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CHS volleyball will be led by returning letter winners Ashley Menges (14), Emma Smith (13), Scout Smith (2) and Maya Toomey-Stout. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Now it gets interesting.

After crushing Olympic League competition two years running, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad is stepping up several rungs on the ladder.

With the creation of the North Sound Conference, the Wolves, who have gone 24-11 overall, 17-1 in conference action, since Cory Whitmore became head coach, find themselves facing a challenge.

The new six-team league features three schools which played at the state volleyball tourney last season.

One was CHS, which made the trip for the first time in 13 years, while South Whidbey and King’s also qualified while playing out of the old Cascade Conference.

While the private school Knights, who knocked off Cascade (Leavenworth) to win the state title, have the early edge, Whitmore isn’t looking past the Falcons, or Granite Falls, Sultan or Cedar Park Christian, for that matter.

“Being a new league, not having much prior knowledge of each team is both a challenge and a blessing,” he said. “In a very competitive league that we are new to, we will need to step on the court, ready to bring our best game forward.”

From the moment the new league was announced, Coupeville’s spikers were among the quickest of any Wolf athletes to embrace the challenge, often stating on social media that they were in attack, and not retreat, mode.

“I’ve been very proud of this group’s attitude toward the new league,” Whitmore said. “They have high expectation of themselves and a competitive spirit.

“We will bring it each practice preparing to bring it each game, no matter the team across the net.”

Last year’s team, which didn’t drop a set in league play, was led by seven strong seniors including Olympic League MVP Hope Lodell.

While losing that pack to graduation hurts, the cupboard isn’t bare, however.

There are four key returning varsity players, a newcomer who isn’t really a newcomer and talented spikers hankerin’ to move up from a JV team which finished 12-1 under Chris Smith.

Coupeville also continues to build for the future, welcoming another strong group as the Class of 2022 arrives on the high school court.

“Our incoming freshman group is working very hard to learn the systems (offense and defense) as well as the expectations of high school ball,” Whitmore said. “They have already made great strides and with more reps, they will soon learn how to let some natural athleticism take them as far as they are willing to push.”

As they begin their high school journey, the young spikers can look to the team’s veterans for guidance.

The returning letter winners include seniors Emma Smith and Ashley Menges, and juniors Scout Smith and Maya Toomey-Stout.

After playing her sophomore season in California, junior Hannah Davidson also returns to the Wolf program to pick up what she started as a freshman.

Menges and Scout Smith are expected to split time between setter and right-side hitter, while Emma Smith will anchor the team at middle blocker and Toomey-Stout will showcase her electric leaping ability coming in hot from an outside hitting slot.

Ashley and Scout both offer a strong all-around game able to take sets from the back row and block and attack in the front,” Whitmore said. “Emma had a very strong off-season preparing to take on role of middle blocker and has really emerged as a top attacker, calling for the ball and ready to shoulder a large amount of swings.

Maya has really developed her game to be a consistent attacker from any location on the court and we will rely on her knack for the ball defensively.”

Davidson will join Emma Smith in giving Coupeville some height, a nice touch on a team that, overall, doesn’t feature very many tall players this time around.

“We are so happy to have Hannah back with the team,” Whitmore said. “A strong freshman year with the program has allowed her to jump back into the swing of things, not missing a beat and holding down a very important second middle blocking role.”

While a majority of the current Wolves operate, shall we say, low to the ground, there are ways to deal with that.

“A weakness this team may face is our relative lack of height. We knew this headed into the off-season and so it was important for us to focus on our verticals in order to compensate,” Whitmore said. “We will have to be tough defensively in the back row and find ways of slowing the ball down with our front row block.

“Tough serving is another emphasis to pull taller teams off their routes on the net and making up for a lack in height,” he added. “As the season progresses, we will need to strengthen our attack, both in smart hitting locations, as well as overall power.”

Another big help is having a tight-knit group of players who know how each other will react, and Coupeville is blessed in that department.

“One of our strengths that we will rely upon this season will be our ability to communicate,” Whitmore said. “This group is a close group of friends that work very well together and communication is a large part of the game they have worked on, on and off the court.

“Another strength we hope to build upon would be our serving. Every day, this group pushes each other to be stronger servers that have potential to rattle opponents,” he added. “And in facing strong servers in practice, we look to be strong passers with experience against a tough serve.”

The Wolves, who open the regular season Thursday, Sept. 6 with a non-conference home match against Friday Harbor, enter year three of the Whitmore Era intent on attacking each new day.

Never back down, never give in.

“Our goals for this season would be to finish toward the top of this new, competitive league,” Whitmore said. “Like each season, we want to be playing our best volleyball at the end and push deep into the playoffs, making it to state.

“It will take more than a starting group of six players – we will rely upon everyone bringing their best every day in practice, helping to prepare for big games.”

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   Ashley Menges teamed with Lauren Rose Saturday to set up their teammates for a non-stop barrage of kills. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Coupeville won all 27 sets it played this season against its 1A Olympic League rivals. (Photo courtesy Cory Whitmore)

They would not be denied this time.

A year ago, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad was nearly perfect in league play, finishing 8-1, with just a loss to Klahowya slightly marring the record.

Saturday, the Wolf spikers achieved perfection, crushing host Port Townsend in straight sets to not only finish 9-0 in conference action, but a flawless 27-0 in sets played.

The 25-10, 25-10, 25-20 drubbing of the RedHawks lifts Coupeville to 12-2 overall heading into the postseason, and the back-to-back Olympic League champs are just one win shy of the program record for victories in a season.

They can tie the 2004 squad by achieving what no Wolf volleyball team has done since that squad — punch their ticket to the state tourney.

To do so, Coupeville needs to win at least one out of two matches at districts Nov. 4 in Tacoma.

But that’s a week away, and, on this Saturday, it’s all about the celebration of finishing off the regular season in style.

“I’m pleased with where we are at and very proud of finishing league play strong,” CHS coach Cory Whitmore said. “I’m so happy for these girls and their hard work paying off in spades.

“Now we push into playoffs and try to play a couple more weeks.”

Coupeville didn’t want to look past Port Townsend, which upset Klahowya last week and is always a scrappy foe.

“I was really happy with our focus and execution in the first two sets especially,” Whitmore said. “Lauren (Rose) and Ashley (Menges) did a great job of distributing the offense and our passing was very strong, allowing us to utilize our middles.

“In set three we mixed things us a bit, getting everyone involved, which took us a minute to settle into, but then when we did, our offense could take over.”

Katrina McGranahan paced that offense, ripping off eight kills, while Mikayla Elfrank (6) and Emma Smith (5) backed her up.

Hope Lodell (12) and Kyla Briscoe (5) spent a good part of their afternoon scraping digs off the floor, with Rose and Payton Aparicio dropping five aces apiece from the service stripe.

JV roars to another win:

Coupeville’s young guns wrapped up their own undefeated romp through league play, pasting Port Townsend in straight sets.

First-year JV coach Chris Smith led his squad to a 12-1 record overall, 9-0 in conference action.

Add in the C-Team (4-0, 3-0), which had the day off, and Wolf volleyball is 28-3 overall, 21-0 in league play this season.

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   Happy birthday, Emma Smith. The CHS junior hits the big 1-7 Monday. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   And happy birthday to Mikayla Elfrank, who makes it a 2-for-1 special for Wolf spikers, turning 18 on the same day.

She’s back.

The iPad glitch which left sophomore Maya Toomey-Stout AWOL from the Coupeville High School volleyball stats has been fixed, and all is well in the universe.

As the Wolves, 3-1 on the season, prep for their first home match of the season, a titanic match-up with Klahowya Tuesday (4 PM tip), here’s an up-to-the-moment statistical overview.

Leading the way is Ashley Menges, the only Wolf to appear in the top 10 in two categories among all 1A players whose teams have reported stats to MaxPreps.

The junior setter is tied for #7 in service aces and sits #9 in assists.

Stats through 9/25 (four matches):

Sets Played:

Payton Aparicio 11
Kyla Briscoe 11
Hope Lodell 11
Katrina McGranahan 11
Ashley Menges 11
Emma Smith 11
Scout Smith 11
Mikayla Elfrank 10
Lauren Rose 8
Allison Wenzel 7
Maya Toomey-Stout 3

Kills:

McGranahan 15
Elfrank 14
Briscoe 12
Aparicio 10
E. Smith 10
S. Smith 5
Rose 1

Kill Percentage:

Rose 50.0
McGranahan 45.5
Elfrank 41.2
E. Smith 34.5
Briscoe 30.8
Aparicio 30.3
S. Smith 23.8

Hitting Percentage:

Rose .500
McGranahan .303
Aparicio .182
E. Smith .172
Briscoe .154
Elfrank .088

Digs:

Lodell 20
Aparicio 8
Briscoe 7
Rose 7
McGranahan 4
Elfrank 3
Toomey-Stout 3
Menges 2
E. Smith 1
Wenzel 1

Blocks:

Elfrank 8 (#10 in 1A)
McGranahan 5
E. Smith 2
Aparicio 1
S. Smith 1

Service Returns:

