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Archive for the ‘Girls Soccer’ Category

Mckenzie Meyer was one of ? freshmen to letter in 2014. (John Fisken photos)

  Mckenzie Meyer was one of three freshmen to letter in 2014, joining Mia Littlejohn and Sage Renninger. (John Fisken photos)

Marisa Etzell scored ? goals during her senior season on the pitch.

Marisa Etzell scored four goals during her senior season, second-best on the Wolves behind Micky LeVine, who punched in six.

Senior Christine Fields helped to anchor a tough defense that weathered the loss to injury of two key players in Jenn Spark and Jacki Ginnings.

  Senior Christine Fields helped anchor a tough defense that weathered the loss to injury of key players in Jenn Spark and Jacki Ginnings.

It was good to be a Luvera.

The senior duo of Ana and Ivy Luvera each picked up an award Saturday as the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer team closed its best season in program history.

Having finished second in their inaugural season in the Olympic League, the Wolves, who combined a strong core of seniors with a fast-rising group of freshman gunners, had much to celebrate at their awards banquet.

Ana ran away with the Coaches Award, while Ivy received the Defensive Player of the Year Award.

Joining them in copping hardware were senior Erin Rosenkranz (MVP), freshman Mia Littlejohn (Rookie of the Year) and freshman Lauren Bayne (Most Improved).

Rosenkranz and fellow seniors Julia Myers and Marisa Etzell were tabbed as First-Team All-Conference players, while the Wolves received the Olympic League’s sportsmanship award.

Varsity letters went to Bree Daigneault, Etzell, Christine Fields, Jacki Ginnings, Micky LeVine, Littlejohn, Ana Luvera, Ivy Luvera, Mckenzie Meyer, Myers, Sage Renninger, Rosenkranz and Jenn Spark.

Bayne, Kirsten Pelroy, May Rose, Tai Rose, Hanna Seiffert and Ashley Smith received Certificates of Participation.

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All-Conference goalie Julia Myers. (John Fisken photo)

All-Conference goalie Julia Myers. (John Fisken photo)

Izzy

   Klahowya’s Izzy Severns (9), McKenzie Cook (3) and teammates. Three more wins to a state title, ladies!

Second in the standings, first in manners.

The Coupeville High School girls’ soccer team capped its first season in the 1A Olympic League by putting three seniors on the All-Conference team and netting the league’s sportsmanship award.

Wolf goalie Julia Myers, midfielder Erin Rosenkranz and forward Marisa Etzell were all honored for their play during a 6-7-1 season, the best mark in program history.

Klahowya’s goal-scoring queens, Izzy Severns and McKenzie Cook, were tabbed as co-MVPs.

The duo has combined for 57 goals for the Eagles (18-2) this season, and will lead their team onto the pitch Saturday to play La Salle in the state quarterfinals.

In a side note, Severns and Cook were two of four All-Conference players who had a pre-season feature story in Coupeville Sports. Port Townsend goalie Malia Henderson and Chimacum goalie Kyah McKinlay were also honored.

Colin Foden of Port Townsend was picked as Coach of the Year.

The All-Conference team:

Klahowya:

Ashlyn Brandt, MF
Danni Antoldi
, F
Emily Peters
, MF
Rachel Seidel
, D

Coupeville:

Julia Myers, GK
Erin Rosenkranz, MF
Marisa Etzell, F

Port Townsend:

Malia Henderson, GK
McKinzie Ginter, D

Chimacum:

Kyah McKinlay, GK
Mechelle Nisbet, D

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McKenzie Meyer unloads a bomb. (John Fisken photos)

McKenzie Meyer unloads a bomb. (John Fisken photos)

? Luvera

Ana Luvera shoots the ball ahead.

Ivy Luvera

Ivy Luvera dances up-field with the ball.

Bree Daigneault glides into action.

Bree Daigneault glides into action.

It was the best season in program history.

While a playoff loss to Vashon Island stung, it doesn’t negate what came before, as the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer team finished 6-7-1, claiming second place in its first year in the Olympic League.

From seasoned seniors like Micky LeVine and Jacki Ginnings to impressive freshman such as Mia Littlejohn and Lauren Bayne, the Wolves were a talented, entertaining bunch.

In the moments after the playoffs, CHS coach Troy Cowan reflected on his second season at the helm of the Wolf program:

The Wolves played hard and never quit, which has been a common trait all year!

Captain and four-year varsity starter Erin Rosenkranz played extremely well; she was our spark plug today.

When we were able to make runs, Erin was the catalyst that would initiate our offense and get the ball to her teammates.

I am very proud of Erin and honored to have coached her for the past two seasons. She is a remarkable young lady.

Julia Myers played fantastic.

She has just grown leaps and bounds this year and I couldn’t be happier with her play all season. She was animated, vocal and led the team with her positive attitude.

I don’t have all the stats from the season totaled yet, but I do know Julia has at least 86 saves, while supplying five shut-outs for CHS.

Having seen some great goalkeepers, I am confident when I say Julia Myers is the BEST goalkeeper in our conference; Julia is the ultimate team player!

We have spent the entire season tweaking, interchanging, training and re-training our defense.

When any team loses their two top defensive players (Jacki Ginnings and Jenn Spark) to injuries, it can and will cause some serious issues, but we didn’t panic. 

We made adjustments, moved some players around and stayed true to our philosophy of playing defense inside-out.

Led by four-year varsity starter Ivy Luvera, our defense stayed strong and had an outstanding season. 

Christine Fields, Mia Littlejohn and Mckenzie Meyer were the backbone of our team and had spectacular seasons. 

Ana Luvera, Micky LeVine, Marisa Etzell, Bree Daigneault and Sage Renninger are the hardest working, committed and offensively minded players I have worked with.

These fine young ladies did everything I asked and more.  Couldn’t be prouder of them and am extremely thankful for the time and dedication they gave to the program and to each other.

The future of CHS girls’ soccer program is bright!

We have some young, talented players that are hungry for time on the pitch and that are eager to learn and perform.

Jennifer Spark is our only captain now and she is up to the challenge.

Jennifer is recovering from MCL/ACL surgery, but made the LONG trip for our first district HOME match and made it on to the field, albeit sitting in a wheelchair.

Jennifer and I talk frequently and we are both optimistic and excited about next season.

Kirsten Pelroy, May Rose, Tia Rose, Lauren Bayne and Ashley Smith all made huge strides in improving their play and will be impact players next season.

I also need to mention our foreign exchange student, Hanna Seiffert.

Hanna was a real treat; she has a great sense of humor and played hard for the Lady Wolves.

Nicknamed, the “German Missile” by Coach Gary Manker because of her deceptive speed and explosive style of play, she will be missed.

On the bus driving 90 minutes to our “home” match, I told the girls how lucky we were.

Oak Harbor’s soccer team was probably home in bed, South Whidbey’s girls’ soccer team was probably doing the same, but Coupeville’s soccer team was on the pitch still playing!!!

Today, right now, CHS is the BEST soccer team on the Island and that says a lot!

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Micky LeVine

Micky LeVine scored a team-high six goals as a senior. (John Fisken photos)

Mia Littlejohn is part of a talented group of freshmen who made an impact this season.

   Mia Littlejohn is part of a talented group of freshmen who made an impact this season.

It was not an especially thrilling day for the Olympic League.

Two of the league’s three girls’ soccer playoff teams fell in the first day of postseason action Saturday, leaving league champ Klahowya to fend for itself against the forces of the Nisqually League.

Port Townsend, the #3 seed, went down hard, falling 5-0 to Bellevue Christian, while #2 Coupeville was forced to travel 45 miles for a “home” game that they lost 3-0 to Vashon Island.

Despite earning the chance to host their game, the Wolves were denied by a District 3 rule that all playoff games have to be held on turf fields.

That forced CHS to hit the highway early in the AM and travel to Kingston High School.

The loss dropped Coupeville’s final record to 6-7-1, still the strongest mark by far in the school’s limited girls’ soccer history.

The game marked the end of the road for a group of splendid seniors who helped lift the program to new heights.

Julia Myers, Ana Luvera, Christine Fields, Micky LeVine, Erin Rosenkranz, Ivy Luvera, Marisa Etzell and the injured Jacki Ginnings all bowed out on top.

Final scoring totals for the season:

Micky LeVine – 6
Marisa Etzell – 4
Mia Littlejohn – 3
Erin Rosenkranz – 3
Sage Renninger – 2
Lauren Bayne – 1
Jacki Ginnings – 1
Ana Luvera – 1

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Bree and Micky (John Fisken photos)

Bree Daigneault (left) and Micky LeVine share a moment. (John Fisken photos)

Hanna

Hanna Seiffert is amused by Kirsten Pelroy.

Mia

Mia Littlejohn flashes some fancy footwork.

Pelroy

Pelroy stalks the field.

rosenkranz

Erin Rosenkranz, 1.3 seconds away from causing a sonic boom.

Daigneault

Daigneault keeps her eyes on the skies, tracking the flight of the ball.

It’s many things wrapped in one.

It’s a “home” game that’s taking place 45 miles down the road.

It’s a winner-take-all playoff game.

It’s probably the biggest game in program history.

When the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad (6-6-1) takes the pitch this afternoon (12 PM) at Kingston High School, it will be a rare venture into true postseason play for the Wolf booters.

The opponent is Vashon Island (6-4-1), the #3 team from the Nisqually Valley League and Coupeville is nominally the home team, having earned that honor by claiming second place in the Olympic League behind Klahowya.

But, with the requirement that all District 3 playoff games take place on turf fields, CHS was not allowed to host the game on its field.

Oak Harbor’s beautiful turf field, less than 10 miles up the road, was already spoken for (a cheer camp), so it’s off to North Kitsap.

The #3 team from the Olympic, Port Townsend (3-11) faces the #2 team from the Nisqually, Bellevue Christian (7-4-2) as well Saturday.

The Coupeville/Vashon winner advances to play Seattle Christian (12-2-1) Nov. 4, while the Port Townsend/Bellevue Christian winner gets Klahowya (14-1).

Two teams will emerge from the six-team district tourney and qualify for state.

To check out the district tourney bracket hop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1371&sport=11

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