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Posts Tagged ‘shoot-out’

Wolf pitch coaches celebrate an epic win on a stormy night. (Photos courtesy Kimberly Kisch)

Storm? What storm?

Sure, sheets of rain slashed down on the prairie Friday night, while wind hit like Indiana Jones cracking his bullwhip.

But a little pre-winter weather never bothered the Coupeville High School co-ed soccer team.

Enduring the elements in all their ferocious glory while the media was quite happy to nibble on candy up in the warm, dry press box, the Wolves pulled off the biggest win of the season.

Rallying to knock off ultra-dangerous Mount Vernon Christian 3-2 (courtesy a victory in a shootout after two scoreless overtime periods), CHS moves into sole possession of second place in the nine-team Northwest 2B/1B League boys’ soccer standings.

The Wolves head into the weekend at 3-0 in conference action, 5-4-1 overall, and sit a half-game back of state powerhouse Orcas Island (4-0) in the standings.

Next up is a trip to Friday Harbor Tuesday, Oct. 22, before the Wolves close the regular season with three of four at home.

When they return to Mickey Clark Field, hopefully the weather will be nicer than it was Friday.

Though maybe the Wolves won’t want it to be, as they excelled while being buffeted from all angles by liquid sunshine and howling wind.

Coupeville goalkeeper Hurlee Bronec got things going with a nifty opening save on a ball which came in on a severe curve thanks to the gusts.

The MVC netminder wasn’t as lucky, failing to stop a laser off the bionic toe of Cael Wilson less than five minutes into the game.

Launching a shot from the far corner, the Wolf senior let the ball ride a wave of rapidly moving air, and the orb twisted and turned, then splashed home into the back of the net, just out of range of any pesky Hurricane defenders.

It was Wilson’s team-leading sixth goal of the season, and the twelfth of his five-year run as a Wolf.

That breaks a tie with Zane Bundy for #8 on the boys’ career scoring chart and moves Cael one goal away from tying older brother Aidan, who netted 13 during his stellar career.

They survived and thrived.

While the visitors soon knotted things up at 1-1, Bronec fought off numerous incoming balls and held fast as time ticked away in the first half.

That gave Preston Epp time to work some magic while operating in the middle of a soggy field, and the CHS senior bashed home his ninth career goal to push his squad ahead 2-1 heading into halftime.

The second half featured a bevy of Hurricanes, including their goalie at times, mounting a fierce attempt to even things up.

Hair plastered, shoulders slumped, a mix of pain and frustration on their faces, the MVC booters finally found that elusive score, with less than three minutes to spare.

Giving everyone stuck in the middle of a monsoon/typhoon/twister event exactly what they craved most — the chance to stay out on the field for another 20 minutes…

Bronec was a wonder in the two five-minute overtimes, punching balls away with both of his fists of fury, while his MVC counterpart snared a header which could have won the game for Coupeville.

Enter the most loved/most hated way to end a game in any sport — the shoot-out.

When two goalies stare down five shooters and try to guess which way the ball is going, and luck often overrules talent.

The first two shooters hit paydirt, with a ‘Cane popping the ball into the right corner followed by Wilson tickling the bottom left corner with his shot.

Then, two misses, with Wolf freshman Lillian Ketterling cracking a beauty which finished just a little too high thanks to the rampaging wind.

A second MVC miss hurt the visitors badly, especially when Epp and 8th grade ace Brian Thompson both came up big on their attempts.

Holding a 3-2 lead with one shooter left for each team, Bronec stared down the last MVC player to come his way, then celebrated as the shot clanked off the bar with a thunk loud enough to be heard through even a prairie storm.

That set off a celebration among the Wolves and the fans brave enough to watch the game from the rain-splattered stands.

It also left CHS coaches Robert Wood and Kimberly Kisch wearing epic smiles.

“It’s always a tough game with these guys, and a big win for us,” Wood said. “They played their hearts out.”

“They all played with so much passion the entire time,” Kisch added. “Really, really exciting for us!”

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Aidan Wilson pushes the ball aggressively during an epic comeback win. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They got by with a little help from their friends.

And when you play on the prairie, there’s no pal quite like the wind – if you know how to use it.

Navigating the swirls like pros, the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad pulled off one of the more stunning pitch comebacks in memory Saturday, coming from three goals behind to win a thriller.

Down 4-1 at the half, and with the wind suddenly at their backs, the Wolves stormed back to tie the game in stoppage time, survived two scoreless overtime periods, then won a shoot-out thanks to a little help from Mother Nature.

The official final score was 5-4, and the win, coming on Senior Night, lifts Coupeville to 4-8 in Northwest 2B/1B League play.

The Wolves finish the season on the road, with trips to face league leaders Orcas Island (11-2) and Providence Classical Christian (11-1) Oct. 26 and 28, respectively.

But, before it heads off on the Road Trip of Death, Coupeville gave its fans a sendoff for the ages.

Tony Garcia was honored on Senior Night.

As was Xavier Murdy.

There were miracle goals, raw emotion, a fair amount of wind, the velvet voice of PA announcer Ja’Kenya Hoskins one final time, and tears.

Like a lot of tears.

And those facial drops, which mainly came from Lopez players, were earned and understandable.

The Lobos, who are a co-ed team, dominated play for a huge chunk of the game, and seemed headed for their own well-deserved, and much-needed, win.

“They owned us today, all day. That’s what I told our guys,” said Coupeville coach Robert Wood. “But we had a friend, and that friend was the wind.”

Lopez had used the weather to its advantage in the first half, building that 4-1 lead thanks to well-placed shots which got a nice boost from the breeze.

Coupeville scraped out one goal, the fifth of the season from sophomore sensation Nick Guay, but trying to drive into the wind was difficult at best, impossible at worst.

Things were looking dire, but the Wolves reached down someplace deep and found a will to win that was, frankly, pretty dang inspiring.

Plus, they had the wind at their backs in the second half, and Mother Nature was a homer after all.

Alex Murdy netted a goal six minutes into the second half, also his fifth of the season, and there was a brief spark of life.

But the Lopez goalie was a scrambler, and, facing a barrage, he knocked more shots wide of the net than he allowed to come inside.

Both Murdy and Cael Wilson had dead-eye shots which couldn’t quite find pay-dirt, and the clock was ticking madly down.

No worries.

Grant Steller, who plays with a laidback ease mixed with serious grit, took a ball from Murdy and slapped it past the flailing netminder, and suddenly we were looking at a 4-3 game.

Even then, though, Lopez still seemed in control, with its goalie punching a ball away from the net with four measly minutes to play.

Once the scoreboard froze at two minutes, and we all entered the twilight zone that is soccer, where the ref, and only the ref, really knows how much time is left to play, Wood might have gotten a little tense on the sideline.

But, if a sweat drop or two burrowed down deep into his collar, he hid it well, as if he knew a miracle was coming.

And that miracle was provided by a hero named Andrew Williams.

Laughing at pressure, he launched a corner kick which went airborne, caught a ride on a passing burst of wind, and somehow, against all odds, buried itself into the corner of the net a moment before the final whistle.

Cue the bedlam.

Cue Williams being beat within an inch of his life by his ecstatic teammates.

Cue an explosion of cheers echoing across the windy prairie.

Meanwhile Wood merely nodded, maybe dipping his head an inch or three, a soccer sage trying hard to project an image of utter calm.

That sent the game to overtime, or, in this case, two five-minute extra periods, both of which failed to see a “golden goal” be launched.

Steller and Wilson both had strong looks at the net, but there was no way this thing was ending anywhere short of a shoot-out.

As in that most-beloved, or most-loathed, of events, in which the teams alternate players taking “kicks from the mark” at a goalie who has .00002 of a second to make a decision on which way to go.

It prevents ties, which we can all get behind … but is a stake through the heart of the team which loses, as luck often trumps skill.

“Worst way to end a game … EVER,” Wood said.

And remember, his team won.

Xavier Murdy, Tony Garcia, and Williams each netted their shots, leaving the shootout at 3-3, before the Lopez goalie blocked Alex Murdy’s attempt up and over the net to give the visitors the edge.

When the Lobos pushed the margin to 4-3, with Coupeville down to its final man, things looked as bleak as the blurry skies above.

But this is where it’s good to know how the weather works on the prairie.

Wood instructed his players to keep their shots on the ground, where the breeze could do the least damage, and they listened.

Steller drilled the snot out of the ball, sending it deep into the bottom right corner of the net, and we were at 4-4 with the last Lopez shooter walking to the line.

The Lobo lined up his shot, connected, and foolishly dared to go against Mother Nature, which bit him right in the butt.

Launching an airborne shot, the shooter could only watch in horror as the wind-aided ball went high and far, and kept going, clearing the football goalposts and coming down somewhere around the highway.

Given a reprieve, with the shootout sent to a sixth player, the Wolves closed in style.

Guay pocketed his shot, putting CHS up 5-4, then strolled back to the waiting high-fives and backslaps.

At which point Lopez made it two high, hard, and fly to the moon attempts in a row, its final gasp at glory making the same mistake of leaving the ground, and never coming back down.

Cue some more bedlam, as the Wolves and their fans celebrated and the wind did its own swirly, invisible victory dance.

Like the ancestors said — know the wind, respect the wind, and win with the wind.

Code of the prairie athlete.

Cue the celebration.

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   Maddy Hilkey was one of three Coupeville booters to score in a shoot-out Thursday, lifting the Wolves to a big win at Port Townsend. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coach long enough and you’ll see just about everything.

