Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Best in the biz. 14 of the 15 girls who played in a Wolf JV volleyball match this season. (John Fisken photo)

   Best in the biz. 14 of the 15 girls who played in a Wolf JV volleyball match this season. (John Fisken photo)

Screw the five-year waiting period.

Unlike some Hall of Fames that make you wait for induction, here at the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, we have no such guidelines.

So, less than 24 hours after it wrapped its season, we welcome the 2016 Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad to these hallowed digital walls.

As the sole inductee in the 71st class to be enshrined, the 15 players and two coaches who just finished one of the best seasons ever put together by a Wolf team, at any level, get the stage to themselves.

After this you’ll find them at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab.

And why not? They played like legends.

Under the guidance of coaches Kristin Bridges and Ashley Herndon, the Wolf JV went 12-2, won 10 straight matches (a five-week-plus winning period) and dominated their league in a way few teams have.

Coupeville’s young guns went a flawless 9-0 in 1A Olympic League play, the fourth CHS squad to do so, but the first that wasn’t a girls’ basketball team.

And they did so in particularly convincing fashion.

Over the course of their showdowns with Port Townsend, Klahowya and Chimacum, the Wolves won an astounding 23 of 24 sets.

In fact, the only set they lost to a league rival came in the very final set they played this season.

Having already taken the first two sets (and the win) at Port Townsend Saturday, they apparently decided to give the rest of the conference the smallest glimmer of hope by surrendering just a smidge.

In a year where the Wolf varsity went 8-1 and roared to its first league title since 2004, the dominance of the JV is just further proof that Coupeville is ready to rule the volleyball standings for years to come.

With Bridges and Herndon meshing their styles expertly with that of first-year head coach Cory Whitmore, the spiker program is booming, both in terms of bodies in uniform and skills shown on the court.

The JV squad proved it had a short memory, as well, rebounding from a loss to 2A Sequim to drill their fellow Wolves while on the road later in the season.

So don’t think these spikers won’t remember that one lonely little set they gave up to the RedHawks and seek revenge next season.

How were they so good, so quick?

The CHS freshman class this year is extraordinarily deep in talented female athletes, young women who have honed their skills and grown used to winning in all of their sports, at the middle school, SWISH and little league levels.

They also show a willingness to learn and a commitment to hard work which bodes well as these spikers spill over into other programs such as basketball, softball and track.

Unlike a lot of JV teams, Coupeville didn’t struggle to get their serves in, which is huge at any level.

Every Wolf who served in matches operated strictly overhand and many of them laid down scorching aces on a regular basis, putting the burden squarely on the other team.

Then, once the ball was in play (or, in many cases, IF the ball was in play) they attacked as one, scrambling for balls and putting down kills with regularity.

They also seemed to enjoy themselves immensely, and while winning always helps with that, it seemed like more with this squad.

Every player who took the floor showed a burning desire to be good, to be winners, and, maybe most importantly, to pick each other up, in good times (and relatively few) bad times.

The young Wolves never splintered, never pointed fingers at each other on the rare missed shot and were quick to congratulate each other — all traits they shared with their varsity counterparts.

For the moment, though, they get to step away from their older teammates.

The Wolf varsity is a spiffy 11-4 entering the district tourney, the most wins by a CHS varsity squad since 2004, but only one volleyball team made it all the way through league play undefeated this season.

For this moment, we hail the JV’s achievement, for what it means today and what it will mean for tomorrow.

Inducted into the Hall o’ Fame, together, as a team:

Kristen Bridges (coach)
Ashley Herndon
(coach)
Hannah Davidson
Maddy Hilkey
Nicole Lester
Emma Mathusek
Jillian Mayne
Lucy Sandahl
Scout Smith
Maya Toomey-Stout
Zoe Trujillo
Raven Vick
Willow Vick
Peytin Vondrak
Melia Welling
Allison Wenzel
Sarah Wright

Read Full Post »

Nicole Lester (John Fisken photo)

   Nicole Lester and her Wolf JV volleyball teammates rolled to their 10th straight win Saturday afternoon. (John Fisken photo)

Perfection. Nothing short of perfection.

For the fourth time in history, and the first time by a non-basketball team, a Coupeville High School squad has finished a flawless 9-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

This time around, it’s the Wolf JV spikers, who tied a bow on their season Saturday by drilling Port Townsend for their tenth consecutive victory.

Coupeville’s young guns knocked off the host RedHawks 25-13, 25-18, 20-25 to finish 12-2 overall for first-year coach Kristin Bridges.

