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Freshman Tony Garcia scored in his first high school soccer game Saturday, helping lift Coupeville to an 8-0 rout of Chimacum. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It went just about as expected.

Despite playing with a patchwork lineup Saturday, the Coupeville High School boys soccer team routed visiting Chimacum 8-0 to officially open the spring sports season.

Sparked by a hat trick from junior captain Aram Leyva, the Wolves torched the Cowboys for the 11th consecutive time over the past five seasons.

Now non-conference foes, the two schools met 10 times on the pitch during Coupeville’s run in the Olympic League between 2015-2018.

During that time, the Wolves broke double digits seven times, outscoring the Cowboys 91-13.

This time around, Coupeville settled for a few less goals, but pulled off its fifth shutout in its last six games with Chimacum.

Admittedly, Wolf senior goalie Dewitt Cole didn’t have to work especially hard for the bagel job, with the Cowboys only able to muster a single shot on goal in 80 minutes of action.

Coupeville kept the ball on the attack for much of the game, and when Chimacum did get it across midfield and into Wolf territory, the CHS defense immediately snuffed things.

A big factor in the smothering defense was a rare appearance in the backfield by goal-scoring phenom Derek Leyva.

Trying to ease his sharpshooter into the season, without putting too much strain on Leyva’s brace-clad knee, Coupeville coach Kyle Nelson stationed the junior on the back side of the field, with orders to take it easy.

And, with the exception of one goal-scoring run late in the game, which pleased his fans even while offering a bit of agitation to the CHS coaching staff, he listened.

Even playing at 50%, Leyva towered above his foes, and he controlled his side of the field with a few deft moves here, a slide to the side there.

Chimacum couldn’t get the ball past him (or fellow defenders like Sam Wynn), and the Cowboys certainly couldn’t take the ball back once it was on Leyva’s toe.

Once the ball was back on the move, punched up from the back or launched half the field, the Wolves attacked, attacked, and attacked some more.

While eight shots got past the Chimacum goaltender, Coupeville could have easily doubled the score with just a bit more precision.

The Wolves whacked shots from the left, the right, up top, even almost from mid-field, sending the Cowboys scrambling.

One shot hit the crossbar and ricocheted off, several more just slid past the opening, and at least three went high into the air, and would have been successful field goals in football.

Spurred on their fans, who included a group of CHS female soccer players camped out in the press box, the Wolves played opportunistic ball, and it paid off.

“Go, Chris, go, go, go …. YEEEEEEESSSSS,” was the call from Avalon Renninger, when Chris Cernick broke through for the first goal of the season.

It came in the game’s 13th minute, after Aram Levya sucked the defense in, then dished the ball into the middle and onto Cernick’s waiting foot.

The lanky Wolf junior, coming off a breakout season on the basketball court, swung from his heels and pegged the ball into the corner of the net, giving Coupeville all the scoring it would need.

Not content to play a thriller, the Wolves kept hammering away, however.

Aram Leyva notched the first of what would be three goals on the day when he broke free, pulled in a pass, then slapped home a shot as the goaltender meekly fell to the ground.

From there, the scores kept coming in the first half.

Freshman Tony Garcia skipped in a ball while on a run up the right side, Aram Leyva bulldozed his way through two defenders for his second goal, then Sage Downes angled in a ball off a breakaway.

While the frequent goals were a first-half highlight, the two plays which will probably be remembered longest didn’t involve anyone scoring.

At one point, a teeny-tiny dog came barreling on the field, looking for a tasty treat or at least a good chase.

Aram Leyva almost corralled the wayward pooch, but it broke free and then went on a zig-zag run, much to the delight of Renninger and fellow booters Mallory Kortuem and Natalie Hollrigel in the booth.

“Look at that cutey go! Dog’s got moves!!”

Once the ball was back in play, Aram Leyva flipped the script from cute to painful, hammering a pass which came right back to him … thanks to it caving in the face of a Chimacum defender.

The ensuing crack was loud enough to make people think someone was duck hunting nearby, followed by the hapless Cowboy keeling over to kiss the sweet, sweet grass.

“Dude’s dead…”

Spoiler, he wasn’t, and managed to get up and stagger off the pitch, but was later heard asking if anyone got the licence plate number of the semi-truck which hit him.

After all the fireworks offered in the first half, the game was fairly tame after the break.

Coupeville sprayed a bunch more shots, Cole made his one, and only, true save with 18 minutes to play, and then the Wolves tacked on three more goals late in the game.

Aram Leyva completed his hat trick, rising above the masses to mash in a header off a nice corner kick from Downes, before Derek Leyva strolled up-field and banked in a shot of his own.

The final capper came courtesy Downes, who, moments after airmailing a shot all the way out to the highway, turned down the volume a bit and went to the left foot, tapping in his second goal on Opening Day.

The win, and the way it played out, were especially nice since Coupeville played minus some of its top players.

Only half of the 14 players listed on the varsity roster saw action, thanks to a busy Saturday full of SAT tests and Science Olympiad competitions.

That enabled JV players such as Garcia, Ben Smith, Zach Ginnings, Andrew Aparicio, and Eli Kastner to get substantial game time.

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Genna Wright and Coupeville soccer kicked off a four-game road trip Saturday in Chimacum. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Well, that didn’t go quite the way everyone expected.

After four years of drilling Chimacum on the soccer pitch during their Olympic League days, Saturday’s non-conference tilt seemed like a good bet to land in the win column for Coupeville.

But it wasn’t to be.

Shocking the world, the host Cowboys snapped a 10-game losing streak to the Wolves, dismantling the visitors 5-0.

The unexpected loss, a complete reversal from a well-executed win Thursday against Sultan, drops the Wolves to 1-3-1 on the season.

From 2014 to 2017, Coupeville’s female booters swept every game they played against Chimacum, outscoring the Cowboys 35-9.

The contests in that series played out one of two ways, with five games decided by a single goal and five decided by five or more goals.

Saturday’s bout joined the list of blowouts, just with the wrong team dominating.

It was the third time in five games Coupeville has been shut out this season.

The Wolves, who sit at 1-1 in North Sound Conference play, return to action next Tuesday, Sept. 18, when they travel to Bothell to face Cedar Park Christian (3-2, 1-1).

The loss at Chimacum marked the start of four straight road games for CHS, which doesn’t play at home again until Sept. 27.

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The Salish, seen here in happier days, grounded itself Sunday, throwing a wrench into the Coupeville-Port Townsend ferry run. (Sarah Kirkconnell photo)

Willie Smith looks like even more of a genius.

The Coupeville High School Athletic Director made the call on bouncing from the Olympic League before this school year, ending a four-year run, and sending CHS to the new North Sound Conference.

One of the many benefits of the decision was reducing the number of times Wolf sports teams had to rely on the notoriously unpredictable Coupeville (Keystone)-Port Townsend ferry run.

After the Salish bit it Sunday, running aground and messing up its rudder, memories of earlier mishaps, when the entire run was put on hold for six months, surfaced.

The news got slightly better later in the day, as the Port Townsend Leader reported the Salish was freed from its grounding and a tug boat was on the way to tow the ferry away.

That will allow the Kennewick to slip in and give Washington State ferries at least one boat on a route which normally runs two.

Though there is still intrigue, as the Salish will have to be declared structurally safe to tow. Otherwise it sits in place and the ferry run is DOA for awhile.

But how does this affect Coupeville sports, is what you really want to know.

If the Wolves were still in the Olympic League, with frequent trips to Port Townsend ahead, there would be much gnashing of teeth.

Instead there is some slight angina.

CHS already played a non-league football game against Port Townsend, but the Wolves still have two non-league games against both Chimacum and the RedHawks scheduled this fall.

The first two arrive next Saturday, Sept. 15, when Coupeville is supposed to send boys tennis and girls soccer to play in Chimacum.

The other date in question is Oct. 4, when Port Townsend is scheduled to pop over to Whidbey for volleyball and soccer matches.

Any decision on Saturday’s events, since it’s CHS traveling, falls to Smith.

But, since the games are non-league, he’s not fretting too badly at the moment.

“If they are out of service, we will cancel,” he said. “But they are on a one-boat service now, so I will look at the schedules and see what’s available.

“Good thing we’re not dependent on that ferry now!!”

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   Sage Renninger, seen here in an earlier match, teamed with Payton Aparicio Monday to win a third straight Olympic League doubles crown. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Vilma Jurma of Port Townsend, a Finnish foreign exchange student, placed second in singles at the league tourney.

   Coupeville senior Claire Mietus claimed fourth in singles and advances to the district tourney for the first time.

It went just about flawlessly.

Pretty much everything clicked into place Monday as Coupeville High School hosted the 1A Olympic League girls tennis tourney.

