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Coupeville senior Chelsea Prescott was tabbed as a First Team All-League pick. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Northwest 2B/1B League coaches also honored Kylie Chernikoff.

Well-respected by their rivals.

The Coupeville High School volleyball squad, which claimed second-place in the Northwest 2B/1B League, put six players on the All-League team.

Seniors Kylie Chernikoff and Chelsea Prescott landed on the First Team, with senior Maddie Vondrak and sophomore Maddie Georges earning Second Team honors.

Sophomores Alita Blouin and Jill Prince round out the Wolf honorees, named Honorable Mention.

In a move which will surprise .00001% of anyone who saw a match this season, La Conner sophomore Ellie Marble, a serene superstar with often-startling power, was tabbed as league MVP.

NWL coaches decided to share the sportsmanship award among all six schools which played, acknowledging the effort of everyone involved in getting the season played during the Age of Coronavirus.

“Best year ever, as you all were amazing!,” said the press release.

 

All-League First Team:

Kylie Chernikoff – Coupeville – Senior – Outside Hitter
Sarah Cook – La Conner – Junior – Outside Hitter
Rachel Cram – La Conner – Junior – Libero
Emma Keller – La Conner – Junior – Setter
Ellie Marble – La Conner – Sophomore – Outside Hitter
Chelsea Prescott – Coupeville – Senior – Outside Hitter
Lindsey Simpson – Orcas Island – Senior – Middle
Kassidy Smith – Concrete – Senior – Libero
Katie Watkins – La Conner – Senior – Middle
Alyvia Wright – Darrington – Junior – Setter

 

All-League Second Team:

Kylie Clark – Concrete – Senior – Right Side
Emma Droog – Mount Vernon Christian – Junior – Middle
Maddie Georges – Coupeville – Sophomore – Setter
Maya Masonholder – La Conner – Senior – Defensive Specialist
Anna Jane Thulen – La Conner – Senior – Right Side
Maddie Vondrak – Coupeville – Senior – Middle
Avery Yates – Mount Vernon Christian – Senior – Outside Hitter

 

All-League Honorable Mention:

Gena Beazer – Darrington – Sophomore – Middle
Alita Blouin – Coupeville – Sophomore – Libero
Bethany Carter – Orcas Island – Freshman – Right Side
Hannah Cook – La Conner – Junior – Middle
Kailey Faber – Mount Vernon Christian – Senior – Outside Hitter
Morgan Huizenga – La Conner – Freshman – Middle
Tayla Malo – Orcas Island – Junior – Setter
Jill Prince – Coupeville – Sophomore – Middle
Sierra Rensink – Concrete – Senior – Setter
Aubrie Sloniker – La Conner – Junior – Defensive Specalist

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Maddie Vondrak brings the fury and the power. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s been a busy couple of days.

As we dig ourselves back out after the crush at the end of fall sports, it’s always good to take a breather and look at some photos.

The pics above and below capture the Coupeville High School volleyball program, and come to us courtesy John Fisken.

To see what he shot at the final matches, pop over to:

VB 2021-05-07 vs LaConner – John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

VB 2021-05-08 vs Orcas – John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

Kylie Chernikoff directs traffic.

Jaimee Masters takes control.

The paparazzi has invaded the gym.

Backed by Jill Prince, super sophomore Lucy Tenore dominates at the net.

Alita Blouin, the very definition of laser-focus.

Chelsea Prescott drops the hammer.

The most-enthusiastic fans in the stands.

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“I will devour your soul, sister!!” Sweet-natured Maddie Vondrak transforms into the volleyball wrecking machine known as The Mad Masher. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“Wolves on three.”

A surreal season ended on a surreal note.

Less than 24 hours after celebrating Senior Night in front of a fairly-full gym, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad closed its season Saturday by thrashing visiting Orcas Island in a mostly-empty house.

No fans were allowed to attend — to honor a request by the Vikings as positive Covid cases rise in the San Juans — though rest content in the knowledge that a handful of teenage girls can make as much noise, if not more, than any group of paying customers.

And the Wolves had plenty to hoot and holler about, as they strolled to a 25-12, 25-12, 25-14 win to finish 6-3 during this pandemic-altered season.

Coupeville, which finished second in the seven-team Northwest 2B/1B League, lost only to two-time defending state champ La Conner, and they made the Braves work as hard as anyone.

While he loses seniors Maddie Vondrak, Chelsea Prescott, Jaimee Masters, and Kylie Chernikoff, Wolf coach Cory Whitmore has a roster which features one junior and six fast-rising sophomores.

In the aftermath of Saturday’s win, as his players celebrated their success and mourned the end of their time together, Whitmore had a satisfied smile peeking out from under his face mask.

“We all have a lot of love for these seniors,” he said. “They were a great support crew for the younger players, like the seniors before them were for them.

“It’s really fun to see the impact these seniors had on our sophomores, and all they passed down.”

With all the obstacles this group of Wolves faced — a new league and classification, the loss of eight seniors, the pandemic — Whitmore was thrilled to see them accept every challenge.

“They tried new things, adapted, accepted feedback, and really were peaking by the end of the season, the right time,” he said. “I’m very proud of this team, and these seniors.”

Saturday’s match was essentially over one play into things.

Orcas served, there was a brief rally, then Prescott came sliding in, dropping the hammer of the gods, her power-packed right arm spiking a winner which split a pair of Vikings and skidded away.

Game, set, match.

Almost.

The Vikings did hang around for another hour or so, but they spent much of their time admiring the Wolf big hitters at work.

Prescott, Chernikoff, and Vondrak took turns getting wicked, spraying winners to all angles and showing their young teammates the way things are done.

Toss in strong runs at the service stripe from Alita Blouin, Maddie Georges, and Abby Mulholland, quality work in the trenches from Masters, and big plays at the net from twin titans Jill Prince and Lucy Tenore, and Orcas was doomed.

The end of the match offered up a perfect mix of the present (soon to be the past), and the future, for the Wolf volleyball program.

Up 22-13 in the third set, Coupeville collected its third to last point of the season thanks to one last, blisteringly brutal spike from the college-bound Prescott.

Stalking away in triumph, the young woman who first made varsity as a freshman celebrated with her contemporaries, then, metaphorically at least, turned over the keys to the car to the next generation.

Sophomores Gwen Gustafson and Ryanne Knoblich, who were on the court at the end, are part of that rising group of sophomore stars, with Tenore, Prince, Blouin, and Georges.

The final point, appropriately, came from one of the veterans, however.

Chernikoff, a fountain of joy over the past six years, from her days as a middle school track sensation to her current status as a volleyball killing machine, strolled to the service stripe, thunked the ball off the floor, then fired a note-perfect career capper.

Her low, sinking fireball ripped off a finger or two as it turned into set point #25 and match point #75, officially ending things.

One group moves on, another moves in, and Whitmore, with 55 wins in 4.5 seasons, rolls on, building something special.

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Ryanne Knoblich spins a ball into play, while Skylar Parker backs her up. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The future is a bright one.

The Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad, playing for first-year coach Ashley Menges, were a bold, confident, frequently-inspired squad of heavy hitters and service stripe snipers.

Exiting with a 25-9, 25-15, 15-7 rout of visiting Orcas Island Saturday, the young Wolves finished the pandemic-altered season with a crisp 6-3 record.

Coupeville’s only losses came to La Conner, the premier spiker program in the Northwest 2B/1B League, and all three matches were tough battles.

Saturday’s tilt, played with no fans, was a different affair, as the Wolves jumped on the Vikings early and rarely relented.

Maya Lucero got her team rockin’ with a spike which was nasty enough to make the Orcas players take two steps back, then reconsider and make it four steps instead.

From there, it was time for Jordyn Rogers to step into the spotlight, with her service game garnering much hooting and hollering from the Wolf varsity players — who sounded louder by themselves than a full gym might have.

Rogers ran off a string of seven straight points, stretching a 9-5 lead out to 16-5 and breaking the spirit of the visitors.

Helping her along was Olivia Schaffeld, who pasted a winner off the back line, and Maya Lucero who snuck in to drop an artful tip which froze everyone on the other side of the net.

Everyone in a Wolf uniform was on fire, with Allie Lucero blistering serves to all parts of the court and Grey Peabody patrolling the net with a vengeance.

Grey Peabody is a tower of power.

Thoroughly entertaining themselves, varsity stars Kylie Chernikoff and Maddie Vondrak worked the lines, bringing all the flare at their disposal.

Trying to outdo one another with extra-dramatic waves of their flags while signaling whether a ball was inside the lines or not, the duo kept on upping their game, until Chernikoff nearly did a cartwheel after spinning out of control on one call.

Giggling behind her mask, while Vondrak laughed along on the other side of the floor, Chernikoff and her fellow senior thoroughly enjoyed themselves during the early stage of their final day in a CHS volleyball uniform.

Back on the floor, the JV spikers continued to rain down pain on the Vikings, with Rogers and Allie Lucero combining to win 17 points on serve in the second set.

The third set gave Ryanne Knoblich a chance to test her ability to bash the ball (she passed the test, easily), while Allison Nastali, Skylar Parker, and Gwen Gustafson all excelled during their stints on the floor.

La Conner escaped this season, maybe, but Coupeville is young, scrappy, and hungry. Watch out for the pack that hunts together.

Gwen Gustafson dreams of future wins.

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Wolf heavy hitters (l to r) Kylie Chernikoff, Maddie Vondrak, and Maddie Georges celebrate a big play on Senior Night. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’ve been part of a renaissance.

Coupeville High School volleyball has soared in the five years Cory Whitmore has been at the helm, and Friday the Wolf coach honored four players who each have made major contributions.

Chelsea Prescott, Jaimee Masters, Kylie Chernikoff, and Maddie Vondrak were celebrated on Senior Night, as seen in the photos above and below.

Jaimee Masters and her parents, Nate and Leann.

Chelsea Prescott brings out the fan club, including parents Josie and Cory.

Bob and Joanne Chernikoff, and their super senior, Kylie.

David and Terri Vondrak jetted into town to watch Maddie, the Mad Masher, unleash missiles.

The fab four, who have each had a big impact on a soaring Wolf spiker program.

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