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Coupeville grad Joey Lippo is off to play college tennis in Kentucky. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Tennis it is.

Joey Lippo was a three-sport star during his days at Coupeville High School, anchoring Wolf teams in tennis, basketball and baseball.

He was also the rare male athlete who could do a mean dance as well, often joining twin sister Skyy in her world of ballet, when he performed in productions of The Nutcracker.

But now Lippo, a 2018 CHS grad, will devote himself solely to the racket arts, after agreeing to play tennis for Midway University in Kentucky.

The liberal arts school competes athletically in the River States Conference, and is part of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics.

Most NAIA schools offer athletic scholarships, and Midway has pledged to pick up a substantial portion of Lippo’s college costs, making his parents hearts sing with great joy.

In addition to playing tennis, Lippo will study environmental science. School begins Jan. 7, with tennis starting in Feb.

He’s joining an Eagles program which is still in its infancy, as Midway was an all-girls school until just recently.

Founded in 1847, the school was originally known as the Kentucky Female Orphan School and admitted its first male undergraduates in time for the fall 2017 semester.

Midway University sits smack-dab on a 200-acre working farm in the Bluegrass region of Kentucky, and the oldest building on campus, Pinkerton Hall, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

While the school has been around for a long time, Lippo is one of the pioneers for male sports at the institution.

The men’s tennis program is in just its second season, with coach Joe Reyes, a highly-accomplished former college player, quickly building a strong roster.

The Eagles currently lay claim to players from Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama and Texas, plus four foreign netters, one from Spain and three from Columbia.

And now you can add Washington state to the list.

“The tennis coach found me somehow and told me to come visit the school,” Lippo said. “I got to play with the team and I loved that environment and everyone was so welcoming.

“It’s a small school and reminds me a lot of Coupeville.”

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Coupeville’s Kailey Kellner, here with parents Tim and Jennifer, knocked down a pair of three-balls Sunday to help D’Youville College win a basketball thriller. (Photo courtesy Kellner family)

Things are on the upswing in New York.

Coupeville grad Kailey Kellner and the D’Youville College women’s basketball team are off to a 3-2 start on the season after pulling out a 69-66 thriller Sunday against Cazenovia College.

That’s a marked turnaround from a season ago, when the Spartans finished 5-20 and claimed only one non-conference victory.

Now, D’Youville has already tripled that number, giving them a boost heading into their first round of Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference games.

During Kellner’s freshman season, the Spartans finished ninth in the 10-team league. Right now, they boast the second-best record of any team from the conference.

D’Youville will get a big test this coming Wednesday, Nov. 28, when it hosts defending league champ Hilbert, which sits at 5-2 in non-conference play.

Winning tightly-contested games, like the Spartans did Sunday, bodes well for the future, though.

The two squads went toe-to-toe, shot-to-shot, swapping razor-thin leads at every break.

D’Youville was up by a single point, 17-16, at the end of the first quarter, while Cazenovia rebounded to claim a 35-34 advantage at the half.

The Spartans poured in 22 third-quarter points, their best showing of the game, to edge ahead 56-55 heading into the fourth, then clamped down on defense to close out the win.

Kellner was a big part of the win, coming off the bench to drop a season-high seven points in 16 minutes of action.

She knocked down a pair of long three-balls, slid a key free throw through the net at the end of the second quarter and also snagged two rebounds and made off with a steal.

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Coupeville grad Makana Stone went for 18 points and seven rebounds Saturday as Whitman College drilled McMurry University. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

McMurry University traveled a long way to witness Makana Stone’s excellence live.

The Texas-based War Hawks trekked 1,801 miles from Abilene to get to Spokane, then got thrashed by the Coupeville grad and her college mates.

Having made the journey from Walla Walla for the non-conference bout, Whitman College made sure the return trip would be a pleasant one, savaging McMurry 83-57.

The Blues, who were led by Stone’s 18-point, 7-rebound performance, are now 3-2 heading into the start of Northwest Conference play.

While Whitman heads home, McMurry will hang around the Whitworth Fieldhouse in Spokane and play the arena’s home team Sunday.

Saturday’s game, which was a tuneup before Whitman hosts league rivals Pacific and Willamette next weekend in Walla Walla, was a one-sided affair.

The Blues flew out to a 9-0 lead in the early going before settling for a 22-11 advantage at the first break.

From there, Whitman stretched the margin to 13 at the half and 20 after three quarters.

Stone, who reached double digits in scoring for the fifth time in as many games this season, scored in every quarter as she amassed her game-high points total.

Shooting a solid 8-12 from the field, the Whitman junior scored 11 of her 18 points in the second half, with seven of them coming in the third quarter.

She also blocked two shots, pilfered a steal and doled out an assist in 22 minutes of floor time.

For the season, Stone tops Whitman with 89 points (17.8 a night), 42 rebounds and eight blocked shots.

The former Wolf ace has seven assists and eight steals, and is shooting 55% from the floor (37-67) and 75% from the free-throw line (15-20).

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Coupeville grad Makana Stone was honored Monday as the Northwest Conference women’s basketball player of the week. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

She’s a three-timer.

Coupeville grad Makana Stone, now a junior at Whitman College, was honored Monday as the Northwest Conference women’s basketball player of the week.

It’s the third time she’s received the honor, having been previously picked in Dec. 2017 and Jan. 2018.

Stone received the accolades after tearing up the floor in Spokane this weekend at the Whit Classic.

She broke her personal collegiate high in back-to-back games, throwing down 24 points Friday in a win against the University of Texas at Tyler, then topping it Saturday with 26 in an overtime thriller versus Montana Tech.

The NWC honors athletes weekly in four sports during the winter season, and Stone was joined by men’s basketball player Ryan Lacey (George Fox) as well as swimmers August Bergh (Lewis & Clark) and Kelli Callahan (Puget Sound).

Whitman women’s basketball is 2-2 in non-conference action, with Stone front and center for the Blues.

The former Wolf standout leads her squad in scoring (17.8 points a night) and rebounding (8.8), while shooting 52.7% from the floor (29-55) and 81.3% from the free throw line (13-16).

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A night after scoring 24 points, Coupeville grad Makana Stone (hand up) torched Montana Tech for 26. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

She had quite a weekend.

A day after setting her collegiate high with a 24-point performance in the opener of the Whit Classic in Spokane, Coupeville grad Makana Stone upped the ante.

The Whitman College junior re-busted her career high-water mark Saturday, tossing in 26 points in a wild and woolly 89-87 overtime loss to women’s basketball powerhouse Montana Tech.

Stone and the Blues charged back from a 13-point deficit, then rode two three-balls in the final five seconds of regulation to somehow, against all odds, force extra play.

But there was no cherry on top of the sundae, as Montana Tech pulled out its own miracle finish in overtime, getting a runner in the paint that dropped through with 0:00.3 on the clock.

With Stone handcuffed to the bench after a blind ref fouled her out in OT, all the former Wolf could do was watch from a distance as Mollie Peoples sliced through the Blues defense.

The sophomore nursing student from Butte flicked the ball skywards at the last second, and it hung in the air for an eternity before caressing the glass and plopping home.

Peoples shot, the only field goal she made in six attempts, capped an extraordinary finish to a game where Whitman didn’t hold the lead until 37 of the 40 minutes of regulation had ticked away.

That lead, at 74-72 off a shot by Kaylie McCracken, was short-lived, however.

Montana Tech, which is 7-1 after the non-conference win (Whitman drops to 2-2) rallied right back, going on an 8-2 tear to go up by four with 40 seconds to play.

Even better for the Orediggers, they were headed to the free throw line, with a chance to all but seal the win.

Except neither charity shot would stay in the basket, keeping alive the slimmest of hopes for Whitman, which hurried down court only to get stuck in some serious defensive traffic.

With way too much time having slithered off the clock, the Blues sent up a prayer, and had it answered twice.

First, Mady Burdett splashed home a three-ball with five seconds to go to cut the lead back to 80-79.

Montana Tech, immediately fouled, reverted back to normal and slipped two free throws through the net, requiring Whitman to hit a buzzer-beater if it wanted to keep playing.

Which it promptly did, as Kaelan Shamseldin drilled the bottom out of the net from the right side, her trey sending the Orediggers reeling and the Blues jumping with joy.

After the emotional roller-coaster of the fourth quarter, it seemed like there was no way for overtime to match the same intensity. And yet it did.

Montana Tech went up by four, Stone slashed to the hoop for a bucket to cut the margin back down, then fouls took over.

The refs bounced three major Oredigger front-court players, as well as Stone, in the late going, but both teams struggled to hit their free throws, largely negating the many fouls.

Whitman, even with its top rebounder on the bench, hit the glass hard in the final seconds, turning a third-chance offensive rebound into yet another game-tier at 87-87.

That came with a little over a minute left in OT, setting up a tension-packed, and scoreless, final 60 seconds, until Peoples went and made herself a folk hero to Oredigger Nation.

That the game even went to an extra period was a bit of a surprise, as Montana Tech controlled the game early, running out to a 23-12 lead at the first break.

The Orediggers stretched the margin to 12 at the half, thanks to a miracle shot which benefited greatly from a lack of replay.

A three-ball which looked, on the live broadcast, like it had been launched well after the buzzer sounded, it flopped through and was counted by the refs, despite some howls from the Blues.

Stone kept Whitman in the game early, pouring in 15 of her 26 points in the first half.

She finished the game shooting 9-16 from the floor and a sizzlin’ 8-9 at the free throw line, while also grabbing a game-high eight rebounds.

Through four games, the former Wolf has 71 points, 35 rebounds, seven steals, six assists and six blocks.

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