Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Lauren Bayne, seen here in an earlier game, and the Wolf defense were in lock-down mode Thursday night, sparking a 4-1 win. (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Bayne and the Wolf defense were in lock-down mode Thursday night, sparking a 4-1 win. (John Fisken photo)

Call it the big beat-down.

Combining an air-tight defense with another spectacular offensive show from state scoring leader Mia Littlejohn, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad romped to a 4-1 win Thursday over visiting Port Townsend.

The win lifts the Wolves to 3-1 in 1A Olympic League play and pulls them within a half-game of first-place Klahowya (3-0).

Coupeville is 5-2-1 overall, with four wins in its last five matches.

The victory, a nice comeback after a loss at Klahowya earlier in the week, left CHS coach Troy Cowan a bit giddy.

When asked if the Wolves had beat Port Townsend, his response:

“Yes sir, like a drum, like a government mule, like they stole from us!!!”

Littlejohn provided all the offense Coupeville needed, putting together her fifth hat trick of the season.

She has 19 goals at the halfway point of the 16-game regular season, one shy of Abraham Leyva’s single-season school scoring record.

Littlejohn carved up the RedHawk defense in three different ways, scoring on a penalty kick, on an unassisted run, and off of a sweet set-up from Sage “The General” Renninger.

The team captain picked up a second assist when she triggered a play on which defender Lindsey Roberts “connected on a Scud missile shot that found pay dirt.”

It was the second goal this season for the sophomore sensation.

When Port Townsend was on the attack, the RedHawk charge was largely blunted by the Wolf ‘d.’

“Defense played incredible,” Cowan said. “Megan DePorter is a master of running our defense.

“The Wonder Twins (Lindsey Roberts and goalie Lauren Grove) played lights out too.”

Cowan also praised the play of freshman Mallory Kortuem, who “drew the toughest assignment tonight, having to shadow one of the most physically gifted players we face.”

Coupeville travels to Chimacum Tuesday for a league game, then plays three straight non-conference tilts before getting its rematch with Klahowya Oct. 18.

Read Full Post »

Nile Lockwood (John Fisken photos)

   Nile Lockwood and the CHS netters sit atop the 1A Olympic League. (John Fisken photos)

Joseph Wedekind

   Joseph Wedekind and doubles partner John McClarin rolled to a 6-0, 6-0 win at #1 doubles Wednesday, sparking another league victory for the Wolves.

Their duos are virtually impeccable.

Only dropping a single game across four doubles matches Wednesday, the Coupeville High School netters thunked host Chimacum 5-2 to tighten their hold on first place in the 1A Olympic League.

The win lifts the Wolves to 2-0 in conference play (3-6 overall), a game up on Klahowya (1-1) and two ahead of the Cowboys (0-2).

The defending league champs can put a virtual stranglehold on things with a win Friday, when they host Klahowya (4 PM) in the third of their six league matches.

Facing off with Chimacum, Coupeville rolled through the doubles portion of things with ease, dropping bagel jobs on the Cowboys at first and third doubles.

Complete results:

1st singles Nick Etzell lost to Isaiah Treibel 7-5, 6-2

2nd singlesJakobi Baumann beat Emmett Erickson 6-3, 7-6(7-3)

3rd singlesNile Lockwood lost to Nate Miller 6-0, 6-1

1st doublesJohn McClarin/Joseph Wedekind beat Jonah Diehl/Zach Engle 6-0, 6-0

2nd doubles Joey Lippo/William Nelson beat Mason Lawson/Jack Meissmer 6-1, 6-0

3rd doublesGrey Rische/Jimmy Myers beat Zackery Kienle/Rowan Powell 6-0, 6-0

4th doublesMason Grove/Aiden Crimmins won by forfeit

Read Full Post »

Lauren Grove (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Grove, seen here in an earlier game, made 26 saves Tuesday night while facing a barrage of shots. (John Fisken photo)

Lauren Grove was phenomenal.

Otherwise, Tuesday’s highly-anticipated battle between the top two soccer programs in the 1A Olympic League did not go as Coupeville would have liked.

Despite Grove’s 26 saves in goal, the Wolves fell 3-0 at Klahowya and dropped out of a first-place tie with the Eagles.

The two-time defending champs, who have never lost in 15 league games stretched across 2+ seasons, controlled the pace of the game from start to finish and rained down shots on Coupeville’s net-minder.

“She made amazing saves,” said CHS coach Troy Cowan. “An incredible 89.55167 save percentage — one of the best displays of soccer goalie play I have ever seen!

Lauren was like Wilt Chamberlain tonight in the box,” he added. “Even the three that got by he would have missed.”

Klahowya (3-0 in league, 5-0-1 overall) was the first team to shut down Wolf forward Mia Littlejohn, whose 16 goals tie her for the state lead.

With little room to move or create, her string of six straight games with a goal came to an end, and Coupeville (2-1, 4-2-1) suffered.

While the Wolves weren’t able to get the ball in the net, they did benefit from giving a freshman a chance to shine in a new position.

With senior Megan DePorter having moved into the starting lineup on defense, Cowan shifted Tia Wurzrainer up front against Klahowya and liked what he saw.

“The other positive was a terrific discovery! Tia can play striker,” Cowan said. “We did a ton of running tonight and my starting forwards needed a blow so I put Tia up top and she really shined.

“Pressure was great and she had multiple shots and made some timely through balls,” he added. “I will be trying to get her more time up top so we can help Mia eradicate the single-season scoring record!!”

Coupeville has five games to play, including two league tilts, before it gets another crack at Klahowya.

When they do, the Wolves will face the Eagles twice in a five-day span, hosting them Oct. 18, then traveling to Silverdale Oct. 22.

“We had an off night and I wish we could call a mulligan but we can’t,” Cowan said. “So we will keep working hard and be ready for them visiting us.”

Read Full Post »

Come on, South Whidbey. Give Coupeville a chance to beat you a lot more. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

   Come on, South Whidbey. Give Coupeville a chance to thrash you on a far more regular basis. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

It’s time, South Whidbey, it’s time.

You may not want to hear this, but you need to think long and hard about leaving the 1A/2A Cascade Conference and joining Coupeville in the 1A Olympic League.

I know you didn’t ask for my opinion, but that has hardly ever stopped me from spouting off.

And I’m offering this advice as a friend, as someone who wants to see Falcon Nation have a fighting chance.

I want you to have plenty of opportunities to serenade fallen foes with “Drive home safely!!”

Now, of course, I don’t want to hear that tune when Coupeville is the opponent. I’m not saying that.

But I want to see South Whidbey have a fighting chance at all other moments.

A chance which would increase immeasurably if the Falcons left behind a broken league, much as the Wolves did in 2014.

This is not just about football, or your recent forfeit to Archbishop Thomas Murphy, though that certainly got me to thinking.

Playing a team whose offensive line could hold its own with a lot of college teams, at a time when you can field less than 20 players, makes no sense.

As much as the Falcon players probably hated the decision — players want to play, always — I think SWHS administrators made the right choice.

Same thing with Sultan, who at 4-0, are also forfeiting to an ATM squad which has outscored foes 170-0 (not a misprint).

I would be shocked if Granite Falls also doesn’t step aside, and you know things are way too one-sided when King’s coach even publicly admitted his team took a vote on forfeiting.

The Cascade Conference, with its crazy-quilt mix of private schools (who can offer scholarships and operate under different rules) and bigger 2A schools (Cedarcrest and, before they fled the league this year, Lakewood) is a staggering Frankenstein monster.

It’s falling apart before our eyes, and my advice to South Whidbey (again, unasked for) is to get out while the getting is good.

I know it can’t happen this school year, but the Falcons should aim to jump leagues in time to start the 2017-2018 school year in a new environment.

Follow Coupeville’s example and petition to leave District 1 and trek over to District 3.

Come make your case to the Olympic League AD’s, who would likely say yes to bumping the league to five schools.

Coupeville, Klahowya, Port Townsend and Chimacum have little to lose in welcoming refugee Falcons, and much to gain, as adding schools helps the Olympic League in increasing playoff allocations.

But, what does South Whidbey have to get out of such a move. Lots.

First, you reinstate your greatest rivalry in a meaningful manner.

Coupeville vs. South Whidbey. Cow Town vs. Hippie Land. Wolves vs. Falcons.

Nothing is sweeter for either side than beating the burg which sits 25 miles down the Island.

Always has been that way, always will be, and having the games be league affairs just ramps that back up to 100.

Financially, it’s a win-win, as the revenue sports (football, basketball, volleyball) will undoubtedly bring in bigger gates for those clashes.

What do you want? A handful of paying customers traveling here from the wilds of Sultan for a Wednesday game or a steady stream of cars surging up (or down) the Island?

Heck, you’ll get more fans from Port Townsend and Chimacum (both schools whose fans travel well and are far closer) than you will from Granite Falls or Cedar Park Christian.

So, we have rivalry and money, and to that we add a leveled playing field and increased chance at winning titles.

Join the Olympic League and you’ll be the second-biggest school (after Klahowya) in terms of student body size. That’s a huge boon.

And, by removing ATM and King’s, you instantly put yourself back in the title picture in every sport.

Winning titles is huge.

Having a realistic shot, where every day every one of your programs feels genuinely competitive, is even bigger.

In the Cascade Conference, Coupeville found itself facing schools with 400 more students and college programs masquerading as private high schools.

In the Olympic League, facing public schools much closer in size, the Wolves have won six titles in two years, stretched across four sports. And they have been competitive in EVERY sport they play.

And another note — the Cascade Conference, for all its size, doesn’t do much with tennis, which forces South Whidbey to play in a random league comprised of private school powers for one sport.

Join the Olympic League, and the Falcons go back to having their sports under the same umbrella, with Coupeville, Klahowya, Chimacum and all the 2A Olympic League schools ready to cross rackets with the well-respected Falcon netters.

But, you say, there has to be some reason to stay in the league you’re currently in. Right?

You got me there.

I’ve heard a mild complaint about the Port Townsend ferry and how that might affect travel, especially with 7 PM kickoff times for football games.

To which I say, big whoopee.

The Olympic League already deals with that by being flexible on some of its start times.

Nowhere is it written in stone that football games have to kickoff at 7.

Which is why, when Coupeville goes down, catches the Clinton ferry and travels to Silverdale to play Klahowya (comparable to South Whidbey hopping over to PT or Chimacum), the kickoff time is 5 or 5:30.

With some other sports, certain match-ups of schools have varsity play first, so that, if a team has to ankle for the ferry, you leave in the middle of the JV game.

Small ways to work around the fact we all LIVE ON AN ISLAND in the first place.

Which leaves one thing — it’s easy to stay.

Except, the league is crumbling.

Lakewood left. ATM is being shoved towards the door, as sentiment for private schools to play in their own leagues builds.

There is no better time to get out, Falcons.

Renew your greatest rivalry. Give your struggling programs a fighting chance, an opportunity to rebuild, and give your elite programs room to soar again.

Make the right choice, South Whidbey. Leave a bad relationship which no longer works and come back home.

Coupeville is here waiting for you, ready to try and kick your fanny certainly, but in the way a brother or sister would.

We should be together, Wolves and Falcons, making life miserable for Klahowya. It’s our destiny.

Read Full Post »

Emma Smith (John Fisken photos)

Emma Smith denies Sequim. (John Fisken photos)

Julian Welling

   The rock in the middle of the Wolf line, senior Uriel Liquidano, gets lined-up with his QB.

Joey Lippo

Doubles ace Joey Lippo slides into battle.

May Rose

May Rose leads an assault on the goal.

First place, all the way.

That’s exactly where every single fall sports team from Coupeville High School finds itself Monday afternoon.

Either in sole possession (soccer, tennis) or tied (volleyball, football) for the top of the 1A Olympic League standings.

Now, take a deep breath and accept a (big) caveat.

Football is technically in an eight-team tie for first, as none of the Olympic or Nisqually League teams, which have joined together for at least two years of gridiron action, have actually played a league game.

The first three weeks (when Coupeville went 1-2) were all non-conference tilts, while the next seven are the ones which really matter.

Things kickoff this Friday, when the Wolves travel to Tacoma to face Charles Wright Academy (1-2) for their league opener.

But, across the other three sports, Coupeville is a flawless 4-0, with a tennis win over Klahowya, a volleyball dismantling of Chimacum and a pair of soccer victories over Chimacum and Port Townsend.

Only time will tell where the Wolves finish fall, or whether they can match or top last year’s performance.

Of Coupeville’s six league titles in the first two years of Olympic League play, three have come in the spring, two in the winter and just one in the fall.

That banner came courtesy last year’s boys’ tennis team.

With 27 of 31 league games still left to play this fall (eight for volleyball, seven apiece for football and soccer and five for tennis), it’s way too early for predictions.

But it is a nice start.

Football:

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

Volleyball:

School League Overall
Coupeville 1-0 2-1
Klahowya 1-0 2-0
Chimacum 0-1 1-2
Port Townsend 0-1 1-2

Girls Soccer:

School League Overall
Coupeville 2-0 2-1-1
Klahowya 1-0 2-0-1
Chimacum 0-1 0-2-0
Port Townsend 0-2 0-4-0

Boys Tennis:

School League Overall
Coupeville 1-0 1-4
Chimacum 0-0 0-3
Klahowya 0-1 0-4

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »