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Posts Tagged ‘Sebastian Davis’

Garrett Compton (John Fisken photos)

   Junior forward Garrett Compton was one of 10 Wolves to score in 2015. (John Fisken photos)

Uriel Liquidano

Big-kicking sophomore Uriel Liquidano is one of the key players coach Kyle Nelson hopes to return to the pitch next season.

Colin Belliveau is one nine seniors who will depart the Wolf program.

Colin Belliveau is one nine seniors who will depart the Wolf program.

Admit it. There wasn’t much suspense.

If Abraham Leyva hadn’t been awarded Player of the Year Thursday when the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad handed out awards and letters, the jaws would have hit the floor.

Leyva capped his junior season on the pitch with a team-high 14 goals, more than double the output of any of his teammates.

He has led the Wolves in scoring both years he has played for CHS.

But, even if you’re 99.2% sure of where one award is going, the rest are usually up for grabs, producing surprises as they’re handed out.

Such was the case Thursday, as seven other Wolves netted honors.

Ethan Spark took home Player of the Year for the JV squad, while Aaron Wright (varsity) and Jeremiah Pace (JV) collected Most Inspirational.

Most Improved Player was split between Connor McCormick and Sebastian Davis at the varsity level, while Isaac Vargas was tabbed for the same award at the JV level.

Freshman William Nelson rounded out the honorees, being named Rookie of the Year.

The Wolves finished 3-11 overall, 2-4 in Olympic League play.

Eight of the 10 players who scored (accounting for 29 of 35 goals) were underclassmen and could return in 2016.

That would be bolstered further by a healthy Zane Bundy, who missed most of his junior season after being the team’s #2 scorer as a sophomore.

Varsity letter winners:

Colin Belliveau
Zane Bundy
Taylor Chiles
Garrett Compton
Josh Datin
Sebastian Davis
Ryan Freeman
Tanner Kircher
Keegan Korteum
Abraham Leyva
Uriel Liquidano
Oscar Liquidano
Connor McCormick
Cody Menges
Loren Nelson
William Nelson
Ethan Spark
Isaac Vargas
Joel Walstad
Aaron Wright

JV certificates:

Noah Allison
Andre Avila
Laurence Boado
Beauman Davis
Nick Dion
Jose Marcos
Zach Nall
Jeremiah Pace
JT Quinn
Henry Wynn

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Abraham

   Abraham Leyva led the Wolves in scoring as a junior, tallying 14 goals. (John Fisken photo)

CHS coach Kyle Nelson has a moment with seniors (l to r) Joel Walstad (Shawn Walstad photo)

   CHS coach Kyle Nelson with seniors (l to r) Joel Walstad, Ryan Freeman, Isaac Vargas, Oscar Liquidano, Josh Datin, Colin Belliveau and Aaron Wright. (Shawn Walstad photo)

The 1A Olympic League took a hit Saturday.

Two schools hailing from the conference took the pitch for district playoff games and both saw their seasons ended.

Port Townsend fell 2-1 to visiting Cascade Christian, while Coupeville went on the road, only to be bounced 5-2 at Charles Wright Academy.

The dual defeats leaves league champ Klahowya, which will play CWA next, as the lone representative left from the first-year league.

It was the second time the Wolves fell to the Tacoma-based school in a week. They had lost 3-1 at home to the private school rivals on May 2.

This time around CHS got goals from Abraham Leyva (off of an assist from Tanner Kircher) and Sebastian Davis.

With Joel Walstad playing up front, Connor McCormick got the start in net and held his own, making several strong saves.

The loss dropped Coupeville’s final record to 3-11 and brought an end to the run of nine seniors.

The cupboard is not bare, however, as the Wolves can return eight of the ten players who scored this season, including its leading goal collectors in Leyva and Davis.

Junior Zane Bundy, who missed most of the season after an injury, was one of the team’s top scoring threats during his first two seasons, and is also expected back.

Final (unofficial) varsity goal scorers:

Abraham Leyva — 14
Sebastian Davis — 6
Colin Belliveau — 3
William Nelson — 3
Joel Walstad — 3
JT Quinn — 2
Garrett Compton — 1
Tanner Kircher — 1
Loren Nelson — 1
Ethan Spark — 1

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Sebastian Davis scored twice Thursday in a 3-2 loss. (John Fisken photos)

Sebastian Davis scored twice Thursday in a 3-2 loss. (John Fisken photos)

Beauman Davis, seen here in his normal uniform, actually played for Port Townsend in the JV game.

   Beauman Davis, seen here in his normal uniform, actually played for Port Townsend in the JV game.

Sebastian Davis has a knack for being in the right place at the right time.

The Coupeville High School junior scored twice Thursday, both times knocking in loose balls off of deflected shots by Abraham Leyva, keeping the Wolf booters close in a narrow 3-2 loss to visiting Port Townsend.

His fourth and fifth goals of the season, they moved Davis into second on the squad in scoring, trailing just Leyva, who has hit the back of the net 12 times this year.

With big-time scoring threat Zane Bundy sidelined for the year with a leg injury — he worked the sidelines as an unpaid assistant coach, rockin’ a suit and tie combo that would put David Beckham to shame — Davis has filled a hole in Coupeville’s offense.

Still, his heroics were not enough to save the Wolves on this afternoon, and the loss stings, dropping CHS to 2-2 in Olympic League play (3-7 overall) and knocking them down into third place in the standings.

Coupeville trails Klahowya (2-0) and Port Townsend (2-1), and it’s a big distinction, as the league’s top two teams will get home playoff openers.

The Wolves are guaranteed a playoff spot if Klahowya bounced Chimacum (0-3) Thursday, as the Wolves would have a two-game lead (and the tiebreaker) with two to play.

But, if they don’t want to be the #3 seed and open on the road in a loser-out game, they’ll need to come strong in their final two conference games.

Those are May 4 (Senior Night) against Klahowya and May 6 at Port Townsend.

Having a full roster would help, as the injury-depleted Wolves played without Bundy, goalie Joel Walstad, midfielder Loren Nelson and defenders Aaron Wright, Keegan Kortuem and Oscar Liquidano.

In their place, younger players stepped up and pushed the Redhawks hard.

Junior goaltender Connor McCormick made several nice saves, including one from his knees and another that negated a terrible call by the refs that gave Port Townsend a wide-open chance it didn’t deserve.

With the guys with the whistles allowing the Redhawks to all but tear Leyva’s jersey off every time the nimble junior touched the ball, he had few great scoring opportunities.

But, while he wasn’t able to add to his goal tally, Leyva did set up both of his team’s scores, using his super-powered foot to blast free kicks that curved and banged off the goalposts.

The first time Davis, flying in from the left side, caught the ball and flipped it past a sprawling Redhawk goalie to open the scoring in the game’s 19th minute.

Port Townsend tied the game up eight minutes later, then got two second-half goals (the first coming barely 30 seconds into the half) to take the lead.

Attacking madly, Coupeville got one goal back when Davis and Leyva repeated their scoring play, but, even then, time was running out on the Wolves.

William Nelson had a half-decent look and crushed a laser with under six minutes to play, but the ball caught up an updraft and sailed a fraction too high.

Coupeville’s final desperation try came on a break-away by Leyva in the waning moments, but the Redhawks were able to scramble and get two defenders back just in time to throw off his ability to cut back inside and his shot went for naught.

JV loses odd one:

With Port Townsend having only seven JV players (counting their goalie), the teams played 7 on 7, instead of 11 on 11.

To get to even that, the Redhawks made a deal to acquire Beauman Davis for one game, and the Wolf junior played the game wearing a red jersey over his white CHS shirt.

The game was also cut by 10 minutes, since Port Townsend had no subs and their players were blowing hard.

And still, the Redhawks ran away with a 3-0 victory.

At least Davis didn’t score against his own teammates, which might have made the situation even more awkward.

The only question remaining is, does Beauman get invited to two soccer banquets this year, since he’s now, technically, both a Wolf and a Redhawk?

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Colin Belliveau (15) drops the boom on a pesky foe. (John Fisken photos)

Colin Belliveau (15) drops the boom on a pesky foe. (John Fisken photos)

Sebastian Davis unleashes his full fury on the ball.

Sebastian Davis unleashes his full fury on the ball.

Cody Menges: "Fancy meeting you all the way up here!"

Cody Menges: “Fancy meeting you all the way up here!”

Wolf fans refuse to go home in the middle of a storm. They're not tourists.

Wolf fans refuse to go home in the middle of a storm. They’re not tourists.

"Please sir, I just want to go home..."

“Please sir, I just want to go home…”

The weather? Atrocious.

The score? Divine.

Shredding Chimacum for the second straight Thursday, the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad rolled to a 13-3 victory. More on that coming later.

For now, some snappy pics captured by travelin’ (and water proof) photo man John Fisken.

To see more (purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8599&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=183&sport=0

P.S. — Plug in the code EB85994962 before May 8 and you’ll get 15% off any orders.

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Sebastian Davis comes alive. (John Fisken photos)

Sebastian Davis comes alive. (John Fisken photos)

Your kung fu is strong. Jose Marcos's is stronger.

The kung fu is strong in Jose Marcos.

William Nelson gets his head in the game.

William Nelson gets his head in the game.

Garrett Compton circles the defense, looking for an opening.

Garrett Compton circles the defense, looking for an opening.

Cody Menges, the middle of the sandwich.

Cody Menges, the middle of the sandwich.

Can't catch Colin Belliveau.

Can’t catch Colin Belliveau.

Closing the day with a semi-awkward bro hug.

Closing the day with a semi-awkward bro hug.

It was a beautiful day for the beautiful game.

The sun was shining, the wind was only mild (for the prairie, at least) and the soccer was successful Saturday, as the Coupeville High School booters took Forks out behind the wood shed.

Scampering down the sideline, various cameras in hand, was travelin’ photo man John Fisken, who provides us with the pics that reside above.

To see more (purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes) pop over to:

Varsity — http://www.1aevergreen.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8375&league=29&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=223&sport=0

JV — http://www.1aevergreen.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8376&league=29&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=223&sport=0

 

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