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Maysen Van Velkinburgh (back row, in pink jersey, holding trophy) celebrates a soccer title. (Photo courtesy Dustin Van Velkinburgh)

The younger brother has mad skills as well.

While Coupeville soccer ace Chayse Van Velkinburgh is busy training in Spain, the youngest sharpshooter in the family continues to tear up the pitch.

Maysen Van Velkinburgh, currently a 2nd grader at Coupeville Elementary School, wrapped up a torrid run Sunday at the Cranberry Cup in Woodinville.

Playing in the championship game, he knocked in his kick as his Oak Harbor-based BU9 squad claimed the title with a 2-1 win after a penalty kick shootout.

The younger Van Velkinburgh tallied five of his team’s 12 goals at the tourney and has 13 scores over the past eight games.

And while he’s raining down scores, he’s not the only Coupeville kid playing a major role for the team.

Conner Armstrong, son of CHS grad Linnane O’Connor, stands tall in the goal for the team.

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Cael Wilson and Coupeville toppled Grace Academy Friday night in a game decided by penalty kicks. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Cameron Epp and Co. are 2-4 and headed home for three-straight games.

“The soccer gods were on our side today.”

Coupeville High School boys soccer coach Robert Wood and his team exited Marysville with a hard-fought win Friday night, thanks to some skill and some luck.

The Wolves bounced host Grace Academy 3-2, with the game decided by a penalty kick shootout after two scoreless overtimes.

That finale went down 5-3 in favor of Coupeville, and lifts it to 2-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, with both victories coming against the same opponent.

“Strong second half with a good result,” Wood said. “Ending with PK’s is probably the most unfair method known to mankind … but a win is a win, even when the other team outplayed us most of the night.”

Closing out a three-game road trip, the Wolves went to extra time for the second-straight game. Coming off of a loss to La Conner, this ending was much more preferable.

Alex Murdy got CHS on the board with his first high school goal, coming on an “aggressive takeaway and good couple moves to get a power knuckleball shot over the keeper, under the bar.”

Coupeville’s second score came courtesy Nick Guay, who tallied his team-leading third goal of the campaign.

“An aggressive attack on a free ball … cheeky little chip over the keeper rushing the ball and into the goal,” is how his coach fondly remembered it.

Grace forced overtime by scoring in stoppage time, then the two teams failed to score in either of the two five-minute extra periods.

While the Wolves played stellar ball at times, they also benefited from Grace hitting the goal post four times.

Coupeville now returns home for three straight games, starting with a rematch with La Conner next Tuesday, Oct. 5.

The Wolves then host Mount Vernon Christian Oct. 7 and Providence Classical Christian Oct. 9.

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Zane Bundy

   Zane Bundy knocked home a rebound late in the first half Thursday for Coupeville’s lone score in a 2-1 playoff loss. (John Fisken photo)

In a perfect world, the players on the field decide the game.

But, no one ever said soccer was perfect.

Stabbed in the heart by two second-half penalty kicks, scores on which goalie Connor McCormick had to battle the sun in his eyes, the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad fell 2-1 Thursday in their district playoff opener (and closer).

The loss, which came on Oak Harbor High School’s turf field, came at the hands of the Nisqually League’s #4 seed, Bellevue Christian, and ended the Wolves season at 5-9-1.

The Vikings (6-7-1) advance to play Vashon Island (8-2-4) in another loser-out game Saturday.

Thursday’s battle was a rematch of a non-conference game from March, when Coupeville fell 7-4 in a wild, high-scoring affair on its home field.

In that game, the Wolves were without McCormick, who was serving a one-game suspension after being given a red card for an inadvertent hand ball a day before.

This time Coupeville had their senior net-minder in place, and the lanky one played superbly, batting balls away and controlling the flow of the game.

While McCormick and his defense were untouchable in the first half, the Viking goalie couldn’t say the same.

During a wild scramble in front of the Bellevue net in the game’s 33rd minute, Coupeville smacked a shot from close range that was partially deflected.

Putting his head in the right place at the right time, senior Zane Bundy, a four-year starter, banged home the rebound into the left corner of the net to stake the Wolves to a 1-0 lead.

It was his sixth goal of the season.

The lead held up until two minutes into the second half, when Bellevue was awarded a penalty kick after what seemed like a fairly innocuous “collision” between two players scrambling for the ball.

Taking advantage of the sweet opportunity, the Vikings knotted things up, with the shooter faking right, then flicking the ball left and just past McCormick’s fingertips.

With the game even, the two teams battled back-and-forth the rest of the way, with Bellevue noticeably pushing hard on offense.

It paid off when the Vikings were awarded a second penalty kick with under seven minutes left in regulation.

Why they got it is something you’d have to ask someone with a deeper understanding of soccer, cause, to the layman, nothing untoward happened on the play.

Bellevue launched the ball into the net on the PK, however, suddenly putting a huge amount of pressure on the Wolves, who had to play from behind for the first time in the game.

Coupeville got the ball into Bellevue’s half of the field several times in the final moments, and had one or two good looks near the end, but nothing clean, and nothing that would go in.

The loss marked the fourth straight year Coupeville went one-and-done in the playoffs, though the one-goal margin was their closest postseason defeat since 2013.

The last Wolf boys’ soccer playoff win came back on May 2, 2012, when CHS knocked off Meridian 1-0.

Thursday’s game marked the end of the run for seniors Bundy, McCormick, Abraham Leyva, Tanner Kircher, Taylor Chiles, Loren Nelson, Jose Marcos, Andrea Avila, Garrett Compton, Cody Menges and manager Sebastian Wurzrainer.

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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.

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