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Posts Tagged ‘Izzy Severns’

Dear AP voters, this is Makana Stone. How could you not vote for her? (John Fisken photos)

Dear AP voters, this is Makana Stone. How could you not vote for her? (John Fisken photos)

Izzy

Izzy Severns, great person, good hoops player. All-State in soccer? Heck yes. In basketball that slot belonged to Stone.

The people who voted for the Associated Press All-State basketball teams are either blind, easily bribed or just morons.

I understand Coupeville is a small town, on an Island, and 99.2% of reporters and editors at the big city papers pay absolutely no attention to us.

Cause how else do you explain the fact Makana Stone, the slam-dunk MVP of the Olympic League, leader of a Wolf squad that went 9-0 in league play and won every game by 15+ points, was left off the AP’s list, while another player from the same league, is on there?

With all due respect to Klahowya’s Izzy Severns, who seems like a really nice young woman and was (arguably) the second best player in the league, huh?

Stone was the dominant player on the dominant team, and it wasn’t even close.

Coupeville went 15-7. Klahowya went 4-15.

Severns was a hustler, a scrapper and a decent scorer on a team that went nowhere.

Stone was the league’s transcendent player, doing anything and everything needed that night to fuel a team that rolled to a league title.

Coupeville’s JV, which also went 9-0 in league play, would have given the Wolf varsity more of a sustained challenge than Klahowya did.

Dominant on the boards, rejecting shots, making off with steals, able to change the flow of the game by herself (at one point she poured in 22 straight points for CHS) or work within a total team-orientated game, Stone was the whole package.

Now, Severns was, quite justifiably, a First Team All-State soccer player, where she helped lead the Eagles to a state title.

Did voters, many (if not all) of whom never saw a single game played by an Olympic League team, just vote for a name they recognized from the fall?

Cause, if they actually saw Stone play and still want to make an argument for voting in favor of one of her runner-ups, maybe it’s time to consider changing jobs.

Maybe try doing something that hires the legally blind.

To see the AP teams, pop over to:

http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20150331/SPORTS01/150339742/1007/AP-announces-All-State-basketball-teams-

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Emma

After playing youth soccer in Coupeville, a family move took Emma Laurion to Crosspoint Academy, where she became an All-State player.

Coupeville faced two of the state’s best high school girls’ soccer players this past fall.

When the Washington State Soccer Coaches Association announced its All-State teams, Klahowya’s McKenzie Cook was tabbed as the 1A MVP and Crosspoint Academy’s Desere’e Doty topped the 2B/1B list.

Three players from Klahowya were honored, with Cook, a forward, being joined by midfielder Izzy Severns as First Team picks.

Defender Rachel Seidel was named to the Second Team, while Eagle coach Troy Oelschlager was picked as the 1A coach of the year.

Doty and fellow Crosspoint forward Emma Laurion, who played her youth ball in Coupeville, were both First Team picks, as was their teammate, defender Kalie Nation.

Both Klahowya and Crosspoint won state titles this season.

Coupeville played Crosspoint in a non-conference game set up to reunite Laurion with some of her former teammates.

The Wolves ultimately finished second in the 1A Olympic League behind Klahowya.

While they couldn’t derail the champs, who finished 21-2, the Wolves played them much more evenly than league mates Chimacum and Port Townsend, holding the Eagles to six less goals than either of those teams did.

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Mia Littlejohn and the Wolves aree soaring. (John Fisken photos)

Mia Littlejohn and the Wolves are soaring. (John Fisken photos)

Kacie KIle

   Kacie Kiel, seen here in an earlier game, shows off the superb defense that sparks the Wolves.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad would love to be the team to break a school-wide 10-year dry spell and hang up the first new league championship banner on the gym wall since 2004.

With that in mind, the Wolves made a statement Friday, drilling the biggest school in the 1A Olympic League, Klahowya, 48-26 on their home court.

The first victory in any sport by a Coupeville team against the Eagles, it lifted the Wolves to 3-2 overall, 1-0 in league play.

CHS is the only team in the four-school league to have a win this season, with Klahowya, Port Townsend and Chimacum a combined 0-12.

With eight league games left to play — the Wolves face each rival three times — it’s too early to declare the banner a done deal, but it’s a nice start, especially since Coupeville won handily while having a bit of an off night.

“It wasn’t our best game on the season, but we fought through the sluggish play and girls not feeling well,” said Wolf coach David King. “We executed well enough on offense and slowed them down in the second half by going to a 3-2 zone.”

Coupeville jumped out to a 13-7 lead after one quarter, with Makana Stone dropping in six of her game-high 20 points in the opening moments.

The Wolves spread out the offense, as usual, with Kacie Kiel raining down three (“a perfectly executed play with the ball touching nothing but net”) and the duo of Hailey Hammer and Julia Myers both banging home a bucket.

CHS stretched the lead to ten, only to momentarily lose the momentum and allow Klahowya back in the game. A couple of quick buckets let the Eagles cut the halftime margin to five.

A defensive shift — the Wolves used a zone defense they hadn’t actually practiced — sparked things and Coupeville finally clicked in on the offensive side as well.

