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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

   Lindsey Roberts and the Coupeville girls soccer squad sit atop the Olympic League at 2-0. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

We’re a week or two into year four of the 1A Olympic League and one thing remains consistent — it’s still a two-team race.

Klahowya, the biggest of the league’s four schools by far, and Coupeville, its smallest, are the heavyweights.

Port Townsend and Chimacum? With a couple of exceptions, cannon fodder.

Take 10 of the 11 varsity sports Coupeville fields a team in (we skip track, since team records are a moot point) and the win totals from 2014 to spring 2017 are:

Klahowya – 145
Coupeville – 133
Chimacum – 74
Port Townsend – 70

After the Eagles were top dogs the first two years, Coupeville (which has raised its win total each year) took the crown in 2016-2017.

As of end of play Saturday night, the early fall totals have Klahowya clinging to a 4-3 lead on Coupeville, while the other schools have yet to notch a league win.

Counting non-conference games, the Wolves (8-6) and Eagles (8-5) are tied (with Coupeville the only school to have at least one victory in each sport).

Meanwhile Port Townsend (1-9) is taking a major hit in its biggest sport, football, while Chimacum (2-8), is struggling in everything except football.

Current standings through Sept. 17:

Olympic/Nisqually League football:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 0-0 2-1
Cascade Christian 0-0 2-1
Charles Wright 0-0 2-1
Chimacum 0-0 2-1
Bellevue Christian 0-0 0-3
Klahowya 0-0 0-3
Port Townsend 0-0 0-3
Vashon Island 0-0 0-3

Olympic League volleyball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 1-0 2-0
Klahowya 1-0 2-1
Chimacum 0-1 0-3
Port Townsend 0-1 1-2

Olympic League girls soccer:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 2-0 3-2
Klahowya 2-0 3-0
Chimacum 0-2 0-3
Port Townsend 0-2 0-4

Olympic League boys tennis:

School League Overall
Klahowya 1-0 3-1
Chimacum 0-0 0-1
COUPEVILLE 0-1 1-3

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   Pedro Gamarra teamed with Jakobi Baumann to pick up a win at #3 doubles Friday afternoon. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ken Stange rolled the dice, and it almost worked.

Stacking his top players in the doubles slots Friday, the Coupeville High School boys tennis coach played the odds against Klahowya, but the Eagles slipped through his grasp.

Pulling out late wins at #2 and #4 doubles, KSS escaped with a 5-2 win on its home courts, putting at least a momentary ding in the Wolves shield.

The conference loss dropped Coupeville to 1-3 overall, 0-1 in Olympic League play and will force the Wolves to fight back if they want to stretch their run of league titles to three years.

CHS still has plenty of time, though, with two more match-ups against Klahowya (Sept. 29 in Silverdale and Oct. 5 in Coupeville) and three against league door mat Chimacum.

Friday afternoon the Wolves got another win from top doubles duo William Nelson and Joey Lippo, who remained undefeated, cruising to a straight-sets win a match after a titanic fight against a Kingston pair.

The other Coupeville victory came courtesy Jakobi Baumann and Pedro Gamarra, who dropped down from singles to play together for the first time.

The difference between a 5-2 loss and a 4-3 win hinged on the other two doubles matches, but the Wolves dropped #2 doubles after being up a set, and fell in a razor-thin pro set in #4 doubles.

Complete Friday results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Nile Lockwood lost to Taylor Fite 6-0, 6-0

2nd Singles — Zach Ginnings lost to Jacob Kraft 6-2, 6-1

3rd Singles — Drake Borden lost to Drew Kraft 6-0, 6-4

1st Doubles — William Nelson/Joey Lippo beat Morgan Seidel/William Stewart 6-1, 6-2

2nd Doubles — Nick Etzell/Mason Grove lost to Joe Bowman/Nick Hytinen 3-6, 6-3, 6-3

3rd Doubles — Pedro Gamarra/Jakobi Baumann beat Parker Short/Carson Short 7-5, 6-4

4th Doubles — Tiger Johnson/Jaschon Baumann lost to Dominic Westland/Eric Lochis 9-7

JV:

5th Doubles — Thane Peterson/Koby Schreiber lost to Cameron Johnson/Dylan Jackson 8-1

6th Doubles — Peterson/Schreiber lost to Tyler Godsey/Dakota Johnson 8-3

7th Doubles — Harris Sinclair/Ginnings beat Aiden Adams/Joe Potter 8-5

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   Fab frosh Genna Wright scored twice Tuesday in a 7-2 win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Season ends now, they’re league champs.

