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Coupeville spikers (l to r) Myra McDonald, Carly Burt, and Capri Anter have been busy bees on the volleyball court. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The six-pack stands strong.

Playing with no bench for a second-straight match, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad put up a strong fight Tuesday, before being nipped by The Bush School.

The 25-23, 25-17, 19-17 non-conference loss, coming on the road in Seattle, drops the Wolves to 4-7 on the season.

Despite hitting Floyd Webb Court with no subs, Coupeville kept things close all night against their private school rivals.

The first set, in particular, was a nailbiter, with the teams tied 23-23 before the host Blazers pulled away in the late moments.

While the second set was a little more lopsided, the third frame was right back to being a back-and-forth battle.

After playing back-to-back matches against non-league teams to kick off the week, Coupeville returns to Northwest 2B/1B League action Thursday night.

This time the Wolves skip big city life and wander away to the wilds of Darrington for a clash with the Loggers.

Will they have more than the minimum six players for that royal rumble? Only time will tell.

 

Tuesday stats:

Capri Anter — 1 kill, 4 digs, 1 ace
Haylee Armstrong — 2 kills, 1 dig, 3 assists, 7 aces
Carly Burt — 1 kill, 3 digs
Lexis Drake — 2 aces
Chloe Marzocca — 1 kill, 3 digs, 1 assist, 3 aces
Myra McDonald — 1 dig, 3 aces

Adie Maynes, a three-sport star with a strong work ethic. (Lara Maynes photo)

Longer than a Taylor Swift movie, and with more hits.

Tuesday’s Coupeville Middle School volleyball home finale clocked in at three hours and 24 minutes, with 334 points spread across nine sets.

And while next-door neighbor South Whidbey made off with three victories, the Cougars had to work for the W’s, with the scrappy Wolves putting up a strong fight.

How the day played out:

 

Varsity:

The first match of the day featured the most points — 117 for those keeping track — with South Whidbey eking out a 25-20, 23-25, 15-9 victory.

The deciding third set was tied three times, the last at 4-4 after CMS 8th grader Willow Leedy-Bonifas sliced a winner through the defense, but then the Cougars pulled away.

South Whidbey had skill, it had grit, and it had luck.

Case in point, a late play in which the Cougars bounced a serve return off a light lashed to the gym roof, eventually winning the rally even as the light bucked and bobbed like it was trapped in an earthquake.

While no glass hit the gym floor below, a fair share of spikes did make contact with the hardwood as the two teams pummeled each other.

Coupeville trailed the entirety of the first set but did manage to fight off three set points as Adie Maynes sprayed bombs from the service stripe.

Tenley Stuurmans unleashed a knee-buckler of a kill to put the ball into Maynes hands, and the Wolves played their best under stress.

Inconsistent serving beforehand, however, put them in the position of chasing the Cougars.

Sydney Van Dyke and Leedy-Bonifas were the only Wolves to score on their serve in the opening frame until Maynes put together her torrid run at the end.

The second set was a different story, however, as this time it was CMS leading start to finish.

Van Dyke and precocious 6th grader Rhylee Inman scorched South Whidbey with nasty aces, while Maynes was a wild woman, sprinting from side to side, tracking down balls, and delivering several flips which froze multiple defenders.

Adie has been the backbone for our team,” said Wolf coach Cris Matochi.

“I’ll bet she ran five miles today; she ran everywhere and was always trying to get our passing going.”

Inman, the lone 6th grader to see varsity time, also impressed her mentor.

“For a younger player, Rhylee is not intimidated at all,” Matochi said. “So good to see.”

South Whidbey refused to buckle, forcing several ties in the latter stages of set two, but Coupeville had the magic touch when it mattered most.

A Cougar serve went wide at 23-23, with Matochi bellowing “OUT!!” then eyeballing the ref, who hesitated for the briefest of seconds before confirming he agreed.

That set up Stuurmans, who flipped the set winner into the narrowest of available cracks during the next rally, knotting things up at a set apiece and setting the stage for the frantic finale.

 

JV – Level A:

The only match South Whidbey swept, as it came out on top 25-19, 25-19, 15-8 in a match closer than the score might seem at first glance.

While the Wolves dropped the opening set, they were poppin’ from the service line.

