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Posts Tagged ‘Crosspoint Academy’

State soccer champs Izzy Severns, McKenzie Cook and Emma Laurion.

State soccer champs (and Coupeville Sports interviewees) Izzy Severns, McKenzie Cook and Emma Laurion.

One season into the sports year and the brand-new 1A Olympic League has its first state champion.

The Klahowya High School girls’ soccer team nipped King’s 1-0 Saturday to wrap a 21-2 season and claim the second state title in program history.

The Eagles, who dropped to 1A this year and joined Coupeville, Port Townsend and Chimacum in the new league, won a 2A title in 1999.

Paced by the high-scoring duo of seniors McKenzie Cook (https://coupevillesports.com/2014/09/08/know-your-foe-klahowyas-mckenzie-cook/) and Izzy Severns (https://coupevillesports.com/2014/09/11/know-your-foe-klahowyas-izzy-severns/), Klahowya outscored its opponents 101-15.

The Eagles, who had 13 shutouts in their championship run, fell twice to Seattle Christian — 3-0 in the regular season and 1-0 at districts.

They avoided a third meeting when SC was upended 3-1 by Meridian in the first round of the state tourney.

Klahowya beat Coupeville 5-0 and 4-0 in the first two meetings ever between the schools.

The nine-goal differential was substantially less than what the Eagles inflicted on fellow league mates Port Townsend (15-0) and Chimacum (15-1).

Another Wolf foe from this season, Crosspoint Academy, also won a state title Saturday, capturing its second-straight 1B/2B title.

The private school, led by a hat trick from one-time Coupeville resident Emma Laurion (https://coupevillesports.com/2014/09/16/the-best-wolf-that-never-was/) stuffed Liberty Bell 5-1 for its 15th straight win.

The Warriors finished 16-2-1.

Crosspoint, which beat Coupeville 7-1, outscored its opponents 117-36, losing only to 3A Capital and 1A Charles Wright Academy.

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Mia (John Fisken photo)

  Wolf freshmen Mckenzie Meyer (left) and Mia Littlejohn have a small sliver of a state record. Sort of. (John Fisken photo)

Coupeville witnessed greatness.

When the Wolf girls’ soccer squad traveled to Bremerton in early October for a non-conference game with defending 1B/2B state champs Crosspoint Academy, it was a chance to reunite with Emma Laurion.

A standout senior who played her youth ball on Whidbey before a family move, Laurion has scored more than 100 goals during her incredible run for the Warriors.

But it was actually a different player in that game who has since put her name in the Washington state high school record books.

Senior Desere’e Doty, who punched three goals into the back of the net that day, sparking a 7-1 Crosspoint win, just became the highest-scoring girls’ soccer player in state history.

Doty rained down five goals against Toledo Oct. 27, pushing her career total to 134.

She has been remarkably consistent, scoring 24, 32 and 32 goals across her first three seasons before putting on a big push as a senior.

Crosspoint has reeled off nine straight wins and sits at 10-2-1 with one regular season game to play. The Warriors have outscored their opponents 81-31, with their only losses to 1A Charles Wright Academy and 3A Capital.

With starting Coupeville goaltender Julia Myers absent for the Crosspoint game, as she took the SATs, Wolf freshmen Mia Littlejohn and Mckenzie Meyer debuted in net for CHS that day.

Little did they know they would team-up to surrender .022% of Doty’s historic run.

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Jacki Ginnings scored the first goal of her high school career Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

Jacki Ginnings scored the first goal of her high school career Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

Emma Laurion (Tara Templeton photo)

   Emma Laurion began her soccer career in Coupeville and has gone on to be one of the state’s top scorers for Crosspoint Academy. (Tara Templeton photo)

Jacki scored!

That was the headline Saturday, as Coupeville High School senior Jacki Ginnings, one of the hardest workers in the biz, overcame a hurt ankle to net the first goal of her stellar high school career.

Playing in Bremerton against defending 2B state champ Crosspoint Academy, the goal wasn’t enough to turn the tide, however, as the Wolves were rolled 7-1 by their hosts.

