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Archive for the ‘Middle School’ Category

(John Fisken photos)

   Audrianna Shaw gets her whole body into her hit. (John Fisken photos)

Chandelle Schoonover

Coral Caveness and Chandell Schoonover (9) plot strategy.

Lita

   Lita Woollet, a highly-accomplished scrapper on the wrestling mat, is ready to rumble on the hardwood.

high five

   Ella Colwell (18) and Samantha Streitler exchange high fives after a successful point.

serve

Caveness fires up a lethal serve.

Genna

   Before taking the court Genna Wright gets a family portrait with her grandparents/biggest fans, Ron and Gretchen Smith.

team

Finding ways to kill time between matches.

The future is coming, one spike at a time.

Coupeville’s younger volleyball players are busy tearing up the court right now at the middle school level, anxious to emulate their high-flying role models on the first-place high school squad.

As they played Thursday at home against Chimacum, photographer John Fisken snapped away, capturing a mix of 7th and 8th grade action.

To see all of his photos (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/MSVB-20161006-Coupeville-vs-Ch/

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Dakota Eck tears off some yardage against Forks Wednesday afternoon. (John Fisken photos)

   Dakota Eck tears off some yardage against Forks Wednesday afternoon. (John Fisken photos)

Logan Wertz

Logan Wertz is ready to rumble.

Cade Golden

Wolf QB Cade Golden triggers the offense.

receiver

Damon Stadler checks his positioning before the snap.

Jake Mitten

Jake Mitten looks for an opening, any opening against a tough Spartans defense.

Trystan Ford

Trystan Ford anchors the line.

OK, let’s get this out of the way quickly and then move on.

Losing 50-0 is not a great thing.

Hopefully though, it can be a lesson, a building block for the future.

That’s the hope of Coupeville Middle School football coaches, who saw their team, made up of mainly 7th graders, get mashed by visiting Forks Wednesday afternoon.

The Spartans, whose roster is awash with 8th graders, dominated from the opening kickoff. Literally.

Sweeping up the ball in his own end zone, Forks’ returner spun back onto the field, cartwheeled towards the right sideline, then strolled 100+ yards the other way, coming into contact with (and getting away from) every one of the Wolf defenders.

Things went downhill pretty quickly from there, with Coupeville trailing 22-0 after one quarter and 44-0 at the half.

A running clock kept things from getting further out of hand after the break, though the Wolves came within a dropped pass of finally busting into the end zone on the game’s final play.

While the Wolves were pasted pretty good and fell to 0-2, head coach Bob Martin found a positive in the play of his quarterback, Cade Golden, who completed passes to Dakota Eck, Daniel Barajas, Ben Smith and Jake Mitten.

Damon Stadler also had a strong kickoff return, coming within one tackler of busting it for a quick six.

To see photos from other CHS and CMS sports events (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/

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The future of Wolf football is a bright one, with Jake Mitten carrying the ball. (John Fisken photos)

   With Jake Mitten rumbling, the future of Wolf football is bright. (John Fisken photos)

Dylan Estes

Dylan Estes (9) can not be stopped. End of discussion.

Alexis Reimers

   CMS volleyball star Alexis Reimers (center), Cole Collins (far right) and friends show off a poster supporting their classmates.

face

“Come with me if you want to live!”

Dakota Eck

   A Sequim player thinks he’s going to wrap up Dakota Eck (42), but, SPOILER ALERT, the Wolf running back got away.

The future is here.

Kicking off their season on a sunny fall Wednesday, the Coupeville Middle School football squad put in strong work, while providing wandering paparazzi with plenty of photo ops.

The pics above come to us courtesy John Fisken.

To see more (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/MSFB-20160928-Coupeville-vs-Se/

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Ben Smith, seen here last season, was one of several Wolves to rip off strong runs in Coupeville's first game. (Deb Smith photo)

   Ben Smith, seen here last season, was one of several Wolves to rip off strong runs Wednesday in Coupeville’s first game. (Deb Smith photo)

Dylan Estes will wreck a dude.

The Coupeville Middle School football player is far from the biggest player on the field, but he makes up in heart what he might currently be shy of in inches.

That was on display several times Wednesday during the Wolves season opener against visiting Sequim, most notably when Estes chased down, then body-slammed a receiver twice his size.

Hustle plays like that, and a late offensive surge, were the highlights for CMS, as it fell 36-12 to a much-larger foe.

Coupeville rallied for both of its touchdowns in the fourth quarter, refusing to go down quietly.

Jake Mitten, who led the Wolf attack all afternoon, used a drop-the-shoulder-and-inflict-some-damage running style to rip off Coupeville’s first touchdown of the season, on an eight-yard plunge.

He then successfully pulled off an on-sides kick, allowing the Wolves to get the ball right back.

CMS quarterback Cade Golden promptly took advantage of the opportunity, guiding the Wolves down the field, before hooking up with Sage Downes on a touchdown pass to the left corner.

On the scoring play, Golden avoided a potential sack, then dropped the ball right onto Downes fingertips, giving the Wolf receiver a perfect ball to snag.

Sequim put the game away in the second quarter, using a very effective passing attack centered around a tall receiver, punching in three of their five touchdowns.

Coupeville’s own passing attack picked up the pace as the game went on, with Golden hooking up with Mitten several times.

A number of dropped passes muted the Wolf attack, however.

Along with Mitten, who ran like a battering ram on the same field where his uncle, Jason McFadyen, led the 1990 CHS gridiron squad to an undefeated season, Coupeville got big runs from Dakota Eck and Ben Smith.

Mitten was a two-way warrior, also dropping the Sequim QB on back-to-back plays where he bull-rushed the line and the blockers melted away under his assault.

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Prescott

   Chelsea Prescott, rampaging spiker, lethal server and destroyer of noses. (John Fisken photos)

Jaelyn Crebbin

   CMS 7th grader Jaelyn Crebbin, daughter of former Wolf volleyball guru Toni Crebbin, played stellar defense Monday in a straight-sets win.

The message has been sent loud and clear — enter Cow Town at your own risk.

By the time the Coupeville Middle School spikers were done blistering visiting Port Townsend Monday, the Wolves had a pair of straight-set wins and a huge psychological edge over one of their closest competitors.

The punctuation on the rout came courtesy Chelsea Prescott’s lethal serving arm, which inadvertently left half the gym dotted in blood.

And while the destruction was unintended, as the CMS 8th grader crushed a serve off of the face of a hapless rival by accident, the image will linger long after Athletic Director Willie Smith finished posing as Mr. Clean to mop up blood spatters.

Like a runaway volleyball exploding off of a delicate nose, the day’s matches were quick, brutal and liable to mentally scar the Port Townsend players for years.

The Wolf 7th graders rolled to a 25-17, 25-12, 25-11 win, then turned the court over to the 8th graders, who upped the ante, cruising 25-5, 25-20, 25-18.

Both CMS squads are a flawless 2-0 heading into their first road match, which comes Thursday when Coupeville heads to Stevens.

Kicking things off hot, the 7th graders rolled out to a 5-0 lead in the first set behind the pinpoint serves of Kylie Van Velkinburgh and never looked back.

At an age where getting the serve over the net is priority one, the Wolf ace, smoking the ball left-handed, is already miles ahead of that, aiming for winners instead.

If an imaginary foot fault hadn’t derailed her, Van Velkinburgh might have pulled off the full Lauren Rose (the CHS junior rolled off 20 straight points on serve earlier this season in a high school match) and never given Port Townsend a chance.

Not that the visitors had much luck, as Samantha Streitler moved into the spotlight for the Wolves, dropping a tip for a sweet winner before ripping off several nice serves of her own.

Kiara Contreras topped both of her teammates, however, with a bullet of a serve that scattered Port Townsend players like so many bowling pins.

Utilizing a deep, talented bench, CMS ran in completely different units in all three sets, with numerous players getting a chance to sparkle.

After big hits from Chloe LaRue in the first, the second set delivered Jaelynn Crebbin (a great save while dangerously close to the net), Alexis Reimers (two winners) and the sniper serves of Izzy Wells, Abby Mulholland and Anya Leavell.

Set three featured Angelina Gebhard (a nasty ace) and Noelle Daigneault moving to the forefront.

Daigneault had the shot of the match, spinning a winner over the net even as the backlash knocked her off her feet.

Skidding to a halt after sliding several feet, she looked upwards in wonder at what she had wrought, even as her teammates mobbed her.

The nightcap was a case of total domination, even before Prescott started randomly exploding people’s faces.

Port Townsend had no answer for big-hitting Morgan Pease, never-say-die Genna Wright or Prescott, always fond of using the angles with her slice ‘n dice spikes.

Savannah Smith was on point at the service stripe, as always, while Jaimee Masters put the match away early with a nine-point explosion in which none of Port Townsend’s returns made it back over the net.

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