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Posts Tagged ‘Soccer’

Dewitt Cole clears the goal. (John Fisken photos)

   Die-hard soccer dads Kelly Keilwitz (left) and Robert Wood stay dry on the covered bleachers.

   Meanwhile, team managers Ashley Menges (left) and Peytin Vondrak stay dry, and warm, nestled away in the press box.

Hunter Downes (4) leads the charge through the raindrops.

Loyal to the end.

The weather was miserable and the final score equally so, but the photos turned out pretty good.

Shooting between the rain drops (and lightning warnings) paparazzi John Fisken clicked away at Thursday night’s Coupeville High School boys soccer playoff game.

The pics above are courtesy him.

To see everything he shot (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Boys-Soccer/20170504-Playoff-vs-Bellevue-Christian/

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   Uriel Liquidano is one of four seniors on the CHS boys soccer squad. (John Fisken photo)

“Not our finest game.”

With his team buffeted Thursday by a quick Bellevue Christian squad, a harsh reffing crew and the constant threat of thunder and lightning, the season did not end the way Coupeville High School boys soccer coach Kyle Nelson would have liked.

By the time things were done at Oak Harbor Stadium, the Wolf booters had absorbed a 5-0 loss, leaving them one-and-done in the district playoffs.

Coupeville finishes 4-11-1, while BC (6-8) advances to play Vashon Island in another loser-out game.

Thursday’s game was frustrating all around.

With the day morphing from blazing sun to stormy doom ‘n gloom, there were two 45-minute delays because of lightning — one right before the game was scheduled to start and another deep in the first half.

Officials decided to skip a halftime break to try and keep things going.

Those same refs called the game extremely tight, benefiting Bellevue Christian, which relied on speed, and not Coupeville, which was ready to rumble in the trenches.

The Wolves, who received just one yellow card all season, were handed multiple warnings Thursday, with Bellevue Christian getting seven free kicks to none for Coupeville.

BC got on the board less than a minute into the game, scoring off of a header set up by one of those free kicks.

The Vikings tacked on two more goals in the first half, one off a corner kick, the other on, yep, a free kick.

With the game in hand, Bellevue tossed in two more scores in the second half to pad the final margin.

Coupeville had several shots on goal, but couldn’t get one to find the back of the net.

The playoff tilt marked the end of the run for CHS seniors Zack Nall, Uriel Liquidano, Nick Dion and Brandon Jansen.

Final season scoring stats:

Aram Leyva – 6
Ethan Spark – 6
William Nelson – 4
Zack Nall – 3
Hunter Downes – 2
Uriel Liquidano – 2
James Wood – 2
Laurence Boado – 1

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   Want to be a coach? Then emulate Gabe Wynn’s playing style and take your shot. (John Fisken photo)

Everyone secretly thinks they can coach.

Listen to enough chatter from the stands, and it quickly becomes apparent there are very few who don’t believe they possess that elusive secret to guiding a team to state championship glory.

And yet, I’ve also noticed, the bigger the talker, the less likely they are to actually step up and take on the job.

Easier to be a “genius” in the stands than prove you were full of hot air in the heat of battle, I guess.

After 27 years of writing about school sports on Whidbey Island, I have worked with many coaches, seeing them in good times and bad.

Some have been brilliant, many were competent, a few less so, and at least one was Hall of Fame worthy, if that award is for being a royal pain in the ass.

But they all accepted the challenge, whether it was for one cringe-inducing season or a stellar career, and did what most of us would not do.

Through endless road trips, on rickety school buses and ferries bouncing through winter storms, through back-and-forth with parents who believe their child is going D-1, despite averaging two points a game, through long hours and low pay, through endless second-guessing, through having to put up with my never-ending stream of inane questions, they persevered.

They did it because they love their sport, because they want to support their town and school, because that one kid you break through to makes it all worthwhile.

Some have helped fill up Coupeville’s Wall of Fame in the gym.

Others never quite got over the top, but they made an impact on the lives of their athletes and those player’s families, friends and neighbors.

I have great respect for those who have stepped up, and those who will do so in the future.

It takes guts. It takes commitment. It takes an ability to believe in yourself and your plan, even when the buzz around you becomes great.

I have never coached, cause I already know I don’t have the answers.

Jim Waller, the Sports Editor at the Whidbey News-Times, coached multiple sports for 30+ years and is in the state Hall of Fame for baseball coaches.

Willie Smith, the Coupeville High School AD, ignited the girls basketball program in the late ’90s, then went on to lead Wolf baseball through years of success, never once backing down from the richniks at King’s or ATM.

When I talk to them, or other coaches, whether they be lifers like Randy King and Ron Bagby, seasoned vets like David and Amy King or fast-rising “youngsters” like Cory Whitmore, it reinforces two things.

One, I have no real freakin’ clue, so it’s a good thing I’ve always positioned myself as a hype man building legends and not an expert when it comes to writing about sports.

Yes, I want the Wolf basketball teams to dress all in black, emerge from the locker room in total darkness, then get hit with a spotlight as AC/DC nails the opening notes of “Thunderstruck” and a FULL student section bounces up and down, making the gym resemble the epicenter of an earthquake.

Again, hype, legends, not reality.

And two, I see why they are coaches.

The jobs are not easy, and there are times where every coach stares into the abyss and questions their choice in life, but there is great reward to be found.

Not just wins and titles, either.

Coaches change lives, often in ways teachers and counselors can’t.

They are parents, mentors, friends and drill sergeants mixed into one, and the best find a perfect balance between all those aspects.

So, why do I bring this all up?

Because, as of this morning, we’re sitting at a rare moment when multiple coaching opportunities are available here in Coupeville.

The search for a CHS football assistant and head girls soccer coach are ongoing, and now three basketball positions have posted — head and assistant gigs with CHS boys basketball and a head coaching job with CMS girls hoops.

This is your moment. Don’t let it pass by.

If you have ever thought about being a coach, or if you have prior experience, step up, make a run at a job.

Do it for yourself. For the town and school. For the kids.

Or just do it for me, so I have some new people to harass with endless questions. Yep, ultimately, think about me.

 

To see current CHS/CMS athletic job opportunities, pop over to:

https://www.applitrack.com/coupeville/onlineapp/default.aspx?Category=Athletics%2fActivities

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Nick Dion is one of four seniors on the Wolf roster. (John Fisken photo)

Wipe the slate clean.

The regular season is done and the playoffs loom for the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad.

After taking a 2-0 loss at Port Townsend Friday night, the Wolves sit at 4-10-1 overall, 3-6 in Olympic League play.

As the #3 seed from its conference, Coupeville hosts the #4 seed from the Nisqually League in a loser-out district playoff game.

The particulars:

When: Thursday, May 4, with a 5 PM kick-off

Where: Oak Harbor Stadium

Cost: Adult/student without ASB $8; student with ASB and senior citizens $5; elementary students $4

Opponent: Bellevue Christian (5-7 with one game left on its schedule)

Goal differential: BC has outscored teams 43-37, while CHS has been outscored 49-26

Best/Worst wins: BC beat Chimacum 11-2 and lost 10-0 to Charles Wright Academy. CHS beat Chimacum 7-0 and lost 7-0 to Klahowya.

Mascots: BC – Vikings; CHS – Wolves

Coaches: BC – Paul Adams; CHS – Kyle Nelson

To see the playoff bracket, hop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2267&sport=9

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   Maggie Crimmins and her Wolf tennis teammates captured their third-straight league title this week. (John Fisken photos)

Zack Nall (20) and CHS boys soccer are off to the playoffs May 4.

We’re coming down to the wire.

As spring sports head toward the regular season finish line, Coupeville, the smallest school in the 1A Olympic League, continues to hold off Klahowya, the biggest, in two important categories.

With baseball, girls tennis and boys soccer titles clinched (softball is the last holdout as Chimacum and Coupeville continue to fight), the Wolves have won four team titles during the 2016-2017 school year.

CHS has brought home girls and boys tennis, volleyball and girls basketball championships, compared to Klahowya winning girls and boys soccer and baseball.

Port Townsend took boys basketball and Chimacum is trying to hold on to its top dog status in softball.

With football’s title having gone to interloper Cascade Christian after the Olympic League joined up with the Nisqually League for that sport, it appears Coupeville will win the most team titles for the second straight year.

Klahowya, two games back of Chimacum with three to play in softball, would have to jump both Coupeville and the Cowboys to claim the title and tie the Wolves 4-4.

At the same time it’s primed to win the most team titles for a second year, Coupeville is also on the cusp of another distinction.

With seven league games left for each school this spring, CHS has 48 varsity wins this school year across the 10 sports it plays.

With a 48-44 edge on Klahowya, the Wolves are trying to boot the Eagles from the roost.

KSS held a 52-40 advantage in 2014-2015, then CHS cut that to 45-42 in 2015-2016.

Standings through games played Friday:

Olympic League softball:

School League Overall
Chimacum 5-1 7-3
COUPEVILLE 4-2 13-2
Klahowya 3-3 7-4
Port Townsend 0-6 0-11

Olympic League baseball:

School League Overall
Klahowya 7-0 9-4
COUPEVILLE 5-2 10-7
Chimacum 2-5 4-7
Port Townsend 0-7 0-12

Olympic League boys soccer:

School League Overall
Klahowya 8-0 12-2-1
Port Townsend 5-2 7-6-0
COUPEVILLE 3-6 4-10-1
Chimacum 0-8 2-10-0

Olympic League girls tennis:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 4-0 6-3
Klahowya 2-3 4-9
Chimacum 0-3 0-6

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