But after what he witnessed Thursday, Coupeville High School girls soccer guru Kyle Nelson could only utter three words.

“Crazy game tonight.”

But, it was a crazy game his team won, so he said the words with a smile on his face.

Playing on the road at Port Townsend, the Wolves managed to lose a three-goal lead in the late going, ended regulation tied 4-4, then survived two scoreless overtime periods before winning 3-2 in a shoot-out.

The victory was huge, as it lifts Coupeville to 3-1 in Olympic League play, pulling them within a game of Klahowya (4-0) and providing a major cushion over Port Townsend (1-3) and Chimacum (0-4).

The Wolves, who have finished second in the four-team league three straight years, now own a tiebreaker over the RedHawks, having beaten Port Townsend twice in as many meetings.

That’s huge, as the #2 team from the Olympic League gets a home playoff game, which, for Coupeville, would be at Oak Harbor’s stadium.

Facing a different Port Townsend team than the one they rolled 8-0 two weeks ago (four RedHawks who were AWOL the first time around had returned), the Wolves were limping a bit.

Junior Lindsey Roberts, the heart of the team, is dealing with a leg injury, while leading scorer Kalia Littlejohn twisted her ankle late in the game.

Fab frosh Genna Wright rose to the occasion, raining down a pair of goals, her sixth and seventh on the season, as Coupeville built a 4-1 lead in the first half.

Ema Smith and Mallory Kortuem also scored for the Wolves, then “things took a turn in the second half.”

With the momentum all on the side of the host RedHawks, CHS had its back to the wall, but refused to break.

After battling through a pair of five-minute overtime periods, Coupeville found itself involved in a shoot-out for the first time in 2017.

It was a tense battle, going six rounds, with Wolf goalie Sarah Wright keeping her squad alive with “a couple of nice saves.”

Given a reprieve, the CHS shooters prevailed, with Lauren Bayne, Genna Wright and Maddy Hilkey torching the RedHawk net-minder to seal the win.

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Cody Menges

   Cody Menges, seen here in an earlier game, kept Coupeville alive in a penalty kick shootout Tuesday with a brilliant, sudden-death shot. (John Fisken photo)

One play will echo for a long time.

A referee’s interpretation on a tough call late in a tie game Tuesday put the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad down a player, cost them their goalie’s services and will deny that same player a chance to suit up Wednesday.

But it ultimately didn’t cost them a win.

Knotted 1-1 with visiting Vashon Island, the Wolves were scrambling back on defense with six minutes to play when the game, and a portion of their season, took a wild plunge off the side of a cliff.

Coupeville netminder Connor McCormick, who was outside the goal box, was whistled for a hand ball as he tried to get back into position.

The ref ruled it was worthy of a red card, which carries an automatic ejection and a one-game suspension, because he felt the play likely denied Vashon an “obvious opportunity to score.”

The Wolves were allowed to replace McCormick in goal with Jose Marcos, but had to pull another player off the field as well and play 10-on-11 the remainder of the way.

And they did pretty well, battling through 16 more minutes of scoreless play (six in regulation, 10 in overtime) before falling 6-5 in a penalty kick shootout.

It won’t count as a loss, however, but a tie, as Olympic League schools only count shootout wins or losses in conference games, and Vashon is a non-conference foe.

That leaves Coupeville at 0-3-1 on the season.

The Wolves return to action immediately, hosting Bellevue Christian (1-3) Wednesday, but will do so without McCormick.

The senior goalie was the star for most of the game Tuesday, holding down the net with authority and blunting several charges by the Pirates.

After the two teams battled to a stalemate through the first 40 minutes, Coupeville broke through quickly in the second half.

Abraham Leyva took a ball off of the foot of Zane Bundy and smacked a shot into the right corner of the net for his fourth goal in as many games.

Coming just two minutes into the half, it gave the Wolves breathing room and they held on until Vashon got lucky, sliding a partially-deflected shot just under McCormick’s glove at the 19:20 mark.

From that point on, the two teams went toe-to-toe (and often elbow to head, as things got chippy at times).

Marcos held down the fort to end regulation, then Wolf defender Tanner Kircher stepped in to mind the net in OT and through the penalty kicks.

He knocked down Vashon’s second attempt, while Coupeville hit on its first four attempts (Bundy, Leyva, William Nelson and Sebastian Davis) to take a 4-3 lead into the final round of penalty kicks.

The Pirates rallied, however, notching a goal on their final kick, then getting a block on the Wolves fifth attempt.

Knotted at 4-4, the teams exchanged successful kicks, with Coupeville’s Cody Menges draining a pressure-packed sudden-death one to keep things going.

That was it for the luck of the Wolves however, as Vashon banged home their next attempt, before the Pirate goalie snuffed Loren Nelson to end the game.

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