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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Payton Aparicio (John Fisken photo)

Payton Aparicio was “on fire” Thursday night. (John Fisken photo)

Close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.

So, despite playing some stellar volleyball Thursday night and coming agonizingly close, the Coupeville High School spikers sailed back home after absorbing a loss.

The defeat, coming in a tense 25-19, 25-23, 25-22 match at Chimacum, drops the Wolves to 2-8 on the season.

Worse, it puts them at 0-2 in 1A Olympic League play and stuck in the basement in a tie with Port Townsend.

Chimacum and Klahowya, the two teams that have beaten Coupeville so far — both in razor-thin results — sit atop the league at 2-0.

The Wolves still have time to make a statement in the playoff race, however.

The top three teams make the postseason, with all three of the Olympic League squads hosting their opening playoff match.

With both of their losses being exceptionally close, and with two of Coupeville’s four remaining matches being against Port Townsend, a school they whipped in an earlier “non-conference” match, prospects are still bright.

While her squad fell Thursday, Wolf coach Breanne Smedley came away pleased with a lot of what her young players accomplished.

“Our outsides and opposites did a great job tonight swinging and exploiting Chimacum’s defense,” she said. “It’s awesome to see the youth on our team stepping into roles and doing their jobs.

“It was a back and forth match the entire night, they battled for every point,” Smedley added. “The girls are hungry to play them at our house next week.”

Sophomore Payton Aparicio sparked the Wolves (“she was on fire!!!”) with a flawless 100% from the service stripe, including four aces.

She also collected a team-high seven kills and 10 digs.

Valen Trujillo went low for 15 digs, Sydney Autio (15) and Lauren Rose (12) combined for 27 assists, Kyla Briscoe hammered home six kills and Hope Lodell had a strong night with three aces and five kills.

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Jared Helmstadter is a super hero in his other life. (Wendy McCormick photos)

  Jared Helmstadter is a super hero in his other life. (Wendy McCormick photos)

Jimmy

   Wolf netters (l to r) Lilan Sekigawa, Grey Rische, Jimmy Myers and Nick Blalock enjoy some quality time with their #1 fan.

Connor McCormick pulled out the day's toughest match at #2 singles. His win officially claimed the league title for the Wolves.

   Connor McCormick pulled out the day’s toughest match at #2 singles. His win officially claimed the league title for the Wolves.

We are the champs!

We are the champs … of taking photos.

Clear some space on the gym wall, cause there’s a new title banner going up.

Following in the footsteps of their feminine counterparts, who ruled the 1A Olympic League in the spring, the Coupeville High School boys’ tennis team ascended the mountain top Wednesday.

Thrashing visiting Chimacum 6-0, the Wolves (5-3 overall) capped a 4-0 run through league play, replacing last year’s champ, Klahowya, atop the heap.

Now, all eyes turn to CHS administration, who are hopefully on the phone, getting their order in.

The title banner, which will join ones raised last school year by the girls’ basketball and girls’ tennis programs, will be the first one hoisted by a Wolf boys’ team in any sport since 2002.

Now, of course, there is the small matter of the netters having won a string of titles during that time, when they were competing in two and three-team leagues.

Those titles were won and should be honored on the CHS gym wall, but have never been. But that’s an argument for another day.

Wednesday, it was all about a new group of players putting the punctuation mark on their title, and they did so with ease.

Playing in front of a spartan crowd (take away family members, a girlfriend or three and a small contingent of the media and the number of people witnessing history was ridiculously low), the Wolves drilled Chimacum.

Coupeville rolled to straight sets wins in all of its matches, with the exception of third singles.

That match, once it finally made it to an open court, was a brawl between Nick Etzell and Emmett Erickson, the lone Port Townsend player to travel and play with Chimacum.

Erickson took the first set 7-5, but Etzell, slapping away with conviction, had turned things around and was about to serve for the second set up 5-4 when the ferry beckoned.

The match went into the record books as a draw, once the idea of leaving Erickson behind to finish up the match, then find his own way home, was voted down … barely.

Officially, the point which captured the day’s win, and the title, for Coupeville, came from #2 singles player Connor McCormick.

The smooth-hitting, never-ruffled senior dug down deep to pull out his win, barely beating #4 doubles duo Lilan Sekigawa and Jimmy Myers off the court.

Even though they started their match later, Sekigawa and Myers turned the power show on and almost caught their teammate, who was deep into a war of attrition.

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st singles — Sebastian Davis beat Jonny Rogers 6-1, 6-2

2nd singles — Connor McCormick beat Chris Sevilla 7-5, 7-6(7-1)

3rd singles — Nick Etzell drew with Emmett Erickson 5-7, 5-4

1st doubles — Joseph Wedekind/John McClarin beat Sean Miller/Zac Smith 6-0, 6-1

2nd doubles — Joey Lippo/William Nelson beat Ryle Gapitulan/Nate Miller 6-1, 6-4

3rd doubles — Grey Rische/Jared Helmstadter beat Connor Cottier/Cayden Sevilla 6-2, 6-1

4th doubles — Jimmy Myers/Lilan Sekigawa beat Jack Meissner/Tibersio Brennan 6-1, 6-0

JV:

5th doubles — Nile Lockwood/Garrett Compton trailed Gapitulan/N. Miller 4-3 (ferry)

6th doubles — Nick Blalock/Aiden Crimmins lost to S. Miller/Smith 6-1

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Kyla Briscoe (John Fisken photo)

Kyla Briscoe was a hitting machine Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

This one counted.

After two “non-conference” matches against league foes (still confusing…), the Coupeville High School volleyball squad officially kicked off 1A Olympic League play Tuesday night.

They might want a do-over, however.

Despite noticeably improving as the match played out, the Wolves fell 25-17, 25-20, 27-25 to visiting Klahowya, dropping their record to 2-7 overall, 0-1 in league play.

Chimacum swept Port Townsend in straight sets in the other league opener Tuesday, so, for the moment, Coupeville is in the basement with the RedHawks.

That could change quickly, however, as the Wolves get a chance for redemption Thursday, when they pop over to the mainland to face Chimacum.

In one of those two “non-counting” match-ups against league foes, Coupeville savaged the Cowboys in the first two sets, before inexplicably falling apart and dropping the final three sets and the match.

The sometimes schizophrenic nature shown by a young Wolf team was on full display again Tuesday.

When they were clicking, they knocked the Eagles on their heels. And, when they weren’t, their mistakes hurt far more than anything the visitors did.

The opening set was a back-and-forth affair, at first at least.

Kyla Briscoe delivered a crushing second-chance spike for a winner and Katrina McGranahan was electric, both at the service stripe and laying down slicing spikes.

Riding a service winner from Sydney Autio, the Wolves closed within 13-12, only to fall back as quickly as they had risen up.

A string of returns that went wide sent Coupeville tumbling into a hole, as the Eagle lead ballooned out to 24-15.

With their backs to the wall, the Wolves made things interesting with back-to-back winners off of McKenzie Bailey’s fingertips, as the senior stalked the net, claiming it as her own.

But it wasn’t enough, as Klahowya closed out the set with a spike that looked like it was flying out the door, but dove and caught the back line at the very last second.

The second set was virtually a replay of the first one, but a step closer.

Payton Aparicio ripped a winner that lopped off an Eagle arm or two as it zipped through, Tiffany Briscoe brought the thunder, Kyla Briscoe was a hitting machine and McGranahan pulled off a nifty two-in-one play.

Bouncing around with mad glee, the Wolf sophomore went high for a potential winner on a spike, then, when denied, immediately sprang back skyward to stuff Klahowya’s return in the face of a surprised Eagle.

Deciding to shake things up a bit, the two teams broke from the pattern in what would turn out to be the final set.

Coupeville roared out to an 8-1 lead on hot serving from Autio and Aparicio, with McGranahan once again pulling off a perfectly-timed stuff at the net.

Klahowya was not to be denied, however, fighting back to reclaim the lead at 17-16.

From that point on, the Wolves would never again be in the lead, though they did force five ties and stave off two match points before succumbing.

The fight left in Coupeville was evident, as both times it fought off match point, it did so by outright winning the point and not merely popping the ball up and hoping the visitors would commit an error.

The first time Hope Lodell came zipping in from the side, appearing almost as if by magic at the last second, to catch the ball on the very tip of one finger and perfectly plop it in for a winner.

On the next, Ally Roberts got elastic, reaching behind her head while airborne to snag the ball and deliver a knee-quaking spike.

Lauren Rose paced the Wolves at the service stripe, converting 92% of her serves, while also doling out six assists.

Valen Trujillo (11 digs), McGranahan (four kills, three blocks) and Kyla Briscoe (three kills) also lodged their names on the stat sheet.

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Jimmy Myers, seen here last season, teamed with Lilan Sekigawa for a key win Friday. (John Fisken photo)

   Jimmy Myers, seen here last season, teamed with Lilan Sekigawa for a key win Friday. (John Fisken photo)

It was a day of grit, topped by joy and music.

Getting a spark from Cole Payne, who won a three-set thriller less than 24 hours after thinking a shoulder injury might sideline him, the Coupeville High School boys’ tennis squad routed host Klahowya 6-1 Friday.

The win lifted the Wolves to 2-0 in 1A Olympic League play and may have already clinched them a league title banner.

With one more match-up against the Eagles Oct. 9, Coupeville, which beat Klahowya 5-2 earlier in the season, has already guaranteed that it has dethroned the defending league champs.

The only lingering question is whether the Wolves (3-2 overall) will still have to go through the joint Chimacum/Port Townsend program to claim the title.

Chimacum skipped out on the first scheduled match because of a lack of players, and there is still no word on whether the Wolves and Cowboys will meet one, two or three times … or never.

For the moment, having knocked off the Eagles in style, the Wolves headed home and found themselves serenaded as if they had won the title.

A musician on the ferry drew the attention of the Coupeville players, and the atmosphere topped off a day filled with wins and pizza.

“We are on the ferry and we hear a violin playing. We all go over and sit to listen,” said Wolf doubles ace Jared Helmstadter. “Great music. Nice way to relax and think of the good and wonderful things we have in this world.

“Just a great time with a bunch of good guys. Great way to celebrate a win for Coupeville!”

Scores from Friday:

Varsity:

1st singles — Sebastian Davis beat Trask 6-0, 6-0

2nd singles — Connor McCormick beat Schoening 7-5, 6-1

3rd singles — Cole Payne beat Swaney 3-6, 6-3, 11-9

1st doubles — Joseph Wedekind/John McClarin lost to Haga/Fite 6-3, 6-0

2nd doubles — Joey Lippo/William Nelson beat Short/Short 7-5, 6-2

3rd doubles — Jimmy Myers/Lilan Sekigawa beat Winters/Cook 6-3, 6-1

4th doubles — Grey Rische/Jared Helmstadter beat Hytinen/Wasburg 6-1, 6-2

JV:

5th doubles — Nick Etzell/Garrett Compton lost 7-5

6th doubles — Nile Lockwood/Aiden Crimmins won 6-1

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Mitchell Carroll had the biggest hit of the night, flattening Klahowya's QB for a teeth-rattling sack. (John Fisken photo)

   Mitchell Carroll had the biggest hit of the night, flattening Klahowya’s QB for a teeth-rattling sack. (John Fisken photo)

It was kind of classless, and sort of fitting.

