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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Arisbeth Montiel notched her third goal of the season Tuesday night. (John Fisken photos)

  Arisbeth Montiel notched her third goal of the season Tuesday night. (John Fisken photos)

Fear Jenn Spark's Million Dollar Leg!

Fear Jenn Spark’s Million Dollar Leg!

They tempted fate, then made their own.

After staking host Port Townsend to a two-goal lead in the first half Tuesday, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad roared back to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat.

Forcing overtime after tying things up 2-2, the Wolves held strong through extra time, then claimed the conference win with a 3-1 edge in a penalty kick shootout.

The victory was huge, as it propelled Coupeville into sole possession of second place in the 1A Olympic League.

The Wolves (2-1 in league play, 4-5-3 overall) sit a game back of defending 1A state champ Klahowya (3-0, 9-3-1) with three to play.

Chimacum (1-2, 3-10), who Coupeville hosts Thursday (4 PM) and Port Townsend (0-3, 0-9-2) round out the standings.

Being in second is important, as the current setup for districts shows only the top two teams from the Olympic League being guaranteed a postseason berth.

Saving their best for late, the Wolves rallied with a strong second-half performance Tuesday.

Arisbeth Montiel notched her third goal of the season, off of an assist from Mia Littlejohn (her seventh) to close the gap to 2-1, then CHS captain Jenn Spark got explosive.

The senior with the million dollar leg uncorked a direct kick from the left sideline, curling it up and over the RedHawk goalie in a fashion that would have made David Beckham scream with delight.

As the ball caught the perfect bend and smacked into the back of the net — it was still picking up speed as it slammed home — Spark and her Wolf teammates went bonkers for a bit.

They quickly calmed down and clamped down on defense, holding Port Townsend scoreless through the second half and overtime play.

With one team needing to emerge — ties are no longer an option at this point of the season — the two squads faced off in a shootout, and one team was clearly better.

Spark, Littlejohn and Lauren Bayne all netted successful shots, while Wolf goalie Lauren Grove shut the door on any potential upset with great authority.

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Tiffany Briscoe delivered 10 service aces Tuesday to spark Coupeville to its first win in league play. (John Fisken photo)

   Tiffany Briscoe delivered 10 service aces Tuesday to spark Coupeville to its first win in league play. (John Fisken photo)

You take W’s any way you get them.

Especially when you’re knee-deep in the battle for a playoff berth.

Getting a boost at a crucial moment, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad dug down and eked out a four-set win at Port Townsend Tuesday night.

The 25-13, 22-25, 30-28, 25-19 victory lifted the Wolves out of the 1A Olympic League cellar, where they had been tied with the Redhawks.

Now 1-2 in league play, 3-8 overall, Coupeville sits in third place, a game behind Chimacum (2-1, 7-6), which lost to Klahowya (3-0, 6-6) in a first-place showdown.

The top three teams in the Olympic League go to the postseason, and all three will host their opening playoff match, so the first goal is to stay ahead of Port Townsend (0-3, 1-8).

Coupeville can make a move on second-place Thursday, when it hosts Chimacum.

After that is a road trip to Klahowya Oct. 26 and the regular-season finale at home Oct. 29 vs. Port Townsend.

Following the oldest rule in the sports cliche book — play them one game at a time — the Wolves took care of business Tuesday.

Which is all that matters.

“It wasn’t pretty … but a win’s a win right?!,” said CHS coach Breanne Smedley. “We were able to finish, which was great.

“We put ourselves in unnecessary situations through our hitting and serving errors,” she added. “However, their ability to fight and close out the game was something that we will build on for Chimacum.”

Coupeville got a big boost from its service game, with Tiffany Briscoe sparking things with ten service aces.

Sydney Autio and Payton Aparicio added nine aces apiece, while Valen Trujillo delivered six and Katrina McGranahan popped for five.

Autio doled out 17 assists, with a variety of Wolves rising to the occasion to put the ball down, hard.

McGranahan led the assault on the stat sheet with nine kills, while McKenzie Bailey, Ally Roberts and Kyla Briscoe each had four.

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Kirsten Pelroy had the best slide of the afternoon, blowing up an Eagle and taking away the ball. (John Fisken photo)

   Kirsten Pelroy had the best slide of the afternoon, blowing up an Eagle and taking away the ball. (John Fisken photo)

The gap has narrowed.

Last year, as it romped to a 21-2 record en route to a 1A state title, the Klahowya High School girls’ soccer team drilled most of its opponents.

And, while they held up considerably better than Olympic League companions Port Townsend and Chimacum, Coupeville was firmly among the victims, falling 5-0 and 4-0.

Jump ahead a year, and, even though the Wolves lost a chunk of seniors and are a very young team, CHS held its own Saturday against the defending champs.

While it fell 2-0 on its home turf, Coupeville (3-5-3 overall, 1-1 in league play) was never out of the match, and Klahowya (8-3-1, 2-0) was nowhere near as dominating as before.

A shot goes in here, a loose ball takes a slightly different bounce, and the game goes in a different direction.

Seriously.

Klahowya’s first score was more luck and being in the right place than anything else.

The Eagles blasted a ball at Wolf goalie Lauren Grove, who knocked it down but couldn’t quite corral it.

As the ball popped off her arm, it took a perfect Klahowya bounce, threading two Wolves to land right on the foot of an enterprising Emily Peters, who banked it over the outstretched fingers of a now out-of-place Grove.

After that, the Coupeville junior, a first-year player, was on lock-down the rest of the first half, going to her knees and climbing a stairway to heaven depending on the situation, while coming away with a variety of saves.

The Wolves were aggressive — Kirsten Pelroy used a sliding tackle to upend an Eagle in the open field, then Coupeville almost got the goal back when May Rose tried to replicate Peters play.

Unfortunately, this time the rebound slid just a bit too far to the side, letting Klahowya escape unscathed.

The Eagles widened the lead early in the second half, when Peters popped a shot over diving Wolf defender Jenn Spark. Again, move a leg an inch or two, and the goal is a no go.

Desperate to get on the board, Coupeville pushed the attack in the second half, with leading scorers Kalia and Mia Littlejohn leading the charge.

The siblings got several looks at the net, but a pesky Eagle defense stayed strong and blunted their best efforts.

Afterwards, if you didn’t look at the scoreboard and just tried to read the mood of the upbeat Wolf team, you might have thought they had won.

The overwhelming feeling? Mark Oct. 26 on your calendar.

That’s the second meeting of the two squads, this time at Klahowya.

And it is, without a doubt, a game the Wolves think they can win, because the gap has really, truly narrowed.

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The look on former Wolf lineman OScar Liquidano's face just about sums it all up. (John Fisken photo)

   The look on former Wolf lineman Oscar Liquidano’s face just about sums it all up. (John Fisken photo)

At the end Friday night, there was a burst of raw emotion, of joy finally spilling out and sweeping over football players who had endured much.

That euphoria, that relief, however, did not emanate from Coupeville High School’s side of the field.

For the Wolves, this will go down as one of the most gut-wrenching losses in school history, in any sport.

Nothing, no pretty words, no rah-rah statements, will change that, and, if lessons are learned and pay off down the road, that still isn’t going to totally wipe away the sting.

You do not lose 14-9 when you surrender a touchdown with 1.6 seconds to go, on your home field, at Homecoming, to a school that entered the game with an 18-game losing streak, and walk away un-scarred.

But, before we go any further, we need to step back a moment and give Chimacum credit. The Cowboys seized the moment that was given them, and they fully deserve to enjoy erasing two years of futility.

So now, Coupeville (1-6) and Chimacum (1-6) sit with identical 1-4 records in 1A Olympic League play, having split the two games they played.

Port Townsend (5-0, 7-0) and Klahowya (3-2, 4-3) are guaranteed the league’s first two playoff spots. The RedHawks shredded the Eagles 43-6 Friday, and have now outscored their opponents 342-12.

With one league game left, the third and final playoff spot is still Coupeville’s to claim.

While Chimacum will be giddy for a day or two after Friday’s win, they should be easily stomped by Port Townsend next Friday.

So, if Coupeville can go on the road and knock off Klahowya, the postseason berth is theirs.

If both the Cowboys and Wolves lose and finish 1-5, then we would go to a tiebreaker, and what that is, I have no clue.

Not that it really matters at the moment.

Right now, what will linger for some time is that Chimacum overcame a 9-0 deficit in the fourth quarter Friday, driving 80 yards in the final three minutes to snatch victory from the jaws of almost certain defeat.

The Cowboys did so, somehow, despite throwing five incomplete passes on the drive — one of which was almost picked off — and twice being stung by Wolf junior Jacob Martin hauling down runners for losses in the backfield.

The second tackle, coming with 25 seconds on the clock, set up a 4th-and-12 from the 17-yard line.

Then Chimacum pulled off a miracle. Somehow.

A 12-yard completion (or a 10-11 yard completion and a really nice spot from the ref) gave them a first and goal, and then the Cowboys lobbed the ball into a scrum and came away with a five-yard touchdown pass.

