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Posts Tagged ‘Girls Soccer’

Maylin Steele and Coupeville soccer are tied for second-place in the Northwest 2B/1B League. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The second time was better than the first.

The Coupeville High School girls soccer team wasn’t able to upend powerhouse Mount Vernon Christian Thursday, but the scrappy Wolves fought until the end.

After absorbing a 7-0 loss at home to the Hurricanes, CHS sits at 2-3 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 3-4 overall.

That leaves them in a tie with Friday Harbor (2-3, 2-7-1), which was shocked 3-0 Thursday by previously winless La Conner (1-4, 1-4).

MVC, a 1B school which has outscored its foes 82-4 this season, is 5-0 in league, 9-1-1 overall, with its only loss against 4A Mount Vernon.

The Hurricanes, with a roster full of travel ball vets, can strike early, late, and from just about every place on the field.

Thursday they broke through in the first two minutes of the game, then ran the score up to 4-0 by the halftime break.

From there MVC cruised in for the victory, though its goal tally was only half of what it scored the first time around.

Coupeville’s defense put up a spirited stand, with Nezi Keiper, Mary Milnes, and Co. showing no fear while facing off with the Hurricane sharpshooters.

Mary Milnes has been a standout on defense.

The Wolves can make a big move in the standings when they return to Mickey Clark Field Tuesday, Oct. 12 to host Friday Harbor in a battle for sole possession of second place.

That will be the second game in a run of four straight at home for Coupeville.

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Coupeville freshman Ayden Wyman scored her first high school goal Thursday, as the Wolves won at La Conner. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They had us in the first half, not gonna lie.

But soccer is a two-half experience, and the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad dominated play after the break Thursday, scoring all its goals in a 3-1 win at La Conner.

The road victory lifts the Wolves back to .500, with the team now 2-2 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 3-3 overall.

It wasn’t that Coupeville didn’t have chances to blow the game open in the first half.

The Wolves controlled much of the action, but were continually thwarted by the oldest rule of soccer.

Just when things get interesting, always bet on a ref calling off-side.

Time and again, the Wolves had the advantage, and then a flag would pop up, often seemingly for no reason at all other than the ref needed a bicep workout.

One of the few times she was allowed to run unimpeded, CHS senior Audrianna Shaw came crashing down the left side of the field, narrowly missing pay-dirt when her shot slid wide at the last second.

On another play, Ayden Wyman and Shaw hooked up with Sophie Martin on a dazzling series of quick passes, but Martin’s shot on goal crested over the bar.

Stuck in a scoreless tie with mere seconds to play in the first half, La Conner shocked just about everyone when a long shot kept on rolling all the way into the back of the net.

Trailing 1-0 at the half despite having outplayed their hosts, the Wolves quickly found their scoring groove after the break.

And I mean really quickly.

Wyman, the lone freshman on the team, beat the La Conner goalie 15 seconds into the second half, taking a ball from Shaw and slamming it into the net for her first high school score.

With the game knotted at 1-1, the intensity on (and off) the field kicked up six or seven notches.

While the La Conner student section couldn’t be seen on the video stream, it could be heard, and the Braves brought some nice noise in support of their team.

“You all need to come to every game, oh my God!” was the sentiment picked up by a live mic in the vicinity.

But if the La Conner faithful was loud ‘n proud, the Wolf booters soon took some of the wind out of their sails.

Shaw busted loose on the right side and turned a Carolyn Lhamon set-up into a tie-breaking score, rattling home her team-leading fourth goal of the season.

Then it was Lhamon’s turn to make the scoreboard pop, as she unleashed a laser from the left on a corner kick.

The ball bounced around a bit, then splashed home, likely as an own goal, since it seemed to go off of a La Conner player.

Here at Coupeville Sports we’re biased, however, and plan to give Lhamon credit for her first goal of the season, and second of her prep career.

It’s just how we roll.

From that point on, the Wolves kept coming, with Ava Mitten and Katelin McCormick both coming inches away from adding goals.

It wasn’t to be, though, as the ref, realizing he had stopped calling off-side penalties and allowed the fans to enjoy the game, reverted to form and waved off a late CHS goal.

Still, Coupeville exited with a strong win, a testament to taking advantage of its scoring opportunities, and some nicely-bruising work by rough ‘n ready defenders like Nezi Keiper, McCormick, and Mary Milnes.

Nezi Keiper and Co. were in lock-down mode on defense.

 

La Conner honors Indigenous children:

Braves players wore bright orange socks while playing, as a way of honoring Indigenous children — both those who died, and those who survived — while in the Residential Boarding School system.

The La Conner school district, which has a sizable number of Native American students, and is closely connected with the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community, marked “Orange Shirt Day” Thursday.

Honoring the slogan “Every Child Matters,” it is “an affirmation of our commitment to raising awareness of the Residential School experience throughout Canada and the U.S.

“The legacy of Residential Schools is something that has a significant impact on all tribal communities across Canada and the U.S.”

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Eryn Wood notched the fifth goal of her high school career Tuesday at Friday Harbor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This was one they wanted, and needed.

With just four of seven Northwest 2B/1B League schools playing girls soccer, every conference tilt is a big one for Coupeville.

So, Tuesday night’s 4-1 loss at Friday Harbor hurts, at least in the moment.

It drops Coupeville to 1-2 in league play, 2-3 overall, and slots them in third-place in the NWL, with six more conference rumbles to play.

Mount Vernon Christian (3-0, 6-1-1) is the dominant team, and La Conner (0-3, 0-3) — who the Wolves play Thursday — are the cellar dwellers.

That leaves CHS and Friday Harbor (2-1, 2-5) to vie for the #2 position.

Coupeville plays three games against each league foe, which means it still has plenty of time to make up ground as the season winds through October.

Overall, the Wolves have nine games still on the schedule, with non-conference bouts against 4A Mount Vernon’s C-Team, as well as Sultan and East Jefferson’s varsity squads, still ahead.

But it’s the remaining six league games, home-and-away affairs with MVC, Friday Harbor, and La Conner, which will matter the most.

Tuesday, Coupeville got its goal from senior Eryn Wood, who smacked home her second tally of the season, and fifth of her prep career.

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The warmup music featured “Get’cha Head In The Game” from High School Musical. Audrianna Shaw listened. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The stadium was rockin’ loud enough you couldn’t hear the camera clickin’.

Ever-thirsty photographer to the stars John Fisken worked his way around Mickey Clark Field Thursday night, capturing images both on, and off, the soccer pitch.

To see everything he shot, and possibly buy some glossies for great aunt Myrtle Jean, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-soccer-2020-2021/GS-2021-09-23-vs-Granite-Falls/

 

Coupeville’s male athletes support their athletic sisters from other misters.

Parting is such sweet sorry, but Coupeville netminder Anna Myles has lost that lovin’ feeling for the soccer ball.

The ball needed to get out of town, fast, so Carolyn Lhamon punched its ticket on the evening express.

“Stay hydrated, folks! Now you know, and knowing is half the battle.”

Wolf goalie Maylin Steele comforts the ball after it got kicked in the face … repeatedly.

If Cindy Lou Who was a ninja, she’d be Katelin McCormick.

Wolf volleyball spikers offer respect to their pitch counterparts.

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Lily Leedy’s first goal put Coupeville soccer ahead to stay Thursday night. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Revenge is a dish best served cold.

Backed by a raucous student section Thursday, the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad scorched visiting Granite Falls 4-2.

The non-conference win was a nice bounce-back for the Wolves after a rough game Tuesday, and also nice payback for games in recent years when very-physical Tiger teams left CHS players bruised, battered, and concussed.

This time out, the former North Sound Conference rivals played an exciting, evenly-matched game in which a few players hit the pitch, but without malice lingering in any of the hits.

Now 2-2 on the season, Coupeville hits the road for three straight games, not playing at Mickey Clark Field again until Oct. 7.

The Wolves took advantage of playing in front of their home fans, drawing energy from their fellow students, who were on top of their chanting ‘n cheering game.

Coupeville struck early, thanks to Audrianna Shaw.

Given a free kick, the Wolf senior crunched a shot which moved left to right, found an opening, and disappeared into the corner of the net less than four minutes into the game.

“Just call her Audri ‘Airbender’ Shaw!”, said jubilant Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith as he watched the goal curve to pay-dirt.

Granite Falls would net an equalizer in the 11th minute, when Evelynn Fuller beat Wolf goalie Anna Myles, but after that Myles went into lock-down mode.

With a big boost from rough ‘n ready defenders like Nezi Keiper, Mary Milnes, and Carolyn Lhamon, the Wolves clamped down on the Tigers, blunting their best efforts.

Then Lily Leedy struck.

Set up by a pass from Eryn Wood, the senior midfielder broke free down the left side and slapped home the first goal of her varsity soccer career, handing Coupeville a lead it would never lose.

Up 2-1 heading into the second half, the Wolves pushed hard, rattling shots at the harried Granite goalie.

The Tiger netminder made one exceptional kick save, and another pretty-good deflection where she punched at the ball, while Coupeville gunner Sophie Martin just missed on a big boomer to the right side of the net.

But Martin kept coming, and was not to be denied.

She bounced a goal off the cross bar early in the second half, with the ball dropping and crossing the line, before flinging itself back out onto the field.

It was in the net long enough to count, however, which was all that mattered, stretching Coupeville’s margin to 3-1.

Granite Falls slipped a shot past Wolf goalie Maylin Steele with 12 minutes to play, cutting things back to a one-goal affair, but Steele, like Myles before her, was solid 99.2% of the way.

Denying the visitors several times, with a couple of really-sweet saves dropped in to fire up her fellow students, Steele held the line.

Then Martin delivered the final exclamation point, deflecting a rebound off of a Shaw shot back into the net with a little over two minutes to go.

Her bold shoes flashing under the stadium lights, she pumped her fists and ran into history.

No mere goaltender can stop Sophie Martin.

With two goals Thursday, Martin has three on the season and eight in her CHS career, moving her into a tie with Sage Renninger for #6 on the all-time Wolf girls scoring chart.

Martin passes Mallory Kortuem, Marisa Etzell, Alexia Hemphill, and Micky LeVine, and now sits four goals behind #5 all-time scorer Avalon Renninger.

Shaw’s game-opening goal was her third of the season, and fourth of her career.

Beyond the goals, Coupeville was solid in all aspects of the game, with role players such as Katelin McCormick, Ava Mitten, and Reese Wilkinson all bringing top effort.

And then there was Noelle “Bring it on!” Daigneault, basking in the glow of her teammates appreciation of her yellow card, and Sophia Milasich earning the undying respect of the media by handing out post-game brownies.

With Coupeville’s next two games against Northwest 2B/1B League rivals Friday Harbor and La Conner, Coupeville wanted to be back in stride before hitting the road.

Consider it mission accomplished.

“We needed to turn the ship around, and did,” said CHS coach Kyle Nelson. “A good game, and a good win.”

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