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Breanne Smedley, winning matches and dealing with the paparazzi. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

There were spikes, and reunions, in the air.

Bouncing between two locations Saturday, wanderin’ camera clicker John Fisken snapped a variety of volleyball-related pics.

While there were a lot of current Coupeville athletes and coaches featured in the snaps, there was also an appearance or two by former Wolves.

Former CHS spiker guru Breanne Smedley, who now coaches at Columbia River, was in Oak Harbor for a tourney.

Meanwhile, in Coupeville, Marie Bagby and her boys Mike and Jason — all top Wolf athletes in their day — gathered in the gym to watch Marie’s niece, Chloe Gaydeski, rip off spikes for visiting Forks.

Now, if the daughter of Ron Bagby’s sister, who’s just a sophomore, were to move to Cow Town to finish her stellar three-sport prep career?

A lot more family reunions and a lot more photos. And a lot more page hits for me.

Just sayin’…

Sitting dead center in the Coupeville High School gym, so they can root for both their alma mater and the visiting team featuring their family member.

Middle school coach Kristina Hooks enforces the rule book.

Wolf booters Ezra Boilek (back) and Cael Wilson bask in the afterglow of Friday’s big soccer win.

The future of Wolf athletics, ready for their closeup today.

The student section was small, but vocal on a sunny Saturday.

“Whoa now. I didn’t say I could dance LIKE John Travolta. I said I could dance BETTER than John Travolta.”

They smile now, but put them on the volleyball court, and they will unleash a can of whup ass on you.

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Madison McMillan stretches out to track down an incoming missile. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This time they sealed the deal.

Striking with a great vengeance and not letting a talented team have too many opportunities to rally, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad delivered a win that some might call an upset.

That’s because Forks rolled into Cow Town Saturday sporting a fine ‘n dandy 6-2 record, while the Wolves have endured a series of near misses.

But on this sunny afternoon, the gym belonged to Coupeville, which recorded a 25-15, 25-17, 25-18 non-conference victory.

The win, the second-straight for the Wolves, pushes them to 3-4 and shows they can punch with the best of them if they stay focused.

Coupeville made its intentions known early, with superb sophomore Teagan Calkins kicking off her best performance of the season by launching a dagger which tore a chunk out of the floor.

That staked CHS to an early 3-2 lead in the first set, and while things stayed tight for a bit, the Wolves were already humming.

Down just 13-11, Coupeville made its move, riding another lightning bolt fired by the free-wheeling Calkins.

With the ball back in their hands, the Wolves sent Lyla Stuurmans to the service stripe, and she hurt some folks.

The joltin’ junior ripped off nine straight points on her serve to blow the set open, with a number of her teammates helping out.

Mia Farris rearranged the molecules around her rivals with a blast of hot air coming off a spike winner, while Katie Marti flipped the ball into a two-inch open space for another point.

Calkins continued to be a thorn in the side of the visiting Spartans, lashing frozen ropes which hit the back line, then kicked away, and CHS was rollin’ ‘n strollin’.

Katie Marti, doin’ what she does. (Photo courtesy Coupeville volleyball)

Coming out of the first set, the Wolves kept peppering Forks with nasty serves, with Marti, Madison McMillan, Calkins, and Issabel Johnson living large at the line.

The Spartans, led by Ron Bagby’s niece, Chloe Gaydeski, put up a good scrap, but Coupeville continually dropped the hammer to end points.

When Calkins wasn’t strafing everyone in her eye range, Grey Peabody and Jada Heaton proved to be nimble and deadly at the net, whether crunching balls or poking tip winners.

If there was a bit of suspense left in the air after set two, it was because Coupeville has had some trouble closing matches out this season.

Potential wins against South Whidbey, Orcas Island, and La Conner slipped away in the final frantic moments, and it’s not hard to picture the Wolves being 6-1 and not 3-4.

Saturday, CHS coach Cory Whitmore didn’t have to worry about heading into his free time with too many worries, however, as his squad slammed the proverbial door shut.

It began with Stuurmans cranking back-to-back winners, a feat repeated not too long after by Farris.

Forks was still hanging around in the third set, though trailing 16-14, when McMillan put an exclamation point on things.

Spinning the ball across her fingertips, then artfully dropping nearly unhittable serves, she ran off eight consecutive points on her serve, with Calkins and Farris dropping haymakers when Forks managed to get the return back in play.

The victory, which sends Coupeville into a week where it will host Northwest 2B/1B League rivals Concrete and Mount Vernon Christian, left the Wolf head coach mostly satisfied.

“We kept within our system and served really well and passed the ball consistently,” Cory Whitmore said.

Teagan had herself a night, and Mia played really well,” he added.

“I’m very pleased with our consistency as a team today.”

Wolves (l to r) Taylor Brotemarkle, Issabel Johnson, and Mia Farris enjoy the taste of victory … and concession stand food. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

Saturday stats:

Teagan Calkins — 8 kills, 1 dig
Mia Farris — 8 kills, 5 digs
Jada Heaton — 2 kills, 1 dig, 1 solo block
Issabel Johnson — 1 dig, 2 aces
Katie Marti — 1 kill, 6 digs, 21 assists, 3 aces
Madison McMillan — 9 digs, 1 assist, 3 aces
Grey Peabody — 3 kills, 1 solo block
Lyla Stuurmans — 6 kills, 4 digs, 1 assist, 3 aces

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Haylee Armstrong prepares to launch a serve earlier this season. (Jackie Saia photo)

It was a beautiful brawl.

Playing with just one girl on the bench Saturday, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad almost pulled off a stunning upset.

Rallying from a set down against visiting Forks, the Wolf young guns came all the way back to hold a match point in the third frame before the Spartans slipped away with the victory.

While Coupeville drops to 2-5 on the season with the 25-13, 21-25, 16-14 loss, not all defeats are created equal.

This royal rumble, with multiple moments of grit and heart shown by a Wolf squad with five freshmen, bodes well for the future.

After grabbing a quick 2-0 lead in the opening set, with Capri Anter blasting a knee-quaking spike winner off the back line, CHS fell behind and couldn’t recover.

The Wolves had some individual bright moments early, such as Chloe Marzocca ripping a nasty slicer and Haylee Armstrong flipping another winner between a pair of rivals, but serving derailed any comeback bid.

Armstrong was the lone Wolf to earn a point at the stripe until fellow frosh Myra McDonald zinged an ace with her team trailing 23-12.

Coupeville’s JV spikers have a bright future. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The second set, after a brief delay caused by one of the refs having to leave the gym suddenly, was far different.

The two teams went at it with intensity, carving out eight ties before Coupeville made its move late in the frame.

Dakota Strong and Lexis Drake set the Wolves up for success with power and finesse at the net, and their teammates caught the point-scoring bug.

Coupeville, riding a string of strong serves from Marzocca, broke open a 19-19 stalemate, finishing the set on a 6-2 tear.

Anter delivered two winners during the surge, and while Forks fought off a pair of set points, CHS was intent on forcing a tiebreaker.

That third and deciding set featured six ties, even with the teams playing to just 15 (or so) and not 25.

Coupeville led by as many as three points, as Drake bobbed, weaved, and bounced all around the court, droppin’ winners, while Forks pushed back hard to regain the edge at 12-9.

A skin-shredding ace from Armstrong highlighted a 5-1 mini-run from the Wolves, as they pushed the Spartans to the very edge.

But down 14-13, the visitors reached deep and found a little extra moxie, holding off a match point and capturing the final three points of the match.

Coupeville’s plucky band of spike-happy warriors gets multiple chances next week to continue their strong play.

The Wolves host Concrete Tuesday on Dig Pink Night, then welcome Mount Vernon Christian to Cow Town Thursday night.

The JV caps a busy week with a trip up-Island to Oak Harbor Saturday for a tournament, with the Homecoming dance lurking that evening.

 

Saturday stats:

Capri Anter — 3 kills, 3 digs, 1 assist, 2 aces
Haylee Armstrong — 5 kills, 7 assists, 1 ace
Carly Burt — 1 assist
Lexis Drake — 6 kills, 1 solo block
Chloe Marzocca — 1 kill, 1 dig, 1 assist, 2 aces
Myra McDonald — 1 ace
Dakota Strong — 2 kills

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Madison McMillan is tied for the team lead in service aces. (Bailey Thule photos)

The halfway point is coming up fast.

Saturday’s non-conference home rumble with Forks will leave the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad with seven matches in the books, and seven to go.

The Wolves are 2-4 heading to the weekend, but that’s deceptive.

Three of those losses came in five-set thrillers and another defeat was against undefeated Neah Bay.

Flip a point here or there and CHS could be sitting at 5-1.

But it is what it is, and the Wolves, fresh off a win over Friday Harbor, are intent on putting together a successful second-half run.

As they prep for Forks, a look at season-to-date numbers for the scrappy spikers:

 

Varsity stats through Oct. 5:

 

Kills:

Lyla Stuurmans – 68
Grey Peabody – 53
Mia Farris – 46
Teagan Calkins – 24
Katie Marti – 9
Jada Heaton – 7
Madison McMillan – 6

 

Digs:

Farris – 78
McMillan – 74
Stuurmans – 59
Taylor Brotemarkle – 36
Marti – 36
Calkins – 13
Peabody – 8
Issabel Johnson – 4
Heaton – 3

 

Block – Solo:

Peabody – 4
Marti – 1

 

Block – Assist:

Peabody – 6
Heaton – 3
Marti – 3
Calkins – 2
Stuurmans – 2

 

Assists:

Marti – 154
McMillan – 7
Stuurmans – 6
Brotemarkle – 3
Heaton – 1
Johnson – 1

 

Service Aces:

Marti – 18
McMillan – 18
Farris – 16
Calkins – 15
Stuurmans – 11
Johnson – 7

Lyla Stuurmans paces the Wolves in kills.

