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Posts Tagged ‘upset’

Nick Guay applies some hands-on defense. (Morgan White photos)

Fear the Wilson boys.

With big bro Aidan netting a hat trick, and younger sibling Cael playing lights-out in the net, the Coupeville High School boys soccer team stunned the world Friday.

Facing off with visiting Friday Harbor, a state title contender which had just upended the actual defending state champs, the Wolves never backed down, claiming a 3-1 win at Mickey Clark Field.

The victory lifts Coupeville to 2-2 on the season heading into a showdown with Orcas Island, which brought home the shiniest trophy from last year’s 2B/1B state tourney.

Friday Harbor handed the Vikings a loss earlier in the week, ending a home-winning streak for Orcas which had reached five years.

So, when the Wolverines arrived on Whidbey Island, they were heavy favorites.

I’m just saying, even the hardiest of Coupeville fans weren’t likely to be hanging out down below the bleachers laying bets on the hometown pitch heroes.

But if they had … jackpot.

Coupeville came out aggressive and never backed down, contesting every shot and fighting for every 50/50 ball.

Wolf goalie Cael Wilson, stalking the pitch, the muted prairie sunshine reflecting off of his glasses, transformed before our eyes.

Suddenly he was Coupeville’s answer to Jan Oblak (thank you Google search…), a towering titan in the net, deflecting everything Friday Harbor sent his way.

Wilson punched a shot away with his right arm, dropped to his knees to make a two-handed block at point-blank range, and even shot high into the air to spear away another incoming missile.

On the sideline, CHS girls soccer guru Kyle Nelson, subbing for Wolf boys coach Robert Wood, who was out of town on business, nodded ever so slightly in approval.

Exactly the way the combined Coupeville pitch brain trust planned it.

If you looked at shots on goal, Friday Harbor had a huge advantage in the first half, and yet the scoreboard at the break reflected that score most beloved of soccer fanatics.

Zero to zero. Nil-nil, as they say in the soccer hotbeds.

Or so I’ve been told.

That was soon corrected, however, as Cael’s older brother decided to help out the family cause.

Aidan Wilson, on the rampage.

Rampaging down the left side of the pitch on a long run, Aidan Wilson lured the netminder in, before ripping a rocket into the top left of the net.

Cue the bedlam from the stands and his teammates.

Cue another small nod from Kyle Nelson, a master of keeping his composure in the glare of the spotlight.

And likely cue bedlam from Robert Wood, on the road but undoubtedly still grooving on his team’s success.

Friday Harbor is a top-notch team however, and you keep peppering any goalie with enough shots, one is going to go in at some point.

The tying score came courtesy Adam Strasbourger, who climbed to the heavens and sacrificed his noggin, using his head to knock the ball just wide of Cael Wilson’s outstretched arms.

The momentum could have shifted. Probably should have shifted.

But it didn’t.

Instead, Coupeville dug in, with the combined efforts of Cole White, Grant Steller, Matthew Ward, and Co. frustrating Friday Harbor’s offense time and again.

The Wolves caught a break when Aidan Wilson was awarded a penalty kick after a wild scrum, and the Wolf senior rattled home his second goal of the night with less than 14 minutes remaining on the clock.

Friday Harbor could not buy a break in the waning moments, missing twice from inches away on the same play.

A laser blast caught an updraft at the last second and slammed off the crossbar, only to rebound right to a Wolverine player.

But when his header put-back went wide left by a hair, Coupeville fans started to breathe again. At least a bit.

Aidan Wilson finally sealed the deal in stoppage time, sprinting down the left side and completing his second-half hat trick to push the lead out to 3-1.

In the aftermath of the win, his teammates carried Cael Wilson off the field while Coupeville Superintendent Steve King, a Friday Harbor alum, tried to walk the tight rope gracefully.

“I’ll file this one away,” he said with a smile. “Might have to bring this up at Thanksgiving and Christmas. Maybe. Never know.”

For Nelson, who will find himself on a bus headed to Forks Saturday with the Wolf girls, the moment was huge.

“A great win for the guys,” he said.

“That’s the best team in this league, and this should be a really great confidence booster.”

Wolf goalie Cael Wilson (in neon shirt) is mobbed after he shut down the Northwest 2B/1B League’s best team.

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   Emily Fiedler teamed with Jaimee Masters Tuesday to knock off their Chimacum rivals. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

All good things must come to an end. It just wasn’t supposed to happen this early.

Playing with a shuffled lineup Tuesday, the Coupeville High School girls tennis team tasted defeat for the first time in 18 matches against its fellow 1A Olympic League foes.

