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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Cody Menges

   Senior defender Cody Menges is part of a strong group of returning lettermen for the Wolf booters. (John Fisken photos)

Abraham Leyva

   Abraham Leyva torched the nets for a team-high 14 goals last season, earning First-Team All-League honors.

Win-loss records can be deceptive.

Take a quick gander at last year’s results for the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad and things don’t look real great.

In their first year in the 1A Olympic League the Wolves finished 3-11 overall, 2-4 in conference play, nabbing third-place in a four-team league.

But that’s not the whole story.

Look closer and you would have seen Coupeville was laid low by an extraordinary run of injuries, which at times took away nearly half its starters.

And yet the Wolves came within a goal of upending Port Townsend and claiming second in their league.

Now, with a healthy roster (including the return of one of his most dangerous weapons), third-year CHS coach Kyle Nelson is striding into the new season with an air of confidence.

“We have many returning player with varsity experience,” he said. “Most of those returning players are seniors who are coming back quicker and stronger.

“In our first week of practice it is clear that we are starting right from where we ended last year.”

Topping those returning players are three First-Team All-League picks from last year — senior forward/midfielder Abraham Leyva, senior defender Tanner Kircher and sophomore midfielder William Nelson.

That trio is part of a group of 12 returning lettermen, including senior Zane Bundy, who was Coupeville’s second-leading scorer as a sophomore before missing virtually the entire season last year with a leg injury.

With Bundy working the sidelines in a suit instead of running the pitch, he watched as Leyva rattled home a team-high 14 goals (giving him 25 for his stellar two-year CHS career).

The surprise #2 scorer in 2015 was then-junior Sebastian Davis, who roared out of nowhere to notch six goals in his first go-round as a Wolf booter.

He’s also back, giving Coupeville three marksmen.

Four if you count William Nelson, who hit the back of the net three times as a frosh.

Other lettermen back in uniform include seniors Taylor Chiles (F), Garrett Compton (MF), Cody Menges (D), Loren Nelson (M) and Connor McCormick (GK), junior Uriel Liquidano (D/MF) and sophomore Ethan Spark (MF).

Senior Jose Marcos (GK) and junior Zack Nall (F/M) are also expected to claim varsity spots.

While there’s talent and experience, the one area the Wolves are deficient in is numbers. Repeat last year’s wave of injuries and things could get dicey.

“We are lacking depth,” Kyle Nelson said. “We are down new players coming in and overall numbers, so if we have injuries that could potentially cause problems.

“We are already working harder this year to raise fitness levels to try and avoid injuries.”

The biggest obstacle in Coupeville’s way will be league mate Klahowya, which went 17-4-2 overall, 6-0 in league play and finished fourth at the 1A state tourney last year.

While he’s ready to take a swing at the champs, Nelson is also looking square at Port Townsend, which edged the Wolves 4-2 and 3-2 the first time around.

“Last year we had real good games against Port Townsend, just coming up short on both games,” he said. “We are looking forward to turning that around this year.”

However the regular season goes, the Wolf coach wants his team to be peaking at the end.

Having dropped loser-out playoff games to Mount Baker (3-0) and Charles Wright Academy (5-2) in his first two seasons, Nelson wants to see a return to the days, not that long ago, when the Wolf booters made strong second-season runs.

“I fully expect to have some postseason play this year,” he said. “With the way the District 3 tournament is set I believe we will have a good opportunity for some success.”

 

To see Coupeville’s soccer schedule, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?league=21&page_name=game_schedule&school=24&sport=9

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Freshman Sarah Wright will take over catching duties for the Wolves, allowing Lauren Rose to return to 3B. (John Fisken photos)

   Hard-hitting freshman Sarah Wright will take over catching duties for the Wolves, allowing Lauren Rose to return to 3B. (John Fisken photos)

Fellow frosh Veronica Crownover works on fielding during the early days of parctice.

   Fellow frosh Veronica Crownover works on fielding during the early days of practice.

The old gang’s back together.

While Coupeville High School softball will have its third coach in as many years, for most of the players, it’ll be an easy fit.

With Kevin McGranahan taking the reigns of the program, much of his roster has already played, quite successfully, for him at the little league level.

