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Archive for the ‘Girls Soccer’ Category

Ryan Griggs prepares to launch himself down field. (John Fisken photos)

   Ryan Griggs and his teammates kick off practice Aug. 20, but all CHS athletes need to get their paperwork done this week. (John Fisken photos)

Fall sports approach for Wolves like Erin Rosenkranz. (John Fisken photo)

Erin Rosenkranz and Co. open practice Aug. 25.

Fall sports approach — faster than you think.

Practice kicks off Aug. 20 for football and Aug. 25 for tennis, soccer and volleyball, but there’s a huge deadline coming up in just two days.

If you’re planning on playing a sport at Coupeville High School, you need to get your buns to the CHS gym this Thursday between 12-6 PM and turn in paperwork and pay participation fees.

Wolf athletes also need an updated physical before the start of practice.

If you’re in need of one, call 678-2414 to set up an appointment. The physical fee is $40 and checks should be written to Yorioka Scholarship.

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The GU19 Whidbey Islanders hoist Lydia Peplinksi after her goal clinched a tourney title Sunday. (Kali Barrio photos)

The GU19 Whidbey Islanders soccer squad celebrates after winning the Crossfire Select Cup Sunday. (Kali Barrio photos)

A memento from the last tourney of the summer.

A memento from the last tourney of the summer.

Ayla Muller enjoys the sweet taste of victory. (Charity Graves photos)

Ayla Muller enjoys the sweet taste of victory. (Charity Graves photos)

Morgan Zylstra played five games in three days and is still smiling.

Morgan Zylstra played five games in three days and is still smiling.

Lydia Peplinski loves drama. Apparently.

Picking the biggest moment to make her biggest play, Peplinski netted a goal with less than five seconds to play in overtime during the championship game Sunday afternoon, lifting the GU19 Whidbey Islanders select soccer squad to its second win of the day and a tournament title.

Her shot sent the Franklin Pierce Fury down in flames, and the 2-1 win, coming on the heels of a 3-1 drubbing of Bainbridge Island FC in an early morning game, gave the Islanders the crown at the Crossfire Select Cup in Redmond.

Whidbey finished 2-1-2 in the three-day tourney, the cap to the summer soccer season.

The Islanders will continue to practice together, but won’t compete again until after the high school season plays out.

Peplinski sent them out on a huge high, netting both of the goals in the finale.

Trailing 1-0, Whidbey tied things up when Jenn Spark lobbed a free kick over the heads of the Fury defenders, finding Peplinski in mid-stride.

Timing her run perfectly, she snatched the ball away and poked it past a flailing goalie.

After that, the two squads battled back-and-forth through the remainder of regular time, then through two ten-minute overtime periods.

With the referee’s mouth a breath away from signaling the end of play and the beginning of penalty kicks to decide the match, it was Peplinski time.

Taking a pass off the foot of Bailee Olson, Peplinski launched a shot from an impossible angle, shocking the world by burying the ball in the back of the net.

Cue the screaming and hollering.

“The referee literally blew his whistle signalling the end of that half immediately after the ball hit the back of the net!,” said Islander coach Sean LeVine. “It was very exciting for us and well deserved. Champions!”

The win avenged a tie against the same team earlier in the tourney.

“In the earlier game we felt like we dominated and should have easily won,” LeVine said. ” However, they were coming off a 3-0 win that morning, and they were definitely a better team Sunday afternoon. It was a battle!

“Those girls were large, speedy, and aggressive,” he added. “Our organized possession proved to be much better though.”

The Islanders made it to the championship with an offensive explosion in their first game of the day, an 8 AM wake-up special against Bainbridge.

After not scoring in their first three games, Whidbey was locked and loaded.

Erin Rosenkranz punched in a pair, the first off of an assist from Micky LeVine, then Gillian Crossley broke free and converted on a pass from Peplinski.

Winning the title was especially impressive, as the Islanders played several players down for most of the tourney.

Leading scorer Jacalyn Hefflefinger missed the tourney, while Alyssa Cross, Jacki Ginnings and Paige Waterman all were limited in how much playing time they could put in.

With most of the team’s regular backfield out, others stepped up and, while playing out of position, excelled.

Becca Pabona, Ayla Muller and Olson all got nods from LeVine.

“I always tell our players that they are soccer players, not positions, and they proved that Sunday!”

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The Islanders rest between games Saturday. (Kerry Rosenkranz photo)

The Islanders rest between games Saturday. (Kerry Rosenkranz photo)

The further they go in the tournament, the better they’re playing.

Capping Saturday afternoon off with its third game in two days, the GU19 Whidbey Islanders select soccer squad put together its best game so far in the 2014 Crossfire Select Cup.

Facing tourney host Crossfire, which is in first place, the Islanders fought to a 0-0 tie, a result that left Whidbey coach Sean LeVine in a much-improved mood.

“The afternoon was much better. We possessed much better and had several chances on their goal,” he said. “They were a well organized team and had chances on our end as well, but it looked like either of us could take it.

“I was pleased with the improvement.”

The Islanders opened the three-day tournament with another 0-0 tie Friday, this one against Franklin Pierce FC Fury, then fell 1-0 to the Whatcom Rangers Saturday morning.

Whidbey, which is playing without leading goal scorer Jacalyn Hefflefinger this weekend, has yet to score, but its defense has been stout.

The only score given up by the goal-tending duo of Kenzie Perry and Ayla Muller came on a bit of a fluke play.

“The goal came after a botched drop to our own goal keeper,” LeVine said. “Kenzie was still able to partially deal with it, but it fell favorably to a Ranger player who skied it.

Kenzie couldn’t deal with it and it just glanced off the post as she was trying to catch it and fell in,” he added.

Now 0-1-2 in the tourney, the Islanders will play Bainbridge Island FC at 8 AM Sunday. Win that one and they return to play a fifth and final game at noon.

“We can compete with the best if we want it bad enough,” LeVine said. “We play tomorrow like we did this afternoon, we will win.”

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Julia Myers, crackin' heads and takin' names.

Julia Myers, crackin’ heads and takin’ names.

OK, if you lean in real close and listen carefully, I’m going to tell you a secret.

You ready? Made peace with the universe and prepared to have your world rocked? Holding on tightly to the edge of the couch, in case the shock knocks you off the cushions?

Here we go…

Julia Myers is one of the nicest people you will ever meet.

Oh, I know, I know. Your brain just went poof and turned into liquid and ran out of your ear and is puddling down there on the carpet.

Your mom is gonna be so PISSED.

But now you’re saying to yourself, how can this be?

Cause you’ve seen Julia play basketball for Coupeville High School, elbows slicin’ and dicin’ like Ginsu as she hauled in boards, leaving people from King’s screaming and crying and blubbering.

And that’s just their whiny lil’ coach…

You’ve seen her drop epic stink eye on South Whidbey with just a glance. A glance that coated the court in ice and froze the Falcons in mid-stride.

Of course, if you were watching closely, you also saw Ms. Myers follow up those actions with a small, secret grin, content in the knowledge that she had just blown up the joint and thoroughly wrecked the concentration of any opponent hapless enough to cross her path.

Cause really, that’s the true Julia — one giant smile boppin’ through life to her own tune.

With her large, blended family at her back (OG cool cat and big sis Taylor Herreman taught her everything she needed to know about droppin’ the stink eye on morons), Myers is having fun when she plays, whether it’s soccer, basketball or tennis.

The fact she’s able to have fun is great, because she’s a tough lil’ bugger who refused to let a shredded knee slow her down. She had to sit out sports during her sophomore year, but she came roaring right back as a junior last year.

I hope her senior year is as awesome as she is, and plays out exactly to her hopes and dreams. Julia deserves that much.

Oh, and her birthday, which just happens to be today? May that be splendiferous as well.

Just don’t get between her and any birthday cake. Cause she’s not afraid to swing an elbow or two.

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Jacki Ginnings shared Player of the Tournament honors with Kendra Warwick. (John Fisken photo)

Jacki Ginnings

Kendra Warwick

Kendra Warwick

Sometimes you have to get beat to get better.

That’s the hope for the GU19 Whidbey Islanders select soccer squad, which fell 5-1 to Chinook United of Calgary Sunday.

The loss capped a three-day run for the Islanders at the high-stakes NCSAA College Showcase Tournament in Puyallup, and, at 0-2-1, the results weren’t quite as awe-inspiring as hoped.

On the other hand, Whidbey coach Sean LeVine knew going in his team would be facing a caliber of opponents they rarely, if ever, see.

The Islanders opened play Friday against the #9 team in the entire nation.

With NCAA coaches everywhere in the stands, the tourney drew top-level teams with rosters jam-packed with possible Division 1 recruits.

“All in all, it was a great weekend,” LeVine said. “We knew we would play the toughest teams we’d ever faced. In this sport, that is how you get better.”

Whidbey played Chinook fairly even for a half Sunday, then “the wheels fell off a little” after halftime.

Trailing just 2-1 at the break (“other than two gifts we gave them, we looked like the better team”) the Islanders were victimized by a couple of quirky plays.

A slow-rolling ball took an odd last-second bounce and skidded right across the fingertips of Whidbey goalie Kenzie Perry for one score, and an “imaginary foul” set up Chinook with a gift-wrapped penalty kick for another.

Whidbey netted its lone goal midway through the first half.

Jenn Spark popped a beautiful set-up to Lydia Peplinski, who twirled, froze the goaltender, who was out in front of her net, and calmly knocked the ball past her for her first score as an Islander.

After it was all over, LeVine tabbed Kendra Warwick and Jacki Ginnings as his Players of the Tournament.

“We are very lucky to have these two players!,” he said. “They battled hard this weekend, had limited mistakes, and they make our team better.”

The Islanders close out their summer season with an appearance at the 7th annual Crossfire Select Cup Tournament in Redmond July 25-27.

After that, their players will head off to their respective schools for the high school season, before reuniting in November for another college showcase.

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