Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Northwest League’

Carolyn Lhamon pushes the ball upfield in pre-pandemic times. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

New league, new dreams.

With the pandemic, it’s been a bit since the Coupeville High School girls soccer team has competed together as a unit.

That would be fall of 2019, and a lot has changed since then.

CHS moved from 1A to 2B, joined the Northwest 2B/1B League, and top scorer Genna Wright has recovered from a devastating leg injury which erased 98.2% of her junior season.

Now, Wright is back to torch nets again, the Wolves are on what should be a more level playing field, and coach Kyle Nelson is only leading one Coupeville soccer program.

The move to 2B brings boys soccer into the same season as girls soccer — technically the fall, but being played this school year from April to May — with the pitch guru opting to step down as boys coach.

While former assistant Robert Wood takes the reigns of that program, Nelson is ready to bound back into action with the Wolf girls as they head into new waters.

“I am thrilled to have left some of those 1A schools behind,” he said. “In soccer we were facing schools that were sending off some of their seniors to go play at Division I schools, not something we were ever able to compete with.

“Now, each school is on a fairly even playing field.”

In this pandemic-shortened season Coupeville will face NWL mates Friday Harbor, La Conner, and Mount Vernon Christian three times each, with five of nine games at home.

“From our past experience with these schools, all the games we have played against them have usually been good contests where either team could have been the winner,” Nelson said. “Looking forward to going into all of our games knowing that we could win that game.

“Friday Harbor and Mount Vernon Christian could both be strong,” he added. “But, since it has been a year and a half since any of us have played, it really could be anyone.”

And there’s no reason to think these Wolf booters can’t be the first CHS soccer team to capture a conference crown.

“Our first goal is not any different than any other year, and that is to have some fun,” Nelson said. “Since there will be no playoffs, a league title will be our team goal.”

Sophie Martin shows off some wicked skills.

Leading the pursuit of that goal will be a group of players with years of experience on the pitch.

Nelson’s three captains are seniors Mollie Bailey and Genna Wright, along with junior Mary Milnes.

Bailey anchors the Wolf defense in goal, with Milnes and sophomore Nezi Keiper holding down the back line.

Midfielders Sophie Martin, a junior, and super sophomore Carolyn Lhamon will be joined by Wright and junior Eryn Wood, who lead the Coupeville attack.

Martin rattled home four goals in 2019, while Wright enters play this season tied for third-place all-time on the CHS girls scoring chart.

With 10 goals as a freshman and another seven as a sophomore, she sits with 17 goals, the same figure thrown down by former Wolf star Lindsey Roberts.

Wright is chasing Mia (35 goals) and Kalia Littlejohn (33 goals) for the career record.

While he has a strong core of returning players to lean on, Nelson also looks forward to seeing which other Wolves accept the challenge and rise to prominence.

“I am sure we will have some athletes that will be stepping up for us to cover key positions, but at this point I am not sure I can identify them,” he said.

“It has been awhile since we have really had a full team out there playing, and it will be fun to see who is ready to take it to the next level.”

However the roster spots break down, Nelson is ready to roll.

“We bring back quite a bit of experience all over the field,” he said. “We just need to bring the pieces together to form a cohesive unit.

“This could prove to be tricky in such a short season, but we will give it our best effort.”

Mollie Bailey clears the goal.

Read Full Post »

Reiley Araceley, seen here in pre-COVID times, set two individual PR’s Thursday, while also running a leg for a victorious 4 x 100 relay squad. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Some solid throws, some zippy runs.

The Coupeville High School track and field squad put in a strong day of work Thursday in Mount Vernon, capturing four titles and setting 32 PR’s at an eight-team meet.

Leading the way for the Wolves were Logan Martin, who claimed top honors in the shot put and discus, Aidan Wilson, who ran away with the 800 crown, and the boys 4 x 100 relay squad.

That unit, made up of Sam Wynn, Reiley Araceley, Dominic Coffman, and Wilson, out-leaned La Conner to capture the title.

Coupeville also notched four second-place finishes, with Catherine Lhamon (1600), Ryanne Knoblich (high jump), the boys 4 x 400 relay team, and Coffman (high jump) pushing the top finishers.

Track powerhouse Mount Vernon Christian defended its home turf, sitting atop the leaderboard in both the boys and girls team standings, while the Wolf squads finished fourth and fifth, respectively.

CHS has two meets left in this pandemic-shortened season, with a trip to La Conner Wednesday, March 31, followed by the Northwest 2B/1B League Championships.

That finale, set for April 3, will be in Coupeville.

 

Complete Thursday results:

 

GIRLS:

100 — Ryanne Knoblich (10th) 15.19 *PR*; Ava Mitten (12th) 15.32 *PR*; Abigail Ramirez (13th) 16.13 *PR*; Maylin Steele (14th) 16.70 *PR*; Camryn Clark (17th) 18.34 *PR*

200 — Ja’Kenya Hoskins (4th) 29.46; Ramirez (18th) 34.29 *PR*; Steele (19th) 35.47 *PR*; Clark (22nd) 38.03 *PR*

400 — Knoblich (4th) 1:13.05 *PR*

1600 — Catherine Lhamon (2nd) 6:19.34

300 Hurdles — Cristina McGrath (5th) 1:06.39

4 x 100 Relay — Mitten, Ramirez, Hoskins, Carolyn Lhamon (4th) 58.88

4 x 200 Relay — Mitten, Car. Lhamon, C. McGrath, Hoskins (4th) 2:09.45

Shot Put — Car. Lhamon (3rd) 26-06

Discus — Aurora Cernick (5th) 67-11; Erica McGrath (8th) 55-03.50 *PR*

Javelin — Cernick (7th) 62-07; E. McGrath (12th) 50-06 *PR*

High Jump — Knoblich (2nd) 4-10

Long Jump — C. McGrath (15th) 10-07 *PR*

 

BOYS:

100 — Sam Wynn (3rd) 12.02 *PR*; Dominic Coffman (6th) 12.42 *PR*; Reiley Araceley (8th) 12.74 *PR*; Dakota Eck (14th) 13.31 *PR*

200 — Mikey Robinett (12th) 29.40 *PR*

400 — Robinett (8th) 1:09.00 *PR*

800 — Aidan Wilson (1st) 2:13.14 *PR*; Hank Milnes (6th) 2:39.46 *PR*

1600 — Mitchell Hall (4th) 5:04.41 *PR*; Milnes (8th) 5:59.75 *PR*; Tate Wyman (10th) 6:13.51 *PR*

300 Hurdles — Wyman (5th) 58.94 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Wynn, Araceley, Coffman, Wilson (1st) 48.35

4 x 400 Relay — Wynn, Hall, Araceley, Wilson (2nd) 3:59.04

Shot Put — Logan Martin (1st) 41-03; Eck (7th) 29-07.50; Josh Guay (10th) 17-11 *PR*

Discus — Martin (1st) 153-10 *PR*; Robinett (9th) 71-02 *PR*; Guay (14th) 45-11 *PR*

Javelin — Martin (4th) 109-10.50 *PR*; Eck (7th) 85-04.50 *PR*; Hall (8th) 83-01.50

High Jump — Coffman (2nd) 5-06 *PR*

Long Jump — Araceley (6th) 14-09.50 *PR*; Eck (13th) 14-01; Milnes (15th) 13-09 *PR*; Robinett (16th) 13-01

Read Full Post »

Kylie Van Velkinburgh was one of three Wolves to collect six or more hits Tuesday, as undefeated Coupeville shredded Orcas Island pitching during a doubleheader sweep. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Get off the tracks or get run over.

Back in action after losing a season to the pandemic, the Coupeville High School softball squad has returned with a vengeance.

Start with fireball-flinging hurler Izzy Wells, toss in a lineup chock full of booming bats, sprinkle with some opportunistic defense, and it’s little wonder the Wolves sit atop the Northwest 2B/1B League with a flawless 7-0 record.

Coupeville’s latest wins came Tuesday, as Kevin McGranahan’s team of assassins swept a doubleheader on Orcas Island, capturing 16-4 and 12-6 wins.

“So we started hitting as soon as we got off the bus and never looked back,” said the CHS diamond guru. “Bella (Whalen) and Chelsea (Prescott) had great games at the plate and were great leaders on the field.

“We are playing good softball, but, of course, we have some stuff to work on. On to Concrete this Friday.”

The Wolves have back-to-back games to finish off this week, following up that road trip Friday with a home game Saturday against Darrington.

That latter game is Senior Night, with first pitch set for 1 PM.

How Tuesday played out:

 

Game 1:

One game, three stages.

First, a somewhat-surprising opening, as Coupeville fell behind 2-0 after an inning of play, a rare deficit for this high-flying squad.

Second, the Wolves chipped away, retaking the lead in the top of the second, then stretching it out (slightly) to 6-2.

Third, and finally, total freakin’ domination, as CHS went off for five-run explosions in both of the final two frames, sending the lead into double-digits while still getting to play a full seven innings.

The “rally” began with three runs in the second, then two more in the third.

Whalen, who was wailin’ on the ball all day, ripped a one-out single, setting off a string of four straight hits for the Wolves, with Gwen Gustafson, Kylie Van Velkinburgh, and Maya Lucero all dropping balls between fielders.

Next time around, Mollie Bailey slapped a single, before Wells and Whalen smoked back-to-back doubles, with the latter picking up a pair of RBI as the lead moved out to 5-2.

A Gustafson RBI single in the fifth tacked on another run, but the Wolves saved the best part of their 25-hit assault in the opener for the game’s final two innings.

The hits came fast and furious in the sixth and seventh, with Bailey’s double to straight-away center and Audrianna Shaw’s laser shot, which destroyed an Orcas glove, vying for most explosive.

While all nine CHS starters had at least two hits in the game, sophomores Gustafson and Whalen put a little extra shine on things.

Gustafson raked four singles, while Whalen went slightly berserk, torching Viking pitching for five hits, including a thunderous triple and a pair of still-pretty-loud doubles.

 

Game 2:

After failing to score in the first inning in the opener, Coupeville’s high-octane offense actually went scoreless until the top of the third in the night-cap.

The Wolves had runners on base early, but couldn’t get them around the bags.

They stranded Coral Caveness after she whacked a one-out double to left in the first, then frittered away Whalen and Heidi Meyers after they connected on back-to-back singles in the second.

Wells was on point in the pitcher’s circle, however, keeping the game scoreless until her team’s bats popped back to life.

That happened in the third, as the Wolves first five hitters all reached base, with three scoring.

Singles from Shaw and Van Velkinburgh set the table, before big boppers Prescott (an RBI double) and Bailey (a two-run single) sent their teammates scampering for home.

The game took on the look of a blowout as Coupeville plated six more in the fourth, coming on the heels of Wells firing off another 1-2-3 inning.

While the Orcas book lost a run somewhere that frame, it shouldn’t be too hard to find if the Vikings go back and look for it.

This time, eight of 10 hitters reached base, with only a well-timed double play by Orcas, off of a wicked Wells liner back to the mound, helping the Vikings escape.

Shaw dumped an RBI single in front of a defender, with Allie Lucero sliding under the tag at home to kick things off.

Runs also came in courtesy a bases-loaded walk by Bailey, a hard smash by Whalen which was booted at third, a Meyers RBI single, a titanic RBI double to dead center from Jill Prince, and a passed ball which allowed Gustafson to sprint home.

One-two-three-four-five-six. Go count ’em a second time, overly-defensive Orcas announcer.

Up 9-0, and not 8-0, the Wolves gave some back, with Orcas eking out three runs apiece in both the fourth and fifth.

But Coupeville also put up its own three-spot in the fifth, with Prescott’s two-run single the defining blow, to keep the final margin at 12-6.

After Wells gunned down the Vikings 1-2-3 in the bottom of the sixth, the game, which was already official, was called for darkness.

Since softball was humming along, and the two school’s baseball teams still managed to play for another 20 minutes or so to reach the official end of their second game, I kind of agree with the Orcas announcer that the umps could have “let them play.”

But, both coaches seemed fine with the decision, knowing if Coupeville ran off a long offensive explosion in the top of the seventh, Orcas would never see the plate again.

On the day, Whalen crunched a team-high seven base-knocks, including three of her team’s seven extra-base hits.

Shaw (6), Van Velkinburgh (6), Bailey (5), Prescott (4), Gustafson (4), Caveness (3), Maya Lucero (2), Wells (2), Meyers (1), Prince (1), and Allie Lucero (1) all added hits, as every Wolf to play had at least one.

Read Full Post »

Jonathan Valenzuela collected a team-high eight hits Tuesday, as Coupeville swept a doubleheader from Orcas Island. (Photos by Morgan White)

Scoring was not an issue.

Pounding the ball to all fields Tuesday, the Coupeville High School baseball team threw down 39 hits and 36 runs, rolling to a doubleheader sweep on Orcas Island.

After collecting 16-8 and 20-1 wins, the Wolves sit at a tidy 5-2 on the season.

Now, the Coupeville bashers get to cool their collective heels for a bit, not playing again until the home finale next Tuesday, March 30.

That will be Senior Night for the lone Wolf 12th grader, Daniel Olson. Then he and his teammates wrap their pandemic-shortened season with three road games.

The trip to Orcas Tuesday was a long run, and even with the second game mercy-ruled after five innings, the teams raced rapidly-encroaching darkness to finish things.

But they did, sending CHS coach Will Thayer and his men back to the ferry with an extra spring in their step.

Xavier Murdy had a pair of doubles during a five-hit afternoon.

How the day played out:

 

Game 1:

Coupeville fell behind early, but never flinched, collecting 14 hits en route to scoring in five of seven innings.

The heart of the order was on fire, with the 2-3-4-5 hitters combining to account for all but one of those base-knocks.

The biggest bats in the opener were swung by Scott Hilborn and Sage Sharp, who each rapped out four hits apiece, with Hilborn crushing a triple.

Sharp, who reached base all five times he went to the plate in the opener, also came around to score all five times, while John Valenzuela added two doubles and a single, scoring three times.

Daniel Olson spanked a pair of singles, Xavier Murdy rounded out the hit attack with a one-bagger of his own, with Hawthorne Wolfe (3), starting pitcher Cody Roberts (2), Hilborn (2), and freshman Cole White (1) combining to tap home multiple times.

Coupeville put up three runs in the first, a single score in the third, then closed with a 3-6-3 tally across the fifth, sixth, and seventh innings.

While offense carried the day, there was a defensive gem, as well.

Peyton Caveness, busting his tail in right field, made a fairly-spectacular running, diving catch to blunt an Orcas rally, even earning some appreciative oohs and ahs from the rival fans.

 

Game 2:

Every ball Orcas threw, Coupeville blasted right back.

Or at least it probably seemed that way, with nine different Wolf hitters collecting a base-knock, and nine of Coupeville’s 25 hits being of the extra-base variety.

Wolfe and Valenzuela had five hits each, with the former bombing a trio of two-baggers and the latter settling for a pair of doubles.

Olson, who got the win on the mound, had a long triple, and might have gone for the inside the park homerun if the score wasn’t so lopsided.

Meanwhile, Murdy (2) and Hilborn (1) teamed up for three doubles, with young guns Nick Guay and Caveness adding base-knocks as CHS ran up a 2-1-5-5-7 run tally across five innings.

Also seeing playing time for Coupeville were Miles Davidson and Andrew Williams, as Thayer shuffled his lineup for maximum appeal.

On the day, Valenzuela led the boomin’ bats, registering eight hits across two games, while Olson and Hilborn had six each.

Also putting some good “wood” on the ball were heavy hitters Wolfe (5), Murdy (5), Sharp (5), Roberts (2), Guay (1), and Caveness (1).

Cody Roberts and Co. did this a lot Tuesday, scoring 36 runs.

Read Full Post »

Avalon Renninger launches a shot in pre-pandemic times. Even with Washintgon state moving into Phase 3, don’t expect local gyms to be this full anytime soon. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Everything is fluid in the Age of Coronavirus.

Day to day, game schedules and rules can, and do, change, and school athletic directors have to remain nimble and ready for everything.

As Coupeville AD Willie Smith and his associates in the Northwest 2B/1B League continue to pull off a remarkable comeback for school athletics, the latest twist is the state moving to Phase 3, and how that affects fans attending games.

So far, all NWL athletic contests have been limited to home fans, with the exception of track and field, where fans have been barred.

That’s because schools have been working with a limit of 200 people at an event, which includes coaches, athletes, refs, officials, media, and fans.

With most track meets featuring 6-8 schools, that number fills up fast counting just participants.

Baseball, softball, and girls tennis, with just two teams playing, leave enough open slots that league AD’s opted to include home fans, something many other leagues statewide have not.

The move to Phase 3 statewide includes language which seems to indicate the number of people who can be at an event bounces from 200 to 400, raising the idea road fans might be allowed.

But it’s not that simple, as there are a lot of moving parts involved.

“Our league is still working through the process,” Smith said. “The Island schools (Orcas, Friday Harbor) are waiting to hear back from their health department on what the requirements will be.”

While all spring sports are played outside, the return of fall sports in early April present a new challenge for the NWL, with volleyball matches played in gyms.

“One thing that needs to be made clear is that indoor sports are predicated at 25% of max occupancy OR 400, whichever is less,” Smith said.

Coupeville’s high school gym legally holds 1,459 people, while its middle school gym holds 1,048.

That means the limit for each under Phase 3 is actually 365 and 262 people, respectively, not 400.

Determining how many people can legally be at a soccer or football game at Coupeville’s Mickey Clark Field is still under review, Smith said.

The other six NWL schools, which all have smaller student bodies than CHS, face similar, unique issues with their gyms and playing fields.

“Determining who gets in is going to be quite a task, which we are still working on,” Smith said. “We don’t have an answer yet, because it’s not quite as simple as just saying all are welcome.”

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »