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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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Saturday was the final ride for Erin Rosenkranz and her GU19 Whidbey Islanders squad. (John Fisken photo)

Saturday was the final game together for Erin Rosenkranz and her GU19 Whidbey Islanders squad. (John Fisken photo)

Islanders forever. (Kali Barrio photo)

Islanders forever. (Kali Barrio photo)

David put the fear of God into Goliath.

Drawing its players from all three Whidbey Island high schools, the ever-scrappy GU19 Whidbey Islanders soccer squad has always been a success, win or loss.

Saturday, having gone further than ever before, the band of sisters made a final stand on the mainland, falling 1-0 to Seattle United NE in a hard-fought State Cup semifinal.

And while the loss ended the Islanders season, and brought an end to this version of the team, it failed to diminish what they have accomplished.

“I am very proud that this small team from Whidbey, who has no cuts and plays big city teams with paid coaches who cut several players in tryouts, could not only compete, but threaten to win it all!,” said coach Sean LeVine. “My only hope is that they have fond memories and valuable lessons to take.”

LeVine, along with those who helped him make the Coupeville/Oak Harbor/South Whidbey juggernaut possible, will look back on the past few years as a great success.

“Our GU19 Whidbey Islanders team is officially disbanded, but Islanders forever!,” he said. “Thanks to Scott Rosenkranz for being a great coach all these years and Sherry Pabona for being a great manager.

“Happy Mother’s Day to all the awesome, ultra-dedicated soccer moms!,” LeVine added. “Without them we’d have no team.”

Playing on a brutally warm field Saturday, the Islanders had to deal with a season-long issue — few, if any, subs.

“It was HOT on the field today, and with only one sub compared to their four, our superior conditioning did not help as much as it had,” LeVine said.

Seattle United poked in the game’s only goal at the 20 minute mark, when it stole a ball and sent a cross into “a poorly-marked player,” who hit from 10 yards out.

Whidbey had several chances to knot the game, but luck wasn’t on its side on this day.

On their best chance, Gillian Crossley beat a defender at the near post and laid the ball on the foot of Lydia Peplinski, but her shot narrowly missed.

With the heat sucking the life out of both teams, play slowed in the second half, but Seattle was able to control the flow of the game by “possessing the ball better than any team we’ve faced this season.”

The game capped a season in which LeVine’s roster changed radically as the season developed.

Coupeville’s Jenn Spark and Jacki Ginnings (“two of the best defenders in the league”) were lost to injuries right as the season kicked-off, two other players left the team unexpectedly, another moved out of the country, and the crush of senior year for many of the players was a constant tricky issue.

“Despite all that, we figured things out, improved as we went along, and went further in the state tournament than we ever have,” said a proud LeVine.

He got contributions from every one of his players, and enjoyed that it was a second family as much as a team.

LeVine’s thoughts on his players:

Alyssa Cross, Ayla Muller and Becca Pabona became our best center backs in Jenn and Jacki’s place and excelled this season. That is a very tough position and they are awesome for stepping in, improving, and excelling.

Erin Rosenkranz played a new position this season at left back, which if you know her playing style, you’d know that was weird. But she simply proved to be the best 1-on-1 defender we have, and she did consistently well.

Paige Waterman was missed at the beginning of the season, but despite her ankle injury, she came on strong and was our consistent right back the rest of the year.

Our top three goal scorers were Lydia, Gillian, and Micky (LeVine).

Lydia and “Jilly” are our youngest and they are going to do great things in the next couple years; I can’t wait to watch them play more.

Kendra Warwick was the axle of our wheels this season.

Nothing happened if she didn’t play a role; she is simply our most valuable asset, although Kenzie Perry may have an argument with her multiple shut-outs as keeper and her goal scoring prowess in very few field appearances. 

Vivien Valles, Micky and Bailee Olson are our work horses and blue collar workers.

While Jacalyn Hefflefinger, one of my favorite people, did not have her 10-goal season like last year, her work rate and sense of humor is the glue of the team. She is really loved by all.

