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   Drake Borden and Co. kick off spring sports Saturday, with Coupeville’s baseball and boys soccer teams both playing at home. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s a trap.

The forecast for Saturday calls for 54 degrees, partially cloudy, with just the barest hint of wind in Coupeville.

But, since that’s also the first day Coupeville High School spring sports teams will play official games, I’m telling you now … sideways rain, slapped into our faces by hurricane-style winds.

You know it to be true.

Anyways, while I try and overcome the deep psychological damage done to my soul by years of being tortured by “spring” weather on the prairie, it’s time for Wolf fans to head outdoors.

CHS baseball and boys soccer officially kick off a new season Saturday, both playing at home.

The Wolf booters debut their school’s new stadium with a non-conference match-up against 2A Olympic.

JV kicks off at 11 AM, varsity at 1 PM.

Right across the way, the Coupeville diamond men will get their first swings in against another non-conference rival, Lynden Christian.

Baseball plays at 1 PM (JV) and 3 PM (varsity).

And, since CHS doesn’t charge to attend any of its spring sports (at least until the playoffs), it makes for a reasonably-priced day for all involved.

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   Luke Pelant (left), hangs out with coach Paul Mendes during the 2013 CHS boys soccer awards banquet. (Photo by Robert Pelant)

One by one, the former Wolves return.

Luke Pelant is the latest Coupeville High School grad to return to his alma mater, only this time as a coach and not a player.

He is joining the boys soccer team as an assistant coach to Kyle Nelson, in a move which will be official when the School Board gives its approval.

Pelant had an illustrious soccer career at CHS, capped by a senior season in 2013, when he was a captain, was named the team’s MVP and was tabbed as an All-League player by Cascade Conference coaches.

He also received the US Army Reserve National Scholar/Athlete Award that year.

After high school, Pelant attended Washington State University, where he studied marketing.

During his time as a Wolf, he played for legendary soccer coach Paul Mendes, an international pitch star who capped his career in Coupeville.

A leader during his time on the field for the Wolves, Pelant is looking forward to helping shape a new generation of players.

“I just love the game so much,” he said. “I want to be around it more and hopefully bring more players to love it as much as I do.”

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   Zack Nall scored his first goal of the season Friday in a 5-3 Wolf win. (John Fisken photo)

   William Nelson (left) and Brandon Jansen watch the play unfold. (Susan Hulst photo)

   Freshman Aram Leyva tallied two goals, giving him three on the season. (Fisken photo)

Claim the wind, claim the game.

Playing with the Whidbey wind at its back in the first half Friday, the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad built a 4-0 lead, then coasted home for a 5-3 win over visiting 2A North Mason.

The non-conference win evened Coupeville’s record at 2-2-1 on the season.

The Wolves put their 1-0 record in Olympic League play on the line the next two games, when they travel to Klahowya Tuesday, Mar. 28, before returning home to host Port Townsend Friday, Mar. 31.

Eight of their next 10 games are league affairs.

Coupeville spread out its scoring Friday, with four booters hitting pay-dirt.

Freshman phenom Aram Leyva torched the North Mason goaltender twice, while Ethan Spark, Uriel Liquidano and Zack Nall all had the magic touch as well.

Spark leads the Wolves with five goals this season, with Leyva hot on his heels with three.

Walter Sebastian-Montejo, Chris Ramsey and Brock Mullins tallied goals for the visitors.

“North Mason did make it interesting late in the game, but the boys held steady,” said Coupeville coach Kyle Nelson. “A good tough, physical win for us.”

JV edged:

Freshman Mason Grove found the back of the net for Coupeville, but North Mason escaped with a narrow 2-1 win.

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Brandon Jansen (John Fisken photos)

Brandon Jansen, putting in work. (John Fisken photos)

A refusal to back down.

That’s the trait I most associate with Brandon Jansen.

The Coupeville High School senior, who celebrates a birthday today, goes all out, all day, every time I see him on the soccer pitch.

Whether he’s playing varsity or JV, in a one-goal game or a blowout, the midfielder attacks every play like it might be the last one he’s ever involved in, and he wants to make dang sure you remember he was there.

Off the field, Jansen is a smart, very friendly guy who pops up on the school honor roll and is in the stands for almost every Wolf athletic contest the school plays.

He supports his classmates in style, regardless of the sport they play, the sign of a quality dude.

Brandon is also a dead-eye shooter, one of the regulars who flies down from the stands at nearly every basketball game to show off their skills from long-range during halftime half-court shooting contests.

As he celebrates his cake day and prepares to head into his final campaign at CHS, we just want to take a moment to stop and wish him all the best.

Happy birthday, Mr. Jansen! May your day be worthy of you.

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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.

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