Capping a chippy, flag-riddled game Friday night, the Klahowya High School football squad, the clubhouse leader in face mask and late hit penalties, chose the lesser of two paths in the final moments, opting to punch in a meaningless touchdown instead of taking a knee up by 10 with 25 seconds to play.

The move gave the visiting Eagles a 29-13 victory over Coupeville, and might give the illusion to those who weren’t at Mickey Clark Field that the game was a blowout.

Which is far from the truth.

And you know what? Whether you won 29-13 or 23-13, here’s a quick piece of advice, Klahowya. Port Townsend ain’t gonna be impressed, either way.

The Redhawks, who demolished winless Chimacum 58-0 Friday to run their record to 5-0 (they’ve outscored opponents 255-6) are rolling through the 1A Olympic League this season.

So the match-up between Klahowya (now 3-2 overall, 2-1 in league) and Coupeville (1-4, 1-2) was a consolation prize, with the winner taking the inside lane on the league’s #2 playoff spot.

As such, it was an orgy of hard hits, defensive gems from the Wolf secondary and a whole lot of tusslin’.

Flags dropped from the skies with more frequency than the third-quarter rain drops, and they stung both sides.

A whole lot of yappin’ and a whole lot of late and flagrant hits, from both sides, set the tone of the game.

And up until the final moments it was a game either squad could have won.

Zane Bundy’s second field goal of the night, a 32-yarder that he whacked about 42 yards, pulled Coupeville to within 17-13, a score that held until the game’s final six minutes.

Klahowya broke through for good when Eagle quarterback George Harris blasted in from two yards out with 6:01 on the clock, capping a drive that was greatly aided by a face mask penalty on the Wolves.

Catching a mini-break when Klahowya misfired on the PAT, Coupeville took over down by 10 and started to make things happen. And then didn’t.

The Wolves had four consecutive gains, highlighted by an 18-yard pass from Gabe Eck to Ty Eck, erased by penalties.

Every time they surged forward, they shot themselves in the foot in the next breath, finally sputtering out and turning the ball over on downs.

The Eagles mixed in two short runs with Coupeville burning its final timeouts, then Harris whipped a 45-yard pass to drive the ball down to the five.

With no way to stop the clock, the Wolves could do little else but watch Klahowya take a knee and run out the game.

Except that wasn’t in the game plan, apparently.

To their credit, the Wolf defense immediately stepped back up and resoundingly blocked the extra point, preventing the Eagles from cracking the 30-point barrier.

Still, it’s hard not to look at Klahowya’s coaching staff and say, “Really?”

The game, the first at home for Coupeville after four straight road trips, had kicked off with a true back-and-forth feel.

The Eagles opened the scoring on a safety when a bad snap left Wolf punter Clay Reilly a sitting duck in the end zone, but the Wolves jumped right back into things on a five-yard scoring run from Wiley Hesselgrave.

Hesselgrave, who powered his way to 102 yards on the ground by repeatedly slamming head-first into would-be tacklers, paced Coupeville’s best running attack of the season.

The Wolves collected 217 yards as a team, with Lathom Kelley gutting out a season-high 91 to back up Hesselgrave.

Klahowya retook the lead on back-to-back second quarter touchdowns, but the opportunistic Wolf defense refused to buckle.

Sophomore Hunter Smith made off with a pair of interceptions, running his season total to four, while Hesselgrave also had a pick and Jordan Ford returned a fumble 20+ yards.

Bundy hit a 27-yard field goal at the halftime buzzer to cut the lead to 17-10, then provided the only scoring in the third quarter with his second field goal.

Kelley (14 tackles) and Hesselgrave (11) led the Wolf tackling machine, while the game’s best play might have come courtesy Mitchell Carroll.

The Wolf junior came crashing around the left side of the line to decimate Harris for a first quarter sack that rattled the Eagle quarterback.

He suffered the first of his three interceptions on the very next play, as Smith went airborne to rip the ball away from a Klahowya receiver.

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