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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Ty Eck, seen here in an earlier game, picked off a pass Friday. (John Fisken photo)

   Ty Eck, seen here in an earlier game, picked off a pass Friday. (John Fisken photo)

Give them credit. They never hung their heads, never gave up.

Things were rough early Friday night at Klahowya for the Coupeville High School football squad, to the point where a running clock kicked in before the halftime buzzer.

But then, down 41-0, the Wolves started to click, and they finished with maybe their strongest second-half performance of the season.

And, while it still fell 41-15 to the Eagles, Coupeville’s flickering playoff hopes stayed just that way. Flickering.

Chimacum was destroyed 63-12 by undefeated Port Townsend Friday, leaving the Wolves and Cowboys with identical 1-5 records in 1A Olympic League play.

Both are 1-7 overall and split the two games they played this season.

While early reports indicated Chimacum would claim the league’s #3 playoff berth via a point differential tiebreaker, there have been recent rumblings that the two schools will instead decide the matter on the field.

Where they would play, and whether it’s a full game or a mini game, will now be decided by league AD’s.

Both schools still have a non-conference game left on their schedule (Coupeville hosts Concrete Oct. 30), so any rubber match would happen after that game, but before the playoffs begin Nov. 6.

Port Townsend (8-0, 6-0) and Klahowya (5-3, 4-2) are guaranteed playoff berths.

Facing an amped-up Eagles squad that wanted to badly win at its Homecoming game, the Wolves struggled early.

Coupeville fell behind 20-0 after one quarter of play, as three different Klahowya players found the end zone.

Austin Keller punched in from 17 yards out, before Dylan Zuber brought back a punt for a second score.

Eagle quarterback George Harris then tacked on a short TD run of his own.

Klahowya triggered the running clock with three more scores before halftime, but, after the extra-long halftime break, Coupeville came out looking much sharper.

That was evident right from the start, as the Wolves pulled off a successful onside kick by Zane Bundy to open the second half.

While it was unable to score on that possession, Coupeville did get two second-half touchdown runs from senior Wiley Hesselgrave.

Bundy tacked on the extra point after the first score, while the Wolves caught the Eagles napping the second time around.

CJ Smith took the snap and rolled out, finding Jacob Martin in the end zone for a two-point conversion.

Martin, Hesselgrave, Lathom Kelley and Uriel Liquidano led an aggressive CHS defense that bent a little in the second half, but never broke.

Liquidano recovered a fumble to go along with a Ty Eck interception from earlier in the game.

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Sarah Wright (John Fisken photos)

Sarah Wright and Co. are on the right track. (John Fisken photo)

Keeping its hot streak alive, the most successful fall sports team at Coupeville High School rolled to another win Thursday night.

By the time they were done, the Wolf JV spikers had shredded visiting Chimacum 25-11, 25-11, 25-17, capturing their third straight victory and school-best sixth of the season.

Now 6-4 overall, 3-0 in 1A Olympic League play, the young guns currently have one more win than the CHS varsity girls’ soccer and boys’ tennis teams.

And they’ve done it despite being shafted a bit by the whims of fate.

With Port Townsend unable to field a JV squad this year, Coupeville’s second team will end up playing three less matches than their varsity counterparts.

The Wolves will close the JV season Monday, Oct. 26 on the road at Klahowya.

Beat the Eagles for a second time, and Coupeville will wrap an undefeated league season and claim a (mythical) league title.

Like last year’s JV girls’ basketball squad, which went 9-0 in league play, the “title” will get them no championship banner, but it bodes extremely well for the future of the Wolves’ varsity program.

Completing a three-match season sweep of the Cowboys (they beat them twice in league play and once in a “non-conference” match), the Wolves played with precision and a cold fury in their home finale.

Coupeville rained down 22 service aces and 26 kills, while notching two milestones.

The Wolves compiled a 1.94 passing average, which coach Heidi Wyman hailed as “the team’s highest of the season” and Kayla Rose converted her first-ever match point on serve.

Nicole Lester claimed player of the match honors, filling the stat sheet with five aces, two kills, a 2.33 passing average and much praise from her proud coach.

Coupeville spread out its offense, with Allison Wenzel collecting six kills, while Sarah Wright (five), Ashley Menges (four) and Maddy Hilkey (two) all chipped in.

Menges doled out a team-high 16 assists, while Wright pounded home 10 service aces.

Kenzi LaRue, Maggie Crimmins, Kameryn St Onge and Abby Parker round out the roster of the best team CHS has to offer this fall.

