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Archive for the ‘Girls Soccer’ Category

Brynn Parker is back for another season of kicking the crud out of the soccer ball. (Jackie Saia photo)

It’s the start of a new era.

Former Wolf star Kimberly Kisch returns to the soccer pitch of her teen years starting Monday, making her debut as Coupeville High School’s new girls’ soccer coach.

She replaces Kyle Nelson, who retired after countless road trips to faraway destinations on school buses as his players serenaded him with Disney songs.

As Kisch steps into her new job, she’ll have a strong support staff, with Central Whidbey Soccer Club mainstays Darren Stafford and Bill Sites expected to join her.

“As a new coach I have realistic expectations for our first season together and I am unsure what the strength of our players will be,” Kisch said.

“I do, however, have amazing volunteers to help round out my coaching team,” she added.

“I believe that having a strong coaching team will be our biggest strength this season.”

The Wolves lost a chunk of players to graduation, including All-Conference booters Nezi Keiper and Carolyn Lhamon, but do retain their top offensive weapon in Ayden Wyman.

The Wolf junior has already rattled home 13 goals across her first two seasons, putting her in fifth place on the program’s all-time scoring chart.

Even better, Wyman is showing she is ready to step up and provide leadership to her teammates.

Ayden has really caught my attention,” Kisch said.

“She took the initiative to hold summer practices all on her own! I am impressed by her passion and love of soccer.”

Wolf sharpshooter Ayden Wyman enjoys a sweet reward after terrorizing rival goaltenders. (Morgan White photo)

While Kisch won’t get a true feel for the strengths and weaknesses of her roster until practices begin, her hope is sparked by a potential influx of younger players.

“For promising newcomers, we have a few 8th graders that have shown interest in joining the high school team,” Kisch said.

“Among them is Devon Wyman, Ayden’s younger sister.

“She signed up as soon as I opened the team to 8th graders and has been attending the summer practices her sister has been organizing.”

The Wolves, along with Friday Harbor and La Conner, will likely be chasing defending Northwest 2B/1B League champs Mount Vernon Christian once league play starts.

“They (MVC) have built a solid foundation and have a fantastic program,” Kisch said.

However the roster sets up, the new CHS coach wants her players to hit the pitch with the same intensity she displayed back in the day.

“My goal is to spark excitement in a team that seems to have lost their fire,” Kisch said. “I love soccer and I want my girls to have a passion for it too.

“I also want them to love Coupeville as much as I do and be proud to represent their school.

“I hope that we can grow together as a team and a soccer family.”

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A new season of Wolf girls’ soccer approaches. (Bailey Thule photo)

A new season looms. Do you know where your shin guards are?

Rain drops falling in Coupeville are an early reminder fall high school sports are closer than you might think.

Football kicks off practice next Wednesday, Aug. 16, with soccer, cheer, volleyball, and cross country slated to welcome athletes back to action Aug. 21.

Barring a surprise comeback by boys’ tennis, Kimberly Kisch will be the only first-year CHS coach this fall, taking over a girls’ soccer program she once played for back in her own school days.

As she preps for replacing the retired Kyle Nelson, the former Wolf booter is getting the word out, hoping to draw a large roster of players for her debut campaign.

Whether you’re a returning veteran or a first-time player, Kisch looks forward to passing on the lessons she learned on the pitch.

Kimberly Kisch

Practices for CHS girls’ soccer will run from 3:00-6:00 Monday through Friday at the fields on Terry Road, next door to the baseball field.

Players need to bring water, wear shin guards and appropriate clothing, and possess “a good attitude and respect (for) all members of the team” while “focusing on the game and the team goals” and “putting out their best effort.”

Kisch, like all Wolf coaches, also would love to see players fill out their Final Forms online BEFORE practice starts.

“Please don’t let administrative paperwork hinder your participation in CHS sports,” she said.

Parents and players with questions can contact the new coach at kkisch@coupeville.k12.wa.us.

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Kim Kisch, Wolf player turned Wolf coach. 

Amber Wyman (right) has accepted a bigger role in helping guide young Coupeville athletes. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

No more open jobs.

For the moment, at least.

Coupeville High School/Middle School Athletic Director Willie Smith has filled coaching positions for CHS girls’ soccer and CMS track and field.

Kim Kisch, one of the first booters to play for the Wolf program when it launched in 2004, is coming back around to call the shots as head coach starting next fall.

She replaces Kyle Nelson, who retired at the end of the most-recent season.

Meanwhile, Amber Wyman, already hired to coach middle school cross country, will also pick up coaching duties with the CMS track and field program.

Returning coach Jon Gabelein and Wyman welcome a new squad to the first day of practice Apr. 10, with a six-meet schedule running Apr. 26-May 31.

Before becoming a head coach, Wyman was an assistant helping middle school (now high school) running guru Elizabeth Bitting.

Both hires will be official once approved by the school board.

