Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Abraham Leyva’

Ethan Spark, one of five Wolves to score this season, nailed his goal from almost midfield. (John Fisken photos)

   Ethan Spark, one of five Wolves to score this season, nailed his goal from almost midfield. (John Fisken photos)

Abraham Leyva, seen here in an earlier game, netted a hat trick Monday, using his head to score all three goals. (John Fisken photo)

Abraham Leyva (in white) has scored in all six CHS games this season.

Every time Abraham Leyva steps on the soccer pitch, he has a pretty good idea where the net is sitting.

The Coupeville High School senior is the leading scorer in Wolf boys’ soccer history and he’s making a run at breaking his own single-season mark.

Through six games this season, Leyva has tallied eight goals — he hit one in each of the first five games, then went for a hat-trick Monday against Forks.

With eight regular season games left (and then hopefully a decent playoff run), he’s already more than halfway to the 14 goals he scored as a junior.

Toss in 11 as a sophomore and Leyva has scored 33 times in a little under 2.5 seasons in the red and black.

I was going to compare how his total in 2016 matched up with other booters in the state, but had little luck tracking down other numbers.

The Seattle Times and MaxPreps are a jumble right now (the consistency of girls soccer teams reporting their stats in the fall apparently didn’t carry over to the spring).

Best I could find was Nick Iregui of Charles Wright Academy, who is listed with nine goals, and Reyes Garcia of Hazen, who supposedly has eight.

But both of their stats are just as jumbled as everyone else, so who really knows?

My list of CHS varsity goal scorers, however, I can vouch for:

Abraham Leyva — 8
William Nelson –2
Zane Bundy — 1
Sebastian Davis — 1
Ethan Spark — 1

Read Full Post »

Cody Menges (John Fisken photos)

Wolf defender Cody Menges gets his head in the game. (John Fisken photos)

Tanner Kircher

Tanner Kircher controls the flow of the game.

Abraham Leyva has had a lot of great days for the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad.

But Monday he did something that was new even for him.

Raining down three goals on visiting Forks, Leyva notched a hat trick using only his head, propelling the Wolves to their first win of the season.

The 3-0 shutout of the Spartans, in which CHS goalie Connor McCormick rarely had to even move, lifts Coupeville to 1-4-1 on the season.

Leyva, who now has eight goals in six games — and has scored in every contest this season — lifted his prep career total to 33 goals (he had 11 as a sophomore and 14 as a junior).

His first score came just four minutes into the game, as the Wolf senior broke free in the middle of a scrum and used his noggin to bounce the ball into the back of the net.

After that Leyva tallied another in the game’s 13th minute and topped things off with a final score three minutes into the second half, not using his legs either time.

Coupeville coach Kyle Nelson, always understated and impeccably dressed, just smiled and shook his head softly when talking about the performance.

“That was pretty special there,” he said with a chuckle. “A hat trick on the head is a rare occurrence.”

With the Wolves thoroughly controlling the flow of activity, McCormick was rarely called on to exert himself in the net, only moving (slightly) a few times to pick up a stray ball or two.

His defenders, led by rampaging force-of-nature Tanner Kircher and rock-solid Cody Menges, Uriel Liquidano and Garrett Compton, were lights out all afternoon.

And when Leyva wasn’t scoring, Coupeville came close to turning the game into a blowout, as Sebastian Davis and Zane Bundy both had great looks at the net, only to miss by the slimmest of margins.

JV pulls out win:

The second game was a donnybrook, as both teams took their best shots at each other and the game came down to a truly last-second shot clanging off the goal stand.

The Wolves struck first, with JT Quinn slipping in a runner in the game’s 20th minute.

Forks answered with their own score right before the half, then things got interesting in the second half.

Zack Nall, sliding down from the varsity squad to give the Wolf JV enough bodies, banged home a go-ahead goal with 17 minutes to play.

The Spartans retied things up with just four and a half to play, but stone-cold-killer Nall dropped another shot into the net in the game’s final minute.

Desperate for one last tie, Forks came hot and heavy at Wolf goalie Jose Marcos, who was patrolling the net in the second half after Brian Roberts turned in a strong first half.

With the stadium clock stopped and all eyes on the ref and his magic watch, the Spartans ripped a liner that came up two inches to the wrong side.

As the clang from ball hitting steel was still ringing through the air, the ref let loose with his whistle, ending play and sending the Wolves into a celebration that was part relief, part joy.

Read Full Post »

Garrett Compton

   Garrett Compton (10), seen here in an earlier game, made a sensational rolling save on a near-goal Wednesday. (John Fisken photo)

The streak lives on.

Coupeville High School senior Abraham Leyva beat the clock by less than 30 seconds Wednesday, flipping in a goal to cap his team’s boys’ soccer game against visiting Bellevue Christian.

But, while it was the fifth straight game that Leyva had scored in this season, it was also the fifth straight time he and his teammates exited the field without a win.

Falling 7-4 in a high-powered shoot-out with the Vikings, the Wolves slid to 0-4-1 in non-conference play.

Coupeville, playing without starting goaltender Connor McCormick (serving a one-game suspension for a red card issued for a hand ball the day before), fell behind early and could never catch back up.

Bellevue knocked in a goal 80 seconds into the game, then tacked on a pair more in the game’s 25th and 27th minute.

Both the second and third scores were fairly lucky ones, with balls taking a pro-Bellevue bounce during heated scrums in front of the net.

Despite the early 3-0 deficit, Wolf goalie Jose Marcos played well, making a series of saves, and got a little help from one of his teammates on a crucial play.

Flying into action from the side, Garrett Compton tumbled head-over-rear in front of the net, snagging a wayward ball with his knees as he did so and preventing the ball from bouncing past Marcos, who was down on the ground after blocking a previous shot.

The Wolves got on the board in the game’s 29th minute when Ethan Spark unloaded a deep, booming shot from almost midfield that took off skyward, then suddenly snapped and dropped over the Bellevue goalie’s head at the last second.

Very reminiscent of a lot of the goals scored by his older sister, CHS senior Jenn Spark, during her run on the pitch, it was his first goal of the season.

After giving up two quick scores to start the second half, Coupeville fought back with three second-half goals to keep things interesting.

William Nelson, trailing the play, banged home his second score of the year, before Sebastian Davis hit a shot that caught the very edge of the net for his first goal of 2016.

Leyva then wrapped things up, pinning the BC goalie on one side of the net, before flipping the ball over his outstretched arm for the 30th goal of his prep career.

JV nipped: Andre Avila knocked in a first-half goal to stake Coupeville to an early lead, but Bellevue slipped in two late scores to escape with a 2-1 win.

Read Full Post »

Cody Menges

   Cody Menges, seen here in an earlier game, kept Coupeville alive in a penalty kick shootout Tuesday with a brilliant, sudden-death shot. (John Fisken photo)

One play will echo for a long time.

A referee’s interpretation on a tough call late in a tie game Tuesday put the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad down a player, cost them their goalie’s services and will deny that same player a chance to suit up Wednesday.

But it ultimately didn’t cost them a win.

Knotted 1-1 with visiting Vashon Island, the Wolves were scrambling back on defense with six minutes to play when the game, and a portion of their season, took a wild plunge off the side of a cliff.

Coupeville netminder Connor McCormick, who was outside the goal box, was whistled for a hand ball as he tried to get back into position.

The ref ruled it was worthy of a red card, which carries an automatic ejection and a one-game suspension, because he felt the play likely denied Vashon an “obvious opportunity to score.”

The Wolves were allowed to replace McCormick in goal with Jose Marcos, but had to pull another player off the field as well and play 10-on-11 the remainder of the way.

And they did pretty well, battling through 16 more minutes of scoreless play (six in regulation, 10 in overtime) before falling 6-5 in a penalty kick shootout.

It won’t count as a loss, however, but a tie, as Olympic League schools only count shootout wins or losses in conference games, and Vashon is a non-conference foe.

That leaves Coupeville at 0-3-1 on the season.

The Wolves return to action immediately, hosting Bellevue Christian (1-3) Wednesday, but will do so without McCormick.

The senior goalie was the star for most of the game Tuesday, holding down the net with authority and blunting several charges by the Pirates.

After the two teams battled to a stalemate through the first 40 minutes, Coupeville broke through quickly in the second half.

Abraham Leyva took a ball off of the foot of Zane Bundy and smacked a shot into the right corner of the net for his fourth goal in as many games.

Coming just two minutes into the half, it gave the Wolves breathing room and they held on until Vashon got lucky, sliding a partially-deflected shot just under McCormick’s glove at the 19:20 mark.

From that point on, the two teams went toe-to-toe (and often elbow to head, as things got chippy at times).

Marcos held down the fort to end regulation, then Wolf defender Tanner Kircher stepped in to mind the net in OT and through the penalty kicks.

He knocked down Vashon’s second attempt, while Coupeville hit on its first four attempts (Bundy, Leyva, William Nelson and Sebastian Davis) to take a 4-3 lead into the final round of penalty kicks.

The Pirates rallied, however, notching a goal on their final kick, then getting a block on the Wolves fifth attempt.

Knotted at 4-4, the teams exchanged successful kicks, with Coupeville’s Cody Menges draining a pressure-packed sudden-death one to keep things going.

That was it for the luck of the Wolves however, as Vashon banged home their next attempt, before the Pirate goalie snuffed Loren Nelson to end the game.

Read Full Post »

Abraham Leyva (John Fisken photos)

  Abraham Leyva notched Coupeville’s first goal of the season Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

Abraham Leyva picked right back up where he left off last spring.

The Coupeville High School senior booter knocked in a goal Tuesday night at Granite Falls, the 26th of his prep career, but it wasn’t quite enough to save the Wolves.

Riding scores from Charlie Richards and Wyatt Long, the 2A Tigers edged their former Cascade Conference foes 2-1 in the season opener for both squads.

It was the first time Granite had beaten Coupeville on the soccer pitch since April 5, 2013.

The Wolves went 2-0-1 against the Tigers in their final league meetings before departing for the newly-crafted 1A Olympic League.

The two schools didn’t play last year.

Coupeville returns to action Saturday with a trip down the Island to face arch-rival South Whidbey, which lost 2-0 to Bush in its opener.

JV action starts at 11 AM, with the varsity scheduled for 1 PM.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »