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Posts Tagged ‘1A vs. 2A’

Sophomore Scout Smith scored her first varsity basketball points Monday, nailing a three-ball at Bellingham. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mikayla Elfrank is ready for the spotlight.

With the Coupeville High School girls basketball squad needing to replace four starters from last year, the Wolf senior has moved from a role as an explosive “sixth man” to being a starter capable of carrying the team on her back at times.

And Elfrank went down fighting Monday, filling the stat sheet with 14 points, 11 rebounds, three steals, two assists and a block in her team’s non-conference season opener at Bellingham.

While it wasn’t quite enough, as the 2A Red Raiders jumped to an early lead, then held on for a 43-31 win, a thin CHS squad (injuries and illness left it with only seven players) got stronger as the game developed.

Overcoming early nerves, which left them in a 14-4 hole after the first quarter, the Wolves put together their best runs in the second (9-6) and fourth (13-10) quarters.

Toss out two layups in the final seconds, when Coupeville was frantically pressing, and that final quarter looks even better.

“If we play it safe (at the end) then they probably don’t hit 43, but who likes it safe!,” said Wolf coach David King.

“We still have a ways to go,” he added. “Just need to bring our fourth quarter effort for the whole game. We need to bring aggressive effort and compete on every possession.”

Having seen a bit of Bellingham from a distance during Coupeville’s visit to the Sedro-Woolley Jamboree, King knew the Red Raiders would come out aggressively, and they lived up to his expectations.

“Going in I knew it would be a battle,” he said. “They reminded me of my teams the past three to four years. Hustle, defensive pressure and a never-quit attitude.

“Their shooting is better than ours at this point, so coming into the game we had to play our normal hard-nosed defense along with playing through the extra pressure on our offense.”

It didn’t happen, at least in the first and third quarters.

“We played flat and on many possessions out of position on defense,” King said. “When we closed out on outside shooters, we stood up and got too close. This led to dribble drives and kick-out passes for open shots.”

Coupeville wan’t much better on offense in the early going, taking “some wild shots” and “not settling down until midway through the second quarter.”

A lot of that is likely first-game jitters, especially for a team with a roster in transition.

“It was good to get an actual game played and against a team that plays like us,” King said. “We had some positive moments and there are things we need to get back into the gym to work on.”

With Elfrank getting eight of her 14 points in the fourth quarter, and the Wolf defense coming alive, Coupeville ended the game on a positive note.

“Something clicked and we got more aggressive on defense, and that sparked our offense,” King said.

Kalia Littlejohn ran the point for the Wolves, and earned praise for “doing a really good job looking to distribute, then looking for her own shot when needed.”

The speedy junior finished with six points, while Kyla Briscoe popped for five, Lindsey Roberts knocked down three and Scout Smith netted three in her varsity debut.

The sophomore tickled the twines on a trey, narrowly beating the shot clock as it wound down.

Roberts had five rebounds and two blocks, while Smith, Briscoe and Littlejohn chipped in with three boards apiece.

Allison Wenzel and Sarah Wright, who “did a very good job in the post, making it hard for their players,” rounded out the board-cleaning business, each collecting a carom.

Briscoe had the defensive play of the night, with “a great save from under their basket which turned into a fast-break layup for us.”

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   Zach Ginnings teamed with Drake Borden for a crucial win at #3 doubles Tuesday, as Coupeville upended Sequim. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The big payback.

With not one, but two separate doubles teams storming back from a set down to win their matches Tuesday, the Coupeville High School boys tennis squad stunned visiting Sequim 4-3.

The non-conference win, hailed as “quite the shocker!” by CHS coach Ken Stange, lifts the Wolves to 4-6 and is the team’s second win over a 2A school this season.

It’s also payback for the two schools first match back in early Sept., when Sequim was the one pulling out a narrow victory.

Coupeville, which wraps Olympic League play with back-to-back matches against win-less Chimacum the next two days, showed no quit.

First doubles duo William Nelson and Joey Lippo and #4 combo Jaschon Baumann and Tiger Johnson showed the most pluck, climbing back into their matches, then coasting home in third-set tiebreakers.

Complete Tuesday results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Pedro Gamarra lost to Blake Wilker 6-2, 6-1

2nd Singles — Jakobi Baumann lost to Raymond Lam 6-1, 6-2

3rd Singles — Nile Lockwood lost to Thomas Hughes 6-2, 6-0

1st Doubles — William Nelson/Joey Lippo beat Tim Porter/Damon Little 4-6, 6-3, 10-6

2nd Doubles — Mason Grove/Nick Etzell beat Kevin Meyer/Sam Frymyer 6-3, 6-2

3rd Doubles — Drake Borden/Zach Ginnings beat Brenton Barnes/Aaron Jackson 6-1, 6-3

4th Doubles — Jaschon Baumann/Tiger Johnson beat Dustin Koch/Liam Braaten 3-6, 6-4, 10-3

JV:

5th Doubles — Thane Peterson/Koby Schreiber beat Steven Lam/Ben Wright 6-4

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   Coupeville senior captain Sage Renninger is headed to the soccer playoffs for the fourth straight year. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Let’s hear it for the Cowboys.

While the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad fell 2-0 to visiting 2A Sequim in a knock-down non-conference brawl Tuesday night, the bigger news came from a different game.

When Chimacum toppled Port Townsend 3-2, the Wolves clinched no worse than second-place in the 1A Olympic League for a fourth straight season.

That guarantees Coupeville (4-1 in league play, 6-6 overall) a “home” playoff game in Oak Harbor Oct. 28 against the #3 team from the Nisqually League — currently Vashon Island.

The Wolves can still catch Klahowya (5-0, 10-1) for the league title, but would need a bit of a miracle, since the Eagles have yet to lose in 25 conference games over a four-year stretch.

With the loss, Port Townsend (1-5, 2-8) falls into a tie with Chimacum (1-5, 1-7-1).

Even if either school were to finish in a tie with CHS at 4-5, the Wolves own tiebreakers, having won the season series against both.

Coupeville has four league games left on its schedule, starting Oct. 17 at Klahowya.

For its tune-up Tuesday, the Wolves faced down Sequim, a much-larger school, for the second time this season.

After falling 4-1 on the road back in mid-Sept., the Wolves, even playing without their top defender, Lindsey Roberts, displayed how much they have grown as the season has played out.

“Continued improvement with our defense against a tough Sequim team,” said CHS coach Kyle Nelson. “We also had a number of great shots, making the Sequim keeper make some very good saves.”

To get an early look at the playoff brackets, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2402&sport=11

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   Coupeville’s days as a tennis power will likely take a hit when the Olympic League combines 1A and 2A programs in the sport next school year. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The path to an Olympic League tennis title has always gone through Coupeville.

Starting next school year, however, that path is going to get a lot rockier.

The Wolf boys have won two crowns in four seasons since joining the newly-created 1A division of the league in 2014, while the CHS girls are a perfect 3-for-3 heading into next spring.

In fact, the Coupeville girls have never lost a match to rivals Klahowya and Chimacum/Port Townsend, and will carry a 15-0 mark in league tilts onto the court in 2018.

While the pursuit of title #4 will remain the same, the chase for title #5 may take a substantial detour.

When the 2018-2019 school year arrives, the 1A division of the Olympic League will merge with the 2A side of things for tennis, creating a 10-team conference for the sport.

That means just one league champ, and not the current two.

The new format only covers the regular season, as 1A and 2A schools will go their own way once the postseason arrives.

All other sports will remain separated between 1A and 2A.

While Coupeville has been playing most of the Olympic League’s 2A schools in non-conference tennis matches, the new format means they would have to upend much-larger schools to retain their title-winning ways.

Instead of just thumping on the Eagles and Cowboys, the Wolves will have to also vie with North Kitsap, Sequim, North Mason, Olympic, Kingston, Bremerton and Port Angeles.

Those schools have student bodies of 527-876 students, which means Coupeville (227 in the last classification count) will experience some deja vu, harkening back to its former days competing in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference.

In the new format North Kitsap (810 students) will overwhelmingly be the team to beat.

On the boys side the Vikings are currently operating on a 41-match winning streak, dating back to a loss to Sequim in Oct. 2014.

The NK girls have lost more recently, but that’s not a common occurrence, as they are still a very-tidy 51-3 over the past four seasons.

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   CHS volleyball coach Cory Whitmore has been pleased to see his team win 20 of 23 sets this season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

After a win over a large 2A school Thursday, the Wolves are 7-1.

1A or 2A, home or away, it matters not.

Carving up teams left and right, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad is on a tear of late.

Thursday night the Wolves added to their hot start, making quick work of host Port Angeles to the tune of 25-16, 25-22, 25-23.

The non-conference win, coming against a school with a student body nearly three times Coupeville’s size, lifts CHS to 7-1 on the season.

The Wolves will carry a five-match winning streak home to face another 2A school, Sequim, next Tuesday, then plunge fully into their pursuit of a second-straight 1A Olympic League crown.

Facing off with Port Angeles, Coupeville had a good mix of opportunistic offense and quality defense.

“I was happy to see our passing come back strong,” said Wolf coach Cory Whitmore. “We weren’t without mistakes, but we managed the serving with greater efficiency in fixing those mistakes and turning them into offense.

“We were sporadic with our attack but I was very proud of how our outsides both produced strong numbers on a mix of shots,” he added. “Glad to get the win on the road.”

Kyla Briscoe loomed large, leading the Wolves with 10 kills, while teammates Payton Aparicio and Katrina McGranahan chipped in with seven apiece.

Lauren Rose doled out a game-high 18 assists and added five service aces to go with the nine Aparicio blasted.

McGranahan, the reigning 1A Olympic League MVP, was a force wherever she set up on this night.

Katrina played a great all-around game with her blocking, serving and hitting,” Whitmore said.

JV falls for first time:

After reeling off six straight wins to open the season, the young Wolves suffered the first ding on their record, coming up on the wrong end of a 28-26, 25-19, 27-25 tally.

“A tough day, but a great learning and growing experience for the team,” said Coupeville JV coach Chris Smith. “The good news is we battled in all three sets and just came up short to a team that was very similar to us.

“We have a three-day break and then we will come back energized and focused on the areas we need to continue to improve upon.”

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