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Posts Tagged ‘Abraham Leyva’

Aram Leyva (Pat Kelley photo)

  Aram Leyva (middle), destroying the competition on the pitch. (Pat Kelley photo)

Leyva (John Fisken photo)

One of the few moments when Leyva isn’t moving. (John Fisken photo)

The records may seem unbreakable, but not so fast.

As he graduated this spring, soccer sensation Abraham Leyva left Coupeville High School with season (20) and career (45) goal-scoring records.

What he achieved in three years on the pitch was far beyond what any other Wolf booter had accomplished.

But wait, because there’s a new gunslinger in town and he wants all the records.

Younger brother Aram Leyva, who will be a freshman at CHS in the fall, has been tearing up fields at every level he’s played, and he plans to make a run for family honor.

“I want to beat my brother’s score in soccer, in less time,” he said with a smile.

Leyva, who will also be playing basketball for the Wolves, is a hard-charging, super-friendly young man who doesn’t know, or at least acknowledge, the meaning of “down time.”

“I love being active,” he said. “I usually hate when I do nothing. I get bored.”

While he’s participated in a number of sports — Leyva was a strong runner for the CMS track squad this spring — the “beautiful game” has always drawn the most interest from him.

“With soccer I grew up learning at a young age and I just loved it,” he said. “I have plenty of endurance, which keeps me going in a game.”

He credits his father for working with him on soccer (“My dad has had a giant impact on me by supporting and telling me how to improve”), and one of his CMS hoops coaches for helping him improve on the hard-court.

“Coach Ryan King, cause this year was my first and he made it a great year for me.”

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Zane Bundy (John Fisken photos)

  Zane Bundy (7), celebrating a goal with Abraham Leyva, was named Most Inspirational when CHS soccer held its banquet Thursday. (John Fisken photos)

Will "The Thrill" Nelson, showing off the deft touch that led to him setting a single-season assist record.

   Will “The Thrill” Nelson, showing off the deft touch that led to him setting a single-season assist record.

They rewrote the record books and were rewarded for it.

Coupeville High School booters Abraham Leyva and William Nelson set new program records for goals and assists, respectively, this season, so it was appropriate the duo were tabbed as First-Team All-League players by 1A Olympic League coaches.

Leyva, a senior, notched 20 goals in his final go-around on the CHS pitch, giving him 45 for his career.

He also departs with the school’s career assist record, having compiled 26 over three seasons.

While both of Leyva’s goal records are likely unassailable, Nelson is on his way to taking away the assist mark.

He set a single-season record as a sophomore with 14 set-ups this year.

The duo received their All-League honors at a banquet Thursday night, where Wolf coaches Kyle Nelson and Gary Manker handed out a nice assortment of awards.

Leyva copped Player of the Year honors for the varsity, while Zane Bundy (Most Inspirational), Laurence Boado (Most Improved) and Ethan Spark (Rookie of the Year) also saw time in the spotlight.

Andre Avila was front and center for the JV, capturing Player of the Year and Most Inspirational.

Jaschon Baumann rounded out the awards, taking home Most Improved for the JV squad.

Varsity letter winners:

Andre Avila
Laurence Boado
Zane Bundy
Jose Castro
Taylor Chiles
Garrett Compton
Sebastian Davis
Tanner Kircher
Abraham Leyva
Uriel Liquidano
Connor McCormick
Cody Menges
Zack Nall
Loren Nelson
William Nelson
Santiago Ortiz
Ethan Spark

Bundy and Kircher were four-year varsity players, while Compton, McCormick, Menges, Nelson and Beauman Davis all played four years in the Wolf soccer program.

JV participation awards:

Jaschon Baumann
Beauman Davis
Nick Dion
Brandon Jansen
Jonathon Johnson
Uriah Kastner
Ethan Kedrowski
Teo Keilwitz
JT Quinn
Brian Roberts
Mathew Shreffner

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Emily Burchfield is joined by Zane Bundy (top right, the '91 CHS baseball squad and Abraham Leyva.

   Hall o’ Fame inductee Emily Burchfield is joined by Zane Bundy (top right), the ’91 CHS baseball squad and Abraham Leyva.

Perseverance. Class. Skill.

Pick your adjective and they all describe the athletes who make up the 47th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Possibly the two most dynamic booters in school history, a two-sport star who overcame a horrifying injury to excel and one of the best teams in Wolf lore, it’s as solid a bunch as they come.

With that, we welcome Emily Burchfield, Zane Bundy, Abraham Leyva and the 1991 Coupeville High School baseball squad to these hallowed digital walls.

After this, you’ll find them up at the top of the blog, living under the Legends tab with their brethren.

Our first inductee, the world-traveling, brilliant Burchfield, was a star on the soccer pitch and tennis court during her time at CHS.

She was also a superb triathlon competitor, and it was at one of those events where she was hit by a speeding car, shattering her back.

Burchfield amazed the doctors and all around her by not only fighting back in record time, but healing to the extent she was able to return to the hard-court and win a district singles title.

One of the most purely talented players to rep the red and black, Emily was also one of the strongest-willed, and her skills, on and off the athletic stage, are undeniable.

These days the former Science Olympiad world-beater is a college grad who is boppin’ around the globe, but her legend still looms large in the little town she sprang from.

Our next two inductees are about to go out and make their mark on the outside world, and it’s appropriate they go into the Hall together.

Bundy and Leyva, who will graduate in June, grew up on the soccer pitch, uniting to form the most potent scoring duo in CHS boys’ soccer history.

In his three years as a Wolf, Leyva set the regular season (20) and career (45) goal-scoring records, with a ton of those set up by his running mate.

Bundy, who had to battle back through injury, was equally explosive when he had the ball on his foot, and that carried over to the football field.

Playing for the first time as a senior, the little kid who once ran wild in the aisles at Videoville, led the Wolf gridiron squad in scoring this past fall.

He was one of the top field goal booters in the state, and his booming drives drew the eyes of college coaches.

In an unexpected detour, it’s football, not soccer, which Bundy will play at the next level, having signed with Santa Barbara City College.

Rounding out today’s class is the 1991 Wolf baseball squad, a team which won a league title, breaking a decade-long dry spell for the program.

Little did they know at the time it would then be 25 more years before Coupeville would again hoist a league title banner for baseball, a feat finally accomplished by the 2016 edition.

The ’91 squad, which featured several players who were key parts of the ’90 Wolf football squad which went undefeated, went on a rampage both with the bats and the arms.

Staff ace Brad Haslam tossed a no-hitter and recorded double digits in strike outs in two-thirds of his starts, while the Wolves rolled up a 145-79 advantage in runs scored over 19 games.

Four different CHS big boppers (Haslam, Frank Marti, Jason McFadyen and Matt Cross) hit legitimate home runs, as Coupeville featured a lineup that thrived on extra-base hits.

Carving up the Northwest B League to a 9-1 tune, the Wolves went 13-6, rolling along until hitting an unexpected bump in their opening playoff game.

One out away from a win over Winlock, Coupeville couldn’t put the game away, surrendering a lead in the seventh before eventually falling 16-13 in 10 innings.

While the loss put a sour taste in a lot of mouths at the time, the achievements of that Wolf team far overshadow a bad inning or two 25 years down the road.

One of the most dominant teams in school history, in any sport, the ’91 hardball squad officially comes home to reside where they have always belonged — the Hall o’ Fame.

Inducted as a team:

Mike Rice (coach)
Cory Smith
(manager)
Eric Anderson
Shawn Ankney
Brian Barr
Troy Blouin
Todd Brown
Chris Cox
Jon Crimmins
Matt Cross
Keith Currier
Chris Frey
Brad Haslam
Frank Marti
Jason McFadyen
Jason McManigle
Jeremiah Prater
Jay Renaux
Ryan Samplawski
John Turner
Aaron Williams
Scott Wofford
Brian Wood
Scott Zustiak

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Cody Menges (14) is one of seven WOlves to have scored this season. (John Fisken photos)

   Cody Menges (14) is one of eight Wolves to have scored this season. (John Fisken photos)

Ethan Spark (15)

   Ethan Spark (15) jumps into Tanner Kircher’s arms as Garrett Compton (right) joins them in a post-goal celebration.

The offense is clickin’.

The season is not over for the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad, but they have already amassed their most successful goal-scoring campaign in recent memory.

And it’s not even close.

With at least two more games on the schedule — the regular season finale at Klahowya Tuesday and a playoff game Thursday in Oak Harbor — the Wolves have tallied 46 goals this season.

They have also scored in every one of their 13 games this season, unheard of consistency for a program which had been shutout at least five times a season for five years running.

At the center of the attack has been senior Abraham Leyva, who broke his own school single-season scoring record.

After tallying 25 goals combined over his first two seasons at CHS (11 as a sophomore and 14 as a junior) Leyva has 20 this year, having scored in all but one game.

Here’s a look at how this year’s Wolves compare to the last five teams to suit up:

2016 — 46 goals in 13 games, zero shutouts (5-7-1 record)
2015 — 35 goals in 14 games, six shutouts (3-11-0)
2014 — 22 goals in 17 games, five shutouts (5-10-2)
2013 — 15 goals in 17 games, nine shutouts (3-14-0)
2012 — 27 goals in 18 games, six shutouts (10-8-0)
2011 — 30 goals in 17 games, seven shutouts (6-11-0)

Both the 2011 and 2012 teams won playoff games, the last times the CHS boys’ soccer squad triumphed in the postseason.

The ’11 team beat Meridian 3-0, then was nipped 2-1 by Seattle Christian, while the ’12 booters bopped Meridian 1-0 and were eliminated 1-0 by Cedar Park Christian (Bothell).

And a look at this year’s scoring chart:

Abraham Leyva — 20
Ethan Spark — 8
Zane Bundy — 5
William Nelson — 5
Zack Nall — 3
Andre Avila — 2
Sebastian Davis — 2
Cody Menges — 1

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Beauman Davis (John Fisken photos)

  Wolf senior Beauman Davis (13) dances a violent ballet with his foe. (John Fisken photos)

Loren Nelson

Using his body to shield the ball, Loren Nelson sets up the play.

Ethan Spark

Unleashing the Ethan Spark Experience.

JT Quinn

   Head alertly up, JT Quinn (15) scans the field, looking for his best chance to slice and dice the Eagles.

Cody Menges

That moment when Cody Menges suddenly got a headache.

Teo Keilwitz

Teo Keilwitz loses his man and sprints to daylight.

Nick Dion

Nick Dion has an incoming present for you.

Abraham Leyva

Abraham Leyva, en route to scoring in his 11th straight game this season.

The action was fast and furious, and that was just on the sideline.

As Coupeville clashed with Klahowya on the soccer pitch Tuesday, wanderin’ photo man John Fisken was busy firing away, capturing a smorgasbord of pics for your perusal.

The eight glossy photos above are courtesy him.

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

Varsity — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11353&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

JV — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11355&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=175&sport=0

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