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Posts Tagged ‘Chimacum’

   Heather Nastali’s win at #3 singles Friday clinched Coupeville’s 17th straight win in 1A Olympic League play. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The path to a girls tennis Olympic League title starts and ends in Coupeville.

Has for the past three years, and nothing looks likely to change in 2018.

Knocking off both their arch-rivals in a little over 24 hours, the Wolf netters bounced visiting Chimacum Friday 5-2.

The win, coming on the heels of a victory over Klahowya Thursday, lifts CHS to 2-0 in conference play, 3-5 overall.

Chimacum (0-1, 1-6) and Klahowya (0-1, 1-5) sit a game-and-a-half back as Coupeville seeks a fourth-straight league crown.

After enduring an early schedule jam-packed with 2A schools, the Wolves have won three of their last four matches and are now 17-0 all-time against 1A Olympic League foes.

Coupeville’s latest win came thanks to its depth in doubles, where the Wolves swept to four wins, all in straight sets.

With start times staggered depending on court availability and Chimacum pulling out wins at #1 and #2 singles in third-set tiebreakers, the actual clinching point came from Heather Nastali.

Romping to a 6-0, 6-0 win at #3 singles, the Wolf senior slapped a final winner down the line to end her match and give CHS its fourth team point on the afternoon.

The day was a vintage Whidbey production, as rain threatened (but never developed) and gusts of wind periodically swept across the frozen tundra (I mean tennis courts…).

Half the entertainment came in watching players try to knock balls back over the fence when they came flying in from other courts.

The slashing wind made that difficult, with at least three balls not making it back up and over, but instead blowing right back in the face of the girl who launched the shot.

While not hurricane-level maybe, the persistent wind also affected a number of shots during on-court action.

Often players would start one way, then have to lurch backwards or fall forward at the last second as the incoming shot suddenly changed directions.

Which doesn’t mean there wasn’t some great shot-making along the way, especially from the Wolf lefties, who seemed somewhat shielded from the breeze, which came primarily from their right side.

Coupeville has four southpaws — Kameryn St Onge, Sage Renninger, Nastali and Avalon Renninger — and all of them slashed with power and precision, making the Cowboys run from side to side while futilely chasing the ball.

Complete Friday results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Claire Mietus lost to Makaela Caskey 3-6, 6-4, 10-7

2nd Singles — Genna Wright lost to Vilma Jurmu 6-2, 4-6, 10-7

3rd Singles — Heather Nastali beat Chiara Vignale 6-0, 6-0

1st Doubles — Payton Aparicio/Sage Renninger beat Renee Woods/Emma Craighead 6-1, 6-0

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

3rd Doubles — Maggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge beat Marley Music/Anna Pace 6-0, 6-0

4th Doubles — Jillian Mayne/Zara Bradley beat Denisse Lopez/Madison Hess 8-2

JV:

5th Doubles — Elaira Nicolle/Nanci Melendrez won 4-1 (Chimacum left to catch ferry)

6th Doubles — Jaimee Masters/Emily Fiedler won 6-0

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   Matt Hilborn ripped an RBI single Wednesday during a tough loss at Chimacum. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Flip the script.

That’s what the Chimacum High School baseball squad is trying to do this season, and, so far, it’s been highly-successful.

After finishing in third-place in each of the previous three seasons of the 1A Olympic League, the Cowboys have taken sole possession of first-place a third of the way through the 2018 season.

Chimacum made that jump by holding on in the rain Wednesday to nip visiting Coupeville 5-4 in an early battle for supremacy.

With the win, the Cowboys (3-0 in league play, 4-5 overall) go a game up on the Wolves (2-1, 7-4), who saw their four-game win streak snapped.

Defending league champ Klahowya (1-2, 2-7) and Port Townsend (0-3, 0-6) bring up the rear at the moment.

While Coupeville wanted to make a statement, and keep its best start in a decade going, the loss is not crippling.

There are six more league games still to play, and the Wolves will play four of those, including both future match-ups with Chimacum (Apr. 23 and 27) on their home diamond.

