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Coupeville senior Sam Wynn scored two goals Friday in his final high school game. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Call it a private school special.

Get to the playoffs, face off with a team you’ve already beaten, and, ta-da, that other squad suddenly has a dominant new player inserted in the lineup.

Maybe us hicks from the sticks living out here in Cow Town are just overly suspicious, but sometimes you wonder…

Anyways, having removed the tin foil hat from my head (for a moment at least), I can report that Cedar Park Christian-Lynnwood, with its new Cristiano Ronaldo-style ringer, capped its boys soccer season Friday with a 5-3 win over visiting Coupeville.

Sam Wynn, the pride of public schools everywhere, banged home a pair of goals for the scrappy Wolves, but when the other team has a guy pegging all his shots from 25+ yards out and recording a hat trick, well…

Still, CHS coach Robert Wood came away from the finale fairly pleased.

“A great game. Tons of fun,” the pitch guru said. “Their guy, who missed our first game, put the ball anywhere he wanted.

“A coast-to-coast dribbler, pretty amazing, but not impossible to defend,” Wood added. “(Our) kids never gave in to them … played strong the ENTIRE game. They just had our number.”

Wynn rattled home his first scores of this pandemic-shortened season, punching home the sixth and seventh goals of his prep career while making his final appearance in a Wolf uniform.

The first came on a penalty kick, while the second sprang from a torrid run upfield.

“Speedy Sam beat the defense several times, and finally went one-on-one with the keeper and buried it,” Wood said.

Coupeville’s other goal came from a star of the future, as freshman Nick Guay “drilled a ball to the upper right corner” for his first high school score.

While the Wolves finished 1-5 on the season, they were young, hungry, and highly-competitive.

Bouncing back after the program was originally shut down due to a lack of sufficient players, they finished the season with 14 players, 12 of whom can return next season.

Wynn and fellow senior defender Owen Barenburg depart, but the players who scored during this campaign included a junior, a sophomore, two freshmen, and an eighth grader.

Xavier Murdy is one of five Wolves who scored this season who can return next year.

 

Final scoring stats:

Aidan Wilson 3
Xavier Murdy 2
Sam Wynn 2
Nick Guay 1
Cole White 1
Cael Wilson 1

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Ryan Blouin gets dramatic. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Nathan Ginnings plays keep-away. (Morgan White photo)

One more time.

The Coupeville High School boys soccer team will get another game during this pandemic-shortened season, with a “playoff” contest Friday afternoon.

The Wolves, who are 1-4 on the season, travel to Lynnwood to face Cedar Park Christian, which is 3-3-1.

The game is a rematch of Coupeville’s season opener, which it won 3-0 at home April 16.

While there are no conventional playoffs this school year, Northwest 2B/1B League Athletic Directors set up a one-day royal rumble, featuring six of the seven schools to play soccer this time around.

Along with CHS vs. CPC, league champ Orcas Island plays Providence Classical Christian, while La Conner and Mount Vernon Christian square off.

Grace Academy, which finished in last place, sits out the mini-tourney, while Friday Harbor sat out the entire fall sports season because of Covid concerns.

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Cael Wilson made history Wednesday, becoming the first 8th grader to score in a Coupeville High School boys soccer game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They ain’t seen nothing like this before.

Coupeville High School has been playing boys soccer continuously since 2004 — except for last spring, when Covid erased all prep sports.

So, now, during this oddest of seasons, a pandemic-shortened campaign in which traditional fall sports are being contested in the spring, it had to end this way — if it is ending.

Putting a cap on a season in which the soccer program was shut down due to insufficient numbers, then saved when tennis was cancelled, the Wolf booters fell 2-1 Wednesday at La Conner.

“They’re a good team,” said Coupeville coach Robert Wood. “They played well and really wanted the win.

“We played well but just gave away too many balls with players out of positions.”

But hold on just a doggone second, cause here’s where things go sideways in 27 different directions.

First, the game may (or may not) count as an official contest.

No refs showed for the pitch rumble, so Wood and his La Conner counterpart manned the whistles.

“We relived our golden days!,” the Wolf pitch guru said with a laugh.

The whole no refs thing may mean the loss won’t be official and drop the Wolves to 1-4 on the season. Instead, it may be classified as a “friendly.”

Soccer Nation waits anxiously for word from CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith, who, hopefully, is otherwise enjoying a quiet evening during a school year which would have driven a weaker man batty.

Second, it may not be the final game of the season.

It is the last one on the regular season schedule, yes.

But, Northwest 2B/1B League officials have been working on a “playoff” plan in which the top six schools from the seven-team league will face off in … MORTAL KOMBAT!!!!!

Or a bunch of soccer games.

Just sayin’ the first choice is the best choice.

Anyways, the games will feature the league’s #1 team versus its #2, #3 vs. #4, and #5 vs. 6.

Regardless of whether Wednesday’s game counts or not, Coupeville should be one of those latter two teams, as Grace Academy finished 0-5-1 and clinched dead-last after losing to league champ Orcas Island.

So, one more game Friday, maybe, possibly?

Want to know the opponent and whether it’s home or away? The nation turns its lonely eyes to Willie Smith one more time, and, hopefully, he turned his phone off for a few hours.

For our third unusual tangent, we return to Wednesday’s game, where those in La Conner witnessed something I don’t believe has ever happened in a Coupeville High School boys soccer game.

A middle school player scored for the Wolves.

Step up Cael Wilson, younger brother of team scoring leader Aidan, and claim your bit of history.

With CHS back in the 2B classification, and the soccer program in need of saving, the Wolves were able to add 8th graders to their roster, and Cael Wilson and Preston Epp answered the call.

Wednesday night, in the 17th season of Wolf boys soccer, the stars lined up just right.

Aidan Wilson, a sophomore, sent a cross which eluded two other Wolf players and two La Conner defenders, with the ball popping right out in front of his younger brother.

Cael was hanging out in the Zen zone and just placed it right to the corner,” Wood said.

My soccer stat hunting has been an uphill battle, as some scoring records have vanished into the mists of time, and the local newspapers didn’t spend a lot of time documenting the early seasons of the program.

But, prior to Wednesday, I had tracked down 57 Wolf boys who found the back of the net in a CHS varsity game.

From Abraham Leyva, who sits atop the career scoring chart with 45 goals, to guys like Tanner Kircher, Laurence Boado, and Zeb Williams, who celebrated once, it’s a semi-complete record of pitch excellence.

None of those 57 soccer scorers was still in middle school when he punched home a goal however, as far as I know.

Which puts Cael Wilson in the company of a mere handful of Wolf athletes who have hit pay-dirt in a high school game before being an actual, you know, high schooler.

The gold standard is “Big” Mike Criscuola, CHS Class of 1960, a man among boys on the basketball court, even as an 8th grader towering over his older teammates.

Who knows where Cael Wilson’s sports career will go. He might be a legend or a footnote. Only time will tell.

But either way, he’ll always have that moment on the La Conner pitch on May 5, 2021, when he did something I’m 99.2% sure no Wolf booter before him has accomplished.

In a season of weirdness, one bright shining moment to treasure.

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Freshman Cole White lofted a pretty, pretty goal Monday night, catching league champ Orcas Island flat-footed. (Morgan White photo)

Sam Wynn (19) and Owen Barenburg (7) were honored on Senior Night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Forget about Bend it Like Beckham. We’re more about Curl it Like Cole.

On the afternoon the Coupeville High School boys soccer program honored seniors Sam Wynn and Owen Barenburg, it was freshman Cole White who stole the show.

While the Wolf booters weren’t able to upend the Northwest 2B/1B League Champs, with visiting Orcas Island rampaging to a 10-1 win, that one Coupeville goal was a peach.