Cami Van Dyke, Emma Leavitt, Zoe Winstead, Cheyanne Attebury, and the Energizer Rabbit of Wolf Nation — the fist-swinging, lung-busting whirlwind of destruction known as Olivia Martin — all scored while firing BB’s.

Martin, rocking back and forth, then flinging her entire body into every serve, cracked off a particularly impressive string of serves, punctuating her run with an ace which caused her to holler like a Viking laying waste to a hapless village.

Win, lose, or draw, the CMS 7th grader, younger sister of former Wolf volleyball ace Emma Mathusek, is very likely the most entertaining middle school athlete in Cow Town.

In this pic from last season, Olivia Martin contemplates 1,001 different ways she will destroy your hopes of winning the volleyball match. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The second set was a lot like the first one, but this time around Brooklyn Pope was the one laying waste to any fools who dared to step into her path.

She scored twice on balls she flipped over her head, with her back to the net, and seemed to be in the thick of things on every other play.

And then there was Miss Martin again, this time crunching a service ace which soared over a Cougar head, then suddenly, violently crashed to the court, bit a chunk out of the floor, and skipped away for a winner.

While the Wolves top JV squad didn’t end the day with a win, they did end it with a great deal of hard-won respect.

The future is bright for these young women, who have grown each time I have seen them on the floor this season.

Their spirit is big, their fight is bigger.

 

JV – Level B:

So close.

Seeking their first win, Coupeville’s second JV squad staggered South Whidbey, winning the opening frame 25-19.

Sparked by a huge day from 6th grader Scarlett Spencer, and strong work from running mates like Emma Cushman and Mila Gesing, the Wolves brought the house down, and kept their fan club rocking even after rock-hard bleachers wore out even the most resilient of tired tushes.

While the Cougars rebounded to win the final two sets 25-12 and 15-10 to claim the match, CMS left coach Kristina Hooks smiling.

“They have improved so much!!” she said.

Samantha Howard and Finley Helm added service aces in the first set, while an exuberant Alexandra Lo cranked out a run of winners from the line in set #2.

The deciding set — a quicksilver race to score 15 points — was up for grabs, as Coupeville overcame a 9-5 deficit to seize the lead at 10-9.

Helm, a pedal-through-the-medal race car driver picking up a new sport, reeled off four straight service winners, with the Cougars bouncing one return off a low-hanging basketball backboard.

South Whidbey had a pack of dangerous underhanded servers at its disposal, however, and rode a variety of moonballs at the end, surging back to claim the victory.

 

Next up:

Coupeville wraps its season with a trip to Lakewood Monday, Oct. 23.

After that, middle school athletes transition to basketball, with the Wolf boys playing first, before the girls return to the court in early 2024.

Get in on the ground floor.

The newly formed Central Whidbey Volleyball Club is looking for coaches for its first season, and that means your spiker guru dreams could come true.

The CWVC is holding an informational meeting this Saturday at Cedar and Salt Coffee, which sits at 200 S. Main St. in the building built by Miriam’s Espresso back in the day.

Mia Farris (left) and Madison McMillan are on a five-match winning streak. (Bailey Thule photo)

Methodical and overpowering.

Jumping out to a huge lead Monday, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad mashed visiting Providence Classical Christian in straight sets.

Putting the kibosh on a non-conference foe, the Wolves captured their fifth-straight win, and did so to a 25-13, 25-15, 25-11 tune.

Now 6-4 on the season, Coupeville gets right back at it in less than 24 hours, traveling to Seattle Tuesday to face The Bush School in another non-league rumble.

If the Wolves come out for that one playing like they did against PCC, it’ll be a short, but sweet road trip.

Ever-springy Lyla Stuurmans erupted for the first of her team-high 12 kills during the opening rally Monday, the ball slamming inches away from denting mom Sarah, who was calling lines.

That sent the ball into the hands of Wolf setter Katie Marti, who promptly went off of a giddy rampage, notching 10 consecutive points on her serve to stake CHS to an 11-0 lead.

While things got a little (emphasis on little) bit closer after that, Coupeville was firmly in control of things every second of the way.

Even with Wolf coach Cory Whitmore bounding out of his chair to chastise over-exuberant members of his student section for intruding in the personal space of a rival hitter, the mood was one of almost Zen-like calmness.

Stuurmans, Grey Peabody, and an electric Mia Farris mashed the crud out of the ball all night long, banging the ball off the back line as the visitors could do little but gaze in silent awe.

Lyla Stuurmans launches. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

PCC was unable to force the action on offense and spent much of its time on defense scrambling to keep from getting pegged in the head and shoulders by the Wolf snipers.

Any balls put into play were tracked down by Madison McMillan and Marti, while three different CHS players recorded solo blocks as the net was a no-fly zone.

Those blocks came from Jada Heaton, Teagan Calkins, and Peabody, as Coupeville snuffed out any PCC comeback hopes in short order.

All nine Wolves to hit the floor made an impact, with Taylor Brotemarkle and Issabel Johnson slamming home daggers in the form of service aces.

If one sound could describe Monday’s massacre, though, it would be the sound of a volleyball tearing up a chunk of the floor after being hammered by the aggressive arms of Stuurmans and Farris.

The wham-bam junior duo were in a particularly savage mood, their kills exploding off the polished gym floor.

Followed by quiet smiles as the Wolf markswomen strode away like gunfighters exiting a high noon showdown ready for another shootout at a moment’s notice.

 

Monday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 1 dig, 1 ace
Teagan Calkins — 2 kills, 2 digs, 2 aces, 1 solo block
Mia Farris — 10 kills, 2 digs, 3 aces
Jada Heaton — 1 solo block
Issabel Johnson — 2 aces
Katie Marti — 1 kill, 6 digs, 25 assists, 7 aces
Madison McMillan — 4 digs, 1 assist, 3 aces
Grey Peabody — 8 kills, 1 solo block
Lyla Stuurmans — 12 kills, 5 digs

Carly Burt cranks up a winner. (Jackie Saia photo)

Six pistons firing as one.

Playing with no reserves Monday, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad scorched visiting Providence Classical Christian, dismantling their private school foes in straight sets.

By the time they were done, the Wolves had a 25-16, 25-13, 25-20 non-conference victory in hand, which lifts them to 4-6 on the season.

Despite playing with a thin bench night in and night out, the freshman-dominated team has won three of its last five.

Next up, road trips to The Bush School in Seattle Tuesday and Darrington Thursday, as Ashley Menges and her spikers carve a path of success.

Monday night, the Wolves dominated almost start to finish, with just a brief dry spell in the (practice) third set.

Fab frosh Haylee Armstrong came out on fire, peppering PCC with nasty serves to reel off the first five points of the night.

That went over so well, the rest of the Wolves decided to do the same thing, with Capri Anter, Lexis Drake, and Chloe Marzocca reeling off their own hot streaks at the line.

Chloe Marzocca digs out a ball in an earlier match. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The visitors had trouble keeping a rally alive, at least in the early going, and it didn’t get much easier in the second set.

Myra McDonald cranked an ace off of a rival’s arm, before Marzocca launched several lasers which set up brief rallies won by the Wolves thanks to note-perfect tips from cousins Armstrong and Anter.

Carly Burt also snapped off a gorgeous ace, and Coupeville romped through the first two frames, securing the win.

But, since this is JV volleyball, they always go on to play a third set for practice — to a full 25 points — even when one team has clearly dominated the proceedings.

Given a third chance, PCC proved to be scrappy, building a third-set lead and holding it most of the way.

At a certain point the Wolves flipped a switch, however, with Anter and Marzocca flicking winners on balls which sliced off any fingertips in their way.

Armstrong, down on the floor and using part of her jersey to clean a slick spot on the floor, bounded back up to position her teammates for success with high, arcing sets.

Finally, Drake ended the night on a crowd-pleasing run at the service line, reeling off seven straight points to slam the door shut for good.

 

Monday stats:

Capri Anter — 3 kills, 3 digs, 8 aces
Haylee Armstrong — 4 kills, 2 digs, 9 assists, 10 aces
Carly Burt — 1 dig, 1 ace
Lexis Drake — 3 kills, 2 digs, 1 assist, 3 aces, 1 solo block
Chloe Marzocca — 4 kills, 4 digs, 1 assist, 4 aces
Myra McDonald — 1 ace