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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

   Freshman Kylie Chernikoff was a beast on defense in her high school hoops debut, claiming Most Improved. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Sophomore Scout Smith brought home a varsity letter plus two awards from Monday’s season-ending basketball banquet.

   Wolves (back, l to r) Lindsey Roberts, Sarah Wright and (front) Ema Smith show off their All-League awards. (Amy King photo)

One last run through the league, with honors.

The Coupeville High School girls basketball squad finished a four-year sojourn in the Olympic League, during which the Wolves went 33-3 in varsity play, by landing three players on the All-League team.

Lindsey Roberts and Sarah Wright were tabbed as First-Team All-Conference players when league coaches voted, while fellow junior Ema Smith received Honorable Mention.

The Wolves also claimed the league’s Sportsmanship award, while Port Townsend senior Kaitlyn Meek was MVP.

For CHS, the All-League honors were just the tip of the iceberg when coaches David and Amy King handed out awards Monday at a season-capping banquet.

Roberts, who led Coupeville in scoring and rebounding this season, took home Leader of the Pack, while she and senior Mikayla Elfrank, were honored as team captains.

Sophomores Scout Smith (varsity) and Tia Wurzrainer (JV) claimed the Wolf Paw Award while seniors Kyla Briscoe and Allison Wenzel copped Four Year Participation honors.

Amy Briscoe, who shepherded daughters Tiffany and Kyla through four years of CHS hoops, while also serving as de facto team mom, also took home some hardware.

The King’s bestowed the first P.O.S (Parent’s Outstanding Support) Award on her.

Other team awards:

Most Improved (JV) — Julia García Oñoro

Most Improved (JV) — Kylie Chernikoff

Most Improved (V) — Scout Smith

Most Improved (V) — Chelsea Prescott

Most Inspirational (JV) — Avalon Renninger

Most Inspirational (V) — Mikayla Elfrank

Best Defense (JV) — Tia Wurzrainer

Best Defense (V) — Allison Wenzel

Best Offense (JV) — Mollie Bailey

Best Offense (JV) — Ashlie Shank

Best Offense (V) — Lindsey Roberts

Varsity letters:

Kyla Briscoe
Hannah Davidson
Mikayla Elfrank
Chelsea Prescott
Avalon Renninger
Lindsey Roberts
Ema Smith
Scout Smith
Allison Wenzel
Sarah Wright

Varsity Participation:

Maddy Hilkey
Nicole Lester
Ashlie Shank

JV Certificates:

Mollie Bailey
Kylie Chernikoff
Julia García Oñoro
Maddy Hilkey
Nicole Lester
Ashlie Shank
Genna Wright
Tia Wurzrainer

Managers:

Heidi Meyers
Maddie Vondrak

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   Junior first-baseman Veronica Crownover is a key bat in a Wolf softball lineup chock full of big-time sluggers. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One strike.

That was how close the Coupeville High School softball squad came to advancing to the state tourney a season ago.

But, after a long road trip, then playing four postseason games in less than 24 heat-drenched hours, and winning two of them, the Wolves were denied at the very end.

It could have been a crusher, but instead, it has become the spark which has kept the fire burning deep in the heart of every CHS player this off-season.

Now, “spring” has arrived, and with it, the Wolves are ready to launch a new assault on the school record book and opposing pitchers.

“Our goals for this season are the same as always,” said CHS coach Kevin McGranahan. “Above all else, have fun and gel as a team; compete for the league championship every day;  advance to state and make sure they knew Coupeville was there by upsetting some teams.”

Coupeville went 19-5 last year, the second-best record in 39 years of Wolf softball, losing to just two teams.

Three tough losses, two on the road, to Chimacum, denied them an Olympic League title by the slimmest of margins.

Then, two defeats to perennial power Bellevue Christian at districts, packaged around wins over Vashon Island and Seattle Christian, ended the Wolves season.

Both Chimacum and BC absorbed substantial losses to graduation, while Coupeville, for the most part, is returning the core of its squad.

Second baseman Jae LeVine and left fielder Tiffany Briscoe graduated, while slugging shortstop Mikayla Elfrank is sitting out her senior season as she recovers from a devastating leg injury suffered during basketball.

While the trio will be missed, the Wolves will still be a very deep, very talented squad, with most positions manned by veterans.

Seniors Katrina McGranahan (P), Lauren Rose (3B) and Hope Lodell (CF) have been All-Conference players year in and year out, with McGranahan the reigning Olympic League MVP.

Junior catcher Sarah Wright has been a star from day one, launching moon shots and gunning down would-be base stealers, while junior first baseman Veronica Crownover is a threat to clear the fences every time she swings a bat.

Toss in sophomore jack-of-all-trades Scout Smith, who blossomed as a star during last year’s playoffs, and the Wolves can stand with just about anyone.

There is plenty of depth as well, with a mix of returning bench players and a talented group of freshmen headed up by former little league standouts Mollie Bailey and Chelsea Prescott.

“I feel that we are strong again as a team and that together these girls can all be the top returning player any given day,” Kevin McGranahan said. “All of them will be pretty much interchangeable on the field.

“We have a big freshmen class coming in,” he added. “So we will be strong in the future and will have to see how they look as practice takes shape.”

In the race for a league title defending champ Chimacum “will be a wild card,” while Klahowya, led by D-1 recruit Amber Bumbalough, “will be strong again this year.”

Port Townsend is mired in a 51-game losing streak dating back to 2014, but the RedHawks made huge strides in the second half last season and looked like a squad about to break through.

Instead of focusing on their rivals, the Wolves will look inward.

“Mental toughness is and always will be something a team needs to constantly work on,” Kevin McGranahan said. “The little things on the field will take care of themselves through practice.

“Our team strengths will be our team speed and the girls playing for each other and not playing for themselves.”

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   Wolf junior Matt Hilborn will bounce between the mound, third and short this season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Right back to the top.

That’s where the Coupeville High School baseball squad wants to go, as the Wolves aim for a second Olympic League title in the last three years.

Last year saw a mid-season coaching change, as Marc Aparicio stepped away to focus on a real-world job and Chris Smith slid into the head gig.

Not missing a beat, the Wolves finished 11-9 overall, 6-3 in league play.

That was good enough for a second-place finish behind Klahowya, but the season ended too early when CHS was nipped 2-1 by Bellevue Christian in a loser-out district playoff game.

As he prepares for a full season as head coach, Chris Smith is excited to see what a veteran, skilled roster can produce.

“My goal for the year is to be the best team on the field every time we play,” he said. “Smaller goals include creating a new system that will directly relate to my style of coaching.

“To win a league title and to win at least one playoff game — everything after that is icing on the cake.”

Coupeville’s seniors have finished second, first and second in the Olympic League during their three years as Wolves, and want to go out on top.

“Senior leadership, experience of our varsity squad, solid pitching staff and solid defense will be our strengths,” Chris Smith said. “These attributes will give us the ability to compete with every team we play.

“If our bats come alive, we will be a significant threat to every team we face.”

Coupeville has a ton of pitching depth, with senior Hunter Smith joining juniors Dane Lucero and Matt Hilborn in the starting rotation.

Three seniors — long relievers Joey Lippo and Nick Etzell and closer Julian Welling — comprise the bullpen.

Flexibility is a huge positive for the Wolves, as players will slide around depending on who is on the mound.

When not pitching, Hunter Smith will be at short, Lucero at third base, Etzell at second, Welling at first and Lippo in center field.

Hilborn will bounce between short and third, with senior Jake Hoagland manning right field.

Other players expected to vie for major playing time include seniors Kyle Rockwell and Jacob Zettle, juniors Shane Losey and Jake Pease and sophomore Gavin Knoblich.

As he mixes and matches his lineup, Chris Smith looks forward to getting production from every slot on the batting order.

To ensure that, the Wolves will put in work on a consistent basis.

“We will swing the bats a ton this year,” he said. “We will be focused on creating a solid lineup from top to bottom of ‘big game hunters’,” he said. “We will work on perfecting this craft, knowing our pitch, knowing our objective and driving the baseball all over the field.”

This is the final season for the current line-up of the Olympic League, as Coupeville bounces to the new North Sound Conference in the fall. As they depart, the Wolves are ready to leave their mark.

“We match up very well with every team in our league,” Chris Smith said. “Overall, I believe we have a stronger team coming back then any of the rest.

“However I know that all of these teams bring their ‘A’ games when they play us and I don’t expect anything less this year,” he added. “My ultimate focus is not to be too concerned with our opponents but to put a team on the field that gives them a lot to be concerned about.”

The CHS coaching staff has two missions — to win at the varsity level while building at the JV level.

“I will be spending as much time with them (the JV) as possible to get them ready for the upcoming years,” Chris Smith said.

While no one knows exactly how things will play out, Coupeville’s coach, for one, is ready to attack the new season.

“It will be a fun and exciting year! We have big expectations, but we also have the team to deliver.”

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   Ema Smith helps anchor a bruising defense which has carried Coupeville to the playoffs. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One game, with everything riding on it.

Having made it in the postseason as the #2 seed out of the Olympic League, the Coupeville High School girls basketball squad gets a little reward mixed with a lot of danger.

