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Capri Anter, seen last season, is off to play high school volleyball next year. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They played their strongest in the finale.

Toss away the scores, and the Coupeville Middle School spikers peaked perfectly Wednesday in Langley, just the way coaches Cris Matochi and Raven Vick hoped.

“I believe this is by far the best volleyball, but the scores didn’t reflect that today,” Matochi said. “I was pleased that we played good volleyball, not desperate volleyball.”

How the day unfolded:

 

Varsity:

The second clash between next-door neighbors in three days went to the host team, with the Cougars nipping Coupeville 25-23, 26-24, 15-11 in a reversal of Monday’s Wolf win.

The loss drops CMS to 4-4 heading into the awards banquet.

Win or lose, Matochi liked what he saw from the girls on the floor.

“We read the balls, not reacted to the balls, which was great,” he said. “I was excited that the girls who came in, did their roles and played their best.

“This was the first time we ran a full new rotation, learning defense and hitting systems that were not executed before,” Matochi added.

“I think that the biggest opponent that we had today was our own minds, but I’m excited to see how today’s matches will elevate the girls game next year.”

Using a mix of full-time varsity spikers and swing players who got their first taste of the high life in the final week, the Wolves jelled and flourished.

“It was great to see how Willow (Leedy-Bonifas) reset from the JV to play on varsity,” Matochi said.

Haylee (Armstrong’s) serves changed the game. She just chipped and chipped away,” he added. “Rhylin (Price) took a bigger role with serve receive and was a main player in our lineup.

Capri (Anter) being consistent tonight was such a plus. As well as Lexis (Drake) was able to recover quickly and finish on a good note, which is something we love to see.”

Both matches against their archrivals were tense, hard-fought affairs, giving the Wolves a taste of battles to come.

“We walked in the gym knowing it would be a tough match and the girls ended up letting the pressure overcome their skills,” Matochi said. “Though we are both confident that this will make them better next year.

“The coaches would like to thank the players who are moving on to high school next year and we want to celebrate their accomplishments,” he added.

“They built up our team and were a great asset and we are excited to see where they go next year.”

 

JV:

Coupeville’s second squad battled to the end in a 25-23, 25-18, 15-8 loss, leaving its final record at 1-7.

“I’m incredibly impressed with how well we played and had good energy for the most part throughout the whole game,” Raven Vick said.

The former Wolf praised the players who grew as the season progressed.

Olivia (Martin) did well with holding her platform and she was highly successful with that,” Vick said. “This was the best Alyssa (McGee) played this season and she got a few playable balls up.

Izzy (Bowder) worked really hard on passing today, too. Everyone chipped in with serving, but we lacked consistency.”

CMS 6th grader Emma Leavitt opened the match with a six-point run at the service stripe, with her reign of terror only ending when the ref belatedly remembered the five-serve limit in middle school volleyball.

“Tonight, Emma did well with serving and consistently put a run in at the line,” Vick said. “KeeAyra (Brown) did well with passing and had one incredible save where she got it back over the net when no one else thought it was going to happen.

Cheyanne (Atteberry) had a couple of good passes, which helped out the team.”

The serene nature and competitive fire of one Wolf player made a particular impression as the season wrapped.

Willow (Leedy-Bonifas) was a calm fire on the court,” Vick said. “Always encouraging her team while staying her fairly quiet self.

“She has a way of keeping the court humming along without most people in the stands noticing,” she added.

Willow is a quiet leader, and we as coaches are so excited to see how much she stepped up this season.”

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One giant-sized Alita Blouin head to rule them all. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

No more home spikes.

The Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad is off to districts next week, but Tuesday marked the final time its five-pack of seniors suited up for a match in their own gym.

The Wolf veterans were honored before their royal rumble with La Conner, their farewell speeches garnering more than a few tears from their younger teammates.

Having played through the Age of Coronavirus and beyond, Alita Blouin, Ryanne Knoblich, Taygin Jump, Maddie Georges, and Jill Prince exit having left a sizable impact on the CHS program.

Jill Prince

Pomp and circumstance.

Maddie Georges

Taygin Jump

Soccer ace Nezi Keiper hustled over after her own Senior Night to celebrate friendship.

Ryanne Knoblich

Alita Blouin

Coupeville coaches Cory Whitmore and Ashley Menges get a photo op with their team leaders.

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Issabel Johnson and Co. are coming for all the wins. (Bailey Thule photo)

The future belongs to them.

As well as the present.

Sending a shockwave across the region, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad finally took down the big dogs Tuesday night.

After narrowly falling short in their two previous attempts, the Wolves not only beat visiting La Conner, but they also swept the Braves right out of the CHS gym.

Winning 25-16, 25-18, 25-15, Coupeville’s young guns wrap a season in which they went 8-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 12-2 overall.

The victory also serves notice to La Conner, which has been the undisputed heavyweight champ of the NWL for decades.

While the Braves JV has not been as flawless as the La Conner varsity, you can count the number of league losses the second squad has taken on one hand … and still have most of your fingers left.

Third-year Coupeville JV coach Ashley Menges and her spikers have been getting closer and closer to unseating their big-game rivals, and Tuesday night everything clicked.

The Wolves exploded out of the gate, thanks to Katie Marti, Taylor Brotemarkle, and Teagan Calkins cranking away from the service stripe, while Jada Heaton stalked the net, ready to inflict damage on anything which came her way.

Jada Heaton abuses the volleyball. (Bailey Thule photo)

Up 17-6 at one point, with La Conner’s coaching staff sitting stunned and slumped in their chairs, Coupeville never let the Braves have a moment to consider a comeback.

Two big kills from Calkins, including a buzzsaw of a slicer on set point, sent the Wolf faithful into pandemonium, and they never had a reason to calm down after that.

Set two was a little closer — the Wolves actually trailed early at 6-5 — but once CHS regained the lead, it held fast.

Tip winners from Marti and Calkins helped stretch a one-point lead out to nine points, while Brotemarkle couldn’t be contained as she fired darts and daggers on her serve.

With the win in hand for Coupeville, the teams played a third set for practice — a quirk seemingly reserved for the world of JV volleyball.

Riding an emotional high, then getting a floor-buckling kill from Aby Wood and long service runs from Marti and Johnson, the Wolves kept the joyous fire in their hearts raging.

Oktober Frost came off the bench to delight the crowd with several strong serves, while Heaton mashed the volleyball like it had personally insulted her.

The message was clear, and loudly delivered.

Coupeville’s young spikers are here to dominate, today and tomorrow.

You’ve been warned, world.

 

Tuesday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 6 digs, 5 aces
Carly Burt — 1 dig
Teagan Calkins — 4 kills, 5 aces
Jada Heaton — 4 kills, 1 assist
Issabel Johnson — 4 kills, 3 digs, 3 aces
Katie Marti — 3 kills, 3 digs, 12 assists, 6 aces
Chloe Marzocca — 2 digs
Grier Mooney — 1 dig, 2 aces
Aby Wood — 2 kills

Aby Wood is all smiles after a strong season. (Bailey Thule photo)

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Wolf seniors (l to r) Jill Prince, Maddie Georges, Alita Blouin, Taygin Jump, and Ryanne Knoblich. (Photo courtesy Cory Whitmore)

It takes a perfect performance to beat the La Conner High School varsity volleyball team.

Coupeville was not perfect Tuesday night.

The Wolves did play steadily better as the night progressed, but whether it was emotional lag from Senior Night, or just the sometimes-overpowering fists of fury employed by the Braves, a win was not in the cards.

Instead, Coupeville fell 25-7, 25-8, 25-16, as the three-time defending state champs wrapped up another flawless run through the Northwest 2B/1B League.

La Conner finishes 8-0 in conference play and sits at 12-1 with three non-conference tilts still to play.

Meanwhile, the Wolves finish their regular season at 7-2 in league action, 9-5 overall.

Next up for CHS is a trip to La Conner Nov. 2 for the District 1/2 tourney.

The Wolves open against Auburn Adventist Academy, which is 5-4 heading into its regular season finale.

That’s a loser-out match, with the winner returning to the court to face La Conner for a trip to the state tourney.

To upend the Braves as they attempt to four-peat as La Conner coach Suzanne Marble closes a 30-year career, rival teams will need to “create chaos.”

Which Coupeville did at times Tuesday. Just not enough times.

“We had trouble both creating points and not making errors at the same time,” said Coupeville coach Cory Whitmore.

“When we were creating points, we were making errors, and when we weren’t making errors, we weren’t creating anything.”

La Conner, led by wham-bam twin towers Ellie Marble and Makayla Herrera, dominated at the net, rifling kills which put the Wolves on their heels, then dropping dead-eye tip winners if the defense backed off too far.

Coupeville, a strong-serving team, was unable to generate any points at the service stripe until late in the second set and struggled to end rallies while on the attack.

Jill Prince did paste one especially noisy winner down the middle of the floor, while Grey Peabody smacked several kills, but the Wolves were on the run most of the match.

Coupeville’s best play might have been a block, where Peabody and Maddie Georges combined to stuff an Ellie Marble cannon shot.

The third set was the closest thing to a back-and-forth affair, and featured the varsity debut of sophomore Taylor Brotemarkle, who recorded an ace while firing off serves.

Taylor Brotemarkle brings the heat. (Bailey Thule photo)

The Wolves did prove plucky, holding off four match points before La Conner finally drove home its 75th, and final, point to end the night.

The biggest positive to come from the loss was the solid play of Coupeville’s seniors, who handled the pressures of their farewell night with class.

Alita (Blouin) had a great game,” Whitmore said. “She covered a lot of court and was a real leader out there for us.

Jill took advantage of her hitting opportunities, and, as a team we passed well.

“I’m really proud of our seniors, and how they helped build our program through the tough Covid years,” Whitmore added. “They’ve helped reset our culture.”

 

Tuesday stats:

Alita Blouin — 6 digs, 1 assist
Taylor Brotemarkle — 1 ace
Mia Farris — 2 kills
Maddie Georges — 7 digs, 11 assists, 1 block assist
Taygin Jump — 2 digs
Ryanne Knoblich — 3 kills, 3 digs, 1 ace
Madison McMillan — 1 dig
Grey Peabody — 3 kills, 1 ace, 1 block assist
Jill Prince — 3 kills
Lyla Stuurmans — 1 kill

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Lyla Stuurmans is pleased to see her favorite photographer is working courtside. (Bailey Thule photos)

Crowd work is an underrated art.

Get yourself a photographer who can capture fans and players in the moments between the action, going below the surface to capture that inner light, and you’ve got yourself a keeper.

Like Bailey Thule, who delivers the portraits seen above and below.

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