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Posts Tagged ‘hat trick’

Freshman Tony Garcia scored in his first high school soccer game Saturday, helping lift Coupeville to an 8-0 rout of Chimacum. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It went just about as expected.

Despite playing with a patchwork lineup Saturday, the Coupeville High School boys soccer team routed visiting Chimacum 8-0 to officially open the spring sports season.

Sparked by a hat trick from junior captain Aram Leyva, the Wolves torched the Cowboys for the 11th consecutive time over the past five seasons.

Now non-conference foes, the two schools met 10 times on the pitch during Coupeville’s run in the Olympic League between 2015-2018.

During that time, the Wolves broke double digits seven times, outscoring the Cowboys 91-13.

This time around, Coupeville settled for a few less goals, but pulled off its fifth shutout in its last six games with Chimacum.

Admittedly, Wolf senior goalie Dewitt Cole didn’t have to work especially hard for the bagel job, with the Cowboys only able to muster a single shot on goal in 80 minutes of action.

Coupeville kept the ball on the attack for much of the game, and when Chimacum did get it across midfield and into Wolf territory, the CHS defense immediately snuffed things.

A big factor in the smothering defense was a rare appearance in the backfield by goal-scoring phenom Derek Leyva.

Trying to ease his sharpshooter into the season, without putting too much strain on Leyva’s brace-clad knee, Coupeville coach Kyle Nelson stationed the junior on the back side of the field, with orders to take it easy.

And, with the exception of one goal-scoring run late in the game, which pleased his fans even while offering a bit of agitation to the CHS coaching staff, he listened.

Even playing at 50%, Leyva towered above his foes, and he controlled his side of the field with a few deft moves here, a slide to the side there.

Chimacum couldn’t get the ball past him (or fellow defenders like Sam Wynn), and the Cowboys certainly couldn’t take the ball back once it was on Leyva’s toe.

Once the ball was back on the move, punched up from the back or launched half the field, the Wolves attacked, attacked, and attacked some more.

While eight shots got past the Chimacum goaltender, Coupeville could have easily doubled the score with just a bit more precision.

The Wolves whacked shots from the left, the right, up top, even almost from mid-field, sending the Cowboys scrambling.

One shot hit the crossbar and ricocheted off, several more just slid past the opening, and at least three went high into the air, and would have been successful field goals in football.

Spurred on their fans, who included a group of CHS female soccer players camped out in the press box, the Wolves played opportunistic ball, and it paid off.

“Go, Chris, go, go, go …. YEEEEEEESSSSS,” was the call from Avalon Renninger, when Chris Cernick broke through for the first goal of the season.

It came in the game’s 13th minute, after Aram Levya sucked the defense in, then dished the ball into the middle and onto Cernick’s waiting foot.

The lanky Wolf junior, coming off a breakout season on the basketball court, swung from his heels and pegged the ball into the corner of the net, giving Coupeville all the scoring it would need.

Not content to play a thriller, the Wolves kept hammering away, however.

Aram Leyva notched the first of what would be three goals on the day when he broke free, pulled in a pass, then slapped home a shot as the goaltender meekly fell to the ground.

From there, the scores kept coming in the first half.

Freshman Tony Garcia skipped in a ball while on a run up the right side, Aram Leyva bulldozed his way through two defenders for his second goal, then Sage Downes angled in a ball off a breakaway.

While the frequent goals were a first-half highlight, the two plays which will probably be remembered longest didn’t involve anyone scoring.

At one point, a teeny-tiny dog came barreling on the field, looking for a tasty treat or at least a good chase.

Aram Leyva almost corralled the wayward pooch, but it broke free and then went on a zig-zag run, much to the delight of Renninger and fellow booters Mallory Kortuem and Natalie Hollrigel in the booth.

“Look at that cutey go! Dog’s got moves!!”

Once the ball was back in play, Aram Leyva flipped the script from cute to painful, hammering a pass which came right back to him … thanks to it caving in the face of a Chimacum defender.

The ensuing crack was loud enough to make people think someone was duck hunting nearby, followed by the hapless Cowboy keeling over to kiss the sweet, sweet grass.

“Dude’s dead…”

Spoiler, he wasn’t, and managed to get up and stagger off the pitch, but was later heard asking if anyone got the licence plate number of the semi-truck which hit him.

After all the fireworks offered in the first half, the game was fairly tame after the break.

Coupeville sprayed a bunch more shots, Cole made his one, and only, true save with 18 minutes to play, and then the Wolves tacked on three more goals late in the game.

Aram Leyva completed his hat trick, rising above the masses to mash in a header off a nice corner kick from Downes, before Derek Leyva strolled up-field and banked in a shot of his own.

The final capper came courtesy Downes, who, moments after airmailing a shot all the way out to the highway, turned down the volume a bit and went to the left foot, tapping in his second goal on Opening Day.

The win, and the way it played out, were especially nice since Coupeville played minus some of its top players.

Only half of the 14 players listed on the varsity roster saw action, thanks to a busy Saturday full of SAT tests and Science Olympiad competitions.

That enabled JV players such as Garcia, Ben Smith, Zach Ginnings, Andrew Aparicio, and Eli Kastner to get substantial game time.

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Anna Dion punched home her first goal of the season Thursday, as Coupeville soccer romped to a 5-0 win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Lindsey Roberts also found the back of the net against Port Townsend, scoring for the 17th time in her stellar career.

Let the goals flow.

With sophomore sensation Genna Wright banging home a hat trick Thursday night, the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad turned its offense back on in a big way, snapping two dry spells at once.

Romping to a 5-0 non-conference win over visiting Port Townsend, the Wolves ended a six-game losing streak which stretched back three weeks.

It also signaled a major turn for the positive for a pitch squad which has been putting up strong shots, only to watch them narrowly miss time after time.

CHS had tallied just two goals during its losing skid, suffering four shut-outs during that run.

That changed Thursday, as the Wolves lifted their season mark to 2-8-1.

Wright tossed in three goals, giving her a team-high five for the season.

With 15 scores in less than two full seasons of play, the Wolf ace is almost halfway to Mia Littlejohn’s program record of 35 goals.

Thursday, she was joined by junior forward Anna Dion, who scored her first goal of the season, and senior midfielder Lindsey Roberts, who notched her fourth tally of 2018.

Roberts has 17 goals for her career, keeping her slightly ahead of the fast-charging Wright on the Wolf career scoring chart.

Coupeville has a prime opportunity to keep the offense flowing, and possibly start its first winning streak of the season.

After a couple days off, the Wolves head to the wilds of Sultan Tuesday, Oct. 9 to face a Turks team it throttled 6-0 the first time around.

That clash kicks off the final stretch of the regular season for CHS, which then plays Cedar Park Christian and South Whidbey at home, before closing league play on the road at Granite Falls Oct. 17.

Postseason brackets are expected to be revealed in the next day or two, but it seems likely five of the six North Sound Conference teams will advance to the modified double-elimination playoffs.

At 1-5 in league play, Coupeville currently sits in fifth-place, a game up on Sultan (0-6) and two back of Cedar Park Christian (3-3).

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   Sophomore Natalie Hollrigel was one of many Wolf booters who played with fire and passion Monday in a 7-2 win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The goals came early, they came late and they came in bunches.

Raining down shots from every angle Monday, the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad romped to a 7-2 win over visiting Mount Vernon Christian.

It was a game of total domination, as the Wolves battered and abused their non-conference foes every step of the way.

All in all, it was a nice cap to a brutal opening stretch of the schedule, as CHS has essentially played a game every other day so far.

Now 4-2 after winning for the fourth time in its last five games, Coupeville finally gets a breather, as it plays just three times over the next two weeks.

While their legs might be tired, the Wolves have shown a splendid scoring touch, racking up 28 goals in the opening stages of the season.

Junior Kalia Littlejohn has 12 of those, including a hat trick Monday, which runs her career total to 30 goals.

That pulls her within five of the program’s career scoring record of 35, tallied by her older sister, Mia Littlejohn, between 2014-12016.

In the early going Monday, though, it was the Renninger sisters who got things going.

Older sister Sage wasted little time, burying a vicious shot from the right side barely a minute into the game.

A little over two minutes later, it was time for lil’ sis Avalon to upstage her, as the sophomore sharpshooter cranked home a bullet from the left corner that curved over the goalie’s shoulder, then dropped in with a soft splash.

Coupeville kept the ball on Mount Vernon’s side of the field for much of the first half, firing shot after shot at the Hurricane goaltender.

From the four-minute mark to the 27-minute mark, the Wolves fired up nine shots to one from MVC, and yet, in a quirk of fate, the only missile to find pay-dirt was the one the opposing team launched.

Up 2-1 in a game that felt like it should have already been 20-1, CHS finally got that straightened out.

Genna Wright sucked the defense to her, then dropped a seeing-eye pass right in front of Littlejohn, who caught the ball with her right leg, deftly flipped it behind her back to her left leg, then poked it into the back of the net.

Coupeville tacked on a fourth goal eight minutes before the halftime break, when Sage Renninger crushed a corner kick into a thicket of players in front of the net.

With both Wright and Littlejohn up in her face, a panicky MVC defender accidentally deflected the shot into the corner of the net.

It’s the second time this season Renninger has gotten an assist by forcing an own goal by an opposing team.

While offense was the focus most of the day, the Wolf defense did its best to make life super-smooth for goalie Sarah Wright.

Mallory Kortuem made a sensational scramble back to deny a breakaway, using her sprinter speed to catch the play and her nimble toes to steal the ball away.

Her fellow defender, Tia Wurzrainer, stopped another play the old-fashioned way, by roughing up the shooter from behind, sending her sprawling face-first into the turf.

While an overly-protective ref gave the feisty sophomore a yellow card for the play, the Wolf fans jamming the stands were much more appreciative.

The second half was more of the same, with Coupeville bashing away on shot after shot.

Littlejohn added two more goals, both on unique plays, while Genna Wright capped things by looping in her fifth score of the season.

Goals #2 and #3 for Littlejohn were highlight-worthy, for vastly different reasons.