The pay-off is a home playoff game 6 PM Saturday against Bellevue Christian, the #3 seed from the Nisqually League.

The danger comes with the battle royal being a loser-out game.

Win, and the Wolves get revenge for a non-conference loss earlier this season to the Vikings.

Plus, and this is probably the biggie, a victory sends Coupeville to the double-elimination portion of districts Feb. 14-17, where three of four teams will punch their ticket to the state tourney.

Here’s what you need to know before you head to the CHS gym this Saturday:

 

Ticket prices:

Cash only (no bills over $20), no checks

Adults: $8.00
Students (with ASB): $5.00
Students (without ASB): $8.00
Senior Citizens (62+): $5.00
Elementary school students: $4.00

 

How the teams compare:

Records – Coupeville (8-13); BC (12-8)

RPI rankings – Coupeville (#56); BC (#17)

Last meeting: BC beat Coupeville 51-29

Point differential – Coupeville (662-747); BC (914-692)

Seniors – Coupeville – Allison Wenzel, Kyla Briscoe, Mikayla Elfrank; BC – Catherine Dugoni, Jasmine Hathaway, Nicole Bloch 

Coaches – Coupeville – David King; BC – Mark DeJonge

 

To see the layout for the whole district hoops tourney, the final one CHS will play in District 3 before moving to the North Sound Conference and District 1 next year, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2521&sport=1

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Ashlie Shank and the Coupeville girls kick off the playoffs Feb. 10 with a home game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Winter belonged to the RedHawks, but the school year has belonged to the Wolves.

Both Port Townsend basketball teams won league titles Saturday, with the girls ending Coupeville’s three-year run atop the standings.

But, if we look at the entire 2017-2018 school year, CHS is the big dog right now.

Looking at the six fall and winter sports the Wolves play (football, volleyball, boys tennis, girls soccer and girls and boys basketball), they have the most varsity wins of any of the four Olympic League teams with 31.

Klahowya, whose boys basketball team had the title sewn up until a late-season collapse, has 28, while Port Townsend sits with 21.

Chimacum, which has suffered win-less campaigns in boys basketball and tennis, brings up the rear with nine total varsity wins.

Spring is on the horizon, and with that comes softball, baseball, girls tennis and boys soccer as we follow the team wins battle.

Track also arrives, but is largely an individual sport disguised as a team sport, and team win totals are all but impossible to keep track of when multiple schools are involved in every meet.

This is the final year of the current set-up of the Olympic League, as Coupeville is bouncing to the new North Sound Conference next fall.

Before the Wolves go, they would love to repeat as unofficial league-wide champs and defend the varsity wins title they copped last year, when they edged Klahowya 51-48.

The Eagles, who spring from the second-biggest student body in 1A, prevailed 52-40 and 45-42 over CHS the first two years of the league, with Chimacum and Port Townsend well behind in every year.

In other matters, the end of the regular season for basketball means the end of the trail for the Coupeville boys.

While the Wolf girls kick off a playoff run Feb. 10,  their male counterparts were tripped up by the Olympic League only having two playoff slots this season.

Still, before they were done, a couple of Wolves hit milestones.

Ethan Spark topped the 200-point mark in his senior season, while Hunter Smith’s 382 points was the best single season for a Wolf boy since Mike Bagby tossed in 414 back in 2004-2005.

Smith also came very close to having one of the best seasons in school history, with the tenth-best single-season mark by a Wolf boy being 392 by Wade Ellsworth in 1978-1979.

On the girls side of the ball, Wolf junior Lindsey Roberts, who still has games to play, has more than doubled her previous career total.

With 152 points this season, she’s jumped from 137 career points (#77 all-time for CHS girls) to 289 points (#36 all-time).

Final regular-season varsity scoring totals and league standings:

Girls:

Lindsey Roberts 152
Mikayla Elfrank 99
Sarah Wright 99
Ema Smith 94
Kyla Briscoe 78
Scout Smith 52
Kalia Littlejohn 38
Chelsea Prescott 34
Hannah Davidson 10
Allison Wenzel 5
Avalon Renninger 1

Boys:

Hunter Smith 382
Ethan Spark 216
Joey Lippo 88
Cameron Toomey-Stout 54
Hunter Downes 53
Mason Grove 51
Kyle Rockwell 29
Jered Brown 24
Dane Lucero 16
Gavin Knoblich 5
Ulrik Wells 4
Jacobi Pilgrim 1

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 7-2 9-10
COUPEVILLE 6-3 8-13
Chimacum 4-5 7-12
Klahowya 1-8 4-15

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 7-2 11-8
Klahowya 6-3 10-10
COUPEVILLE 5-4 7-13
Chimacum 0-9 0-14

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