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Archive for the ‘Girls Soccer’ Category

South Whidbey goaltender Cassie Neil. (John Fisken)

South Whidbey goaltender Cassie Neil denies a shot Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

When Coupeville and South Whidbey play, in any sport, it is personal.

The Wolves and the Falcons are separated by only a few miles, living together on an Island, and since both are 1A, while Oak Harbor is 3A and rarely plays either of its neighbors, this is THE rivalry.

Games get chippy at times. Fans get personal at times. A win can make or break a school year, depending on what town you call home.

Coupeville bouncing from the 1A/2A Cascade Conference to the 1A Olympic League this year has taken the schools in different directions, but keeping the rivalry going, even in non-conference games, was the best decision the school AD’s could have made.

With wins in football and girls’ soccer, and a loss in volleyball, the Wolves have an early 2-1 edge in 2014.

But, the first big winner is a Falcon, junior soccer goalie Cassie Neil.

She, along with Wolves Mia Littlejohn and Marisa Etzell, reminded us Tuesday that you can have hard-core rivalries while still respecting your foes.

Neil is a bubbly force of nature and a frequent visitor to Cow Town.

In the world of select soccer, where Wolves, Falcons and Oak Harbor Wildcats often play on the same teams, she has frequently worn the same uniform as many of the girls she faced Tuesday.

In the second half of a narrow game, Neil twice got taken out hard. Both times were accidental in nature, but that didn’t keep the Falcon net-minder from being laid out.

The first time came on a breakaway when Littlejohn, who scored two goals, lit Neil up when they inadvertently collided at full-speed out in front of the net.

The second came with Neil on the ground, trying to grab a ball and getting clocked in the face by Etzell’s foot.

What was touching was the concern of all three girls for each other.

Instead of hanging back and letting the injured player’s teammates deal with the situation, as you might normally do, in both instances the Wolves immediately went to check on Neil.

And, after the worst of the two collisions, when she regained her feet, still a little wobbly, Neil went and grabbed Littlejohn in a bear-hug, one friend making sure the other knew that she held no ill will.

It was a quick moment, but it spoke volumes.

It reminded all of us what grace under pressure, class and hard-nosed mutual respect should look like on the athletic field.

Well played, ladies. Well played.

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Wolf goalie Julia Myers is all smiles. (John Fisken photos)

Wolf goalie Julia Myers is all smiles. (John Fisken photos)

Marisa Etzell

Marisa Etzell keeps her body between the ball and her defender.

Mia Littlejohn streaks towards one of her two goals.

Mia Littlejohn streaks towards one of her two goals.

Jenn Spark, defender extraordinaire.

Jenn Spark, defender extraordinaire.

Freshman Ashley Smith enjoys the view.

Freshman Ashley Smith enjoys the view.

Your 2014 Wolf booters.

Your 2014 Wolf booters, just hangin’ out.

With so many high-powered goal scorers among her teammates, Bree

  With so many high-powered goal scorers among her teammates, Bree Daigneault finds it tough to decide who to pass to first.

Micky "Two Fists" LeVine glides into action.

Micky “Two Fists” LeVine glides into action.

It was a great way to kick off the season.

Bouncing their closest rival in grand fashion, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad opened the 2014 season with a bang Tuesday night.

Two goals from freshman Mia Littlejohn, some stellar defense from goalie Julia Myers and her back line (in particular Jenn Spark), and the deed was done.

Coupeville 2, South Whidbey 1. All is well with the world.

But then you start thinking, boy, I wish I could see some more photos from the game. That would be swell.

Good thing John Fisken was traveling through town, on temporary leave from picture-clickin’ duties in Oak Harbor, and snapped a few hundred photos for you to peruse.

Up above are eight that demanded to be seen now.

To see more photos, and possibly purchase some (part of the proceeds goes to fund scholarships for Wolf student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=6531&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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Mia Littlejohn (John Fisken photos)

Freshman Mia Littlejohn scored twice in her high school debut. (John Fisken photos)

Makana Stone celebrates her former teammate, Jenn Spark, who had a stellar defensive game.

Makana Stone celebrates her former teammate, Jenn Spark, who had a stellar defensive game.

Jenn Spark may be blushing.

Jenn Spark may be blushing.

Wins over South Whidbey are like potato chips — you can’t have just one.

Following in the footsteps of their football counterparts, many of whom were in the stands rooting them on, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer players opened a new season with a resounding 2-1 win Tuesday over their Island rivals.

Sparked by two goals from freshman Mia Littlejohn, in her high school debut, the Wolves controlled the game from start to finish.

They struck first, they struck last and they clamped down when the game was on the line.

With South Whidbey racing the clock in the waning moments, trying to find a goal to tie, Coupeville’s defense, anchored by Jenn Spark and Christine Fields, stepped up big time.

Spark, a feisty junior who clears the ball with booming kicks that threaten to break the sound barrier, came up with the biggest defensive play, using her body to deny a Falcon shot at point-blank range with less than three minutes on the scoreboard.

With her defensive line refusing to break, Wolf goalie Julia Myers had time to set herself and was fairly flawless in net.

The silky smooth senior nimbly picked off several South Whidbey shots, then stared down the would-be shooters, breaking them mentally as well as physically.

The game opened under sunny skies, and, while the scoreboard refused to cooperate for the first few minutes, the action on the field got off to a crisp start.

Littlejohn, one of two freshmen to start for the Wolves (along with Sage Renninger), put Coupeville in front early, picking up a loose ball and blasting it home from the right side.

South Whidbey answered late in the first half, when freshman Celeste Hernandez slipped a ball past a wall of players in front of the net.

After that one miscue, Myers and her defenders were lights out the rest of the way.

With the CHS student section picking up the noise considerably, it was Mia time, part two.

Shooting from the left side this time, she zipped what would be the game-winner into the back of the net less than three minutes into the second half.

The two squads came after each other hard the rest of the way, with chippy play intensifying at times. But, amid the rough-and-tumble, there was one genuinely sweet moment.

Littlejohn, making a run at the net, inadvertently blew up Falcon goalie Cassie Neil, colliding with her rival and sending her crashing hard to the turf.

Neil, after a moment or two prone on the ground, bounced back up and went over and hugged Littlejohn.

Having played select soccer with many of the CHS girls, and being one of the peppiest people in the known world, it was a classy move by Neil, a player equally at home in both towns.

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McKenzie Cook

McKenzie Cook

Cook wreaks havoc on the soccer pitch.

Cook wreaks havoc on the soccer pitch.

With Coupeville having left the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, joining Port Townsend, Chimacum and Klahowya in the 1A Olympic League, now is a great time to learn a bit about some of the players who will face off with the Wolves.

McKenzie Cook owns the pitch.

The Klahowya Secondary School senior may be the single most talented athlete in any sport that Coupeville will run into this season as it joins its new league.

As a junior, Cook rained down 20 goals, handed out 12 assists and was selected as the MVP of the Olympic League.

She then tacked on a Second-Team All-State selection and helped guide the Eagles to the 2A state tourney, where they fell 2-1 to Fife in the first round.

With reclassification, Klahowya edged under the limit and became a 1A school. With a long history of excellence on the pitch, including a 1999 state championship, the Eagles will enter play this season as the team to beat.

At the heart of their attack is Cook, who has been a goal-scoring whiz since she first stepped on the field as a freshman.

An avid wakeboarder and water skier in her free time, she plays one sport in school, and plays it very, very well.

“I’d say that one of my strengths as a soccer player is that I’ve played soccer for a very long time so I know the game very well,” Cook said. “By having all this experience playing I have the ability to see the whole field and know what kinds of runs need to be made and when they should be made.

“I enjoy soccer because I get to play a sport I love along with my friends,” she added. “Soccer gave me the opportunity to meet a lot of people and make friends that I’ll have forever. I also love the feeling of beating a defender and scoring a goal.”

Cook was drawn to the pitch at an early age, and a life-long love affair has blossomed.

“I just love the sport in general and everything about it. I love how it keeps me in shape and makes me have to work hard,” Cook said. “I also like how you get to work with other people and you have to have good team work to be successful.”

As she prepares to make her final run at Klahowya, the plan is a simple one for Cook.

“My goal this year is to help lead my team to a state championship.”

When she’s not busy on the pitch, Cook enjoys watching “NCIS” and “Criminal Minds,” listening to country music and hanging out with her friends.

She also participates in a sports medicine class, which requires her to work as a student trainer, helping tape and rehab athletes for football, baseball and basketball.

She credits her youth coach, David Lowe, who taught her from ages 6-11, for being a huge influence in her development as a soccer player.

Off the field, her family and her church have helped guide her development into the bright, successful young woman she has become.

“The person I am today has mainly been shaped by my relationship with my family and with God,” Cook said. “I was raised in a Christian home where we went to church every Sunday. However, now that I’m older my faith is more my own, thus meaning I’ve taken it upon myself to follow God and try to live my life to his standards.

“Coming from a Christian family my parents have always been very supportive of my decision and have always tried to teach me to strive to be like Christ,” she added. “They’ve also given me the opportunities and resources I need to become the best soccer player and person I can become.”

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(Shelli Trumbull photo)

  “Shoot! I’ll be home in time to watch the East Coast feed of “Dancing With the Stars!!” (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Need to get to bed a bit earlier on Friday nights? You’re in luck.

With Coupeville High School jumping from the 1A/2A Cascade Conference to the 1A Olympic League, a lot of its travel will be rerouted from the Clinton/Mukilteo ferry to the Coupeville (Keystone)/Port Townsend route.

Since that second run shuts down earlier in the evening (and is more unpredictable in general), a lot of Wolf games will be played at earlier times than in years past.

The Wolf football team kicks off the season with four straight home games. But, after tonight’s 7 PM battle with South Whidbey, the rest of their home games will all go off at 5:30.

That includes games 2-4 (Sequim, Chimacum and Port Townsend) as well as Homecoming against Klahowya Oct. 24.

The first road game, a first-ever trip to Klahowya Oct. 3, features a 4 PM kickoff. We’re talking a throwback to middle school start times here.

Then comes a 5 PM game at Port Townsend and a 3 PM(!) start at Chimacum, before the regular season finale at Concrete provides the only other 7 PM start of the season.

Volleyball, girls’ soccer and boys’ tennis will also be affected, so it’s a good idea you keep an active eye on the school’s schedule, or you may end up coming in to matches at the mid-point.

One note of caution: the school calendar currently lists times for both JV and varsity for soccer and volleyball. Disregard part of that, as there is no JV soccer squad this year.

To stay up-to-date on the schedule, check out:

http://coupeville.tandemcal.com/

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