Not only was it the best scoring play of the season, but arguably one of the prettiest ever seen on Mickey Clark Field.

With an injury-riddled Coupeville squad battling the undefeated Vikings every step of the way, and Wolf goalie Logan Martin making one sweet save after another, CHS trailed just 1-0 at the mid-point of the first half.

That’s when White, heir to a legacy of prep athletic excellence crafted back in the day by dad Greg, lost his dang mind.

Blasting a shot from deep on the left side of the field, Cole was trying to set up teammates scrambling for position in front of the net.

Instead, the ball, showing a mind of its own, kept rising, kept curling, and kept increasing in speed and velocity, until it hooked right into the top right corner of the net.

The Orcas goaltender, who was otherwise lights-out, flung himself skyward, trying to track the incoming swerve missile, but had no chance as the orb came dangerously close to tearing a hole through the netting.

The play drew a low whistle and a reverent “That was sweet!” from CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith, who then crafted the Curl it Like Cole movie title out of thin air, before gifting it to the media assembled in his press box.

That set off pandemonium in the stands, and on the pitch, with White mobbed by his teammates, a crush of joy hailing the young star’s first high school goal, though very likely not his last.

As fast as the euphoria washed over the gathered masses, it was dampened a bit, however.

The Vikings seemed to take the score personally, and clicked into destruction mode after that.

Sending 10 of 11 players on many attacks, Orcas rattled home four scores in an eight-minute tear, breaking up a 1-1 stalemate and carrying a daunting 5-1 lead into the halftime break.

Intent on keeping their unbeaten streak intact, the very-efficient Vikings seized every opportunity, no matter how small, and rained home another five goals in the second half to make the final score much more lopsided than probably necessary.

With the loss, Coupeville drops to 1-3 during this pandemic-shortened season, with the regular-season finale set for Wednesday in La Conner.

After that, there may be another game, however.

NWL officials are working on a plan for “playoff” games to cap the season, with contests played Friday or Saturday.

The league’s #1 and #2 teams would face-off, with #3 vs. #4 and #5 vs. #6 also on the schedule.

Coupeville is currently in fifth-place in the seven-team league, ahead of La Conner (1-4-1) and Grace Academy (0-4-1).

While Monday’s tilt with Orcas was about the soccer, it was also about paying tribute to Wynn and Barenburg, the heart and soul of the Wolf backline.

They were hailed before the game, with velvet-voiced CHS announcer Ja’Kenya Hoskins reading off their senior thank-you’s, and family giving the duo a gift certificate for dinner.

Wynn, who will be attending the University of Calgary, summed up his run as a Wolf booter thusly:

“I really got into soccer and had more fun with it because of the programs at Coupeville,” he said. “I just want to thank all the coaches and everybody who’s volunteered and fed me throughout the years.”

Barenburg, who began his soccer career at age six in South Korea, and later had a stint playing in Italy, plans to attend Western Washington University.

“I like soccer to be fun for everyone and enjoyed playing Central Whidbey Rec soccer with my friend Sam in elementary school,” he said.

“Going forward I plan to study computer science and hopefully continue playing this wonderful sport wherever I can.”

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With one flex of his chest, Xavier Murdy crushes the soccer ball’s dream of flying free. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The boys were back in town.

Thursday night brought the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad back to Mickey Clark Field for the first time in two weeks, and the occasion lured in wanderin’ photo whiz kid John Fisken.

The pics seen above and below are courtesy him.

To bask in everything Fisken shot, and possibly buy some glossy keepsakes, pop over to:

BS 2021-04-29 vs Providence – John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

Ryan Blouin sweeps the leg.

Wolf girls soccer stars show support for their male counterparts.

Logan Martin elevates and denies.

Cael Wilson unleashes his full fury.

Payton Parks (left) and Abbie Martin are A-OK with having their photo snapped.

Cole White dances in the dandelions.

Sam Wynn chooses the nuclear option.

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