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Posts Tagged ‘Crosspoint Academy’

Coupeville’s seniors claim control of the soccer pitch. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There’s always something new.

Robert Wood is 48 games into his run as a soccer coach at Coupeville High School, but Saturday’s home opener against Crosspoint provided a different wrinkle.

Playing through a few rain drops spit from an overcast prairie sky, the Wolves rallied in the second half to forge a 1-1 tie with their private school rivals, the first ever stalemate under their pitch guru.

With the contest being a non-conference one, the teams passed on playing overtime or going to a shoot-out to decide things. Instead, a mixed result for both squads.

And while Wood felt his team played better than it had in an earlier road loss to Auburn Adventist Academy, he wasn’t terribly overjoyed with Saturday’s result.

“We beat ourselves,” he said. “Just the very definition of apathetic.

“We didn’t play well enough to keep control of the ball and were tentative a lot of the time. Stuff to work on.”

The Wolves, now 0-1-1 on the season, play at home twice next week, welcoming Northwest 2B/1B League foes Friday Harbor and Grace Academy to Coupeville for non-conference games Tuesday and Saturday, respectively.

That will give the Wolves a chance to work on tightening up their attack and finding the fire in their collective bellies.

It’s not hard to believe it’s there, as there was moments Saturday when things sparked to life.

Trailing 1-0 early in the second half, despite outshooting Crosspoint, Coupeville finally found the counter when Sage Arends knocked in his first varsity goal with 32 minutes left to play.

The Wolves had at least two chances to claim the lead in the late going but came up just short.

Senior Preston Epp sent a penalty kick just barely wide left, the ball coming tantalizingly close to finding the back of the net as Crosspoint’s goaltender watched his life flash before his eyes.

Then, with the game in stoppage time, 8th grader Tamsin Ward, already having an impact in her high school debut, bashed a high arcing shot under pressure.

While the ball needed to be several feet lower to hit paydirt, it was still an impressive wallop from a young gun who shows no fear on the pitch.

Coupeville is playing as a co-ed team for the second straight season, while rebuilding the roster for a girls’ team, with female booters like Ward, Ayden Wyman, Lillian Ketterling, and Taylor Marrs holding their own in male-centric games.

Crosspoint tallied the afternoon’s first score 19 minutes into play, when freshman Caleb Smart slipped a shot through a thicket of players in front of the net.

Other than that shot, on which he was largely blocked from seeing the incoming ball, Wolf goalie Hurlee Bronec was lights out.

At one point the senior netminder deflected a shot at close range, then soared high to punch another ball up and over the goal.

Coupeville’s defensive front made Bronec’s job a lot easier after that, largely keeping Crosspoint at bay across the game’s final 50 minutes or so.

With a strong core of seniors, which includes Cael Wilson, Mason Butler, Dane Hadsall, Epp, Wyman, Bronec, Angel Partida, and Matthew Ward, the Wolves are primed for a successful run.

While Saturday’s tie was a mixed bag, Wood remains focused on the positives.

“We’ll keep working, that’s for sure,” he said as he headed into the night.

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Carolyn Lhamon jousts with a Crosspoint Academy player Saturday. (Morgan White photos)

It was a tall challenge.

The Coupeville High School girls soccer squad is a scrappy band of players who never back down from anyone.

But, when the opponent is a blue blood program which boasts multiple state titles and enters play undefeated, life is likely to be tough.

Such was the case Saturday, as the Wolves put out a maximum effort but came up short against visiting Crosspoint Academy.

The Warriors, repping a 1B school, exited Whidbey with a 7-0 win, improving their season mark to 5-0-1, with that tie having come against 2A power North Kitsap.

Edie Bittner battles for control of the ball.

The loss drops Coupeville to 1-7, though their next game should be a more-competitive affair.

The Wolves travel to La Conner Tuesday, Oct. 11 to face a Braves team which sits at 0-8 on the season.

Coupeville has home and away games with La Conner, as well as road trips to Mount Vernon Christian and Granite Falls left on the schedule.

The Wolves may also pick up a road game at Sultan, if the two schools are able to work around the Turks league schedule, which has been impacted by fire-related weather conditions.

Coupeville scoring ace Ayden Wyman enjoys a complimentary donut.

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Hall o' Fame inductees (clockwise, starting in top left) Alexis Trumbull, Tracy (Taylor) Corona, Dalton Martin and Emma Laurion.

   Hall o’ Fame inductees (clockwise, starting in top left) Alexis Trumbull, Tracy (Taylor) Corona, Dalton Martin and Emma Laurion.

Excellence, in big moments and small moments.

The ability to dig deep and find that extra little bit of something special unites those going in to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame today.

Three stellar female athletes, including one who will go down as the greatest Wolf who never was, and two big moments, one by an individual, one by a team, make up the 57th class to be ushered into these hallowed digital walls.

Please welcome Alexis Trumbull, Tracy (Taylor) Corona, Emma Laurion, the weekend when Dalton Martin won three throwing medals at state and the 2011 Coupeville High School softball squad, which pulled off the most improbable playoff win in school history.

After this, you’ll find the athletes and moments enshrined atop the blog, under the Legends tab.

Our first inductee, Trumbull, was a standout softball player, both as a flame-throwing hurler and a deadly hitter at the plate.

For much of her career, she didn’t have a ton of support around her, and the Wolves didn’t win a lot of games during her time (later in this induction ceremony we’ll discuss the biggest W she was part of, however).

That shouldn’t lessen her impact, because Trumbull, who went on to play college ball at Skagit Valley, was as dependable a player as you could want.

She never looked flustered, even when things were falling apart around her, and was a rock for a program trying to rebuild.

Her impact went far beyond wins and losses, and she should be remembered for being a serene star who left it all on the diamond every game.

That’s a trait Corona always had during her stellar run as a three-sport (volleyball, basketball, softball) star.

The late ’90s to mid-2000’s are rightfully viewed as the golden age for CHS girls sports, and the 2002 grad was a key part of that success.

As a sophomore, Corona played on the first Wolf girls’ basketball squad to ever win a game at state, then teamed up with Sarah Mouw and Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby to put an emphatic stamp on their senior seasons.

Led by the terrific trio, Coupeville finished 6th at state in basketball (best in program history) and 3rd at state in softball (tied for best in school history for any sport).

The Wolves also advanced to state in volleyball that season, marking the only time in the 116-year history of CHS that all three core girls sports teams went to the big dance in the same school year.

Corona was indispensable in all three sports, part of the glue which held those squads together.

Need someone to pound in the paint? Someone to get a key hit at just the right moment? Couldn’t go wrong with picking her.

Our third inductee, Laurion, is the classic case of what could have been.

She’s going into our hall because she learned the game of soccer here in Coupeville, but, unfortunately for Wolf fans, she put together her record-setting prep career in Bremerton.

Having left Whidbey at age nine, thanks to her dad’s military transfer, Laurion ended up at Crosspoint Academy, where she was a volleyball and basketball star before graduating in 2015.

But it was soccer, the sport she picked up playing with future Wolves like Julia Myers and Marisa Etzell, which became her true claim to fame.

During her time at Crosspoint, Laurion rained down a mind-boggling 118 goals in four years, leading her squad to back-to-back 1B/2B state titles.

And she shone brightest in the big moments, scoring the only goal in a 1-0 championship win as a junior, before tossing down a hat trick in the final game of her senior season.

We could wonder what it would have been like for Coupeville to have played ATM and King’s with Laurion running wild, or we can merely step back, stop crying, and honor her for all she accomplished, regardless of the uniform.

Yep, let’s do number two.

Joining her in the “what could have been” category, but in a different way, is Martin.

A standout football, basketball and tennis player, he was severely hampered by injuries (concussions mainly) which eventually whittled down his athletic choices.

Instead of complaining, Dalton turned to track and finished his high school days with a bang.

After taking 5th at state in the discus as a junior, Martin went bonkers in his final trip to Cheney as a Wolf.

By the time he was done this spring he had claimed three medals (2nd in the discus, 8th in the shot put and javelin, with the last event being one he had picked up just five weeks prior).

That put him in auspicious company, as one of just seven Wolves to have won three medals at the same state track meet.

Even better, he is the only one of the seven to have accomplished the feat solely as a thrower.

Now he’s droppin’ viral videos and preparing to take his throwing skills to the college level, but, before he goes, we just had to give him one more honor.

Our final inductee today is the most unlikely.

The 2011 CHS softball squad did not have a great season. Can’t sugarcoat that.

The only 1A school to take the diamond that year in the Cascade Conference, they got beat on by ATM and Co. and finished the regular season at 0-17.

But, as I mentioned, they were the only 1A school (South Whidbey was up in 2A at the time and King’s doesn’t play softball), so, whether they wanted it or not, the Wolves were playoff-bound.

At which point they pulled off the most stunning postseason win in school history.

Led by the seasoned Trumbull, a team which played as many as six freshmen in the lineup at some points shocked the world (and Meridian), bouncing the Trojans out of the playoffs to a 5-1 tune.

A pair of close 7-3 losses to Friday Harbor and Lynden Christian ended Coupeville’s season at 1-19, but that win will stand forever as proof that any team can win on any day.

The Wolves scored first, with Trumbull crunching a double, followed by singles from Autumn Stevenson and Bessie Walstad.

Tied at 1-1 in the fourth, Meridian finally looked like it was ready to break out, loading the bags with just one out.

At that point, CHS coach Jackie Calkins pulled her starting pitcher (Stevenson) and brought Trumbull on in relief.

Game over.

Alexis whiffed the next two batters, hung three more scoreless innings on Meridian, and fueled a game-winning rally in the fifth.

Madeline Roberts led off with a walk, went to third on yet another double by Trumbull, then scampered home with what would be the winning run on a ground-out off of Stevenson’s bat.

Coupeville tacked on two more in the inning, using walks to Walstad and Breeanna Messner and a huge error on a ball smacked by Sydney Aparicio.

The game’s final run came courtesy of back-to-back two-baggers from Walstad and Aparicio.

There have been huge playoff wins in CHS history, landmark ones like the 1970 boys’ hoops team winning the first district title by a Whidbey Island team.

But none have been so improbable, and possibly, so satisfying, as a season of pain was washed away by one glorious afternoon in which the Wolves stood tall and howled as a team.

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The Three Amigo celebrate.

  The Three Amigo celebrate. May Rose (14) and Bree Daigneault both scored Saturday, while Wolf volleyball star Ally Roberts was there to root her buddies on. (Mimi Rose photo)

Taichen Rose teams with older sister May to form the Rose & Rose Wrecking Crew. (John Fisken photo)

   Taichen Rose teams with older sister May to form the Rose & Rose Wrecking Crew. (John Fisken photo)

Not bad. Not bad at all.

Facing off Saturday with two-time defending 1B/2B state soccer champs Crosspoint Academy, the public school kids more than held their own.

Riding goals from May Rose, Bree Daigneault and Jenn Spark, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad came within a whisker of an upset, before being nipped 4-3.

“The match was epic and the girls are learning to ratchet up their level of intensity to match and surpass their opponent,” said CHS coach Troy Cowan. “Each match we get faster, stronger and better prepared for our impending conference matches.”

The non-conference loss dropped the Wolves to 2-3-3 on the season, while Crosspoint won its fourth straight.

Coupeville will now have 10 days to tweak all the small things, as it’s off until a non-conference game at La Conner Oct. 13.

Two days after that, the Wolves kick off the first of six straight 1A Olympic League matches, which will decide the squad’s postseason fate.

Saturday, facing a school it lost to 7-1 last year, Coupeville clamped down on both sides of the ball.

Crosspoint had outscored its last three opponents 27-1, with nine goals in each of those games, but the Wolf defense held them to less than half of that per-game average.

While Spark is the rock for the Wolf defense, her fellow defenders all stepped up big.

One young gun drew big-time praise from her coach, for her play on the afternoon and all season.

“How impressed I have been with one of my players of late. She is the hardest-working player on the pitch, never complains, gives me and her teammates 100% every second on the pitch and does it with a smile on her face,” Cowan said. “She has grown leaps and bounds from her freshman year to yesterday. She is gritty, tough-minded and passionate!

Taichen Rose has left an indelible mark on me and demonstrated the true spirit of sportsmanship and the results of possessing a positive perspective.”

And, when the Wolves had their chances on offense, they took full advantage, and not always from the expected gunners.

Kalia Littlejohn, who entered with seven goals in seven games, was held scoreless, but set up Daigneault for her second goal of the season.

Spark crushed home her third score of the season, with a little help from an opposing player.

The senior with the golden leg let loose with a corner kick that curled at the last second, then exploded off of a Crosspoint defender’s noggin and into the corner of the net.

Wrapping up Coupeville’s scoring burst was May Rose, as the junior hit pay-dirt after being set up by Mia Littlejohn.

One of the most unsung Wolves, the always-hard working older sister in the Rose & Rose Wrecking Crew was sky-high afterwards.

Especially with one of her best friends, Daigneault, also scoring, while the third of the Three Amigos, CHS spiker Ally Roberts, screamed her approval from the sidelines.

“I know what it feels like to cry when you’re over emotionally happy now,” Rose posted on Twitter in the afterglow of her big moment.

To her, and all of her Wolf teammates, who never broke, and barely yielded, in the face of a true powerhouse, job well done, ladies.

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Emma

After playing youth soccer in Coupeville, a family move took Emma Laurion to Crosspoint Academy, where she became an All-State player.

Coupeville faced two of the state’s best high school girls’ soccer players this past fall.

When the Washington State Soccer Coaches Association announced its All-State teams, Klahowya’s McKenzie Cook was tabbed as the 1A MVP and Crosspoint Academy’s Desere’e Doty topped the 2B/1B list.

Three players from Klahowya were honored, with Cook, a forward, being joined by midfielder Izzy Severns as First Team picks.

Defender Rachel Seidel was named to the Second Team, while Eagle coach Troy Oelschlager was picked as the 1A coach of the year.

Doty and fellow Crosspoint forward Emma Laurion, who played her youth ball in Coupeville, were both First Team picks, as was their teammate, defender Kalie Nation.

Both Klahowya and Crosspoint won state titles this season.

Coupeville played Crosspoint in a non-conference game set up to reunite Laurion with some of her former teammates.

The Wolves ultimately finished second in the 1A Olympic League behind Klahowya.

While they couldn’t derail the champs, who finished 21-2, the Wolves played them much more evenly than league mates Chimacum and Port Townsend, holding the Eagles to six less goals than either of those teams did.

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