From that point on it was all Wolves, all the time, with Mia Littlejohn dropping in a 15-footer and Monica Vidoni taking a nice entry pass from Wynter Thorne and blowing past her defender for the bucket.

Izzy Severns, who led Klahowya to a state soccer title in the fall, did her best to keep the Eagles close, pouring in 16.

“She was all over the court disrupting our offense,” King said. “Next time we play them we will make the necessary adjustments and look to do a better job defensively on her.”

Even with several of his players fighting through illness, and starter Madeline Strasburg still out with an injury, King was pleased with the team-wide effort.

Eight of nine players scored, while the Wolves hauled down 35 boards.

Stone snagged 10 caroms, Hammer collected seven and Myers, Littlejohn and Vidoni hauled down four apiece.

Kiel ran the point superbly, handing out a team-high five assists.

While Stone was at the forefront of the scoring attack, Myers stepped up with a solid nine-point performance to back her. Always a scrapper, she impressed her coach with a “sweet drive from the right wing.”

“She caught the ball, assessed and then made a play,” King said. “She drove baseline, beat her defender and was able to get to the basket for a layup.

“Her game has elevated from last year and she is able to handle the ball off the dribble better,” he added. “This season’s version of Julia is a more confident player and it’s showing in her play.”

Kiel tossed in eight, Hammer swished four, Littlejohn popped for three and Vidoni and McKenzie Bailey chipped in with a bucket apiece.

Coupeville gets right back at it Saturday, hosting 2A Sequim in a non-conference bout. JV tips at 2 PM, varsity somewhere around 3:45ish.

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State soccer champs Izzy Severns, McKenzie Cook and Emma Laurion.

State soccer champs (and Coupeville Sports interviewees) Izzy Severns, McKenzie Cook and Emma Laurion.

One season into the sports year and the brand-new 1A Olympic League has its first state champion.

The Klahowya High School girls’ soccer team nipped King’s 1-0 Saturday to wrap a 21-2 season and claim the second state title in program history.

The Eagles, who dropped to 1A this year and joined Coupeville, Port Townsend and Chimacum in the new league, won a 2A title in 1999.

Paced by the high-scoring duo of seniors McKenzie Cook (https://coupevillesports.com/2014/09/08/know-your-foe-klahowyas-mckenzie-cook/) and Izzy Severns (https://coupevillesports.com/2014/09/11/know-your-foe-klahowyas-izzy-severns/), Klahowya outscored its opponents 101-15.

The Eagles, who had 13 shutouts in their championship run, fell twice to Seattle Christian — 3-0 in the regular season and 1-0 at districts.

They avoided a third meeting when SC was upended 3-1 by Meridian in the first round of the state tourney.

Klahowya beat Coupeville 5-0 and 4-0 in the first two meetings ever between the schools.

The nine-goal differential was substantially less than what the Eagles inflicted on fellow league mates Port Townsend (15-0) and Chimacum (15-1).

Another Wolf foe from this season, Crosspoint Academy, also won a state title Saturday, capturing its second-straight 1B/2B title.

The private school, led by a hat trick from one-time Coupeville resident Emma Laurion (https://coupevillesports.com/2014/09/16/the-best-wolf-that-never-was/) stuffed Liberty Bell 5-1 for its 15th straight win.

The Warriors finished 16-2-1.

Crosspoint, which beat Coupeville 7-1, outscored its opponents 117-36, losing only to 3A Capital and 1A Charles Wright Academy.

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All-Conference goalie Julia Myers. (John Fisken photo)

All-Conference goalie Julia Myers. (John Fisken photo)

Izzy

   Klahowya’s Izzy Severns (9), McKenzie Cook (3) and teammates. Three more wins to a state title, ladies!

Second in the standings, first in manners.

The Coupeville High School girls’ soccer team capped its first season in the 1A Olympic League by putting three seniors on the All-Conference team and netting the league’s sportsmanship award.

Wolf goalie Julia Myers, midfielder Erin Rosenkranz and forward Marisa Etzell were all honored for their play during a 6-7-1 season, the best mark in program history.

Klahowya’s goal-scoring queens, Izzy Severns and McKenzie Cook, were tabbed as co-MVPs.

The duo has combined for 57 goals for the Eagles (18-2) this season, and will lead their team onto the pitch Saturday to play La Salle in the state quarterfinals.

In a side note, Severns and Cook were two of four All-Conference players who had a pre-season feature story in Coupeville Sports. Port Townsend goalie Malia Henderson and Chimacum goalie Kyah McKinlay were also honored.

Colin Foden of Port Townsend was picked as Coach of the Year.

The All-Conference team:

Klahowya:

Ashlyn Brandt, MF
Danni Antoldi
, F
Emily Peters
, MF
Rachel Seidel
, D

Coupeville:

Julia Myers, GK
Erin Rosenkranz, MF
Marisa Etzell, F

Port Townsend:

Malia Henderson, GK
McKinzie Ginter, D

Chimacum:

Kyah McKinlay, GK
Mechelle Nisbet, D

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