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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Cameron Toomey-Stout is second in receptions, fourth in all-purpose yardage and fifth in tackles. (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf junior Cameron Toomey-Stout is second in receptions, fourth in all-purpose yardage and fifth in tackles. (John Fisken photo)

Stats are a tricky business.

Whether they’re being recorded with pen and paper on the sidelines, or off of game film later, one thing remains constant.

Every player is dang sure their numbers should be higher than what the stat sheets show.

To which I say, hey, it is what it is.

The stats below, which document Coupeville High School’s gridiron progress through three weeks, come with a couple of caveats.

One, if tackles seem a bit low, it’s because no totals have been posted for the La Conner game (at least not on MaxPreps or Hudl).

And two, if you disagree with your stats, talk to your coaches.

Me? I’m just the messenger, not the stat keeper.

Offense:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 12-30 for 276 yards (#2 in league) with 3 TD and 4 INTs

Receiving:

Hunter Smith 8 receptions for 210 yards (#1 in league)
Cameron Toomey-Stout 3-57
Jake Hoagland 1-9

Rushing:

Jacob Martin 25 carries for 159 yards
Clay Reilly 24-134
Smith 17-32
Chris Battaglia 7-10
Matt Hilborn 4-3
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim 1-(-4)
Downes 15-(-26)

All-Purpose yards (Rush/Rec/KR/PR/IR):

Smith 478
Reilly 162
Martin 159
C. Toomey-Stout 68
Hilborn 48
Battaglia 10
Sean Toomey-Stout 10
Hoagland 9

Total yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes 250
Smith 242
Martin 159
Reilly 134
C. Toomey-Stout 57
Battaglia 10
Hoagland 9
Hilborn 3

Touchdowns:

Smith 4 (tied for #4 in league)
Downes 2
Martin 2
Reilly 1

PATs:

Reilly 7 (#2 in league)

Points:

Smith 24 (tied for #4 in league)
Reilly
13
Downes
12
Martin
12

Defense:

Tackles:

Martin 15
Smith 14
Reilly 12
Teo Keilwitz 10
C. Toomey-Stout 8
Battaglia 7
Julian Welling 7
Uriel Liquidano 6
S. Toomey-Stout 6
Jacob Zettle
6
Dane Lucero
5
Hilborn
4
James Vidoni 3
Shane Losey 1
Pacquette-Pilgrim
1

Sacks:

Vidoni 2 (tied for #1 in league)
Liquidano 1
Martin 1

Interceptions:

Smith 2 (tied for #2 in league)
S. Toomey-Stout 1

Fumble Recoveries:

Reilly 1

Special Teams:

Kickoffs:

Reilly 14 for 585 yards (#1 in league)

Punts:

Reilly 9 for 308 yards (#3 in league)

Kickoff/punt returns:

Smith 8 for 219 yards (#2 in league)
Hilborn 3-45
Reilly 3-28
C. Toomey-Stout 2-11
Pacquette-Pilgrim 2-0

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Mia Littlejohn, seen here in the season-opening jamboree, rattled home three more goals Saturday afternoon. (John Fisken photo)

   Mia Littlejohn, seen here in the season-opening jamboree, rattled home three more goals Saturday afternoon. (John Fisken photo)

Mia Littlejohn is on a torrid run these days.

The Coupeville High School junior banged home three more goals Saturday — her second hat trick of the season — lifting the Wolf booters to a 3-0 win at Port Townsend.

That gives Mia nine goals in four games, putting her just one off of little sister Kalia Littlejohn’s single-season school scoring record, and firmly places Coupeville alone atop the 1A Olympic League.

With the win, the Wolves are 2-1-1 overall and a pristine 2-0 in league play, which puts them a half game up on Klahowya (1-0).

Chimacum (0-1) and Port Townsend (0-2) round out the standings.

Coupeville will gets its first crack at the two-time defending league champ Eagles Sept. 27, when it travels to Silverdale to face Klahowya.

Before they get to that, the Wolves have a pair of non-conference games (Sept. 19 at Mount Vernon Christian and Sept. 22 at home against North Mason).

If Mia Littlejohn continues to pepper the net at her current rate — she’s scored in all four games this season — she’ll own the school (and family) scoring mark long before CHS faces its biggest league rival.

Coming off of a late night Friday, with a football game and after-game dance, the Wolf booters came out a bit slow Saturday and went into the locker room facing a scoreless tie.

Whatever was said during the break worked, as Mia Littlejohn broke free in the second half, with two of the goals set up by stellar corner kicks by junior captain Sage Renninger.

Meanwhile, Wolf goalie Lauren Grove and her defense were in lock-down mode all afternoon, refusing to give the RedHawks even a sniff of a goal.

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Mia Littlejohn cracked home four goals Tuesday, propelling Coupeville to an 8-0 win and sole possession of first-place in the 1A Olympic League. (John Fisken photo)

   Mia Littlejohn cranked home four goals Tuesday, propelling Coupeville to an 8-0 win and sole possession of first-place in the 1A Olympic League. (John Fisken photo)

“When you have a combination of red hot Wolves and a bunch of young Cowboys you are gonna get some thunder and lightning!!!”

By the time the goals were done raining down Tuesday, all Coupeville High School girls’ soccer coach Troy Cowan could do was smile.

And sing his team’s praises.

Powered by Mia Littlejohn, who netted a hat trick then went one better, the Wolves obliterated visiting Chimacum 8-0 to claim sole possession of first-place in the 1A Olympic League.

While there’s still a long ways to go for Coupeville to upend two-time defending league champ Klahowya, for this day, at least, the Wolves (1-0-1 overall, 1-0 in league play) are top dogs.

Three of Mia Littlejohn’s four goals came in the first half, all unassisted.

She added a final score off a “stunning header” in the second half, set up by a “ferocious crossing pass” from senior captain Bree Daigneault.

With five goals in the first two games of the season, Mia Littlejohn is already halfway to little sister Kalia’s school single-season scoring record.

Mia was a one-woman wrecking crew, she was totally unstoppable and in the zone,” Cowan said. “She had to be butter tonight because she was on a roll.”

Kalia Littlejohn doesn’t intend to let the scoring title slip away easily, popping her first two scores of the year into the back of the net.

Kalia struggled mightily with her shot early in the match, but I kept telling her shooters shoot, so keep on ripping them in,” Cowan said. “Her perseverance finally paid off late in the match.”

Daigneault and freshman Avalon Renninger rounded out the scoring attack, each tallying their first goal of the season.

Bree played a career match; she was fantastic tonight, really her most complete match,” Cowan said. “Her biggest contributions came from her tenacity and on the field leadership!

“She just refused to be rattled and kept her team on point and focused; very proud of this amazing young woman.”

Avalon Renninger’s first high school goal, fittingly, was set up by older sister Sage.

Avalon is just such an unselfish player and wants to share too much sometimes,” Cowan said. “I told her tonight before the match started she would score her first career goal if she listened and followed my directions.

“She has so much potential because she has been prepared for this moment and having a left foot like a sledge hammer helps too,” he added. “Avalon and Sage work so well together and you can actually see the chemistry on the pitch.

“It’s really a thing of beauty when they are working in tandem, almost like synchronized swimmers!!!”

Coupeville dominated the game so completely senior goalie Lauren Grove failed to touch the ball in play once.

That led Cowan to gush over his defenders, who were clicking on all cylinders.

From Lindsey Roberts (“Her drive, commitment and just overall sense of responsibility to her team, school and community are off the charts”) to Lauren Bayne (“She is such an unbelievable athlete that can do so many different things on the field it’s scary”) to his freshman starters, praise was offered all.

Tia (Wurzrainer) and Mallory (Kortuem) are really the Wonder Twins from the super heroes,” Cowan said. “These two are peanut butter and jelly, ham and cheese or whatever combination you like.

“They just complement each other so well, the fact they are freshman is what is really exciting,” he added. “The ceiling with these two is epic, I mean cathedral level.”

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Lauren Rose, assassin. (John Fisken photo)

Lauren Rose, smiling assassin. (John Fisken photo)

Lauren Rose is a savage.

Now, she may appear to be calm and composed, the very definition of a cool cat, an athlete who rarely betrays her emotional state as she excels in any of her three sports.

But look deep inside the chest cavity of the Coupeville High School junior and you will find a heart three times the expected size, one which grows every time she (metaphorically at least) rips off an opponents head and leaves them to bleed out.

They call her Mouse, Munchkin or Keebler Elf, but Rose played more like the Terminator Tuesday night, ripping off a run at the service stripe like I have never seen in my years of covering high school volleyball.

Spinning the ball gently from hand to hand, then dropping balls into every nook and crevice possible, she threw down 20 consecutive points on her serve to kick off the third set, propelling the Wolves to a straight-sets romp over visiting Chimacum.

The 25-16, 25-19, 25-7 romp over the Cowboys improved Coupeville to a flawless 2-0 overall, 1-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

Sitting atop the league standings (with eight more league matches to play, admittedly), the Wolves are off to a strong start in the Cory Whitmore era.

And so far they are lighting the fuse with their service game.

“Serving is our strong point; we work on it every day, twice a day,” Whitmore said. “When we’re struggling a little bit confidence-wise with our hitting, it centers us and gets us back into a nice flow.”

Rose, who put every one of her 25 serves on the night in play, recorded 10 aces, but saved the loudest fireworks for the third set.

With Coupeville comfortably ahead after holding off a Chimacum rally late in the second set, their setter stepped to the service line to kick off the third.

She almost never left.

As Rose built a 20-0 lead, she mixed in serves which skidded off Cowboy arms and out of bounds with a few (a very few) where Chimacum actually got the ball back in play.

On those, Wolf snipers Mikayla Elfrank and Katrina McGranahan made short work of any rallies.

Swinging from their heels, the duo pounded the ball off of bodies and even made linesman Craig Trujillo jump a bit as the ball ricocheted past his head several times.

Elfrank painted the corners with her lasers, while McGranahan climbed a staircase to heaven on one play, hung there for what seemed like an eternity, then uncorked and lashed the ball on a line right between two Cowboys who both swung and whiffed on the ball.

With a loud ‘n proud Julian Welling-led Wolf student section hailing Rose on every serve, she almost pulled off the near impossible and served out the entire set herself.

Alas, a CHS spike during a mini-rally caught a little too much net and flopped backward, briefly ending the magical joy ride five points short of history.

For her part Rose flashed a small smile as fans chanted her name, already digging in and ready to return serve herself.

As she did so, she briefly tugged at her jersey, rubbing the wrist on her serving hand, for a fleeting second, maybe the smallest testament to it being sore after such an epic run.

Coupeville controlled play all evening, only trailing for a brief second in the opening moments.

After back-to-back spikes misfired, the Wolves found themselves down 4-2 in the first set, but forced a side out, then flipped the ball to McGranahan and the match was effectively over on the spot.

Her run of four straight service points, two on aces, staked Coupeville to a lead it would never relinquish, and the Wolves never trailed at any point in the remaining hour of the match.

A key five-point surge late in the first, all coming off of serves by Hope Lodell and highlighted by a gorgeous winner off of Elfrank’s fist, sealed the deal and set the tone.

Coupeville blew out to an 8-1 lead in the second, again fueled by Lodell’s high-octane serving (“she’s a high risk, high reward server”), then stretched it to 23-15.

The Cowboys put together their best sustained run of the night, slicing off four straight points to momentarily make things uncomfortable, before Lodell captured back-to-back points on a nasty spike and a nastier tip that froze every Chimacum player on the floor in place.

After that it was the Lauren Rose Experience set to overdrive.

Stats-wise, the Wolves got something from everyone.

For the match, Rose dealt out six assists to go with her stellar service, while Ashley Menges set up her teammates four times.

Elfrank, who has “been working really hard,” paced the Wolves with seven kills, while McGranahan had four and Lodell added three.

Valen Trujillo (8) and Payton Aparicio (5) were the team dig-masters, with Tiffany Briscoe providing solid all-around play and Emma Smith using her height and long reach to help CHS control play at the net.

Coupeville gets an immediate chance to keep its hot streak going, with 2A Sequim coming to town Wednesday for a non-conference match.

JV and C-Team action tips at 4:15, varsity at 5:30.

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Uriel Liquidano was one of several Wolves who made big plays in Saturday's big win. (John Fisken photo)

   Uriel Liquidano had six tackles and a sack in Coupeville’s 41-10 win over South Whidbey. (John Fisken photos)

Jacob Martin rambled for 129 yards in week one, most by any player from the Olympic/Nisqually League.

   Jacob Martin rushed for 129 yards in week one, most by any player suiting up for an Olympic/Nisqually League team.

The Wolves are off to a great start.

Of the eight football teams who make up the Olympic/Nisqually League, only two won on opening night.

One was perennial state title contender Cascade Christian and the other was Coupeville.

After rocking arch-rival South Whidbey 41-10 to reclaim The Bucket, the Wolves are dominating on the stat sheets, as well.

They currently have the top player in nine different categories among league teams who have reported stats to MaxPreps.com.

Of all the leaders, maybe the most impressive is Clay Reilly, who recorded 365 yards on eight kickoffs.

That puts him #1 in league, #1 in 1A and #2 among all 30 kickers in the state who have reported stats.

The only booter ahead of him is Jack Clayville of 3A Mercer Island (434 yards on nine kicks), and he had an extra chance to unleash his foot.

Where Reilly and his teammates sit after week one, as reported by CHS coaches:

Offense:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 4-8 for 98 yards (#3 in league) with 2 TD and 2 INTs

Receiving:

Hunter Smith 4 receptions for 98 yards (#1 in league)

Rushing:

Jacob Martin 11 carries for 129 yards (#1 in league)
Clay Reilly 5-33
Chris Battaglia 6-5
Smith 5-3
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim 1-(-4)
Downes 4-(-13)

All-Purpose yards (Rush/Rec/KR/PR/IR):

Smith 202
Martin 129
Reilly 61
Battaglia 5

Total yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Martin 129 (#4 in league)
Smith 101
Downes 85
Reilly 33
Battaglia 5

Touchdowns:

Smith 3 (tied for #1 in league)
Martin 2 (tied for #3 in league)
Downes 1 (tied for #5 in league)

PATs:

Reilly 5 (#1 in league)

Points:

Smith 18 (tied for #1 in league)
Martin
12 (tied for #3 in league)
Downes 6
Reilly 5

Defense:

Tackles:

Teo Keilwitz 7
Martin 7
Smith 7
Uriel Liquidano 6
Reilly 6
Battaglia 5
Julian Welling
5
Cameron Toomey-Stout
4
Sean Toomey-Stout
3
James Vidoni
3
Jacob Zettle
3
Shane Losey
1
Dane Lucero
1
Pacquette-Pilgrim
1

Sacks:

Vidoni 2 (#1 in league)
Liquidano 1 (tied for #2 in league)
Martin 1 (tied for #2 in league)

Interceptions:

Smith 2 (tied for #1 in league)

Special Teams:

Kickoffs:

Reilly 8 for 365 yards (#1 in league/#2 in entire state)

Punts:

Reilly 2 for 36 yards (#3 in league)

Kickoff/punt returns:

Smith 2 for 84 yards (#1 in league)
Reilly 3-28

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