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Casie Greve has stepped down as CMS 8th grade volleyball coach. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Casie Greve is leaving the gym, but not the school.

The popular Coupeville Middle School volleyball coach has stepped down after four seasons in the program.

Greve, who is an English teacher at CMS, is remaining at the school.

“She’s (just) moving into a different phase and she won’t have time to coach right now,” said Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith.

After stepping in as the 7th grade coach in 2015, Greve eventually moved up to coach the 8th grade team in recent years.

Her squads were always competitive, and her coaching laid the groundwork as Wolf players prepared to make the transition to the high school program.

Plus, she always responded to emails and was quick to deliver info, even when it probably seemed like I was nagging.

On the bench or in the classroom, Greve has always been first-rate, and we here at Coupeville Sports thank her and wish her the best.

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Coupeville senior Emma Smith capped her stellar prep career by being named a First-Team All-League pick by North Sound Conference volleyball coaches. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Scout Smith (left) and Maya Toomey-Stout (right) were also honored.

Coaches like ’em. They really like ’em.

Coupeville High School landed three All-Conference picks and the Coach of the Year when North Sound Conference volleyball gurus sat down to vote.

The Wolves, who finished second in league play at 7-3, trailing just defending state champ King’s, put senior middle blocker Emma Smith and junior outside hitter Maya Toomey-Stout on the 1st team.

Junior setter Scout Smith was tabbed as a 2nd team All-Conference nod, while Cory Whitmore was picked by his peers as the coach with the most.

Fifteen girls were honored, led by league MVP Dominique Kirton of King’s.

The All-Conference squads, presented in alphabetic order:

 

1st Team All-Conference:

Noelle Alberda – King’s – 10 – Middle Blocker
Emma Leggett – South Whidbey – 12 – Outside Hitter
Ava Mason – King’s – 11 – Setter
Baily McCutchen – King’s – 12 – Outside Hitter
Kaya Nelson – Cedar Park – 10 – Libero
Emma Smith – Coupeville – 12 – Middle Blocker
Maya Toomey-Stout – Coupeville – 11 – Outside Hitter

 

2nd Team All-Conference:

Emma Hodson – South Whidbey – 10 – Middle Blocker
Chloe Johnson – South Whidbey – 12 – Setter
Irena Korolenko – Cedar Park – 11 – Outside Hitter
Abigail Miller – Sultan – 10 – Outside Hitter
Jenny Rodenbaugh – Granite Falls – 11 – Middle
Adair Rosenau – King’s – 12 – Libero
Scout Smith – Coupeville – 11 – Setter

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Team, from first serve to last point. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The volleyball hung in the air for a brief, tantalizing moment.

One more chance, one more play, one more rally, one more opportunity to write a happy ending to this tale.

Then it was gone, the ball splashing down inches away from the net, squirting away between outstretched hands. A perfectly-placed tip for one team, and perfect agony for the other.

And with that, a season of joy came to a sudden close Tuesday for the Coupeville High School spikers, with the wrong team celebrating in the cramped Lynden Christian Middle School gym after a tense, thrilling, five-set, two-hour-plus loser-out playoff match.

In a brawl of fire and fury, of sensational saves and remarkable poise under pressure, Nooksack Valley, a battle-hardened 1A team which survived playing in a league chock-full of 2A and 3A schools, nipped the Wolves 25-19, 20-25, 23-25, 25-19, 15-13.

With that win, and a four-set romp over South Whidbey immediately afterwards, the Pioneers claimed the #3 seed from District 1, and advance to bi-districts Saturday, two wins away from a trip to state.

For the Wolves, for senior leaders Emma Smith and Ashley Menges, who gave everything they had to the program over the course of four seasons, and for the talented underclassmen who signal a bright future, the seasons ends.

Coupeville exits at 11-5, the third-straight season the Wolves have finished with double-digit wins under coach Cory Whitmore.

After dominating the Olympic League the past two seasons, CHS helped inaugurate the new North Sound Conference this year.

With three of six league teams having made the state tourney in 2017, including the champs, King’s, the level of play in their new home was greatly elevated, but the Wolves responded.

They swept a pair of matches from their Island rivals, were one of just three teams to take a set from King’s in the regular season, and claimed second-place in the standings.

Having split their first two matches at the district tourney Saturday (narrowly falling to Meridian before eliminating Cedar Park Christian), the Wolves headed back to Lynden Tuesday needing just one win to advance.

What they got with Nooksack was a full-on royal rumble, a brawl between two extraordinarily-even teams.

Time and again, players on both squads made truly startling saves, keeping rallies alive long after the odds said they should have ended.

If the same two squads meet tomorrow, it’s very likely Coupeville comes out on top.

Keep playing, World Series-style, in a best four-of-seven affair, and it’s anyone’s guess which team prevails.

The opening set was a perfect example, as the Wolves and Pioneers staged 10 ties, from 1-1 up to 14-14.

Maya Toomey-Stout got things poppin’ when she lofted a shot up and over the heads of the entire Nooksack defense, the ball seemingly headed out of bounds.

Instead, it suddenly tailed off — just as “The Gazelle” planned — miraculously dropping and catching the final flake of paint on the end line, causing the line judge to jump out of his shoes as the large Nooksack crowd wailed in unison.

From there, the opening set was a battle of attrition.

Scout Smith jumped high, then banked home a lil’ sky hook for a winner, Chelsea Prescott came roaring in from the left side to absolutely paste the air out of the ball on a spike, and Emma Smith used her long reach to flick the ball where the defense wasn’t.

Unfortunately, Nooksack was also adept at dropping little pokes and tips into the gaps, and the Pioneers swung things their way with an 11-5 run to break the 14-all tie.

While they weren’t happy about dropping the opening frame, the Wolves didn’t let it slow their roll.

Bouncing right back, with Emma Smith patrolling the skies ruthlessly, using the very top of her fingertips to snuff out would-be kills, CHS hung tough, then made its move.

Trailing 14-11, the Wolves went on a 5-0 run to reclaim the lead, then never gave it back.

Strong service runs from both of the Smith “sisters,” Scout and Emma, kick-started things, a couple of lasers from Toomey-Stout scattered the defense, then Coupeville got dynamic to seal the deal.

Two sensational saves on what should have been kills for Nooksack — one from Emma Mathusek, the other from the tag-team of Prescott and Scout Smith, who both punched the ball with outstretched fists — set up the Wolf big hitters.

Closing on a 14-6 run, the Wolves had the momentum, and they hammered the pedal through the metal in the third set.

Once they had the lead, and it came early at 2-1 when an Emma Smith block keyed a booming kill from Toomey-Stout, who leaped almost high enough to clear the net, they never gave it back.

Hannah Davidson, who was an artful tipper all night, sent one pretty winner skidding past the defense, but saved her best bit of ninja work for crunch time.

With Nooksack charging back from down 19-14 to knot things at 23-23, the collars on the shirts of Wolf coaches Whitmore and Chris Smith were tightening big time.

Enter Davidson, who stuffed a Nooksack shot to put CHS back in the lead, before pulling off a ballet move which ended with another tip winner, to seal the third set and set off a team-wide celebration.

Wolf bench players Raven Vick, Lucy Sandahl, Zoe Trujillo, Willow Vick and Maddie Vondrak, who were vocal all night, rushed to meet the incoming players and the party was on.

And then the party was off, as Nooksack came out to open the fourth set and played its best ball of the night.

Through three sets, Coupeville had won 69 points to 68 from the Pioneers, but things took a sickening turn as Nooksack surged out to a 15-6 lead.

Other than one spike on which Emma Smith cranked it up and opened a can of whup-ass on the ball, it was shaping up as a set to forget, or, maybe, one in which you take the film, burn it, and bury it in a landfill.

But, as they proved all season, these Wolves are resilient.

After a Nooksack serve sailed so long it almost left the gym, Coupeville handed the ball to Scout Smith, and the splendid setter promptly went off on the longest run on serve of any player, on either team, all night.

With some help from Prescott, who won a mid-air tip battle, forcing the ball up and over her rival’s hand, a little scrambling defense from a charged-up Menges and a lot of mashin’ by Emma Smith, the Wolves ran off seven straight points.

Scout Smith did most of her damage by making sure she kept her serves in play, then relying on her team’s attack, but “Scooter” also zipped one ace which ripped skin off of a Nooksack player’s unlucky hand.

The comeback, as unexpected and inspired as it was, never fully got over the hump, however.

Coupeville, which was being waxed, got back within a single point three times, with the final time coming at 17-16, but couldn’t regain the lead.

To give credit where it’s due, it wasn’t Wolf errors which denied them down the stretch in the fourth frame, but Nooksack winners.

The Pioneers came with everything they had, and it was just a little more than CHS wanted to give up.

And that was how the fifth, and final, set went down as well.

Toomey-Stout lashed a looping, curling streak of lightning that bit off the back end of the line for a winner, Davidson had yet another tip winner and Coupeville’s senior duo went out battling with everything they had.

Down 12-9 in a race to 15 points, the Wolves forced a 13-13 tie with Emma Smith and Menges firing serves which resulted in the final Wolf points of the season, and their stellar careers.

The stage was set for an emotional finale, and the teams delivered.

Two final plays, rallies which went back-and-forth and sucked the oxygen out of lungs on both sides of the net, and then it was over.

One team cried with joy, one group of fans screamed with glee.

If we knew the Nooksack girls personally, knew their stories, their hopes and dreams and plans for the future, and if their joy didn’t come at the expense of our town’s young women, it would probably be easy to be happy for them.

The Pioneers played their hearts out. They earned their win.

But this isn’t Nooksack Sports.

The team I watched play all season hails from Coupeville, and while I wanted a win for them, I also know this loss isn’t the end.

The 12 young women on this Wolf volleyball team are too talented, too bright, outgoing and intelligent, too full of potential, to have the rest of their lives defined by one volleyball match.

When they look back, in a few days, in a few months, in a few years, after they have conquered other worlds, and are achieving great things, I hope they remember several things.

What it felt like to be part of a team playing as one, each young woman pushing themselves to their limits, and sometimes beyond.

Playing through taped-up hands, hurting knees, aching backs, refusing to bend no matter the name on the front of the other team’s jersey.

The times and moments that were yours and only yours, that didn’t belong to the fans, or the parents, or your classmates.

The time spent on buses, on ferries, late-night trips when it was just you and your coaches and the bus driver, slashing through the night.

Tuesday night, as the team headed home, the bus stopped at a mall and the Wolves took over the food court, bouncing between Panda Express, Two Guys Burgers and Subway.

There were tears, there were giggles, there was sadness in a season ending, in the high school volleyball careers of Menges and Emma Smith coming to a close.

But there was also pride, in individual accomplishment and team achievement, and there was a closeness you don’t see with every team.

As they strolled back to their bus, dodging rain drops, but clumped together, forever a team, and not just a random group of individuals, one thing was obvious.

I was watching winners walk away, and no scoreboard will ever change that.

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Ja’Tarya Hoskins leads off a final batch of Wolf fall sports portraits. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Zoe Trujillo

Mica Shipley

Abby Mulholland

Keahi Sorrows

Coral Caveness

Noelle Daigneault

Isabel Hucke

Eryn Wood

The final batch.

At the start of the fall sports season, candid camera clicker John Fisken shot portraits of virtually every Coupeville High School athlete.

While a few Wolves were missing on their photo day, he managed to capture a solid 98.6% of those who turned out for soccer, cheer, cross country, tennis, volleyball and football.

And, over the course of the season, I managed to run just about every one of the portraits he sent me.

Today’s group, consisting of four cheerleaders, four spikers and one gridiron warrior, brings my mission to an end.

So with that, it’s on to winter, where, with just basketball, both of our jobs will take a lot less time and effort.

We think…

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Emma Smith threw down big hits from every angle Saturday as Coupeville volleyball pulled off a stunning come-from-behind win at the district tourney. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Jennifer Menges was vibrating in place.

Rocking back and forth on the hard wooden bleachers in the cramped Lynden Christian Middle School gym Saturday, her legs bouncing as she bit her bottom lip, arms tensing and un-tensing, she had just about reached her limit.

“I can’t freakin’ take this!!!!” she half-whispered.

Then, a moment later, as her daughter Ashley and her Coupeville High School volleyball teammates celebrated an improbable, incredible miracle win to keep their season alive, Jennifer’s smile exploded.

“Who am I kidding? I LOVE THIS!!!!!!” she giggled as Wolf moms pummeled each other, hugging away the stress and embracing the joy.

Down on the court, their daughters, having been two points from elimination only to rally like stone-cold killers, did the same.

Having pulled off a five-set revenge win against league rival Cedar Park Christian, the Wolves earned a split on day one of the two-day district tourney, and guaranteed themselves at least one more postseason match.

Coupeville, 11-4 after a four-set loss to Meridian, followed by their wild ride to victory against CPC, plays Nooksack Valley (7-9) in a 5 PM loser-out game Tuesday, Oct. 30 in Lynden.

Win, and the Wolves clinch a trip to bi-districts Nov. 3, while first returning to the court at 6:30 Tuesday to face the winner of South Whidbey (10-7) and Meridian (5-12) in a match to decide the #3 and #4 seeds from District 1.

Lynden Christian (14-2) and King’s (15-1), who have already clinched bi-district slots after winning both of their matches Saturday, play for the district title and the #1 and #2 seeds.

 

Tough loss to Meridian:

The Trojans entered the tourney with a losing record, but that’s based more on a small school playing in a cutthroat 1A/2A/3A league, than on their talent level.

Taking advantage of Coupeville errors, Meridian rolled to a 25-16, 23-25, 25-18, 25-23 win, putting the Wolves on the cusp of elimination.

For a brief second CHS looked locked in, jumping out to a quick 2-0 lead in the opening set thanks to two strong serves from Scout Smith and a hammered spike off the pain-inducing fingers of big hitter Emma Smith.

Then things lurched the other way, and didn’t get corrected for quite a bit.

Once the Trojans snatched their first lead, they relentlessly pecked away, getting two or three points to every one Coupeville put on the board.

Though, even then, the Wolves were often fighting two foes, as the scoreboard operator, who apparently couldn’t fathom that CHS was playing as the home team in both matches, spent much of the day awarding points to the wrong team.

With a strong Coupeville cheering section having made the trip to the hinterlands, the hootin’ and hollerin’ hit appropriately rowdy levels as the validity of the scoreboard was frequently, and loudly, called into question.

At one point, the head judge, up on her perch at the net, whipped around, cast a frosty look at the Cow Town brigade and snapped, “The score is correct!”

It was, once again, not.

While not being willing to offer an apology upon realizing she was wrong, the judge did refrain from speaking to, or even looking at, Wolf fans the rest of the match.

She did hunch her shoulders every time cries about the scoreboard came up after that, though, so we had that going for us, which was nice.

Even when the points were awarded correctly, however, the Wolf spikers couldn’t string enough of them together in a row to blunt Meridian’s charge.

Hannah Davidson, Chelsea Prescott, Scout Smith, Ashley Menges and Emma Smith all figured in blocks at the net, while Davidson nailed a gorgeous running tip for a winner, but it was too little to stem the tide.

Things changed for the better in the second set, but it took a moment.

Down 4-0 in the blink of an eye, CHS got on the scoreboard (well, not at first…) when Emma Smith floated through the air like a butterfly, then stung like a bee, dropping a dagger into an empty hole in the defense.

A tip winner from Maya Toomey-Stout forced the first of nine ties in the second frame, with the stalemates running from 6-6 to as late as 23-23.

Coupeville actually trailed as late as 20-18, before a mammoth spike from Emma Smith tore a gaping hole in Meridian’s willpower and kicked off a set-closing 7-3 run for the Wolves.

The senior captain launched missiles from all directions while playing in front of a large group of family, before Davidson punctuated things with a rolling spike to seal the set win.

With the match knotted at a set apiece, the Wolves grabbed the early lead in the third frame, but couldn’t hold on to it.

Prescott ripped off a Trojan arm with a slice ‘n dice spike, Menges went all “Smashley” on her foes and CHS pulled off an amazing save on a ball stuck in the net, but it wan’t quite enough. Once Meridian snatched the lead at 11-10, it closed the set convincingly.

The fourth set was a killer, in more ways than one.

After trailing almost the entire way, from 1-0 all the way to 19-12, Coupeville dug deep and found some magic.

With Prescott rifling serves and Emma Smith bashing the snot out of the ball, the Wolves went on an unexpected 7-0 tear to force a tie at 19 apiece.

Then CHS promptly fell back apart, giving up a 5-1 run to stake Meridian to a 24-20 lead.

And yet, the Wolves, in full Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde mode, almost pulled off another stunner, holding off three match points, thanks to a Toomey-Stout tip and back-to-back blazing serves o’ death by Menges.

In a match suddenly popping with fury and fire, the final point was less than anticlimactic, as the head judge, perhaps still frosty, dinged Coupeville on a questionable carry call.

 

Wild win against Cedar Park:

During the rest period between matches, the Wolves looked tired, hot, disappointed and melancholy, but not — and this is the biggie — defeated.

Facing a foe with which they had split two regular-season matches, Coupeville saved its best for last, somehow pulling out a 25-27, 25-13, 21-25, 25-23, 15-8 victory to inject new life into its season.

The stretch of play which will live large in memory came when the Wolves were at their lowest.

Trailing two sets to one, and down 23-18 in the fourth after a 6-1 Cedar Park run had erased a 17-17 tie and sent the two Eagles fans in attendance into hysterics, Coupeville needed a miracle.

Enter the duo of Davidson and Scout Smith.

Rising as one, even if the former is more than a few inches taller than the latter, the two Wolves caught a would-be CPC winner and rejected it right back in the face of the hitter.

That set off a set-closing 7-0 run, with Davidson scoring the final six points with precision serves and some ball-crunching help from Prescott, flying through the air and playing out of her mind.

With each Wolf point, the impossible became a bit more probable, the already vocal Coupeville fans made the small gym rock, and the Eagle spikers visibly pulled back within themselves.

Suddenly, Cedar Park wasn’t playing to win, but merely to survive, and the Wolves pounced on their prey, tearing them apart in huge, snapping bites.

Once it had the fourth set in hand, CHS used its superior power to brutalize the Eagles in the fifth frame.

Emma Smith lashed a winner, Prescott smoked a put-away, and Toomey-Stout ascended to a new dimension of sight and sound, in which each of her winners erupted in full technicolor and surround sound.

The moment when you knew the match was over, truly over, came not on the final point. Instead it came earlier, when Toomey-Stout bashed a ball off a rival player’s surprised face.

The Eagle staggered a few steps and remained on her feet, but her heart and soul departed her body at that precise moment, perhaps never to return.

Coupeville’s comeback, and the big bang unleashed by “The Gazelle,” capped a rubber match in which both teams came hard on every play, and unsung warriors like libero Emma Mathusek stood tall.

Or actually, dove, as Mathusek dug ball after ball off the wood floor, keeping alive rallies in which the teams were separated by just a small error here, a smaller miscue there.

The opening set featured 11 ties, with the first one not coming until 10-10, as the Wolves had to scrape to get back in the match.

Surprisingly, even though it felt like it, a check of the stats shows Coupeville never actually led in the opening frame. And, while it fought off two set points, there was no such luck when facing a third one.

The second set was a complete reversal, with Scout Smith compiling two strong runs at the service stripe, while Emma Smith smashed everything within a one-mile radius of her rapidly-descending fist.

Bolting out to a 6-1 lead, the Wolves stretched it out to 23-11 and cruised in with the win to knot the match at a set apiece.

Cedar Park snatched back the momentum, however, leading almost start to finish in the third set, despite stellar play at the net from Davidson.

All of which set up the fourth-set miracle, as Coupeville, behind big kills from Emma Smith, Prescott and Toomey-Stout and a sweet mini hook shot by Scout Smith, refused to give up.

With cameos from swing players Zoe Trujillo and Lucy Sandahl, who popped in to pound a few serves, and vocal bench support from Willow Vick, Maddie Vondrak and Raven Vick, the Wolves lived and died as a tightly-knit unit.

One team, one dream.

That they ultimately lived, thrived and get to play on, is just the cherry on top of the sundae.

 

The district bracket:

http://www.nscathletics.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2745&sport=10

The bi-district bracket:

http://www.nscathletics.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2737&sport=10

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