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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Sage (John Fisken photo)

   Sage Renninger scored her second goal of the season Thursday. (John Fisken photo)

“I told these girls the first day of tryouts, they were special. Still feel the same way today, even more so!”

Coupeville High School girls’ soccer coach Troy Cowan has talked his team up all year and they have responded, continuing to play scrappy, intelligent ball even with several starters out with season-ending injuries.

The Wolves capped their regular season Thursday by drilling visiting Port Townsend 3-0, garnering a bit of revenge for an earlier loss to the Redhawks.

The victory also gave CHS (6-6-1 overall, 3-3 in Olympic League play) 2nd place in the final league standings and a home playoff game. Sort of.

As the #2 team from the Olympic League, Coupeville hosts the #3 squad from the Nisqually League, Vashon Island, in a loser-out game Saturday, Nov. 1.

Win that game and the Wolves advance to the double-elimination portion of the district tourney Nov. 4-8.

But, despite earning a home playoff game, Coupeville is still being sent on the road.

The Olympic League requires all district games to be played on turf, and Cow Town boasts natural sod, baby!

So the “home game” will be held at Kingston High School, which is 45 miles away.

Efforts to move the game to Oak Harbor, which does have a turf field and sits less than 10 miles up the road, were unsuccessful. The Wildcats field will be occupied Saturday by an all-day cheer camp.

Being forced to travel a chunk to host a “home” game left Cowan a bit bemused.

“We have a new season to look forward to.  Unfortunately, the Olympic Conference has some strange ways of rewarding their higher seed playoff teams,” he said. “Not sure who gets the home field advantage for this match???

“I can say for certain that CHS doesn’t have the home field advantage.”

Still, he’s not dwelling on the matter.

“Regardless, we are in the playoffs and will be ready to play Vashon Island no matter the location,” Cowan said. “Finishing 2nd is awesome and the entire Coupeville community should be proud of our Lady Wolves and the terrific season we had.

“Not sure I remember when CHS ladies soccer finished with a .500 record across the board.”

Coupeville, which had lost 1-0 at Port Townsend Tuesday, came out firing on this night.

“Best passing and possession match of the year for us,” Cowan said. “They really moved the ball well and played a very intelligent match.

“Even with two defensive gems (Jacki Ginnings and Jenn Spark) missing due to injuries, our defense played really well,” he added. “I think the earlier match certainly provided us with a ton of information.

“They have some solid players, but I was not going to allow the Lady Wolves to let a team come into our house and take away our chance at making history!”

Seniors Erin Rosenkranz and Marisa Etzell each banged home their third goals of the season, while freshman Sage Renninger tallied her second.

Rosenkranz picked up two assists while Renninger recorded the other one.

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Micky LeVine (John Fisken photos)

   Micky LeVine, who leads Coupeville in scoring this season, looks for an opening in the defense. (John Fisken photos)

Erin

Mckenzie Meyer unleashes “The Bone Crusher.”

Ivy

Ivy Luvera sacrifices her noggin. P.S. — those are snappy shoes.

Bree

Bree Daigneault is in a hurry to get places.

Erin

Erin Rosenkranz leads the attack.

It’s simple.

Win tonight and you get a home playoff game. Lose, and you start the postseason on the road.

When Coupeville (5-6-1 overall, 2-3 in the Olympic League) and Port Townsend (3-10, 2-3) kick off at Mickey Clark Field (5 PM), it’ll be a battle for second place, better postseason seeding and bragging rights.

The Redhawks stunned the Wolves 1-0 Tuesday to force a tie, setting up a chance for Coupeville to get a bit of revenge on its home field in the regular season finale.

Klahowya (14-0, 6-0) is league champ, while Chimacum’s booters (2-12, 1-5) are done.

The #2 seed from the Olympic League will host the #3 team from the Nisqually League Nov. 1, while the loser tonight will take its #3 seed on the road to play the #2 team from the Nisqually League the same day.

The winners of those games advance to the double-elimination portion of the district tourney Nov. 4-8.

To get you ready we present some snappy pics from Tuesday’s game, courtesy John Fisken.

To see more (and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=7097&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=180&sport=0

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Kyla

  The future is now, as Kyla Briscoe (8) and fellow freshmen Lauren Rosen and Katrina McGranahan are seeing solid varsity time. (John Fisken photos)

(John Fisken photos)

  Wolf booters, fenced in, but ready to break out Thursday and claim second place in the Olympic League.

One team is in the playoffs. One will have to fight for its postseason life.

Everything will be decided Thursday. Maybe.

After absorbing incredibly narrow defeats Tuesday, both the Coupeville High School volleyball and girls’ soccer squads are facing must-win situations when they reunite with Port Townsend for their regular season finales.

Those games, coming on the heels of twin defeats on the road, will be on Whidbey (5 PM starts for both) tomorrow.

