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Posts Tagged ‘Becca Pabona’

Saturday was the final ride for Erin Rosenkranz and her GU19 Whidbey Islanders squad. (John Fisken photo)

Saturday was the final game together for Erin Rosenkranz and her GU19 Whidbey Islanders squad. (John Fisken photo)

Islanders forever. (Kali Barrio photo)

Islanders forever. (Kali Barrio photo)

David put the fear of God into Goliath.

Drawing its players from all three Whidbey Island high schools, the ever-scrappy GU19 Whidbey Islanders soccer squad has always been a success, win or loss.

Saturday, having gone further than ever before, the band of sisters made a final stand on the mainland, falling 1-0 to Seattle United NE in a hard-fought State Cup semifinal.

And while the loss ended the Islanders season, and brought an end to this version of the team, it failed to diminish what they have accomplished.

“I am very proud that this small team from Whidbey, who has no cuts and plays big city teams with paid coaches who cut several players in tryouts, could not only compete, but threaten to win it all!,” said coach Sean LeVine. “My only hope is that they have fond memories and valuable lessons to take.”

LeVine, along with those who helped him make the Coupeville/Oak Harbor/South Whidbey juggernaut possible, will look back on the past few years as a great success.

“Our GU19 Whidbey Islanders team is officially disbanded, but Islanders forever!,” he said. “Thanks to Scott Rosenkranz for being a great coach all these years and Sherry Pabona for being a great manager.

“Happy Mother’s Day to all the awesome, ultra-dedicated soccer moms!,” LeVine added. “Without them we’d have no team.”

Playing on a brutally warm field Saturday, the Islanders had to deal with a season-long issue — few, if any, subs.

“It was HOT on the field today, and with only one sub compared to their four, our superior conditioning did not help as much as it had,” LeVine said.

Seattle United poked in the game’s only goal at the 20 minute mark, when it stole a ball and sent a cross into “a poorly-marked player,” who hit from 10 yards out.

Whidbey had several chances to knot the game, but luck wasn’t on its side on this day.

On their best chance, Gillian Crossley beat a defender at the near post and laid the ball on the foot of Lydia Peplinski, but her shot narrowly missed.

With the heat sucking the life out of both teams, play slowed in the second half, but Seattle was able to control the flow of the game by “possessing the ball better than any team we’ve faced this season.”

The game capped a season in which LeVine’s roster changed radically as the season developed.

Coupeville’s Jenn Spark and Jacki Ginnings (“two of the best defenders in the league”) were lost to injuries right as the season kicked-off, two other players left the team unexpectedly, another moved out of the country, and the crush of senior year for many of the players was a constant tricky issue.

“Despite all that, we figured things out, improved as we went along, and went further in the state tournament than we ever have,” said a proud LeVine.

He got contributions from every one of his players, and enjoyed that it was a second family as much as a team.

LeVine’s thoughts on his players:

Alyssa Cross, Ayla Muller and Becca Pabona became our best center backs in Jenn and Jacki’s place and excelled this season. That is a very tough position and they are awesome for stepping in, improving, and excelling.

Erin Rosenkranz played a new position this season at left back, which if you know her playing style, you’d know that was weird. But she simply proved to be the best 1-on-1 defender we have, and she did consistently well.

Paige Waterman was missed at the beginning of the season, but despite her ankle injury, she came on strong and was our consistent right back the rest of the year.

Our top three goal scorers were Lydia, Gillian, and Micky (LeVine).

Lydia and “Jilly” are our youngest and they are going to do great things in the next couple years; I can’t wait to watch them play more.

Kendra Warwick was the axle of our wheels this season.

Nothing happened if she didn’t play a role; she is simply our most valuable asset, although Kenzie Perry may have an argument with her multiple shut-outs as keeper and her goal scoring prowess in very few field appearances. 

Vivien Valles, Micky and Bailee Olson are our work horses and blue collar workers.

While Jacalyn Hefflefinger, one of my favorite people, did not have her 10-goal season like last year, her work rate and sense of humor is the glue of the team. She is really loved by all.

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Ayla Muller (second from left) was the Player of the Game Sunday.

Ayla Muller (second from left) was the Player of the Game Sunday.

Complete and utter domination.

Even down a star (Becca Pabona was out sick) the GU19 Whidbey Islanders select soccer squad routed the visiting Tracyton Pumas 2-0 Sunday in a game that was as one-sided as they come.

Attacking from all sides, the Islanders controlled the flow of play from opening whistle to closing whistle.

“We played an outstanding game today and dominated in time of possession, shots on goal, and corner kicks,” said Whidbey coach Sean LeVine.

About the only thing slowing the Islanders down was the ref, who refused to believe his own eyes.

Whidbey sparkplug Micky LeVine got blasted in the box and bit the turf after breaking free behind the defense with the ball, but the ref, missing his seeing eye dog, declined to give the Islanders a penalty kick.

Denied that early goal, Whidbey settled for making their own, raining down a pair of beauties in the second half.

The only goal they would need came when three Islanders hooked up on a bing-bang-boom play.

Kendra Warwick lashed “a perfect ball through the defense towards the corner,” where speedster Bailee Olson nabbed it and redirected the ball to Gillian Crossley, who used her chest to knock the shot into the net.

Not content with one, Warwick cracked another corner kick, using Ayla Muller’s head as her target.

Muller’s forehead met ball, goal, celebration.

It was part of a busy day for Muller, who came dangerously close to scoring on two other occasions. One of those bounced along the goal line before being cruelly denied at the last second by the harried Tracyton goaltender.

For her stellar efforts (she played the full 90 as a center back with Pabona out) Muller nabbed Player of the Game honors.

Whether it was Muller or others, Sean LeVine came away very pleased with what he saw on the field.

“All in all it was a complete game and I am very happy with everyone’s play today,” he said. “Again we were missing players and only had one sub, but this is the new normal for us.

“Our defense did outstanding today!”

The Islanders, who have won two straight, return to the pitch Sunday, Mar. 22 when they travel to Bellevue to play Lake Hills Legend.

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The Islanders did NOT wear this on the field, but probably wished they could have. (Alyssa Cross photo)

   The Islanders did NOT wear these on the field this weekend, but probably wished they could have while playing in miserable conditions. (Alyssa Cross photo)

They came. They played. They survived.

Despite missing five players with injuries — including leading scorer Jacalyn Hefflefinger — and playing in often cold, wet, miserable conditions, the GU19 Whidbey Islanders select soccer squad sparkled in its return to the pitch this past weekend.

Playing at the Astro Turf Cup Girls College Showcase in front of college coaches and scouts, the Islanders escaped with two ties and two narrow losses to top teams.

It was the first action for the squad in several months, after players took an extended break for their high school seasons.

That time apart was filled with injury, as Hefflefinger, Jacki Ginnings, Paige Waterman, Vivien Valles and Jenn Spark were sidelined.

Valles (concussion) is expected back soon, but Hefflefinger (MCL tear) is sidelined for another six weeks, Waterman (ankle) falls in the “unknown return” category and Ginnings (concussions) and Spark (reconstructive knee surgery) are gone for the season.

In their place, a variety of guest players picked up the Islander mantle and wore it well.

Anni Field, an All-Conference Center Defender for South Whidbey High School, played despite having her own injury issues.

Her ACL is torn, but she’s currently wearing a brace and doing physical therapy. Which apparently includes being a rampaging force of nature on the soccer pitch.

Anni stepped in and did outstanding,” said Islanders coach Sean LeVine. “Not only is she a strong player, she is very smart, cool under pressure, and she fits right in with our team.

“If she wasn’t so busy with her horse events she’d be heavily recruited by us,” he added. “Well, we did try a little and the invitation remains open.”

Joining her in the relief corps was Oak Harbor defender Alyssa Eden (“She is fast, strong, and tough and helped our back line look solid for the weekend. Even after taking a player’s head in her face at full speed, she still tried to finish out the game; that kid is tough!”), and Wildcat teammates Caylie Etherington and Suzanne Kaltenbach.

Etherington, younger sister of Islander Alyssa Cross, is only a freshman but already gaining notice for her play.

Caylie is a pure soccer player! This kid is fluid, sharp on the ball, and very smart. She made our team better!,” LeVine said. “She plugged the middle up along side of her twin, Kendra Warwick, and was an expert at tackling the ball away from good players and distributing the ball to try to start an attack.

“She also finished the tourney playing some striker for us as I thought her near flawless play gave us the best chance to score,” he added. “We really loved having her!”

Kaltenbach is a veteran who the Islanders have tried to woo away from Northwest United. For a weekend at least, they got her.

“She was our first phone call when we were looking for players,” LeVine said. “This is one of the coolest young ladies I know. She sings, dances, smiles, and sometimes all WHILE playing soccer! She is very positive, super smart, and our players love her.

“On top of all that, she is an outstanding player. She has it all and would be good in any position, but, due to our depleted defense, she played center defender and was awesome,” he added. “Paired with Alyssa Cross in the middle, she helped keep our team in every game.”

With their hired guns complementing longtime Islanders such as Becca Pabona and Micky Levine, Whidbey opened the tourney by tying Velocity Green 0-0.

The game was postponed after the teams had warmed up in a cold downpour, then restarted an hour later. Playing in miserable conditions, the Islanders came dangerously close to scoring numerous times, but couldn’t quite break through.

Pabona put together a great back-and-forth run with Gillian Crossley, but the Velocity goalie stretched out for a last-second save. Later, on a ball from Erin Rosenkranz, Pabona crushed a ball that twisted just millimeters wide of a game-busting score.

Bothered by rain, snow and sub-arctic temps, the Islanders fell 3-1 to the Delta Coastal Selects of Canada and 4-0 to the Spokane Shadow, before bouncing back to notch a scoreless draw with Gala FC of Snohomish.

Bailee Olson, battling for a ball in front of the goal against the Canucks, pressured Delta into scoring an own goal, before the highly-ranked Canadian squad rallied for the win.

“That game could easily have gone 1-0 us, or 1-1,” LeVine said. “This was our best game of the tourney and I was very happy with how well we played.”

More injuries surfaced for the Islanders as the tourney played out, with starting goalie Kenzie Perry being sidelined with a shoulder injury. In her place, Ayla Muller (having recovered from her own injury issues) played strongly.

“She was on fire! Ayla flew around the box making several diving saves, sometimes twice!,” LeVine said. “Kid is da’ bomb keeper. I really think she is better now than she was before she had her knee injury. I’m excited to watch her fly around this season.

LeVine also singled out Alyssa Cross for having an especially strong tourney.

“I can’t tell you how much of a loss it is for us not having Jenn and Jacki! However, we’ve always known Alyssa can handle anything we throw at her,” LeVine said. “It was no question that we were going to move her to the center defender role. What we didn’t know is that she would step in and demolish all our expectations!

“She was nearly flawless! She is just so tough, faster than she thinks, strong, and very smart,” he added. “She is going to be GREAT for us this year and I have even higher expectations of her now.”

While the Islander players wait for emails and phone calls from college coaches who watched the tourney, they will prepare to kick off their regular season.

Up first is Seattle United, which comes to Ft. Nugent Saturday, Dec. 6 (12:30 PM kickoff).

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Bundled up against the cold, the GU18 Whidbey Islanders prepare for some butt-kickin'. (Kali Barrio photo)

Bundled up against the cold, the GU18 Whidbey Islanders prepare for action. (Kali Barrio photo)

Everyone knows their names now.

After shining at the PSPL Winter College Showcase Tournament Sunday, the young women on the GU18 Whidbey Islanders select soccer team are now on the radar of college coaches.

Playing less than 24 hours after waging a tough battle in a State Cup semifinal, where they fell 2-1 to the Vancouver Timbers, the Islanders bounced right back.

Facing off with elite squads, they earned a draw and a close loss, while having a chance to dazzle recruiters with their individual skills.

With more than 30 colleges represented in the stands, the stakes were high for any booters who are interested in continuing to play after their high school days are done.

With that in mind, the Islanders went toe-to-toe with the Pierce County Fire College Prep Team, and refused to yield, notching a 0-0 draw in an intense affair.

“Our girls performed outstanding,” said Islander coach Sean LeVine. “The other team was bigger, faster, and stronger than most of our team, but we rose to the challenge and frustrated them.

“This was our best game of the season!”

A lights-out defense sparked by Alyssa Cross, who fought through a toe injury suffered the day before, was the key. Cross, ignoring the pain, completely locked-down the left side of play almost by herself.

Whidbey’s second game was a narrow 2-0 loss to an “elite” PSPL Academy team that was formed specifically for college showcase tournament play.

The Islanders came with another strong defensive effort, but two small mistakes hurt them.

Vivien Valles broke free and had a chance to notch a goal for Whidbey, but the Academy goalie got her fingertips on the ball and re-directed it at the last second.

“We finished that tough match with some players playing in atypical positions and we still did well,” LeVine said. “I am very happy with how they played against these “elite” teams.

Kenzie Perry, Becca Pabona, Jacki Ginnings, Paige Waterman, Alyssa Cross, Kendra Warwick and Selena Medina deserve to be mentioned for their stellar play this weekend,” he added. “But all our players stepped up and had great games!”

Saturday the Islanders went into their semifinal match against the Timbers needing a win or draw to advance to the championship game. It wasn’t to be, however.

Pabona nailed “a rocket from 30 yards out” for her team’s goal, while Erin Rosenkranz, Hailey Erbe, Micky LeVine, Medina and Morgan Zylstra pushed hard in the second half for a tying score that never came.

Perry shut down the Timbers for huge chunks of the game, collecting 15 saves.

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