Two years ago virtually this same roster, playing as the Central Whidbey LL Venom with McGranahan and assistants Ron Wright and Justine McGranahan, went undefeated (ten-running every foe) all the way until the state tourney.

While they lose four starters from a team that went 7-12 under one-year coach Deanna Rafferty (McKayla Bailey, Hailey Hammer and Monica Vidoni graduated while Kyla Briscoe jumped to track), the new addition of the Wolves is loose, confident and very, very happy.

“The team has really rallied behind this new coaching staff and are very excited to get this season going,” Kevin McGranahan said.

The core of the squad is battle-tested, and while they’re young, they have a history of winning and a rock-solid belief in themselves.

Sophomores Katrina McGranahan (P), Lauren Rose (3B) and Hope Lodell (OF) are joined by juniors Tiffany Briscoe (OF), Jae LeVine (INF) and Robin Cedillo (OF) as returning letter winners.

Junior Kailey Kellner (INF) and sophomore Heather Nastali (OF) are also returning players with huge upside, while four other newcomers will be in the thick of things.

Freshmen Sarah Wright (C), Tamika Nastali (OF) and Veronica Crownover (1B) were all key players in the rise of the Venom, while sophomore transfer Mikayla Elfrank (INF) arrives from Langley to rejoin girls she once played with in her little league days.

Excitement in the coaching change has been so high CHS has enough girls to field a JV team for the first time in years.

The Wolves are sitting with 20 players, an unheard of number on the prairie (two years ago Coupeville went to state under David King with a roster that barely crawled over half that).

“We are going to field a JV team so it seems the program is on the rise and hopefully we can build from here,” Kevin McGranahan said. “There are a lot of girls that have never played before but they are definitely very excited to learn and help grow this program.

“I will use three of the varsity girls (Crownover and the Nastali sisters) to play as a swing player and play with the JV to help guide their learning process and use their leadership.”

With his varsity squad, Kevin McGranahan will look to utilize their natural skill-set and build on their sense of camaraderie.

“The strength of this team is going to be our team speed and the way these girls all play for each other and are a team and not individuals,” he said. “We will play solid defense.”

When asked about areas his players might need to work on, the veteran coach just laughed and left it for outsiders to try and figure out on their own.

“No coach will say weaknesses for the press,” Kevin McGranahan said with a smile.

The Wolves, who went 5-4 in their first go-round in the 1A Olympic League (Chimacum edged Klahowya for the title), have lofty goals but realize every journey begins with a simple step.

“Goals for the season are of course to win state, but just to give 100% and play together as a team and have fun doing it,” Kevin McGranahan said. “I feel like this team can be very competitive if we do those things.

“The team to beat for us is the next team on the schedule; you have to take a season one game at a time.”

Win or lose, the “new” coach is happy to be back on the job, and the feeling is mutual from his players and parents.

“We have a bunch of great ladies out there giving 100% to the team,” he said. “Even in the cold and high winds they keep going. We as a community can be very proud of them.”

 

To see the softball schedule, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?league=21&page_name=game_schedule&school=24&sid=4018&sport=15

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Wiley Hesselgrave was named First-Team All-League by 1A Olympic League coaches for the second straight season. (John Fisken photos)

   Wiley Hesselgrave was named First-Team All-League by 1A Olympic League coaches for the second straight season. (John Fisken photos)

Cameron Toomey-Stout took home a Mr. Hustle Award Tuesday night.

Cameron Toomey-Stout took home a Mr. Hustle Award Tuesday night.

So did Jordan Ford.

So did Jordan Ford (5).

Back-to-back.

Coupeville High School senior Wiley Hesselgrave capped his prep basketball career with a second straight selection as a First-Team All-League player.

Hesselgrave’s honor, which came after a vote by coaches in the 1A Olympic League, topped the awards given out Tuesday at a season-ending banquet for the Wolf boys’ hoops squads.

Fellow senior Jordan Ford (varsity) and sophomore Cameron Toomey-Stout (JV) were given the Mr. Hustle award by CHS coaches Anthony Smith and Dustin Van Velkingburgh.