The spikers join the 2014-2015 Coupeville varsity and JV girls’ basketball teams and the 2015-2016 varsity girls hoops squad in completing the run to perfection.

The only time the JV squad fell was in non-conference bouts to 2A Sequim and Bellevue Christian back in Sept.

During their 10-match winning streak, which covered a five-week span, Coupeville avenged that early season loss to Sequim, and did so while playing on the road.

“I’m so proud of how much work these young women have put into this team,” Bridges said. “They’ve made so much progress and get better every day.

“I think we definitely ended this season as a united Wolfpack.”

In their final match, the Wolves continued a season-long habit of delivering scorching serves, zipping 26 aces past the flailing RedHawks.

Scout Smith paced CHS with eight of the winners, while Hannah Davidson (5), Raven Vick (4), Peytin Vondrak (3), Lucy Sandahl (3), Zoe Trujillo (2) and Maddy Hilkey (1) also had the magic touch.

Trujillo and Maya Toomey-Stout crunched the ball with abandon, each recording five kills, while Smith doled out six assists and Hilkey recorded a team-high 10 digs.

Teammates Nicole Lester (a kill and a dig), Melia Welling (a dig) and Willow Vick (a kill) also scribbled their name onto the stat sheet, as Coupeville continued to get key contributions from everyone on the roster.

“The team came out swinging this game,” Bridges said. “We had 18 digs, 10 of those from Maddy, who played great defense today.

“Overall we played really well.”

The JV squad will stay together for another week of practice, then unite to cheer on their varsity counterparts at the district tourney, which Coupeville hosts Nov. 5.

Read Full Post »

Julian Welling (John Fisken photos)

   Julian Welling and his Wolf teammates captured their third win of the season Friday night, smacking Chimacum 24-6. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith

   Hunter Smith, seen here in an earlier game, hauled in his 10th TD reception of the year, tying the CHS single-season mark.

A true team win.

That’s what the Coupeville High School football squad put together Friday night, riding touchdowns from three different players as it romped to a 24-6 win at Chimacum.

The victory snaps a three-game skid for the Wolves and lifts them to 2-4 in Olympic/Nisqually League play, 3-6 overall.

With one game left on the schedule — next Friday at home against undefeated Cascade Christian — the Wolves have taken a huge step forward from last year’s 1-9 mark.

First-year coach Jon Atkins mixed things up a bit Friday, going for two-point conversions after all three scores.

When Hunter Smith scampered in on attempts after the first and third touchdowns, it was the first successful conversions of the season for CHS.

The Wolves broke the game open early and never let go of the lead.

Hunter Downes dropped the ball into Cameron Toomey-Stout’s hands on an 18-yard scoring strike late in the first quarter to kick things off.

The first of three TD passes on the night for the junior quarterback, it set the tone.

Smith bolted in for two to open an 8-0 lead and Coupeville stretched the margin to double digits with a safety on the first play of the second quarter.

Downes went right back to work, finding the other Toomey-Stout brother, freshman Sean, with a 20-yard pass to run the score to 16-0.

It was the first varsity TD for the young receiver, and a reward, as Sean Toomey-Stout had provided the Wolves with the earlier safety.

He blew up an option play and rode down the pitch man in the end zone.

Coupeville held Chimacum scoreless through the first half, with Cameron Toomey-Stout pilfering a pass — his third pick of the season — and the Wolf line partially blocking a Cowboy punt.

The hosts finally cracked the code midway through the third quarter, when they put together a seven-yard scoring pass.

The conversion failed, however, and the Wolves put the game on ice with a pair of plays from Smith.

After having opposing teams fail to throw his way most of the season, the junior finally got a rare crack at an interception, and immediately made off with it.

His third pick of the season, it gives Smith 11 all-time (he had one as a freshman and seven as a sophomore), leaving him just one shy of Josh Bayne’s CHS career record.

Shortly thereafter Smith continued his quest to attack all of Bayne’s records, hauling in his 10th touchdown reception of the season.

The snag ties Bayne’s single-season mark, and was Downes 16th TD pass this season.

He’s spread his scoring strikes out between Smith (10), Cameron Toomey-Stout (4), Jacob Martin (1) and Sean Toomey-Stout (1).

Downes sits two shy of Joel Walstad’s single-season record of 18 touchdown passes, set in 2014, when his primary target was … yep, Bayne.

Read Full Post »

Lauren Rose (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose, seen here in an earlier match, had a team-high 16 assists Thursday night. (John Fisken photo)

“I’m very happy with our fight tonight.”

Roaring from behind while playing in front of a hostile crowd Thursday, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad almost pulled off a miracle win.

But while the Wolves ran out of gas a point or two from keeping their league record flawless, CHS coach Cory Whitmore was still impressed with the fight he saw from his players.

“Klahowya is a very good team and at their house they play even better,” he said. “We never gave up and got battle-tested going into districts.”

The Eagles escaped with a 27-25, 25-16, 26-28, 19-25, 15-12 win, making up a bit for Coupeville winning a five-set thriller the first time these two schools squared off in Silverdale back in Sept.

In between, the Wolves slammed Klahowya in straight sets during the one time they faced-off on Whidbey, and, if a fourth showdown is coming, it will be on Coupeville’s turf.

CHS, which is 7-1 in 1A Olympic League play, 10-4 overall, has one more regular season match Saturday at Port Townsend (0-8, 2-12).

After that, the Wolves carry a #1 seed into districts Saturday, Nov. 5.

Win two matches (while not losing more than one) that day in their own gym and they punch their ticket to state.

Klahowya (6-3, 7-7) will have to win a loser-out game against Seattle Christian Nov. 3 to make it to the double-elimination round of districts.

To see the bracket, pop over to: http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2069&sport=10

Thursday, the Eagles opened strongly, but the Wolves responded.

“We lost a tight first set and didn’t let it determine the entire rest of the match,” Whitmore said. “Our defense was scrappy and lit a fire.”

Hope Lodell led the attack, firing off eight aces on her serve while also going low for a team-high 21 digs.

She was joined on the stat sheet by Katrina McGranahan (nine kills, seven aces), Lauren Rose (16 assists), Ashley Menges (11 assists), Valen Trujillo (nine digs) and Mikayla Elfrank (eight kills).

JV stays red-hot:

With the varsity match being a long one, the young guns got the short end of the stick on the road. As the ferry revved its motor in the distance, the two schools played just a single set.

The results? Same old, same old, as Coupeville crushed Klahowya 25-16 to nab its ninth straight win.

The JV squad sits at 8-0 in league play, 11-2 overall and will go for a perfect conference season when it faces Port Townsend.

While the Wolves time on the floor was limited Thursday, they continued to shine brightly.

“We had to play pretty quickly but we did play well,” said Wolf JV coach Kristin Bridges. “We are growing into a really cohesive unit.”

Read Full Post »

Melia Welling (John Fisken photo)

   Freshman Melia Welling made a one-handed save Tuesday, one of a ton of dazzling plays pulled off by a red-hot JV volleyball squad. (John Fisken photo)

At this point, the best you can hope for is just to not be hurt.

Face off with the Coupeville High School JV spikers and you will lose — that is pretty much set in stone — so, if you can leave the court with all your body parts in place, winner, winner, chicken dinner for you.

After being thrashed within an inch of their lives Tuesday night, Chimacum’s players had a hundred-yard stare firmly in place as they congratulated the triumphant Wolves.

The score was a tidy 25-14, 25-13, 25-7 and it wasn’t even remotely close, to be honest.

The win, the eighth straight for Wolf JV coach Kristin Bridges and her rampaging squad, lifts them to 7-0 in 1A Olympic League play, 10-2 overall.

Coupeville’s young guns have two matches left, road affairs Thursday at Klahowya and Saturday at Port Townsend.

Win both and they tie Amy King’s 2014-2015 CHS girls’ basketball squad, which also went 9-0 in league, as the best JV team in memory.

Even if they don’t get to ultimate perfection (but you’d be a fool to bet against them), these Wolves are a talented batch of fresh-faced warriors.

With 10 freshmen on a 13-player roster, Coupeville’s JV is considerably younger than Chimacum’s, which boasts six sophomores.

Talent trumps age, however.

From Raven Vick unleashing a serve that kicked off a Cowboy’s face for a point to Melia Welling making a sensational, one-armed save to Willow Vick launching a cannon shot of a spike down the line for a winner, everyone on the roster was humming.

Coupeville was firing on all cylinders at the service stripe, led by Scout Smith, who ran off nine consecutive points on her serve at one point.

Overall, she recorded 15 points on her serve, while Lucy Sandahl peppered Chimacum for 11 and Raven Vick kept the Cowboys jumping as she piled up eight winners.

Raven Vick closed out both the first and third sets with aces, while Willow Vick hit on back-to-back aces in the second set, including one that, like her sister’s earlier serve, shot up and smacked a Cowboy receiver in the face.

That sting was something virtually every Wolf foe has felt this season.

My advice? Better get used to it.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »