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The many looks of Tai Rose.

The many looks of Tai Rose.

Her attitude is impeccable.

First-year Wolf soccer player Tai Rose is ready to go wherever her coaches ask her to play. Point and she’s ready to charge into action.

“I play defense,” said the CHS freshman. “Not sure which side yet, either one is fine.”

She’s following in the (quick) footsteps of big sis May Rose, a sophomore who streaks up the field on the attack.

May has really inspired me and helped with the game,” Tai Rose said. “If I need extra help or I don’t get something, she’s the first person I ask, and she’s really nice about it, too!”

Rose, who also doubles as the Freshman class president, decided to pick up the sport when she entered high school.

The standard set down by May and other older Wolf players inspired her.

“I’ve always wanted to play soccer, but never had the time to play much, but freshman year, I thought why not give it a shot?,” Rose said. “I enjoy all of my fellow players that are seniors because I look at them and set a goal to be just as good as them or better.

“Especially my senior mentor, Marisa Etzell, she’s helped me get a lot better from when I started!”

Away from the pitch, Rose enjoys fishing and horseback riding, Disney movies (“I love to watch them so much! It’s fun!”) and her math and fitness classes.

She hopes to become a mathematician and attend the Naval Academy in Annapolis.

When she’s with her Wolf teammates, in practice or at game time, she is keen on fine-tuning her skills.

“My strengths, I think, are mostly defending, taking the ball away from people,” Rose said. “Areas I need to work on are shooting long distance with lots of air, and I need to practice my PK’s.

“My main goal is to be a very successful defender and work super hard to get better at playing soccer!”

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Bree Daigneault

Bree Daigneault

Also a talented tennis player, she was picked as a Player of the Match during her freshman season. (Ken Stange photo)

Also a talented tennis player, she was picked as a Player of the Match during her freshman season. (Ken Stange photo)

Busy.

That perfectly describes Coupeville High School sophomore Bree Daigneault, who has already lettered in three sports (soccer, cheer and tennis), while finding time to balance school work and a personal life.

She and her Wolf teammates take their 1-0 record on the road to Sequim today for a non-conference girls’ soccer game, giving Daigneault a chance to continue to live her love affair with the sport.

“I enjoy soccer for too many reasons to count,” she said. “I have played for about six or seven years and I started in rec just because it looked like fun!”

On the pitch Daigneault bounces around, generally playing outside mid, but sometimes slipping up to forward.

Wherever she lines up, she always has an eye on honing her skills and helping out her teammates.

“I need to work on taking the ball out of the air, but I think my strengths are in my teamwork and ability to move the ball around the field,” she said.

“This soccer season we have a lot of seniors, so I think it would be great if we could make it to districts for them!,” Daigneault added. “I have played with the seniors for a few years now and they most definitely have helped me get better; I want to continue to learn from them.”

A big fan of the Seahawks and Sounders, she gravitates towards classic rock and upholds both parts of the student/athlete equation.

“I really enjoy school,” Daigneault said. “Math and English are probably my favorite subjects.”

Whether she’s on the pitch, in the classroom or out and about, she draws inspiration from a number of directions.

She looks up to professional female soccer players like Mia Hamm and Hope Solo, but finds her biggest fans close by.

“My parents have always encouraged me to do what I love, and I love soccer.”

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Klahowya soccer sensation Izzy Severns.

Izzy Severns

Severns

  Severns (9) with some of her Klahowya teammates, including big-time goal scorer McKenzie Cook (3).

With Coupeville having left the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, joining Port Townsend, Chimacum and Klahowya in the 1A Olympic League, now is a great time to learn a bit about some of the players who will face off with the Wolves.

Soccer has been very, very good to Izzy Severns.

The Klahowya senior also plays hoops (“I always call basketball my Hawaii, it’s my get away sport! I love being able to clear my mind and learn new things every year”), but life on the pitch has shaped her, both as an athlete and a young woman with big plans for the future.

“Soccer will always be my favorite sport,” Severns said. “I’m so blessed to have such a good team every year I have played soccer. My team is my family and I really enjoy having the opportunity to do that and be in that position every year!

“I really enjoy being a part of something that makes me grow not only as a player but also as a person,” she added. “It has taught me life lessons I could never learn from my everyday lifestyle. I have been so lucky to have my team also be my best friends.”

Severns and her friends have been very successful, helping lead the Eagles to the 2A state tourney last season.

While the school’s lone girls’ soccer title came in 1999, long before she was near a field, she would love to go on a similar run.

But it’s the journey, and not the destination, which matters most to her.

“My athletic goal is, of course, to help lead my team to state,” Severns said. “But my goal as a leader on the team is to help each player become the best soccer player they can be. To influence my teammates to work hard and love the sport they play.”

That attitude permeates her mindset day in and day out.

As she strives to improve her skills every day, she always does it with an eye to how she can help her teammates.

“There will always be things I need to work on; overcoming my smallness has been a big weakness of mine,” Severns said. “As a center mid I need to be able to win the ball in the air, but this has also helped me become a better player because it means I had to work harder and jump higher then my opponents.

“My team has helped me push myself to become the player they know I can be,” she added. “I would much rather assist my teammates then score; I love being able to slot my teammates the balls that they put in for a goal.”

Severns has had offers from Central Washington and Corban College, but hasn’t made a decision yet on where she’ll take her talents. Wherever she lands, she wants to major in business and communications.

She’s preparing for that by participating in DECA, and also devotes some of her time to studying American Sign Language, for which she has “a passion.”

When she’s not hard at work on the pitch and hardwood or in the classroom, Severns can often be found watching her favorite TV show.

“I love watching SNL with my friends,” she said. “We always laugh and have such a great time.”

No matter where she is, or what she’s doing, Severns is grateful for those who have entered her life and helped shape and guide her through the years.

“Every coach has impacted me in great ways, but, in particular, Krista Oelschlager has impacted me the most,” Severns said. “She has always given me the encouragement I need to make me a better player and she has taught me how to believe in myself.

“Every time we have a conversation she has taught me something not only about soccer but about myself and others around me,” she added. “I’m so glad I have her in my life.”

But her influences are not limited merely to sports.

“Mrs. Campbell is another teacher that has influenced me greatly. She is a role model in my life and she helped me become a better student and woman,” Severns said. “She has given me the opportunity to become a better leader and help shape my personality as it is today.

“I am so blessed to have such a great teacher in my life who makes me a better person. I’m also so grateful to have wonderful friends in my life. They make every day so much better!”

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South Whidbey goaltender Cassie Neil. (John Fisken)

South Whidbey goaltender Cassie Neil denies a shot Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

When Coupeville and South Whidbey play, in any sport, it is personal.

The Wolves and the Falcons are separated by only a few miles, living together on an Island, and since both are 1A, while Oak Harbor is 3A and rarely plays either of its neighbors, this is THE rivalry.

Games get chippy at times. Fans get personal at times. A win can make or break a school year, depending on what town you call home.

Coupeville bouncing from the 1A/2A Cascade Conference to the 1A Olympic League this year has taken the schools in different directions, but keeping the rivalry going, even in non-conference games, was the best decision the school AD’s could have made.

With wins in football and girls’ soccer, and a loss in volleyball, the Wolves have an early 2-1 edge in 2014.

But, the first big winner is a Falcon, junior soccer goalie Cassie Neil.

She, along with Wolves Mia Littlejohn and Marisa Etzell, reminded us Tuesday that you can have hard-core rivalries while still respecting your foes.

Neil is a bubbly force of nature and a frequent visitor to Cow Town.

In the world of select soccer, where Wolves, Falcons and Oak Harbor Wildcats often play on the same teams, she has frequently worn the same uniform as many of the girls she faced Tuesday.

In the second half of a narrow game, Neil twice got taken out hard. Both times were accidental in nature, but that didn’t keep the Falcon net-minder from being laid out.

The first time came on a breakaway when Littlejohn, who scored two goals, lit Neil up when they inadvertently collided at full-speed out in front of the net.

The second came with Neil on the ground, trying to grab a ball and getting clocked in the face by Etzell’s foot.

What was touching was the concern of all three girls for each other.

Instead of hanging back and letting the injured player’s teammates deal with the situation, as you might normally do, in both instances the Wolves immediately went to check on Neil.

And, after the worst of the two collisions, when she regained her feet, still a little wobbly, Neil went and grabbed Littlejohn in a bear-hug, one friend making sure the other knew that she held no ill will.

It was a quick moment, but it spoke volumes.

It reminded all of us what grace under pressure, class and hard-nosed mutual respect should look like on the athletic field.

Well played, ladies. Well played.

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Wolf goalie Julia Myers is all smiles. (John Fisken photos)

Wolf goalie Julia Myers is all smiles. (John Fisken photos)

Marisa Etzell

Marisa Etzell keeps her body between the ball and her defender.

Mia Littlejohn streaks towards one of her two goals.

Mia Littlejohn streaks towards one of her two goals.

Jenn Spark, defender extraordinaire.

Jenn Spark, defender extraordinaire.

Freshman Ashley Smith enjoys the view.

Freshman Ashley Smith enjoys the view.

Your 2014 Wolf booters.

Your 2014 Wolf booters, just hangin’ out.

With so many high-powered goal scorers among her teammates, Bree

  With so many high-powered goal scorers among her teammates, Bree Daigneault finds it tough to decide who to pass to first.

Micky "Two Fists" LeVine glides into action.

Micky “Two Fists” LeVine glides into action.

It was a great way to kick off the season.

Bouncing their closest rival in grand fashion, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad opened the 2014 season with a bang Tuesday night.

Two goals from freshman Mia Littlejohn, some stellar defense from goalie Julia Myers and her back line (in particular Jenn Spark), and the deed was done.

Coupeville 2, South Whidbey 1. All is well with the world.

But then you start thinking, boy, I wish I could see some more photos from the game. That would be swell.

Good thing John Fisken was traveling through town, on temporary leave from picture-clickin’ duties in Oak Harbor, and snapped a few hundred photos for you to peruse.

Up above are eight that demanded to be seen now.

To see more photos, and possibly purchase some (part of the proceeds goes to fund scholarships for Wolf student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=6531&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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