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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

   Ashley Menges teamed with Lauren Rose Saturday to set up their teammates for a non-stop barrage of kills. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Coupeville won all 27 sets it played this season against its 1A Olympic League rivals. (Photo courtesy Cory Whitmore)

They would not be denied this time.

A year ago, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad was nearly perfect in league play, finishing 8-1, with just a loss to Klahowya slightly marring the record.

Saturday, the Wolf spikers achieved perfection, crushing host Port Townsend in straight sets to not only finish 9-0 in conference action, but a flawless 27-0 in sets played.

The 25-10, 25-10, 25-20 drubbing of the RedHawks lifts Coupeville to 12-2 overall heading into the postseason, and the back-to-back Olympic League champs are just one win shy of the program record for victories in a season.

They can tie the 2004 squad by achieving what no Wolf volleyball team has done since that squad — punch their ticket to the state tourney.

To do so, Coupeville needs to win at least one out of two matches at districts Nov. 4 in Tacoma.

But that’s a week away, and, on this Saturday, it’s all about the celebration of finishing off the regular season in style.

“I’m pleased with where we are at and very proud of finishing league play strong,” CHS coach Cory Whitmore said. “I’m so happy for these girls and their hard work paying off in spades.

“Now we push into playoffs and try to play a couple more weeks.”

Coupeville didn’t want to look past Port Townsend, which upset Klahowya last week and is always a scrappy foe.

“I was really happy with our focus and execution in the first two sets especially,” Whitmore said. “Lauren (Rose) and Ashley (Menges) did a great job of distributing the offense and our passing was very strong, allowing us to utilize our middles.

“In set three we mixed things us a bit, getting everyone involved, which took us a minute to settle into, but then when we did, our offense could take over.”

Katrina McGranahan paced that offense, ripping off eight kills, while Mikayla Elfrank (6) and Emma Smith (5) backed her up.

Hope Lodell (12) and Kyla Briscoe (5) spent a good part of their afternoon scraping digs off the floor, with Rose and Payton Aparicio dropping five aces apiece from the service stripe.

JV roars to another win:

Coupeville’s young guns wrapped up their own undefeated romp through league play, pasting Port Townsend in straight sets.

First-year JV coach Chris Smith led his squad to a 12-1 record overall, 9-0 in conference action.

Add in the C-Team (4-0, 3-0), which had the day off, and Wolf volleyball is 28-3 overall, 21-0 in league play this season.

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   After winning at Chimacum, Kyla Briscoe and the high-flying CHS spikers haven’t dropped a set in seven league matches. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Payton Aparicio (right), here spending quality time with Kayla Rose (left) and Emma Smith, had a school single-game record 18 service aces Tuesday.

By the time the Wolves were done chomping, not a Cowboy was left standing.

Flexing their collective spike-launching muscles, all three Coupeville High School volleyball squads cruised to straight-sets wins Tuesday at Chimacum, keeping their records spotless in conference action.

Take the Wolf varsity, JV and C-Team this season, add them together and they’re a combined 24-3 overall, 17-0 in Olympic League play.

Varsity cruises:

Having clinched a second-straight league title a night earlier, when Klahowya was upset by Port Townsend, Coupeville is playing for perfection.

The Wolves now sit at 7-0 in league play, 10-2 overall after drilling Chimacum (1-6, 1-9) to the tune of 25-13, 25-12, 25-18.

That keeps another streak alive, as well, as CHS has won all 21 sets it has played against league foes this season.

Coupeville returns home Wednesday to face Klahowya (4-3, 6-7) on Senior Night (4:00 varsity/5:15 JV), then wraps the regular season Saturday at Port Townsend (2-5, 4-10).

After that, it’s off to districts in Tacoma Nov. 4.

As the #1 seed from the Olympic League, the Wolves automatically advance to the double elimination portion of the tourney.

Win at least one of two matches and CHS volleyball is state bound for the first time since 2004.

Tuesday night was about getting in the gym, putting a quick and efficient beat-down on the Cowboys and ankling for the last ferry out of town.

But Chimacum, pulling a page out of North Mason’s “stall, stall and stall some more” playbook, stretched things way out, opting to play varsity last even though Coupeville had a set time to leave.

Then, the Cowboys opted to play meaningless third sets in both of the night’s first two matches, hold Senior Night festivities and still take every single minute allotted for the varsity teams to warm up.

Which meant the Wolves were literally racing the clock in the third set, trying to get that 75th and final point on the board before 7:30 PM clicked into view and the CHS bus started spinning its wheels in the parking lot.

They made it, but just barely, with numerous players chipping in to fill up the stat sheet.

“I thought we took care of business well, getting everyone involved in the process and working together,” Coupeville coach Cory Whitmore said. “Our serve was strong, serving to spots and moving the ball around.

“We have to hit with more efficiency come district time, but I thought we came at them from all angles when given the chance.”

Katrina McGranahan led the hit parade, pounding down seven kills, while Payton Aparicio was all over the floor, picking up four kills, six digs and a school single-game record 18 aces on her serve.

Payton was on fire tonight! Very proud of how hard she has worked on her serve and it has definitely paid off in results,” Whitmore said.

The previous ace record was 13, set in 2010 by Jessica Riddle.

Kyla Briscoe and Mikayla Elfrank added three kills apiece, Hope Lodell went low for eight digs and McGranahan connected on five aces to round out the stat sheet.

JV romps:

The best record for any Coupeville fall sports team belongs to the JV spikers, who raised their record to a sterling 10-1 overall, 7-0 in league play.

Chris Smith’s squad was led by freshman Chelsea Prescott, who scorched the Cowboys with 10 aces during a 25-11, 25-8, 15-12 win.

C-Team rolls:

Coupeville’s third unit capped a 4-0 season with a 25-9, 25-12, 15-13 victory.

The Wolves were powered by the wham-bam serving duo of Heidi Clinkscales, who ripped off 12 aces at the service stripe, and Willow Vick, who pounded away for nine of her own.

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   Pedro Gamarra won two of three matches Monday at the Olympic League tennis tourney, earning a trip to districts. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Jakobi Baumann is overcome after pulling off a stunning come-from-behind win to qualify for districts. (Ken Stange photo)

Guts.

Determination.

An indomitable will to win.

Coupeville High School junior Jakobi Baumann showed all that, and more, Monday, as he pulled off a stunning reversal of fortune to kick off the long-delayed 1A Olympic League boys tennis tourney.

After being rained out twice on Whidbey, the netters found clear skies and dry courts in Chimacum, and the Wolves took advantage, with six of their nine competitors earning a trip to districts.

Of the six, it might mean the most to Baumann, who trailed Chimacum’s big-hitting, highly-vocal JJ Klaric 4-0 in a loser-out pro set.

Two weeks ago, the pair met up in a regular-season match and Klaric came out on top in a three-set thriller.

Monday, it was Baumann’s turn to wrest the spotlight away, as the cerebral cool cat battled for an hour-and-a-half before eliminating his ornery foe 8-6.

With that victory, he joins fellow singles player Pedro Gamarra and the doubles teams of Joey Lippo/William Nelson and Mason Grove/Nick Etzell, in punching their tickets to Tacoma.

The Wolves open the two-day district tourney Wednesday afternoon at Sprinker Tennis Center.

Lippo and Nelson, making a final bid at reaching the state tourney as seniors, claimed the league doubles title Monday, rolling to a 3-0 record on the day, while Klahowya’s Taylor Fite captured the singles crown.

Gamarra was third and a mentally drained Baumann fourth in singles play, while Grove and Etzell played the most matches of any Wolves, splitting four bouts to claim third place.

Coupeville’s #3 seeds, singles ace Nile Lockwood and doubles duo Zach Ginnings and Drake Borden, were knocked out of the tourney in the single-elimination first round.

Klahowya will also send six netters to districts, with Fite and Jacob Kraft being joined by the duos of Morgan Seidel/William Stewart and Joe Bowman/Nick Hytinen.

Neither Chimacum or Port Townsend advanced any players.

Complete Monday results:

Singles:

Pedro Gamarra:

Beat Drew Kraft (Kla) 8-6
Lost to Jacob Kraft (Kla) 6-0, 6-2
Beat Jakobi Baumann (Cp) 6-4, 6-4

Jakobi Baumann:

Beat JJ Klaric (Chim) 8-6
Lost to Taylor Fite (Kla) 6-0, 6-0
Lost to Pedro Gamarra (Cp) 6-4, 6-4

Nile Lockwood:

Lost to Taylor Fite (Kla) 8-0

Doubles:

William Nelson/Joey Lippo:

Beat Mason Lawson/Roman Powell (Chim) 8-0
Beat Nick Etzell/Mason Grove (Cp) 6-4, 6-2
Beat Morgan Seidel/William Stewart (Kla) 6-3, 6-1

Mason Grove/Nick Etzell:

Beat Parker Short/Carson Short (Kla) 8-2
Lost to William Nelson/Joey Lippo (Cp) 6-4, 6-2
Beat Joe Bowman/Nick Hytinen (Kla) 6-4, 6-2
Lost to Morgan Seidel/William Stewart (Kla) 7-6(7-2), 6-7(4-7), 11-9

Zach Ginnings/Drake Borden:

Lost to Morgan Seidel/William Stewart (Kla) 8-2

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   Joy abounds in Coupeville, where the volleyball squad is one win away from clinching back-to-back Olympic League titles. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Color me genuinely shocked.

If you need proof that any team can beat any other team on a given day, look no further than Vashon Island football stunning Port Townsend 27-21 Friday in overtime.

The Pirates, who started the season 0-6, entered that game having been outscored 303-60, while the RedHawks, even after a one-point loss to Klahowya, entertained playoff hopes.

To which I say, no more.

Over here in Coupeville, where we continue to lose football players to injuries at a staggering rate, there was no miracle on the gridiron.

But our other sports are looking pretty good, so life is balanced out.

Wolf volleyball, in particular, is flying high, needing just one win in its final three matches to clinch back-to-back league titles.

Plus, if you add up the varsity (9-2), JV (9-1) and C-Team (3-0) records, the Coupeville spikers are an astonishing 21-3 under the guidance of Cory Whitmore, Chris Smith and Ashley Herndon.

Regular season play wraps up in both volleyball and soccer this coming week, with postseason action for tennis and soccer kicking off.

The Coupeville booters host their playoff opener Oct. 28 in Oak Harbor, while weather issues have jammed both the league tourney and districts into the same week for the netters.

As we head down the stretch run for fall sports, a look at the league standings, through Oct. 22:

Olympic/Nisqually League football:

School League Overall
Cascade Christian 5-0 7-1
Charles Wright 4-1 6-2
Klahowya 3-2 3-5
Port Townsend 3-2 3-5
Bellevue Christian 2-3 2-6
Vashon Island 2-3 2-6
COUPEVILLE 1-4 3-5
Chimacum 0-5 2-6

Olympic League volleyball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 6-0 9-2
Klahowya 4-2 6-6
Chimacum 1-5 1-8
Port Townsend 1-5 3-10

Olympic League girls soccer:

School League Overall
Klahowya 7-0 13-1
COUPEVILLE 5-2 7-7
Chimacum 1-6 1-9-1
Port Townsend 1-6 2-11

Olympic League boys tennis:

School League Overall
Klahowya 4-1 12-2
COUPEVILLE 4-2 6-7
Chimacum 0-5 0-11

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   Former Coupeville JV volleyball coach Kristin Bridges (and son) popped in Thursday to watch the Wolves romp to a win. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Wolves (l to r) Maya Toomey-Stout, Emma Smith and Ashley Menges are part of a big-hitting, sweet-serving first-place team.

One win away.

After strolling past visiting Port Townsend in straight sets Thursday, the Coupeville High School volleyball program is super close to doing something it’s never accomplished in its long history — win back-to-back league titles.

Claim victory in just one of their final three conference matches next week, and the Wolves officially clinch the 2017 Olympic League crown, which will sit quite nicely next to the 2016 version.

Of course, Coupeville would prefer to sweep its final three tilts, then roar through districts with an eye on advancing to state for the first time since 2004.

And nothing we’ve seen so far would indicate any reason that can’t happen.

Thursday the Wolves improved to 6-0 in league play, 9-2 overall, using a 25-10, 25-15, 25-16 romp over the RedHawks to open a two-game lead in the standings.

Klahowya (4-2, 5-6) is solidly in second-place while Chimacum (1-5, 1-8) and Port Townsend (1-5, 3-10) are deadlocked for the league’s third and final playoff berth.

But there is little doubt who the hard-hitting, sweet-serving big dog is right now, as the Wolves continue to fire on all cylinders.

Not only has Coupeville won every league match this season, it hasn’t dropped a set, singing its rivals to a merry 18-0 tune. Overall, the Wolves have won 27 of 33 sets.

Facing a tall, and fairly feisty, RedHawk squad, CHS seized the momentum early and never gave it back.

The opening set stayed close, for a bit, with the Wolves clinging to an 8-7 lead and looking for that spark that would light the fire.

It arrived courtesy two players, one a newcomer to the varsity, another a seasoned pro.

Scout Smith, a smooth-hitting sophomore with deceptive power, scrambled and made a brilliant running save on a ball, poking it skyward a moment before the floor claimed it.

Given new life, Coupeville rallied to win the point on a booming spike off of the fingertips of senior Kyla Briscoe.

A key contributor since way back when she was just a raw freshman, Briscoe missed her entire junior season due to a terrible leg injury.

Instead of sulking, she became her team’s biggest cheerleader during their stellar run last year. Now, Briscoe has returned, the skip back in her step, to seize a sizable, and well-deserved chunk of the spotlight.

After pounding the crud out of the ball Thursday, she immediately went on her best service run of the season, spraying winners left, right, and every which way.

By the time she was done — stopped only by an over-eager ref who dinged her for violating a five-second rule on getting your serve in the air which few knew even existed — Briscoe had piled up 10 straight points on her serve.

From 9-7 to 19-7 in the snap of two fingers, and the RedHawks were done, emotionally, mentally and physically.

And, while Briscoe’s serves were crackin’ off elbows and fingers and slammin’ into the hardwood, she got plenty of aid from her hyped-up teammates.

Emma Smith unleashed a spike which peeled paint off the back-line (while scarring the psyche of the RedHawk who tried to stop it), and that was just one point on a non-stop aerial assault.

Payton Aparicio sliced a buzz-saw of a winner cross-court, while Scout Smith owned every inch of the floor.

One moment, she was dancing forward, using just her fingertips to spin a winner in between Port Townsend defenders.

The next, Scoutosaurus Rex scaled a stairway to heaven, then unleashed holy heck with a put-away which went from right to left, hitting the court like a grenade and spraying shrapnel in every direction as the ball skidded into the fifth row of seats.

All of that was the opening act for Mikayla Elfrank, who capped the first set with a spike which erupted from her fist with a sonic boom and left a crater where it landed just inside the end-line.

Port Townsend managed to keep some rallies going, but had little answer for Coupeville’s raw power, either from the service line or on the finishing kills.

Long service runs from Ashley Menges, Katrina McGranahan, Aparicio and (her again!) Briscoe kept the Redhawks back on their toes, while Elfrank’s burning desire to break some faces with each kill kept them wide awake.

In between their rain of terror, the Wolves mixed things up with some subtle, elegant winners, as well.

Emma Smith dropped in tips for winners on back-to-back plays, freezing the Port Townsend defense in place, while Menges continues to be the master of the fake-out.

The Wolf play-maker has perfected a play on which she makes everyone, including often times her own teammates, think she’s about to loft a set. Then, at the very last second, her fingers curve to the side, instead, sending the ball skidding over the net on a tip.

It’s a subtle thriller and an ice-cold killer, and it leaves its victims grasping at air, as the ball, which has arrived by surprise, plops neatly to the floor for another Coupeville point.

Seeing his team mesh together so well, with everyone stepping up at a different moment, puts a smile on Wolf coach Cory Whitmore’s face.

“I like to see a nice balance, and that’s what we’re getting,” he said. “We’ve been stressing communication and everyone doing their own little job at the right time.”

The Wolves filled up the stat sheet, with Briscoe dropping five service aces, pounding four kills and going low for five digs.

Aparicio and Scout Smith led CHS with six kills apiece, while Elfrank and Emma Smith each added five.

Whitmore was thrilled to see balance from his front-line players, while also giving a special nod of approval to Emma Smith.

Since she patrols the middle, the junior standout doesn’t get as many kill chances as the snipers playing on either side, but she worked with what came her way.

Emma really took advantage of her opportunities,” Whitmore said. “That is awesome!”

Coupeville’s setters doled out 21 assists, with Lauren Rose lofting 13 and Menges eight, while senior libero Hope Lodell paced the squad with 12 digs.

McGranahan (4), Aparicio (4) and Rose (3) joined Briscoe as Wolves racking up service aces.

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