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Posts Tagged ‘SW Falcons’

Kalia Littlejohn has scored in both of her first two high school games. (John Fisken photos)

   Kalia Littlejohn has scored in both of her first two high school games. (John Fisken photos)

Landon

   Lindsey Roberts fan club was out in full force to see her score her first goal. Pictured are (l to r) lil’ bro Landon Roberts, mom Sherry Roberts and grandpa Rick Bonacci.

Kalia (21)

Littlejohn and Jenn Spark celebrate a goal.

Kalia Littlejohn doesn’t know what it’s like to play in a high school soccer game and not score.

Making it 2-for-2 to start her career, the Coupeville High School freshman rattled home another goal Thursday night.

Her score, one of two to come off the foot of a Wolf ninth grader (Lindsey Roberts punched home her first), wasn’t enough, though, as Coupeville fell 4-2 at South Whidbey.

The non-conference loss dropped the Wolves to 0-1-1 on the young season.

CHS gets its first home game of the season Saturday, when it hosts Forks at noon.

Facing a tough Falcon squad, Coupeville was hurt by bad luck and poor calls.

South Whidbey jumped on the board early, knocking home a goal in the third minute, and then things got fluky.

The Wolves inadvertently scored an own goal to make it 2-0, then had their goalie, Mckenzie Meyer, whistled for a dubious foul while fighting for a loose ball in the box.

Given a gift penalty kick, the Falcons slammed it home, carrying a 3-0 lead into the halftime locker room.

What could have been a blow-out took a turn for the positive, however, after CHS coach Troy Cowan went all Vince Lombardi on his team.

“I saw the girls coming off the pitch with their heads down and their spirits wilted; I knew I needed to light a fire under them and bring them back to life,” he said. “I reminded them that they had only really given up one goal and that in soccer there are two halves and we still had a half of soccer to play.

“I talked about what we were doing right, which was a lot, to be honest,” Cowan added. “We were better then this team across the board, we just weren’t getting the calls and the ball wasn’t bouncing our way every time.

“I reminded the girls to control what we were in charge of, and that was our effort!!”

Cowan made a few strategic changes which paid immediate dividends.

Senior captain Jenn Spark slid into the sweeper role, Sage Renninger moved into the middle “to help control the flow of the ball and to send quality through balls” and Littlejohn jumped up to forward.

The new flow hit pay dirt ten minutes into the half, when Spark pounded a rocket to Littlejohn, who promptly shattered her defender’s ankles en route to her second goal of the season.

Kalia has no mercy!,” said a jubilant Cowan.

Midway through the second half, Coupeville got another goal back off of a corner kick from the master, Spark.

“Not sure if you have ever had the privilege of watch Jennifer Spark serve up a corner kick, but it is a thing of beauty for us and probably a living nightmare for our opponents,” Cowan said.

Spark’s missile rattled around, zipping between May Rose to Bree Daigneault to Renninger and on to Roberts, who launched a laser shot into the back of the net.

With the loud South Whidbey crowd quieted, Coupeville came hard for the tying goal, only to lose Littlejohn to an injury with six minutes to play.

Luckily for the Wolves, Littlejohn’s mom, Dawn Hesselgrave, later confirmed the injury wasn’t a bad one and her daughter expects to be in the thick of action Saturday.

Without its top scorer, and desperate to force a tie, Coupeville moved one of its midfielders to forward to increase its offensive chances.

The move backfired, however, when South Whidbey took advantage of the mismatch and launched a successful counter-attack, scoring the game’s final goal in the waning seconds.

While it went into the record books as a loss, Cowan came away pleased with his squad’s resilience under fire and was already looking for some payback.

“I can’t wait to play them again next year!!!”

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Emma (John Fisken phot)

   Wolf freshman Emma Smith, here playfully posing for the cameraman, made her varsity debut against Friday Harbor. (John Fisken photo)

(Hope Lodell photo)

The Wolves head back home, racing the sunset. (Hope Lodell photo)

The fire burned red-hot, just not long enough.

On the road at Friday Harbor, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad got off to a torrid start Thursday.

