Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Allison Wenzel’

Connor Thompson

   Ignoring the rain drops, Connor Thompson gets positively medieval with his shot put. (John Fisken photos)

Allison Wenzel

   Allison Wenzel gives her braid a pep talk before the duo teams up to zip around the track oval.

Ariah Bepler

Ariah Bepler slices through the weather, on his way to somewhere a little drier.

Lauren Bayne

   Having taken the hand-off from Madison Rixe, speedy Wolf Lauren Bayne prepares to launch the booster rockets hidden in her shoes.

team

Rain or shine, there’s always time for a group pic.

Conlisk

   Guarding the safety of the baton with both hands, Danny Conlisk seeks to finish what Jared Helmstadter began.

Mckenzie Meyer

  Mckenzie Meyer (and her awesome socks) get dramatic with partner in crime Rixe.

Makana Stone

   The only moment all afternoon when rival runners were even in the same frame with speed demon Makana Stone. Seriously.

Dalton Martin

   Dalton Martin dances the PR dance, launching the discus 161 feet, seven inches — three feet and two inches better than his previous top mark.

Through sun or rain, the cameraman is always there.

While the weather flip-flopped all day Saturday for the Coupeville High School track and field team as it competed at sub-districts in Bremerton, the show still went on.

Wanderin’ photo clicker John Fisken stayed warm by bouncing all around the stadium, seeking out photos both action-packed and intimate.

The nine snazzy pics above are courtesy him.

To see more, and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes, pop over to:

Girlshttp://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11517&league=21&page_name=photo_store&school=0&sport=0

Boys http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11513&league=21&page_name=photo_store&school=0&sport=0

Read Full Post »

Lauren Rose (JOhn Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose paced the Wolf JV Thursday with seven points, two rebounds and two steals. (John Fisken photo)

JV is more about improvement than wins and losses.

Now, there is no doubt Coupeville roundball guru Amy King enjoys the former more than the latter (she was thrilled to go 14-5 last year), but the highlights of her season don’t always come from the scoreboard.

So, while this year’s young Wolves (7-10 overall, 5-3 in league play) fell 40-34 at Chimacum Thursday, she mourned the loss but came away happy with slices of the game.

King makes sure every one of her players scores during the season, so when Brisa Herrera, who has missed several games with illness, notched a free throw in the first quarter, that was one bright moment.

“The first (free throw) dropped and we all went nuts,” King said.

The second moment was seeing the continued development of one of her freshman who are brand new to the sport.

“Watching Maddy (Hilkey) play, it is hard to believe she has never played basketball before,” King said. “She was driving to the basket, taking the shots, playing tough defense and ended the night with a big bag of ice on her knee!”

And Hilkey wasn’t the only frosh who caught her coach’s eye.

Nicole (Lester) was so aggressive! Where did this girl come from?,” King said with a smile. “She found herself at the free throw line twice – fun to watch her come alive.”

The game itself was a wild one, as the two teams battered each other — often for real, as Chimacum prides itself on being a, shall we say, “scrappy” squad.

Tied at eight after the first quarter, the Wolves hit a cold spell in the second and watched as the Cowboys ran wild to the tune of 15-6.

“We got out-played. Made a lot of weak or bad passes allowing Chimacum easy steals and lay ups,” King said.

The Cowboys repeatedly sent one player flying up behind the Coupeville ball-handler, something the Wolves didn’t deal well with, even as their coaches warned them again and again.

A bit of tough talk at halftime lit a fire under the Wolves, who emerged in the second half much more in control.

“The third quarter was much better defense and steadier on offense. Fighting more for the ball, going strong after rebounds and out-scoring them like we knew we could,” King said.

Ashlie Shank and Allison Wenzel “were everywhere,” Sarah Wright “was moving around helping out anywhere needed” and Hilkey and Lauren Rose put considerable pressure on Chimacum’s ball-handlers.

Down by six with eight minutes to play, Coupeville played aggressively, throwing on a full-court press, but couldn’t quite catch the Cowboys.

Brittany Powers was a major force in the fourth, playing like “a crazy spider monkey,” which brought a smile to her coach’s face.

“She mauled a girl, stopping her from dribbling, then not giving her any room to breathe, let alone keep the ball,” King said. “The Chimacum girls aren’t exactly “clean” players and our girls were just tired of not getting some of the foul calls.

“Pushing calls and all their contact went unnoticed, so we dished some of that out as well.”

Powers ended the game with a bright red arm after being smacked on a play where the ref went conveniently blind, but she and her teammates made their coach proud.

“The girls gave everything they had – left it all on the court,” King said. “The energy and effort, attitude and fight they gave in that last half was awesome and just a good end to the game, regardless of the score.”

Rose paced the Wolves with seven points, while Wright and Lester dropped in five apiece.

Skyler Lawrence (4), Wenzel (4), Kyla Briscoe (3), Powers (3), Shank (2) and Herrera (1) all chipped in.

Coupeville snagged 40 rebounds and made off with 27 steals, as all 11 Wolves hauled down at least one board, from Wright (7) to Lindsey Laxton (1).

Powers pilfered six steals, with Shank hot on her heels with five.

Read Full Post »

Skyler Lawrence gave Coupeville a much-needed spark Tuesday, snatching five boards. (John Fisken photo)

   Skyler Lawrence gave Coupeville a much-needed spark Tuesday, snatching five boards. (John Fisken photo)

Amy King had to pull out the Vince Lombardi speech.

Disappointed by her team’s first-half performance Tuesday, the easy-going Coupeville High School JV girls’ hoops coach let loose a bit at halftime.

“It was an ugly, slow-start, Monday’ish-road-trip sort of game, even though it’s a Tuesday,” she said. “After some ‘strong words of wisdom’ during halftime, the girls were ready to play.”

And they did, using a second-half defensive stand to rally for a 29-20 win at Port Townsend.

The victory, the team’s third in the last four games, lifted the young Wolves to 7-9 overall, 5-2 in 1A Olympic League play.

Coupeville, which had crushed the RedHawks twice earlier this season, played fairly lackluster in the early going.

“Port Townsend came out on fire and our defense was flat-footed,” King said. “We were quiet. Not even rebounding.

“Offensively the ball moved slowly, not strong passes or cutting or anything,” she added. “We tried every man play we knew to try and get something to click.”

Trailing 14-12 at the break, something needed to change.

After King’s halftime talk (no word on whether any chairs were thrown … admittedly, as awesome as that would be, it’s also just as unlikely), things clicked, though.

With freshman Ashlie Shank leading the way, “driving the lanes, taking good shots and quicker on defense,” Coupeville pulled together to hold Port Townsend to just six second-half points.

Swing player Allison Wenzel “brought much needed energy to the floor” and Sarah Wright “ripped the rebounds like she has the past few games, even driving the ball up the floor.”

“Everyone contributed, feeding off of each other in the fourth and taking the win,” King said. “It was a tough one, but it was a win and we are happy for it.”

Wright paced Coupeville with eight points and 10 rebounds, while Shank (7), Wenzel (5), Lauren Rose (3), Skyler Lawrence (3), Maddy Hilkey (2) and Brittany Powers (1) also scored.

The Wolves controlled the boards, ripping down 40, with Brisa Herrera (3), Nicole Lester (2) and Lindsey Laxton (1) backing up Wright, Wenzel (5) and Lawrence (5).

Read Full Post »

Allison Wenzel: Beast Mode (John Fisken photos)

Allison Wenzel: Beast Mode (John Fisken photos)

Now, let’s imagine you’ve never been to a game of any sorts at Coupeville High School before.

At first, you see Allison Wenzel, with the ever-present smile, the serene sweetness of nature, the way she jokes around with bench buddy Skyler Lawrence.

A few words, and it becomes quickly obvious she’s smart as a whip, sensitive to others, a young woman who loves (and is loved by) her teammates.

So, you have one image of what you think she is.

Then, it begins.

A volleyball match, a basketball game, a track meet, and the second Allison Wenzel unleashes and it is … freakin’ awesome.

She is, quite simply, a beast at times, and I mean that in the best way possible.

At a recent basketball game, I was sitting next to Jodi Crimmins, the Nicest Woman in the Universe, but also someone who used to tear arms off of people on the basketball court in the ’90s.

As we watched Wenzel uncork a butt-whuppin’ on anyone who would dare to get between her and the basketball, I looked at Jodi and said, “You know, she is you reincarnated, isn’t she?”

Jodi’s smile covered one side of the gym to the other.

Allison Wenzel, kind, caring, smart, lover of animals and people, is a destroyer of worlds in the arena, and it is beautiful to see.

As she celebrates her birthday today, I hope she knows how many fans she has, people who appreciate her huge heart and never-say-die spirit on the floor.

Like her older sister Rachel, also a talented athlete and scholar and amazing young woman, Allison is a blessing to her parents, Susan and Tim, and to her town.

We are lucky to get to be a small part in her journey, to witness as she, day by day, shines even more brightly.

I always love to see young athletes like Allison get rewarded for the time and effort they put in, for showing you can play like a demon on the court and still be an angel in real life.

Happy cake day, Miss Wenzel. Never stop being awesome.

Read Full Post »

Lauren Rose (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose, seen here in an earlier game, was one of three Wolves to hit for eight Friday in a Wolf JV win.  (John Fisken photo)

Mouse was back in the house, and all was right.

Back after missing time with an illness, spark-plug Lauren Rose threw down five of her team-high eight points in the first quarter Friday, sparking the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad to a runaway win on its home court.

The 36-22 victory over a scrappy Port Townsend team lifted the young Wolves to 5-8 overall, 3-1 in 1A Olympic League play.

For a second, the game was a close one, as the two rivals exchanged opening baskets.

Wolf freshman Sarah Wright went down low for a hard-earned bucket in the paint, before the most popular visiting player in all the land, Port Townsend’s always-smiling Amelia Breithaupt, threw down a running hook shot to answer.

After that, it was all Coupeville, all the time, until coach Amy King called off the attack late in the third.

The Wolves blew the game open with an 11-0 run after Breithaupt’s bucket, with Skyler Lawrence banging home three baskets around a pair of scores from Rose.

The crafty sophomore ace put a rebound back up and in, then drilled a three-ball from somewhere out in the parking lot.

CHS continued to push the pace, with different players showing a hot hand, eventually stretching the lead out to 32-8 late in the third.

From that point on, the Wolves went into clock-eating mode, working on plays.

Rose shared scoring honors with Lawrence and Wenzel, as each of the swing players scored eight points apiece. Wright and Maddy Hilkey rounded out the attack, each dropping in six.

Two of Hilkey’s points came when she swished a pair at the free-throw line, which is notable because there were so few visits to the charity stripe on the night.

Between the JV and varsity games, Coupeville owned a 5-0 advantage on made free throws Friday, with the JV sinking three of those.

Wright paced the Wolves on the boards, snatching 14, while Lawrence and Ashlie Shank had four apiece.

Hilkey pilfered four steals, with Brittany Powers and Nicole Lester making off with two apiece.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »