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Archive for the ‘Girls Soccer’ Category

Jacki

Jacki Ginnings, seen here in an earlier game, and her teammates on the Whidbey Islanders GU18 soccer squad haven’t lost in eight games. (John Fisken photo)

It was a tie, but it felt almost like a win.

Keeping its unbeaten streak alive at eight games, the Whidbey Islanders GU18 select soccer squad battled to a 1-1 draw with visiting Pacific Sound United of Everett Sunday.

The tie kept the Islanders (8-2-1) in first place heading into their season finale Saturday, Mar. 29 — a rematch with the United on their home turf.

Going into Sunday’s match, Islander coach Sean LeVine expected a battle, and that’s what he got.

“We expected this was one of the tougher teams in the league and we were right,” he said. “This team was faster than many of the teams we’ve played this season, and they also had some height.

“First half, we had to absorb too much of their possession on our half, but we improved second half,” LeVine added. “However, both halves we definitely looked like the more dangerous team on the attack. We had several near misses and shots by multiple players and they only had three shots on goal.”

After a scoreless first half, Alyssa Cross broke through for the Islanders in the second half.

Coming from her left defender spot, she popped a ball 40 yards (“A great shot!!”) and watched in delight as it went up and over the United goalie, who had been straying too far from her net.

Pushing hard, Everett finally got the equalizer in the game’s final moments.

“Their big bruiser of a striker beat our defense, but only to the end line well wide of goal,” LeVine said. “However, the girl put a cross in that went over our keeper’s hands and just barely hit the inside of the far post and into the net.

“It was an impossible angle, was probably meant to be a cross,” he added. “If the wind had been blowing just right, it wouldn’t have snuck in, but it did.”

Even with the fluke of a late score, LeVine came away pleased with his team’s performance, and he singled out Cross for extra credit, naming her the player of the game.

“Despite being sick this week and injured for much of the season, Alyssa gave us another 90 minutes of solid defense, shutting down any attack from their right and taking a yellow card for a good hard body check,” he said. “Despite the referee trying to get in her head, she played her game and did not back down.”

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Erin

Erin Rosenkranz heads up field in pursuit of the ball. (John Fisken photos)

Coupeville's Fab Five

The Islanders bring together players from North, South and Central Whidbey. Coupeville’s own Fab Five — (l to r) Jacki Ginnings, Tori Wellman, Rosenkranz, Jenn Spark, Micky LeVine.

Micky LeVine (John Fisken photos)

LeVine battles for the ball under pressure.

Hefflefinger scores, Islanders win.

The song is stuck on repeat, but no one seems to be complaining, as it’s catchy, has a good beat and is being played by a team that has swept into sole possession of first place.

The latest victim of the supremely hot Whidbey Islanders GU18 select soccer squad was the Northshore Evolution, who fell 2-1 Sunday afternoon at Ft. Nugent.

It was the seventh straight win for an Islander team that now finds itself sitting at 8-2, alone in first place with two games left to play in the season.

And the win played out in familiar fashion, as Jacalyn Hefflefinger and Jenn Spark set the table, while Kenzie Perry slammed the door shut.

Hefflefinger shook things up early, banging home a ball in the fifth minute of the game for her seventh goal in as many games.

She and teammate Bailee Olson were fighting for the ball in the Northshore box, and, with the help of a puddle that stopped the ball and set her up nicely, it was golden leg time once again for the goal-scoring phenom from Oak Harbor.

Keeping the pressure on, Whidbey got a second score ten minutes later.

Spark lofted a patented near-perfect corner kick, laying it right at the feet of Selena Medina, who, without an ounce of mercy in her body, calmly lashed it past a helpless Evolution goalie.

After that, it was all about defense, and the Islanders were near-stifling. With Perry in net, and her band of scrappy defenders guarding her turf, Northshore had few opportunities to score.

The Evolution finally did, on a goal that benefited from the refs going blind — twice.

First they awarded Northshore a questionable free kick, then they allowed a goal to stand after an Evolution player kicked the ball free from Perry’s hands — a no-no.

“In my mind, that’s a 2-0 win,” Islander coach Sean LeVine said. “Second half was all us. Our defense was stout and they never got behind us in the entire second half.”

Whidbey kept the pressure on, with multiple players ripping shots on goal. Olson, Micky LeVine, Erin Rosenkranz, Becca Pabona, Kendra Warwick, Hailey Erbe, Morgan Zylstra and Paige Waterman all rattled the Evolution netminder.

LeVine, after some thought, tabbed Warwick as his player of the game.

Kendra really held down the midfield today, battling much larger opponents and winning, controlling possession, and helped to relieve the defense from having to pressure the ball in the middle,” LeVine said. “Kendra is our own Ozzie Alonso! Great job today!”

The Islanders host their next game, Sunday, Mar. 23 (2 PM) at Ft. Nugent, then hit the road for their season finale.