In the mob of players, it was virtually impossible to tell who caught the ball and it took forever for any of the refs to throw their hands up in the air.

When they did, signalling a Cowboy score, the Chimacum sidelines unleashed an earthquake, while the (for once) intensely-noisy Coupeville fans collapsed, a great sigh of disbelief trembling off of every lower lip.

The two-point conversion completed the swing from 9-6 Coupeville lead to 14-9 deficit, and even though the Wolves got the ball back for one final Hail Mary, it fell well short of the end zone.

Only as the final buzzer sounded did the loss seem halfway real, because, up until then, there seemed no way it was going that direction.

Coupeville dominated the game everywhere but on the scoreboard, mixing crisp passing from freshman Gabe Eck with power running from Wiley Hesselgrave.

Eck piled up 164 yards through the air, spreading the love out among five receivers.

Hunter Smith racked up 89 of those yards, including 22 on a second quarter touchdown hookup with his QB that staked the Wolves to the full 9-0 lead.

Even though they were unable to tack on the extra point, due to a bad snap, the score added to a 24-yard field goal kicked earlier in the quarter by Zane Bundy.

When the Wolves were on defense, they were even more effective, and it all started with Smith.

The sophomore sensation picked off not one, not two, but three Chimacum passes, running his season total to seven picks.

That breaks the mark of six in a season currently sitting on the school record board under the name of Josh Bayne.

Lathom Kelley also recovered a fumble forced by Wiley Hesselgrave, then shot through the line later to block the extra point after Chimacum’s first touchdown.

Hesselgrave added seven tackles and a sack, while Martin (five tackles) and freshmen Chris Battaglia (eight tackles) and Ty Eck (five tackles) flew all around the field.

But, while Coupeville came dangerously close to blowing the game open on both sides of the ball, it didn’t.

The Wolves turned the ball over on downs three times and used punter Clay Reilly frequently, including on both of their fourth-quarter drives.

On its final time with the ball, Coupeville went from its own 26-yard-line down to Chimacum’s 21, riding Gabe Eck’s legs (a 33-yard scramble) and arm (a 22-yard pass to Ryan Griggs.)

Clinging to the three-point lead, and close enough for Bundy to kick another field goal, Coupeville then hit an unexpected wall.

A sack, an incomplete pass and a penalty turned a 1st-and-10 at the 21 into a 4th-and-22 at the 33, while also turning a potential field goal try into a punt.

The ball went back to Chimacum, and then, well, let’s not talk about the final three minutes any more.

Tomorrow is another day.

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Mia Littlejohn hammered home her fifth goal of the season Thursday to key a 2-1 win. (John Fisken photo)

   Mia Littlejohn hammered home her fifth goal of the season Thursday to key a 2-1 win. (John Fisken photo)

Let’s get ready to rumble.

Setting up a Saturday showdown for first place in the 1A Olympic League standings, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad took care of business Thursday night.

Shrugging off a limited warm-up, the Wolves eventually took control and bounced host Chimacum 2-1 to capture their conference opener.

Now 1-0 in league play (3-4-3 overall) Coupeville will welcome defending 1A state champion Klahowya (1-0, 7-3-1) to town in two days.

The game, set for the day of the Homecoming dance, kicks off at 11 AM.

While the Eagles roared to a title last fall, the core of that team, including transcendent stars McKenzie Cook and Izzy Severns, departed, while the young Wolves are just starting to really get rolling.

Facing off with the Cowboys, Coupeville relied on their high-scoring sister combo to ice the deal.

Freshman Kalia Littlejohn nailed her team-high eighth goal, while sophomore Mia Littlejohn tallied her fifth.

Lil’ sis opened things with a bang.

Kalia was back at it with a killer shot that left the Cowboy goalie grabbing air and seeing nothing but the bad, bad freshman trotting back to the mid-line stripe after outing her team in the hurt locker!!!,” said CHS coach Troy Cowan.

Then, it was big sister’s time, and she responded in style.

“Not to be outdone, Mia did a little corner shopping when she put in a goal from waaaaaaayyyyy out that found the corner net,” Cowan said.

No one is quite sure how Chimacum (0-1, 2-9) scored, especially Cowan.

“There is NO way that goal even went close to going in,” he said. “Can’t tell you anything about it because I never saw it happen. You will have to ask the ref…”

Still, regardless of the score, Cowan came away fairly pleased with the result.

“Girls played fairly well and did their best, but we could have done much better,” he said. “I was proud of them and was happy for this young team and that they started their conference season off with a victory!!”

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