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Only two 1A volleyball players currently have more assists than Coupeville junior Scout Smith. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Everyone is chipping in.

As the Coupeville High School volleyball squad preps for its biggest match of the still-young season — a first-place showdown in Shoreline Tuesday against King’s — the Wolf spikers boast a flawless 5-0 record.

They’re doing it by getting solid contributions from everyone on the roster, from Chelsea Prescott ripping off wicked serves to Emma Smith dominating at the net.

Five matches in, that duo accounts for the top slot in seven of ten statistical categories, with Prescott tops in digs, aces, service points and service percentage.

Emma Smith is #1 in kill percentage, blocks and hitting percentage, while Scout Smith (assists), Maya Toomey-Stout (kills) and Emma Mathusek (service returns) each top a single category.

Three of those Wolves are also among the best in all of 1A in a stat category, with Scout Smith leading the way at #3 in assists.

 

Stats through Oct. 1:

 

Matches Played:

Hannah Davidson 5
Emma Mathusek 5
Ashley Menges 5
Chelsea Prescott 5
Emma Smith 5
Scout Smith 5
Maya Toomey-Stout 5
Zoe Trujillo 4
Lucy Sandahl 2
Raven Vick 1
Maddie Vondrak 1

Kills:

Toomey-Stout 52 (#10 in 1A)
E. Smith 48
Menges 27
Davidson 23
Prescott 17
Trujillo 3
S. Smith 2
Mathusek 1

Kill Percentage:

E. Smith 44.9
Menges 33.9
Davidson 31.1
Mathusek 25.0
Trujillo 25.0
Toomey-Stout 24.1
Prescott 17.5
S. Smith 13.3

Hitting Percentage:

E. Smith .299 (#4 in 1A)
Davidson .122
Toomey-Stout .051
Menges .049

Digs:

Prescott 68
Toomey-Stout 54
Mathusek 47
Menges 36
S. Smith 28
E. Smith 14
Davidson 9
Trujillo 1
Vick 1

Blocks:

E. Smith 12
S. Smith 6
Menges 4
Davidson 3

Service Returns:

Mathusek 90
Toomey-Stout 89
Menges 56
Prescott 56
Davidson 5

Assists:

S. Smith 141 (#3 in 1A)
Menges 15
E. Smith 4
Prescott 3
Davidson 2
Mathusek 1
Toomey-Stout 1

Serving Percentage:

Prescott 91.9
S. Smith 91.3
Toomey-Stout 90.0
Davidson 89.5
E. Smith 89.0
Menges 87.3
Trujillo 83.3
Vick 66.7
Sandahl 50.0

Service Points:

Prescott 50
S. Smith 49
E. Smith 46
Menges 39
Toomey-Stout 29
Davidson 15
Vick 2
Sandahl 1
Trujillo 1

Service Aces:

Prescott 20
Menges 17
E. Smith 15
S. Smith 11
Toomey-Stout 9
Davidson 3
Sandahl 1

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Freshman Kylie Van Velkinburgh and the Coupeville JV volleyball squad played strongly Saturday at a tourney in Oak Harbor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

No fear.

Playing against much-bigger schools Saturday, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad more than held its own at a tournament in Oak Harbor.

The Wolves, repping one of the smallest 1A schools in the state, went spike-to-spike with rivals from larger classifications, ultimately winning five of nine sets.

CHS finished second in pool play, sweeping two sets from 2A Cedarcrest, while splitting sets with 3A Marysville Pilchuck and 4A Mount Vernon.

Advancing on to the single-elimination championship bracket, the Wolves pushed 4A Kamiak to the brink before bowing out in a hard-fought three-set rumble.

“Good tournament for the JV,” said Coupeville coach Chris Smith. “Overall good play from our team.”

Lucy Sandahl, Zoe Trujillo, Maddie Vondrak and the rampaging Vick sisters, Raven and Willow, carried the team on their back, but Smith was able to give quality floor time to everyone in uniform.

Anya Leavell and Abby Mullholland split time at middle while Jaimee Masters and Abby Meyers shared time at libero.

Kylie Van Velkinburgh and Ivy Leedy pulled duty on the front row, with Noelle Daigneault firing away from the service stripe.

The stat sheet was fairly balanced, with Trujillo (16 kills, nine digs and seven aces), Sandahl (36 assists, 15 aces) and Vondrak (15 kills, 6 digs) topping the charts.

Raven Vick whacked seven kills and went low for eight digs, while Willow Vick accumulated four kills, three digs and six aces.

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Sofia Peters was on point as a server Thursday for Coupeville Middle School volleyball. (Photo courtesy Paula Peters)

The Coupeville Middle School girls volleyball team faced two opponents Thursday afternoon.

One was host Granite Falls, the other was the weather … inside the gym.

“The 8th grade girls seemed to be in a trance in their two matches tonight,” said CMS coach Casie Greve. “Granite Falls’ gym was muggy and hot, with no ventilation or air conditioning.

“We sacrificed timeouts for water breaks, and the heat contributed to a lack of focus and low morale.”

The Wolf 8th grade varsity snapped up the opening set 25-18, then faded a bit, falling 25-13, 25-11, while the CMS JV was swept 25-13, 25-4.

While her teams came up on the short end of the score, Greve emerged (gratefully) from the steam room, I mean gym, pleased with how her players responded.

That covers both their play on the court, and how they are interacting with each other.

“If we look at the start of the season overall, they’ve been playing an excellent game and the rallies have been impressive,” she said.

“A celebration is that we have been coordinating our cheers on the sidelines to support the team and it sounds great when you’re on the court,” Greve added. “They all have shown great camaraderie.”

 

7th grade:

The younger Wolf squads were swept away in straight sets, with the JV falling 25-11, 25-17 and the varsity being toppled 25-7, 25-10, 25-8.

CMS coach Sarah Lyngra praised “notable performances in pass positioning” from Skylar Parker and Hayley Thomas, and “great serving” from Sofia Peters.

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Wolf junior Hannah Davidson had seven kills Wednesday as Coupeville High School volleyball rallied for a five-set win over Granite Falls. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The better team won Wednesday.

It just took a lot longer to get there than we all might have expected.

Coming off an epic, emotion-packed, five-set win the night before against their arch-rivals, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad looked dazed, disorientated and out of sorts for the first two sets against visiting Granite Falls.

But the Wolves are undefeated for two reasons – they have considerable talent and they don’t give in easily.

Digging deep and avoiding a stunning upset, Coupeville rallied for a 20-25, 21-25, 25-12, 25-22, 15-9 win, sending their vocal fans home with relieved smiles on their faces, and quelling at least some of their coach’s angina.

“I’m extremely excited we turned it around,” said a still somewhat frazzled Cory Whitmore. “It is very easy to let things get away when you’re shell-shocked, but we displayed a lot of fight and heart.

“That will be very important as we go forward,” he added. “We expect a lot of ourselves, and we expect to win, and sometimes you have to find a way to do that … and we did.”

The win lifts Coupeville to 3-0 in North Sound Conference play, 5-0 overall.

The Wolves sit in a tie atop the league with defending 1A state champ King’s (3-0, 5-1), which swept South Whidbey Wednesday in straight sets.

The Knights lone loss was a four-set defeat at the hands of North Creek, a 4A Kingco school currently sitting with a flawless 7-0 record.

Sole possession of first-place in the NSC will be on the line next Tuesday, Oct. 2, when Coupeville travels to Shoreline for the first of two regular-season meetings with their private school foes. King’s comes to Whidbey Oct. 23.

Wednesday’s warm-up match became a wake-up, after Coupeville was caught sleep-walking for close to an hour.

The less said about the first two sets, the better, as very little went positively for the Wolves as they tried to adjust to a team with a unique playing style.

After facing a hard-hitting South Whidbey squad Tuesday, the Wolves ran up against a Granite Falls unit which dinked, poked, blooped and tipped the ball all night, making up for a lack of raw aggression by keeping everything in play.

CHS trailed from start to finish in the first set, and had just a (very) brief 1-0 lead in the second frame before that also got away from them.

Hannah Davidson had several nice tips for winners in the early going, but while big hitters Emma Smith, Ashley Menges and Maya Toomey-Stout were able to lash a few sizzling spikes, they were few and far between.

Something finally seemed to spark for Coupeville in the third set, as Scout Smith led off things by becoming the first Wolf to make a sustained run at the service stripe.

With Menges and Emma Smith pulling off “surprise, you thought the ball was going that way, but it really was going the other way” tips, Scout Smith reeled off six straight points to open the set.

After that, the Wolves began to drop the hammer more frequently, whacking winners off of their rivals arms, legs and torsos, erasing most of the smiles on the Granite side of the net.

Unable to blunt Coupeville’s power game, or match it, the visitors backpedaled, continued to throw junk in the air, and watched in horror as their advantage rapidly slipped away.

Zoe Trujillo popped into the game and immediately connected on a winner, Davidson continued to be a strong force up front and Toomey-Stout had the cannon fully firing by that point.

Coupeville’s service game, which had been uncharacteristically off in the early going, clicked from the third set on, as well.

Chelsea Prescott zinged a wicked ace that smacked the floor and curled around a would-be receiver, before Menges displayed some prime-time power.

One of “Smashley’s” serves exploded underneath a rival’s feet with so much fury it marred the glossy finish on the gym floor and set the Granite player’s shoelaces on fire.

The fourth set was chock full of raw power, 99.3% of it coming from Coupeville’s gunners, though the Tigers made things interesting by rallying from a 20-12 deficit to knot things up at 21-21.

Granite thought it had retaken the lead on the very next point, but celebrated prematurely, as Emma Mathusek made a stunning dig on a ball that looked unplayable.

With a flick of her wrists, the unsung Wolf junior, who does all the back row dirty work that makes the highlight reel kills possible, sent the ball curling back over the net, where it sliced through three defenders and dropped in for a monumental point.

With the bleeding stopped, Coupeville rode an ace from Toomey-Stout and a kill from Trujillo to force a fifth set and completely deflate the last bit of air out of Granite.

The visitors did briefly hold a 3-1 lead in the final frame, but a couple of sweet tips from Prescott pulled the Wolves back even, then Toomey-Stout started killin’ girls.

The longer the match went, the harder “The Gazelle” seemed to hit, and her spikes in the fifth set were of the type which ripped out souls and sent the Wolf student cheering section into hysterics.

The yells just got louder when Lucy Sandahl made a splashy cameo, launching a wicked service ace to push CHS to the edge of victory.

And the final blow?

Vintage Toomey-Stout, flying up the middle, launching airborne, hanging there for an eternity, then introducing her clenched fist to the hapless ball, blasting a match-closing spike right through the heart of the Granite defense.

It was the 15th and final kill of her night, helping her top a balanced stat sheet which included 12 kills from Emma Smith, seven from Davidson and five from Prescott.

Mathusek racked up 18 digs, Scout Smith was the motor which made the Wolves run with 35 silky assists, and Prescott paced CHS at the service line with five aces, while Menges and Emma Smith added four apiece.

 

JV nipped:

Missing several ill players, the Wolf young guns took the opening set 25-17, then faded, falling 25-16, 25-10.

The loss drops the JV to 1-2 in league play, 2-3 overall.

The opening set was a mix of big hits, with Maddie Vondrak, Trujillo and Willow Vick hammering away, while Vondrak used her jumping ability and long fingers to rise above the net and continually snuff out Granite shots.

Jaimee Masters put the set on ice with a strong run at the service line, and things seemed to be completely in Coupeville’s favor.

It wasn’t to be, though, as Granite completely flipped the switch after that, limiting the Wolf highlights to a couple more put-aways by Trujillo and two perfectly-lobbed running tips by Vick.

 

Superheroes live amongst us:

The best play of the night didn’t come in either match, but right at the tail end of warm-ups for the varsity match.

Coupeville had its HUDL camera set up right behind the court on a tripod, and someone, or something, slammed into it, knocking the camera free.

As it fell towards the unforgiving gym floor, a half-scream went up, several Wolves lurched in slow motion, and then Vondrak, looking every bit the part of a superhero, came flying past multiple teammates and snagged the equipment mere centimeters away from it kissing the floor.

And then promptly slow-strutted away, possibly whispering “I’m Batman!!” under her breath as she went.

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Maya Toomey-Stout lashed a team-high 15 kills Tuesday as Coupeville volleyball pulled out a five-set win at South Whidbey. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

18 years to the day she was born, Emma Smith committed cold-blooded murder.

And her mom loved every freakin’ second of it.

When you go to carve the tombstone, include the name of every South Whidbey High School volleyball fan, who all went deathly quiet at the end of Tuesday night’s varsity volleyball match against visiting Coupeville.

The Falcon faithful hooted and hollered, and sported some classic Hawaiian shirts, but even the brightly-colored duds couldn’t save their team, because when Smith’s final, artful tip dropped to the floor and skidded away, it capped a five-set war and a major win for the Wolves.

Winning a battle of undefeated teams, CHS clambered back on the bus for the short, joyous ride home wearing grins, carrying birthday cupcakes and celebrating a 19-25, 25-20, 25-21, 24-26, 15-12 win.

The victory lifts the Wolves to 2-0 in North Sound Conference play, keeping them in a first-place tie with defending 1A state champs King’s, and 4-0 overall.

It also leaves them as the only fall sports team in the new six-team league, in any sport, to still be undefeated.

“I’m thrilled for the girls and this hard-fought win,” said Coupeville coach Cory Whitmore. “They have been putting in an incredible amount of work and preparation, so to earn a win on the road is very exciting.

“I thought that mentally we handled what they threw at us very well, able to turn around and come back at them with an attack of our own,” he added. “We did strong and smart work from the service line, attacking weakness and difficult areas, helping us to limit their attacks at the net.”

Coming on the heels of an epic JV match which left a buzz lingering in the gym, the teams came out fired up and ready to rumble from the first serve.

Back-to-back big plays, one a missile of a spike off the fingertips of Maya Toomey-Stout, the other a scorching service ace from Ashley Menges, helped stake Coupeville to an early lead.

But after Chelsea Prescott came rumbling in from the side to pound home a put-away to stretch the margin to 10-7, the Falcons regained control.

A long, successful run at the service stripe, and some teeth-rattling kills from South Whidbey senior Emma Leggett, fired up the local student section, and once the Falcons retook the lead, they never gave it back.

Menges, operating as her alter ego, “Smashley,” did her best to keep the Wolves in the set, thrashing and slicing the ball, while Emma Smith froze the defense with a note-perfect tip, but it wasn’t quite enough.

Coupeville only dropped one set across its first three matches, but if losing the first set hurt, it never showed on the faces of the Wolves.

Instead, they immediately went to work, with big winners from Emma Smith, Toomey-Stout and Prescott, all off of flawless sets from the nimble Scout Smith, who was everywhere at once.

A back-and-forth second set hung in the balance, with CHS up just 19-18, when the birthday girl made her presence felt.

Stopping a South Whidbey rally cold, Emma Smith rose up above the net with a mighty bound and pasted the ball off the back line for a winner, then strolled away, casually flicking a loose strand of hair over her ear, eyes blazing with fury and joy as Menges rushed to bear-hug her.

That play set off Coupeville’s most sustained run of the night, as it closed out the second set (on a knee-shredding spike from an exuberant Toomey-Stout), then surged to take a tight third frame.

Hannah Davidson was a key player in that third set, rising up to help turn away several would-be Falcon winners with key stuffs.

With both teams coming full tilt, punching, counter-punching, then finding a little more gas to swing from the heels, the fourth set was brutal, and beautiful.

The lead flipped back and forth while Emma Smith and Menges tried to out-do each other in the ferocity of their kills, only to have Toomey-Stout literally go and tattoo a ball off a rival’s forehead, dropping the Falcon to her knees.

Not to be outdone, Prescott, who overcame a wayward contact lens, dropped in a quirky hook shot that crawled through the air at the speed Matthew McConaughey drawls his words, before skipping away for a point.

Her next winner? A spike that, like Toomey-Stout’s bullet, bounced off a Falcon noggin and knocked some brain cells loose.

Even with all that, however, South Whidbey eked out a set win, even if it took them three ties to nab the deciding point against the pesky Wolves.

If the fifth and deciding set was the shortest, as the high school mercy rule dictated it only go to 15 and not 25, it still managed to pack in just as many plot twists and stunning reversals as the first four frames.

At first, the Falcons, riding a high coming out of the fourth set, seemed like they would run away with things, jumping out to a quick 5-2 lead.

The SWHS student section was rockin’.

But “Smashley” was … smashing.

Menges laced a winner that sliced off a few fingers as it carved its path of destruction, before Davidson and Scout Smith teamed up on a stuff, and the Wolves were on the comeback trail.

Cue the angina and the fingernail-chewin’, as the two squads fought through five ties down the final stretch run.

The last stalemate came at 11-11, and it came courtesy Emma Smith, who buried a huge spike that tore up the right corner, exploding at the feet of a volunteer lineman who had been super-enthusiastic on pro-Falcon calls all night.

This time, not so happy.

Nice.

As good as her teammates had been around her all night — and they were very good, from Scout Smith doling out 27 assists to Emma Mathusek scraping 17 digs off the floor — in the final moments, it was time for the birthday girl to blow out all the candles by snuffing every last Falcon hope and dream.

She followed the spike with a stuff at the net to give CHS a lead it would never relinquish, and then came about as perfect a moment as you can get without operating off a script.

South Whidbey, down 14-12, put the ball into play, and the rally went on, and then on some more, 12 players fighting to their last drop of sweat.

In the stands, Konni Smith, her voice strained by a night of screaming for her daughter, suddenly found one final holler.

Because, out there on the court, Emma Smith, twirling into the air, arms above her, fingertips quivering with anticipation, found the ball in mid-flight, stopped time, and flicked the biggest shot she’s nailed in a career full of nailing big shots.

The ball hit the ground, the Falcons whiffed, Konni and associates lost their minds and Emma’s cool as a cucumber younger sister, Savannah, almost looked up from her phone.

Almost.

Down on the court, after the celebration, the hugs, the screams, and a few words from their busting-with-pride coach, the Wolves exited the gym the way they entered.

As a tightly-knit group of strong young women who are buying into their roles, sacrificing for each other and enjoying the ride, a win and a cupcake at a time.

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