Aparicio 47
Lodell 43
Briscoe 28
Toomey-Stout 6
McGranahan 2
Rose 2
Menges 1
E. Smith 1
S. Smith 1
Wenzel 1

Assists:

Menges 33 (#9 in 1A)
Rose 25
S. Smith 7
Elfrank 1

Serving Percentage:

McGranahan 97.4
Rose 97.1
Aparicio 91.4
Briscoe 88.9
Menges 78.6
S. Smith 77.8
Lodell 70.6
Toomey-Stout 66.7
Wenzel 66.7

Service Points:

Aparicio 37
Menges 25
McGranahan 21
Rose 15
Lodell 10
S. Smith 7
Toomey-Stout 6
Briscoe 5
Wenzel 4

Service Aces:

Aparicio 16 (#6 in 1A)
Menges 15 (#7 in 1A)
Lodell 8
McGranahan 6
Rose 6
Toomey-Stout 6
Briscoe 3
S. Smith 3
Wenzel 2

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   Hope Lodell had a team-high 11 digs Thursday as Coupeville swept 2A North Mason in a match ended prematurely. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Official or not, a victory is a victory, never to be turned down.

In my world, at least, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad sits at 3-1 after sweeping 2A North Mason on the road Thursday night.

There is some slight confusion, however, since the non-conference tilt was supposed to be a best-of-five-sets affair and the teams only got two sets finished.

Perhaps not thinking things out all the way, North Mason elected to play the JV match first, and it went long.

Then, after Coupeville won the first two (very long) sets of the varsity match 25-23, 26-24, the clock simply ran out on everyone.

Having traveled 70+ miles to Belfair for the match, the Wolves couldn’t miss their ferry back to Whidbey and were forced to ankle for the exit before they could officially seal the deal.

If it was a league match, the teams would reschedule and restart the match.

Being a non-conference tilt, no one’s headed back to North Mason this season. That’s for sure.

And with CHS in complete control of the match, as well, it would seem pretty safe to stick it in the W column. At least unofficially.

So, in the impartial (ha!) world of Coupeville Sports, the Wolves are 3-1 and finally headed home.

With four matches, and tournament appearances from Langley to Yakima under its belt, Coupeville makes its home debut next Tuesday, Sept. 26.

That match will be a big one, as the Wolves, defending Olympic League champs, clash with arch-rival Klahowya for sole possession of first-place.

KSS (2-0 in league play) holds a half-game lead on CHS (1-0) at the moment.

Wolf coach Cory Whitmore liked the scores Thursday, but would have enjoyed seeing his team get a chance to put a true stamp on a win.

“We did not play particularly consistent tonight in the two sets we did play,” he said. “I think we as a team would have liked another set to end on a strong note.”

Coupeville claimed the edge against North Mason thanks to its passing, Whitmore said.

Hope Lodell, who led the Wolves with 11 digs, and Maya Toomey-Stout both had very high passer ratings, and things flowed from there.

Lauren Rose (nine assists) and Ashley Menges (four) put the ball into play for CHS, with Mikayla Elfrank (five kills), Katrina McGranahan (four) and Scout Smith (three) slamming winners.

Coupeville’s always-strong service game was paced by Payton Aparicio, who recorded a pair of aces from the stripe.

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   After missing last year with an injury, Kyla Briscoe (front) returns to play alongside teammates like Payton Aparicio. (John Fisken photos)

Beth Stout (left) and Lisa Toomey swing by the gym to cheer on daughter Maya.

Your 2017 CHS varsity spikers.

Wolf junior Ashley Menges sends a set skyward Saturday during jamboree play.

Mikayla Elfrank’s fan club came prepared.

Coupeville’s JV spikers are ready for their close-up.

   Lauren Rose sat out the jamboree as she recovers from a run-in with an especially vicious picnic table.

Aparicio brings the thunder.

Shenanigans are afoot.

Willow Vick launches the attack.

It’s as close to home as they’ll be for awhile.

The Coupeville High School volleyball squads open with four straight road matches this season, and don’t play in their home gym until Sept. 26.

But Saturday they made the trip for parents and fans a bit shorter, just rambling 10 miles down the road to Oak Harbor for a jamboree.

While there the Wolves faced off with old school rival Darrington and the host Wildcats, and photo man John Fisken snapped a gazillion (or more) pics.

After you peruse the 10-pack of snap shots above, there are still many, many more to see (and buy).

Pop over to the links below and remember, a portion of your purchase price goes to fund scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes.

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Volleyball/2017-09-02-vs-Darrington/

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Oak-Harbor-Volleyball/2017-09-02-vs-Coupeville/

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