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Posts Tagged ‘Soccer’

Hard-charging freshman Lindsey Roberts and her Wolf teammates are ready to charge on to the next game. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Fast-flying freshman Lindsey Roberts and her Wolf teammates are ready to charge on to the next game. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

The goals dried up in a hurry.

Coming off a game in which it scored eight times, and could have doubled that if it hadn’t spent the final 30 minutes playing keep-away, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad hit a road bump Tuesday.

Facing a tough-nosed Bellevue Christian team, the Wolves fell 6-0 in a non-conference game.

The loss dropped CHS to 1-2-1 on the season, with another non-conference road game just around the corner.

That one is Thursday at 2A Sequim, against a team that has split its first two contests against Coupeville’s fellow 1A Olympic League teams.

Sequim beat Chimacum 2-0, then lost to defending 1A state champ Klahowya 2-0.

Coupeville had racked up 13 goals in its first three games, with freshmen Kalia Littlejohn finding the back of the net in each of the contests, but that run came to an end at the hands of Vikings goalkeepers Emilie Groeschel and Julia Gottlieb.

Bellevue punched home three goals in each half, with Bella Boscolo leading the way with a two-goal night.

Lucy Rash led BC with a pair of assists.

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"League? Non-league? Now you're just hurting my brain." (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Kalia Littlejohn: “League game? Non-league game? I’ll just score in all of them and you can figure out the rest later.” (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Some games matter more than others.

And this is where it’s going to get kind of confusing.

Coupeville High School, which has only three foes in the 1A Olympic League (Port Townsend, Klahowya, Chimacum), has been looking to pad out the schedule for both its girls’ soccer and volleyball squads.

Mission accomplished.

The Wolves have added two more home volleyball matches and one road trip for the booters, bringing those teams totals to 14 (with seven at home) and 15, respectively.

Now we get wacky.

The Wolf spikers have added Chimacum (Oct. 1) and Port Townsend (Oct. 8) while the soccer squad has picked up Port Townsend (Sept. 29), but — now, pay attention — even though those schools are league foes, the matches WON’T count in the league standings.

So, while you certainly want to win, doing so won’t help Coupeville’s chances of earning playoff berths, just as losses wouldn’t derail any hopes.

For both squads only the originally scheduled six matches against those schools (and Klahowya) will matter when figuring out which three teams earn postseason berths in each sport.

So, for volleyball that’s:

10/13 Klahowya
10/15 @ Chimacum
10/20 @ Port Townsend
10/22 Chimacum
10/26 @ Klahowya
10/29 Port Townsend

And the “counters” for soccer:

10/15 @ Chimacum
10/17 Klahowya
10/20 @ Port Townsend
10/22 Chimacum
10/26 @ Klahowya
10/29 Port Townsend

Six league games is the magic number for fall, as Wolf football and boys’ tennis each have that number on their schedule as well, and all of those WILL count in the conference standings.

And, in slightly less confusing scheduling news, the Wolf JV football team has picked up a home game to fill an open slot on Monday, Sept. 21.

The Wolves will now tee it up with 2A Anacortes at 5 PM that night.

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defense

   Two booters dance the eternal dance of the weekend soccer warrior. (John Fisken photos)

run

   “I’m in the mood to score goals and chew bubblegum … and I’m all out of bubblegum.”

tenley

Lyla Stuurmans, the future of Wolf soccer, hard at work.

(John Fisken photos)

   “No, you don’t want to know what happens if I take the mouth piece out, sister!!”

2 girls

Remember that dance we talked about earlier? It’s now in full swing.

ticked

   “Gird your loins, ladies! I’m about to drop my patented Kick ‘o Death and Eternal Doom on you all!!”

"EEEEEEEEAAAAAAAAA!!!!!"

“EEEEEEEEAAAAAAAAA!!!!!”

"Go outside and play with the other kids, they said. It'll be safe, they said..."

“Go outside and play with the other kids, they said. It’ll be safe, they said…”

OK, I’ll be the first to admit I’m a bit out of the loop on this one.

All I know is the pics above are of the Deception FC GU-11 soccer squad in action from Saturday, and that we think (possibly) there are several Coupeville players on the team.

I actually recognize one, future Wolf star Lyla Stuurmans, so I have that going for me.

The rest of them? Yep, it’s all a guess.

But, as usual, John Fisken’s pics are snappy and I like to run as many of them as possible, so what the hey.

If some Oak Harbor kids have somehow wandered on to Coupeville Sports, well, it happens.

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Sophie Sandahl (John Fisken photo)

Sophie Sandahl (John Fisken photo)

First off, can we just admit Sophie Sandahl has pretty impeccable taste in movies?

The Coupeville High School freshman soccer player, a recent transfer from Greenville, South Carolina, lists Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, The Breakfast Club, Moulin Rougue, School of Rock and The Imitation Game as some of her favorite flicks.

From someone who frittered away 15 years running video stores, let me say — the first three are certifiable classics and the last two are pretty dang good on their own rights.

So, top-notch start for the Whidbey newcomer.

But movies aren’t her only strong point, as Sandahl is already involved with both the Wolf booters and the school’s drama troupe.

“My primary interests would have to be anything that has to do with the fine arts,” Sandahl said. “My favorite classes are English literature and drama.”

On the pitch, she’s a defender, part of a unit that shut down Forks 8-0 in Coupeville’s home opener Saturday.

A veteran of rec soccer, she played for her middle school team in South Carolina and has stayed with the game.

“I’m not quite sure the exact reason why I decided to play,” Sandahl said. “My mom and dad loved the sport (that was a heavy influence), and something about the game seemed … intriguing, and enjoyable.

“Overall though, the exact reason is hard to pinpoint.”

It’s a sport she’s come to love, however.

“I enjoy pretty much all of the aspects of soccer,” Sandahl said. “The team, the games, practices, etc.”

As she progresses in the game, she has a clear idea of where she’d like to go.

“My goals are pretty simple — practice, play hard and don’t give up,” Sandahl said. “My goals for future seasons/games would be to keep playing hard.”

Along with putting in hard work, she wants to keep improving her skills, as well.

“My strengths are thinking while I’m on the field, but I have to admit there are some exceptions,” Sandahl said. “I’m doing really well on defense, and listening to/following directions during the game.

“Some areas that I would need to work on are keeping control of the ball, and communicating with my teammates; sometimes I get a little bit too wrapped up in what’s going on, and forget to make calls and talk to the girls.”

On and off the soccer pitch, Sandahl has always gotten a lot of encouragement from those she is close to, which has been a key factor in her growth as a player and a young woman.

“There’s a lot of people that have had a big impact on me that helped me be the person I am,” she said. “I would definitely say that my three closest friends (Abby, Lexi and Samantha) in South Carolina really impacted who I am.

“Here in Coupeville, I would have to say that my team is making a huge impact as well.”

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Arisbeth Montiel, seen here in an earlier game, scored twice Saturday in an 8-0 win. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Arisbeth Montiel, seen here in an earlier game, scored twice Saturday in an 8-0 win. (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

Jovanah Foote

Jovanah Foote has become a crowd favorite in her first year as a booter.

Lauren Grove was the loneliest girl in town.

The Coupeville High School soccer goalie got all dressed up and then spent 80 minutes cooling her heels, as she didn’t face a single shot on goal Saturday.

With the Wolves scoring early and often, they eventually had to spend the final 30 minutes of the game conducting a passing drill to keep from thrashing visiting Forks any harder than they did.

When the ref finally, mercifully signaled the end of play, allowing the visitors to head back to their bus and the pile of pizzas waiting them (Coupeville moms pulled off a surprise Pizza Factory delivery as a thank you for the Spartans making the long trip), the scoreboard read 8-0.

And it could have been much, much worse, if Wolf coach Troy Cowan hadn’t very firmly applied the brakes.

Capturing the first win of the fall season for any CHS squad, varsity or JV, the Wolf booters, now 1-1-1 on the season, controlled every aspect of the game.

Kalia Littlejohn provided her squad with the only goal it would actually need in the game’s 11th minute, cracking in a shot from the right side for her third goal of the season.

It was the third straight game she had scored, keeping her perfect during her young high school career.

Once the bubble was burst, the Wolves poured it on.

Bree Daigneault punched in a goal, taking a booming corner kick off the foot of Jenn Spark, catching it and flipping it past the stricken goalie.

It was a feeling the Spartans net-minder would feel often on the day, with the game’s third goal coming on a ball that landed in the goalie’s hands, then popped free.

Seizing the moment, Ashley Smith tapped in the ball and the rout was on.

After that, the rest of the first half was the Mia Littlejohn show.

Back after missing a game, the super sophomore scored on a bull run, assisted on a score by Arisbeth Montiel, then capped the half with a bomb from almost midfield that splashed into the back of the net.

Coupeville continued to push, for just a bit, in the second half, with Montiel notching her second score and Spark pulling off a nasty pump fake move that left two Spartans on the ground while she slid by for the game’s final goal.

After that, the Wolves noticeably pulled back, passing up numerous breakaway opportunities while working on their passing game, with Sage Renninger, Lindsey Roberts, May Rose and others essentially playing keep-away.

Crowd favorite Jovanah Foote, a Wolf cheerleader moonlighting as a booter for the first time, made several strong runs near the end and came dangerously close to notching a goal, which would have sent her ardent fans into a fit.

I’m just saying. If Foote had hit pay dirt, Dawn Hesselgrave would have come fully unglued.

And Grove?

She finally touched the ball 64 minutes into the match, when Roberts, circling on defense, tapped it back to her, mainly to check and see if her goalie was still awake.

Grove was, and she flashed a huge smile as the pro-Coupeville crowd went bonkers razzing her for her “great save.”

It was a smile worn by all the Wolves on this day, a sunny afternoon when the goals rained down from the heavens.

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