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Hope Lodell, seen here in an earlier match, lit the fire for Coupeville Thursday, dropping in nine service aces. (John Fiskenb pohoto)

   Hope Lodell, seen here in an earlier match, lit the fire for Coupeville Thursday, dropping in nine service aces. (John Fisken photo)

(Photo courtesy Valen Trujillo)

   Pink jerseys and hair ribbons were on display as the Wolves held a breast cancer awareness night. (Photo courtesy Valen Trujillo)

Tiffany Briscoe celebrates with Wolf gridiron star (and huge volleyball fan) Jacob martin.

   Tiffany Briscoe celebrates with Wolf gridiron star (and enthusiastic volleyball fan) Jacob Martin. (Amy Briscoe photo)

They were feeling it.

Riding a wave of energy from an amped-up student cheering section, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad roared back to stagger visiting Chimacum Thursday night, forcing a tie for second place in the 1A Olympic League standings.

Sparked by spectacular serving from Hope Lodell and an aggressive team-wide approach to hitting, the Wolves knocked off the pesky Cowboys 20-25, 25-13, 25-23, 25-15.

The win, avenging a tough five-set loss to Chimacum earlier in the season, a night when the Cowboy JV outshouted the Wolf fans, was sweet for all involved.

As her players whooped and the remaining fans stomped the bleachers, CHS coach Breanne Smedley beamed.

“The best we’ve played; we stayed focused on winning the next point, moving ahead,” she said. “The girls are making it not “about me,” but “about the team,” which is very nice to see.”

The victory lifted Coupeville to 2-2 in league play, 4-8 overall.

The Wolves are tied with Chimacum (2-2, 7-7) two games behind Klahowya (4-0, 7-6) and two ahead of Port Townsend (0-4, 1-9) with two to play.

CHS travels to Klahowya Monday, then hosts Port Townsend Thursday on Senior Night.

The top three teams make the postseason — something the Wolf spikers did not do last year — and Coupeville is one win or one RedHawk loss from clinching a berth.

The Wolves started things with a bang Thursday, as sophomore Katrina McGranahan pounded a spike between two Cowboys to open the night’s scoring.

After that, the first set was a herky-jerky affair, with Coupeville strong at first (winners from McKenzie Bailey and Kyla Briscoe) then surprisingly unfocused for a bit, then offering a late rally that fell just short.

The second set was a different matter.

Lodell joined the action and her presence in the lineup immediately gave the Wolves a noticeable jolt.

The high-jumping sophomore was on fire at the service stripe (she would finish with nine aces on the night) and Coupeville claimed the early lead and never relinquished it.

Clinging to a 13-12 lead, the Wolves ripped control of the set away when McGranahan came roaring up on the outside, mashing a frozen rope of a spike that dug a trench three feet deep as it exploded on the end line for a winner.

Chimacum buckled and went down meekly, with the Kat Attack continuing.

Ally Roberts dropped in a gorgeous tear-drop tip over the heads of two players, Bailey touched the gym ceiling as she soared to reject a Cowboy shot and then McGranahan closed out the set with a six-point run on serve.

With the joint jumpin’, though, things took a sharp left turn.

As quickly as they had seized control, the Wolves threw it away, falling behind 7-0 in the third set.

Enter The Surgeon and exit Chimacum’s heart.

Operating with an uncanny precision, Lodell zipped serves to the right, to the left, right down the middle and off of the elbows and knees of flailing Cowboys.

One of the few times Chimacum mounted any kind of return, a brief rally broke out only to be brought to a screeching halt by Roberts and McGranahan, who teamed for an emphatic stuff at the net.

Still, despite battling back ferociously, Coupeville couldn’t quite seem to get over the last hump.

Seven ties, but only one momentary lead at 8-7, and then the Wolves found themselves down 23-20, returning serve.

Never fear.

The Wolves thwarted a Chimacum stuff attempt, before handing the ball to a Keebler Elf with ice water running in her veins.

Lauren Rose is as steady a player as there is in Wolf Nation, in any sport, and I swear I have never seen her miss a serve in almost two full seasons.

Barely cocking one eyebrow (she was so calm, you had to look really closely to see if she was still breathing), Keebs laid down four straight winners.

The final one? An ace that ripped a small divot out of the back line and tore a much bigger chunk out of the Chimacum coach’s heart.

As the rival spiker guru howled in a mix of agony, disbelief and wonderment, Rose strolled past, moving McConaughey-style, her quiet smile uttering a very loud “Alright, alright, alright.”

Their spirit broken, the Cowboys went down quickly in the night’s final set, aided by a couple of laser spikes off of Tiffany Briscoe’s fingertips and a sensational save on a play by Emma Smith.

The freshman, maybe the tallest player on the Wolf squad, was headed to the floor and caught in an awkward position almost beneath the net, yet still managed to punch the ball skyward at the last second, keeping a key rally going for a few more seconds.

As the now hoarse-voiced crowd filtered out, all that was left to do for the Wolves was add up their stats.

Roberts and Tiffany Briscoe led the way with eight kills apiece (Rally Ally had a perfect hitting night, with no errors) while Rose and Sydney Autio both chipped in with 12 assists.

Working the back line and picking up another two dozen floor burns for her ever-growing collection, Wolf libero Valen Trujillo came away with 16 digs.

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May Rose (John Fisken photo)

   May Rose scored her second goal of the season Thursday, helping lift Coupeville to a playoff berth-clinching win. (John Fisken photo)

Goal one — make the playoffs — accomplished.

Goal two –unseat Klahowya as league champs — still attainable.

Riding goals from May Rose and Kalia Littlejohn, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer team upended scrappy Chimacum 2-1 Thursday night and punched its ticket to the postseason.

The win, the third in the last four games for the Wolves, lifted them to 3-1 in 1A Olympic League play, 5-5-3 overall.

It also guaranteed the Wolves will finish no worse than second in the conference for the second straight year.

They have two regular season games left and could still catch the defending 1A state champs in the standings.

Coupeville travels to Klahowya (4-0, 10-3-1) Monday for a battle royale, then holds Senior Night Tuesday, with Port Townsend (0-4, 0-10-2) in town.

The Wolves controlled play for much of Thursday night’s action.

“The Chimacum goal was us getting lazy and not taking care of business,” said Wolf coach Troy Cowan. “Don’t let the close score fool you; they were handled.”

Rose opened the scoring, taking a pass from Kalia Littlejohn and pounding it home. It was the fleet-footed junior’s second goal of the season.

May Rose played lights out; she has really worked hard and improved her game!,” Cowan said. “Her first touch has become a real weapon and she is getting hungry for the ball, which is bad news for defenders!!!”

Having helped out on the first score, Littlejohn put the second one away herself, notching her ninth goal.

The score was set up by big sis Mia Littlejohn, who tallied her team-high eighth assist.

“Of course, Batman and Robin (Littlejohn sisters) are still on course to break every record in the sport of women’s and probably men’s soccer,” Cowan added. “And don’t ask me which one is Batman and which one is Robin.

“They are just talented, very competitive, driven young ladies that love soccer!,” he added. “I’m glad they play for CHS!!!”

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Wiley

  Wiley Hesselgrave (10) caught a TD pass in a playoff game as a freshman. If Coupeville wins Friday, he can make it back to the postseason as a senior. (John Fisken photo)

There’s no two ways about it.

Seriously. There are four options, and only one works.

What we’re talking about is getting the Coupeville High School football team into the playoffs, and, while it’s become more of a long shot in the last week, it’s still possible.

Long story short, if the Wolf defense had not surrendered a touchdown with 1.6 seconds to play last Friday, losing 14-9 to Chimacum, we would not be having this conversation.

A Homecoming win and Coupeville would have punched its ticket to the postseason.

But, it didn’t happen and the Wolves and Cowboys now sit in a third-place tie at 1-4 in 1A Olympic League play, with one conference game left to play.

League champ Port Townsend and Klahowya are in, and the league’s final berth goes to whichever school claims third.

And, while the advantage was firmly Coupeville’s last week, that’s no longer the case.

If the two teams finish in a tie, the tiebreaker, which is point differential in head-to-head games, goes to Chimacum.

The Wolves won the first meeting 28-26, but their five-point loss Friday means they lose that tiebreaker by three points.

So, heading into Friday — Coupeville at Klahowya and Port Townsend at Chimacum — there are four possible finishes:

Option 1: Coupeville and Chimacum both win.

Option 2: Coupeville and Chimacum both lose.

Option 3: Chimacum wins, Coupeville loses.

Option 4: Coupeville wins, Chimacum loses.

In the first three scenarios, Chimacum goes to the playoffs and Coupeville, after a non-conference game against Concrete Oct. 30, will get a season-ending crossover game against another non-playoff team.

Or, option four hits and the Wolves are playoff bound Nov. 6 or 7 and will travel to face Cascade Christian.

Let’s face it, option 1 and 3 aren’t going to happen, because there is no way possible the Cowboys beat a Port Townsend team that is 7-0 and has outscored its opponents 342-12.

Even with big-time weapons Wesley Wheeler and Ezra Easley out with injuries, the RedHawks are going to roll. Bet the farm on that.

So, the ball is firmly back in Coupeville’s court.

Do what they could not do last year — beat Klahowya in a season finale with a postseason berth on the line — and the Wolves are a playoff team.

In the words of legendary former Raiders owner Al Davis … just win, baby.

Cause that’s your only option.

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