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Posts Tagged ‘Genna Wright’

   Maddy Hilkey is not too sure about the quality of the refs in Klahowya. (Amy King photo)

Playing on the road for the second time in less than 24 hours, and with a thin roster to boot, the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball squad struggled Saturday against a rugged Klahowya team.

Despite a strong effort on the boards, the young Wolves fell 33-17, evening their Olympic League mark at 1-1 on the season.

Coupeville’s JV sits at 5-6 overall heading home to play Tuesday against Port Townsend.

Facing off with Klahowya, and playing second after the Wolf varsity won in the opener, Amy King’s squad got out-muscled a bit.

“There was a lot of Eagle contact – they are always super aggressive,” she said. “We pull a rebound down, they have two to three girls mauling whoever has the ball.

“Our girls don’t appreciate that much contact, so…”

The Wolves, who only suited seven with several players missing, got strong games from Maddy Hilkey and Genna Wright.

Maddy and Genna played the most controlled during the whole game,” King said. “Maddy found herself at the free throw line a lot in the second half because she was getting some good shots off of being fouled.

Genna was just a tough player who worked hard on both ends of the court.”

Ashlie Shank and Nicole Lester both took rebounds back up strongly, netting buckets on second-chance plays, while Lester also hooked up with point guard Mollie Bailey for the best basket of the night.

Finding herself matched up with a smaller defender, Lester, listening to her coach, stepped in front of the Eagle and converted after getting a quick pass delivered onto her fingertips.

Mollie and Nicole locked eyes and it was an easy basket,” King said. “Something we did not get too many of during the night.”

Hilkey paced the Wolves with a team-high nine points, and, after one made free throw, one of her teammates tried to get a little extra.

Foreign exchange student Julia García Oñoro, still learning the intricacies of American basketball, snatched the ball away from the Eagles and tried to inbound it.

“We look and Julia had picked up the ball and was trying to throw it in,” King said. “Funnier, the Klahowya team was trying to defend the throw in.

“It was determined that it was actually their ball,” she added. “Then you hear Sarah (Wright’s) voice from the bleachers: ‘She’s from Spain.’ It was pretty funny.”

Even in a loss, King came away happy with her player’s fight. Whether the ball belonged to them or not, they weren’t willing to go down easy.

All seven Wolves who suited up had at least one rebound, with defensive dynamo Tia Wurzrainer snatching six boards and making off with three steals.

“Despite the score, the girls never let down,” King said. “Their effort was there and it was one of the better games, with everyone fighting and playing with energy from start to finish.”

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   Genna Wright was the only freshman in the 1A Olympic League to make the All-Conference soccer squad. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   With two goals and a team-high six assists, sophomore Avalon Renninger had plenty to celebrate.

The streak lives.

The Coupeville High School girls soccer squad landed three selections on this year’s Olympic League All-Conference squad, marking the fourth-straight year the Wolves have reached, or topped, that figure.

Of the league’s four schools, only Klahowya and CHS have hit that trifecta, or better, each year.

This time around, it was senior midfielder Sage Renninger, junior forward Kalia Littlejohn and freshman forward Genna Wright who got the nod.

It was the second time the two older players have been tabbed by league coaches (Renninger was also All-League in 2016, Littlejohn in 2015), while Wright was the lone 9th grader to crack this year’s roster.

The All-Conference honors were just the tip of the iceberg, though, as the Wolf booters gathered Tuesday to hand out awards at a season-capping banquet.

Renninger picked up Player of the Year honors from CHS coach Kyle Nelson, while Lauren Bayne (Most Inspirational), Natalie Hollrigell (Most Improved) and Wright (Rookie of the Year) also took home hardware.

Letter winners:

Knight Arndt
Mollie Bailey
Lauren Bayne
Anna Dion
Maddie Hilkey
Natalie Hollrigel
Mallory Kortuem
Kalia Littlejohn
Avalon Renninger
Sage Renninger
Lindsey Roberts
Ema Smith
Megan Thorn
Genna Wright
Sarah Wright
Tia Wurzrainer
Lily Zustiak

Participation certificate:

Aurora Cernick

Managers:

Chris Cernick
Ashlie Shank

Also, after extensive video view, Nelson released the updated, tweaked and 100% official stats for the 2017 season.

Goals:

Littlejohn 15
G. Wright
10
Roberts 6
S. Renninger
3
Kortuem
2
Smith
2
A. Renninger
2
Arndt
1
Bayne
1

Assists:

A. Renninger 6
G. Wright
6
S. Renninger
5
Roberts
5
Littlejohn
3
Bayne
2
Hilkey
2
Smith
2
Dion
1
S. Wright
1

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   Genna Wright beats the ball at its own game, proving she too can levitate. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Kalia Littlejohn leads an attack.

Wolf fans show support for Lindsey Roberts.

That’s gonna leave a mark.

“Sweet sassy molassy, I felt that all the way up here!!”

   International man of mystery Josh Bayne waves his support for CHS seniors Lauren Bayne (left) and Sage Renninger.

Avalon Renninger breaks out a tango, mid-match.

The action was fast, but the camera was quicker.

Having moved from grass to turf for the postseason, the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad found the pace of the game a bit sped up Saturday.

Wandering on to the sidelines, in between shooting cross country and volleyball, paparazzi John Fisken was on top of things, however, madly clicking away.

The pics above are courtesy him.

To see everything he shot, pop over to the link below.

When you do, remember, purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes.

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-2018-Coupeville-Soccer/2017-10-28-vs-Vashon/

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   Sage Renninger set up the winning goal in a 3-2 thriller Tuesday night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Playoff ticket? Punched.

While the postseason brackets haven’t been released yet, three teams have advanced out of the 1A Olympic League every year the conference has been active.

If that stays true, and there seems to be no reason it won’t, the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad has clinched one of those slots.

Riding a late goal from breakout freshman star Genna Wright, the Wolves escaped with a nail-biting 3-2 win over visiting Chimacum Tuesday night.

The victory lifts CHS to 4-1 in league play, 6-4 overall and pulls it within a half game of league leader Klahowya (4-0, 9-0).

Port Townsend (1-3, 2-6) and Chimacum (0-5, 0-6) round out the standings, and, with the loss, the Cowboys can’t finish ahead of Coupeville.

If both teams were to take opposite paths and somehow end up tied at 4-5 in league play at the end of the season, the Wolves would own a tiebreaker for winning the season series.

While Tuesday’s game wasn’t a romp like the first time the schools played — back then Coupeville strolled to a 7-2 win — it showcased the Wolves at their gritty best.

Kalia Littlejohn found the back of the net early in the game to stake CHS to a lead, but the plucky Cowboys responded with a pair of goals to shake things up.

“After that we settled down and got our defense in order,” Coupeville coach Kyle Nelson said.

Littlejohn banged home her 15th goal of the season midway through the first half to knot the game at two, and that’s where it stayed for quite some time.

Coupeville had numerous second-half opportunities, but the Cowboys escaped time and again, until Sage Renninger broke the defense.

The senior captain rifled a “well-taken corner kick” and put it on Wright’s toe, allowing the young sharpshooter to flick it past the net-minder with “a great finish.”

It was Wright’s eighth score of the season, leaving her just two shy of the team single-season record for goals by a freshman.

That mark of ten goals was set two years ago by none other than Littlejohn.

Now midway through her junior season, Kalia’s two-goal night Tuesday pulls her to 33 career goals, two back of older sister Mia, who scored 35 from 2014-2016.

With the win, the Wolves, who have back-to-back non-league tilts against 2A schools Port Angeles and Sequim up next on the schedule, improved to 3-1 in one-goal games this season.

While he might have preferred another romp, a win is a win, especially when it comes against a rival, something Nelson could appreciate.

“Another league victory, so it was a good night, even if it was close,” he said.

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   Sophomore Avalon Renninger is one of seven Wolf booters to score this season, keeping Coupeville on a record-setting pace. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The goals are rattling home at a record pace.

Coupeville High School’s girls soccer squad has placed the ball in the back of the net, sometimes with a little help from its rivals, 29 times through the first seven games this season.

The Wolves haven’t reached the halfway point of the regular season yet — that comes Tuesday against Klahowya — but have already topped their offensive output from six of the past eight seasons.

Looking at the stats one can find on the Olympic League site, you can go back to the 2009 season, and this is how CHS has finished each season:

2009 — 15 goals
2010 — 16
2011 — 6
2012 — 8
2013 — 11
2014 — 18
2015 — 33
2016 — 47
2017 — 29 (and counting)

Coupeville’s goal-scoring renaissance can be directly linked to the arrival of Mia Littlejohn and Sage Renninger in 2014, followed by the addition of Kalia Littlejohn and Lindsey Roberts a year later.

The record-setting 2016 season was sparked by Mia Littlejohn racking up a school single-season record 27 goals.

This year, with her big sister having moved on, Kalia Littlejohn is on pace to both break Mia’s single season and career marks.

The junior sharpshooter has 13 goals in 2017, and 31 for her career (just four off Mia’s record).

After that comes Abraham Leyva, who tallied 45 career goals for the Wolf boys.

CHS scoring totals this season:

Kalia Littlejohn – 13
Genna Wright – 5
Lindsey Roberts – 4
Avalon Renninger – 2
Lauren Bayne – 1
Sage Renninger – 1
Ema Smith – 1

But wait, that’s 27 goals, not 29, you say.

There’s a simple explanation for that — Sage Renninger scares people.

Twice this season Coupeville’s senior captain has whipped laser shots on corner kicks and caused harried defenders to accidentally deflect the ball past their keepers for “own goals.”

And yes, Sage rightfully got assists on both plays for forcing the situation.

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