Just sayin’…

Yes, yes, there are still plenty of games to go, and three-time Olympic League champ Klahowya has yet to play a conference tilt, but, for one night at least, Coupeville is on top of the girls soccer world.

Shredding Chimacum’s defense with ease Tuesday, the Wolf booters rolled to a 7-2 road win in their league opener.

Now 2-1 overall, Coupeville split the scoring duties four ways against the Cowboys.

Lindsey Roberts, Kalia Littlejohn and Genna Wright banged home two goals apiece, while Avalon Renninger put the cherry on top with a score of her own.

Littlejohn, who leads the Wolf squad with four goals, has scored in every game this season.

The junior sharpshooter now has 22 tallies in her career, pulling her closer to big sister Mia, who set the program’s scoring record with 35 goals from 2014-2016.

With her own two-goal night, Roberts sits with three scores on the season.

It was the first time Renninger and Wright had found the back of the net, with the latter notching her first official high school goals.

The freshman whiz kid also scored during the season-opening jamboree, but that goal doesn’t count towards her season total.

Coupeville also doled out its assists, with Wright and Sage Renninger each picking up a pair.

Roberts and Littlejohn set up other goals, while one score — off a free kick by Roberts — was unassisted.

With his team kicking off a three-game road trip with the Chimacum game (the Wolves travel to Sequim Thursday and Port Townsend Saturday), CHS coach Kyle Nelson was pleased with much of what he saw.

“We will call it a “taking care of business” type of game,” he said. “Overall we continue to be making progress; our passing game took a nice jump forward as we continue to work on various aspects of our game.

“We also left Chimacum healthy as we start a succession of away games this week,” Nelson added. “Sequim tomorrow should be a good test for us as we continue to look to improve.”

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   Wolf faithful (l to r) Ema Smith, Lindsey Roberts and Courteny Arnold enjoy Coupeville’s strong start. (John Fisken photo)

Human sacrifice, dogs and cats living together, mass hysteria.

OK, we’re not quite there … yet.

Two weeks into a new football season, things have gone topsy-turvy, with Coupeville and Chimacum sitting at 2-0, while Port Townsend and Klahowya wallow at 0-2.

That’s a huge reversal from recent seasons, but, before we get too giddy here, let’s remember one thing — no one has played a single league game yet.

Plus, Cascade Christian, which was undefeated heading into the playoffs last season, is also 2-0, so some things have stayed completely normal.

While football got a jump on the other sports, soccer, tennis and volleyball have all joined the action, except for a handful of contests in Kitsap County bumped because of the smoggy fall-out from Canadian fires which filled Washington skies.

As we make the turn, an up-to-the-moment look at how Coupeville and its closest rivals are faring in the still-early days of a new fall season.

Olympic/Nisqually League football:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 0-0 2-0
Cascade Christian 0-0 2-0
Charles Wright 0-0 2-0
Chimacum 0-0 2-0
Bellevue Christian 0-0 0-2
Klahowya 0-0 0-2
Port Townsend 0-0 0-2
Vashon Island 0-0 0-2

Olympic League volleyball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 0-0 1-0
Chimacum 0-0 0-1
Klahowya 0-0 0-1
Port Townsend 0-0 0-1

Olympic League girls soccer:

School League Overall
Klahowya 0-0 1-0
COUPEVILLE 0-0 1-1
Chimacum 0-0 0-1
Port Townsend 0-0 0-1

Olympic League boys tennis:

School League Overall
Klahowya 0-0 1-0
Chimacum 0-0 0-0
COUPEVILLE 0-0 0-1

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Will scenes like this one day be just old memories? (John Fisken photo)

“High school football will be gone in five years.”

Those words, said to me in the parking lot after Coupeville’s season-opening win over arch-rival South Whidbey Friday, came from someone not prone to hyperbole.

The speaker has an extensive football background, as a player, coach and administrator, and is pretty spot-on in their assessment of almost anything involving prep sports.

One part of me, the part which has camped out in many a press box and at the top of many a visitor’s grandstand over the years, is quick to dismiss that as a lot of hooey.

No high school sport captures the imagination quite like the myth built up around Friday Night Lights.

Every sport has its die-hard fans, but high school football is the great equalizer.

Take almost any school, and whether its football program is a powerhouse or an also-ran, the stands are stuffed. People ebb and flow around the track, on the grass, at the concession stand.

Some are there to watch the game. Others just to see and be seen.

It is a social setting unlike any other high school sport, one whose fan base cuts across all cliques. Everyone shows up, especially in a small town like Coupeville.

Which also means football is the single biggest money-generator for any high school, and it’s not even close.

