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Posts Tagged ‘Klahowya’

Even those wearing glasses will be able to ID the 50-yard line. (Mike Lodell photos)

   Even those wearing glasses will be able to ID the 50-yard line. (Mike Lodell photos)

Lincoln Kelley hangs out next to the huge W

   Lincoln Kelley hangs out next to the huge W that kicks off the Wolves logo in the end zone.

wlves

Your groundskeepers at work.

What is this thing called a home football game?

Coupeville High School finds out tonight, as the Friday Night lights go on for the first time at Mickey Clark Field this season, after four straight road games to start the season.

The Wolves (1-3 overall, 1-1 in Olympic League play) face Klahowya (2-2, 1-1) at 5:30 PM, in a battle for sole possession of second place.

With Port Townsend (4-0, 2-0) running wild and Chimacum (0-4, 0-2) sputtering, a win against the Eagles would be huge for Coupeville. The top two teams make it to the playoffs.

In preparation for the festivities, school groundskeepers Mike Lodell and Lincoln Kelley were hard at work this week, getting the field prepped.

Their efforts glisten in the pics above.

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The harder Sage Renninger stares at the computer rankings, the more confused she gets. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   The harder Sage Renninger stares at the computer rankings, the more confused she gets. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Some things can not be explained.

Debbie,” the often-evil computer that ranks high school sports teams for http://www.scoreczar.org/ — a site with a fairly impeccable reputation and an owner with a great sense of humor about my frequent needling — is at it again.

Continuing her love/hate relationship with lil’ ol’ Cow Town, the scariest computer to hit the scene since Hal refused to open the pod bay doors in 2001: A Space Odyssey is just messing with us now.

How else to explain Debbie’s hatred of Coupeville High School football, which she currently ranks behind a team the Wolves just beat, which she mixes with her love of CHS girls’ soccer?

Where to start?

It’s easy to get frustrated at first, when you see the Wolf gridiron warriors, while up four slots from last week, are regarded as just the 48th best team in class 1A.

Which just happens to be a full three slots behind Chimacum, the team they beat 28-26 Friday.

So, the computer thinks the Cowboys would beat the Wolves, except the Wolves have actually proved that wrong … ON THE FIELD.

As you grip your head and rock back and forth, while also noticing that this Friday’s foe, Port Townsend, is now the #1-ranked team, take a deep breath.

And then pop over to the site’s soccer rankings, which will put the skip back in your step and restore your faith in computers (sorta.)

There, Debbie is downright delightful, plopping Coupeville at a strong #18, giving the Wolves, who are 1-2-2, the highest slotting of any 1A school with a losing record.

Deer Park is ranked #1, while Coupeville’s Olympic League rival, Klahowya, must be wondering how a defending state champ who’s gone 5-0 so far can only be ranked #5.

Of course, even the soccer rankings have a quirk, though.

Head down to #30 and there’s Bellevue Christian.

You know, that school that beat Coupeville’s booters 6-0, the only game the Wolves have been manhandled in this season.

And yep, the Vikings are a full 12 slots behind the team they bushwhacked.

Man, I’ll bet they could have some fun discussions with Coupeville’s football team…

Somewhere, Debbie’s circuit board is blushing right now.

 

To peruse the rankings for yourself, skip merrily over to:

Soccer — http://www.scoreczar.org/classifications/63-high-school-soccer-girls-wa1a

Football — http://www.scoreczar.org/classifications/4-high-school-football-wa1a

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Cole Payne pulled out a three-set win Friday to help lift the Wolves to a huge win over Klahowya. (John Fiskern photo)

   Cole Payne pulled out a three-set win Friday to help lift the Wolves to a huge win over Klahowya. (John Fisken photo)

Slow start, hot finish.

Recovering nicely after a couple early bumps, the Coupeville High School boys’ tennis team stormed back to thrash host Klahowya 5-2 Friday, taking the first step to winning a league title banner.

