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Lucy Sandahl and her teammates made some phenomenal hustle plays Tuesday during the most epic JV volleyball match I’ve witnessed. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

No quit. Ever.

Tuesday night’s varsity volleyball match-up between Coupeville and South Whidbey was the headliner, a battle between undefeated teams vying for the league lead.

But if you missed the opening act, your soul is poorer for it.

The Wolf and Falcon JV squads threw down three sets of hyped-up, mega-intense, classic action, filled with amazing come-backs, huge mood swings and quite possibly the single most stunning play I’ve ever witnessed in a volleyball match.

That one team had to lose wasn’t fair, but, in the end, despite winning more points (75-66), Coupeville fell a centimeter short, as their hosts pulled out a 12-25, 27-25, 27-25 thriller.

The loss drops the Wolves to 1-1 in North Sound Conference action, 2-2 overall.

But, while the Falcons can justifiably celebrate a win in which they rallied from down a set, and trailing 17-7 in the second, it’s hard to think of the Wolves as losers.

To a woman, they sold out on every play, running down balls that were headed for the stands, collecting floor burns galore, and refusing to cede any point.

That was driven home midway through the first set, when South Whidbey celebrated too early on a kill, only to have Coupeville sophomore sensation Maddie Vondrak rip out their collective spine and show it to them.

To be fair, the Falcons had nailed a spike which looked 99.999999992 percent certain to be a winner, which is why, as a group, they had turned their backs on the Wolves and were converging for a group fist bump and cheer.

Vondrak was prone on the floor, with only her body between the descending ball and the floor, when, by means which scientists will debate for years to come, she threw her fist up over her head.

And … HOLY CRUD ON A STICK … not only made contact with a ball she couldn’t really see, but popped it perfectly into the air and onto the fingertips of a teammate.

Who promptly flicked it further skyward just as Zoe Trujillo, flying in from the right side, dropped her fist like the hammer of death and blasted a spike which really wasn’t coming back.

It was a play which caught everyone by surprise.

From the Falcons, who skidded to a halt, six jaws slamming onto the floor, to the refs, who both looked at each other, shaking their heads in amazement, to Vondrak, who popped up, smile reaching from one corner of the gym to the other.

Coming hot on the heels of a sizzlin’ run at the service stripe from Willow Vick, getting key assistance from twin sister Raven, who lashed one winner off a Falcon player’s chest, it captured Coupeville’s JV squad at its most-explosive.

The Wolves were in total control in the opening set, from Lucy Sandahl springing skyward at the last second, looking one way while using just her fingertips to redirect a ball the other way for a winner, to Vondrak pounding the snot out of the ball time and again.

That hot streak continued for most of the second set, with Sandahl throwing down a long, successful run at the service stripe and Trujillo smashing a winner off the back line which then took a nasty bounce and bit a chunk out of the back wall.

Up 17-7, things looked rosy … and then they didn’t.

South Whidbey rediscovered some lost magic, and a little luck, coming all the way back to take the lead, and have a set point at 24-23.

Coupeville fought off that point, however, thanks to another miracle save, and rode a superb serve from Willow Vick to actually put itself on match point at 25-24.

It wasn’t to be, though, as the Falcons ran off the final three points, overcoming Vondrak sprinting off the court for yet another miracle save, to knot things up at a set apiece.

At that point, it was like watching two heavyweight boxers late in a championship fight, standing in the middle of the ring and just punching like mad.

South Whidbey landed the first hay-maker, running out to its own 17-7 lead in the third set.

The Wolves could have crumbled. Should have crumbled. But, wait for it.

Yep, Coupeville then stormed back, behind precise, powerful serving from both Vick sisters and Trujillo, turning a 10-point deficit into four late ties.

The first came at 21-21, the most heart-pounding at 24-24, after CHS fought off two match points, thanks to a high-flying tip from Sandahl and a cannon shot of a spike by Trujillo.

Or maybe the most heart-pounding came at 25-25, after the Wolves fought off a third match point.

That came on a play where, once again, the ball was all but dead, until Vondrak, using every inch of her long right arm, spun the ball back into play while sprinting straight at her screaming bench.

But even miracles sometimes run out.

Trying to fight off a fourth match point, Coupeville kept what turned out to be the game’s final rally going for an eternity.

The Wolves saved the ball one, two, three times … only to watch a final shot, headed out of bounds, somehow, improbably, fatally, catch the last flake of paint in the deepest corner on the court.

It was, in the end, the only way this match could end – with a perfect, nearly impossible to duplicate shot.

Two teams exited afterwards, and the score-book will tell you one team won, and the other lost.

Not entirely true.

The Falcon JV deserves to celebrate their triumph. They wouldn’t give in or give up.

But neither did the Wolves.

Regardless of the score, the way Trujillo, Sandahl, Vondrak, the Vicks, Anya LeavellAbby Mulholland and Jaimee Masters played, the way they fought, point after point after endless point, bodes well for their future.

Sometimes the scoreboard doesn’t tell the entire story.

Sometimes both teams win.

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Taygin Jump, here firing up a serve, was a rock Thursday for the Coupeville Middle School 8th grade varsity volleyball squad. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It might still be going on.

Thursday’s middle school volleyball rumble between Coupeville and visiting Lakewood featured four matches, one stunning reversal, and a running time of well over three hours.

It was so long, I can’t honestly say I was there for the entire thing, as a Booster Club meeting plucked me from the gym midway through the day’s third match.

At which point things had already been unfolding for two-and-a-half hours, all backed by the screams of 10,000 hyped-up middle school girls trapped in one small gym.

So, here’s what I know:

I had to ankle for the exit midway through the 7th grade varsity, which Coupeville eventually lost 25-10, 25-6, 25-14.

I also completely missed the 7th grade JV, which apparently put up a spirited battle in a narrow 25-18, 25-15 defeat.

Before I bailed on the 7th graders, Jill Prince and Melanie Navarro (both 8th graders helping fill out a thin roster) delivered strong plays to send a jolt through the Wolf fans.

Navarro popped a nice shot in between two Lakewood players, triggering a return shot into the net, while Prince thumped the afternoon’s most distinctive spike.

And, with that, we’re on to the 8th grade.

 

JV:

One close set, one not so close set, in a 25-20, 25-7 loss to a school which funnels its players on to a fairly large 2A high school.

Maya Lucero and Ryanne Knoblich smoked impressive aces while on serve, while Prince, who was making her season debut, pulled off a play which doubled as a great recovery and a winner, all in one.

Going low to stab at a quickly-dropping serve, Prince caught the ball with the tips of her fingers and spun it back across the net while sliding to one knee.

Not only did the ball arc back across the barrier, it then flung itself to the floor between a pair of surprised Lakewood players and skipped merrily away before a rally could break out.

Ultimately the visitors were just too on-point with their own serving for the Wolves to get much going, but Lucero did put together a quality run at the line in a one-woman effort to balance things out.

 

Varsity:

Talk about a plot twist.

If you saw only the first set, you wouldn’t have believed the score of the second set. And vice versa.

Little went right for the Wolves in the opening frame, as Lakewood, lashing one laser serve after another, roared out to a 16-0 lead en route to a 25-3 win.

Heck, toss out a Lucy Tenore tip, in which she froze a rival and dumped the ball right in front of her for a winner, and we can just say nothing went right.

And then everything changed in a snap.

Powered by (high-jumping) Taygin Jump, who went on a crusade of dropping in winners with quick flicks over her shoulder, Coupeville found its mojo and roared back to win the second set 25-19.

While the Wolves couldn’t pull the match out, falling 25-18 in a tightly-contested final set, the turn-around was remarkable.

Once they got going, the CMS spikers served strongly, chased down balls they had no business getting to, and got quite efficient at smacking winners.

And it came from everyone on the floor.

Alita Blouin, who ran off four straight aces on her serve midway through the second set, also had a superb dig in which she popped the ball back into play while sprawled on the floor.

Her teammates — Gwen Gustafson, Hayley Fiedler, Maddie Georges, Vivian Farris, Jump and Tenore — all chipped in with hustle plays, before Fiedler closed out set #2 with a wicked serve.

The final set was all-out war, with Georges and Tenore firing off an assortment of dazzling serves, while Jump was a young woman in constant motion.

Locking down the right side of the floor, she continually thwarted Lakewood, using a variety of moves to drop winning shots, each one hitting like a dagger.

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Lucy Tenore and the CMS spikers launched a new season Tuesday. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Alita Blouin directs traffic.

Calm, cool, collected (and secretly a killer on the court), it’s Allie Lucero.

Grey Peabody made a strong debut, jumping right into the thick of action on almost every play.

Vivian Farris shows off her hops.

Cypress Socha smashes a winner.

Arm booming like a cannon, Maddie Georges sprayed aces to every corner of the court.

8th grade captain Taygin Jump was a fireball, flying from one side of the court to the other while keeping up a steady patter of encouragement to her teammates.

The start of a new season only becomes truly official when the first photos arrive.

So, luckily for the Coupeville Middle School spikers, wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken spent a fair amount of time in Cow Town Tuesday, snapping away as the Wolves battled visiting Sultan.

The pics above are courtesy him.

To see everything Fisken shot, and possibly buy some glossies for grandma, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Volleyball-2018-2019/MSVB-2018-09-18-vs-Sultan/

And, when you do, remember (or learn for the first time), purchases help fund yearly scholarships awarded to two graduating CHS seniors.

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Playing in front of aunt Joli, a first-ballot Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Famer, Emma Smith helped lead Coupeville to a huge win in Bothell Tuesday night. (Konni Smith photo)

The louder you get, the better we play.

When the Coupeville High School volleyball squad strode onto the court in Bothell for its North Sound Conference opener Tuesday night, it faced numerous challenges.

The dangerous team across the net, Cedar Park Christian, was a solid 4-1 in non-conference play.

Toss in a rabid student section, and things might have seemed daunting for the Wolves.

If, and only if, you didn’t know the young women wearing the black uniforms don’t bend. They don’t break. And they will snap you in half.

Their mothers saw it coming. From now on, so might their private school rivals.

“The crowd of (CPC) boys were animals,” said one Coupeville mom. “And they fueled our girls fire as they heckled the crap out of us.

“I wanted to warn them that our kids live for the screams.”

By the time they were done, the Wolves had turned any razzing into screams of pure anguish, thrashing the host Eagles 25-20, 25-18, 25-23.

The win propels Coupeville to a pristine 3-0 on the season.

At 1-0 in league play, they sit in a tie atop the new conference, and have a full week before they travel to Langley for an epic clash with arch-rival South Whidbey.

While he’ll start planning for that rumble when his team returns to practice Wednesday, the bus ride home Tuesday was all about enjoying that first conference win for CHS coach Cory Whitmore.

“We’re very excited, of course,” he said. “Any time you can go on the road in this league and come back with the win is an accomplishment.

“We played with a lot of focus and very clean from the service line and then gradually put the pressure on, taking them out of rhythm.”

Not every facet of their play was flawless, but the Wolves made up for any small weaknesses by excelling in other areas.

“Our hitting was shaky at times, but the passing was pretty consistent, so our hitters could then settle in themselves,” Whitmore said. “Chelsea (Prescott) and Ashley (Menges) had great all-around games passing, serving and digging.

Emma Mathusek did a great job passing and digging as well and Emma Smith had a powerful six kills with no errors,” he added. “A skill that we’ve been pushing has been smart and strong blocking, and we showcased that well tonight.”

Coupeville picked up 10 blocks, with Emma Smith soaring above the net to collect six stuffs to match her six kills.

The stat sheet was nicely balanced, with Scout Smith doling out 23 assists and Mathusek going low to scrape 11 digs off the floor.

Ashley Menges (five kills, four aces), Hannah Davidson (four kills), Chelsea Prescott (three kills, four aces), Maya Toomey-Stout (seven kills, three digs, two aces) and Zoe Trujillo (one kill) all chipped in as well.

“Plenty to work on in practice,” Whitmore said. “But we’re of course excited about a big win.”

 

JV strolls to win:

Coupeville’s young guns crushed the Eagles 25-12, 25-8 in their league opener.

The win lifts the JV to 2-1 overall, 1-0 in conference action.

“Good team effort across the board,” said CHS coach Chris Smith.

The Wolves got big play from a number of players, something their leader always likes to see.

Lucy (Sandahl) flew all over the floor setting and feeding her hitters,” Smith said. “The Vick sisters (Willow and Raven) were very composed at the service line and swinging well in the front row.

Maddie (Vondrak) is playing all six rotations and has made significant improvements in serving and passing,” he added. “Zoe (Trujillo), as usual, gave us a lot of power swinging from the outside.”

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Maddie Georges, seen here during basketball season last year, had an impressive volleyball debut Tuesday afternoon. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Everything is a little crazy on opening day.

That first game of the season offers a heady mix of emotions for young players, and Tuesday was all that and more for the Coupeville Middle School volleyball squads.

Playing visiting Sultan in a CMS gym packed to the rafters, the Wolf spikers picked up some valuable lessons, introduced the world to some new stars and got their first taste of action against someone wearing a different uniform.

While the Turks ultimately won three of four matches, dropping only the 8th grade JV tilt, the day was an important step forward on the way to future success for the Wolves.

 

8th grade varsity:

Coupeville led in two of three sets, but couldn’t keep its momentum going and fell 25-17, 25-12, 15-12.

The Wolves jumped out to a 5-2 lead in the opening frame, behind a pair of superb tips from Vivian Farris and a thunderous ace off the hand of Lucy Tenore.

But Sultan got lucky on the next play, when a return of another Tenore missile blooped over the heads of all six Wolves and bit the very last flake of paint off the back line.

That unexpected winner seemed to immediately change the flow of play, with the Turks taking advantage and rolling all the way out to a 22-12 lead before Tenore made it back to the service stripe.

Once she got there, the hard-hitting Wolf went back to dropping lasers, and aided by a Jordyn Rogers tip which froze the Turks on one play, ran off four straight points.

Sultan recovered, though, closing out the first set, then running away with the middle frame.

CMS fell behind early and could never get back in the set, despite the play of Taygin Jump and Alita Blouin, who both flew all around the court, trying to dig balls off the floor.

While the third set was merely for fun, with Sultan having already clinched the match, it featured strong serving from Tenore and Ryanne Knoblich.

Tenore rattled one ace off a Sultan player’s chin, while Knoblich lashed back-to-back frozen ropes for winners on her first two serves as a CMS spiker.

 

8th grade JV:

Coupeville’s brightest moment, as the Wolves rode wicked serving from the likes of Maddie Georges and the Battlin’ Lucero twins, Allie and Maya, and ran away with a 25-17, 25-20 victory.

Trailing 4-1 in the early going, CMS turned things around quickly after Hayley Fiedler smacked a serve which curved upward as it sailed over the net, catching a helpless Turk right under the chin.

The Sultan receiver staggered backward, almost went to the floor once, twice and then three times, but surprised the crowd (and herself) by staying on her feet.

Though, if we’re being honest, the Turks were a bit gun-shy after Fiedler’s KO, and probably more so after Georges zinged one of her serves off of the noggin of a different would-be returner.

“Mad Dog,” a standout basketball player for CMS, didn’t play volleyball as a 7th grader. One match into her first season of spikes, sets and kills, and it would be hard to picture her not playing varsity the rest of the way.

Just to make sure Sultan would be extra-twitchy on the bud ride home, Allie Lucero made it a three-pack, launching a serve off yet another Turk’s face, then bumping fists with her sister, both issuing a slight nod, one killer recognizing another.

With Coupeville’s service game clicking on all cylinders, Georges lashed an ace right down the middle of the court, to seal the deal on set one. The Turks, simply happy not to be plastered in the face again, seemed almost relieved.

They shouldn’t have been, because the beast which lurks in the heart of the easy-going Maya Lucero re-surfaced in the second set, as she tattooed a serve off of … yes, you guessed it, a rival player’s chin.

Throwing band-aids in the air for everyone to enjoy, the rabid Wolves gave Sultan no chance to get a rally going.

When the serves weren’t landing immediately for winners, and that was few and far between, CMS benefited from hustle plays from Trinity McGee and Cypress Socha.

 

7th grade varsity:

The day’s first match was also the most one-sided, as Sultan cruised to a 25-7, 25-6 win behind uncannily good serving for first-year middle school players.

While the Turks might be young, there is little doubt their 7th graders have been playing volleyball for some time now.

Every Sultan player who stepped to the service line did it with purpose and intent. The Turks, to a player, served overhand, and did so with speed, power, and accuracy, picking apart the Wolf receivers.

In a match with very few rallies, three Wolves did make their presence known, however.

Katie Buskala stopped one Sultan tear with a beautifully-placed return which split two Turks as it found pay-dirt, then she served up Coupeville’s lone ace a few plays later.

Grey Peabody consistently got her hands on the ball play after play, and lofted a nice hit at the net which skidded for a winner, while Ava Mitten stood tall during the longest rally of the match.

Playing in front of mom Aleshia (McFadyen) Mitten, herself a former Coupeville volleyball ace, Ava smashed one return to keep the rally alive, then lobbed a second shot over the net to win the point.

 

7th grade JV: 

Peabody and Mitten were again front and center, as the two teams played a close set before Sultan eked out a 25-19 win.

Other Wolves who came through with big hits for winners included Brenna Silveira and Kaitlyn Leavell, while Peabody put together two strong runs at the service line.

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