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Jacki Ginnings capped a strong three-year run Wednesday, exiting at the district tennis tourney. (John Fisken photos)

   Jacki Ginnings capped a strong three-year run Wednesday, exiting at the district tennis tourney. (John Fisken photos)

Valen Trujillo, heir to the throne.

Valen Trujillo, heir to the throne.

Aaron Curtin is headed back to Yakima for the 1A state tourney.

Aaron Curtin is headed back to Yakima for the 1A state tourney.

“She was very kind and respectful, but would always hold her ground.”

Over the last three years, Jacki Ginnings has been a rock for the Coupeville High School girls’ tennis squad, a player Wolf coach Ken Stange could always count on, match after match.

“She has been a tough competitor for us, and she will be missed,” Stange said. “She could possibly be made of iron. She didn’t miss a single contest this season, and many of her matches were of the 2+ hour variety.

“I’m going to miss her tenacity,” he added. “She had a way with opponents. Early in her career, she would let players cheat, but, by her second year, she would hold her foes accountable for bad calls.”

Ginnings, a senior, capped her career Wednesday with a strong showing at the district tourney, falling 6-0, 6-1 in the semifinals to eventual champ Alexis Schorno of Charles Wright Academy.

Schorno claimed the lone spot at state being offered from the highly-competitive District 3 tourney.

Ginnings traveling partner, sophomore Valen Trujillo, also made it to the semifinals, before being knocked out 6-1, 6-2 by Taryn Mulvihill of Vashon Island.

“They both fought hard, but came up short against a pair of talented players,” Stange said.

The Wolf tradition of having a strong #1 singles player carried down from Amanda d’Almeida to Allie Hanigan to Ginnings in recent seasons, with Trujillo set to inherit the mantle next year.

Jacki put up a 10-4 record at #1 this year. Those are excellent numbers,” Stange said. “Luckily, Valen seems fit to take over the role as our top singles player.”

Extra match:

A quirk in the schedule forced Wolf netter Aaron Curtin, who had qualified for state back in the fall, to go back out and beat a player he had already taken down to reaffirm his trip to Yakima.

The CHS senior did just that, dispatching Steen Jennings of Vashon 6-3, 3-6, 6-1.

“I’ve never seen Aaron hit serves harder than he was hitting them today,” Stange said.

Curtin will take his second consecutive trip to the 1A state tourney May 29-30. He advanced as a doubles player with Ben Etzell during his junior season.

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Abraham

   Abraham Leyva led the Wolves in scoring as a junior, tallying 14 goals. (John Fisken photo)

CHS coach Kyle Nelson has a moment with seniors (l to r) Joel Walstad (Shawn Walstad photo)

   CHS coach Kyle Nelson with seniors (l to r) Joel Walstad, Ryan Freeman, Isaac Vargas, Oscar Liquidano, Josh Datin, Colin Belliveau and Aaron Wright. (Shawn Walstad photo)

The 1A Olympic League took a hit Saturday.

Two schools hailing from the conference took the pitch for district playoff games and both saw their seasons ended.

Port Townsend fell 2-1 to visiting Cascade Christian, while Coupeville went on the road, only to be bounced 5-2 at Charles Wright Academy.

The dual defeats leaves league champ Klahowya, which will play CWA next, as the lone representative left from the first-year league.

It was the second time the Wolves fell to the Tacoma-based school in a week. They had lost 3-1 at home to the private school rivals on May 2.

This time around CHS got goals from Abraham Leyva (off of an assist from Tanner Kircher) and Sebastian Davis.

With Joel Walstad playing up front, Connor McCormick got the start in net and held his own, making several strong saves.

The loss dropped Coupeville’s final record to 3-11 and brought an end to the run of nine seniors.

The cupboard is not bare, however, as the Wolves can return eight of the ten players who scored this season, including its leading goal collectors in Leyva and Davis.

Junior Zane Bundy, who missed most of the season after an injury, was one of the team’s top scoring threats during his first two seasons, and is also expected back.

Final (unofficial) varsity goal scorers:

Abraham Leyva — 14
Sebastian Davis — 6
Colin Belliveau — 3
William Nelson — 3
Joel Walstad — 3
JT Quinn — 2
Garrett Compton — 1
Tanner Kircher — 1
Loren Nelson — 1
Ethan Spark — 1

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Josh Datin ain't playin'. (John Fisken photos)

Josh Datin ain’t playin’. (John Fisken photos)

Abraham Leyva

Abraham Leyva dances in mid-air as he leads the charge down field.

Sebastian Davis

Sebastian Davis gets some elevation in his game.

Cody Menges

Uriel Liquidano (3) looks on as Cody Menges (14) prepares to launch the ball.

Tanner Kircher

Tanner Kircher is on his way, and he’s bringing the soccer ball with him.

Connor McCormick

Connor McCormick works on honing his goalkeeper skills.

Isaac Vargas

Isaac Vargas, playing soccer or air guitar?

The season is winding down, but the photo opportunities still abound.

Traveling clicker John Fisken wandered through Coupeville Saturday (perhaps drawn by the sunshine) and he and his lens captured the CHS boys’ soccer squad hard at work.

The Wolves lost a hard-fought non-conference game to private school power Charles Wright Academy, but local fans can forget that and focus on the pics.

To see more (purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS senior students/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8671&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

P.S. — Use the coupon code EB86714962 before May 17 and you’ll get 15% off.

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McKenzie Bailey (left) and Wynter Thorne, AKA ?, celebrate sharing Player of the Match honors. (Ken Stange photo)

McKenzie Bailey (left) and Wynter Thorne celebrate sharing Player of the Match honors. (Ken Stange photo)

Sydney Autio (John Fisken photo)

Sydney Autio and doubles mate Micky LeVine put up a titanic battle, before being nipped 7-5, 7-5. (John Fisken photo)

You have to play the best to be the best.

With that in mind, the Coupeville High School girls’ tennis squad stepped up and faced off with one of the premier net programs in the state Saturday.

And, while the Wolves couldn’t derail perennial state title contender Charles Wright Academy, eventually falling 4-1 in a non-conference tilt, they did acquit themselves quite nicely.

“Despite the score, I was pleased with the results,” said Coupeville coach Ken Stange. “CWA is one of the premier 1A programs. Our players took full advantage of the chance to play against some quality players.”

Having waged battle against seasoned, top-level players who generally play year-round, the Wolves, now 1-3, will have a chance to put the lessons learned to work right away.

Coupeville is scheduled to play three matches this coming week — hosting 2A Lakewood Monday, traveling to South Whidbey Wednesday, then hosting league rival Chimacum Friday.

That last one is the big one, with the Wolves sitting atop the Olympic League standings at 1-0, having shredded Klahowya earlier this season.

In their match against the private school netters Saturday, the doubles duo of McKenzie Bailey and Wynter Thorne claimed Coupeville’s lone win and were honored as joint Players of the Match.

McKenzie and Wynter, AKA McWynter, AKA McFlurry, enjoy playing together,” Stange said. “Their games complement one another, and they have solid chemistry.

“The best part about this match was watching them figure out how to make subtle adjustments as the match went along,” he added. “Each time the other team took some advice from the coach, McFlurry would keep applying pressure. It was a strong performance!”

While she eventually fell in three epic sets, Wolf sophomore Valen Trujillo also sparkled during her performance at second singles.

Facing a foe who possesses a rare two-handed forehand, Trujillo had her hands full during her second straight three-setter.

(Jenny) Soel is the most skilled opponent Valen has faced this year. It was a classic battle,” Stange said. “Both players battled with intensity, while being quite friendly with each other.

“High school tennis players officiate their own matches. Sometimes, this proves to be the most difficult part of playing a match,” he added. “Valen and Jenny were the epitome of class. I don’t think either of them made a bad call against the other.

“Rather, they both played balls that were out, just to make sure.”

Complete Results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Jacki Ginnings lost to Alexis Schorno 6-0, 6-1

2nd Singles — Valen Trujillo lost to Jenny Soel 3-6, 6-3, 10-8

1st Doubles — Payton Aparicio/Sage Renninger lost to Emily/Mei Ge 6-1, 6-1

2nd Doubles — McKenzie Bailey/Wynter Thorne beat Casey Kim/Meera Patel 6-2, 6-4

3rd Doubles — Sydney Autio/Micky LeVine lost to Kate Pasco/Monica Refuerzo 7-5, 7-5

JV:

Haleigh Deasy/Jazmine Franklin lost to Aura/Lovia 9-7

Maggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge lost to Abby/Emma 7-2

McKenzie Meyer/Renninger beat Erin/Casey Kim 8-4

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Vote for Josh Bayne! He would vote for you!! (John Fisken photo)

Vote for Josh Bayne! He would vote for you!! (John Fisken photo)

OK, we’re going to need to work fast, and smart.

Northwest Elite Index has posted a poll to pick the best football performance from Week 10 of the high school season, and we’ve got a little over 14 hours to blow up their poll and bring victory to Cow Town.

Our guy, Coupeville High School senior Josh Bayne, is in third place in the three-man slug-fest, but he’s just a vote or two off of second place and first place is not out of sight.

The voting ends at noon Wednesday and the poll claims you can only vote once every 24 hours. BUT, I did find that I could vote once in Firefox, then slip over to Internet Explorer and get another vote in.

Just sayin…

And sure, there’s no trophy to go with this victory. Just the sweet, sweet satisfaction of spankin’ the big boy schools, in this case represented by Eastlake and Charles Wright Academy.

I mean, come on, are we going to just bow down to some private school fancy lad and let them have the honor without a fight? This is a fight for public school supremacy.

Spread the word! Vote (and maybe vote again). Roar, Wolf Nation, roar!!

http://www.northwesteliteindex.com/2014/11/09/vote-washingtons-week-ten-elite-performance/

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