For more photos, including pics of Islander players who call Oak Harbor and South Whidbey home, head over to:

http://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf350b8730ec

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The Whidbey Islanders GU18 select soccer squad players (most of them, anyway), winners of six straight. (Kali Barrio photo)

The Whidbey Islanders GU18 select soccer squad players (most of them, anyway), winners of six straight. (Kali Barrio photo)

Jacalyn Hefflefinger owns the goal right now.

Scoring her sixth goal of the season Saturday, to go with an awe-inspiring score from teammate Jenn Spark, Hefflefinger sparked the Whidbey Islanders GU18 select soccer squad to its sixth straight victory.

The 2-0 home triumph over the Issaquah Arsenal lifts the Islanders to 7-2 on the season, and they get right back at it with a home game at Ft. Nugent (2 PM) Sunday.

Saturday, Whidbey dominated Issaquah from the moment the two teams stepped on the field. The Islanders peppered the Arsenal goalie, claiming a 20-3 shot on goal advantage.

With Morgan Zylstra manning the net for Whidbey, that freed goalie Kenzie Perry (“like a pit bull up front”) to play in the open field, and the fleet-footed one helped kick-start the offense.

Perry moved back into goal in the second half to combine with her teammate on the shutout.

The Islanders broke through when Spark took advantage of a free kick earned by Erin Rosenkranz.

Spark blasted a shot from 20 yards out that neatly curved over the Arsenal wall and plopped right into the corner of the net as the Issaquah goalie could only watch the shot in horror.

Pressing hard in stoppage time, Whidbey sprung Hefflefinger for the game-capping goal.

With mighty mite Micky “Two Fists” LeVine pressuring the defense, Tori Wellman pilfered the ball and slapped a picture-perfect crossing pass to Hefflefinger. Two seconds later, the golden-toed shot-maker had scored again and the celebration was on.

With contributions from every one on the roster, Islander coach Sean LeVine picked Paige Waterman and Becca Pabona as his players of the game.

Paige matched their big, fast bruiser stride for stride and showed how strong she can be,” LeVine said. “We know Paigey is a great defender, but she battled their toughest player all game and won and took her out of the game!

Becca played hard from box to box, battling for every 50/50, and really helped to control our possession,” he added. “Great job!”

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Many faces, much awesomeness from Madison "Mad Dawg" Tisa McPhee.

Many faces, much awesomeness from Madison “Mad Dawg” Tisa McPhee.

She can kick your butt in more ways than you can count.

The woman, the myth, the legend … track records fall before her and wild horses come to heel out of respect … she needs two last names, cause one isn’t enough when you’re this awesome.

Casting an epic shadow across the sports world, where she ruled as a high school sprinter and hurdler, dabbled in soccer and volleyball, and continues to ride to multiple medals in any horse race you can put together, she is the chosen one, and it is her birthday.

She is Mad Dawg, the destroyer of nations, the quote machine unleashed, the best damn athlete to ever NOT be awarded Coupeville High School’s Athlete of the Year.

Which is fine, cause we all know the truth, and the truth will set you free.

I’m talking about Madison Tisa McPhee and you know it to be true.

Bow when she passes, cause that’s what you do when the legends walk by.

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Jacalyn Hefflefinger (right) has scored five goals in the last five games.

Jacalyn Hefflefinger (right) has scored five goals in her last five games.

Not even the refs can stop this team.

Despite “900 offsides calls,” the Whidbey Islanders GU18 select soccer team rolled to its fifth straight win Sunday afternoon, bouncing their hosts, Tracyton Velocity, 2-1 in a game that wasn’t remotely as close as the score might indicate.

Now 6-2 in league play, the Islanders got big goals from Jacalyn Hefflefinger and Bailee Olson, and would have netted more if over-eager refs hadn’t blown the whistle every three seconds.

It was Hefflefinger’s fifth goal in as many games, while Olson netted her first score as a member of the Islanders.

Whidbey used a superb bit of teamwork to grab its first goal.

Jenn Spark, the master of the corner kick, popped a ball to Paige Waterman, who laid it off to a rampaging Erin Rosenkranz.

Her shot on goal whacked a Velocity defender and bounced cleanly to Hefflefinger, who did what she does better than just about anyone on the pitch — put it in the back of the net while the goalie grasps at empty air.

Frustrated by Tracyton’s offsides trap, the Islanders turned it to their advantage on Olson’s goal.

Timing her run perfectly to keep the whistle dry in the ref’s mouth, she snared a beautifully placed pass from Hailey Erbe and crunched the ball past the diving keeper.

With a lead to hold, Whidbey goalie Kenzie Perry and her rugged band of defenders were fairly spotless, shutting Tracyton down.

“Our defense remains, easily, the best D in the league!,” said Islander coach Sean LeVine. “The D made one error today and they capitalized, which is a fluke! I’d be perfectly happy with one error per game.”

The Islanders, who sit just one point out of second place in league play, now host three straight home games at Ft. Nugent.

Whidbey plays twice next weekend — Saturday, Mar. 15 (12:30 kickoff) and Sunday, Mar. 16 (2 PM).

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