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Nezi Keiper has been a star for several Coupeville High School teams. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

On to the next challenge.

Coupeville High School senior Nezi Keiper has signed to play soccer for Edmonds College.

A First-Team All-Conference player and team captain, the Wolf ace anchored her team’s defense the past four years.

Keiper was a tower of power on the backline for Coupeville, making life easier for her goaltender’s, while showcasing a mix of grit, hustle, and a booming leg.

She also played basketball at CHS and was a star football player back in her middle school days.

A member of the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, Keiper is slated to graduate this spring.

She will join an Edmonds team which is rebuilding after not competing in 2022.

The Tritons, who play in the Northwest Athletic Conference, have a new coach in place and Keiper is part of a group of recent signees who hail from spots such as Lynnwood, Monroe, and Utah.

Edmonds women’s soccer won NWAC titles in 2000 and 2002.

Making things official. 

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Nezi Keiper, Superstar. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The first time I saw Yetlanezi Keiper play a sport, she was busy making a boy seriously rethink his life choices.

Clad in a Coupeville Middle School football uniform, she had unloaded on a dude who thought he was going to block her, sending her rival sprawling to the grass.

Standing over him, long hair flowing from beneath her helmet, Nezi’s face was a study in calmness.

She wasn’t outwardly mad, but she also wasn’t going to smile at the fellow player she cut in half and left to (metaphorically) bleed out on a muddy patch of grass.

It was one of the most striking moments I have witnessed in three decades of on and off writing about prep sports.

Not because Nezi was a girl, dominating in a sport where girls are rarely made to feel welcome.

But because, in that moment, it was obvious she was a truly special athlete.

She showed no fear.

She asked for no quarter.

She was going to kick your butt on every play.

End of story.

Young Nezi, dominating the gridiron. (Sarah Saunders photo)

Now, over the last six years, as Nezi moved through middle school, then left football behind and played soccer and basketball during her high school days, I’ve seen a different side of her.

In her dealings with others, close friends or casual acquaintances, she remains one of the kindest people you will meet.

And one of the strongest.

Plus, and this is huge, she always answers my messages, sending me tidbits of info after games while bumping along the backroads of America in a school bus.

Whether her team wins big or gets roughed up on the scoreboard, Nezi is solid gold as a sideline reporter.

For someone such as myself, who can be a bit obsessive about wanting to get stories printed the same day a game is played, she has been invaluable.

Being hailed on Senior Night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

On the field or court, she has never wavered, never made me rethink that first appraisal of her inner fire.

She is relentless as a soccer defender, taking on the best goal scorers in the region time and again, always making sure they will remember the time they unwisely chose to tangle with her.

Nezi is not a dirty player, by any means.

In fact, she goes out of her way not to hurt others and often shows concern for the physical well-being of those she clashes with.

But she is not going to back down. Like ever.

Capable of clearing the back line with a booming kick, Nezi believes every 50/50 ball belongs to her, and legs churning, she will not surrender her patch of turf, no matter how quick or large the foe may be.

If a collision is required, she never shies from contact.

But, at the same time, she’s just as likely, if not more so, to strip the ball and send it flying far away from her net before the shooter realizes they’ve lost control of the play.

“Get outta here!” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

When she’s on the hardwood, Nezi brings the same style of play to basketball as she does to soccer.

A ferocious rebounder, when she plants herself under the hoop, good luck on moving her from her appointed position.

One of my favorite photos from Coupeville Sports is one of Nezi going toe-to-toe with a much-taller South Whidbey hoops player during her 8th grade season.

She will not be moved. You can try, but it ain’t happening, skippy.

The Wolves went undefeated that year, and Nezi was a major contributor on both ends of the floor.

Other players may have been set up to be scorers, but she showed a deft touch with the ball in her hands and could sting rival defenses.

But, as on the soccer pitch, Nezi was an absolute rock on defense and that was where she rightfully earned her fame.

Locked in from the line. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

So, here we are in early December, and she doesn’t graduate until June, and yet I’m skipping ahead of the normal schedule a bit. As you’ll see in a few moments.

Nezi chose not to play basketball this season, focusing on school, work, and life, and while her absence saddens me, it’s not about me.

If she’s happy and fulfilled, good on her. That’s what matters.

There are rumors in the air Nezi might pick up a tennis racket this spring and cap her high school days on the court or migrate to track for one go-round.

I hope it’s true, either way.

But if it’s not, Nezi deserves the peace of being allowed to make her own decision, so I’ll go be quiet in the corner after this.

As I do, however, I want to take a moment to put an official stamp on things.

Whether she still has high school sports highlights to craft or not, Nezi long ago punched her ticket to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

She is a special athlete, and an even better human being, and putting her in our digital shrine makes the joint a lot classier.

So, let’s do this now, and not wait until summer.

After this, when you slide past the Legends tab at the top of the blog, that’s where you’ll find Nezi hanging out.

Was there ever a doubt?

No, no there was not.

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