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Posts Tagged ‘Kimberly Kisch’

CHS soccer coach Kimberly Kisch wants to see you on the pitch. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Beautiful Game calls to you.

Coupeville students heading into grades 8-12 are invited to swing by the CHS commons Wednesday between 2:00-3:30 PM to get info on playing soccer for the Wolves.

Coaches Kimberly Kisch and Robert Wood will be on hand to answer questions and hand out fliers with info on summer and fall schedules, and players can get in the loop early.

Whether you’re a returning player or a first timer, this is a great opportunity to join a program on the rise.

With Coupeville being a 2B school, eighth graders are eligible to play for the high school while still attending middle school, giving younger players a chance to put together a five-year prep career on the pitch.

The Wolves hope to pick up enough female players to return to having two separate squads in the fall after playing as a co-ed team last season.

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Coupeville soccer coach Kimberly Kisch hangs out with her mini me. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

One more peak pitch performance, captured in peppy pics.

The Coupeville High School co-ed JV soccer squad closed its season Saturday, clashing with visiting Friday Harbor under sunny skies.

While the second team played, Wolf varsity booters, and coach Robert Wood, pulled double duty, working as refs and sideline strategy planners.

Along for the ride was wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken, who delivers the snaps seen above and below.

 

To see everything he shot, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/CHS-Boys-Soccer-2023-2024/BS-2023-10-28-JV-vs-Friday-Harbor/

 

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Coupeville soccer fans like Madison McMillan (left) and Jada Heaton get a 2-for-1 deal, with Wolf booters joining together to form co-ed teams in 2023. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The tribes are merging.

In the wake of Coupeville High School cancelling its varsity girls’ soccer schedule due to a lack of players, those booters who did turn out will unite with their male counterparts to form a co-ed program.

The revamped Wolves will feature both varsity and JV teams, with player placement based on “game skill, determination, and leadership skills,” said girls’ coach Kimberly Kisch.

The set-up, which is only in place for the 2023 season at this point, will play against boys’ teams from the Northwest 2B/1B League.

Several of Coupeville’s rivals, such as Lopez Island, have fielded co-ed teams in previous seasons.

Schools at the 2B or 1B classification are allowed to use female players on male teams, if the school doesn’t have an active girls’ program in that sport.

For the Wolves, early practices drew 10 female players, while CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith stipulated the program needed 15 to be viable.

When it became apparent Coupeville couldn’t get to that number, the painful decision was made to cancel the varsity season for a girls’ program which has played 19 consecutive seasons since launching in 2004.

Smith and Kisch discussed other options, such as having the Wolves play a JV-only schedule, but that would likely require 7 v 7 games instead of the standard 11 v 11, with a very-limited set of opponents.

After consultation with CHS boys’ coach Robert Wood, the decision was handed to the players.

“After many discussions, team votes, and meetings, we decided we will merge our girls’ team with the boys,” Kisch said. “Ultimately we left the decision up to the team and they feel that this is the best option.”

Both coaches are intrigued by the possibilities of the new set-up, which will give Wolf girls a chance to keep their program alive, while adding a new wrinkle to the boys team.

“I truly believe that this will be a fantastic learning experience for all involved,” Kisch said. “Our coaching team is prepared to coordinate and organize a large team.

“We will have plenty of players for a first and second team, while also giving everyone plenty of field time.”

Wood, who has floated the idea of calling the unity team “CHS FC,” is raring to go with the Wolves set to open the season Sept. 12 at home against defending 2B/1B boys state champ Friday Harbor.

“One academy, with a first and second team,” he said. “Dreams do come true!”

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Varsity girls’ soccer action rages last fall. This year, things have taken a turn. (Morgan White photo)

Season #20 has been put on hold.

For the first time since 2003, there will not be a varsity girls’ soccer team playing at Coupeville High School.

Citing low turnout, CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith made the painful call Monday, but held out hope for other options.

“With profound disappointment, we are canceling our varsity girls’ soccer schedule for this year due to a lack of players,” he said. “Only 10 are practicing/on the roster currently.”

That’s one less player than the Wolves would need to even put a full 11-woman team on the field, while giving the team no subs or injury replacements.

Earlier, Smith had indicated a need for the program to have 15 players to be viable.

While the program’s 13-game varsity schedule, which was set to start Sept. 7 at Granite Falls, is gone, there are still options available to Wolf girls who have been practicing.

They are eligible to play with Coupeville’s boys’ team, as that is allowed in Washington state when a school does not have an active girls program.

Last year, several Wolf foes, such as Lopez Island, had a co-ed mix.

Smith and first-year head coach Kimberly Kisch, a former Wolf player herself, are also scrambling to pull together a JV-level schedule.

That would likely feature 7 v 7 games, instead of 11 v 11, perhaps using a modified field and game time.

The goal is to keep as many of the players still involved in soccer as possible, as CHS has seen in recent years that when a program goes down, it’s hard to get back up.

The move from 1A to 2B pushed boys’ soccer from the spring to the fall, where it joined football, boys’ tennis, and cross country.

Most 2B schools play 1-2 sports per season, and fielding four boys’ teams at the same time quickly proved to be a no-go, numbers wise.

Tennis lost the battle for bodies and has sat dormant for three seasons now.

Smith and Kisch don’t want to see girls’ soccer, which had played 19 straight seasons since its debut in 2004 — even surviving the pandemic — take a similar hit.

“It’s our hope that our girls that are signed up continue to play this fall or it will be very difficult for us to have a program moving forward,” Smith said.

“I firmly believe that Kim was and is going to lead a resurgence in our girls soccer program, but we need to play with who we have this fall in order to create a first step in the rebuilding process.”

Being more than a week into practice, with the season bearing down, Smith had to be realistic, however, for all involved.

“It is certainly not how we wanted this season to be, and it has not been an easy decision to make,” he said.

“But I also have an obligation to the other schools to allow them an opportunity to fill their schedules with other schools.

“I have reached out to our league schools, and they are all willing to work with us on a JV level game,” Smith added.

“I feel that I will be able to fill out a decent schedule with surrounding school’s programs to give our team a decent amount of games.”

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CHS needs more female soccer players, and soon. (Bailey Thule photo)

They’re scrambling to save the season.

Midway through the first week of practice, turnout is not where it needs to be for Coupeville High School to field a full girls’ soccer team.

The Wolves, who have a new coach in former player Kimberly Kisch, lost a chunk of players to graduation and haven’t been able to fully replace them so far.

“We only have 8-9 (players) right now, so short by a bit,” said CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith. “Really need 6-7 more, so it’s in real danger of not going.”

The school is actively recruiting for more players to sign up, and one possible help is that 8th graders are eligible to play since Coupeville is a 2B school.

The Wolf booters are currently slated to kick off their season with a road trip Sept. 7 to face Granite Falls and have a 13-game schedule.

A decision on the season will have to be made well before that opener, however, because of the effect on other schools, especially Coupeville’s fellow Northwest 2B/1B League foes.

CHS, which moved back to 2B from 1A when the state did its last classification counts in 2020, fields more sports programs than most schools at its current level.

The Wolves have a cheer squad, run cross country, and play football, girls’ and boys’ soccer, and volleyball in the fall.

Coupeville’s boys’ tennis program, which also traditionally operates in the fall, has been dormant since roster numbers crashed three seasons ago.

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