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Archive for the ‘Girls Tennis’ Category

Renee Woods (John Fisken photos)

   Chimacum netter Renee Woods is skilled with a racket, but it’s her grace and spirit which will carry her the farthest. (John Fisken photos)

Bree Daigneault (John Fisken photos)

The same could be said for Coupeville’s Bree Daigneault.

Tennis has always been viewed as one of the most polite of all sports.

Fans don’t typically scream during points, players applaud well-hit shots, they call their own lines at most levels of competition and on and on.

Now, there are some exceptions — the three years I played at Tumwater High School we were a pack of wild animals who took great delight in drilling each other in the groin with the ball as often as possible.

But, by and large, tennis stands as one of the last bastions of manners and good taste.

Having watched some Coupeville High School matches this year, both boys and girls, I have to say, the game seems to be at an all-time high for sheer politeness these days.

The Wolf girls, in particular, go way out of their way to compliment their rivals on a regular basis, whether they’ve just drilled a gorgeous shot or been the victim of one.

Now, it’s safe to say CHS singles ace Valen Trujillo would most likely serve her foes tea and cakes mid-match if she was allowed (she’s a top-notch baker and probably the most sincerely nice successful athlete I’ve ever covered), but she has a fast-rising rival or two.

Wolf junior Bree Dagineault is the queen of compliments, and she never seems less than 179% sincere as she bestows them on her hard-court opponents.

Friday, as she faced off with Renee Woods of Chimacum, she might have met her doppelganger and it produced maybe the most blissful match I have ever witnessed.

Now, this was a hard-fought duel, with both players going full-tilt, often bounding along the baseline and slugging it out.

But, in between every shot, they found new ways to rain down praise on each other, and, when they exited, without hearing the score, you would have had no idea who won by their expressions, which were both beaming and topped with smiles.

Now, I once drilled one of my own teammates in the face with an overhead ON PURPOSE (well, it wasn’t just once…), but these two young women are operating in a whole different world from us late ’80s ruffians, and it’s really incredible to witness.

At one point, the following exchange was made. I swear.

“That was a REALLY nice serve.”

“Thank you! Well, you made a REALLY nice return.”

“Well thank you! That was a great rally!!”

“It was, wasn’t it!!”

“Thank you.”

“Well, thank you!!”

It never came across as sappy or cloying or fake, just two really bright, really well-adjusted high school athletes living in the moment, thoroughly enjoying the experience and proving you can compete hard without being a jerk.

As they exited at the end, after much more two-way praise, Bree turned to the Chimacum coach and said one of the best things I have heard in 25 years of covering prep sports.

“That was fun! I like playing against really nice people!”

The entire match, from start to finish, speaks well of Daigneault and Woods, their coaches and their families.

Next time you read about something cruddy happening in the world of sports, let your mind wander back to this day, this match, and rinse your mind out. Let the sunshine in.

Be like Bree. Be like Renee. Be a winner.

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Kameryn St Onge teamed with Kenzi LaRue for a win at fourth doubles Friday, lifting CHS to a 4-3 win. (John Fisken photo)

   Kameryn St Onge teamed with Kenzi LaRue for a win at fourth doubles Friday, lifting Coupeville’s girls’ tennis squad to a 4-3 league win. (John Fisken photo)

There were wild twists and turns and unexpected detours.

And that was just getting the two teams together for a match.

Once Coupeville and Chimacum finally hit the tennis court Friday, it capped a wild 24 hours.

In a matter of hours Thursday, the match went from being on, to being postponed two weeks due to transportation issues, to being suddenly restored to its original date and time.

So, of course, that’s how the match itself played out, as the Wolves roared to three straight wins, took a step back with three straight losses, then won the match 4-3 on the basis of a victory from a doubles duo seeking its first win of the season.

When Kenzi LaRue and Kameryn St Onge exited their home court bearing a straight-sets win at fourth doubles, they were the final players still on the court.

Did they know they were playing to break a tie and put Coupeville into sole possession of first-place in the 1A Olympic League standings?

I kind of doubt it, since there seemed to be absolutely, positively no tension in their mid-match strut.

Or, they’re just super cool and composed at all times.

One of the two.

With LaRue wildly swatting bugs between points, St Onge skipping across the court after a particularly nice serve, or the duo repeatedly bumping rackets with enough fury to make onlookers think they would bust them, the CHS sophomores finished the day as unexpected stars.

The victory lifts the Wolf netters to 1-0 in league play, 2-3 overall and puts them atop Chimacum (1-1) and Klahowya (0-1) as they seek to defend their league title.

Coupeville came out looking for the rout, as their first two doubles teams were on and off the court in about the time it took their parents to unfold their chairs at court-side.

Toss in a win at second singles for Sydney Autio (over Coupeville Sports favorite non-Wolf athlete, Port Townsend’s eternally-smiling Amelia Breithaupt, who joins Chimacum for tennis) and the Wolves looked unbeatable.

Until, one by one, the remaining three matches still on court all began to go Chimacum’s way.

Stalking along the fence line, Coupeville coach Ken Stange never betrayed any nervousness as the match went from 3-0 to 3-1 to 3-2 to 3-3, but his voice reached a new, low growl as he verbally put the spurs to his final doubles duo.

It worked, with St Onge serving efficiently and LaRue dropping in a couple of sweet winners while their teammates gazed on, offering moral support as the rain clouds started to creep in around the edges.

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st SinglesValen Trujillo lost to Sophia Thurston 6-4, 6-3

2nd SinglesSydney Autio beat Amelia Breithaupt 6-4, 6-3

3rd SinglesBree Daigneault lost to Renee Woods 6-3, 6-2

1st DoublesSage Renninger/Payton Aparicio beat Amy Plastow/Emma Craighead 6-0, 6-1

2nd DoublesMcKenzie Bailey/Jazmine Franklin beat Tessa Rasmussen/Jordyn Johnson 6-1, 6-0

3rd doubles Julianne Sem/Maggie Crimmins lost to Marley Music/Aurora Plunkett 6-1, 6-0

4th DoublesKameryn St Onge/Kenzi LaRue beat Emily Calkins/Alex Solomon 6-2, 6-2

JV:

5th DoublesJulianne Sem/Maggie Crimmins beat Lacey/Natalie 6-0

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Sydney Autio won in straight sets Thursday one of two Coupeville victories. (John Fisken photo)

   Sydney Autio won in straight sets Thursday one of two Coupeville victories. (John Fisken photo)

Undeniable progress.

Retaking the courts after a two-week break, the Coupeville High School girls’ tennis team went toe-to-toe with one of the best net programs in the state Thursday and held its own.

While the Wolves fell 5-2 to perennial power South Whidbey while playing in Langley, that was two matches better than the first time they met this season.

“We performed much better than we did the last time we played South Whidbey,” said Coupeville coach Ken Stange. “Picking up a couple of wins was good.

“More importantly, we were competitive in most of the matches,” he added. “South Whidbey has an excellent team. Luckily, we won’t face them at districts!”

Coupeville (1-3) returns to action quickly, hosting the combined forces of Chimacum/Port Townsend Friday afternoon (3 PM) in a 1A Olympic League match.

Complete Thursday results:

Varsity:

1st SinglesValen Trujillo lost to Bailey Gochanour 7-5, 6-2

2nd SinglesSydney Autio beat Anna Lynch 6-2, 6-4

3rd SinglesBree Daigneault lost to Alex Foode 6-2, 6-1

4th SinglesMaggie Crimmins lost to Lucy Clements 6-0, 6-0

1st DoublesPayton Aparicio/Sage Renninger lost to Iona Rohan/Clara Martin 7-6 (10-8), 7-5

2nd DoublesMcKenzie Bailey/Jazmine Franklin beat Kara Mead/Carmen Warwick 6-4, 7-5

3rd DoublesJulianne Sem/Julia Borges lost to Taylor Hamilton/Jing Wu 6-0, 6-1

JV:

4th Doubles — Kameryn St Onge/Kenzi LaRue lost to Katherine/Macey 8-7

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Kenzi LaRue (John Fisken photos)

   Kenzi LaRue is so excited to smash this winner, she starts to jump with joy midway through her swing. (John Fisken photos)

Bree Dagineault

   Sunglasses in place, Bree Dagineault ignores the glowing orb in the sky and focuses on the fuzzy tennis ball bouncing her way.

Sage Renninger

  With a mere flick of her wrist, Sage Renninger deposits another winner in the bank.

Bailey

   Rabid tennis fans (l to r) Donna, Mollie and McKayla Bailey take a moment away from watching their favorite player (McKenzie Bailey) to snap a family photo.

Payton

Payton Aparicio unleashes Hell. Or a really nice serve. One of the two…

Kameryn St Onge

   Silhouetted against a chain-link background, Kameryn St Onge displays laser-like focus as she and doubles partner Maggie Crimmins roll to a win.

The weather was nice and the tennis even nicer.

Taking advantage of a truly sunny, dare I say warm, spring afternoon Monday, the Coupeville High School girls’ tennis team rolled to a big win under the ever-clicking eye of the wanderin’ cameraman.

The pics above are courtesy John Fisken.

To see more, and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes, pop over to:

http://www.nw1a2bathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11049&league=5&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=45&sport=0

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Maggie Crimmins teamed with Kameryn St Onge to pull out a doubles win Monday. (John Fisken)

Maggie Crimmins teamed with Kameryn St Onge to pull out a doubles win Monday. (John Fisken)

Everything went to plan.

Playing on its home courts Monday, the Coupeville High School girls’ tennis squad enjoyed sunny skies, warm weather, no breeze and a chance to paddle an opponent.

Facing a Friday Harbor team that was very young and very much in the development stage, the Wolves romped to a 6-1 win, their first official victory of the season.

Coupeville now sits at 1-1, with two matches (a 3-1 lead over Granite Falls and a 3-3 tie with Klahowya) still waiting to be finished later in the season.

The Wolves hit the road Wednesday to face Island arch-rival South Whidbey in Langley, then sit until Apr. 12.

Facing off with a green Wolverine squad (more than half its players are newcomers and the coach is in his first season), Coupeville put them down quickly.

Only two varsity matches resembled anything close to a battle.

Playing pro sets instead of the normal best two-of-three sets format to allow Friday Harbor time to ankle to the ferry, Coupeville dropped two or fewer games in five of seven contests.

Best moments:

Valen Trujillo dropping a series of lobs over her opponents head, artfully using her shot-making skills to baffle her foe.

Bree Daigneault rolling her eyes way into the back of her head and moaning “Moooooooooooommmmm, you’re making me nervous,” and then immediately proving she wasn’t really all that nervous by whipping a winner down the line.

The entire CHS squad proving once again it is the kindest, politest, most considerate tennis squad I have ever witnessed, stopping to compliment their opponents on almost every shot, even when the Wolves were rolling.

When I played at Tumwater High School back in the day, we took great delight in hitting our own teammates during practice and once set off a near-riot while in Aberdeen.

Monday, almost to a girl, the Wolves went out of their way to personally thank the Friday Harbor girls for making the trip to Whidbey.

Kids today, so much classier than we ever were…

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st singlesValen Trujillo beat Morgan Timmons 8-0

2nd singlesSydney Autio beat Alli Benz 8-1

3rd singlesBree Dagineault beat Madeline King 8-2

1st doublesPayton Aparicio/Sage Renninger beat Jillian Urbach/Lucy Urbach 8-0

2nd doublesJazmine Franklin/McKenzie Bailey beat Midi Thomas/Mariah Dannibar 8-2

3rd doublesMaggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge beat Katy Kalseth/Joely Loucks 8-6

4th doubles Julia Borges/Julianne Sem lost to Morgan Timmons/Isabelle Brown 8-3

JV:

5th doublesKenzi LaRue/Jazmine Franklin lost to Yasmin Sara/Calina DePue 6-4

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