From the crackle of excitement in the crowd as the sun sets and kickoff approaches to the swarms of people taking photos on the field after a game — parents, siblings, relatives, significant others, classmates — it’s a communal, time-honored tradition, and it’s hard to imagine it not existing.

But…

As I said, the person who uttered that statement has maybe been wrong twice in the last 25 years (and even that’s debatable), and cold, hard facts and figures paint a disturbing picture.

Participation in high school football is down.

Way down. Way, way, way down.

With the increased attention on concussions and other traumatic injuries (NFL players retiring in their 20’s or leaving their bodies to science, ESPN football commentators quitting their job in protest, etc.) something is happening.

High school football participation dropped by 25,901 students from the 2015 to the 2016 season.

And that’s even with an additional 61 schools having started, or revived a program last year.

That one-year drop almost equals the decline (28,000) seen between 2008-2015 nationally.

While the national numbers for 2017 aren’t out yet, it’s a pretty certain bet we’re looking at another huge dip.

Scan the rosters for the Olympic/Nisqually League, a mashup in its second year of play, and the drop-off is shocking.

In 2016, seven of eight teams counted 32 or more men on their roster, with only Chimacum failing to crack the 30-man barrier.

This year, six of eight teams DON’T currently reach the 30-man barrier.

Coupeville, with 28 players (down from 33 last year), has gone from the third-smallest roster to the third-biggest, despite losing bodies.

With the exception of Klahowya, which is essentially a 2A school which slips under the 1A cutoff by half a whisker, the league is shrinking away.

Here’s a roster comparison between 2016 and 2017, based on numbers pulled from MaxPreps:

School 2016 2017
Bellevue Christian 52 27
Cascade Christian 41 27
Charles Wright 40 34
Chimacum 26 27
Coupeville 33 28
Klahowya 69 55
Port Townsend 32 25
Vashon Island 35 28

Look at those numbers again. The league went from 328 to 250 players in one year. ONE YEAR.

It’s already had an impact, as Port Townsend forfeited its season opener against Sequim, citing “not enough eligible players.”

Coupeville, which, as we said, has the third-largest roster now, averaged 41.5 players from 2006-2015.

And, before you say, well, maybe the student body was bigger back then, no it wasn’t.

CHS is a small 1A school which came really close to returning to 2B not so long ago, so any thoughts of boasting a 50-man roster have rarely, if ever, existed, no matter the decade.

But a larger percentage of the school’s male population played football in the past, and that is true at EVERY school in our league.

While there might be a lot of mitigating circumstances (players choosing other sports, opting for academics over sports or being held sway by all their technological gadgets), it’s hard to ignore the increased attention on injuries.

While it’s not so much that football is any more dangerous today (with better equipment and training, the reverse is probably true), but that the focus on what could go wrong is front and center.

And you can’t fault parents and players if this is the route they’re choosing.

The ability to walk and talk as an adult matter far more than who won a rivalry game, no matter how much sports writers hyperventilate about on-field accomplishments.

Coupeville High School senior Jacob Zettle was injured last year while making a tackle in a game at Klahowya.

He remained prone on the turf for close to 15 minutes before medics transported him to a hospital, and the experience was a major factor in his decision not to play this season.

I’ve had a good handful of concussions before this, and so when I got this one it took a couple months for me to decide not to play because I love the sport so much,” Zettle said. “But with a cervical sprain and strain, and major concussion, I thought better of it.

“Being taken off a football field, in an ambulance, on a backboard with a neck brace, is pretty scary,” he added. “That was a huge wake-up call.”

Zettle does stress that while he believes leaving the sport was the best choice for him, it’s a personal decision best left to each athlete and their family.

“I don’t discourage others from playing! In fact, I love seeing people play!,” he said. “But I do want to say be super careful, because one displacement of your head or anything else for that matter can be a career ender.”

While there is little doubt most modern coaches stress proper techniques, helmet makers are continually upgrading equipment, and health is on everyone’s minds, football will always be a violent game.

It is the very nature of the beast.

As someone who has been on the sidelines of the sport for years, I find it hard to believe it will ever go away.

But I’ve been wrong before — many, many times.

Maybe the numbers, locally and nation-wide, will level off, or even start going back up.

But, quicker than we might think, we may be having the same conversations in Washington state that they are in New Jersey, where three high schools (with student bodies more than four times that of Coupeville) suspended varsity football programs due to declining numbers.

Instead of asking, “Are you ready for some football?” on a future fall Friday night, will we be left to ponder “Are you ready for some lacrosse … or ultimate frisbee?”

The mind boggles.

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