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Lily Leedy scored twice Thursday as the Coupeville JV girls soccer squad beat Port Townsend, winning for the first time this season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Lily Leedy led them to the promised land.

The sophomore rattled the net for two goals Thursday, propelling the Coupeville High School JV girls soccer squad to a 5-2 win at Port Townsend.

The non-conference victory is the first W the Wolf booters, varsity or JV, have put up on the board this fall.

Technically, since the RedHawks loaned Coupeville some of their players to make for even sides, with one of the Port Townsend players netting a goal for her “new” team, the match is probably considered as a friendly.

To which I say, tough nuts, a win is a win and we’re calling it an official win.

It’s been a rough season for CHS soccer, at both levels, with the Wolf booters suffering more than their fair share of injuries and close losses.

They need this. They get this.

Leedy was backed up by teammates Samantha Streitler and Katelin McCormick, who each banged home a goal, and the RedHawk who will have to live down scoring against her own school.

Will the mystery Port Townsend player who tallied a goal be invited to the Coupeville banquet and installed as an honorary Wolf?

You never know, but my vote is a yes.

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Freshman Carolyn Lhamon, launching an impressive long ball, came within an inch of scoring Tuesday against King’s stellar varsity defense. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Brekyn Clark collected an assist in the JV game, as Coupeville and King’s combined rosters and played a one-goal thriller.

“I think this might be the best girls team I’ve had here.”

No matter what the win/loss record says, Coupeville High School girls soccer coach Kyle Nelson has never swayed in his belief in his injury-plagued, but resilient players.

Tuesday night made for rough sledding for the Wolves, as they welcomed one of the premier 1A programs to town, finding themselves on the wrong end of a 7-0 rumble with visiting King’s.

The loss drops CHS to 0-6 in North Sound Conference play, 0-8-2 overall, but it is still just a game off of a playoff berth.

After facing the high-powered Knights, who have been a regular visitor to the state tournament, the schedule gets much, much easier over the next week.

Coupeville heads to Port Townsend Thursday for a non-conference tilt with an 0-8 RedHawk team which has only scored in one game, before hosting Sultan (1-5 in league, 1-8-2 overall) Tuesday, Oct. 15.

The Turks nipped the Wolves 1-0 on turf in Sultan the first time around. Playing on regular grass in front of its home crowd, the chance for Coupeville to net some revenge is huge.

And necessary, if CHS wants to remain in the race for the fifth, and final playoff berth out of the six-team NSC.

While Tuesday’s tango might have seemed one-sided on the scoreboard, if the Wolves can bring the same energy they had against King’s, anything is possible.

“They played hard all game long against a very tough opponent,” Nelson said. “I never saw any hanging of heads, which I’m very happy with.

“From start whistle to end whistle, they competed.”

The Wolves also came close to puncturing a strong Knights defense which has collected six shutouts in 10 games.

“We definitely had a lot more shots on goal than the first time around, which is really good,” Nelson said. “We were inches away from scoring on them.”

Coupeville’s best chance came on a free kick awarded after a Wolf player was sent sprawling by a rival.

Freshman Carolyn Lhamon took the shot, and emulating former Wolf Jennifer Spark’s bionic leg, crushed a high, arcing ball which curved away from the King’s goalie as it picked up speed.

Unfortunately, the curve was just slightly too far, as the ball slammed off the far post, then rebounded to a teammate who immediately fired again, only to send the ball just wide on the right.

“Close, very, very close,” Nelson said with a small smile.

King’s got on the board less than 70 seconds into the game, slapping in a short shot, then followed that up with three more scores in the first half.

Wolf goaltender Mollie Bailey turned away her fair share of shots, including making a sensational diving save to deny a Knights player who had a one-on-one breakaway and seemed destined to hit pay-dirt.

Sprawling to her right at the last second, the 25th generation (give or take a generation) Coupeville native hit the turf, slid, and snared the ball, pulling it to her chest and not letting go while almost being stepped on by the rampaging shooter.

That play was symbolic of how the Wolf defense played all night.

King’s, with its band of club ball pros, can hit from anywhere, and came in waves, hitting one goal on the third rebound, as Bailey stopped back-to-back shots in rapid-fire motion before being unable to twist into a pretzel fast enough to deny the final shot.

But she and CHS defenders such as Tia Wurzrainer and Nezi Keiper stood tall, fighting for every ball, and frequently forcing the Knights out of their comfort zone.

On one play, a King’s player came curling in from the right side, seemingly with an open shot, only to be met by Wurzrainer, who hip-checked her into the stands to a mighty roar from the Wolf faithful.

Along with Lhamon’s blast, the Wolves got several shots on goal from Avalon Renninger, including one from distance, which curved just wide at the last second.

Coupeville also got strong attacks out of Mallory Kortuem and Audrianna Shaw.

 

JV mixes things up:

The Wolves only had six JV players in uniform, so King’s offered up a couple of players to even out the sides, and the teams played to what would be a 3-2 win for the “bad” Knights over the “good” Knights/Wolves.

Since it was regarded as a friendly, the loss doesn’t affect Coupeville’s record.

Both CHS goals were knocked in by rented players, with Wolf Brekyn Clark assisting on the first score.

Also seeing action for the Wolves were Lily Leedy, who came dangerously close to scoring on a second-half shot, and Izzy Wells, Camryn Clark, Anna Myles, and goalie Katelin McCormick, who snagged several nice saves.

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CHS Principal Duane Baumann cruises by, looking for fresh ‘n tasty league standings updates. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolf girls soccer plots its next move.

Three left, but at least one will fall.