The win lifted the Wolves to a flawless 2-0 on the season, 1-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

If the CHS boys want to join their female counterparts, who put up a league title banner in the spring, they’ll have to dethrone the defending champs, which just happens to be the team they walloped.

They did it by sweeping all four doubles matches and getting a win at #3 singles from converted football player Cole Payne.

Coupeville trailed in the match early, after dropping two of the first three matches to be wrapped.

Singles players Sebastian Davis (6-4, 6-0) and Connor McCormick (7-5, 6-2) were nicked by the Eagles, but the doubles duo of John McClarin and Joseph Wedekind rolled to a win (6-3, 6-1) to keep Wolf hopes semi-high.

Hope surged when Joey Lippo and William Nelson pulled out a victory in three sets (6-0, 5-7, 6-4) knotting the match at 2-2.

After that, it was all Wolves, all day.

Payne came back to net a 6-3, 1-6, 10-8 win in his first-ever varsity singles match, and then Coupeville got straight-sets wins from the duos of Jimmy Myers/Lilan Sekigawa (7-6, 6-4) and Grey Rische/Jared Helmstadter (6-2, 6-2).

The Wolves also rolled to wins in the only two JV matches that were done before the siren call of the ferry forced them back on the bus.

Nick Etzell and Garrett Compton won 6-3, while Nile Lockwood teamed up with Aiden Crimmins to pull a sweet 6-0 bagel job on the Eagles.

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Jenn Spark is back, healthy and ready to lead the Wolf booters. (John Fisken photos)

   Jenn Spark is back, healthy and ready to lead the Wolf booters. (John Fisken photos)

Bree Daigneault (left) will be a captain this season.

Bree Daigneault (#17) will be a captain this season.

The brightest bit of news from the first week of practice for the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad was the return of senior spark-plug Jenn Spark.

The defensive whiz kid with the booming clearing kick suffered a devastating MCL/ACL injury and missed most of her junior campaign, but is back to lead a young Wolf squad into a new season.

Jennifer has been working hard and I expect great things from her and she expects great things from herself,” Wolf coach Troy Cowan said. “She will take the helm of our defense as our “sweeper.” Welcome back Cap!”

Coupeville, which went 6-7-1 and finished second in the 1A Olympic League last season, will face an uphill battle in 2015.

League rival Klahowya is the defending 1A state champ, and while it lost its top two players, McKenzie Cook and Izzy Severns, to graduation, the Eagles are still stacked.

“Tough team to deal with, lots of talented players on the pitch and a coach that is always well prepared and has a bench full of starters!,” Cowan said. “We will do our best and give them everything we have, no excuses and no backing down.”

While the Wolves lost eight players to graduation, Spark will have some familiar running mates and a strong group of promising freshmen will be fighting for immediate playing time.

Sophomore Mia Littlejohn is the top returning scorer, having netted three goals while winning Rookie of the Year honors last season.

Mia’s versatility allowed her to play goalie to forward for CHS last year, but after an extremely successful European soccer tour, Mia’s offensive prowess will be on display full time this season!,” Cowan said. “No net will be safe this season, ciao…”

Junior Bree Daigneault and sophomore Sage Renninger (“she hasn’t missed a beat and her shot is better than ever”) join Spark and Littlejohn at the forefront, with Daigneault being named a team captain.

“I think Bree has surprised me the most. She really worked hard since last year and has transformed herself into something special,” Cowan said. “Not only is she a much more physically dominating player, but her leadership is profoundly distinctive and magnanimous.

Bree has added quickness and ball control to her game,” he added. “She really came out of the gate on fire and hasn’t looked back.”

Two youngsters expected to make an immediate impact are freshmen Kalia Littlejohn and Lindsey Roberts.

Kalia will be fun to watch this season, so everyone better come early because you may not want to miss the show this young striker is going to put on!,” Cowan said. “Not to be outdone, Lindsey has turned her golden track shoes in for spiked soccer cleats and we have been picking up the bodies ever since.