It wasn’t quite enough, though, as the pesky Wolverines battled back to claim a 28-26, 25-7, 25-17 non-conference victory.

The loss dropped Coupeville to 0-2 on the young season, with a trip to a tournament in Langley scheduled for Saturday.

Showing no signs of tired legs after the long ferry trip Thursday, the Wolves shot out to an 18-9 lead in the first set.

A very young team, CHS let Friday Harbor off the hook a bit, unable to keep its foe pinned down.

Still, Wolf coach Breanne Smedley was pleased with a lot of what she saw unfold in front of her.

“Our serve receiving and passing were strong, and we played very scrappy during the first and third sets,” she said. “We let the game get away from us in the first by not being able to execute in critical moments.

“However, I’m proud of how the girls battled and were able to improve on the things we worked on in practice.”

Valen Trujillo paced Coupeville with a team-high 12 digs, while Katrina McGranahan collected three blocks.

Lauren Rose notched three service aces and freshman Emma Smith, making her varsity debut, had two kills and two blocks.

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Chris Battaglia (John Fisken photo)

   When Chris Battaglia gets rollin’, the ground starts shakin’. (John Fisken photo)

Wiley Hesselgrave (Steve Smith photo)

   You dare to put your mitts on Wiley Hesselgrave (10) when he’s about to break a big run? This does not please Mr. Hesselgrave whatsoever. (Steve Smith photo)

Shane Losey

   Every hair on Shane Losey’s neck is screaming one thing … RUN!! (Fisken photo)

Jacob Martin

   Having scooped up a fumble, Jacob Martin (32) has eyes only for the end zone. Spoiler: he made it. (Smith photo)

attack

   A pack of Wolves, led by Cameron Toomey-Stout (11), devour a Falcon runner. (Fisken photo)

Hunter Smith

Hunter Smith (4) gets all electric in the open field. (Smith photo)

Julian Welling

   Julian Welling (51) and Hesselgrave prepare to initiate the Sandwich Protocol, in which they take one Falcon and squish him between two tacklers. (Smith photo)

The sounds of fall are echoing across Whidbey.

Helmets hitting pads. Quarterbacks screaming signals. Fans bellowing for their teams. Roving photographers firing off a million clicks a second.

As Coupeville High School opened a new football season with two games — a varsity contest at South Whidbey Friday and a JV battle at home in Cow Town Tuesday — photo men Steve Smith and John Fisken were hard at work documenting the hard-hitting action.

The photos above are courtesy them.

To see more of Smith’s work on the varsity game, and possibly purchase some, pop over to:

http://www.cascadeathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8905&league=2&page_name=photo_store&school=0&sport=0

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Cousins Sara Bryant (left) and Hope Lodell

   South Whidbey’s Sara Bryant (left) and Coupeville’s Hope Lodell shared a cousin bonding moment before their teams played Tuesday. (John Fisken photos)

Catch a rising star. Young guns (l to r) Emma Smith, Lauren Rose and Katrina McGranahan.

   Catch a rising star. Young guns (l to r) Emma Smith, Lauren Rose and Katrina McGranahan.

Opening nights are about far more than wins and losses.

And yes, they do keep score for a reason, and when the scoreboard clicked off Tuesday night, it wasn’t in favor of the local team, as a very, very young Coupeville squad fell 25-6, 25-6, 25-14 to a very, very seasoned South Whidbey team.

A loss is a loss, and it’s rarely pleasant to take one, but the Wolves showed heart and pluck, especially in the case of Valen Trujillo.

Immediately re-staking her claim to being the Floor Burn Queen, the junior libero spent much of the match cartwheeling from sideline to sideline, trying to track down the laser spikes flying off of the hands of Falcon hitters.

And I’m not just saying that because Trujillo led a pack of her teammates who surprised me with a post-match plate of opening night cookies.

Seriously.

Her coach, who, to my knowledge, was not bribed with chocolate chips, backs me up on this.

Valen did a great job tonight,” said Wolf guru Breanne Smedley. “She fought for every point.”

See? Not just the cookies talking. Though they do whisper … sweetly.

But, more than wins and losses, opening night is about side things like that.

Getting reacquainted with returning stars and their families, but also seeing an influx of younger players who bring a new wave of family support with them.

It’s about meeting Kathy O’Brien, aunt to hard-hitting Wolf JV spark-plug Abby Parker, in person for the first time, and seeing Heidi Monroe, aunt of even-harder-hitting Sarah Wright, again for the first time in a long while.

Opening night is former Wolf stars like Kacie Kiel and Madeline Strasburg, now graduated but resurfacing to bestow hugs on former teammates and classmates.

It’s always a bit odd to see former players no longer clad in uniforms we have grown so accustomed to them wearing with pride, but the tradition of coming back and passing something on — a word, a hug, a smile — to the next generation of players, is what binds us in a small town like Coupeville.

The first match is about beginnings.

It’s about a boisterous freshman taking the mic and absolutely ripping through the player introductions, laying down nicknames left and right and working the crowd like a pro.

Her name is Sarah Wright and she is a ball o’ fire, and her majestic run is just beginning at CHS, on and off the court.

And, the first match is about endings, or, at least, the beginning of endings, as new seniors take those first steps down the path towards graduation.

This year’s Wolf squad only has two seniors in Sydney Autio and McKenzie Bailey, but they both had an impact on opening night.

With Autio, seeing her happy and healthy and bouncing around the court, after she spent much of her junior year limping after a season-wrecking injury, matters more than the final score.

And Bailey, who has inherited the mantle of Photo Bomb Queen from now-graduated big sis McKayla?

The only member of the Class of 2016 who played for both of last year’s league-title winning teams (basketball, tennis), she began her victory lap by expressing arched-eyebrow disapproval of my Wazzu t-shirt.

But, since she will provide me with a years-worth of awesome photos, cause she can’t resist the siren call of the camera, I’m gonna ignore that.

Also, cause Wazzu, or at least its football team, is sorta putrid at the moment.

Point, Bailey.

Opening night is about CHS football coach Brett Smedley sneaking stealthily (he thought) through the crowd to bring his wife and fellow coach flowers for her season opener, while all the parents in my row went “awwwwwwwww” in unison.

It’s about the very snazzy, yet still pretty dang butt-crushin’ bleachers installed in the CHS gym over the summer. The ’70s (and its seats) are long gone in Cow Town.

And on an Island where family lines run deep, opening night is also about the joy of cousins on rival teams getting to play each other for the first, and only time.

Wolf sophomore Hope Lodell and Falcon senior Sara Bryant faced off across the net, but before and after the match embraced each other, smiling and posing for pics — a reminder that wins and losses matter, but blood matters more.

On the court, Katrina McGranahan and Kyla Briscoe rose up for a team-up on a beautiful stuff, Tiffany Briscoe zipped a gorgeous ace on a serve that singed the net as it crawled over the tape at 102 MPH, and Trujillo?

She’s still out there, diving for loose balls, refusing to cede the night.

Ultimately, it was a loss and one in which one team was quite obviously stronger, but it was opening night and there was a lot more than just a simple match going on.

You just needed to look around for a moment and take in the whole big show for all it was.

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Jacob Martin, seen here stuffing a runner during a summer scrimmage, was electric Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Jacob Martin, seen here stuffing a runner during a scrimmage, was electric Friday, with a sack, an interception and a fumble recovery for a touchdown. (John Fisken photo)

The set-up was strong, but they just couldn’t quite stick the landing.

An opportunistic, big-play defense that had its fuse lit by an electrifying performance from Jacob Martin, kept things close, but too many bobbled opportunities in the fourth quarter Friday sent the Coupeville High School football squad to a 27-14 loss.

The defeat, coming on the road at the hands of Island rival South Whidbey, forced the Wolves to relinquish The Bucket.

After a year of bliss in Cow Town, the trophy will now live in captivity in Langley, a town that couldn’t even keep its scoreboard powered on opening night.

And we’re gonna get to the game, but seriously, you charge people $6 a pop and then have no programs for the fans?