Playing without five key players, including its top scorer (Micky LeVine), top defender (Jenn Spark) and starting goaltender (Julia Myers), and with several other key players limited to short stints on the pitch, Coupeville couldn’t match Crosspoint’s high-powered offense.

Desere’e Doty netted a hat trick and former Whidbey resident Emma Laurion added a goal and two assists to pace Crosspoint.

The loss dropped Coupeville to 3-3-1 heading into the start of the six-game 1A Olympic League schedule.

CHS coach Troy Cowan was content to look at the positives on the trip home.

His younger bench players got a chance to experience substantial playing time, and Ginnings seized her moment.

Literally.

Cowan had moved Ginnings and her sore ankle up front to avoid contact as much as possible and was about to pull her from the game.

Her replacement was actually on the sideline, ready to come in, when she made her goal-scoring run.

“She was begging me on the bench to play,” Cowan said. “Jacki must have seen she was about to get subbed and decided to make one last push to score a goal.

“Before the match, when I told Jacki I wasn’t going to play her much because I wanted her to rest her ankle, she told me Jesus had kissed her ankle,” he added. “Well, it must have been true, because in those next few moments before she came out for the day, Jacki put one in the back of the net.

“After a few minutes on the bench Jacki told me, “see coach, I told you Jesus kissed my ankle!”

Coupeville entered the non-conference game, which had been set up to give Laurion a chance to reunite with some of the girls she played with during her rec league days on Whidbey, down a chunk of players.

Spark is lost for the season with a blown-out knee, while LeVine, Myers and defender Christine Fields were taking the SATs. Bree Daigneault was called away by a family emergency.

“When you take that kind of firepower off a team, you won’t see too many sparks,” Cowan said.

Their absence, and Cowan’s decision to limit the playing time of seniors Ginnings, Erin Rosenkranz and Marisa Etzell to preserve their health for league play, gave the Wolf bench its biggest chunk of playing time this season.

Freshmen Mckenzie Meyer and Mia Littlejohn stepped in for Myers, splitting time in goal, while Lauren Bayne, Kirsten Pelroy, Ashley Smith, Hanna Seiffert and Tai Rose all saw substantial action.

“A lot of these girls haven’t played much this year, but when opportunity came a knocking, they were there to open the door and took full advantage of their opportunities,” Cowan said. “All these girls played hard and learned a lot about the game and themselves today; they will be better players tomorrow because of today.”

Cowan also took a few moments to praise older players who shined.

May Rose was awesome today. Playing nearly the whole match as an outside mid-fielder, she was terrific at winning balls and battled hard all day,” Cowan said. “Very happy with May’s play, her future has never looked brighter.

Ivy and Ana Luvera are just terrific young ladies that are great at playing soccer. Both play hard, never quit and excel in sportsmanship,” he added. “The Luvera girls played really well today; Ivy, still learning her new position, continues to put in work and is getting better every day. Ana is just driven!!! I mean this player doesn’t have a first or even second gear, she has one speed, fast!!!

“Just a pleasure to train, watch, and coach.”

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Emma Laurion (Tara Templeton photo)

Emma Laurion (Tara Templeton photo)

Laurion (right) during her Coupeville soccer days. (Blaine Laurion photo)

Laurion (right) during her Coupeville soccer days. (Blaine Laurion photo)

What could have been.

Subtract one family move and Coupeville High School might currently have one of the best soccer players in the state on its roster.

But the military gives and the military takes, and Emma Laurion was swept away, leaving The Rock in 2005, just as her life on the pitch was taking off.

Now, having grown up from a mighty mite to being a high school senior, she’s a star at Crosspoint Academy in Silverdale, the defending 2B state champs.

Laurion has merely scored 82 goals and handed out 62 assists in the first three seasons of her stellar high school career. So it’s little wonder she’s been a First-Team All-State player each of those seasons.

Oh, and did we mention she actually plays two sports in the same season? Yep, she’s an All-League volleyball player, as well.

And now, thanks to some work by the two school’s Athletic Directors, Laurion will get a chance to reunite with some of the girls she once played with during her youth soccer days, current Wolves such as Marisa Etzell and Julia Myers.

The original idea, broached by her dad, Blaine Laurion, was to have Crosspoint travel to Whidbey, but, when that didn’t pan out, the schools agreed to send the Wolves to Silverdale.

The non-conference game is slated for Saturday, Oct. 11.

While her soccer career has been stuffed to the brim with highlights, getting the chance to reunite with some of the girls from her earliest days on the pitch has Laurion thrilled.

“I am SO beyond excited to play those girls!!,” she said. “I’ve already messaged a couple of them, and I’m hoping we can all go out to dinner after the game or something.”

Laurion was six when she started playing in Coupeville’s coed rec league, and the sport claimed her heart from the start.

“I don’t remember what made me want to play, but I remember how much I loved it and how it brought many people from the community together!,” she said.

The three seasons she spent chasing a soccer ball around Cow Town remain cherished memories.

“I was young so I don’t remember too much,” Laurion said. “How much I loved spending time with my closest friends (Julia, Rosie, Riley, Marisa, Paige), walking downtown and getting ice cream, playing baseball in an all boys league, and going to a writer’s conference for “young authors”.

“The one event that stands out the most to me was racing my second grade teacher around the track and “beating” him and then proceeding to give my autograph to all my classmates,” she added. “Hilarious, I know, but that was the “cool” thing to do back at that age.”

Crosspoint started to allow its athletes to play multiple sports in the same season during her junior year and Laurion jumped at the chance to bring volleyball, which she had played in middle school, back into her life.

“I had a blast and both of my parents coached and played, so it is in my blood,” she said. “My dad coaches soccer and my mom coaches volleyball, so we make everything work and I couldn’t be happier with the decision to play.”

But, as much as she enjoys life on the court, her heart ultimately calls her back to the pitch.

“I have such a passion for soccer. I have played for as long as I can remember and I don’t think I will ever stop playing,” Laurion said. “Soccer is the world’s sport, I believe, and it just brings everyone together, that’s what inspires me the most to keep playing.

“I go on mission trips to Mazatlan every summer and play soccer with the kids,” she added. “Having a connection with them is amazing and only makes me want to continue playing.”

Known for having ferocious foot work (“My kick is literally my strength. I take all the free kicks”) and a strong work ethic (“I guess my competitive drive could be considered a strength in that I am constantly doing anything to win”), Laurion has big goals for her final season.

“My major goal is to decide where I want to play for college,” she said. “But, besides that, I plan to break 100 career goals and win as defending state champions for high school.

“In volleyball, I hope to make an all-league team again and get the team to the Yakima tournament,” Laurion added. “And I am really hoping to just glorify God in all of my athletics this year.”

That aspect of the game is vitally important to the booter, who combines year-round sports with strong academic work (she’s in the National Honor Society), while always looking to stay strong in her faith.

“I’m not like a usual teenager out on the weekends,” Laurion said. “Because I spend almost every night doing sports I set aside time to spend with my family, but I also love trying to get together with friends.

“My favorite day of the week is probably Wednesday because that’s the day I have youth group (Newlife Youth) and I get to see all the friends I have from other schools and just spend time worshiping God,” she added. “I like going out and just finding the beauty in nature and thanking God for the opportunity to witness it.”

Laurion is thankful every day for her support crew, whether they be family, friends, fans, or all of the above combined.

“My whole family and friend base has made me the person I am today,” she said. “The love and support my parents have given me throughout the years has been amazing. We went through a lot of tough times but they still came out of it with hearts for God and blessed my brother and I with amazing childhoods/teenage years.

“All of my grandparents, as well, have always been supportive coming to my games and I would say my grandma is probably the strongest person I know,” Laurion added. “My brother and I are best friends and I don’t think I could get through a lot of stuff without him.

“And finally, my friends. They’re my world. I literally do not know what I would do if I didn’t have them. We do everything together.”

Which makes it even sweeter that come Oct. 11, Laurion will get a chance to introduce her new friends to some old friends.

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