Falling 4-3 at Chimacum, the Wolves not only saw their four-year unbeaten streak end, but also fell out of first-place for the first time since joining the conference in 2014.

Coupeville (2-1 in league play, 4-7 overall) trails the Cowboys (3-1, 4-6) by half a game, while Klahowya (0-3, 1-9) sits mired in the cellar.

If things break right, though, this is all just a prelude to staging a winner-take-all bout May 3 on Whidbey in what would be the final Olympic League contest for any CHS sports team.

Coupeville is jumping to the new six-team North Sound Conference in the fall, but the Wolf netters still intend to make it four-for-four on league titles before they depart.

Here’s how it lays out:

Coupeville travels to Silverdale this Thursday, Apr. 26 to play a match-and-a-half against Klahowya.

The two squads will complete a rain-delayed match (it currently sits at 2-2 with three matches in flux), then play their regularly-scheduled bout.

Chimacum and Klahowya face off May 1, then the Cowboys come to Whidbey May 3 for the rubber match in their three-game season series with the Wolves.

If the Eagles keep on losing, both Coupeville and Chimacum would enter the finale bearing identical 4-1 records.

There are several other ways the Wolves could win the title, but we’ll just let the most exciting one — a battle royal for all the chips in front of Coupeville’s fans — sit out there as the most tantalizing opportunity.

While the end result wasn’t what he wanted, or intended, Coupeville coach Ken Stange found positives amid the wreckage.

Zara (Bradley) and Jillian (Mayne) were on fire today!,” he said. “Down 4-0 in the first set, they won seven of the next eight to take the set. Then they dominated.

Kameryn (St Onge) and Maggie (Crimmins) were solid,” Stange added. “Kam was a magician today.”

 

Complete Tuesday results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Genna Wright lost to Gladys Hitt 6-1, 6-3

2nd Singles — Heather Nastali lost to Vilma Jurmu 6-0, 6-2

3rd Singles — Nanci Melendrez lost to Makaela Caskey 6-3, 6-1

1st Doubles — Payton Aparicio/Sage Renninger beat Renee Woods/Emma Craighead 6-2, 6-3

2nd Doubles — Claire Mietus/Tia Wurzrainer lost to Grace Yaley/Chloe Patterson 6-1, 6-2

3rd Doubles — Maggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge beat Marley Music/Christina Bell 7-5, 6-3

4th Doubles — Jillian Mayne/Zara Bradley beat Denisse Lopez/Madison Hess 7-5, 6-2

JV:

5th Doubles — Jaimee Masters/Emily Fiedler won 6-2

6th Doubles — Megan Behan/Elaira Nicolle lost 6-2

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Hope "The Surgeon" Lodell carved up Klahowya Tuesday afternoon. (John Fisken photo)

   Hope “The Surgeon” Lodell carved up Klahowya Tuesday afternoon. (John Fisken photos)

This celebration is from an earlier match, but it perfectly captures Coupeville's mood at the moment.

   This celebration is from an earlier match, but it perfectly captures Coupeville’s mood at the moment.

The reign of terror is ended.

After two-plus years and 14 straight wins in conference play, the Klahowya High School volleyball squad has been shoved off of its throne.

The dragon slayers?

Coupeville, which went on the road Tuesday and shocked the Eagles, rallying to win in five titanic sets.

The 11-25, 25-23, 20-25, 26-24, 15-9 win gives the Wolves sole possession of first place in the 1A Olympic League, and puts the first dent in Klahowya’s previously ding-free armor.

Now 2-0 in conference play, 4-2 overall, CHS sits a half game up on the Eagles, who slide to 2-1.

Chimacum (1-2) and Port Townsend (0-2), which Coupeville hosts Thursday (JV 4:30, varsity 5:45), round out the league standings.

While anything is far from decided (Coupeville has seven league matches left, including two more against Klahowya), the win guarantees the Eagles will not be able to pull off a third straight undefeated league campaign.

Klahowya went 6-0 in 2014 and 2015.

This year volleyball and soccer expanded their league schedules to nine matches, equaling what basketball, softball and baseball were already doing.

Coupeville’s Rocky-like triumph Tuesday was a sterling testament to the Wolves inner strength, said coach Cory Whitmore.

“I’m so proud of the way we fought and found it within themselves to recover from a rough first set,” he said. “We made plays when we needed to, both defensively and offensively.

“Our poise looked better in close situations and that calm demeanor helped us to come away with a win.”

Wolf junior Hope “The Surgeon” Lodell sparked the victory, chipping in with strong effort in every aspect of the game.

She recorded a team-high seven service aces while adding nine kills and 15 digs.

Mikayla Elfrank pounded home 11 kills to pace the CHS attack, while Valen Trujillo (24 digs) and Katrina McGranahan (five service aces) helped fill up the stat sheet.

Ashley Menges (15 assists) and Lauren Rose (14) teamed up to make a potent two-headed beast at setter, with both playing fairly spotless ball.

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"I've been coaching since (John Fisken photos)

   “Vampires? I ain’t afraid of no stinkin’ vampires!!” Randy King is the man to lead a team into bat country. (John Fisken photos)

Ashleigh Battaglia

Ashleigh Battaglia chases down a ball during an earlier match.

Zoe Trujillo

Want flawless form? Call Zoe Trujillo.

Scout Smith

Scout Smith is a star, even when she plays Stevie Wonder-style.

Raven Vick (19) and Maya Toomey-Stout celebrate

Raven Vick (19) and Maya Toomey-Stout are just happy to see each other.

Randy King with the upset!

The longtime Coupeville High School/Middle School coach picked up a new sport at the last second this year, taking over the CMS 8th grade volleyball squad a match into the season when coach Sadi Foltz abruptly left to take a new job.

Jump forward to Monday night, and, after a long road trip to the town former CHS football coach Ron Bagby (well … and “Twilight“) built, King and his spikers emerged with a stunning upset.

The Wolves knocked off undefeated Forks 29-27, 25-20 for the win of the season.

The score is all the info we have at the moment (and nothing on the 7th grade squad), so let’s toss out a bunch of photos to fill the rest of your time.

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Jared

   Jared Helmstadter teamed with brother Grey Rische to capture a vital come-from-behind three-set win Monday. (John Fisken photo)

This is how you start a season.

Having waited its turn seemingly forever, as all of the other fall sports teams at Coupeville High School played two or three contests, the Wolf boys’ tennis squad finally saw action Monday.

And what action, as they used three come-from-behind wins to topple 2A Sequim 4-3 in a non-conference match.

The season-opening road win came against a school that not only is much larger than 1A Coupeville (it has three times as many students) but also is the defending 2A Olympic League champs.

On this day, that mattered not to the Wolves, as they battled back to claim three-set wins in three separate matches, all after having lost the first set.

It was actually even more of a comeback, as Coupeville trailed 3-1 on the day, and if any of the final three matches had fallen the other way, team defeat would have been the flavor of the day.

Instead, it was miracle time.

“We couldn’t have been any closer to elimination,” said Wolf tennis coach Ken Stange. “This was the best team win I’ve ever experienced with the boys.”

Connor McCormick pulled out a 5-7, 6-4, 6-2 win at second singles to kick-start things.

Connor took his doubles skills to the singles court,” Stange said. “He served and volleyed, which is pretty rare for singles players.

Connor epitomized calmness today; his final set showed he was able to maintain a high level of consistency and concentration in the match,” he added. “He has always been our best net player. It was fun to see him use those skills in singles.”

The Wolves put the match away by dominating in doubles, winning three of four.

Joey Lippo and William Nelson strolled to a 6-3, 6-0 win at second doubles, while #3 (Jimmy Myers/Lilan Sekigawa) and #4 (Grey Rische/Jared Helmstadter) had to dig down deep for their victories.

Myers and Sekigawa lost a tense tiebreaker 7-6 to open their match, then rebounded to take the next two sets 6-4 and 10-8, while Rische and Helmstadter prevailed in a razor-tight match 4-6, 6-4, 10-7.

Jimmy and Lilan were high energy, and so were their opponents. They didn’t make it look easy,” Stange said. “Instead, they made it look like it took every ounce of their energy to win.

“They play an unorthodox style. Combined with the high energy, they will often put opponents into uncomfortable situations.”

With the match squared at 3-3, the deciding point came from Coupeville’s real-life brothers.

Grey and Jared picked up the deciding point. They knew that they were the deciding match, too,” Stange said. “In the past, pressure has been a bugaboo for them.

“I’ve been preaching staying relaxed. They made good on it. They breathed.”

Coupeville’s three losses came at first singles (Sebastian Davis fell 6-1, 6-0), third singles (Garrett Compton went down 6-2, 7-5) and first doubles (Joseph Wedekind/John McClarin were nipped 6-4, 6-2).

But wait, there’s more:

The Wolves pushed their hosts hard in JV action as well, winning two matches.

5th doubles — Nick Etzell/Cole Payne won 8-6
6th doubles — Aiden Crimmins/Nile Lockwood lost 6-3
7th doubles — Tiger Johnson/Jaschon Baumann lost 6-4
8th doubles — Jakobi Baumann/Santiago Ortiz won 6-3
9th doubles — Nick Blalock/Payne lost 6-0

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