Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Aidan Wilson’

Cameron Epp strikes a pose. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The day was grey, but the action was bright.

Playing under overcast skies Saturday, the Coupeville High School boys soccer team gave highly-ranked Providence Classical Christian plenty to deal with.

Cruising along the sidelines, camera at the ready, was John Fisken, who delivers the pics seen above and below.

To see everything he snapped, and possibly purchase some glossies for the in-laws, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-soccer-2020-2021/BS-2021-10-09-vs-Providence/

 

Alex Murdy rampages.

Aidan Wilson protects his net.

Grant Steller gets up close and personal.

Cael Wilson achieves inner bliss.

Miguel Puente holds his ground.

Andrew Williams heads off on a jaunt.

Aby Wood (left) and Abby Mulholland, about two seconds away from tossing the pesky paparazzi over the fence.

Read Full Post »

Cael Wilson uses his uncanny telekinesis powers to control the flight of the soccer ball. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

This time he could hold the camera steady with no issues.

After shooting through gale-force winds at the last Coupeville High School boys soccer game, wanderin’ photographer John Fisken had an easier time of things Tuesday night.

The weather was balmy, the game was a thriller, and there was Diet Coke awaiting him in the press box.

With that in mind, he delivered the pics seen above and below.

To take a gander at everything he snapped, and possibly buy some glossies for the in-laws, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-soccer-2020-2021/BS-2021-09-21-vs-Grace-Academy/

 

Andrew Williams unleashes a laser.

Xavier Murdy (16) and Preston Epp celebrate Coupeville’s first goal of the season.

“I think it’s time for a second goal, gentleman.”

“I’m on it. Put me in, coach!”

Aidan Wilson sends the ball far, far away.

Cameron Epp works on that whole telekinesis thing.

Goal #2, and win #1.

Read Full Post »

Freshman Mason Butler shared time in goal in Coupeville’s season opener. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’re not yet at full force.

The Coupeville High School boys soccer squad opened a new season Tuesday with a limited roster, yet still put up a good fight.

While the Wolves fell 4-0 at Mount Vernon Christian, second-year CHS head coach Robert Wood came away pleased with some of what he saw.

“Pretty good play considering the novice team, only two subs, and another five on the bench waiting for eligibility,” he said.

Thanks to a quirk in the schedule, Coupeville has plenty of time to get everyone on the roster ready before its next game.

The original home opener set for this Friday was cancelled when Cedar Park Christian begged off due to a lack of players.

That means the Wolves don’t play again until Sept. 17, when they host defending Northwest 2B/1B League champ Orcas Island.

After that, the games start coming much-quicker, with CHS currently sitting with a 15-game schedule.

Or, 16 if CPC reschedules.

Tuesday, Coupeville split time in net between junior Aidan Wilson, who patrolled the goal in the first half, and freshman Mason Butler, who got the call after halftime.

Both Wolf goalies surrendered a pair of scores.

Wood praised the work put in by his active players, with hard-charging senior Xavier Murdy “running himself into the ground” while covering every inch of the field.

The Wolf coach also offered “special consideration to Cameron Epp and Nick Guay” for stepping up and claiming the center back spots formerly held by now-graduated stars Owen Barenburg and Sam Wynn.

With plenty of time between games one and two, Wood is ready to get back to the practice field with his young, relatively-inexperienced team.

“(We’ve got) 999 things to work on,” he said. “Orcas is next week … time to practice and get more players.”

Read Full Post »

Sophomore Nick Guay is a key returning player for the Coupeville High School boys soccer team. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Guay is joined by freshman Cael Wilson, the first Wolf to score in a varsity game as an 8th grader.

Youth rules the day.

As the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad preps for its first full season back in the Northwest 2B/1B League, the Wolves will do so with no seniors on the roster.

Well, unless you count Mexican foreign exchange student Miguel Puentes, who is the great unknown heading into the new campaign.

Other than that, most of the experience on the Wolf roster comes in the form of players like junior Aidan Wilson, who punched in three goals during a pandemic-shortened sophomore season, and current sophomore Nick Guay.

Freshman Cael Wilson, who became the first 8th grader to score in a CHS varsity soccer game, and Guay each tallied a goal apiece last time out, providing the rest of the returning fire power.

Coupeville graduated defenders Sam Wynn and Owen Barenburg, while goal scorers Xavier Murdy (3) and Cole White (1) are currently planning to play tennis this fall.

The Wolves dipped their toes into the NWL, and playing in the fall as opposed to the spring, after moving from 1A to 2B last year.

CHS won its first game out, bouncing Providence Classical Christian, before finishing 1-5.

This time around, the Wolves have a full 16-game schedule, with all contests league affairs.

Boys soccer is a bit of a wild mish-mash in the NWL.