On the first, Kalia swung and, for one of the few times in her career, completely whiffed on a ball.

With the defense on its heels, she paused for a split-second, then promptly blasted the ball through the back of the net, before turning and heading back up-field, shaking her head and laughing.

Littlejohn’s final goal belonged 98.6% to Lindsey Roberts.

The junior with the bionic leg unleashed a 30-yard cannon shot that smacked into the MVC goalie’s arms with a bang, then bounced free.

Following the ball all the way, Littlejohn leaned in and popped the rebound into the back of the net, adding one final bit of frustration to the Hurricane netminder’s day.

On the other side of the field there was a lot more happiness.

After Sarah Wright was spot-on in the first half, she gave way to freshman Mollie Bailey, who made two crowd-pleasing saves to cap the game.

On one, Bailey went airborne to snag a hard shot, getting far more air than expected, while on the other, she timed her jump perfectly, punching the ball up and over the crossbar.

Over on the sideline, both the official goalie guru, Gary Manker, and the unofficial one, former Wolf net-minder Lauren Grove, who worked with her successors before the game, were all smiles.

It was a look shared by head coach Kyle Nelson.

“Our focus and our goal is to keep on improving, take small steps and we will be a heck of a team by the end of the season,” he said. “And we’re already showing a lot of positive steps that way.”

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Lauren Bayne, seen here in an earlier game, and the Wolf defense were in lock-down mode Thursday night, sparking a 4-1 win. (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Bayne and the Wolf defense were in lock-down mode Thursday night, sparking a 4-1 win. (John Fisken photo)

Call it the big beat-down.

Combining an air-tight defense with another spectacular offensive show from state scoring leader Mia Littlejohn, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad romped to a 4-1 win Thursday over visiting Port Townsend.

The win lifts the Wolves to 3-1 in 1A Olympic League play and pulls them within a half-game of first-place Klahowya (3-0).

Coupeville is 5-2-1 overall, with four wins in its last five matches.

The victory, a nice comeback after a loss at Klahowya earlier in the week, left CHS coach Troy Cowan a bit giddy.

When asked if the Wolves had beat Port Townsend, his response:

“Yes sir, like a drum, like a government mule, like they stole from us!!!”

Littlejohn provided all the offense Coupeville needed, putting together her fifth hat trick of the season.

She has 19 goals at the halfway point of the 16-game regular season, one shy of Abraham Leyva’s single-season school scoring record.

Littlejohn carved up the RedHawk defense in three different ways, scoring on a penalty kick, on an unassisted run, and off of a sweet set-up from Sage “The General” Renninger.

The team captain picked up a second assist when she triggered a play on which defender Lindsey Roberts “connected on a Scud missile shot that found pay dirt.”

It was the second goal this season for the sophomore sensation.

When Port Townsend was on the attack, the RedHawk charge was largely blunted by the Wolf ‘d.’

“Defense played incredible,” Cowan said. “Megan DePorter is a master of running our defense.

“The Wonder Twins (Lindsey Roberts and goalie Lauren Grove) played lights out too.”

Cowan also praised the play of freshman Mallory Kortuem, who “drew the toughest assignment tonight, having to shadow one of the most physically gifted players we face.”

Coupeville travels to Chimacum Tuesday for a league game, then plays three straight non-conference tilts before getting its rematch with Klahowya Oct. 18.

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Mia Littlejohn, seen here in the season-opening jamboree, rattled home three more goals Saturday afternoon. (John Fisken photo)

   Mia Littlejohn, seen here in the season-opening jamboree, rattled home three more goals Saturday afternoon. (John Fisken photo)

Mia Littlejohn is on a torrid run these days.

The Coupeville High School junior banged home three more goals Saturday — her second hat trick of the season — lifting the Wolf booters to a 3-0 win at Port Townsend.

That gives Mia nine goals in four games, putting her just one off of little sister Kalia Littlejohn’s single-season school scoring record, and firmly places Coupeville alone atop the 1A Olympic League.

With the win, the Wolves are 2-1-1 overall and a pristine 2-0 in league play, which puts them a half game up on Klahowya (1-0).

Chimacum (0-1) and Port Townsend (0-2) round out the standings.

Coupeville will gets its first crack at the two-time defending league champ Eagles Sept. 27, when it travels to Silverdale to face Klahowya.

Before they get to that, the Wolves have a pair of non-conference games (Sept. 19 at Mount Vernon Christian and Sept. 22 at home against North Mason).

If Mia Littlejohn continues to pepper the net at her current rate — she’s scored in all four games this season — she’ll own the school (and family) scoring mark long before CHS faces its biggest league rival.

Coming off of a late night Friday, with a football game and after-game dance, the Wolf booters came out a bit slow Saturday and went into the locker room facing a scoreless tie.

Whatever was said during the break worked, as Mia Littlejohn broke free in the second half, with two of the goals set up by stellar corner kicks by junior captain Sage Renninger.

Meanwhile, Wolf goalie Lauren Grove and her defense were in lock-down mode all afternoon, refusing to give the RedHawks even a sniff of a goal.

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