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Coupeville volleyball aces Jada Heaton (left) and Mia Farris, off to the bright lights of Yakima. (Jennifer Heaton photo)

Next stop, the wilds of Eastern Washington.

The Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad is off to the state tourney for the first time since 2017, with the bus departing Cow Town Tuesday afternoon.

The Wolves open play in the 16-team double-elimination royal rumble Wednesday at 9:45 AM in the SunDome against Lind-Ritzville-Sprague.

Win or lose, CHS is back on the floor later in the day, with hopes of advancing to day #2, which goes down Thursday.

As they departed, the spikers were sent off by fellow students, teachers, administrators, parents, and fans, as you can see in the pics above and below.

Chloe Marzocca is ready for the long trip. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Marzocca)

Ten talented young women, one exquisite dream of kickin’ fanny and takin’ names. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Heaton)

JV spikers (l to r) Capri Anter, Haylee Armstrong, and Lexis Drake root for their varsity counterparts. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

Jada Heaton lets mom snag a forever memory. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Heaton)

Wolf coach Cory Whitmore works the reception line. (Coupeville Schools photo)

“When are we stopping for coffee???” (Photo courtesy Jennifer Marzocca)

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Jada Heaton (left) and Lyla Stuurmans open state tourney play Wednesday morning in Yakima. (Jackie Saia photo)

The path is set.

The Coupeville High School volleyball team, headed back to the state tournament for the first time since 2017, now knows its opening round foe.

The Washington Interscholastic Activities Association released the official bracket Sunday morning, having seeded the 16 qualifiers for the Nov. 8-9 royal rumble.

The Wolves?

Sitting at 12-5, having won 11 of their last 12 matches, they’re #12, and begin their adventure at the Yakima SunDome against #5 Lind-Ritzville-Sprague.

Oh, and by the way, Coupeville spiker coach Cory Whitmore is a Ritzville grad (Class of 2009) who was a standout three-sport athlete there in his younger days.

His dad Greg, now superintendent in Entiat, was also a longtime coach, teacher, and athletic director at the school, so ties still run deep.

Cory Whitmore, Ritzville legend, now rockin’ Coupeville colors. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“Looking forward to matching up with my alma mater, see some familiar faces in the crowd,” Cory Whitmore said.

“They’re a strong team and I recognize a good number of the names.

Cari Galbreth’s (head coach) kid is their setter and I definitely remember Zoe splashing around the city pool I lifeguarded at each summer.

“Gotta love the small-town connections. Go Wolves!”

PS — If you’re wondering about that pool, the internet remembers forever:

https://www.ritzvillejournal.com/story/2012/06/21/news/pool-managers-prepare-for-swim-season/2724.html

Coupeville and Lind-Ritzville-Sprague, which is 17-2 on the season, play at 9:45 AM on Court #5.

You can see the bracket here:

http://www.wpanetwork.com/wiaa/brackets/tournament.php?act=view&tournament_id=4082&school_year=2023-24&district=-1&sport=10&class=2B

Win or lose that opening match, Coupeville returns to the courts later in the day as the tourney is a double-elimination event.

#4 Goldendale (19-1) and #13 Liberty of Spangle (12-5) are opposite the Wolves and Broncos.

Right now, the losers from those two matches are slated to clash at 3:30, with the winners vying at 7:15, but time flows at its own pace once a state tourney begins.

Overall, four teams will go two and out Wednesday, while four more will be sliced early Thursday, with the final eight guaranteed to bring home a trophy.

Coupeville’s Northwest 2B/1B League rival La Conner, which is the four-time defending state champs, have their lowest ranking in years.

The Braves (12-7), who edged the Wolves for the bi-district crown after CHS ended La Conner’s 12+ year conference win streak, are seeded #11 and open against #6 Toutle Lake (14-6).

Top-seeded Adna (18-0) and #2 Manson (20-0) are the last unbeaten teams standing, while #15 Kalama (11-11) is the only school to reach state without posting a winning record.

Wolf spikers Lyla Stuurmans (4), Madison McMillan (11), and Mia Farris (3), ready to write their own tale. (Bailey Thule photo)

This is Coupeville’s sixth trip to the state volleyball tourney, and its first as a 2B school.

The previous five appearances all came at the 1A level.

Whitmore, now in his eighth season at CHS, led the Wolves to the royal rumble in 2017, where they fell to Castle Rock and Lakeside (Nine Mile Falls).

Prior to that, Kim Meche and Toni Crebbin guided Coupeville as it qualified four straight seasons between 2001-2004.

The Wolf spikers went 4-8 at state in that span, collecting a win each time around.

Coupeville KO’d King’s (2-0), Freeman (2-0), Toutle Lake (3-2) and Zillah (3-1) in successive years, but came up just short of bringing home a trophy.

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Wolf Mom Kim Brotemarkle gets rowdy. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolf Nation travels.

Even with gas still around $5.00 a gallon, a pack of Coupeville High School volleyball fans made the trek to La Conner Wednesday to support their team at the Bi-District tourney.

They were passionate all the way through a long night, as the Wolves played eight sets across two matches to punch their ticket to the state tourney.

Also making the trip to the mainland was wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken, who delivers the pics seen above and below.

To take a gander at action shots from the tourney, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/CHS-Volleyball-2023-2024/VB-2023-11-01-at-District-tournament

 

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Long day, big reward. (Jennifer Heaton photo)

In the end, one thing matters — they’re going to the state championships.

No matter how the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad got there, no matter how many ups and downs the Wolves experienced Wednesday, the end result trumps everything else.

In a season in which they started 1-4, they’ll step on the bus next Tuesday at 12-5, winners of 11 of their last 12.

And when they take to the courts at the Yakima SunDome Wednesday as one of 16 teams still in contention for a 2B state title, they’ll be the second squad led there by CHS coach Cory Whitmore.

“See how things work better when you hit it where I ask you to hit it?” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’ll be a return trip for assistant coach Ashley Menges as well, since she was a player on the last Wolf volleyball team to make it to Yakima — the 2017 edition, which played Castle Rock and Lakeside (Nine Mile Falls) at the big dance.

This year’s team will find out their opening round foe Sunday, when the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association releases the full bracket for the double-elimination tourney, with schools seeded #1-#16.

Coupeville had two shots Wednesday to win one match at the 2B District 1/2 tourney in La Conner, and Cow Town’s spikers came through in crunch time.

The Wolves didn’t upend four-time defending state champ La Conner to claim the bi-district title, though they came within two points of doing so three times.

But they did crunch Northwest Christian of Lacey, the top seed from District 2, for the second time in three days, and that punched their ticket.

How Wednesday played out:

 

La Conner:

Coupeville had the champs on the ropes, dangerously close to winning its first volleyball district-level title since 2004.

But while the Braves are not the team they once were, their spikers are still dangerous — young women who have rarely lost and almost always play like they expect to bring home the W.

And they slipped away in the end, finding just enough pressure-packed winners to eke out a 22-25, 17-25, 25-23, 26-24, 15-12 win to get to 12-7 on the season.

Despite winning more points (109-105), the Wolves never got to match point, and have now split their four matches with La Conner this season.

Wins at the South Whidbey Invite and on Coupeville’s Senior Night — handing the Braves their first league loss in 12+ years — were huge.

A pair of five-set losses on La Conner’s home floor? Frustrating.

Will there be a fifth matchup in Yakima? Only time will tell.

For now, the Wolves can focus on what went right, which was a lot.

CHS opened the night by sweeping to wins in the first two sets, riding big kills from snipers Lyla Stuurmans — back on the floor after an ankle injury in Monday’s district playoff opener — and Mia Farris.

Jada Heaton won a tip war at the net, Katie Marti spanked a series of service winners, and Grey Peabody pasted a winner to give the Wolves the lead for good midway through the first frame.

Clinging to a 23-22 lead, Coupeville got two epic plays to seal the deal.

“Right there, that’s my favorite spot on the floor to hit.” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Marti, freezing everyone on both sides of the net, had the entire gym believing she was about to launch a set for one of her mad mashers.

Instead, at the very last second, the irrepressible one suddenly twisted her body into a pretzel in the kind of move which makes former dishwashers like myself cry out in pain, flipping the ball into a small hole in the defense.

Ball hit floor, the Braves whiffed, and Marti’s body snapped back into place, already going into celebration mode.

Try doing that when you’re middle-aged, missy. Ain’t gonna feel so good then, so enjoy being limber now.

With La Conner still in shock, Marti made a sensational running save on the next point, then flipped the ball skyward, setting up a rampaging Teagan Calkins.

Her right arm swinging like a scythe cutting grass, the sophomore sensation crushed the bejesus out of the ball, blasting home a kill to put set one into the win column.

Set two was more of the same sweet sauce, as Coupeville rallied from an early deficit, put the hammer down, then pulled away.

Lyla Stuurmans spent Halloween icing her ankle, with help from Nick Guay. (Sarah Stuurmans photo)

A stellar run at the service line from Stuurmans, followed by an even better one from Madison McMillan, was more than La Conner could deal with.

Back-to-back kills from Peabody and Stuurmans pushed Coupeville ahead 2-0, and things were looking peachy.

And they stayed positive for much of the third set, a battle royal with 11 ties and multiple lead changes.

Coupeville got to 23-23 on a McMillan ace, putting them two points away from lifting some hardware, only to have La Conner slip away at the very end.

The fourth set might have been the most frustrating, however, as the Wolves blew out to a 15-7 lead, with Farris floating in from above to nail a tip winner to push the lead to a full eight points.

The Braves refused to buckle, answering with a 10-2 run to knot things up at 17-17, before both squads went on 3-0 mini-runs to re-knot things at 20-20.

A pair of strong plays from Peabody at the net gave CHS a 22-20 lead, with the Wolves twice getting back within two points of ending things at 23-23 and 24-24.

That elusive match point still evaded the Wolves, though, with La Conner sending things to a fifth and deciding set.

Coupeville’s final lead in that frame came at 4-3, and the final tie at 7-7.

Farris launched three more winners in the waning moments, but La Conner, ever elusive, gave their student section something to scream about at the end.

 

Haylee Armstrong (left) celebrates with her future teammate, varsity ballhawk Taylor Brotemarkle. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

 

Northwest Christian:

With just minutes between the La Conner loss and a return to the court, the Wolves looked listless, in the extreme.

Their foes, who stayed alive by sweeping Auburn Adventist Academy earlier in the evening, came out with some fiery pop, while it took most of the first set for Coupeville to rediscover its mojo.

But the Wolves eventually did, holding off four set points in the opening frame before rallying for a 27-25, 25-12, 25-18 victory.

We’re not going to talk about most of the first set, as it would be super depressing.

Coupeville’s spikers made the kind of unforced errors they rarely make and looked like zombies with hangovers – understandable after the gut-wrenching loss to La Conner.

But then, something clicked deep inside, round about when the Wolves were looking at a 23-19 deficit.

Seniors Issabel Johnson (1) and Grey Peabody are front and center for a state-bound team. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Peabody rose up over the net like a phoenix, unleashing one of the loudest kills of the night, and the splendid senior middle blocker seemed to wake up her team.

Farris went back to launching lasers, the Wolves started scrambling for balls again, holding off multiple Northwest Christian set points, and then Calkins ripped a hole in the floor once CHS finally had a set point of its own.

Coupeville’s rivals stayed chippy, but got a lot more gun-shy after that, and steadily, play by play, the Wolf team capable of making a solid run at state reemerged.

The second set was a non-stop parade of Wolf kills and service aces, with about the only thing capable of stopping Coupeville being a ref who froze in place and made like a tree as Farris tried in vain to get around her while chasing a ball.

The final frame was a romp, with Farris (two times), Calkins, and Marti raining down hot death on their serves.

The “we’re-going-to-state” point?

It came off the fist of Peabody, as she punched home a final kill, guaranteeing she and fellow senior Issabel Johnson will lead their squad onto the floor another time.

 

Wednesday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 11 digs
Teagan Calkins — 14 kills, 6 digs, 1 ace, 3 block assists
Mia Farris — 40 kills, 38 digs, 10 aces, 1 solo block, 1 block assist
Jada Heaton — 2 kills, 1 dig, 1 assist
Issabel Johnson — 2 digs
Katie Marti — 5 kills, 25 digs, 81 assists, 5 aces, 1 solo block
Madison McMillan — 47 digs, 5 assists, 4 aces
Grey Peabody — 29 kills, 2 digs, 1 assist, 3 solo blocks, 4 block assists
Lyla Stuurmans — 18 kills, 25 digs, 1 ace, 1 block assist

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One Whidbey, kicking everyone else’s fannies.

The three public high schools on The Rock are like siblings — they may squabble all the time amongst themselves, but someone from outside gives any of them the stink eye, it’s time to unite and drop the smack-down.

Or jointly celebrate when one does well.

Works either way.

Today the spotlight swings towards Langley, with the news South Whidbey High School varsity volleyball coach Mandy Jones has been honored by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association.

The organization’s salute to coaches for October, sponsored by the US Army, includes the Falcon spiker guru alongside leaders from Clover Park, Renton, and Fife.

All places that wish they were Whidbey.

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