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Posts Tagged ‘All-State’

Allison Wenzel (John Fisken photo)

   When she’s not laying down the law on the basketball court, Wolf junior Allison Wenzel is a mega-talented musician. (John Fisken photo)

She’s a quintuple threat.

When Allison Wenzel isn’t busy whuppin’ on people in one of her three sports (volleyball, basketball and track), the Coupeville High School junior is a musical maestro.

She currently plays the French horn, trumpet, trombone and mellophone and is teaching herself the clarinet.

So it should come as little surprise that Wenzel has been plucked out of obscurity and selected to perform with the Washington Music Educators Association All-State High School Concert Band.

The only CHS student to nab the honor, she’ll join her fellow musicians in Bellevue in Feb., 2017.

Wenzel has been working with music teacher Sean Brown, while Coupeville School District music director Jamar Jenkins helped her record her audition.

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Kristin Bridges (John Fisken photo)

   A former state high school player of the year in Louisiana, Kristin Bridges is now imparting volleyball wisdom to young Coupeville spikers. (John Fisken photo)

A fighter and a survivor.

That’s what Coupeville High School has in its new JV volleyball coach.

Kristin Bridges, who is off to a 2-1 start in her debut season at the helm of the Wolf young guns, is a highly-accomplished spiker who has overcome daunting conditions to get to where she is today.

A state player of the year in Louisiana, she and her family lost their home during Hurricane Katrina.

During the rebuilding process, Bridges and her teammates had to scramble to find other playing options, as their high school was closed down.

As hard as going through the devastation of one of America’s worst natural disasters was, having volleyball to fall back on helped in a time of crisis.

“During evacuation, I had to attend another high school while my own was being repaired,” Bridges said. “Their volleyball team welcomed me with open arms.

“This team made me feel like I was one of their own immediately. It didn’t matter that we were competitors, at that moment we were family,” she added. “I think that’s when I really knew that volleyball was my number one love in sports.”

Midway through the year, her school reopened and she was able to reunite with her original teammates.

“It was hard playing sports and having our parents rebuilding our homes but I think we all needed something to keep us together during that trying time,” Bridges said. “Volleyball was that something.”

The sport she first picked up age five (“I fell in love”) carried Bridges on to college, though an early stint at the University of Mobile was cut short by health issues.

After moving back home, she attended the University of New Orleans and began to transition into a new role as a coach.

Her initial job came at the middle school level, where she was an 8th grade assistant at Ursuline Academy.

“It was the most fulfilling role I’ve ever held and I’m excited to be coaching once more,” Bridges said.

Having replaced Heidi Wyman, who stepped down after a season to focus on family, Coupeville’s newest coach is part of a Wolf dream team which includes first-year varsity coach Cory Whitmore and fellow assistant Ashley Herndon.

The trio are building an exciting program, expanding on what former Wolf coaches Wyman and Breanne Smedley started.

Bridges is approaching her mix of freshmen and sophomores with a three-step plan for success.

“I have three goals for the JV team this year,” she said. “Increase speed, physicality and aggressiveness, draw the team closer to the varsity level and increase their comfort and confidence on the court.”

Having the opportunity to pass on what she learned from her time on the court as a player has been a thrill for the young coach.

“I really enjoy coaching student athletes,” Bridges said. “I love seeing how hard they work in practice and watch it translate to the court.

“There is so much potential in each player; not just athletically, but academically and professionally as well,” she added. “It’s wonderful to see the drive in each of them and know that they are going to really make a difference in the world.”

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CHS catcher Cole Payne was tabbed as a First-Team All-State player. (John Fisken photo)

   CHS catcher Cole Payne was tabbed as a First-Team All-State player. (John Fisken photo)

He’s gone, but not forgotten.

Three weeks after he graduated from Coupeville High School, Cole Payne received one final honor for his baseball playing skills.

The standout catcher, who was earlier honored as the 1A Olympic League MVP, was named as a First-Team All-State player Tuesday.

Payne follows in the footsteps of former teammate Ben Etzell, who nailed the same honor as a pitcher in 2014.

The award comes courtesy the Washington State Baseball Coaches Association.

After leading the Wolves to their first baseball league title in 25 years, Payne was the lone Whidbey Island player named to the All-State team.

The complete 1A squad:

First-Team:

Henry Cheney (Charles Wright)
McKabe Cottrell (Freeman)
Ashton Dulfer (Vashon)
Luke Gleasman (Chelan)
Brayden Hale (Medical Lake)
Skyler Jump (Hoquiam)
Matt Kelleran (Overlake-Bear Creek)
Cole Payne (Coupeville)
Blaine Ross (Zillah)
Nate Rossine (Kiona-Benton)
Kaleb Strawn (Tenino)
Gabe Tolrud (Connell)
Kylan Touch (Aberdeen)
Isaac Wersland (Cle Elum)

Second-Team:

Thomas Butler (University Prep)
Peter Dudunakis (Overlake-Bear Creek)
Tyler Fox (Cascade Christian)
Trystan Garland (Connell)
Dalton Hawk (Cle Elum)
Chase Kuhnert (Lakeside – Nine Mile Falls)
Ryan Long (Overlake-Bear Creek)
Jack Paukert (Freeman)
Lino Rivera (Kiona-Benton)
Joel Rodriguez (Eatonville)
Blake Vandel (Cascade-Leavenworth)
Cory Wagner (Medical Lake)

Coach  of  the  Year:

Steve  Hall (Vashon)

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(Joan Payne photos)

Cole Payne straps on his catcher’s gear one final time. (Joan Payne photos)

CJ

CJ Smith takes a wicked cut.

Payne shares a moment with South Whidbey's Charlie Patterson.

Payne shares a moment with South Whidbey’s Charlie Patterson.

It was their final moments on a high school baseball field, and they spent it together.

Cole Payne and CJ Smith played alongside each other for three years at Coupeville High School, and Thursday they slapped on their Wolf uniforms one last time.

The duo were in Bellingham for the 1A/B All-State feeder games, and they went out with a splash.

Payne caught 10 innings over the course of the two eight-inning games, then made his high school pitching debut, tossing two scoreless innings.

Smith alternated between the mound, where he threw three innings, and second base, where he put in four strong innings of work.

While their team was swept in the doubleheader, falling 5-3 and 6-3, both Wolves stood tall.

“Good competitive games all around,” said CHS assistant coach Chris Smith, who was in the dugout for the twin-bill.

Payne and Smith raked as well, both piling up two hits on the day.

After the doubleheader, Payne was one of 10 players nominated by coaches to advance on to play in the All-State games June 11-12 in Yakima.

He passed.

Cole declined, stating thank you, but I am a high school grad now and I am hanging up my high school baseball cleats,” Chris Smith said.

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Makana Stone

   Coupeville senior Makana Stone models a new, one-day-only uniform. (Amy King photo)

(Eileen Stone photo)

Winner, winner, chicken dinner. (Eileen Stone photo)

Makana Stone bowed out a winner.

Playing in her final high school basketball game Saturday, the Coupeville High School senior piled up some nice stats to help her 1A squad upend the 2A team 87-80 at the All-State game.

Stone threw down six points, snatched six boards, rejected four shots and dealt out two assists.

“A really good game. Makana represented Coupeville well,” said CHS coach David King, who was in the stands with wife/assistant coach Amy to watch their star’s prep swan song.

The middle game of a three-game day (1B and 2B opened the day at King’s High School and 3A and 4A were to close), the 1A vs. 2A tilt was a close one.

Coming out strong, the 1A all-stars blew out to a 12-point lead in the first five minutes of the game

While the 2A squad chipped their way back into the game, Stone tallied her first points on a sweet little jump shot that found nothing but net.

Up 44-40 at the half, 1A coach Shane Wichers of Nooksack Valley inserted Stone as a starter to begin the second half.

Makana played well; she got into a good rhythm in the half,” David King said.

The 2A team banged away from the outside, draining a number of three-balls to keep things close, but the 1A stars, including Stone, closed the game with precision work at the free throw stripe.

As she and her nine new teammates basked in the glow of one final prep win, her coaches watched with pride.

“What a honor and great opportunity for Makana and the other players participating today,” David King said.

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