CHS didn’t play badly Wednesday, but came up short a few times and couldn’t get any help.

“Tough loss! Good game, but couldn’t get any of the breaks to go our way and we missed a few opportunities to help ourselves out,” said Coupeville coach Chris Smith. “Either way, we focus on winning or learning and we did some learning today.”

The Wolves struck first, getting a two-out triple from Hunter Smith followed by an RBI single off the bat of Julian Welling in the top of the first.

As it would all too often, though, the brief rally died there and Chimacum immediately answered with two runs of its own in the bottom half of the inning.

A pair of walks set the table for Cole Dotson, who brought both of his teammates around with a two-run single to left-center.

It was all the Cowboys would get, though.

Smith, who whiffed four while tossing a complete game, promptly got himself out of the inning with his first two K’s of the day.

Chimacum added a run in the second, taking advantage of both a passed ball and a wild pitch, dropping the Wolves into their biggest deficit of the afternoon.

Coupeville is an opportunistic team, however, and has shown skill at rallying from deficits all season.

Wednesday was no different as the Wolves plated two in the top of the third to tie things up.

Again it was the red-hot Welling, whose single knocked in Nick Etzell, who doubled, and Smith, who had been plunked by a pitch.

CHS left two aboard, though, one of many opportunities left unexplored in a rain-soaked game.

The Cowboys scraped out six hits against Smith, who was undefeated coming in to the start, and three of them came in the game-busting bottom of the third.

Stringing together base-knocks from Matthew Bainbridge, Cody Clark and Aaron Serrato, Chimacum picked up its final two runs, taking the lead for good.

After Coupeville sliced the deficit back to one run in the fourth, with Jake Pease walking and scampering home on an RBI single by Matt Hilborn, the two teams descended into a pitcher’s duel.

Neither squad tallied a run in their final three times at bat, as Smith and Dotson traded goose eggs the rest of the way.

The Wolves had a couple of shots, with Welling crushing a one-out double in the fifth, only to be stranded, and Kyle Rockwell called out on interference on what should have been a sixth inning base-knock.

Coupeville matched Chimacum’s six hits, with Welling picking up 50% of those with two singles and a double.

Hilborn, Etzell (getting his extra-base hit on the birthday of older twin siblings Marisa and Lucas) and Smith rounded out the hit parade.

The Wolves get a couple days off to tweak their games (and avoid the raindrops), returning to action with a pair of non-conference games against Sequim and La Conner Apr. 16 and 19.

After that comes the stretch run, six straight league bouts in a 13-day period.

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   Aram Leyva scored two goals Friday as Coupeville blasted Chimacum 9-0 on the soccer pitch. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Let’s agree not to sugarcoat things — Chimacum High School boys soccer is not in a great place right now.

When you’ve been outscored 55-0 in five games, your offense isn’t working and neither is your defense.

The latest team to tattoo them was Coupeville, which gave three players their first scoring opportunity of the season Friday, and ran as many JV players into action as possible.

And still romped to a 9-0 win.

The second-straight conference victory for the Wolves, it lifts them to 3-1 in Olympic League play, 4-2-1 overall.

It also pulls CHS within a half-game of league leader Klahowya (3-0), while Port Townsend (1-2) and Chimacum (0-4) bring up the rear.

The Wolves struck for eight of their nine goals in the first half and finished the game with six players in the scoring column.

Freshman Sam Wynn led the way, recording a hat trick to push his season scoring totals to four goals.

Aram Leyva added a pair of goals (he has four on the year), while cousin Derek Leyva settled for a single goal, his team-leading 14th.

Senior Ethan Spark notched his first goal of the season, with sophomores Chris Cernick and Jonathan Partida recording their first-ever varsity scores to round out the attack.

With some help from his defenders, Wolf goalie Dewitt Cole recorded the shutout.

CHS coach Kyle Nelson used the game somewhat as a training device, but with an eye also on clinching the win as quickly as possible.

“We were able to get quite a few JV players in,” he said. “Nice to get another league win.”

Things are about to get a lot tougher for Coupeville, as its next four foes, Vashon (5-2-1), Forks (6-0), Port Angeles (6-2) and Klahowya (5-2-1) are a combined 22-6-2.

First up is Vashon, which visits Whidbey Monday for a 4 PM non-conference game.

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   Pedro Gamarra played in his first Coupeville soccer game Tuesday and promptly threw down a hat trick in a 12-0 win. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Freshman Sam Wynn tallied his first score, helping the Wolves improve to 2-0.

The goals splashed down like raindrops.

Taking advantage of their favorite whipping boy Tuesday, the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad laid waste to host Chimacum, cruising to a 12-0 win.

And, yes, that’s not a misprint. It’s not supposed to say 1 or 2. It’s meant to say 12.

The lopsided win, coming in the Olympic League opener for both teams, lifts Coupeville to 1-0 in conference play, 2-0 overall.

The two schools have met eight times since the league formed in 2014, and this is the fifth time the Wolves have broken double digits against the Cowboys.

After scoring 11, 13, 10 and 11 goals across four games during the 2015 and 2016 seasons, Coupeville slacked off a bit last year, totaling seven, three and four.

While the Wolves won all three of those games, one finished in a 4-3 nail-biter, offering Chimacum hope it had turned a corner and would be more competitive.

That hope has been promptly snuffed out.

With several new free-wheeling, big-scoring booters joining the roster this season, the 2018 Coupeville soccer squad looks to be an explosive one.

Two of the newcomers, sophomore transfer Derek Leyva and foreign exchange phenom Pedro Gamarra, accounted for seven goals against the Cowboys.

Leyva punched in four scores, raising his total to six through the first two games.

Gamarra, who wasn’t able to play in Coupeville’s opener Saturday, tallied a hat trick in his debut, a mark matched by Aram Leyva, who also tossed in three goals.

That gives Aram, who scored six as a freshman, four tallies through the first two games of his sophomore campaign.

With the Leyva cousins, and now Gamarra, running wild to kick off the season, it’s sending tremors through rival goalies, and maybe Abraham Leyva.

Older brother of Aram, and cousin of Derek, Abraham, who graduated in 2016, holds the Wolf boys soccer scoring records with 20 goals in a season and 45 in a career.

For now…

The other two goals Tuesday came from players at radically different stages in their career.

Senior captain William Nelson notched his first score of the season, while freshman Sam Wynn connected on the first goal of his high school career.

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   Audrianna Shaw singed the nets for 15 points Monday, as both CMS girls hoops squads thrashed Chimacum. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The mission was simple – get in, put down a beatin’, get out.

Mission accomplished.

Both Coupeville Middle School girls basketball teams rolled to blowout wins Monday, thrashing host Chimacum quickly and efficiently.

The Wolf 7th graders cruised to a 40-7 rout, upping their record to 5-1 on the season, while the CMS 8th graders improved to 4-2 after collecting a 41-12 victory.

Both squads will get a much bigger test Thursday, when they return home to face Stevens, a ginormous middle school from Port Angeles.

The first time the two schools faced this season they split games, with Coupeville’s 7th graders and Stevens’ 8th graders coming out on top.

Monday afternoon was a romp from start to finish, with the Wolves getting 15 players in the scoring column.

7th grade:

Coupeville dominated in the paint, with Carolyn Lhamon going off for 14 and Nezi Keiper banging home a season-high 11.

Maddie Georges (8), Gwen Gustafson (2), Alita Blouin (2), Jessenia Camarena (2) and Adrian Burrows (1) rounded out the Wolf offensive attack.

8th grade:

Runnin’ and gunnin’, Audrianna Shaw outscored Chimacum by herself, slapping home 15 points with a variety of slick moves and killer finishes.

Ja’Kenya Hoskins swished eight, Anya Leavell torched the nets for six and Kiara Contreras banked in four to back their leader up.

Also scratching their names in the scoring column were Ella Colwell (3), Lily Leedy (2), Abby Mulholland (2) and Kylie Van Velkinburgh (1).

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