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Grey Peabody dominated at the net Thursday, sparking Coupeville to a key league win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’re on a tear.

Since coming dangerously close to ending four-time defending 2B state champ La Conner’s 12+ year conference winning streak in a five-set thriller, the Coupeville High School varsity spikers have rocked their foes.

The Wolves have won four straight, with win #4 coming at home Thursday against Mount Vernon Christian.

Coming from behind to nail down a 19-25, 25-13, 25-18, 25-15 victory, CHS improves to 3-2 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 5-4 overall.

Up next for the Wolves are back-to-back non-conference matches, with Providence Classical Christian (10-5) coming to Whidbey Monday, Oct. 16.

The next night, Coupeville enjoys a bus trip to Seattle to square off with The Bush School, which sits at 5-6.

Thursday’s win capped a week in which the Wolves won two of two in their own gym while dealing with all the side events associated with Homecoming.

“Really good team win tonight and super proud of the girls for their maturity as they fought through each set,” said Coupeville coach Cory Whitmore.

“MVC is much improved from previous seasons, and we knew we’d need to show up.”

The Hurricanes, who, like Coupeville, upended La Conner during the South Whidbey Invite, came out strongly, but the Wolves responded in kind.

“We played well even in dropping the first set, but MVC played very tenacious and very clean out of the gates,” Whitmore said.

“That’s the maturity and resiliency I’m proud of with the win tonight – they continued to trust and stick to our systems and just elevate it within the game plan, and it really panned out.”

Stellar play at the service stripe was key to the win.

Issabel Johnson cracks off a fearsome serve. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“We HAD to serve tough tonight and that was where we came up big with all six servers,” Whitmore said.

“Our best set was the second, where we only committed two errors the entire set which is difficult to pull off while remaining aggressive.”

Across the board, the Wolves brought ferocious play to the floor.

Madison (McMillan) covered so much of the court and just pinpointed her serving locations tonight,” Whitmore said.

Katie (Marti) did a great job of distributing the ball. She made really smart choices and delivered the ball to her hitters, keeping them in rhythm.”

In particular, the fiery setter was on the same wavelength with senior slugger Grey Peabody.

Katie and Grey really connected, but Grey was so smart tonight with her ball placement and aggressiveness on the overpasses,” Whitmore said.

“She also had to adjust her block and made it happen on the fly.”

While Peabody slammed home 12 kills, junior Mia Farris was hot on her heels, peppering the Hurricanes with 11 winners of her own.

Mia had the offensive game she (and everyone) knew she could,” Whitmore said. “She’s been working so hard on her attack approach, and it popped tonight.

“She was zeroed in on the service line, and had such an air of confidence, there were moments that she truly took over the set.”

As Coupeville heads into Friday’s Homecoming parade and football game, and Saturday’s dance, the spikers are flying high, as they should be.

The Wolves celebrate another win. (Jackie Saia photo)

“They had to maintain a high level of energy and focus for a significant amount of time, and so I’m very proud of the way they pulled together to make it happen,” Whitmore said.

“Fun to get a Homecoming win.”

 

Thursday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 2 digs
Teagan Calkins — 4 kills, 1 dig, 2 aces, 1 solo block, 2 block assists
Mia Farris — 11 kills, 8 digs, 6 aces, 1 solo block
Jada Heaton — 1 dig
Issabel Johnson — 1 ace
Katie Marti — 2 kills, 5 digs, 27 assists, 8 aces
Madison McMillan — 17 digs, 2 assists, 3 aces
Grey Peabody — 12 kills, 3 solo blocks, 2 block assists
Lyla Stuurmans — 7 kills, 3 digs, 1 ace, 2 solo blocks

PR’s for everyone!

Ready to rumble. (Photos by Sherry Bonacci and Laura Callahan)

They were back, and faster than ever.

Returning to Lake Padden in Bellingham, where many of them competed in a relay event back in August, Coupeville High School cross country runners sparkled Thursday afternoon.

This time out, the event was the Lake Lap Invite, with the Wolf girls finishing 6th in the team standings and the boys squad claiming 7th.

The Meridian girls and Sehome boys brought home team titles, with sophomores Logan Ignacio of Meridian and Nickolas Luce of Lynden Christian finishing fastest on the 2.6-mile course.

Marking the end of the regular season, the event catapults the Wolves into the postseason.

“What a rush! What a race!” said CHS coach Elizabeth Bitting.

“EVERYBODY who ran the relay in August PR’d their time by well over a minute! A very fast race.”

Junior Carson Field was the fastest Wolf, cracking the 15-minute barrier, while his teammates all ran strongly.

“Top five boys were within one minute of each other,” Bitting said. “The girls ran a beautiful, strong race. So much fun!!!”

As her runners competed on one of the prettiest courses they will see this season, Bitting got some help from bus driver extraordinaire Laurie Black, who doubled as an unofficial assisant coach.

“She helped me with times!” Bitting said. “I truly do appreciate our bus drivers; they are the best!!!”

Coupeville charges into the postseason after this, with the Northwest 2B/1B League Championships Oct. 19 at Mount Vernon Christian.

After that comes Tri-Districts Oct. 26 at Fort Steilacoom Park, and, hopefully, the state meet Nov. 4 in Pasco.

George Spear kicks it into overdrive.

 

Thursday results:

 

GIRLS:

Noelle Western (16th) 19:17.90
Jasmine Castellanos (36th) 21:00.20
Aleksia Jump (46th) 21:46.90
Reagan Callahan (59th) 23:52.50
Erica McGrath (61st) 24:19.00

 

BOYS:

Carson Field (23rd) 14:52.90
Landon Roberts (50th) 15:38.40
George Spear (53rd) 15:42.20
Ezekiel Allen (56th) 15:45.30
Kenneth Jacobsen (61st) 15:50.80
Nicholas Wasik (107th) 17:22.00
Santi Ojeda (115th) 17:36.70
Preston Howard (121st) 17:50.50
Axel Marshall (124th) 17:59.20
Zach Blitch (165th) 23:37.60
Damy Giacobbe (168th) 23:46.50

Your moment of Zen.

Chelsi Stevens and her fellow CMS spikers continue to show great growth. (Photo courtesy Kristi Stevens)

It was only the first chapter.

While the Coupeville Middle School volleyball squads fell at South Whidbey Wednesday, the Wolves will get an immediate chance at redemption.

That’s because the next-door neighbors are playing back-to-back matches with each other, with the South Enders scheduled to travel up to Cow Town Tuesday, Oct. 17 for a rematch.

That’s the home finale for Coupeville, and a perfect opportunity for Wolf Nation to pack the CMS gym and create a wall of sound.

With that in mind, how Wednesday played out:

 

Varsity:

Unforced errors stung the Wolves in a 25-17, 25-17, 15-8 loss.

“We started every set strong, but we had so many errors that led South Whidbey to take the lead mid set, while we kept trying to keep the ball in play,” said CMS coach Cris Matochi.

“South Whidbey is way better than they were last year,” he added. “They were keeping the ball in play very consistently.

“They have an incredible and well-trained libero that was running for everything. She is the backbone of their team.”

Matochi also praised the Cougar staff — “They have two great coaches that are doing an incredible job training those kids” — while finding positives for his team, as well.

“Now we know what they look like, and I hope that the players step up their game so we can fight for every point next week,” he said.

“Our setter Addy (Maynes) played her heart out,” Matochi added. “She was getting to every single ball, and she always plays with her full heart.”

Giving her some help is job #1 before the rematch.

“There is only so much a setter can do when the passes are not coming to her,” Matochi said.

“We will be focusing on our serve receive and serve, and keeping the ball in play as those two skills will be imperative for us to be able to perform well.”

The Wolf coach is already counting down the days until Coupeville gets a second crack at its archrivals.

“Next week we will need to fight, and it won’t be easy,” Matochi said. “I’m hoping that being at home and having our incredible fans will boost the players confidence and give them a boost.

“I’m hoping that the girls will use this opportunity to bring their A-game next week.”

 

JV – Team A:

“I feel like I always say this but, although my teams didn’t win the game, they played so well I couldn’t be happier with their growth and progress.”

That was the feeling Wolf coach Kristina Hooks carried away from Langley after her team bounced back to claim set #3 by a 16-14 score, after South Whidbey won the first two frames 25-14, 25-18.

Battling both talented rivals and their own frustration over some questionable calls from the ref — whose seeing-eye dog had been possibly locked out of the gym — the young Wolves got stronger as the match played out.

Hooks has been working with her players on passing — “That’s really the fundamental skill of volleyball” — and was pleased with her team’s growth.

“If you can’t pass, you can’t really do anything else and all of a sudden during this game their passes started being amazing,” she said.

“This was the first game where I had my players practice being setters and getting the second ball and Brooklyn (Pope) and Cami (Van Dyke) did amazing.

“They were running all over the court to get to that second ball.”

 

JV – Team B:

Growth was again the word of the day.

While the Wolves lost 25-19, 25-8, 15-7, Hooks sees progress every time out.

“This team’s performance had a significant increase from our last game,” she said. “They played so well.

“Their passes were doing really well, and almost all of my girls were making their serves over the net, which was amazing and a little surprising.”

On a team with very inexperienced players, Hooks especially enjoys seeing how her young spikers remain positive, helping each other.

“I love the girls on this team,” she said. “They’re all so sweet to each other.

“After every point, especially a mistake, they run towards their teammate that missed a serve or shanked a pass and are encouraging them; it’s the sweetest thing to see.”

Rough day for booters

Cael Wilson and Co. are battling for a playoff berth. (Lyla Stuurmans photo)

This one stings.

The Coupeville High School varsity boys’ soccer team entered Thursday ranked #4 in the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association RPI rankings.

They won’t be in the same spot tomorrow.

After only losing to teams ranked ahead of them — #1 Friday Harbor and #3 Mount Vernon Christian — the Wolves fell 4-0 at Bothell to host Providence Classical Christian, which was ranked #9.

It’s the first time the CHS varsity has been shut out this season, with the loss coming to a team it beat 2-0 a month ago in a game classified as a non-conference affair.

The defeat drops Coupeville to 2-3 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 5-4 overall, with three conference rumbles left on the regular-season schedule.

Currently sitting 5th in the nine-team NWL, the Wolves close with a road trip to Lopez Island (Oct. 18), a home tilt with La Conner (Oct. 20), and a trek to Orcas Island (Oct. 24).

CHS trails Friday Harbor (4-0), MVC (3-1), Orcas (3-1), and PCC (3-1) in the conference standings.

Meanwhile, Lopez (1-2), Grace Academy (1-3), La Conner (1-4), and Cedar Park Christian-Lynnwood (0-3) are battling in the basement.

As they headed home from Bothell, Wolf coaches Robert Wood and Kimberly Kisch preferred to make the trip mostly in quiet contemplation.

“Man, it was a rough game,” Kisch said, and, with that, we’ll leave the loss in the rear-view mirror and move on to potentially better days.

 

JV has tilt on tap:

Coupeville’s second squad returns to action before the varsity does, travelling to Mount Vernon Christian Tuesday, Oct. 16 for a game.

The Wolf JV sits at 0-2-1 on the season.

Coupeville High School cheerleader Alysia Burdge gets into a shooter’s duel with rival paparazzi. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Action on the floor, action in the bleachers.

Coupeville High School volleyball squads crushed visiting Concrete Tuesday, sweeping both the JV and varsity matches.

While they did so, the fans, many of them decked out in pink to commemorate the battle against breast cancer, cheered, posed for pics, then posed for some more.

The click of the camera could be heard from one end of the gym to the other, with the photos seen above and below coming to us from John Fisken.

To see his action shots from the game, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/CHS-Volleyball-2023-2024/VB-2023-10-10-vs-Concrete/