League mates Coupeville, La Conner, Orcas Island, Mount Vernon Christian, and Friday Harbor play, but Concrete and Darrington don’t.

So the five are joined by outsiders PCC, Lopez Island, Cedar Park Christian-Lynnwood, and Grace Academy for just this one sport, making for a solid nine-team royal rumble.

Orcas Island is the reigning champ, and longtime big baddie, while I-5 corridor schools like MVC and PCC have rosters rich in players and coaches from non-school premier programs.

“All our opponents are fantastic programs,” said CHS coach Robert Wood. “And will be a challenge for us due to youth and inexperience.”

Along with Guay, the Wilson brothers, and the tantalizing promise of a foreign exchange student arriving from a soccer-mad country, the Wolves will rely on players such as Preston Epp and Grant Steller.

Epp is a freshman, who, like Cael Wilson, is heading into his second year as a varsity player.

While Steller is making his CHS debut, he has prior experience playing for Deception FC and has been named with Aidan Wilson as a team captain.

Wood plans to work extensively on building his young players confidence and fitness, with an emphasis on “teamwork and off-ball movement.”

“We have a very young team, so success is not going to be measured in win/loss record against the I-5 corridor of year-round competitive players,” he said.

“We want to build our soccer IQ and team skills, for the long-term development of the CHS soccer program.”

Read Full Post »

Owen Barenburg played strong defense Thursday, but Coupeville fell 3-1 to Providence Classical Christian. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolf goalie Logan Martin had several strong saves in net. (Morgan White photo)

It was a gentleman’s brawl.

In the end, the more-physical team won Thursday, and, unfortunately that squad was not the one wearing the red and black of Coupeville High School.

Pushed around a bit by visiting Providence Classical Christian, the plucky Wolves put up a good fight, but ultimately fell 3-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League action.

The loss drops Coupeville to 1-2 on the pandemic-shortened season, with two games left on the schedule.

First up is Senior Night Monday, May 3, with Orcas Island coming to Whidbey, before the Wolves cap their campaign with a trip to La Conner May 5.

Still, even after a loss, there was much to be happy about.

Starting with the fact Coupeville was out there on the field playing after being hit by the double whammy of a pandemic and the program being shut down for a week-plus when it seemed there wouldn’t be enough players to field a team.

While Providence controlled the pace of the game, and sent more than a few Wolves crashing down to kiss the grass, Coupeville didn’t go gently into that good night.

Seniors Sam Wynn and Owen Barenburg brought considerable heat to bear on the visiting Highlanders in the backfield, with both Wolf defenders crashing hard to blunt multiple scoring opportunities.

“We NEVER stopped fighting and playing, which is most commendable,” said CHS coach Robert Wood. “Good defense stopped a lot of attacks.

“Very happy with the seniors for controlling the back players and all the attacks.”

PCC, a small 1B school which hails from Bothell, is one of three schools, with Grace Academy and Cedar Park Christian-Lynnwood, which join the NWL for boys soccer.

The Highlanders have the look of year-round pitch warriors, and, give them credit, they took advantage of their opportunities.

After poking a goal into the net in the 7th minute of the game, PCC added two more in the first half to take a 3-0 lead in at the break.

Staying on the attack for much of the first 40 minutes, the Highlanders laced multiple shots in the direction of first-year goaltender Logan Martin, and he made several nice saves, including one in which he sprawled out to snag a madly-curving ball.

Coupeville got a long run from Aidan Wilson, only to have his shot snuffed at the last second by the PCC goalie, but it was the Wolf defenders who had the biggest first-half plays.

On one play, Wynn, going one-on-one with his man in the deep left corner, spun his rival around, pickpocketed the ball, and was gone before the PCC player stopped spinning and fell down with a gentle plop.

The Wolves finally got on the board in the game’s 53rd minute, when Wilson converted on a penalty kick, pasting a booming shot into the top right corner of the net.

The speed-demon sophomore, who leads CHS with three goals this season, had a second PK, but the PCC goalie got an arm on the ball, and knocked it wide of the net.

While the Wolves received two penalty kicks, a person could be forgiven for thinking maybe they deserved more, as there was a fair amount of elbows and knees flying, with players sent sprawling.

The answer, likely, is to toughen up their own style of play.

“Totally bums me out when they let another team bully them,” Wood said. “Obviously we need to work on being strong against bigger players … especially on “free” balls in our own 18-yard box.

“We could play them all year long and beat them every time if we could JUST MOVE TO THE BALL!!!!,” he added. “But when you leave holes in the middle because someone is not doing their job … well … you get punished.”

With a young, resilient Wolf team at his beck and call, Wood and his crew will look to bounce back quickly, however.

“Tomorrow’s a new day … a day of rest before we focus on Orcas.”

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »