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Posts Tagged ‘Orcas Island’

Seniors Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim (left) and Cole White help spark a high-flying Wolf soccer squad. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There was magic in the rain.

Buffeted (but just a bit) by the first foul weather of the season Saturday, the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad stormed from two goals down to shock a state powerhouse.

Orcas Island won the 2B/1B state crown two years ago, and finished runner-up last fall, but on this day, the Vikings had no answers for a fired-up Wolf crew.

Getting goals from four different players, and late-game defensive heroics from goaltender Hurlee Bronec, Coupeville pulled out a 4-3 win in a non-conference game against a league foe.

With three straight victories after an opening night loss to defending state champ Friday Harbor, the Wolves sit at 3-1, their best start to a season in the Coupeville Sports era (2012-today).

Up next?

A prime-time rumble under Friday Night Lights at Mickey Clark Field (admission is free!), with the Wolves hosting Cedar Park Christian-Lynnwood (1-2) at 6:00 PM in their first game to count in the league standings.

And the rematch with Orcas Island?

That will come on the road in the regular-season finale Oct. 24.

For now, the Wolves, and coaches Robert Wood and Kimberly Kisch, will bask in the afterglow of a milestone victory.

And one achieved without a full roster, as several players, including starter Ayden Wyman — one of two girls on the Wolf varsity — were absent.

Saturday’s tilt, coming on the heels of a blowout Coupeville football win on the same field less than 24 hours before, was an all-out scrap.

Players hit the turf frequently, though fairly cleanly, as the teams waged a back-and-forth affair, the momentum shifting in unison with the rain getting heavier, slacking off, then surging back.

Orcas caught a break early, as a penalty kick off the foot of Wolf senior Cole White hit an updraft and sailed too high to kiss the back of the net.

Given a reprieve, the Vikings rattled home a pair of first-half goals, with Ethan Moss connecting on a penalty kick of his own before Joaquin Shanks Morales slipped a shot between defenders.

Down 2-0, things would have looked dire in some previous seasons.

But this year’s Wolf squad doesn’t break easily, and Coupeville’s defense stiffened up considerably after that.

The comeback trail began with a one-man rampage, with Preston Epp snaring the ball and charging pell-mell into Hell, beating the Orcas netminder in a one-on-one battle.

Given a spark of life, Coupeville responded, battering the Vikings defense with a bevy of shots.

Nick Guay, hunting goals. (Ryan Blouin photo)

The rapid-fire attack paid off, as a ball bounced off the goalie’s hands and landed in front of Wolf gunner Nick Guay, who was hanging out, minding his own business.

Presented with a gift, the silky senior flicked the ball right back where it came from, sending it to its proper home in the back of the net and knotting things up at 2-2.

A late save by Bronec, down on his knees and using his long arms to corral the ball, kept the stalemate in place as halftime arrived.

Whatever was said in the locker room worked, as the Wolves, wet but not entirely miserable, claimed the lead six minutes into the second half.

A scrum in front of the Orcas net attracted a crowd, with junior midfielder Angel Partida popping into the line of fire to bank the ball in for his first varsity goal.

The Vikings didn’t get to back-to-back state title games by giving up, however, and they kept coming.

Awarded another penalty kick, Moss proved to be just as deadly the second time around, forcing the game’s final tie with 20 minutes and change left in regulation.

With fans on the edges of their seats, the rain-slicked battle intensified, until Cole White stepped forward, grabbed the mic, and said, “You’re looking for a hero? Cause that’s me!”

Punching the ball past the Viking goalie with just seven minutes of action left to play out, the Wolf senior broke the tie and sent his teammates into hysterics.

Thankfully, the Wolves immediately refocused, with defenders like Andrew Williams, Hank Milnes, and Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim clamping down on the Orcas shooters.

Andrew Williams leads the charge. (Thomas Studer photo)

The Vikings had one almost sure thing in the final frantic moments, but the shooter dragged the ball too hard to the left, the orb sliding past the net as a whole bunch of pent-up breath came flooding out of the Wolves.

Then Hurlee Bronec stepped forward and sealed the deal, boldly making one final save while sprawled on the wet turf, setting off a major celebration.

And earning a slight nod of approval from twin brother Hunter up in the stands.

Guay’s goal was his team-best fourth of the season and gives him 12 for his CHS career, moving him out of a tie with Zane Bundy and into sole possession of 7th place on the all-time scoring chart.

White has three on the campaign, and seven for his run as a Wolf, while Epp’s first goal of the season was his sixth at the school.

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Big hitter Lyla Stuurmans rang up a team-high 18 kills Thursday night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There is a fork in the road. Which route do you take?

The Coupeville High School volleyball squad has 10 matches left on the regular season schedule, with seven of those coming against Northwest 2B/1B League foes.

Which means the Wolf spikers still have plenty of time to pull together, find a killer finishing touch, and rack up a whole bunch of wins.

Or continue to frustrate themselves and their coaches by being unable to fully harness their talent while settling for middle of the road status.

Coming off a five-set loss to Orcas Island Thursday in the conference opener for both teams, Coupeville finds itself at 0-1 in league play, 1-3 overall.

Two of those losses have come in five sets, and in both of those matches the Wolves were poised to win but didn’t.

Thursday’s defeat, coming to the tune of 25-22, 18-25, 19-25, 25-14, 15-8, wasn’t quite as much of a knife to the heart as their earlier loss to South Whidbey.

In that match, the Wolves led two sets to none, with match point in set #3, only to see things slip away.

But the Orcas defeat stings in its own special way, as it’s the first time a CHS varsity volleyball team has lost to a NWL rival other than four-time defending state champ La Conner since rejoining the league in 2020.

With those Braves (1-0, 1-4) struggling at times during their own rebuilding year, the race for the league crown seems to be wide open.

Coupeville’s next match? It’s at La Conner Sept. 26, after an appearance at this weekend’s South Whidbey Invite.

Time to choose your path.

CHS coach Cory Whitmore stresses a point in an earlier match. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coming off an impressive three-set road sweep of Mount Vernon Christian in a match considered a non-league rumble, the Wolves hit their home floor, and promptly reverted to a work in progress.

Up 3-0 in the opening set after a couple nice serves from Katie Marti and a high-flying tip winner from Lyla Stuurmans, CHS then lost the lead and never got it back.

The last tie in the first frame came at 6-6, and while Orcas never really pulled away, the Vikings kept the Wolves at bay just long enough to net the set.

Stuurmans, who walloped a team-high 18 kills, smoked a couple of winners to keep things close, but the defining play was when two Wolves crashed through the bench in pursuit of a wayward ball.

The hustle was there, but the fact they had to go so far off course in an ultimately futile effort to prolong the play added to Coupeville’s frustration.

But then the Wolves started clicking, capturing the next two sets and playing more like the team which blew MVC off the floor.

Coupeville shot out to an 8-2 lead in the second set, with Mia Farris and Teagan Calkins racking up winners at the net, gave back the lead for a hot second, then flipped the offensive power show back on.

Grey Peabody and Stuurmans took turns torturing the Vikings, spraying winners and ripping off arms, while Madison McMillan brought the complete game, sparkling on serves and mid-range slicers which found openings in the Orcas defense.

With the match knotted at a set apiece, CHS stayed on the offensive, claiming the lead at 8-7 in the third and never giving the advantage back.

Katie Marti had a picture-perfect flip over her shoulder, the ball catching the Vikings flatfooted, while Stuurmans showed off the guns, mashing winners and flexing her biceps to crowd roars.

The biggest cheer came for fan favorite Jada Heaton, who clinched the third set by bounding skyward to crush a winner at set point after Orcas (barely) got a Stuurmans nuclear blast back into play.

Jada Heaton patrols the net. (Jackie Saia photo)

Things were looking peachy at that point, but unfortunately for home fans, it was deceptive.

As fast as the fun times arrived, they vanished for the Wolves, with Orcas riding its heavy hitter, senior Bethany Carter, who became a nearly flawless mash machine across the night’s final two sets.

The fourth set slipped away fast, a 9-3 deficit morphing into an 18-9 disadvantage for Coupeville.

One Orcas player airmailed a serve moments after accidentally hitting herself in the face while bouncing the ball at the service line, but that was small consolation for the Wolves.

All of which set up a fifth and deciding set, which looked like it would be a heavyweight brawl in the middle of the ring.

Until it suddenly wasn’t.

Three times in the final frame Coupeville players hit the floor and made one-handed saves to keep a point alive, with both Calkins and Marti doing it during the same rally.

But a 7-7 tie slipped away, with Orcas running off six straight points on its serve, and the Wolves never fully recovered.

In the aftermath of the loss, which leaves Coupeville winless at home this season, the quandary lingers.

The talent is there. The heart is there. But will these Wolves find their killer instinct?

Only time will tell.

 

Thursday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 2 digs
Teagan Calkins — 4 kills, 5 digs, 1 block assist
Mia Farris — 5 kills, 20 digs, 2 aces
Jada Heaton — 2 kills, 3 digs, 1 block assist
Issabel Johnson — 1 assist, 3 aces
Katie Marti — 2 kills, 6 digs, 37 assists, 1 solo block, 1 ace
Madison McMillan — 1 kill, 20 digs, 2 assists, 5 aces
Grey Peabody — 10 kills, 2 digs
Lyla Stuurmans — 18 kills, 10 digs, 3 aces

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Capri Anter cranks up the power. (Jackie Saia photos)

If you’re on the floor, you’re on the floor.

The Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad played with the minimum six players Thursday, with everyone in uniform bringing big effort.

While the Wolves, who had five freshmen among their active players, couldn’t topple visiting Orcas Island, they did push the Vikings in a 25-18, 25-18 loss.

The conference defeat drops Coupeville to 0-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 1-3 overall, with a trip to La Conner Sept. 26 next up on the schedule.

The young Wolves battled hard in the opening set, building an early lead thanks to back-to-back aces from Capri Anter.

The fab frosh cracked one of those winners off of a Viking player’s arm, the ball hitting bone and making the sound of a melon dropped off the Empire State Building.

Myra McDonald goes low for a shot.

Myra McDonald collected her own ace shortly after, but on a ball which caught the net, hung in the air for an eternity, then flopped over the other side, burrowing its way into the ground as several Orcas players swung and missed.

That staked Coupeville to a 6-4 advantage, but despite some strong work at the net from Anter, the Vikings pulled away, reclaiming the lead and stretching it out.

The second set, played quickly as Orcas prepared to ankle it to the ferry, proceeded in much the same style.

Coupeville sparkled early, this time with McDonald lashing a winner and Chloe Marzocca crushing a nasty service ace, before the Vikings used a deeper roster and older players to seize the advantage.

The Wolves got stellar all-around play from Lexis Drake and Haylee Armstrong, while Anter soared high for a tip winner and Dakota Strong killed the dreams of an Orcas rival by stuffing her shot at the net.

 

Thursday stats:

Capri Anter — 3 kills, 3 aces
Haylee Armstrong — 4 assists, 1 ace
Lexis Drake — 1 kill
Chloe Marzocca — 1 dig, 2 aces
Myra McDonald — 1 kill, 2 aces

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Ryan and Rachel Wilson hang out with their four children, who all would look great in Coupeville’s black and red at some point. Just sayin’.

“It’s been a special place for me since I was a kid.”

Growing up in a military family, Ryan Wilson, who was the Orcas Island High School Athletic Director until his recent resignation, often spent vacations in the Lake Quinault area.

Further cementing the connection, he and wife Rachel, who led the Vikings volleyball program, were married at the local lodge.

Now the couple, and their pack of precocious kids, have left the Northwest 2B/1B League and bought a home almost right next door to the school in Lake Quinault.

Call it home sweet home, unless I can convince them to transfer their athletically blessed, but still quite young, offspring to Coupeville at an appropriate time.

“Ha! We’ll see,” Ryan Wilson said with a chuckle. “Never say never.”

For now, he’ll be teaching in Lake Quinault, while both he and Rachel, a former professional volleyball player, will look for ways to stay involved in sports.

The departure of the Wilsons brings an end to their run on Orcas, which began when they arrived there in 2018 from California.

The Vikings employed three AD’s in as many years before Ryan Wilson accepted the job, and he provided stability while spurring great growth.

Under his watch, Orcas teams showed substantial improvement in almost every sport, with boys’ soccer claiming a state title and two runner-up finishes.

Rachel Wilson led the Vikings volleyball team to the 1B state tourney last fall, the program’s first trip to the big dance since 2011.

A first-round victory over Waterville-Mansfield marked the first time Orcas had won at the state spiker championships since 2005.

Ryan Wilson is justifiably proud of the heights Vikings sports reached, while mindful of the hard work put in by himself, his coaches, and support staff.

“The lion’s share of our program’s achieved at the highest level, and those kids will have great stories to tell for years,” he said.

“It was fun to be part of that success, having committed to being part of something bigger than just myself.”

The Wilson’s positive impact, on both Orcas and in the NWL, can’t be denied.

Ryan and Rachel were a huge asset to the school and the league,” said Justin Paulsen, an Orcas parent and basketball official.

“Their influence will be greatly missed,” he added. “Lake Quinault is lucky to have such a positive and motivated influence joining their program.”

That’s an opinion shared by Coupeville AD Willie Smith, who has worked with Ryan since his arrival in the region.

“He was passionate and completely vested in the Orcas community and kids,” Smith said. “Fiercely loyal to our league and a totally standup guy who I respected a lot as a fellow AD.

“He has a great future ahead of him in every aspect other than being a good bowler or golfer, but hey you can’t be good at everything,” he added with a big laugh.

“He added levity and had a good perspective in our meetings and was a lot of fun to be around. He’s going to be missed by us and Orcas for sure.”

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Ask not for whom the bat tolls. It tolls for thee. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“Today we put the league on notice! We are keeping the crown!!”

Coupeville High School softball coach Kevin McGranahan was feeling good Saturday, and why not.

Having travelled to Orcas Island to face a decent Vikings squad, the Wolves opened a can of unholy whup ass on their hosts, blowing them out 22-0 in a game mercy-ruled after three innings.

Led by out-of-the-park home runs from Mia Farris and Haylee Armstrong, CHS solidified its hold on first place in the Northwest 2B/1B League, jumping to 7-1 in conference play.

Now 10-5 overall, the Wolves have won seven of their last eight games.

Fueled by tasty noodles, Madison McMillan and Co. are on a winning tear. (Jennifer Marzocca photo)

Saturday, Coupeville dominated in every aspect of the game.

Senior hurler Gwen Gustafson struck out nine, not allowing her defense to get a single out on its own.

The Vikings did scratch out one hit and two walks, but that paled in comparison to Coupeville ringing up 16 base knocks and seven free passes.

Two of the biggest blows came from the sweet-swinging Farris, who clobbered an RBI triple and a grand slam home run — all in the first inning.

CHS rolled out to a 9-0 lead after one frame, tossed three more runs on the board in the second, then emphatically ended things with a 10-run burst in the third.

Armstrong, an 8th grader playing like a seasoned pro, joined Farris in the long ball club, belting a two-run shot that was still climbing as it cleared the fence in left center.

Powered by her mom’s flowers, 8th grader Haylee Armstrong smashed her first high school home run Saturday. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

 

Saturday stats:

Capri Anter — One walk
Haylee Armstrong
— One home run
Taylor Brotemarkle
— Two singles
Teagan Calkins
— One single, one double, one walk
Mia Farris
— One double, one triple, one home run
Gwen Gustafson
— One single, one walk
Allie Lucero — One single, one double
Maya Lucero
— One single, one double
Chloe Marzocca
— One walk
Madison McMillan
— Two singles, one walk
Melanie Navarro
— One single
Sofia Peters
— Two walks

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