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Jenn Spark

Jenn Spark delivers a thunderous kick earlier in the season. (John Fisken photo)

This is the way the season ends, not with a whimper, but a proud scream of joy.

Capping a nine-game unbeaten run, the Whidbey Islanders GU18 select soccer squad fought to a 0-0 tie against a very talented Pacific Sound United team in Everett Saturday.

The 7-0-2 finish left the team, which brought together booters from Coupeville, Oak Harbor and South Whidbey, with a sterling 8-2-2 record.

The only two losses came early in the season to what proved to be the top two teams in the league.

The Islanders will now have two months off, with tryouts for the next team in mid-May.

Whidbey will lose two high school seniors — Oak Harbor’s Selena Medina and Coupeville’s Tori Wellman — but could return almost its entire roster if things work out.

The current team played with a collective fire all season, making its name with a stingy defense and a high-flying offense.

And while that offense couldn’t get one into the back of the net Saturday, the defense more than held its own.

With starting goaltender Kenzie Perry off on vacation, Morgan Zylstra slid into net and recorded her first complete game shutout of the season. Helping her out was the back wall that refuses to give an inch.

“Our back four — Alyssa Cross, Jacki Ginnings, Jenn Spark and Paige Waterman — proved, again, to be the best in the league,” said Islander coach Sean LeVine.

The Islanders came hard in the second half, flooding the Everett side of the field. Jacalyn Hefflefinger, Bailey Olson, Becca Pabona and Medina ripped off shots on goal, but the net gods were not of a giving nature in the end.

Still, keeping the unbeaten streak alive for the final 75% of the season is something for the entire team to be proud of accomplishing.

“You are my favorite sports team on the planet!,” LeVine told his team. “I enjoyed this season more than any other!

“We improved, had fun, and had you seen by colleges,” he added. “That is a successful season!”

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Carson Risner (left) anchoring the line for the Wolves. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Carson Risner (left), anchoring the line for the Wolves. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Risner (bottom left) and other captains from the CHS squad celebrate during the team's awards dinner in the fall. (Sylvia Arnold photo)

Risner (bottom left) and other CHS captains celebrate during the football team’s awards dinner. (Sylvia Arnold photo)

And then some snipping was done. (Jennie Prince photo)

And then some snipping was done. (Jennie Prince photo)

A little snip here. A little shave there.

Doctors cleaned up the injured leg of Coupeville High School football captain Carson Risner recently, getting the junior back on-target for being ready for his senior season on the gridiron.

Risner, a two-way starter on the line for the Wolves, was injured during a practice midway through the football season, and is currently sitting out the basketball season while working as a manager for the boys’ hoops team.

He hopes to be back and healthy in time to throw during the track season.

“His surgeon threw discus in college and asked if we wanted a rubber-band and some springs added while he was in there, so he could really get a good launch,” mom Jennie Prince said with a laugh.

“The surgeon was hoping he could play the end of the season of basketball, but our season is over too soon,” she added. “He cannot bend his knee past 90 degrees for six weeks. Then he should be fine. He will take it slow and needs to rebuild his quad muscles. He’s hoping to throw.”

Doctors shaved Risner’s torn-up patella and repaired a 28mm meniscus tear. A medial ligament attached to his patella that keeps it from dislocating is still torn.

Surgery on that would require a six-month recovery time, so the family is waiting to see if it will heal itself, which is very possible.

“He can play with a nice tape job and a patella tracking brace,” Prince said. “If it dislocates again he will consider fixing it, but it still may heal if he’s nice to it.

“His torn MCL from football looks like it never happened,” she added. “Happy about that. ACL is perfect too.”

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Football coaches scouting for new talent.

CHS football coaches scouting for new talent.

Through good games and bad, the CHS/CMS band is always there to support their teams.

Through good games and bad, the CHS/CMS band is always there to support its teams.

Paul Schmakeit perfects his halftime half-court shot style.

Paul Schmakeit perfects his halftime half-court-shot style.

Wolf boys' hoops coach Anthony Smith (right) and junior guard Joel Walstad hang out pre-game.

Wolf hoops coach Anthony Smith (right) and junior guard Joel Walstad hang out.

Superintendent Jim Shank contemplates the state of the universe.

Coupeville Schools Superintendent Dr. Jim Shank contemplates the state of the universe.

"I'm Batman!"

Jason Knoll plays us out.

The action on the basketball court is not the only action.

A photographer like John Fisken knows this to be true, so he lets his camera wander from time to time, and comes up with shots like the ones above — a smorgasbord of colorful images from Tuesday night’s Coupeville vs. Granite Falls boys’ basketball game.

Than he’s nice enough to share them with us.

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