You massacre a recorded version of the national anthem by playing it through a 25-cent sound system that faded in and out, all but begging for a mercy killing?

And where to start with the scoreboard, which sputtered through two quarters, went cold and dark for the entire third quarter, then managed to get back up to about 9% operating capability in the fourth?

But hey, whoever was operating it managed to keep the clock wildly running in the final quarter long after penalty flags should have killed things, tearing away 10-20 seconds from Coupeville at a burst while blind, timid refs stared at their feet, unable to get up the gumption to make a correction.

Joel Norris weeps.

But anyway. Ignore the fact South Whidbey was not remotely ready to host a football game — they do have a teacher’s strike going on, so I like to think there was one lunch lady pulling mad overtime trying to run concessions and the scoreboard at the same time.

So, it’s possible “Myrtle” kept on unhooking the power cord for the scoreboard every time she powered up the microwave. Fair enough.

In the midst of the madness, however, two fairly young football teams put on a decent show, with Coupeville’s defense the big star for much of the night.

Repeatedly South Whidbey drove deep into enemy territory in the first half, and every single time the Wolves refused to bend.

Martin got things rocking with a pretty, pretty interception, snaring a ball that popped up off of a Falcon shoulder pad, then Wolf teammate Hunter Smith pulled off his own pick to bring a skidding halt to another drive.

With neither offense unable to break through, Martin seized the day with a vengeance.

A play after South Whidbey had pulled off a long catch and run to shove the Wolf “D” back on its heels, Martin exploded in from the side and snatched up a fumble.

Stumblin’ and rumblin’ down the sidelines, he left the Falcons clutching at air as he brought the ball back 65 yards for the first score of the season.

After Zane Bundy tacked on the extra point, Coupeville seemed poised to head into the halftime locker room up 7-0 and rolling.

But the first mistake reared its head when a Wolf receiver was nabbed near the end zone with a mere eight ticks on the clock (yes, at that point the scoreboard was 75% functional…).

While it looked like he was out past the line, the refs awarded South Whidbey with a safety, cutting the lead to 7-2.

Still, the Wolves seemed to be in command, and stayed that way until a sensational diving TD catch in the end zone gave the Falcons the lead midway through the third quarter.

Coupeville’s offense was seriously sputtering as the scoreboard loomed like a giant blank slate in the third, but an interception by Clay Reilly and a blow-em-up sack in the backfield by Martin kept the Falcons from adding to their lead.

And then it happened, the break-through play that could have spurred an epic win. Except it didn’t.

Senior Jordan Ford, a transfer playing his first-ever game in the same Wolf uniform that many of his relatives once wore, made off with a fumble and bolted nearly the length of the field, cartwheeling into the end zone and sending the packed visitors bleachers into a frenzy.

But then the frenzy faded as quickly as it hit, as the game-changing touchdown was called back, victim to a penalty whistled on one of Ford’s blockers.

A little bit of the life went out of the Wolves after that, and yet, even though they continued to stall out on offense, the score stayed 9-7 until the final six minutes.

Then, for the first time, a tired Coupeville defense softened just a bit, and the Falcons took advantage, slashing away for three scores on the ground in a four-and-a-half-minute surge.

With the game gone, the Wolves did find some final bits of redemption in the waning moments, with CJ Smith striking twice.

Sophomore QB Hunter Downes hooked up with the senior receiver on an 80-yard scoring strike, then Bundy pulled off a successful onside kick that Smith beat the Falcons to, snaring the ball while hurtling around like a madly-bouncing pinball.

It wasn’t enough to completely save the day, but it showed a team that was willing to fight until the final gun, a positive sign as Coupeville goes forward.

The Wolves play their first four games on the road, and, if the first game was any indication, they will be a dangerous team when they get all the wrinkles worked out.

Their defense, in particular, is a hard-hitting assault team, anchored by seniors Wiley Hesselgrave and Lathom Kelley.

I didn’t see a win Friday, but I did see potential.

Can’t say the same for the folks operating South Whidbey’s stadium.

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