Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Mia Littlejohn’

(Pat Kelley photo)

The future of Wolf boys’ soccer. (Pat Kelley photo)

Kalia (left) and Mia Littlejohn. (Dawn Hesselgrave photo)

Kalia (left) and Mia Littlejohn. (Dawn Hesselgrave photo)

Heat or no heat, there was soccer to be played.

Bouncing around the state this weekend, Coupeville booters found tournament play awaiting them at every destination.

Mia and Kalia Littlejohn were in Bellingham, where they and their teammates on the Northwest United GU16 squad played in the Baker Blast.

The team stormed to a pair of 3-2 wins in the early going, bouncing Burnaby District Metro Select and Gorge FC, with Mia Littlejohn scoring a pair of goals in the opener.

Northwest United ultimately claimed second in the GU16 premier division, falling to West Vancouver 2-0 in the final.

It was the closest any team came to toppling the unbeaten juggernauts.

The boys were busy too, as the young Wolves on the North Whidbey Islanders FC-01 squad played in the Rainer Slam.

Missing six players, the Islanders had no bench and were battered by severe heat, falling 5-1, 4-1 and 7-0.

Jake Mitten and Aram Leyva teamed up in game one on a beautiful, all-Wolf goal.

Leyva, fighting through three defenders, came off the turf to find Mitten, who popped home a short shot that the goalie never saw coming.

Fellow Coupeville booter Matthew Kelley set up his team’s goal in game two, knocking a pair of defenders to the ground before sliding the ball onto the waiting foot of a teammate for the tap-in.

Read Full Post »

Kailey Kellner (left) and Kalia Littlejohn  (Amy King photo)

   Kailey Kellner (left) and Kalia Littlejohn bring Island Ball to the mainland. (Amy King photos)

team

Back (l to r) Lauren Rose, Mia Littlejohn, Tiffany Briscoe, Kalia Littlejohn, Kailey Kellner. Front: Sarah Wright, Lindsey Roberts, Ashlie Shank, Lauren Grove, Ema Smith, Kyla Briscoe.

Lindsey

Away from the court, a little phone time.

David King

  You can try and sneak a camera into the pre-game huddle, but Tiffany Briscoe will catch you. Every single time.

Ocean Shores has been invaded.

11 Wolf hoops stars and two slightly-frazzled coaches (“Towels everywhere!” exclaimed Amy King with a chuckle after surveying a hotel room later) have embarked on a road trip.

The mission: team bonding and much skill-building.

Both are important as, even though the Wolves are the defending 1A Olympic League girls’ basketball champs, six seniors departed and Coupeville’s younger players will be heavily relied on next season.

Early returns? Highly positive.

Even without their seniors — Makana Stone and McKenzie Bailey — the gathered players, who include eight freshmen or sophomores, came out strong Monday to kick off their camp.

First they had to get there, though.

“What a LONG day,” said CHS coach David King.

The Wolves were up before the sun, loaded everyone in before 6:30 and caught the 7:15 ferry. Then had to turn around and play two games in the afternoon after arriving.

Coupeville won the first, using a second-half rally and a last-second defensive stop, to topple Castle Rock 24-22.

Then, tired legs finally got the better of the Wolves, as they fell 23-16 to Onalaska in the nightcap.

They return to the court today for three games, facing Adna, Lincoln and Foss. The latter two games pit them against much-larger schools.

“A little out of our comfort zone, but it is camp and what doesn’t kill us makes us stronger right?,” said Amy King, ever-enthusiastic, as she charged to meet the new day.

“Coffee… maybe some coffee first,” is what I would like to assume was her husband’s response.

Taking the court in their first game Monday, the young Wolves took a few moments to jell. Which would be expected.

“Nerves played a part in the early going for us. Good shots taken, but not falling,” David King said. “Defensively, we played well.

Trailing by three at the half, Coupeville began to click in the second half.

Up by two with five seconds to go, the Wolves had a one-and-one at the free throw line to ice the game.

The first freebie slid off the rim, though, giving Castle Rock a chance to tie or win.

The Wolves locked down on defense, even without taking a moment to talk about it (“In hindsight I should have called a time-out once I saw their setup”) and didn’t allow their foes to get a shot off before the buzzer sounded.

Lauren Grove paced the Wolves in the opener with eight points, while Kailey Kellner snared seven boards.

King also praised the play of two players who are, slightly, at least, grizzled vets.

Tiffany (Briscoe) was hustling each time she was on the court,” he said. “Mia (Littlejohn) did a great job from the point guard spot.”

The second game, while close, featured a Wolf squad ready to finally take a break.

“I think the day got to us. We came out flat and never recovered,” David King said. “Defensively, we just didn’t have it.”

The freshmen made an impact, as Kalia Littlejohn knocked down a sweet three, Lindsey Roberts hauled in four rebounds and Ema Smith “brought some energy offensively.”

With day one in the books, David King was looking at more than his team’s win-loss record and came away pleased.

“We are very young and still trying to find our way. Each player is being asked to expand their game and do things that they wouldn’t normally do,” he said. “The one thing they can control is their effort.

“We are going to see some tough teams here. Do we want to win every game, of course,” King added. “But more importantly is we want each player to give 100% effort at all times.”

Read Full Post »

Whidbey warriors (l to r) celebrate their tourney title. (Dawn Hesselgrave photos)

Whidbey warriors (l to r) Malia Hansen, Mia Littlejohn, Kalia Littlejohn and Jenna Cooley celebrate their tourney title. (Dawn Hesselgrave photos)

The best girls under 16 team in all the land.

The best girls under 16 team in all the land.

The will to win is strong in these two.

Powered by its one-two combo of Wolf sharpshooters in sisters Mia and Kalia Littlejohn, the NWU GU16 select soccer squad romped to its third straight win Sunday afternoon, claiming a title at the 21st annual Skagit Firecracker tourney in Burlington.

NWU bounced Snohomish United GU16 2-0 in its final game to cap a 3-0 run through the tournament.

The squad, which boasts four players total from Whidbey, had opened play with a 4-0 drilling of Gala FC Friday.

It then pulled out a heart-stopping 2-1 win over Snohomish Saturday when Kalia Littlejohn slipped a penalty kick past the goalie with less than 30 seconds to play.

Snohomish rebounded to beat Gala FC 3-0 late Saturday to give itself a shot at the title.

Then reality hit like a Littlejohn bomb smacking into the back of the net.

The CHS duo were joined by longtime traveling companion Malia Hansen and newcomer Jenna Cooley to rep Whidbey on the tourney title-winning squad, which is otherwise made up of off-Island players.

Mia Littlejohn was one of Coupeville High School’s top scoring threats last year, winning the award for the team’s top new player.

Kalia, who starred for the CMS volleyball and basketball squads, is expected to join her sister on the pitch in the fall, when she’ll be a freshman and Mia will be a grizzled vet as a sophomore.

Read Full Post »

Kalia (left) and Mia Littlejohn. (Dawn Hesselgrave photo)

Kalia (left) and Mia Littlejohn. (Dawn Hesselgrave photo)

On the video, you can smell the goalie’s fear.

Coupeville High School freshman-to-be Kalia Littlejohn, playing for her select soccer squad, lines up the penalty kick with under 30 seconds to play in a tie game.

She circles the ball like a lioness, then her hand goes up and time starts to move in slow motion.

A slight dip of the head, the goalie visibly flinches, and then a sudden flick of Littlejohn’s left foot and the ball slices left to right and vanishes into the corner of the net.

Cue the celebration for Littlejohn and her NWU U16 teammates, including big sis Mia and fellow Whidbey booter Malia Hansen, as they claim a 2-1 win over Snohomish United GU16 Saturday.

That win, with the first goal coming from Hansen, lifted NWU to 2-0 in the on-going Skagit Firecracker tournament in Burlington.

NWU opened with a 4-0 romp over Gala FC Friday, and the two wins propel the team into the championship game in their division.

That game is 4:30 Sunday on Field 8 at Skagit River Park.

If the Littlejohns win, it’ll be the second straight summer their team has triumphed at the tourney.

Read Full Post »

Mia (left) and Kalia Littlejohn pose with their coaches and the State Cup trophy. (Dawn Hesselgrave photo)

   Mia (left) and Kalia Littlejohn pose with their coaches and the State Cup trophy. (Dawn Hesselgrave photos)

malia

Malia Hansen (left) joins the Littlejohns to represent Whidbey.

A little sisterly love to cap the awards ceremony.

A little sisterly love to cap the awards ceremony.

All the ferry rides and long trips and getting up to leave the Island at 3:30 AM paid off.

Coupeville’s Mia and Kalia Littlejohn are coming back home as champions.

The duo and their teammates on the NWU U15 Premier girls soccer squad captured a State Cup title Sunday, bouncing FC Spokane 3-0 to claim the Silver division.

The Littlejohns and Oak Harbor’s Malia Hansen comprise the Whidbey contingent on the select squad.

NWU romped through the State Cup, outscoring four foes by a score of 14-1.

It opened with a 6-0 win, then ran up scores of 3-0, 2-1 and 3-0 en route to the title.

The celebration was a brief one however, as the Littlejohn sisters took off after the soccer game to go play select basketball.

Mia, a freshman at Coupeville High School, and Kalia, an 8th grader, are guest players with Washington Elite Blue Ice, who are playing in a weekend hoops tourney.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »