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Posts Tagged ‘Soccer’

Lauren Bayne (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Bayne, a young woman of many talents. (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Bayne is a bit of a Renaissance woman.

The Coupeville High School sophomore, who celebrates a birthday today, is a whirlwind, always up to something, and always doing a pretty spectacular job at whatever she does.

On the soccer pitch she’s one of the hardest-working Wolves, a lock-down defender who helped anchor Coupeville’s often-stingy defense.

Put her on the track oval and there is little she can’t accomplish.

During her freshman season, Bayne Train, Jr. competed in eight different events, going all the way to districts in both the 3200 and high jump.

Once there she PR’d in the running event and just missed tying her best mark — which she had set while winning the event at sub-districts — while jumping.

When she’s not busy blazing a trail of athletic success, much like older brother Josh, Lauren can be seen snapping pics of fellow Wolf athletes.

Or working tirelessly behind the scenes at Booster Club events like the annual Crab Feed.

Or hanging out with her 10,000 friends.

Bayne is a bright, blazing ray of sunshine in Coupeville, and she comes off as smart, well-spoken, deeply caring to those she holds close and a young woman whose potential is limitless.

I always figure we should get in good with people like Lauren when they’re just starting, so that when she’s ruling the world, she might remember us benevolently.

So happy birthday, Miss Bayne.

I hope your cake day is a sweet one, but, then again, I hope all of your days are that way.

You make us better as a town for your presence, and I hope you always know how highly we all think of you.

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Valen Trujillo and the CHS girls' tennis squad are defending league champs/ (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf junior Valen Trujillo and the CHS girls’ tennis squad are defending league champs. (John Fisken photos)

Sophomore Julian Welling

   Sophomore Julian Welling is one of several returning starters new baseball coach Marc Aparicio hopes to inherit.

track

   Everyone in this pyramid can return this season. Top: Sylvia Hurlburt. Middle: Jared Helmstadter, Makana Stone. Bottom: (l to r) Lathom Kelley, Dalton Martin, Mitchell Losey.

These might be the Coupeville High School schedules you’re looking for.

Maybe.

You never know, as high school sports schedules, especially in the spring, are notorious for being ever-changing beasts.

As we sit six days out from the first day of practice for a new season (Monday, Feb. 29), I can say I’m at least 84.7% confident in what’s below.

Of course, even if these schedules stay exactly as they look now, weather is likely to play its usual role in reshaping things as we go forward.

But, as we wait for everything to play out, this is at least a start.

Maybe don’t laminate the schedules yet, though…

* = league game

BASEBALL

Sat-Mar. 12 @ Jamboree (Oak Harbor)
Mon-Mar. 14 @ Sultan
Wed-Mar. 16 Concrete
Fri-Mar. 18 @ Concrete
Mon-Mar. 21 Cedarcrest
Tue-Mar. 22 Sequim
Sat-Mar. 26 @ Friday Harbor
Tue-Mar. 29 @ Lynden Christian
Thur-Mar. 31 Port Townsend (*)
Sat-Apr. 2 @ South Whidbey
Fri-Apr. 8 @ La Conner
Mon-Apr. 11 @ Blaine
Thur-Apr. 14 @ Chimacum (*)
Tue-Apr. 19 Klahowya (*)
Thur-Apr. 21 @ Port Townsend (*)
Sat-Apr. 23 Meridian
Mon-Apr. 25 Chimacum (*)
Wed-Apr. 27 @ Klahowya (*)
Fri-Apr. 29 Port Townsend (*)
Tue-May 3 @ Chimacum (*)
Thur-May 5 Klahowya (*)

BOYS SOCCER

Fri-Mar. 11 Jamboree (South Whidbey, Skyline, Lake Stevens)
Tue-Mar. 15 @ Granite Falls
Sat-Mar. 19 @ South Whidbey
Tue-Mar. 22 Sequim
Tue-Mar. 29 Vashon Island
Wed-Mar. 30 Bellevue Christian
Mon-Apr. 4 Forks
Fri-Apr. 8 @ Cascade Christian
Mon-Apr. 11 @ Forks
Thu-Apr. 21 @ Chimacum (*)
Tue-Apr. 26 Klahowya (*)
Thur-Apr. 28 @ Port Townsend (*)
Sat-Apr. 30 Chimacum (*)
Tue-May 3 @ Klahowya (*)
Thu-May 5 Port Townsend (*)

GIRLS TENNIS

Mon-Mar. 14 Granite Falls
Mon-Mar. 21 @ South Whidbey
Thur-Mar. 24 @ Klahowya (*)
Thur-Apr. 14 @ South Whidbey
Fri-Apr. 15 Chimacum (*)
Tue-Apr. 19 @ Klahowya (*)
Fri-Apr. 22 @ Granite Falls
Tue-Apr. 26 @ Chimacum (*)
Thur-Apr. 28 Klahowya (*)
Mon-May 2 Sequim
Wed-May 4 Chimacum (*)

SOFTBALL

Sat-Mar. 12 South Whidbey
Mon-Mar. 14 @ Sultan
Wed-Mar. 16 Concrete
Fri-Mar. 18 @ Concrete
Wed-Mar. 23 Bellevue Christian
Sat-Mar. 26 @ Friday Harbor
Thur-Mar. 31 Port Townsend (*)
Tue-Apr. 12 @ Lynden Christian
Thur-Apr. 14 @ Chimacum (*)
Tue-Apr. 19 Klahowya (*)
Thur-Apr. 21 @ Port Townsend (*)
Sat-Apr. 23 Meridian
Mon-Apr. 25 Chimacum (*)
Wed-Apr. 27 @ Klahowya (*)
Fri-Apr. 29 Port Townsend (*)
Tue-May 3 @ Chimacum (*)
Thur-May 5 Klahowya (*)
Tue-May 10 @ Bellevue Christian
Mon-May 16 @ La Conner

TRACK

Thur-Mar. 17 @ Island Jamboree (Oak Harbor)
Sat-Mar. 19 @ Port Angeles Invitational
Thur-Mar. 24 @ North Kitsap (Olympic, Sequim)
Thur-Mar. 31 @ South Whidbey (Granite Falls, Sultan)
Thur-Apr. 14 @ Port Townsend (Port Angeles, Sequim)
Sat-Apr. 16 @ Cashmere Invitational
Thur-Apr. 21 @ Olympic (North Mason, Port Townsend)
Thur-Apr. 28 @ Kingston (Port Angeles, Olympic)
Sat-Apr. 30 @ Shelton Invitational
Mon-May 9 @ Olympic League JV Championships (Klahowya)
Sat-May 14 @ 1A Olympic League Championships (Bremerton)
Fri-May 20-Sat. May 21 @ District 3 Championships (Bremerton)
Thur-May 26-Sat. May 28 @ State (Cheney)

To check start times, stay up to date and keep an eagle eye out for changes, bookmark these two pages:

Olympic Leaguehttp://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?league=21&page_name=school_home&school=0&sport=0

Coupeville Schoolshttp://coupeville.tandemcal.com/

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Coupeville High School freshman Kalia Littlejohn. (John Fisken photos)

Coupeville High School freshman Kalia Littlejohn. (John Fisken photos)

Kalia Littlejohn (right) bulldozes her way to own of her 10 goals during the high school season. (John Fisken photo)

Littlejohn rampages to one of her 10 goals during the high school season.

Never stop working.

Coupeville High School freshman Kalia Littlejohn passed on playing basketball this winter so she could continue to focus on her true love, soccer, and it’s paid off.

After enduring through tryouts which began back in October, she was selected Saturday to the pool of players who will train with the Puget Sound Premier League Surf Academy.

The Academy is a training development program for select-level booters, set up to help prospective college-level athletes refine their skills.

Along with the extra practice and coaching Littlejohn will receive, she’ll also be in contention for a spot on teams which will travel to out of state tournaments.

Those tourneys are hotbeds for college coaches and recruiters looking for talent.

For Littlejohn, who also teamed with big sis Mia to spark their NW United select squad to a 1-1 tie Saturday morning (Mia scored), the selection capped a long, arduous process.

She had to face off with players from across Washington state and make it past the first level of cuts.

Once she did, Littlejohn was invited back for the next level of tryouts and put in three sessions a weekend.

“It’s been a long process,” she said.

During her first high school season Littlejohn set a CHS girls’ soccer record with 10 goals and was selected as a First-Team All-League player.

Coupeville tied a program record with six wins and finished second in the 1A Olympic League behind defending 1A state champ Klahowya.

To find out more about the PSPL Surf Academy, pop over to:

http://pspl.surfsoccer.com/

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Birthday girl Jenn Spark. (John Fisken photos)

Birthday girl Jenn Spark. (John Fisken photos)

Sparky doing what she does best, ruling the soccer pitch with an iron fist (and an explosive leg).

   Sparky doing what she does best, ruling the soccer pitch with an iron fist (and an explosive leg).

Spark, hanging out with her fan club, lil' bro Ethan (left) and boyfriend Anthony Bergeron.

   Spark, hanging out with her fan club, lil’ bro Ethan (left) and boyfriend Anthony Bergeron. (Photos courtesy Kali Barrio)

The early days of Sparky.

A legend is born.

Without Sparky, would there even be a Coupeville Sports?

Jenn Spark, who hits the big 1-8 today, is part of the CHS Class of 2016, the athletes who were just about to step foot into a high school classroom in August 2012 when I left the newspaper world and kicked off my online adventure.

Over the last 41 months, that batch of Wolves, from Makana Stone to Wiley Hesselgrave, Sylvia Hurlburt to Jared Helmstadter and far beyond, have given me countless stories and put up with my written shenanigans along the way.

Through all the highs and lows, Spark has been one of the brightest-shining of my “stars.”

A masterful soccer player, whether taking the pitch as a Wolf or as a member of various Whidbey Islanders select squads, Jenn has been nothing short of electrifying.

She has a cannon for a leg, and when she launches a ball from deep in her own zone, an entire stadium often goes quiet.

The rare defender who can, and will, score on you from anywhere on the field — she once banked a ball off of a goaltender’s head for a score from almost mid-field — Spark made soccer exciting.

And let me be the first to admit, the “beautiful game” has never particularly been one of my favorites.

Call me a heathen, but the intricacies of the game often fly over my head.

I understand baseball, basketball, football, etc. better, and when I was growing up, youth soccer wasn’t the obsession it is today.

But I can, and do, appreciate, watching a player like Jenn take over a game.

A dominant defender who lifted her fellow players, who held them together even in the face of teams like ATM, King’s or Klahowya, Spark never gave anything less than her best to her beloved sport.

The day she suffered a devastating on-field injury remains a haunting one, but the way she fought back, the way she never gave in, has always been truly remarkable.

Returning to the field, one leg encased to look like a bionic weapon, Jenn never coasted, never played tentatively.

There were countless moments this past season when the greatest entertainment at a soccer game was seeing how many times CHS coach Troy Cowan would hyperventilate as Sparky did the splits or slid under an onrushing player in pursuit of the ball.

Off the field, Jenn always comes across as a genuinely nice person, someone who deeply cares about her family, friends and teammates.

Smart, well-spoken and modest about her undeniable talent.

On the field, Spark, who earned All-Conference honors and deep respect from rival players and coaches, made me rethink the game.

I still don’t understand all the little side rules soccer has, and am still not sure how people can get so dang excited over a scoreless tie, but Jenn Spark made me a believer.

When she was on that pitch, doing what she did, crushing the ball, directing traffic, willing her teams to excellence even when she could barely move, Sparky earned every last cheer.

As she moves forward, I hope she gets the chance to play college ball if that’s what she wants. She has given so much to the game, and I hope it keeps giving back to her.

But, whether it’s soccer or something else, I have no doubt Jenn will leave an indelible mark wherever she goes.

So, thank you, Miss Spark, for four years of teaching me soccer could be entertaining.

For four years of always answering my questions about your injuries, even when you certainly had better things to do with your time.

For helping to make Coupeville Sports what it is, and for always doing it with great grace and style.

Happy birthday, Jenn.

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Abraham Leyva wants all the goals. All of them. (John Fisken and Dan d'Almeida photos)

   Abraham Leyva wants all the goals. All of them. (John Fisken and Dan d’Almeida photos)

Abraham Leyva is the very definition of laid-back.

I swear, before every Coupeville High School boys’ soccer game last year, the same question was always asked, with the very same answer.

“It’s almost game time, where’s Abraham? Where’s Abraaaaaaahaaaaammm!?!?”

“He’s taking a nap, man. He’ll be here…”

And then, sure enough, the most efficient goal-scoring machine in Wolf soccer history would come ambling across the field at the last second, not a single moment of concern or nerves on his relaxed face.

Flip a switch and he would pound home a goal or two (or three), smile spreading slowly across his face, and you would realize not everyone needs to get stressed out in pre-game warm-ups.

When you’re the man, you’re the man, and you just need some Z’s to prep for battle on the pitch.

As Abraham celebrates a birthday today, several months away from his final season of gracefully punching home goals for Coupeville, we should take a moment to celebrate all he’s done.

From the moment he stepped on the pitch at CHS, he has been, as I said previously, a goal-scoring machine.

In his first game as a sophomore, he knocked in a pair of scores in a 3-0 win over Friday Harbor, and he hasn’t stopped finding the back of the net since.

Leyva has 25 goals in two seasons, 11 as a freshman and a school-record 14 last year as a junior.

The one unifying factor about almost all of his goals? They’re pretty.

Abraham plays with flair, gliding across the pitch, and rarely seems to be out of place. He can beat you 10,001 different ways and has repeatedly embarrassed rival defenders and goalies at every level he’s played at.

He’s also a very smart, well-spoken guy, who in between teaching the finer points of the game to his successor, younger brother Aram, is already preparing for the next stage in his life.

After graduation from CHS, Leyva plans to return to his native Mexico and become a doctor and I have little doubt he will just as successful at that as he is operating on the pitch.

So happy birthday, Abraham, enjoy your day and the rest of your senior year.

I look forward to seeing you tear up the pitch one last time, and, like all your fans, simply want to say thank you — for the player you are, and the man you are.

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