Varsity letter winners:

Andre Avila
Desmond Bell
Beauman Davis
Jordan Ford
Jared Helmstadter
Wiley Hesselgrave
JJ Johnson
Risen Johnson
Dante Mitchell
DeAndre Mitchell
Hunter Smith
Gabe Wynn
BayLee Dunsmore
(manager)

Participation certificates:

Ariah Bepler
Hunter Downes
Gabe Eck
Ty Eck
Luke Merriman
Brian Shank
Cameron Toomey-Stout
James Vidoni

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(Amy King photo)

   The Wolves arrived early, but were forced to cool their heels due to the host site’s team holding a practice — in the one gym on campus. (Amy King photos)

dab

While they waited, they posed for a photo or two hundred.

So far this postseason the 1A Olympic League is 0-6 against the Nisqually League.

The closest anyone from the four-team conference, girls or boys, has come to toppling their big city rivals came Wednesday, when the Coupeville girls roared back in the fourth quarter to nearly erase a 15-point deficit before falling 52-48 to Charles Wright Academy.

The loss dropped the Wolves to 15-5, but they will get a second crack at playoff hoops Friday, when they will return to their new home away from home, Sumner High School.

Coupeville will face Seattle Christian (10-7) at 7:45 PM in a loser-out District 3 game.

Win and they will be one of the final 16 1A girls teams still alive for a state title and will advance to regionals the next weekend.

To do so, the Wolves will need to learn a valuable lesson from Wednesday’s game — Olympic League refs have NOT prepared conference teams for playoff basketball.

It is a simple fact — if Coupeville played during the regular season like Charles Wright did Wednesday, their starting five would have fouled out of every league game.

Probably mid-way through the first half.

Coming from a league where jump balls and ticky-tacky fouls are often called with a startling frequency, the Wolves found themselves face-to-face with a foe who routinely initiated considerably more contact then they are used to, and refs who had little issue with it.

One example: Kailey Kellner scrambled back on defense and planted herself in front of oncoming Tarriers four times, absorbing the collision.

In Olympic League play, it would have likely been four offensive fouls.

Against Charles Wright, Kellner herself was whistled three times for the foul, only garnering the charge on her fourth and final attempt.

Knocked around on the boards — even when they were able to hold on to the ball, the Wolves were routinely roughed-up — and offered few chances at turnovers thanks to strong ball-handling by Charles Wright, Coupeville had trouble finding a reliable rhythm.

The Wolves did start with a bang, dropping in the game’s first five points (a Makana Stone put-back off of a rebound and a gorgeous three-ball from the left side from Kellner).

Three straight buckets from Stone, on which she showed off her superior speed and slashing ability, staked Coupeville to an 11-6 lead, its biggest of the night.

Charles Wright immediately responded, however, knotting things up at 11 before the Wolves capped the first quarter with their best offensive play of the evening.

Racing the clock, Mia Littlejohn shot up the side, dished the ball to Kyla Briscoe, then pumped her fist as Briscoe zinged the ball inside to a cutting Kellner for a lay-in a half a tick before the buzzer.

Up 13-11 heading into the second, Coupeville started to have more trouble stringing together baskets and fell behind midway through the quarter.

Another nothing-but-net trey from Kellner pulled the Wolves to within 21-20, but the Tarriers used a 5-2 run to take a four-point lead in at the half.

As close as the first half was, the third quarter was a disaster in almost every way.

With CWA inflicting major damage on the boards, shoving the younger Wolves out of their way on almost every play, and being allowed to do it, the Tarriers stretched their lead out to 15.

14 of Charles Wright’s 21 points in the third came via rebound put-backs, and they also dropped in several free-throws, something the Wolves never had a chance to match.

Coupeville shot just one free throw on the night — and missed it — while the Tarriers successfully banked home 13.

The lone bright spot in the third was Littlejohn, who started taking the ball right at the hoop, throwing down runners on four consecutive Wolf possessions.

As the fourth quarter began, with things bleak, CHS coach David King challenged his players, daring them to step up and show some grit.

And they almost pulled off a miracle.

Finally showing the rough-house style they are capable of playing, the Wolves held Charles Wright without a field goal in the fourth, slashing the lead all the way down to 50-48 with 46 seconds to play.

A 14-3 run that started with a Littlejohn three-ball ended with a Kellner trey and the Tarriers finally seemed to be cracking.

Coupeville, with all five girls firing at top gear, came within a sliver of forcing a shot clock violation on the next possession, only to have two fluky moments blunt the superior effort.

First, CWA got the shot off, with the ball leaving the shooter’s fingertips right before the buzzer, and, when the shot hit the iron, it took a weird bounce and shot straight down to the floor, where the Tarriers snatched it back away.

Forced to foul, Coupeville needed Charles Wright to miss at least one of the free throws. Which it did.

But, once again, the Tarriers found a way to corral the rebound, absorb another foul and hit one last free throw.

In the end, the Wolves, after fighting back so intensely, were never able to take a shot themselves over the final 46.5 seconds, an agonizing way to end a gutsy comeback.

Stone led Coupeville with 20 points, 15 rebounds and six blocks.

Heading into Friday, she has 388 points in 20 games (19.4 per game), which gives her the third-best single-season scoring total in Wolf girls hoops history.

Kellner knocked down 13 while Littlejohn popped for 11 and dealt out six assists. Lauren Grove and Lindsey Roberts each added a bucket during the fourth-quarter rally.

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Coupeville is chomping through the 1A Olympic League the same way Luke Merriman eats hot dogs -- in big bites. (John Fisken photo)

   Coupeville is chomping through the 1A Olympic League the same way Luke Merriman eats hot dogs — in big bites. (John Fisken photo)

We are Darth Vader. At least for the moment.

Sparked by a top-drawer basketball season, Coupeville High School has slid past Klahowya to become the true rulers of the 1A Olympic League.

How is this possible? Let me break it down for you.

With the regular season done for basketball, when you look at the six varsity sports in which Coupeville has competed in so far during the 2015-2016 school year (four in the fall, two in the winter), the Wolves have won more games against league opponents than their rivals.

Now, we’re only counting official “league” games, and not the weird “non-league” volleyball and soccer matches played against league foes to fill out schedules in the fall.

Those games didn’t count in the official league standings, so they don’t count here.

So, with spring still ahead of us, and four more team sports to decide (baseball, softball, boys soccer and girls tennis), here’s where the league win tallies stand right now:

Coupeville (25)
Klahowya (23)
Port Townsend (18)
Chimacum (13)

The Wolves are also tied with Klahowya with two league titles, having retained their girls basketball top dog status while stealing boys tennis away from the Eagles.

For the sixth-smallest 1A school to be up on the second-biggest is an accomplishment, and Coupeville has done it so far by being spectacular in one sport, solid in almost every one, and, during their one weak season, not taking a zero.

The Wolves are the only school not to have a win-less league season in at least one sport this year.

Broken down by sports, the wins:

Coupeville — girls basketball (9), boys tennis (4), boys basketball (4), girls soccer (4), volleyball (3), football (1)
Klahowya — VB (6), girls soccer (6), girls BB (4), FB (4), boys tennis (3), boys BB (0)
Port Townsend — boys BB (7), FB (6), girls BB (4), girls soccer (1), VB (0), boys tennis (0)
Chimacum — boys BB (7), VB (3), FB (1), girls soccer (1), girls BB (1), boys tennis (0)

Last year, in the first go-round for the four-team league, Klahowya finished with 52 wins to Coupeville’s 40, while Chimacum (23) and Port Townsend (20) brought up the rear.

The Eagles won five titles in 2014-2015, to two each for Coupeville and Chimacum and one for the RedHawks.

With five of the six league champs having repeated so far, thanks to Chimacum’s miracle finish in boys’ basketball, where they were a basket away from losing their title, only to rally for four straight wins, that would seem to indicate a possible late surge ahead for Klahowya.

The Eagles are the defending champs in baseball and boys soccer.

But I wouldn’t count out Coupeville.

The Wolves are the defending league champs in girls tennis, and should return almost their entire squad.

And, in softball, where Chimacum slid in to snatch a title a year ago, the Wolves will be reuniting the squad which stormed to an undefeated season and a trip to state at the little league level two seasons ago.

With big bopper freshmen Veronica Crownover and Sarah Wright (and new CHS coach Kevin McGranahan) once again teaming with Hope Lodell, Lauren Rose, Katrina McGranahan and Co., the Wolf softball squad could be the surprise team of the spring.

As the next three months play out, the mythical league win title is very much up for grabs.

For the moment, though, if you want to know where the power resides, look no further than Cow Town.

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