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Posts Tagged ‘Zane Bundy’

Abraham Leyva (left) with select soccer teammate Dawson d'Almeida. (Dan d'Almeida photo)

  Abraham Leyva (left) with select soccer teammate Dawson d’Almeida. (Dan d’Almeida photo)

You lose one, you gain one.

When Jeremy Copenhaver was plucked away from the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad by a family move cross-country, it took a goal-scoring threat away from the Wolves.

But, just maybe, sophomore Abraham Leyva will be able to step in and provide that same sort of spark.

The top scorer on his select soccer team, Washington Rush, where he plays along side Wolf teammate Zane Bundy, he netted eight goals in 14 games.

Now he hopes to make an impact on the pitch for CHS this spring.

“My goals are to get as many goals and assists as I can, so I can make first or second team,” Leyva said. “I enjoy the sensation of scoring goals, humiliating players by beating them and getting assists.”

While he has a great deal of confidence in his skill (“The areas I feel comfortable with are my dribbling, my speed, my passing and crossing”), he still works hard at the game.

“I need to work on my shots, finishing and heading,” Leyva said. “I work on that a lot with my dad.”

It was his father who first brought him to the beautiful game, signing him up for a soccer team at age four, when they were living in Mexico. 12 years later, Leyva is still going strong, and can still turn to his dad for advice and help.

“My dad has the biggest impact on me,” Leyva said. “He helps me improve so I can become one of the best and maybe even go pro.

“If it weren’t for him pushing me to be better, I would have not had the same level of skill as I have now.”

During his time on the soccer pitch, Leyva has bounced all over, playing multiple positions.

He started as a defender, “then, like all kids, wanted to score goals” and moved up to forward. Now he generally operates as a midfielder, working the right side of the field, where he can use his speed and dribbling skills to blast by people.

The speed is honed by working out, while his reflexes are sharpened in a different way.

“I run to stay in shape and play video games like every other teenage dude!”

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CHS science warriors (l to r) Loren Nelson, Zane Bundy and Sam Wynn. (Janine Bundy photos)

   CHS science warriors (l to r) Loren Nelson, Zane “Dreamboat” Bundy and Sam Wynn. (Janine Bundy photos)

Sebastian Davis (left) and Nick Dion hum "We are the Champions" as they head back to their seats.

  Sebastian Davis (left) and Nick Dion hum “We are the Champions” as they head back to their seats.

Brandon Kelley -- winning medals and taking names.

Brandon Kelley — winning medals and taking names.

Bundy and Nelson, plotting to take over the world.

Bundy and Nelson, plotting to take over the world.

The combined brain power on display in this photo is staggering.

The combined brain power on display in this photo is staggering.

There was something for everyone.

Big wins. Big controversies. Groupies screaming.

Cause science.

Regionals for the Science Olympiad were held Saturday at Seattle Central Community College and the duo of Sebastian Davis and Nick Dion ruled in mag-lev.

I’m not going to pretend to know what that is, but the victory earned them and adviser Terry Welch a trip to the state meet April 12 at Eastern Washington University. A win there and they qualify for nationals, which are held at the University of Central Florida.

Wolf teammates Brandon Kelley and John McClarin placed third in their category, while Loren Nelson and Zane Bundy grabbed the spotlight two times.

First they became embroiled in a controversy over their Scrambler and had to have a volunteer coach come to their defense.

The coach was up to the task. If asked “What? Are you some kind of rocket scientist?” they would be one of the few people in the world able to respond “Why yes, yes I am.”

Later the dandy duo had to beat off the fans with a stick, as a band of girls swooned over Bundy like he was the second coming of ion-charged dreamboat Nikola Tesla.

Cause science.

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"Gee, Brain, what do you want to do tonight?" "The same thing we do every night, Pinky -- try and take over the world!"(Janine Bundy photos)

“Gee, Brain, what do you want to do tonight?” “The same thing we do every night, Pinky — try and take over the world!” (Janine Bundy photos)

Marisa Etzell plots her strategy.

Marisa Etzell, possibly building a nuclear reactor while having some lunch.

Science!

Science!

It's good to be Zane Bundy. "All your medals belong to me!!"

It’s good to be Zane Bundy. “All your medals belong to me!!”

They came, they saw, they did science … in a really sporty kind of way.

Coupeville High School’s Science Olympiad team competed Saturday in the NW Region C Invitational Tournament at Raisbeck Aviation High School in Tukwila, bringing home several medals for accomplishing scientific things that make my brain hurt when I think about them.

So, basically, while I have no idea what they did, or how they did what they did (I took as few science classes as possible in my school days…), I do know this — CHS students are smart. And successful.

Go, enjoy the photos, courtesy Janine Bundy. I’m taking my brain back to bed.

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Zane Bundy, dapper man about the soccer pitch.

Zane Bundy, dapper man about the soccer pitch.

#7 in the program, #1 in Wolf fans' hearts.

#7 in the program, #1 in Wolf fans’ hearts.

Super Zane. (John Fisken photo)

Super Zane. (John Fisken photo)

You can’t contain Zane Bundy, but you can injure him.

The Coupeville High School sophomore and his select soccer team, the North West Nationals, won two games this past weekend at a college showcase tournament in Portland.

Bundy, playing in front of a Whitman College coach who came to see him play, assisted on the eventual winning goal in his team’s final game, before being felled by an ankle injury.

“Not sure how bad yet, waiting for the swelling to go down,” said mom Janine Bundy.

The Nationals finished the tourney 2-1-1.

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Zane Bundy (left) is comin' through! (John Fisken photo)

Zane Bundy (7) is comin’ through! (John Fisken photo)

Zane Bundy is flying high.

The Coupeville High School sophomore is preparing for the upcoming boys’ soccer season by playing with a select squad that will be taking part in a college showcase in Portland this weekend.

Bundy and his teammates on the North West Nationals have played in Oregon before, but this will be their first time taking the field in front of
college coaches scouting for prospective players.

Continually working on his game, the Wolf speedster also attended a soccer camp at the University of Washington recently. Seeing a different level of competition is always helpful as you hone your own skills.

“It was a very high level of soccer and fast paced game, a lot of fun,” Bundy said. “And the coaching staff was very helpful and informative.”

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