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Posts Tagged ‘La Conner’

Logan Downes rolls out. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“We will be better next week.”

Coupeville High School football coach Marcus Carr was already looking ahead as he and his young team headed home after absorbing a 21-0 loss Saturday night in La Conner.

The defeat, coming a week after the Wolves won in a clash on Whidbey between these same two teams, evens both squad’s records at 1-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play.

For Coupeville, next up is a road trip Saturday, April 24 to play a non-conference tilt against Lummi Nation.

The Blackhawks are 2-0 after knocking off Concrete 16-12 and pounding Darrington 38-24.

Once Coupeville makes it through that road rumble, they’re projected to have some time off before wrapping the pandemic-shortened season at home May 8 against Concrete.

A possible non-league matchup with 1B powerhouse Neah Bay, which was projected for either April 30 or May 1, now seems unlikely to happen.

When discussing the La Conner rematch, Carr was ready to move on and focus on the next challenge, simply saying “We are young in some areas and still learning.”

Saturday was a busy day on Whidbey Island, as I watched three events play out a mile from my home — girls soccer, JV and varsity volleyball — so I wasn’t anywhere near La Conner.

And, unfortunately, if the game was streamed, it’s not popping up anywhere online at this moment.

Which is a long way to getting around to saying I don’t know much about how things played out.

If more surfaces, I’ll pop back in and update this story.

Until then, enjoy a collection of photos from last week’s game.

Coupeville dogpiles a La Conner runner.

Waiting for the action to unfold.

Brett Casey charges into action.

Dakota Eck hits the gap.

Ben Smith (6) and Tim Ursu (1) team up to bring a Brave runner down.

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Kylie Chernikoff brings the thunder of the gods to the volleyball court. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Suzanne Marble has built a dynasty.

Under the leadership of their longtime coach, La Conner High School volleyball is the crème de la crème of 2B teams, with back-to-back state titles and an unbeaten streak in league play which dates back more than a decade.

If you want the Northwest 2B/1B League title, you have to go through the Braves.

And that won’t be easy.

The point was driven home, more than once, as La Conner crunched host Coupeville in straight sets Tuesday, warning a rebuilding Wolf squad it will need to get tougher to come for the big dog.

With a 25-15, 25-7, 25-9 win, La Conner improves to 3-0 on the season, without having dropped a set, while Coupeville slips to 1-1.

The two teams meet again April 29, with the Wolves on the road, and CHS coach Cory Whitmore will aim for his team to play more like it did in set #1 Tuesday than sets #2 and 3.

“We competed in the first set at times and had spent a lot of time on our serving in practice, working on consistency,” he said. “I was happy to have seen that skill improve a lot and translate into the game.”

Consistency, though, is key.

“Throughout the game (Tuesday) we were too flat and unfocused,” Whitmore said. “Those were long points of discussion today at practice.

“We had a strong practice today and addressed some of the growing pains our group has come up against and so we will work to refocus and take a second shot at a very good La Conner team.”

Senior Kylie Chernikoff paced the Wolves, racking up five digs and four kills, while sophomore Maddie Georges dealt out 10 assists.

Others notching numbers on the stat sheet included Chelsea Prescott (six digs, two service aces), Ryanne Knoblich (six digs), Jaimee Masters (five digs), and Maddie Vondrak (four kills).

More support came from Jill Prince (two kills, one block), Lucy Tenore (one kill), and Abby Mulholland (one ace).

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Genna Wright, seen here during tennis, netted Coupeville’s first soccer goal of the season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

She’s back.

It’s been 585 days since Genna Wright left the soccer pitch in agony, suffering a devastating injury in the season opener of her junior season.

Chucked hard from behind while sprinting towards the sideline in pursuit of a ball, the effervescent star went down awkwardly, tearing her ACL, MCL, and meniscus.

In the blink of an eye, her season was done, and then the hits kept coming.

Surgery. Recovery. A worldwide pandemic shutting down prep sports just as she was set to return.

Jump forward to Wednesday night, though, and a lot of that melted away.

Wright, running free in front of family and friends once again, slashed through La Conner’s defense to open her senior campaign with a much-more positive result, and her smile, and those of her teammates, lit up Mickey Clark Field.

By the time the Wolves were done ripping up the turf, they had a tidy 4-0 win over the visiting Braves, putting Coupeville atop the Northwest 2B/1B League standings a game into a pared-down six-game schedule.

With two more games against La Conner, and three against Mount Vernon Christian, CHS is chasing the first league title in program history.

Play like they did Wednesday, and the Wolf booters will soon have a place on the Wall of Fame in the CHS gym.

Coupeville struck quickly, with Wright going on a rampage barely four minutes into the game.

Fed a ball by Carolyn Lhamon, the resurgent one went coast-to-coast, then slapped a shot left to right, burying the ball in the corner of the net for the year’s first score.

It was the 18th prep goal for Wright — she had 10 as a freshman, and seven as a sophomore — allowing her to break a tie with Lindsey Roberts as the #3 scorer in CHS girls soccer history.

Mia Littlejohn (35 goals) and Kalia Littlejohn (33) sit at #1 and #2 all-time.

The Wolves stayed on the attack the rest of the first half, keeping the ball on La Conner’s side of the field, but narrowly missed on a couple of prime scoring opportunities.

Up 1-0 at the break, with goaltender Mollie Bailey able to spend much of her time quietly basking in the sun, Coupeville broke things open in the second half.

Sophie Martin crunched a shot which should have been a goal, only to have it be redirected by the La Conner goalie’s knee, while Audrianna Shaw and Wright also had strong looks which didn’t quite pay off.

But then the dam broke, as the Wolves whacked home three scores in the final 22+ minutes.

Eryn Wood was first up, punching in a ball off of a feed from Shaw, before Lhamon and Reese Wilkinson buried shots in the back of the net.

It was Wood’s second career high school goal, and the first for both of her teammates.

Coupeville continued to hammer away, with Lily Leedy putting together a nice run on goal which fell just short, while the Wolf defense was virtually lights out.

Bailey was her usual calm self in goal, flicking away the few shots La Conner mounted, but watched as her defenders did much of the dirty work.

Nezi Keiper, Anna Myles, Katelin McCormick, and Mary Milnes were a wall in the backfield, blunting any chance the Braves had to mount a threat.

CHS coach Kyle Nelson has his program in a strong place, with a 17-woman roster which also includes Ava Mitten, Camryn Clark, Sofia Milasich, Noelle Daigneault, and Gwen Crowder.

The Wolves are back at it Saturday, hosting Mount Vernon Christian in a game set to kickoff at 1 PM.

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Wolf freshman Skylar Parker played strongly Tuesday in Coupeville volleyball’s home opener. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Learn something new every day.

While the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad couldn’t topple powerhouse La Conner Tuesday, the young Wolves did get progressively better as the match proceeded.

Playing in their home opener, the CHS spikers fell 25-13, 25-16, 25-21, evening their early-season record at 1-1.

The Wolves get a chance to bounce right back, and put the lessons learned into full effect when they travel Thursday to Darrington.

Coupeville then closes a busy week of Northwest 2B/1B League action when it hosts Mount Vernon Christian Saturday.

La Conner’s varsity squad has won back-to-back 2B state titles, and its JV team is full of talented players looking to break into the higher ranks.

The Braves came out strong, but also benefited from a little trepidation from the Wolves.

“La Conner was a good team, but we played very slow at moments,” said Coupeville JV coach Ashley Menges.

Things improved as the night wore on, however, with the Wolves digging deep and finding a comfortable rhythm.

“We really emphasized playing consistent and letting them make the mistakes, which proved well in the third set,” Menges said.

“We improved from practice the day before which I was very happy with,” she added. “Everyone played great though.”

Gwen Gustafson “had some really great serve receive passes, as well as Skylar (Parker), and Grey (Peabody) was very aggressive at the net today.”

“Overall, it was a good game and a good learning opportunity!,” Menges said.

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Ben Smith rushed for 104 yards, and the winning touchdown, as Coupeville nipped La Conner Saturday in an overtime thriller. (Photo courtesy Deb Smith)

He worked for this. He fought for this. He prayed for this.

When Ben Smith played the final football game of his junior season, a road contest at Interlake back in November 2019, he had no clue the world would go topsy-turvy less than four months later.

As the pandemic overran every part of our lives, high school sports were largely put on the backburner.

For Smith, the possibility of not being allowed to play his senior season has haunted him, and driven him.

He worked out, he trained, he followed every Covid-related news story he could find. Even in the darkest moments, he believed.

Saturday night, Smith and his Coupeville High School gridiron teammates, coaches, families, and fans were rewarded for that faith.

Stepping onto the gridiron to face a rival school for the first time in 17 months, playing “fall sports” in the second week of April, the Wolves rose to the occasion.

Winning a war of attrition between two young, scrappy squads, Coupeville pulled off an electrifying 6-0 win in its Northwest 2B/1B League opener.

In a game which saw big plays on defense and offense (no matter what the score might indicate), the biggest was a one-yard bull run into the end zone by Smith to cap the first high school football overtime game seen in Cow Town in maybe forever.

It’s certainly been at least a few years, as the refs huddled to refresh themselves on OT rules, while at least one fan hollered at another, “Don’t go anywhere! This ain’t soccer!! We don’t go for ties!!!”

Or, maybe that was just playing on a loop in my own head…

Never know.

But then, after 48 minutes of two teams — longtime old-school rivals reunited with Coupeville’s move from 1A to 2B — standing in the middle of the ring and smashing each other to a pulp, the Wolves dropped the hammer.

La Conner got the ball first in overtime, awarded a first-and-10 from the Coupeville 25.

At which point the Braves held on to the ball for all of about three seconds.

The Wolf defense surged, 11 men strong, battering the ball-carrier on the first play, the pigskin popping free and hitting the turf, screaming “Freedom!” like Mel Gibson at the end of Braveheart.

CHS freshman Zane Oldenstadt pulled off a sweet two-for-one special, wrapping up La Conner’s runner, while also reaching in and punching the ball free, with senior Dakota Eck pouncing on the suddenly-free ball.

Freshman Zane Oldenstadt came up big on both sides of the ball. (Photo courtesy Michelle Glass)

The lightning-quick turn of events handed the ball back to Coupeville, and there was no stopping Smith.

Completing a 24-carry, 104-yard performance, he plunged up the middle four straight times, his linemen driving the Braves onto their heels each time.

The first carry garnered four yards, the next two 10 apiece.

Then the final dagger went in, Smith crashing from right to left, punching a hole to the promised land, before sprinting off, his teammates chasing him to celebrate.

“This was the best game I’ve ever played in!!,” he said while bouncing with joy from well-wisher to well-wisher.

For Smith’s head coach, getting a win was big, but just returning to action was even bigger.

“Just being out there, being able to compete, play against another opponent, is huge,” Marcus Carr said. “Our defense was outstanding, and our young guys really stepped up.”

While it was a long time ago, the last Wolf team to play earned the program’s first winning record since 2005, then graduated a strong batch of seniors.

One of those departed guys, Sean Toomey-Stout, is now competing for a roster spot at the University of Washington, and the CHS coaches went and watched him participate in spring practices before their game.

Then they unleashed their newest batch of Wolves, who played with their own fiery abandon.

Alternating junior Cole Hutchinson and freshman Logan Downes at quarterback, Coupeville mixed in some precise passing with a fair amount of smash-mouth running on offense.

On defense, it was big plays and big hits, as the Wolves never allowed La Conner inside its 35-yard line during regulation.

Brian Casey, back in action after an injury cost him most of his sophomore season, made a big splash, roaring in to recover an early fumble.

After scooping up the ball, Casey moved to the sideline, the removal of his helmet revealing the most luxurious mane of golden hair in all the land, bringing an audible gasp of approval from scoreboard operator Joel Norris.

“Dude is rockin’ the killer hair!!”

Wolf sophomore Dominic Coffman may have shorter hair than Casey, but he also came up big on defense, crashing through La Conner’s line for a big-time sack deep in the backfield.

CHS stuffed the Braves on a fourth-and-one — a play upheld by a measurement from Coupeville’s all-star chain gang — with a bevy of players earning roars for other stops.

Miles Davidson, Isaiah Bittner, Josh Upchurch, and Kai Wong joined Smith in smashing runners, while Sage Downes, Tim Ursu, Scott Hilborn, and Daylon Houston chased down foes from behind, denying them crucial first downs.

While Coupeville’s defense was rock-solid, its offense was often inspired, yet came up just short of busting things wide open.

Unlike La Conner, the Wolves made it down inside the 20-yard line twice in regulation, only to have their momentum blunted by an equally-scrappy Braves defense.

The first time, Logan Downes zipped silky-smooth passes into the hands of Eck (20 yards) and older brother Sage Downes (16 yards), setting up a first-and-10 at the La Conner 18.

CHS stalled out there, though, then got unlucky on a big drive midway through the third quarter.

After softening the defense with a steady diet of Smith playing battering ram, the Wolves (almost) pulled off a stunning play.

Hutchinson found Sage Downes on the move down the left side of the field, and then things got weird.

Downes pulled in the pass, took a step or two, got hit, the ball popped free, the La Conner defender stopped his pursuit to try and convince the ref it was an incomplete pass…

Pause for a deep breath.

So then Downes picked up the ball and spun away, looking like he was on his way to a possible touchdown, only to be hit by a different Brave, with the ball getting away once again, only this time it was La Conner who recovered it.

And scene.

While the game remained scoreless throughout regulation, the action was never boring, and both teams played surprisingly smoothly considering the long layoff.

There were few penalties, and even though neither team could crack the end zone until overtime, Coupeville got folks excited right at the end of regulation.

With the ball in his hands and 17 ticks on the clock, Logan Downes scrambled out of the hands of a would-be sacker, picking up five yards on a play seemingly destined to lose 10 just moments before.

The Wolf 9th grader then put up a potentially game-winning bomb from the 38-yard line on the final play before overtime.

It disappeared into a mass of hands, as multiple La Conner defenders harassed a Wolf receiver, falling just short of providing a miracle ending.

Not that it mattered in the end, as Coupeville’s overtime domination was just a heartbeat away, sending the Wolf football faithful back to their cars with an extra skip in their steps.

The pandemic is still with us. Life is not yet back to normal.

But, for three hours Saturday night, Ben Smith and his classmates, those on the field and those in the stands, got to focus on something positive.

Take your wins, in a game or in real life, and hold on to them.

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