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Sebastian Davis (22) and his WOlf teammates will open the playoffs on the road Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

Sebastian Davis (22) and his Wolf teammates will open the playoffs on the road Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

Earning a home playoff game was going to be a long shot.

Going into Wednesday’s regular season finale at Port Townsend, the Coupeville High School boys’  soccer squad needed a win, and then to triumph on a coin flip, to earn that honor.

The Wolves will never know how they would have done with that coin flip, however.

Despite playing what CHS coach Kyle Nelson termed “our best team effort,” Coupeville fell 4-2 to the Redhawks in a shootout after finishing play tied 1-1.

The loss dropped the Wolves to 3-10 overall, 2-4 in Olympic League play and gives them third place in the four-team league.

Coupeville will hit the road Saturday to play the Nisqually League’s #2 seed (most likely Charles Wright Academy) in a loser-out district playoff game.

Win that and they advance to the double elimination portion of the postseason and a rematch with Olympic League champ Klahowya.

With second place on the line Wednesday, the Wolves came out strongly against a team they had been nipped by 3-2 earlier this season.

“We started a little slow, but midway through the first half we got going and it was a tight, hard-fought game from there,” Nelson said. “Quite a few near misses.”

Coupeville’s score came thanks to the Redhawks, who knocked the ball into their own goal after a “a strong, well-placed cross by Abraham (Leyva)“.

While they didn’t get the victory they wanted, the Wolves will turn the page and head into a new season at 0-0, the same as every other team in the postseason.

“We our now looking forward to our district game. I feel good about our chances,” Nelson said.

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Aaron Wright kicks off our Senior Night portraits. (John Fisken photos)

Aaron Wright kicks off our Senior Night portraits. (John Fisken photos)

Colin Belliveau

Colin Belliveau

Keegan Kortuem

Keegan Kortuem

Jeremiah Pace (left) and Isaac Vargas

Jeremiah Pace (left) and Isaac Vargas

Ryan Freeman

Ryan Freeman

Joel Walstad

Joel Walstad

Oscar Liquidano

Oscar Liquidano

Josh Datin

Josh Datin

To everything, there is an end.

And while the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer season is far from done — there are at least two more games to play, possibly even a playoff opener at home — Monday was the official send-off for nine Wolf senior booters.

John Fisken was in town (for a few seconds at least) and was nice enough to snap the pics above.

Feel free to marinate in the (slightly) emotional happenings.

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Ryan Freeman (John Fisken photos)

Ryan Freeman performs some mid-air trickery. (John Fisken photos)

The collision with the ball appears to have knocked pa

   The collision with the ball appears to have knocked part of Cody Menges hair off… Josh Datin (right) can only stare in silent horror.

Abraham Leyva sacrifices his noggin for the good of the team.

Abraham Leyva, rock star.

First they need to be good. Then they need to be lucky.

Both parts of the equation go right for the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad and it will host its opening playoff game.

A 5-0 loss Monday to visiting Klahowya dropped the Wolves to 2-3 in 1A Olympic League play (3-9 overall) and into third-place in the standings.

But, if CHS upends Port Townsend (3-2) on the road Wednesday in the regular season finale, the two schools will finish in a tie for second place and have split the season series.

If that happens, their fate is decided on the flip of a coin.

Win, and they’re the #2 seed and play at home Saturday, May 9 against the #3 team from the Nisqually League.

Lose, and they’re #3 and hit the road that day to visit the other league’s #2 squad.

Either way, the game will be a loser-out affair.

A victory in their playoff opener and the Wolves advance to the double-elimination portion of districts May 12-16, where two of the remaining four teams would qualify for state.

Klahowya (5-0) assured itself of avoiding a loser-out game with the win Monday, clinching the league title.

But, while they lost, the injury-plagued Wolves did play better in the second half against the Eagles, so you take your positives where you can find them.

“We came out flat in the first half and paid for it quickly,” CHS coach Kyle Nelson said. “The boys regrouped in the second half and played a bit better, only conceding the one goal after half time.”

To see more photos from this game (purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8704&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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