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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Sydney Autio (John Fisken

   CHS senior Sydney Autio capped her high school volleyball career by being named a First-Team All-Conference pick. (John Fisken photos)

Valen

   Valen Trujillo, who shattered the school career record for digs as a junior, got her props from 1A Olympic League coaches.

Katrina

   Katrina McGranahan, a terror both at the net and the service stripe, gets ready to launch a missile.

Valen Trujillo continued a proud tradition, while Sydney Autio and Katrina McGranahan jumped in to join in on the fun.

The Coupeville High School volleyball trio were honored Thursday when 1A Olympic League coaches released their season-ending honors.

Trujillo’s selection as a First-Team All-Conference player was her second straight, as the junior has been honored both years the Wolves have played in their new league.

It was the first selection for Autio, a senior who was co-captain with Trujillo, and McGranahan, a sophomore in her first year as a full-time varsity player.

With three players being honored, Coupeville topped last season, when Trujillo and then-senior Hailey Hammer were tabbed.

This year’s trio of honorees sparked the Wolves to a resurgence.

CHS went from 1-11 a year ago to 6-10, claimed second-place in the regular season standings and returned to the postseason.

Once there, the Wolves toppled Seattle Christian, giving Coupeville its first home volleyball playoff win in more than a decade.

Cascade Christian, which advanced to the state tourney, eventually eliminated the very-young Wolves in the second round of districts, but only after a stirring battle in Puyallup.

Trujillo, who was named the team’s MVP, shattered the school career record for digs this season, passing legendary former Wolf Jessica Riddle.

For the season, she recorded 157 digs (ninth-best by a 1A player), a team-leading 264 service returns and 33 service aces.

Autio set up the Wolf attack with 147 assists (#10 in 1A), while also unleashing an array of winners from the line. She had 45 aces (#8 in 1A) and won 77 points on serve.

The tall, explosive McGranahan, who saw some limited varsity action as a freshman, made a huge impact in her second season.

She recorded 70 kills (#20 in 1A), a team-high 14 blocks, 78 service points and 38 aces (#13 in 1A).

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Clay Reilly was tabbed as the 1A Olympic League's best punter. (John Fisken photos)

   Clay Reilly was tabbed as the 1A Olympic League’s best punter. (John Fisken photos)

Wiley Hesselgrave

   Wiley Hesselgrave was First-Team All-Conference for the second straight season, while also being named Coupeville’s MVP for his two-way play.

Lathom Kelley

   Lathom Kelley led the Wolves in tackles and joined Hesselgrave as the only seniors from the Class of 2016 to letter all four years.

Thursday was a good night to be named Wiley Hesselgrave.

The Coupeville High School senior capped his stellar four-year football career by being named MVP and taking home First-Team All-Conference honors as a running back.

Hesselgrave also joined Lathom Kelley as the only Wolf seniors in the Class of 2016 who lettered all four years.

Coupeville landed five players on the All-Conference team when 1A Olympic League coaches tallied up their votes.

Sophomore defensive back Hunter Smith, junior punter Clay Reilly, senior offensive lineman Brenden Gilbert and senior receiver CJ Smith joined Hesselgrave in being honored.

Hunter Smith, who snagged a school record seven interceptions this season, was an honorable mention pick last year while Hesselgrave garnered his second straight First Team selection.

He was tabbed as a linebacker as a junior.

When the Wolves handed out team awards at their season-ending banquet Thursday, Hesselgrave was joined by five other winners.

Freshman quarterback Gabe Eck was picked as the team’s Offensive MVP, Gilbert was tabbed Alpha Male and Hunter Smith collected the Defensive MVP.

Cameron Toomey-Stout (ACE Award) and Zane Bundy (Special Teams) rounded out the honorees.

Earning varsity letters (* indicates 4-year player)

Chris Battaglia
Zane Bundy
Mitchell Carroll
Hunter Downes
Gabe Eck
Ty Eck
Jordan Ford
Brenden Gilbert
Ryan Griggs
Wiley Hesselgrave (*)
Lathom Kelley (*)
Uriel Liquidano
Jake Lord (*)
Josh Lord (*)
Mitchell Losey (*)
Jacob Martin
Tyler McCalmont
JR Pendergrass
Clay Reilly
CJ Smith
Hunter Smith
Julian Welling

Certificate Of Participation:

Dewitt Cole
Seth David
Matt Hilborn
Jake Hoagland
Ethan Kedrowski
Teo Keilwitz
Ryan Labrador
Shane Losey
Dane Lucero
Garrett Machen
Ethan Marx
Axel Partida
Jake Pease
Mike Rice
Josh Robinson
Jacob Smith
Matt Stevens
Jonathan Thurston
Cameron Toomey-Stout
James Vidoni
Greg Villarreal
Tavian Woolett
Jacob Zettle

Managers:

Tyler Cermak
Nick Crownover
Dominic Dausey
Baylee Dunsmore

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Lauren and Tiffany

   Lauren Rose (front) and Tiffany Briscoe (white shorts) are fighting for spots on the CHS varsity roster. (John Fisken photos)

Fab frosh

   Fab frosh (l to r) Sarah Wright, Lindsey Roberts, Maddy Hilkey and Ashlie Shank.

They are the team to beat, but that’s a bit of a doubled-edged sword.

Coupeville High School girls’ basketball stormed through the 1A Olympic League last season, with both varsity and JV squads finishing a pristine 9-0.

The varsity, led by slam-dunk league MVP Makana Stone, won every league game by 15 or more points.

But, while there’s still a nice afterglow coming off of the championship banner hanging on the gym wall, there’s also a huge bulls-eye target on this year’s Wolf team.

Klahowya, Port Townsend and Chimacum will undoubtedly come extra-hard each time they take on the defending champs, anxious to be the first to dethrone the hoop queens.

“I do know that we will not be able to walk through the three teams this year,” said CHS coach David King. “We are going to have to put in the work and play our game to give ourselves a chance to repeat.”

The Eagles and RedHawks both have new coaches (“It will be interesting to see how they play us this year vs. how they played us last year”) while the Cowboys are a fast-rising team.

“Chimacum, we saw them at camp.  They have improved and return a good core of players as well,” King said. “The second and third round last year they played us tough.

“To say who our biggest foe will be this year, that’s a tough question,” he added. “Maybe Chimacum, just because we know what they have and how they play, but I wouldn’t sleep on the other two teams.”

As they prepare for their defense, the Wolves will do so minus 70% of last year’s varsity roster.

Six Wolves (Kacie Kiel, Monica Vidoni, Madeline Strasburg, Hailey Hammer, Wynter Thorne and Julia Myers) graduated and a seventh (McKenzie Bailey) chose not to play this year.

Leading the returning trio of players is Stone, who put together the sixth-best single-season scoring performance in CHS girls’ hoops history as a junior.

The rare player capable of playing all five positions on the floor, offensively and defensively, she will be the focal point, but is far from the team’s only weapon.

Sophomore point guard/wing Mia Littlejohn and junior wing/post Kailey Kellner join Stone to form the core.

“Having the reigning MVP back for another season is always a good thing,” King said. “Add in Mia and Kailey, both that can do some special things on the court as well and compliment Makana and not put the burden on Makana to have to do it all.”

Among the early favorites to join the trio on the varsity are the stars of last year’s JV squad and a newcomer with strong basketball bloodlines.

Defensive-minded juniors Lauren Grove, Tiffany Briscoe and Skyler Lawrence, sophomores Lauren Rose and Kyla Briscoe and freshman Lindsey Roberts have all made statements in the first week of practice, though nothing is settled.

A pack of freshmen (Sarah Wright, Ashlie Shank, Ema Smith, Maddy Hilkey, Nicole Lester and Lindsey Laxton) and sophomores Allison Wenzel, Brisa Herrera and Brittany Sass-Powers round out what is currently an 18-player roster.

Whether they end up on varsity or JV, each Wolf will need to fully commit for the program to continue its success from last season. King is preaching mental toughness.

“The players have really bought into the One Team, One Goal, Family theme we had last year,” King said. “That is huge with such a young team. Our leaders do a great job of promoting team and encouraging each other; that is then carried up and down the roster.

“Losing six seniors and their leadership along with the talent they brought is always tough,” he added. “We know how well our JV team played last year and we expect nothing less of them at the varsity level. It’s getting used to the game speed and talent of the other team and having them know they belong and can play against anyone.

“Once they believe in themselves and play with confidence, we will be alright.”

Coupeville will attack on both sides of the ball, but needs to continue to fine-tune its shooting touch to go with the aggressiveness.

“Our strengths will be our quickness and the never give in or up attitude,” King said. “We have some players that can be hard to defend and on a whole we are a very solid defensive team.

“Shooting. We have got to get better in this area. Teams that play zone against us are going to dare us to beat them from the outside,” he added. “We have to make them pay.”

With such a whole-sale change to the roster, the most important thing might simply be getting used to playing with each other as a unit.

Seven of the current Wolves played fall ball this year, which should help ease the transition.

“Because we only have two returning full-time varsity players and a third (Kellner) that moved up at the end of the season, our first goal is to mesh as a team. We need to know each others strengths and weaknesses,” King said. “Once we figure these things out, then our other goals will fall into place.

“We are going to have growing pains and may show signs of inconsistency, but as the season moves on this should smooth out,” he added. “The obvious goal is to play hard every game from the tip off to the end of each game. If we give effort and play to our strengths we will be very competitive.”

The Wolves want to control the regular season again, but they also want to go deeper into the playoffs than last season, when they went two and out after a 15-5 regular season.

“As the season goes, we want to defend our league title, not just make it to the district play-offs, but go there to win. From there, getting to state is where we want to be,” King said. “Our opponents this season are much the same from last season. No easy win on our schedule.

“I like that and what it should do for us if we are successful against these teams is give us the added confidence we need to for the postseason.”

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Mia Littlejohn (John Fisken photo)

   Mia Littlejohn (20) was one of three Wolf booters tabbed as All-Conference selections. (John Fisken photo)

The magic number is three, it appears.

For the second straight season, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad landed a trio on the All-Conference team.

Senior defender Jenn Spark, sophomore midfielder Mia Littlejohn and freshman midfielder Kalia Littlejohn were tabbed when 1A Olympic League coaches held their balloting this week.

Last year the Wolves honored were seniors Erin Rosenkranz, Julia Myers and Marisa Etzell.

Coupeville repeated as league runner-ups behind Klahowya this season, improving to 4-2 in conference play.

The Wolves went 6-7-3 overall, tying the program record for most wins in a single season. They were knocked out of the playoffs by Vashon Island.

Kalia Littlejohn scored a school record 10 goals in her first high school season, while her big sis tallied five goals and eight assists.

Spark, who missed most of her junior year with a knee injury, had three goals and four assists, while anchoring the Wolf defense.

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A recent open gym drew a number of prospective Wolf basketball players. (John Fisken photo)

   A recent open gym drew a number of prospective Wolf basketball players. (John Fisken photos)

Wolf freshman Kalia Littlejohn (righT0 applies defensive pressure during a fall ball game.

   Wolf freshman Kalia Littlejohn (right) applies defensive pressure during a fall ball game.

Fall sports are not quite done yet, but basketball is lurking just around the corner.

Roundball action returns Monday, Nov. 16, when Coupeville High School coaches David King, Amy King, Anthony Smith and Dustin Van Velkinburgh welcome players to the first day of practice.

If the current schedules hold, the Wolf boys will kick off the season two weeks later with a road game on Nov. 30, and the first home hoops action will come in the form of a doubleheader against South Whidbey Dec. 2.

Wolf fans are currently scheduled to get five 2-for-1 deals, with home doubleheaders against South Whidbey, Orcas Island, La Conner, Mount Vernon Christian and Chimacum.

As always, high school sports schedules are almost constantly in flux. Especially before we actually get to the season.

To keep up to date, try either:

School calendar — http://coupeville.tandemcal.com/

Olympic League calendar — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?league=21&page_name=school_home&school=0&sport=0

For the moment (at least) the 2015-2016 CHS hoops schedules (league games have an asterisk):

Girls:

Wed-Dec. 2 South Whidbey
Fri-Dec. 4 @ Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic
Sat-Dec. 5 @ Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic
Mon-Dec. 7 @ Mount Baker
Wed-Dec. 9 Orcas Island
Fri-Dec. 11 Klahowya (*)
Tue-Dec. 22 @ Vashon Island
Wed-Dec. 30 La Conner
Tues-Jan. 5 @ Port Townsend (*)
Wed-Jan. 6 @ Sequim
Sat-Jan. 9 Mount Vernon Christian
Tue-Jan. 19 @ Chimacum (*)
Wed-Jan. 20 @ Bellevue Christian
Fri-Jan. 22 Port Townsend (*)
Tue-Jan. 26 Chimacum (*)
Fri-Jan. 29 @ Klahowya (*)
Tues-Feb. 2 @ Port Townsend (*)
Thur-Feb. 4 @ Chimacum (*)
Sat-Feb. 6 Klahowya (*) SENIOR NIGHT

Boys:

Mon-Nov. 30 @ Meridian
Wed-Dec. 2 South Whidbey
Sat-Dec. 5 @ Bellevue Christian
Mon-Dec. 7 Mount Baker
Wed-Dec. 9 Orcas Island
Fri-Dec. 11 @ Klahowya (*)
Fri-Dec. 18 Concrete
Wed-Dec. 30 La Conner
Mon-Jan. 4 @ South Whidbey
Tue-Jan. 5 Port Townsend (*)
Sat-Jan. 9 Mount Vernon Christian
Fri-Jan. 15 Stevenson
Tues-Jan. 19 @ Chimacum (*)
Fri-Jan. 22 @ Port Townsend (*)
Tues-Jan. 26 Chimacum (*)
Fri-Jan. 29 Klahowya (*)
Tues-Feb. 2 Port Townsend (*) SENIOR NIGHT
Thur-Feb. 4 @ Chimacum (*)
Sat-Feb. 6 @ Klahowya (*)

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