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Having won their playoff opener by forfeit Monday, Xavier Murdy and Coupeville soccer are guaranteed at least two more postseason bouts. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Well, that was … unusual.

Just hours before game-time Monday, the Cedar Park Christian boys soccer squad forfeited its playoff game with Coupeville, denying the Wolves a chance to play a postseason game on their home field, but guaranteeing their season goes on at least two more games.

Shortly before their bus was scheduled to leave Bothell, CPC officials contacted Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith with the news.

It was the second time Cedar Park forfeited to Coupeville this season, having also done it 10 days ago.

“Not enough players. They must have been hoping to make it, but fell short last moment,” said CHS soccer coach Kyle Nelson.

That tracks with reports from Bothell, where Coupeville softball players saw CPC soccer players on a bus in the parking lot, but the bus never departed.

While CHS was denied its share of the gate, and a chance to raise money with concession sales, the 1-0 win lifts the Wolf booters to 6-8 on the season and sends them to the double-elimination portion of districts.

Coupeville hits the road Wednesday and faces Lynden Christian, which lost 3-0 Monday to South Whidbey. Kickoff is 4:30 PM.

The Lyncs are 6-9-2.

Win in Lynden and the Wolves clinch a trip to bi-districts and play Saturday in the 3rd/4th place game against the winner of Meridian and Mount Baker.

Lose to the Lyncs and CHS gets the loser of Meridian and Mount Baker in the 5th/6th place game, also on Saturday, with just the 5th place team advancing.

South Whidbey and King’s, which beat Meridian 2-0 Monday, play in the district title game Saturday, and both are already qualified for bi-districts.

All Saturday games will be played at Whatcom Community College.

Cedar Park and Sultan, which fell 5-4 Monday to Mount Baker, have been eliminated.

To see the up-to-the-moment playoff bracket, pop over to:

http://www.nscathletics.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2915&sport=9

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Uriah Kastner and Coupeville High School boys soccer will get a win Friday, without having to play a game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Coupeville High School boys soccer squad hasn’t played at home in nearly a month.

And now they’ll have to wait a few more days, though they will get a freebie win for their troubles.

Cedar Park Christian, which was scheduled to come to Whidbey Friday, has forfeited the game, handing the Wolves a 1-0 North Sound Conference victory.

The reason given was the private school “not having enough players.”

While it won’t get to play Friday, Coupeville will grab the W and improve to 3-4 in league play, 5-7 overall.

The Wolves wrap regular-season play Apr. 23, when they host South Whidbey on Senior Night.

After that comes the playoffs, though, with the forfeit, questions linger.

Coupeville currently holds the #3 seed from the NSC, and, barring a torrid final week full of upset wins from Sultan, would host a loser-out playoff game Apr. 29 against the #5 NSC seed.

That’s CPC, which sits at 0-7, 0-9 after the forfeit.

And how does a win-less team make the postseason, you ask?

The district tourney is supposed to feature the top three teams from the four-team Northwest Conference and the top five from the six-team NSC.

Except, Granite Falls killed its season before it began, automatically qualifying all NSC teams still standing.

So it’s on to districts for everyone … unless this becomes more than a one-game situation for CPC, in which case the playoff bracket could be ripped up and restructured.

Under the current plan, a win in their playoff opener would send the Wolves to the double-elimination portion of districts, one win away from punching their ticket to bi-districts.

The bracket, as it sits at 11 AM Thursday morning:

http://www.nscathletics.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2915&sport=9

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In this photo, you ignore the big picture and focus on what’s right in front of you. Coupeville baseball has the same mission. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Friday’s epic baseball showdown just got a little more … epic.

With both of their prior meetings coming down to a single run, very little separates Coupeville and Chimacum as they prep for a 4 PM game tomorrow, Apr. 27.

And now, thanks to an unexpected plot twist, the teams really are dead even.

Chimacum Athletic Director Tony Haddenham cleared up a nagging mystery Thursday, confirming Port Townsend forfeited a Mar. 21 game to the Cowboys.

While no reason has been given for the forfeit, that changes Chimacum’s record from 4-1 in 1A Olympic League play to 5-1, pushing them back into a tie with Coupeville.

The Wolves (11-4 overall) and Cowboys (7-7) essentially control their own destinies, at least until Friday’s game goes final.

Win out across your final three games and you can’t be denied.

Lose Friday, though, and you fall a game back with two to play, and then you’ll need some help, no matter who you are.

Coupeville, which is expected to send ace Hunter Smith to the mound Friday, is seeking a second league crown in the last three seasons.

That would be a fitting farewell present for the baseball program before CHS exits to the new North Sound Conference in the fall.

Chimacum has never finished higher than third in the previous three years of the four-team league.

 

UPDATE (6:30 PM Thursday):

A Port Townsend starter said the game was forfeited because the RedHawks couldn’t field a full lineup that day. 

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   A rough and tumble season finale at Forks included CMS spark-plug guard Kiara Contreras suffering an ankle injury. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

As season finales go, this one busted out all the fireworks.

After traveling all day Thursday, and then some, to get to Forks, the Coupeville Middle School basketball squads walked head-on into a wild afternoon on the court.

By the time the Wolves exited and headed back to the bus for their final trip home this season, they had two wins in as many games, though one came in an extremely odd manner.

The Wolf 7th graders romped to a 37-24 win, while the CMS 8th graders officially were credited with a forfeit win after the Forks coach pulled his players and took his ball home while trailing by five with 14 ticks left on the clock.

Seriously.

But first, the game that finished.

7th grade:

Carolyn Lhamon has steadily grown as a force in the paint for the Wolves, and she capped her first middle school season by throwing down a career-high 24 points.

While Lhamon by herself would have been enough to match Forks, she wasn’t alone.

Not by a long shot.

Maddie Georges tossed in seven in support, Nezi Keiper and Gwen Gustafson each added a bucket and Alita Blouin knocked down a pair of free throws to round out the attack.

With the win, the CMS 7th graders finished the season at 8-2 for first-year head coach Alex Evans.

The Wolves fell only to Sequim, a large middle school which funnels players to a 2A high school, and both of those games came down to the wire. One was decided late in the fourth, the other in overtime.

8th grade:

Where to begin?

The game was rough-and-tumble, to be charitable, with Coupeville shooting 35 free throws and losing spark-plug guard Kiara Contreras to a leg injury after she was sent intentionally flying by a Forks rival.

Up by one with 50 seconds to go, the home-town Spartans melted down mentally, throwing away the game and their cool.

Wolf scoring ace Anya Leavell struck twice, stealing a ball and turning it into a go-ahead layup, then pilfering yet another pass only to be tackled to the floor.

Unable to continue, she had to be replaced at the free throw line, with Coupeville coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh calling on Abby Mulholland to do the honors.

“Enter the momentum-swinging hero! After playing less than a minute, Abby steps to the free throw line and sinks them both,” said a proud coach.

After that, things went all to heck and beyond, with a steal on an inbound pass, a turnover, a missed Forks shot, a scramble for a loose ball and a Forks coach coming unglued.

Whistled for a technical, he continued to rant while Izzy Wells iced the game with a pair of charity shots.

And then the Forks coach took his ball and went home, refusing to play out the final 13.8 seconds of the season, forfeiting the game and any chance to close with class.

In the midst of a game where a Forks player cursed right at a ref’s face and Contreras was injured on a play that seemed to spring out of a time machine from the era when the Detroit Pistons “Bad Boys” used to throttle Michael Jordan, there was a saving grace.

It came in the way Coupeville’s players handled a potentially explosive situation on a foreign floor.

“There were a lot of times where we could have given into the fight but we didn’t,” Van Velkinburgh said. “We stayed the course, stayed together and got large contributions down the stretch to pull a wrestling match out to be a basketball game win.

“We end our season and I couldn’t be more proud of this group of young ladies.”

His squad finished 6-4, with their losses coming to Stevens and Sequim, two schools several times larger than Coupeville.

The victories built his team’s confidence, and the losses taught them what they need to do to improve.

As they prepare to move up to high school ball, Van Velkinburgh, who has guided these players through several years of SWISH basketball prior to this season, has seen the Wolves grow, develop and bond as a team, on and off the floor.

“I’m very excited for their future,” he said. “My hope is they continue to work hard and that they stay together.

“Amazing group of young ladies that I can truly say I have been blessed to share the court with.”

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Come on, South Whidbey. Give Coupeville a chance to beat you a lot more. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

   Come on, South Whidbey. Give Coupeville a chance to thrash you on a far more regular basis. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

It’s time, South Whidbey, it’s time.

You may not want to hear this, but you need to think long and hard about leaving the 1A/2A Cascade Conference and joining Coupeville in the 1A Olympic League.

I know you didn’t ask for my opinion, but that has hardly ever stopped me from spouting off.

And I’m offering this advice as a friend, as someone who wants to see Falcon Nation have a fighting chance.

I want you to have plenty of opportunities to serenade fallen foes with “Drive home safely!!”

Now, of course, I don’t want to hear that tune when Coupeville is the opponent. I’m not saying that.

But I want to see South Whidbey have a fighting chance at all other moments.

A chance which would increase immeasurably if the Falcons left behind a broken league, much as the Wolves did in 2014.

This is not just about football, or your recent forfeit to Archbishop Thomas Murphy, though that certainly got me to thinking.

Playing a team whose offensive line could hold its own with a lot of college teams, at a time when you can field less than 20 players, makes no sense.

As much as the Falcon players probably hated the decision — players want to play, always — I think SWHS administrators made the right choice.

Same thing with Sultan, who at 4-0, are also forfeiting to an ATM squad which has outscored foes 170-0 (not a misprint).

I would be shocked if Granite Falls also doesn’t step aside, and you know things are way too one-sided when King’s coach even publicly admitted his team took a vote on forfeiting.

The Cascade Conference, with its crazy-quilt mix of private schools (who can offer scholarships and operate under different rules) and bigger 2A schools (Cedarcrest and, before they fled the league this year, Lakewood) is a staggering Frankenstein monster.

It’s falling apart before our eyes, and my advice to South Whidbey (again, unasked for) is to get out while the getting is good.

I know it can’t happen this school year, but the Falcons should aim to jump leagues in time to start the 2017-2018 school year in a new environment.

Follow Coupeville’s example and petition to leave District 1 and trek over to District 3.

Come make your case to the Olympic League AD’s, who would likely say yes to bumping the league to five schools.

Coupeville, Klahowya, Port Townsend and Chimacum have little to lose in welcoming refugee Falcons, and much to gain, as adding schools helps the Olympic League in increasing playoff allocations.

But, what does South Whidbey have to get out of such a move. Lots.

First, you reinstate your greatest rivalry in a meaningful manner.

Coupeville vs. South Whidbey. Cow Town vs. Hippie Land. Wolves vs. Falcons.

Nothing is sweeter for either side than beating the burg which sits 25 miles down the Island.

Always has been that way, always will be, and having the games be league affairs just ramps that back up to 100.

Financially, it’s a win-win, as the revenue sports (football, basketball, volleyball) will undoubtedly bring in bigger gates for those clashes.

What do you want? A handful of paying customers traveling here from the wilds of Sultan for a Wednesday game or a steady stream of cars surging up (or down) the Island?

Heck, you’ll get more fans from Port Townsend and Chimacum (both schools whose fans travel well and are far closer) than you will from Granite Falls or Cedar Park Christian.

So, we have rivalry and money, and to that we add a leveled playing field and increased chance at winning titles.

Join the Olympic League and you’ll be the second-biggest school (after Klahowya) in terms of student body size. That’s a huge boon.

And, by removing ATM and King’s, you instantly put yourself back in the title picture in every sport.

Winning titles is huge.

Having a realistic shot, where every day every one of your programs feels genuinely competitive, is even bigger.

In the Cascade Conference, Coupeville found itself facing schools with 400 more students and college programs masquerading as private high schools.

In the Olympic League, facing public schools much closer in size, the Wolves have won six titles in two years, stretched across four sports. And they have been competitive in EVERY sport they play.

And another note — the Cascade Conference, for all its size, doesn’t do much with tennis, which forces South Whidbey to play in a random league comprised of private school powers for one sport.

Join the Olympic League, and the Falcons go back to having their sports under the same umbrella, with Coupeville, Klahowya, Chimacum and all the 2A Olympic League schools ready to cross rackets with the well-respected Falcon netters.

But, you say, there has to be some reason to stay in the league you’re currently in. Right?

You got me there.

I’ve heard a mild complaint about the Port Townsend ferry and how that might affect travel, especially with 7 PM kickoff times for football games.

To which I say, big whoopee.

The Olympic League already deals with that by being flexible on some of its start times.

Nowhere is it written in stone that football games have to kickoff at 7.

Which is why, when Coupeville goes down, catches the Clinton ferry and travels to Silverdale to play Klahowya (comparable to South Whidbey hopping over to PT or Chimacum), the kickoff time is 5 or 5:30.

With some other sports, certain match-ups of schools have varsity play first, so that, if a team has to ankle for the ferry, you leave in the middle of the JV game.

Small ways to work around the fact we all LIVE ON AN ISLAND in the first place.

Which leaves one thing — it’s easy to stay.

Except, the league is crumbling.

Lakewood left. ATM is being shoved towards the door, as sentiment for private schools to play in their own leagues builds.

There is no better time to get out, Falcons.

Renew your greatest rivalry. Give your struggling programs a fighting chance, an opportunity to rebuild, and give your elite programs room to soar again.

Make the right choice, South Whidbey. Leave a bad relationship which no longer works and come back home.

Coupeville is here waiting for you, ready to try and kick your fanny certainly, but in the way a brother or sister would.

We should be together, Wolves and Falcons, making life miserable for Klahowya. It’s our destiny.

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