The Wolf girls’ soccer team (5-6-1 overall, 2-3 in Olympic League play) fell 1-0 to Port Townsend (3-10, 2-3), which has won back-to-back games after starting its season roughly.

With Chimacum (2-12, 1-5) losing 8-0 to Klahowya (14-1, 6-0) Tuesday, the Cowboys were eliminated from contention.

The Coupeville/Port Townsend rematch will be a battle for second place in a league where the top three make the playoffs.

While the Wolves are in, a win Thursday would be huge.

The #2 team gets a loser-out home playoff game Nov. 1 against the #3 team from the Nisqually League, while the #3 Olympic League team has to travel, facing the #2 Nisqually Valley squad.

While the booters will be playing for positioning, the Wolf spikers will be just trying to survive.

After falling 25-5, 31-33, 24-26, 25-23, 15-11 to Port Townsend, CHS (1-10, 1-4) is mired in last place, trailing Chimacum (4-9, 2-4) by a half game and the Redhawks (8-5, 2-3) by a game.

Klahowya (14-0, 6-0) has the title safely in hand, but Thursday’s rematch will decide the final two playoff spots. Or blow everything up.

A Port Townsend win would give it the #2 seed (and a home playoff match), while Chimacum would be #3 and Coupeville would be done.

But, if the Wolves can rebound and win, which is very reasonable given that they almost won Tuesday, that would create a three-way tie at 2-4.

If that happens, the three schools would have a mini-playoff to decide the #2 and #3 seeds.

The first match-up between Coupeville and Port Townsend got off to a sour start, then turned into a donnybrook.

“A tough loss tonight! They played their hearts out (with the exception of game #1) and can’t wait to take PT on again on Thursday,” CHS coach Breanne Smedley said. “We did a good job of reducing our errors and playing to our potential tonight.

“We just had a hard time holding on to some of our early leads in the fourth and fifth games, leaving us with too much catch-up to do towards the end.”

Valen Trujillo paced the Wolves with a flawless 23-for-23 performance at the service stripe, including three aces. She also went low a team-high 38 digs.

Lauren Rose doled out 37 assists, fellow freshman Katrina McGranahan collected three blocks and the big three — Hailey Hammer (15 kills, six digs), Kacie Kiel (10 kills, 25 digs) and Madeline Strasburg (eight kills, 23 digs, five aces) filled up the stat sheet.

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Aaron Curtin (John Fisken photo)

   Aaron Curtin went 3-0 Monday to capture the singles title at the inaugural 1A Olympic League tourney. (John Fisken photo)

The Wolves have arrived.

In the biggest triumph of Coupeville High School’s short run in the 1A Olympic League, the boys’ tennis squad upended heavily-favored Klahowya in the league tourney Monday in Kitsap, qualifying four players for Districts.

Singles players Aaron Curtin and Sebastian Davis went one-two (with Davis shocking the #1 seed in the semifinals) and will be joined by the duo of Connor McCormick and Loren Nelson, who rebounded from an opening loss to claim fourth place in doubles.

Districts will be held Saturday, Nov. 1 at a time and site yet to be determined.

After his team’s impressive run Monday, longtime Wolf coach Ken Stange was sky-high.

“It was a great tourney!,” he said. “We exceeded expectations in singles, and we met expectations in doubles.”

The tourney, which brought together Klahowya, which had gone 4-0 in league play, Coupeville and the combined forces of Chimacum and Port Townsend, was played with a slightly different format than normal.

Instead of playing best two sets out of three, matches were pro sets to eight, win by two.

Curtin went 3-0 on the day, nipping Davis (2-1) in an all-Coupeville finale that came down to a tiebreaker.

Davis, riding high after bouncing Klahowya’s #1 player in the semis, had a 4-1 advantage on Curtin in the tiebreaker, before the senior rebounded to rip off six straight points to notch the win.

While Stange was pleased to see Curtin, who went to state as a doubles player last year, seize the moment, he was equally impressed with the continued rise of his #2 player.

Sebastian had a coming out party of sorts,” Stange said. “Early in the season, he was playing well, but having a hard time closing the door on his opponents.

“As we hit the final third of the season, he really came alive,” he added. “He’d already had consistency and a bit of power, but he added some tenacity to the mix — a bit of the killer instinct.”

Taking down the tourney’s top seed, who beat Curtin during regular season play, was an unexpected bonus.

Sebastian made two very big statements today,” Stange said. “He established himself as a co-#1 singles player.

“He also let it be known that the singles court is all his next season. He is the early pick as top player in the league,” he added. “With more off-season practice, he’ll be challenging the private schoolers at districts, looking to advance to May play.”

Not that the Wolf junior can’t make that jump right now.

“Both Sebastian and Aaron stand a good shot to advance to state, if they bring their respective A games this weekend,” Stange said.

Coupeville’s third singles player, senior Kyle Bodamer, went 1-2, just missing a spot in the semifinals opposite Curtin.

McCormick and Loren Nelson fell in their opening match, then stormed back to win two in a row and advance.

Freshmen Joey Lippo and William Nelson knocked off Chimacum’s #1 team before losing to the eventual champs.

They were eliminated along with Bodamer and the team of Joseph Wedekind and John McClarin, who lost both of their matches.

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Monica

  Monica Vidoni, seen here in an earlier match, was one of five Wolves honored on Senior Night Monday. (John Fisken photos)

trio

  Madeline Strasburg (20), Kacie Kiel (16) and Hailey Hammer (26) brought the same intensity to the Klahowya match that they have displayed all season.

They made the titans tremble a bit.

Sparked by a string of big spikes from their heavy hitters, who were celebrating Senior Night, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad pushed the #9 team in 1A, unbeaten Klahowya, hard Monday night.

And while the Wolves couldn’t quite pull off what would have been a huge upset, falling 25-18, 25-23, 26-24, they walked away heads high.

Part of that is the knowledge that if it plays at this level over its final two matches — at Port Townsend Tuesday and then back home for a rematch with the Redhawks two days later — Coupeville can, and should, grab a playoff berth.

While CHS is 1-9 overall, 1-3 in the Olympic League, they still have a chance to finish anywhere from second to fourth in the four-team league. The top three teams net a ride to the postseason.

Klahowya (13-0, 5-0) already punched its ticket long ago, while Chimacum (4-7, 2-2) and Port Townsend (6-5, 0-3) were set to play late Monday night.

After the Fab Five (seniors Madeline Strasburg, Monica Vidoni, Kacie Kiel, Hailey Hammer and the injured but always photogenic McKayla Bailey) were honored in pre-match festivities, the Wolves came out with little fear.

Led by the forever-young Kiel, who could still pass as a freshman, Coupeville actually out-hit the Eagles most of the night.

Kiel, the eternally laid-back Hammer and Strasburg, who was so supercharged she was vibrating in place at times, laid down spine-cracking shots.

When they stayed in, the Wolves pushed Klahowya back on its heels.

Ultimately however, too many spikes sailed long in the first set, and a 9-8 deficit turned into a 23-15 hole in the blink of an eye.

Strasburg made one final bid to spark a rally, unleashing a wicked shot that exploded at the feet of an Eagle and skidded off, slammed into the back wall of the gym and shot back onto the court with almost as much force as when it left.

Maddie Big Time then punctuated the winner with a bellow that rivaled anything to ever exit Tarzan’s mouth.

Coupeville kept at it, with a chance to pull out a win in both of the next sets.

McKenzie Bailey joined in on the power display, freshman Lauren Rose ran into the second row of the seats in a bid to save a runaway ball and Valen Trujillo added floor burns #14,314-#14,401 while refusing to let any ball get past her without a diving effort.

The third set also saw the varsity debut of freshman Katrina McGranahan, who immediately teamed with Bailey to form a sometimes-potent duo at the net.

The match ended on a briefly sour note, as a 24-24 tie in the third set was broken when Coupeville was penalized for a rotation error.

On match point, three Wolves went to the floor in an effort to save the winning point, with Kiel whacking her face a bit.

To their credit, the Klahowya players applauded when the scrappy Wolf senior bounced up and was able to exit the floor under her own power.

And, unlike some other juggernauts in previous years (cough, ATM and King’s, cough) the Eagles were gracious winners .

Strasburg (seven kills, five digs), Kiel (five kills, 12 digs) and Hammer (four kills) paced the heavy hitters while Rose collected 18 assists. Trujillo had a team-high 16 digs and was credited with 11 perfect passes.

 

Barely a match: Despite facing a JV squad that managed to incorporate a big-time hitter who had already played two sets in the varsity match, the Wolves were rallying when time ran out on them. Literally.

Coupeville had cut an eight-point deficit back to four at 22-18 in the first set when the clock hit 7 PM and Klahowya had to hightail it to the ferry.

With the threat of a quick exit hanging over the event, a decision was made to bump up the varsity into the opening slot. After the three sets took up substantial time, the JV squads did a breakneck warmup and hurtled into action.

Other than a beautiful, slicing serve for a winner off the fingertips of Allison Wenzel, the early going was a bit rough for Coupeville.

Klahowya, taking advantage of a setter and a big hitter who were playing at a level beneath their talents, jumped out to to a quick 7-2 lead, then stretched it to 20-12.

The Wolves rallied, however, with McGranahan slamming a spike off the back line for a winner.

Sparked by her crowd-pleaser, CHS got big winners from Hope Lodell and Payton Aparicio.

Lodell cranked a shot from her back-court that sailed over multiple heads and dropped in, peeling the paint off the back line, while Aparicio went high to execute a gorgeous tip that plopped squarely between two Klahowya defenders who teamed up to whiff on the return.

Then the Eagles ran away with their “win.” Sorry, not buyin’ it.

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