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Posts Tagged ‘black eye’

   Wolf defender Axel Partida sports a shiner Tuesday after CHS boys soccer beat Port Townsend in a rough-and-tumble affair. (Photo courtesy Partida)

They broke through, but not without a fight.

Riding a hat trick from sophomore Derek Leyva, the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad knocked off host Port Townsend 3-1 Tuesday, the first time the Wolf booters have beaten the RedHawks in the four-year run of the Olympic League.

The hard-fought victory, which lifts the Wolves to 2-1 in conference action, slides CHS into sole possession of second-place behind Klahowya (3-0).

Port Townsend (1-2) and Chimacum (0-3) bring up the rear at the moment.

Coupeville, which sits at 3-2-1 overall, hadn’t beaten Port Townsend in a boys soccer game since 2012.

The schools were in different conferences back then, and since uniting in the Olympic League in 2014, the RedHawks had won all seven meetings, outscoring the Wolves 23-7.

That includes shutting out Coupeville in three meetings last season.

This time around, the Wolves have added Leyva, who transferred to Coupeville for his sophomore year.

With his three goals Tuesday, two of which came in the first half, he has 13 scores in six games.

That pulls him within seven of cousin Abraham Leyva’s single-season Wolf boys scoring record of 20 goals.

None of his goals came easy Tuesday, as Port Townsend brought the heat, with frequent back-and-forth action erupting between the two teams.

“It was a lil’ tussle fest,” said Wolf senior defender Hunter Downes, as he described a game that came close at times to breaking into a full-on brawl.

Teammate Axel Partida finished the game with an impressive shiner after taking one nasty shot, but also emerged with the win, which makes even a black eye a little easier to deal with.

His coach, Kyle Nelson, generally remains the very picture of calm and cool while patrolling the sidelines. But just because the outer surface is placid doesn’t mean his insides aren’t roiling.

“It became quite a battle,” he said. “They missed a penalty kick opportunity and we put it away with five minutes left.

“It was an exciting game, and gave me a few more grey hairs.”

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Avalon Renninger (John Fisken photo)

   Freshman Avalon Renninger hit for a team-high four points in her high school basketball debut. (John Fisken photo)

(Amy King photo)

   Emma Mathusek (left) models the beginning of the black eye she got Tuesday, while Hannah Davidson demonstrates how it happened. (Amy King photo)

Emma Mathusek had a memorable high school basketball debut.

The Coupeville freshman knocked down the first basket of the season Tuesday, finished with a team-high four points and got her bell rung, departing with “a really cool black eye.”

Her offensive touch, and facial sacrifice, weren’t enough to save the Wolf JV, however, as host Blaine used a height advantage to roll to a 28-16 non-conference win.

And when I say height advantage, I mean the Borderites had a 6-foot-3 girl somehow playing JV ball.

“I believe that is where Blaine broke the game open,” said a deadpan Coupeville coach Amy King.

While the Wolves have no one remotely close to that tall (especially on the JV level), they didn’t back down from the rampaging giant.

“It was a well fought battle,” King said. “Tonight we had a group of hard-working, feisty JV’ers. This being the first actual high school game for half the team, we did well.

Ema (Smith), Hannah (Davidson) and Nicole (Lester), with help from Sarah (Wright) one quarter, were as strong as could be in the post,” she added. “We were able to shut her (the 6’3 girl) down or block her when she brought the ball down low and definitely made it uncomfortable at every opportunity.”

King was pleased with the defensive effort she got from the top of her rotation to the bottom.

“The girls went back and forth between a man and an aggressive zone defense – all worked together, looked for steals and caused a lot of turnovers,” she said.

“Every wing who stepped foot on the court did an outstanding job on defense and helping move the ball on offense,” King added. “Maddy (Hilkey) really shut players down.”

The Wolf coach also had praise for the ball-handling skills of Scout Smith and Ashlie Shank, and the scrappiness of Maya Toomey-Stout, Tia Wurzrainer, Renninger and Mathusek.

“They showed what they were made of, stopping drives and making Blaine work for every point they got,” King said. “It was an improvement from Saturday’s jamboree and they will only continue to get better.”

Mathusek and Renninger paced Coupeville with four points apiece, while Wright, Davidson, Smith and Hilkey netted two apiece.

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Madeline Strasburg was the only Wolf to hit two free throws in one trip to the charity stripe Friday, as an 11-of-29 performance there cost CHS a win. (John Fisken photo)

   Madeline Strasburg was the only Wolf to consistently hit her free throws Friday, as an 11-of-29 performance at the charity stripe cost CHS a win. (John Fisken photo)

It’s official.

And while it didn’t happen exactly the way the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team would have wanted — with a win over 2A Sultan at home Friday night — it did, eventually, happen.

The Wolves are playoff bound.

A hail of fourth-quarter three-point bombs from the Turks, and 18 missed free throws by the Wolves, cost Coupeville, as a fast start trickled away in a gut-wrenching 42-39 loss.

But, the defeat, which dropped the Wolves to 8-9 overall, 4-7 in Cascade Conference play, was softened by the news South Whidbey fell 47-31 to visiting Lakewood.

The Falcons dropped to 1-10 in league play, leaving Coupeville three games up with three to play in the race for the #2 seed from their league heading into the 1A district playoffs.

Since the Wolves swept South Whidbey and own the tie-breaker, game over, man, game over.

Coupeville will host the #3 seed from the Northwest Conference (currently Mount Baker) Tuesday, Feb. 11 in the opener of the double-elimination tourney.

Four of the eight teams playing (King’s is the #1 seed from the Cascade Conference, while the NWC sends six teams) will advance to Tri-Districts.

With the postseason locked into place, the Wolves can use their final three regular season games (they travel to ATM Feb. 4, host Granite Falls for Senior Night Feb. 7 and travel to King’s Feb. 8) to fine-tune their game and correct mistakes.

Nothing looms larger right now than the team-wide inability to hit a shot from the charity stripe.

Friday night, Coupeville and Sultan each made 11 free throws. But, since Sultan is a very “hands-on” team and tends to get called for its fair share of fouls, the Wolves had 29 attempts to Sultan’s 17.

Coupeville missed its first seven free throws before Breeanna Messner slid one through the hoop, and only one player, Madeline Strasburg, was able to hit two free throws in one trip to the stripe. She did it twice, draining five of Coupeville’s 11 successful free throws.

In a back-and-forth, hard-fought affair where the Wolves led in the fourth quarter, his team’s inability to convert its freebies haunted CHS coach David King after the game.

“I told the girls, we make four of those free throws, four, and we win this game,” King said. “We have to get better at this.”

Coupeville opened the game on a tear, even while clanging its free-throws, bolting out to an 8-1 lead with four different players scoring.

Messner banked home the game’s first basket on a shot that lingered on the rim for a day and a half before flopping through the net, then Strasburg, Makana Stone and Julia Myers all knocked home quick buckets.

Sultan fought its way back into the game, but Amanda Fabrizi staked the Wolves to an 11-10 lead with a dazzling driving layin.

The senior guard, who later took a nasty poke to the head that should leave her with a black eye Saturday morning, roared into the paint with her body twisted to protect the ball from a defender, only to throw down a sweeping hook off the glass at the last second.

The Wolves made several attempts to pull away in the second and third, getting the lead up to six, only to have the plucky Turks whittle the score back down.

A Sultan team that hadn’t hit a three all game got hot from behind the arc in the fourth, raining down three daggers straight into the heart of Wolf Nation.

Suddenly down by five, it was Coupeville’s turn to rally, with a 5-2 run pulling them within 39-37.

Unfortunately, the one Turk basket was as big a heart-breaker as possible, as a Sultan player picked up a loose ball, after Stone had soundly rejected her teammate’s shot, and drained a short jumper with one tick on the shot clock.

After the refs kept things interesting by calling back-to-back traveling violations — one on each team — Sultan drained three of its final four free throws, packaged around a missed field goal from Coupeville, to seal the come-from-behind win.

Stone banked in a rebound (one of about a million that she snagged) with a second to play to cap her team-high 10 point performance, but the clock ran out before Sultan in-bounded the ball, preventing the Wolves from fouling again.

Strasburg banged home nine in support of Stone, while Fabrizi netted six before taking a shot to the face in the fourth quarter. Kacie Kiel (5), Myers (4), Messner (4) and McKayla Bailey (1) rounded out the scorers.

Monica Vidoni and Wynter Thorne also saw court time for CHS, with Vidoni getting a big roar from the crowd when she grabbed a defensive rebound, then wrenched it free with conviction when a pesky Turk tried to take it away from her.

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