Coupeville volleyball (7-0) hosts King’s (6-0) Monday in one of the titanic matches of the fall season, guaranteeing one of the last undefeated teams in the North Sound Conference will be no more.

The two spiker squads currently join South Whidbey girls soccer (9-0) as the only NSC programs with an unblemished record.

Monday’s showdown on Whidbey is part of a busy week for Coupeville, with all five Wolf teams in action.

After King’s, CHS volleyball welcomes Sultan to town Wednesday for Dig Pink Night, then travels to Port Townsend Thursday.

Wolf football is off to Tenino Friday to face Northwest Christian, while soccer hosts King’s Tuesday and ventures out Thursday to Port Townsend.

Coupeville cross country has meets Thursday at South Whidbey and Saturday at Lakewood, and boys tennis rounds out the action by possibly playing five days in a row.

The schedule has the netters at Overlake Monday, home Wednesday (Bear Creek) and Thursday (Friday Harbor), then back on the bus Friday for a trip to Bear Creek.

Tuesday is tentatively open, but may be used to finish up a home match with The Bush School which was stopped by rain.

As we prepare for the action-packed week ahead, a look at where we are so far.

 

North Sound Conference volleyball:

School League Overall
Coupeville 3-0 7-0
King’s 3-0 6-0
CPC-Bothell 2-1 7-2
South Whidbey 1-2 2-4
Granite Falls 0-3 3-4
Sultan 0-3 3-5

 

North Sound Conference football:

School League Overall
CPC-Bothell 1-0 4-1
South Whidbey 1-0 4-1
Coupeville 0-0 3-2
King’s 0-0 1-4
Granite Falls 0-1 1-4
Sultan 0-1 1-4

 

North Sound Conference girls soccer:

School League Overall
South Whidbey 5-0 9-0-0
King’s 4-1 6-3-0
CPC-Bothell 3-2 6-3-0
Granite Falls 2-3 5-5-0
Sultan 1-4 1-7-2
Coupeville 0-5 0-7-2


Emerald City League boys tennis:

School League Overall
Seattle Academy 9-1 9-1
University Prep 9-1 9-1
Bear Creek 5-5 5-5
Overlake 5-5 5-5
Eastside Prep 3-4 3-4
South Whidbey 3-5 3-5
Bush 1-6 1-6
Coupeville 1-8 1-8

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Despite a loss Thursday, Mallory Kortuem and her CHS girls soccer teammates are still very much alive in the playoff hunt. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The hunt goes on.

Nine games into a 15-game regular season, the Coupeville High School girls soccer team is still looking for its first win.

A 6-2 loss Thursday at Granite Falls drops the Wolves to 0-5 in North Sound Conference action, 0-7-2 overall.

South Whidbey (5-0, 8-0), which knocked off King’s (4-1, 6-3) in other Thursday action, winning 2-0, controls the race for a league crown at the halfway point of the conference schedule.

Cedar Park Christian (3-2, 6-3), Granite Falls (2-3, 4-5), and Sultan (1-4, 1-6-2) would currently claim the other playoff berths, but Coupeville is just a game off of the #5 seed.

The Wolves play three of their final five league games at home, including a huge rumble with Sultan Oct. 15.

Thursday night CHS got both of its goals from Avalon Renninger.

That gives the senior captain five scores on the year and 11 for her career.

Renninger joins Mia Litttlejohn (35), Kalia Littlejohn (33), Lindsey Roberts (17), and Genna Wright (17) as the only Wolf girls to score in double digits during their time on the soccer pitch.

She’s scored in each of her four seasons, raising her yearly goal totals from one to two to three and now five and counting.

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Lily Leedy, showing her colors on a night when Coupeville High School soccer honored those fighting against cancer, gets artful with the ball. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Carolyn Lhamon launches a missile.

Izzy Wells eyeballs the defense, looking for an open teammate.

Natalie Castano fights for control of the ball in the open field.

Tia Wurzrainer’s moment of Zen – chipping a perfect shot without ever having to open her eyes to see where the ball sits. She just knows.

Natalie Hollrigel, killin’ it.

They are fast, brutal, and efficient.

There’s many reasons the South Whidbey High School girls soccer squad is undefeated this season, and all were on display Tuesday during a 4-0 win at Coupeville.

The Falcons have an explosive offense, a lock-down defense and high-caliber players at every position.

As it heads into a first-place showdown with King’s Thursday, South Whidbey sits at 4-0 in North Sound Conference play, 7-0 overall.

Coupeville, which lost its top scorer to injury in the first half of the season opener, is headed in the right direction, showing growth across the board, even if the record doesn’t always reflect it.

With the loss to their Island rivals, the Wolves sit at 0-4 in league play, 0-6-2 overall.

That puts them a game off of a playoff berth with six conference tilts to go, as they are chasing Granite Falls (1-3, 3-5), who they face Thursday on the road, and Sultan (1-3, 1-5-2).

King’s (4-0, 6-2) sits in a tie with South Whidbey atop the league standings, while Cedar Park Christian (2-2, 5-3) holds the middle.

Coupeville coach Kyle Nelson knew Tuesday’s game would feature probably the toughest foe on the schedule, but he came away pleased with a lot of what he saw from his team.

“I felt pretty good with our effort,” he said. “A few mental errors cost us, but
mostly a great effort and continued improvement.”

 

JV blanked:

No score was reported, but word on the street was that South Whidbey shut out Coupeville, which leaves the Wolf young guns sitting at 0-3 in league, 0-4 overall.

 

To see more photos from both varsity and JV action, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Soccer/GS-2019-10-01-vs-South-Whidbey/

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