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Chelsea Prescott, seen during her senior season at Coupeville High School, is piling up stats as a freshman at Medaille College. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Call her the streak-buster.

Sparked by the play of Coupeville grad Chelsea Prescott, the Medaille College volleyball team swept visiting Hilbert College Wednesday in New York.

The 25-8, 25-13, 25-15 win snaps a five-match skid for the Mavericks and lifts them to 1-1 in Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference play, 4-9 overall.

Medaille will try and make it two straight when its hosts La Roche University (1-1, 4-12) Saturday afternoon.

Prescott, who has adapted to playing a new position in college, having moved from the left side to the right, tallied five kills, three service aces, and a match-high 11 digs.

Teammates Chase Luebeck (11 kills) and Haley Kennedy (27 assists) also filled up the stat sheet for Medaille.

Having played in all 41 of her team’s sets, Prescott has piled up 63 kills, 101 digs, 10 aces, seven assists, six block assists, and one solo block.

The former Wolf standout has accounted for 78 points, third-best on the team.

Coupeville grad Zoe Trujillo shows off her first of many bodybuilding medals. (Photo courtesy Amy Trujillo)

New sport, still killin’ it.

Coupeville grad Zoe Trujillo, a volleyball, tennis, and track star during her days as a Wolf, is now a bodybuilder.

To no one’s surprise, the uber-talented Trujillo has had an immediate impact, taking home two medals at her first event.

Competing in the NPC Washington Ironman Natural Bodybuilding Championships Oct. 2 in Shelton, she claimed first in “Figure-True Novice” and third in “Bikini-True Novice.”

The event was held at the Little Creek Casino Resort.

Trujillo, a 2020 CHS grad and member of the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, had her biggest impact at the high school level as a volleyball spiker.

Trujillo (front) and Maddie Vondrak get down with their bad selves. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

She was a big hitter and a big part of the success of a CHS program which never finished lower than second-place in league during her four years on campus.

During Trujillo’s senior year, her team went 14-5, tying the Wolf volleyball single-season record for wins.

Nezi Keiper (back) and Carolyn Lhamon kick off a series of fan photos from Tuesday night’s CHS volleyball matches. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The gym was alive with color Tuesday night.

With the Coupeville High School volleyball squads hosting Dig Pink Night, to honor the battle with breast cancer, Wolf fans dressed up for the occasion.

That drew the attention of wanderin’ cameraman John Fisken, who delivers the pics seen above and below.

Lyla Stuurmans goes full Matrix, sliding under an incoming explosion of hair. Or so it appears. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The uniforms were poppin’, the action was hoppin’.

Wearing brand-new pink duds Tuesday to honor the fight with breast cancer, the Coupeville High School volleyball players looked crisp as they delivered staggering kills.

Capturing it all in digital images was Diet Coke-fueled cameraman John Fisken, who provides us with the pics seen above and below.

To take a gander at everything he shot, and possibly purchase some glossies for Christmas presents, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Volleyball-2021/VB-2021-10-05-vs-Concrete/

 

Grey Peabody wins a tip war.

Jill Prince unleashes the thunder ‘n lightning.

Jada Heaton gets the offense rolling.

Lucy Tenore drops the hammer.

Ryanne Knoblich punishes the volleyball.

Taylor Brotemarkle gets artful at the net.

The Wolf JV celebrate one of many big plays.

“Welcome to the Lucy Tenore Experience. Get ready, folks — I’m about to go be all awesome.” (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Focus on the details.

Do the little things right, and the big things will get easier.

Coupeville High School varsity volleyball coach Cory Whitmore preaches that philosophy, and Tuesday night his players proved they’ve been listening.

Playing a fairly error-free night, the Wolves cruised past visiting Concrete 25-11, 25-18, 25-11.

The win lifts Coupeville to 6-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 6-2 overall, heading into the biggest gut-check of the season.

The Wolves travel to La Conner Wednesday for a first-place showdown with the two-time defending state champs, who haven’t dropped a set while going 6-0 in league, 7-0 overall.

While Coupeville will be an underdog against the Braves, it will be a good test for the young Wolves, to see if they can carry over the strong performance against Concrete while facing a juggernaut.

“It was good to start the week with a win, and a pretty focused one,” Whitmore said. “We’ve made that a priority in everything we do — start to finish, focus in on the details.

“Details will make the difference down the stretch for us, this year and the next, as we try and maintain focus and get the growth we’re looking for.”

Playing on Dig Pink Night Tuesday, while raising money for the fight against breast cancer, Coupeville jumped on Concrete early.

Maddie Georges ripped off five straight points on her serve — with the biggest being delivered via a mighty spike off the dangerous fingertips of an airborne Savina Wells — as CHS built an early 7-2 lead.

The real set-buster was Lucy Tenore, however, who was uncanny at the service stripe, turning a 9-7 lead into an 18-7 advantage.

The Wolf junior pounded out several aces during her run, while Jill Prince and Lyla Stuurmans came swooping in to smash winners which ended brief rallies.

Coupeville libero Alita Blouin was a magician as well, dropping one winner down the middle of the floor while facing the other way, the ball arcing up and away as pretty as a rainbow.

She was equally as deadly from the service stripe, with several Blouin serves setting up Wells, who was swinging the hammer of the gods while patrolling the left side of the floor.

The lanky freshman almost touched the ceiling as she soared into the heavens, her kill arm whipping downward, spraying kills as Concrete players ran for cover beneath her barrage.

The second set, while a little closer in score, was never in doubt, as Coupeville’s superior fire power ruled the evening.

Prince, Tenore, and Wells ended rallies by beating the life out of the ball, with Stuurmans and Olivia Schaffeld dancing through the air to deliver tips which froze the Lions in place.

Concrete’s errors built up as the final set played out, while the Wolves played with ever-more precision.

Tenore was a terror at the net, and she closed the win with a powerhouse put-away which caused the foundation of the CHS gym to rumble like a tsunami was about to make landfall.

Whitmore emerged from the match pleased with how clean his team’s hitting sheet was — “hard work paying off” — and with how the Wolves and their support staff were able to pull off a successful fundraiser.

Money generated by the Dig Pink event will go to pay for mammograms through the WhidbeyHealth Foundation.

“It was a great night for breast cancer awareness, and, on top of that, we were able to focus on local individuals, which is great,” Whitmore said.

“We have a great group of parents who put it all together, with posters, and balls for the girls to throw to the fans, and the money stays local – I love that idea.”

 

Tuesday stats:

Alita Blouin — 1 kill, 9 digs, 2 assists
Maddie Georges — 4 digs, 18 assists, 8 aces
Taygin Jump — 3 digs
Ryanne Knoblich — 1 dig
Jill Prince — 3 kills
Olivia Schaffeld 
— 2 kills, 4 aces
Lyla Stuurmans 
— 5 kills, 5 digs, 3 aces
Lucy Tenore 
— 6 kills, 1 dig, 7 aces
Savina Wells 
— 7 kills, 1 dig, 6 aces

Savina Wells had six of Coupeville’s 28 aces in a straight-sets win over Concrete.