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Volleyball guru Cris Matochi keeps a watchful eye on his 8th grade spikers. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There was a middle-of-the-week feel to things.

Head to the Coupeville Middle School gym for Wednesday’s volleyball match, and you were met with a variety of issues.

The bleachers were still packed away.

A new ref, who later had to consult the rules book more than once, didn’t like the way the net was hanging, and insisted on several adjustments.

And Coupeville’s opponent, Northshore Christian Academy? Nowhere to be seen, presumably lost in traffic during its commute from Everett.

But things have a way of working out, and, eventually, everything was properly unfurled and tightened up, and the private school spikers arrived in the lil’ gym on the prairie.

After all that, fans got two fairly exciting tilts.

While Coupeville lost both the JV and varsity matches, the prime-time bout wasn’t decided until the final moments, while the second squad showed great hustle and grit.

How the day played out:

 

JV:

Coupeville normally has two JV squads, but Northshore only has one, so several Wolves became enthusiastic fans in the stands.

The young women on the floor put up a solid fight for coach Kristina Hooks, fighting valiantly in a 25-12, 25-6, 15-7 loss.

CMS 7th graders Brooklyn Pope and Kennedy O’Neill both had strong runs at the service line, while Olivia Martin wins an unofficial “most spirit of the day” award.

The younger sister of former Wolf volleyball ace Emma Mathusek — who announced her engagement on Instagram earlier in the day — Martin vibrated with excitement every second she was on the floor.

Rocking back and forth before firing off a successful serve, or yelping “We’re having fun!” she remains a delight — the sort of indispensable team-first player every program needs.

Coupeville fell behind early in set one, but rallied, cutting the margin to 14-12 at one point.

Viktoria Grieves bumped a winner into open space, while Zoe Winstead and Pope both cracked off well-hit serves to keep the Wolves close.

Northshore ultimately pulled away, however, reeling off the final 11 points of the set, riding its own impressive service game.

Set two was rough for quite a while, with the Wolves falling behind 15-1 before O’Neill stopped the skid.

With parents Sean and Ashley watching from the front row, the lethal lass pounded out four straight winners on her serve, with two missiles skimming the top of the net, then diving hard for unhittable aces.

While CMS was unable to keep the momentum going, O’Neill’s fiery display bodes well for the future of her, and the Wolves.

Set three was for practice, with Northshore already having clinched the victory, but Coupeville put up a strong fight.

Pope, O’Neill, and Martin all peppered the visitors with their serves, with Pope zinging one beautifully nasty offering.

 

Varsity:

Dead even through two sets, with Coupeville taking the opening frame 25-23, before Northshore matched them by the same score the next time on the floor.

That sent the match to a third and deciding set, one in which the Wolves led at 2-0 and 3-2 after Adeline Maynes led off with a couple crisp service winners.

But it wasn’t to be, as Northshore used a 12-2 run to bust things open.

The Wolves still fought off two match points, with Tenley Stuurmans following up a tip winner with an ace at the service stripe.

The deficit was too large however, and the visitors held on to triumph 15-7, heading back to the bus with a collective skip to their steps.

That capped a heavyweight fight, as the two teams stood in the middle of the court and exchanged knockout punches all afternoon.

The opening set featured eight ties, with the final one at 21-21.

Willow Leedy-Bonifas provided the final burst of energy to shove the Wolves over the finish line, taking advantage of the ref overturning her own call and putting the ball back in the hands of CMS.

Winners from Stuurmans, Ari Cunningham, and Rhylin Price got Coupeville into position to claim the set, with Maynes slamming the door shut on a play where she flicked the ball over her head, letting it splash down into a small open space between defenders.

That set off an on-court celebration … which might have been a bit premature.

Coupeville actually led for much of the second set, before Northshore surged back to make it a nailbiter.

The Wolves played with wild abandon, such as on plays where Maynes lost her shoe, kicked it away, and still found a way to spark her team to winning a tense back-and-forth rally.

After being up by as many as four points thanks to a hail of winners springing from the electric fingers of Stuurmans, Coupeville lost the lead, however.

There were 10 ties down the stretch, the last at 22-22, but the Wolves just missed on several smashes which almost caught the back line.

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