The weather morphed from early clouds into blazing sun, which was great except for one poor Klahowya netter who sat up from her towel late in the day to be met by muffled screams from her teammates.

“You are a lobster! No, I mean a red, REEEEEDDDDDD lobster!!”

Meanwhile, school groundskeepers were able to shepherd some wayward geese from the premises before they had a chance to unleash machine-gun-style poop. Always a win.

In the midst of all of that, CHS coach/tourney director Ken Stange pulled off a tight, well-oiled event which was done in time to let rival teams catch the early ferry, with nary a trace of drama, on-court or off.

Coupeville, as undisputed four-time league champs, had the most entries, claiming nine of the 24 slots.

By the end of the day that had held up, as the Wolves won a doubles title, tied for top honors in the team scoring race, and advanced five netters to next week’s district tourney.

CHS seniors Payton Aparicio and Sage Renninger were the big winners, sweeping all three of their matches to claim a third straight doubles crown.

The team they beat in the final, Wolf sophomores Avalon Renninger and Tia Wurzrainer, played well above their seeding, taking out both of Klahowya’s doubles duos.

The youngest players to advance (eight seniors and two juniors will join them at districts), they had the match of the day.

That came in the semifinals, when Wurzrainer, whipping vicious cross-court returns and Avalon Renninger, peppering screaming left-handed winners, stomped on Klahowya’s #1 team.

“That! That was nice!!,” Stange said with a big grin as he strolled by in the aftermath.

The young Wolf duo benefited from the biggest cheering section of the day.

While school was in session Monday, many of their fellow athletes popped out during breaks, lunch or study hall.

Every Wolf had at least a few students on hand during their matches, but the clock timed out best for Avalon and Tia, who saw the bleachers jammed for their semifinal bout.

The two CHS doubles duos will be joined in Tacoma May 16-17 by senior singles player Claire Mietus, who is making her first trip to districts.

The top two finishers in singles and doubles at the two-day event, held at the Sprinker Tennis Center, advance to state.

Monday’s league tourney, which was missing Chimacum’s top two players, Renee Woods and Gladys Hitt, who had other commitments, opened with a winner-take-all first round.

Win a pro set and you were district bound, with later rounds (all best-two-of-three-sets) for deciding seeding. Lose and your season was done.

Wolf singles players Genna Wright and Heather Nastali and the doubles team of Kameryn St Onge and Maggie Crimmins fell in the first round.

Wright, who soared all the way to being Coupeville’s #1 player this season, is just a freshman, while the other three are seniors.

CHS sends five players to districts, while Klahowya (four, including singles champ Hailey Sargent), Chimacum (2) and Port Townsend (1) round out the Olympic League contingent.

 

Complete Coupeville results:

 

Genna Wright:

Lost to Maddy Rienks (Klahowya) 8-6

 

Claire Mietus:

Beat Makaela Caskey (Chimacum) 8-4
Lost to Vilma Jurma (Port Townsend) 6-1, 6-3
Lost to Rienks (Kla) 6-3, 6-0

 

Heather Nastali:

Lost to Jurma (PT) 8-0

 

Payton Aparicio/Sage Renninger:

Beat Chiara Vignale/Claudia Garfis (PT) 8-0
Beat Grace Yaley/Chloe Patterson (Chim) 6-3, 6-0
Beat Avalon Renninger/Tia Wurzainer (Coup) 6-0, 6-0

 

Avalon Renninger/Tia Wurzrainer:

Beat Anna Wells/Kelisha Harris (Kla) 8-0
Beat Taylor Bruce/Marianne Marker (Kla) 6-2, 6-3
Lost to Aparicio/S. Renninger (Coup) 6-0, 6-0

 

Maggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge:

Lost to Yaley/Patterson (Chim) 9-7

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   CHS tennis coach Ken Stange honored Heather Nastali and five other Wolf seniors Thursday. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Kameryn St Onge fires a shot back against Chimacum as she and Maggie Crimmins stroll to a win.

Play to your strengths.

Getting a sweep from its four doubles teams Thursday, the Coupeville High School girls tennis squad pulled out a 4-3 win over visiting Chimacum and claimed its fourth-straight Olympic League title.

The only Wolf athletes to achieve the four-peat (CHS girls basketball fell a game short of a fourth title), the netters finish the season 5-1 in conference play, 7-8 overall.

Coupeville went 20-1 against Klahowya, Chimacum and Port Townsend across the past four seasons.

After opening with a 6-0 run in 2015 during the debut season of the Olympic League, the Wolves finished 5-0 and 4-0 the past two years.

In both of those seasons, they clinched the title early, and rain-outs against league foes weren’t made up, hence the smaller win/loss totals.

This season came all the way down to the finale, however.

Chimacum and Coupeville entered Thursday both sitting at 4-1, having split their two prior meetings.

With two varsity players, Genna Wright (WE Day in Seattle) and Zara Bradley (illness), unavailable, the Wolves shuffled their lineup a bit.

But, in the end, Coupeville got the same dynamic play from its doubles duos it has been able to rely on all season, regardless of how the lineup card is filled out.

While Stange hailed all of his duos, two made a big impression in the spotlight.

Seniors Maggie Crimmins and Kameryn St Onge, who have played together all four years, “wielded their magic racket wands once again.”

The duo are looking especially strong as they head into Monday’s Olympic League tourney (10:45 AM start at the CHS courts), where trips to districts will be decided.

Stange also praised sophomores Tia Wurzrainer and Avalon Renninger, whose win at #2 doubles was the deciding point in the battle for the team win.

The precocious netters knew the match, and title, hung on their bout, and embraced the honor, attacking with glee and then bumping rackets with a little more ferocity as they neared the win.

Avalon and Tia established themselves as a force to be reckoned with,” Stange said. “They were undefeated in league this year, and today they dispatched who will be Chimacum’s top duo in Monday’s tourney.”

With Wright and Bradley out, freshmen Emily Fiedler and Jaimee Masters also got a chance to step up, and it was a huge step.

After playing doubles all season, the two Wolves made their singles debut in the year’s biggest match, and both cracked their fair share of winners against veteran foes.

Emily and Jaimee dipped their toes into the varsity waters. They came up short, but played quite well,” Stange said. “This should bode well for them next season.”

Along with a league title hanging in the balance, Thursday was Senior Night for Wolf old-timers Payton Aparicio, Heather Nastali, Claire Mietus, Sage Renninger, Crimmins and St Onge.

Mietus and Nastali joined the tennis program as juniors while the other four went the whole way, and their coach got a bit misty-eyed as he honored all six.

“Twenty seasons of tennis from six seniors. That is a lot of time, effort, energy, and dedication,” Stange said. “Coupeville’s Class of 2018 made a positive impact on the CHS tennis program.

“It’s been an honor working with you all over the past four years,” he added. “I know the six of you are destined for great things in life, and I hope that you continue making tennis one of your lifetime sports.”

Nastali was praised for her “flexibility in playing in whatever spot was needed on a given day” and Mietus for her “willingness to play the best players that the big schools had to offer.”

Stange noted that St Onge, “the most acrobatic person on our team” and Crimmins, “the person with the sunniest disposition,” had spent four years as doubles partners, “and you’re still friends!”

When it came to his captains, Aparicio and Sage Renninger, the net guru informed them they were the best girls doubles duo, hands down, he has coached in his 13 years at the helm of the CHS program.

“You were the Alpha Wolves before you even knew it,” Stange said, emotion in his voice. “I’ll never forget that first week of 9th grade tennis and how you broke the hearts of so many aspiring #1 doubles teams.

“You were so darned nice about it, too!,” he added. “You never backed down, and you’ve never looked back.

Sage and Payton, thank you both for setting the standard. Thank you for the wins, for the giggles, for the leadership, for paying it forward and being outstanding stewards of the program.”

 

Complete Thursday results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Heather Nastali lost to Gladys Hitt 6-1, 6-0

2nd Singles — Jaimee Masters lost to Renee Woods 6-0, 6-0

3rd Singles — Emily Fiedler lost to Makaela Caskey 6-2, 6-4

1st Doubles — Payton Aparicio/Sage Renninger beat Marley Music/Christina Bell 6-0, 6-0

2nd Doubles — Avalon Renninger/Tia Wurzrainer beat Grace Yaley/Chloe Patterson 6-1, 6-3

3rd Doubles — Maggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge beat Madison Hess/Denisse Lopez 6-1, 6-3

4th Doubles — Jillian Mayne/Claire Mietus beat Chiara Vignale/Claudia Garfis 6-3, 6-0

JV:

5th Doubles — Nanci Melendrez/Elaira Nicolle beat Jaden Long/Olivia Mattern 6-0

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