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Wolf junior Cael Wilson has scored for Coupeville High School soccer in all four seasons he’s played. (Nick Guay photo)

Long day, all the feelings.

The Coupeville High School soccer squad jumped island to island Wednesday, alighting on Lopez, where the Wolves played two games before making the long return trip to Whidbey.

The journey home was made with mixed emotions, as the JV team basked in the afterglow of its first victory, while the varsity squad dealt with a loss which erases much of its playoff hopes.

How the day played out:

 

Varsity:

“Kids are broken. Me too…”

So spoke Wolf coach Robert Wood after an emotional last-second defeat.

At one point this season, the Coupeville varsity was ranked as high as #4 in the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association RPI rankings.

But a recent three-game skid in conference action, made worse by a 3-2 loss in overtime to Lopez, will make it exceedingly difficult for the Wolves to advance to the playoffs.

Postseason hopes are not completely dead, but they are on serious life support.

The loss drops CHS to 2-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 5-5 overall, and pins them in 6th place in a nine-team league from which the top four teams advance to the district tourney.

Defending state champ Friday Harbor (6-0 in league), Providence Classical Christian (5-1), and Mount Vernon Christian (4-1) are close to locking down the top three slots.

After that, Lopez (3-2) and Orcas Island (3-2) sit a game-and-a-half up on Coupeville in the battle for the final playoff berth, while Grace Academy (1-5), La Conner (1-5), and Cedar Park Christian-Bothell (0-5) are all but eliminated.

The Wolves host La Conner Friday for Senior Night, then close the regular season on the road Oct. 24 with a game on Orcas Island.

Wednesday’s game came within a few seconds of being decided in a penalty kick shootout, but Lopez broke through to score the winner in stoppage time at the tail end of the last overtime.

Coupeville’s goals came off the feet of sophomore Ezra Boilek and junior Cael Wilson.

Boilek, in his first year as a CHS booter, tallied his team-high seventh goal of the season, while Wilson punched in his second.

Now in his fourth season as a Wolf after making his varsity debut as an 8th grader, the latter has recorded six career goals.

 

Josh Lujan notched his first high school goal Wednesday on Lopez Island. (Jackie Saia photo)

 

JV:

They saved their best for last.

The Wolf JV, a co-ed team playing in a boys’ league, blanked Lopez 2-0 behind goals from Josh Lujan and Solomon Rudat.

It was the first time this season both players had scored, and the victory lifts the second unit’s final record to 1-3-1.

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Coupeville goalie Nick Guay (in green) is mobbed after the Wolves won a three-team tiebreaker Saturday, advancing to bi-districts. (Morgan White photos)

The Wolf booters live to play another day.

Beating the odds, and two rival teams, the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer team survived a three-team tiebreaker Saturday in Oak Harbor, emerging with a bi-district playoff berth to claim as its own.

Playing 40-minute “half games,” the Wolves knocked off Lopez Island 1-0, then nipped Providence Classical Christian 3-2 in a penalty kick shootout after finishing regulation in a scoreless tie.

That gives Coupeville the fifth, and final, playoff berth from District 1.

The Wolves, 5-8 on the season, now host Seattle-based Summit Atlas (3-1-1), the #4 team from District 2, in a loser-out playoff game.

That game will either be played Monday, Oct. 31 or Tuesday, Nov. 1 at a still-to-be-determined location.

Coupeville is the host team but is not allowed to play on its own home pitch as Mickey Clark Field does not have covered bleachers on both sides of the field.

The winner advances to play at Mount Vernon Christian (9-4-1), District 1’s #3 seed, in a loser-out, winner-to-state game which will most likely go down Nov. 2.

The eight-team 2B/1B state tourney runs between Nov. 11-19.

Coupeville’s boys’ soccer program, which launched in 2004, has made two prior trips to state, qualifying in 2009 and 2010 while being coached by former Seattle Sounders star Paul Mendes.

In modern times, CHS coach Robert Wood is the man calling the shots, though he was out of town on a business trip Saturday, with Wolf girls soccer guru Kyle Nelson filling his shoes.

Preston Epp wins the race to the ball.

The tiebreaker was forced when Coupeville, Lopez, and Providence all finished 3-5 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, trailing defending state champ Orcas Island (8-0), Friday Harbor (7-1), MVC (6-2) and Grace Academy (4-4).

Saturday’s event was to feature each of the three schools playing twice, but the Wolves made game three a moot point when they won games one and two.

Coupeville opened play at Oak Harbor’s Wildcat Memorial Stadium looking for some revenge against a Lopez squad which it lost to in the regular season.

Vying on a fast turf field after largely playing on natural grass, the two teams warily circled one another, looking in vain for a break in the defense.

Wolf goalie Nick Guay was on point all day, and he made several strong saves to preserve a scoreless tie heading into a short halftime break.

CHS had its scoring chances during the game’s first 20 minutes, but narrowly missed on several shots, with Reiley Araceley, Preston Epp, and Cole White each pushing the ball just wide of the net.

Coupeville’s big break came with a hair over nine minutes left in regulation, with senior team leader Aidan Wilson using his noggin to redirect a corner kick into the back of the net.

The Lopez goalie almost made the save but couldn’t control the madly spinning ball and it splashed home to the delight of a large pack of Wolf fans.

It was Wilson’s 10th goal of the 2022 campaign, and his 13th overall during his CHS days.

Aidan Wilson bangs home the game-winner against Lopez Island.

Trying desperately to find the tying goal, Lopez came hard after Guay, but he was unflappable, shutting the Lobos down with the aid of stout defenders like Hank Milnes, Andrew Williams, and Cameron Epp.

With the game one win in hand, the Wolves celebrated for about 1.3 seconds, then snapped their game faces right back on as PCC arrived on the pitch.

The Highlanders generated little heat on Guay, other than one long shot the Wolf netminder snagged on the fly, but Coupeville’s offense also sputtered a bit.

White had one primo opportunity in stoppage time in the second half, but the ball caught a gust of wind and sailed just over the bar, earning a sigh of relief from PCC supporters.

With 40 minutes run off the clock, and no goals to speak of, the teams jumped past the normal overtime period, instead settling things with a tense shootout.

Both Coupeville and PCC failed to convert on their first tries, but nailed opportunities #2 and #3.

Preston Epp and Guay, stepping out of goal for a moment, both popped balls into the left corner of the net, and things were knotted at 2-2.

The fourth shooters failed to crack the tie, with one blast blocked and the other banging off the bar on the right side of the net.

That set up things for a dramatic finish, and Wilson responded, launching a missile into the right corner to push CHS ahead 3-2.

Down to their final shooter, PCC needed a miracle, and its prayers went unanswered under cloudy skies.

Guay did some shake, a little bake, faked to the left, to the right, then celebrated as the Highlander booter slapped a shot to the left of the net, his team’s season vanishing as the ball drifted too far outside.

“On to the playoffs!”

Cue the celebration, followed by his teammates carrying Guay off the field, while Nelson smiled from the sideline.

A veteran of numerous big games, including those state playoff rumbles, the fill-in coach was happy to help keep the season going, while looking to hand the keys back to Wood.

“I just told them playoff games are always intense and tight,” Nelson said. “It was an exciting day and they stepped up. Will be fun to see them keep playing.”

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Cael Wilson and Coupeville play two half-games Saturday in a bid to claim a district playoff berth. (Morgan White photo)

Three teams enter, one goes home happy.

Having forged a three-way tie for the fifth, and final, boys soccer playoff berth from the Northwest 2B/1B League, Coupeville, Lopez Island, and Providence Classical Christian will decide matters on the pitch.

The three teams meet Saturday at Oak Harbor’s Wildcat Memorial Stadium, with action beginning at noon.

Admission is free.

Having ignored my idea of having the teams chug eggnog on a moving ferry, with the last man standing “the winner,” the format for Saturday is:

**There will be a pregame coin flip to determine which teams are A, B, and C.

**If all heads or all tails, team reps flip coins again until an odd one out.

**Odd one out is team A.

**Order of games: A vs. B, B vs. C, A vs. C.

**Games consist of two 20-minute halves with a five-minute halftime.

**No sudden death overtime — straight to penalty kicks if game tied.

**If one team finishes 2-0, they claim the playoff berth. If all three teams finish 1-1, there will be a redraw to decide teams A, B, and C, followed by penalty kick shootouts.

Saturday’s winner, as the #5 playoff seed from District 1, advances to host Summit Atlas, the #4 seed from District 2 in a loser-out playoff game Monday, Oct. 31.

If it’s Coupeville, the Halloween night rumble would most likely be back at Oak Harbor’s stadium.

Monday’s winner hits the road after that, advancing to play Mount Vernon Christian, District 1’s #3 seed, in a loser-out, winner-to-state game either Nov. 1 or 2.

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Grant Steller and Co. have two regular-season games left as they chase an elusive playoff berth. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The path to the playoffs just got rockier.

A 3-1 loss Saturday to visiting Lopez Island doesn’t eliminate the Coupeville High School boys soccer team from postseason contention.

But it does make it much tougher for the Wolves to claim one of the top five slots in the Northwest 2B/1B League standings, which they have to do to advance.

A win Saturday would have moved CHS into a fourth-place tie with Grace Academy.

Instead, at 2-4 in league action, the Wolves fall behind Lopez (2-2), and land in a sixth-place tie with La Conner, a game back of the Lobos.

Coupeville hosts La Conner Oct. 25 on Senior Night, then travels to Orcas Island Oct. 27 to face the defending 2B/1B state champs in the regular-season finale.

Now 4-7 overall, the Wolves likely need to win both of their remaining games, while getting some help from other teams, to claim a postseason berth.

If Coupeville doesn’t make it to the playoffs, Saturday’s game, a very winnable one, will loom large.

The Wolves, who were missing a key starter and playmaker as Cole White recovers from a concussion, looked flat for much of the game.

And Lopez took advantage. Really quickly.

The Lobos banged home a goal 35 seconds into play, redirecting a partially blocked shot right back into the net, the ball moving left to right before nestling into the corner of the net.

Coupeville’s defenders clamped down a bit after that, and goaltender Cael Wilson made several nice saves, but Lopez found its moments.

A second goal landed in the promised land in the game’s 15th minute, and a third one was slapped home in the 26th minute.

Trailing 3-0 at the break, Coupeville tried to ramp up its attack in the second half but had little luck stringing together a series of successful passes.

Cameron Epp finally got the Wolves on the board in the game’s 58th minute, winning a battle in front of the net to register his fourth goal of the season.

But that was pretty much it for Coupeville.

Aidan Wilson had one strong blast from just inside the midfield marker, but the alert Lopez goalie stepped in front and snuffed out the potential score.

The Wolves hung tough in the waning moments, with Cael Wilson punching a dangerous in-close shot wide of the net, but there were no comebacks on this day.

Afterwards, CHS coach Robert Wood sighed as he gazed across a sun-splashed pitch.

“On to Tuesday,” he said. “We’ll be ready for La Conner.”

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Aidan Wilson pushes the ball aggressively during an epic comeback win. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They got by with a little help from their friends.

And when you play on the prairie, there’s no pal quite like the wind – if you know how to use it.

Navigating the swirls like pros, the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad pulled off one of the more stunning pitch comebacks in memory Saturday, coming from three goals behind to win a thriller.

Down 4-1 at the half, and with the wind suddenly at their backs, the Wolves stormed back to tie the game in stoppage time, survived two scoreless overtime periods, then won a shoot-out thanks to a little help from Mother Nature.

The official final score was 5-4, and the win, coming on Senior Night, lifts Coupeville to 4-8 in Northwest 2B/1B League play.

The Wolves finish the season on the road, with trips to face league leaders Orcas Island (11-2) and Providence Classical Christian (11-1) Oct. 26 and 28, respectively.

But, before it heads off on the Road Trip of Death, Coupeville gave its fans a sendoff for the ages.

Tony Garcia was honored on Senior Night.

As was Xavier Murdy.

There were miracle goals, raw emotion, a fair amount of wind, the velvet voice of PA announcer Ja’Kenya Hoskins one final time, and tears.

Like a lot of tears.

And those facial drops, which mainly came from Lopez players, were earned and understandable.

The Lobos, who are a co-ed team, dominated play for a huge chunk of the game, and seemed headed for their own well-deserved, and much-needed, win.

“They owned us today, all day. That’s what I told our guys,” said Coupeville coach Robert Wood. “But we had a friend, and that friend was the wind.”

Lopez had used the weather to its advantage in the first half, building that 4-1 lead thanks to well-placed shots which got a nice boost from the breeze.

Coupeville scraped out one goal, the fifth of the season from sophomore sensation Nick Guay, but trying to drive into the wind was difficult at best, impossible at worst.

Things were looking dire, but the Wolves reached down someplace deep and found a will to win that was, frankly, pretty dang inspiring.

Plus, they had the wind at their backs in the second half, and Mother Nature was a homer after all.

Alex Murdy netted a goal six minutes into the second half, also his fifth of the season, and there was a brief spark of life.

But the Lopez goalie was a scrambler, and, facing a barrage, he knocked more shots wide of the net than he allowed to come inside.

Both Murdy and Cael Wilson had dead-eye shots which couldn’t quite find pay-dirt, and the clock was ticking madly down.

No worries.

Grant Steller, who plays with a laidback ease mixed with serious grit, took a ball from Murdy and slapped it past the flailing netminder, and suddenly we were looking at a 4-3 game.

Even then, though, Lopez still seemed in control, with its goalie punching a ball away from the net with four measly minutes to play.

Once the scoreboard froze at two minutes, and we all entered the twilight zone that is soccer, where the ref, and only the ref, really knows how much time is left to play, Wood might have gotten a little tense on the sideline.

But, if a sweat drop or two burrowed down deep into his collar, he hid it well, as if he knew a miracle was coming.

And that miracle was provided by a hero named Andrew Williams.

Laughing at pressure, he launched a corner kick which went airborne, caught a ride on a passing burst of wind, and somehow, against all odds, buried itself into the corner of the net a moment before the final whistle.

Cue the bedlam.

Cue Williams being beat within an inch of his life by his ecstatic teammates.

Cue an explosion of cheers echoing across the windy prairie.

Meanwhile Wood merely nodded, maybe dipping his head an inch or three, a soccer sage trying hard to project an image of utter calm.

That sent the game to overtime, or, in this case, two five-minute extra periods, both of which failed to see a “golden goal” be launched.

Steller and Wilson both had strong looks at the net, but there was no way this thing was ending anywhere short of a shoot-out.

As in that most-beloved, or most-loathed, of events, in which the teams alternate players taking “kicks from the mark” at a goalie who has .00002 of a second to make a decision on which way to go.

It prevents ties, which we can all get behind … but is a stake through the heart of the team which loses, as luck often trumps skill.

“Worst way to end a game … EVER,” Wood said.

And remember, his team won.

Xavier Murdy, Tony Garcia, and Williams each netted their shots, leaving the shootout at 3-3, before the Lopez goalie blocked Alex Murdy’s attempt up and over the net to give the visitors the edge.

When the Lobos pushed the margin to 4-3, with Coupeville down to its final man, things looked as bleak as the blurry skies above.

But this is where it’s good to know how the weather works on the prairie.

Wood instructed his players to keep their shots on the ground, where the breeze could do the least damage, and they listened.

Steller drilled the snot out of the ball, sending it deep into the bottom right corner of the net, and we were at 4-4 with the last Lopez shooter walking to the line.

The Lobo lined up his shot, connected, and foolishly dared to go against Mother Nature, which bit him right in the butt.

Launching an airborne shot, the shooter could only watch in horror as the wind-aided ball went high and far, and kept going, clearing the football goalposts and coming down somewhere around the highway.

Given a reprieve, with the shootout sent to a sixth player, the Wolves closed in style.

Guay pocketed his shot, putting CHS up 5-4, then strolled back to the waiting high-fives and backslaps.

At which point Lopez made it two high, hard, and fly to the moon attempts in a row, its final gasp at glory making the same mistake of leaving the ground, and never coming back down.

Cue some more bedlam, as the Wolves and their fans celebrated and the wind did its own swirly, invisible victory dance.

Like the ancestors said — know the wind, respect the wind, and win with the wind.

Code of the prairie athlete.

Cue the celebration.

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