“This young, defensive-minded speedster with power in both legs has been anything but freshman like! Just dangerous.”

While the Wolves will miss the veterans lost to graduation, Cowan looks to the future, and sees a bright one.

“Our goals are simple; Stay positive, improve each and every half, give 100% effort, and never, ever quit!,” he said. “We are going to focus on what we can control and manage what we can’t!

“Our team strengths are our youthfulness and our high energy,” Cowan added. “We are very young and have some players with a lot of energy. We will be looking to capitalize on that energy and use it to gain momentum and turn it into our advantage.”

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Makana Stone snatched Olympic League MVP honors while leading the Wolves, who won all nine league games by double digits. (John Fisken photos)

  Makana Stone snatched Olympic League MVP honors while leading the Wolves, who won all nine league games by double digits. (John Fisken photos)

Aaron Curtin, state caliber.

Aaron Curtin, state caliber.

Not bad. Not bad at all.

The first year of the all-new, all-exciting 1A Olympic League is all but done — softball is mid-way through its season and all the other sports are in the postseason, but all league games have been played for 2014-2015.

So, how did Coupeville High School do?

Let’s just say quality beats quantity.

Despite being the smallest of the four schools in the league (with just half the student body of Klahowya), the Wolves more than held their own in the 10 sports in which they compete as a team.

For this exercise, we are looking at football, volleyball, girls and boys soccer, girls and boys tennis, girls and boys basketball, softball and baseball.

Golf doesn’t count, as Christine Fields (who just won the Olympic League postseason tourney by 10 strokes, I might add) was a one-woman team.

She played against 1A/2A Cascade Conference competition during the regular season, when she trained and traveled with South Whidbey.

We’re also not counting track, which is largely an individual sport inside a team one.

With most meets involving multiple teams from 1A and 2A (and, sometimes 3A), team wins and losses have little meaning.

Seriously, go look at the Olympic League website and try and figure out how they compute track team records. It makes no sense.

P.S. — If we go by their convoluted computing, Coupeville is the 1A girls’ regular season track champs.

But all anyone really looks at is how individual athletes (and relay teams) do at the state meet, so we’re not adding track into this team tally.

The stats:

Student body size (WIAA numbers at start of the school year):

Klahowya (455)
Port Townsend (327)
Chimacum (237)
Coupeville (225)

Total league wins across the 10 sports:

Klahowya (52)
Coupeville (40)
Chimacum (23)
Port Townsend (20)

League titles:

Klahowya (5) Volleyball, girls soccer, boys tennis, baseball, boys soccer
Coupeville (2) Girls basketball, girls tennis
Chimacum (2) Boys basketball, softball
Port Townsend (1) Football

Best league record:

Coupeville girls basketball (9-0) **Wolf JV also went 9-0**
Klahowya baseball (9-0)

State titles (so far):

Klahowya girls soccer

More positives for Coupeville, you ask?

The Wolves may have lost the regular season boys’ tennis title, but they stormed back to dethrone Klahowya in the postseason league tourney.

Plus, unlike Chimacum and Port Townsend, they garnered at least one league win in every one of the 10 sports, just like Klahowya.

In the end, what can we take away from all this?

One, Klahowya is good, especially in soccer, but didn’t really dominate across the board as much as you might have expected with its size advantage.

It is not ATM or King’s, and the Wolves can compete with the Eagles in almost any sport, any night.

Two, the numbers back my feeling that we are back in a golden age for female athletes at CHS.

Both of the new league title banners going up on the gym wall come from feminine sweat, grit and hard work, and Wolf girls accounted for 60% (24 of 40) of Coupeville’s league wins in year one.

Now, the gentlemen had their moments.

The Wolves were the only team to beat league champ Port Townsend in football and senior netter Aaron Curtin is going to state as a singles player.

In the end, take this — year one was a very good start. Year two, if the Wolves, girls and boys, believe and work, should be even better.

You know what the league is now. Go take control of it, in every sport.

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