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Posts Tagged ‘banquet’

   Hunter Smith led Coupeville in scoring, steals and assists, netting team MVP honors and recognition as a First-Team All-League player. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Hunter Downes, who paced the Wolves in rebounding, was one of six seniors honored for their defensive prowess at a season-ending awards banquet.

They were a potent one-two punch and everyone noticed.

Senior gunners Hunter Smith and Ethan Spark combined to score 598 of Coupeville’s 923 points during basketball season, and that helped the duo earn First-Team All-Conference honors when Olympic League coaches voted.

Kaiden Parcher, a beast all season for league champ Port Townsend, claimed conference MVP.

Smith, whose 382 points was the most scored by a Wolf in a season since Mike Bagby netted 414 in 2004-2005, was named team MVP Thursday when CHS held its season-ending awards banquet.

With 847 career points, he finished as the 12th highest scorer in program history, while also leading his squad in steals and assists as a senior.

Coupeville coach Brad Sherman broke down Smith’s strengths:

“Talented floor manager, unique ability to get to the rim and draw contact (102 points from the free-throw line this season), difficult to defend, handles the ball well against pressure, great mid-range game, which is very rare in today’s high school basketball game.

“Quiet leader, amazing competitor.”

Senior Cameron Toomey-Stout collected the Wolf Pack Award, which honors a player who exemplifies “a team-first mentality, commitment and reliability, a positive and encouraging attitude on and off the basketball court, effort and work ethic, and all-around character.”

“His work ethic, character, and level of commitment are clear to anyone who has worked with or knows Cam,” Sherman said.

When it came time to honor the Defensive Player of the Year, Sherman mixed things up a bit, spreading love to all of his seniors — Hunter Downes, Kyle Rockwell, Joey Lippo, Smith, Spark and Toomey-Stout.

“We stressed all year setting the tone with our defensive intensity and five players moving and communicating as one,” Sherman said. “We recorded 217 steals and had 177 deflections and played well on defense as a group.

“When we sat down to determine one defensive player of the year based on several statistical factors, it became difficult to pick one, which is a good thing,” he added. “Ultimately we felt the senior group as a whole deserved to be recognized for the way they worked together to disrupt teams on defense.”

Smith led in steals, Lippo in blocks and deflected passes, Downes in rebounds, Toomey-Stout “was a defensive workhorse,” Spark recorded 48 steals and 30 deflected passes and Rockwell was “a skilled shot blocker and came up huge at the end of the season.”

In fact, that effort at the end netted Rockwell the Play of the Year for an offensive rebound and put-back which sealed an upset of first-place Klahowya on Coupeville’s Senior Night.

Rounding out the awards, Spark notched Sharp Shooter honors, for draining the most three-balls, while Chris Ruck was named Most Inspirational for the JV squad.

“I’m really proud of this group and thought they played so hard this season,” Sherman said. “Had some successes and moments that they can remember for years to come — 101-year anniversary, big win on Senior Night, winning record in league.

“Looking forward, we take this year’s positives and continue to build on them,” he added. “We lose a lot of seniors this year and our entire starting five, but with that comes a great deal of opportunity for our younger guys – and we have a talented group of young players that we are excited about.

“This will be a big off-season for us to develop and grow as a team, and Coach (Chris) Smith and I are really looking forward to what the future holds for this group of athletes.”

Varsity letter winners:

Jered Brown
Hunter Downes
Mason Grove
Gavin Knoblich
Joey Lippo
Dane Lucero
Kyle Rockwell
Hunter Smith
Ethan Spark
Cameron Toomey-Stout
James Vidoni

Varsity participation:

Jacobi Pilgrim
Ulrik Wells

JV participation:

Trevor Bell
Koa Davison
Sage Downes
Mason Grove
Tucker Hall
Alex Jimenez
Gavin Knoblich
Ryan Labrador
Jean Lund-Olsen
Daniel Olson
Jon Partida
Jake Pease
Jacobi Pilgrim
David Prescott
Chris Ruck
Matt Stevens
James Vidoni
Ulrik Wells

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Sydney Autio was one of four captains for this year's CHS net squad. (John Fisken photos)

   Sydney Autio was one of four captains for this year’s CHS net squad. (John Fisken photos)

Bree Daigneault capped her junior season by being named Most Inspirational.

Bree Daigneault capped her junior season by being named Most Inspirational.

Did it really happen if the media wasn’t alerted?

Successfully pulling off a covert awards banquet Wednesday night, the Coupeville High School girls’ tennis team put a final stamp on a very successful season.

Junior Valen Trujillo and sophomores Payton Aparicio and Sage Renninger shared the team MVP award, while sophomore Maggie Crimmins claimed Most Improved and junior Bree Daigneault copped Most Inspirational.

Trujillo and seniors McKenzie Bailey, Jazmine Franklin and Sydney Autio were also honored for their work as team captains.

Varsity letter winners:

Payton Aparicio
Sydney Autio
McKenzie Bailey
Julia Borges
Maggie Crimmins
Bree Daigneault
Jazmine Franklin
Kenzi LaRue
Sage Renninger
Julianne Sem
Kameryn St Onge
Valen Trujillo

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Jovanah Foote (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Wolf senior Jovanah Foote received three awards at her final cheer banquet Saturday night. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Heather Nastali was one of 10 letter winners.

Heather Nastali was one of 10 letter winners. (John Fisken photo)

They came to bowl, take photos and, maybe, hand out a few awards.

Capping another successful season, the winter edition of the Coupeville High School cheer squad held its awards banquet in style Saturday night.

Jovanah Foote and Robin Cedillo shared Captain honors, while Foote also took home 4-Year and Wolf Awards from coach Cheridan Eck.

Cedillo doubled up, nabbing the Coaches Award.

Most Spirited went to Kaela Hollrigel, while Natasha Estes was honored as Most Improved.

Letter winners for fall cheer were:

Julia Borges
Julie Bucio
Robin Cedillo
Natasha Estes
Jovanah Foote
Gaby Halpin
Kaela Hollrigel
Mckenzie Meyer
Claire Mietus
Heather Nastali

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Makana

   Makana Stone roars to the hoop for two of the 427 points she threw down as a senior. (John Fisken photos)

Grove

  Lauren Grove made the jump from JV to varsity and was tabbed as her team’s best defender.

team

   The Wolf varsity and coach David King celebrate after knocking Seattle Christian out of the playoffs.

Makana Stone went out with a slam dunk.

The Coupeville High School senior capped her stellar prep hoops career with a second-straight MVP award from 1A Olympic League coaches, then took home five other honors when the Wolves held their awards banquet Monday.

Plus, she was tabbed to play in the All-State game Saturday, Mar. 19 at King’s High School (4 PM tip-off).

Stone will be one of 10 players on the 1A squad, which will face off with a 2A all-star team.

And she wasn’t the only Coupeville hoops star who needed their parents to hitch a trailer to the car to haul home all their hardware.

Junior Kailey Kellner and sophomore Mia Littlejohn were also named First-Team All-League selections, as CHS, which successfully defended its league title, accounted for 50% of the league’s top six players.

Port Townsend (sophomore Kaitlyn Meek), Klahowya (junior Maya Ladner) and Chimacum (junior Mechelle Nisbit) each notched one First-Teamer.

Wolf junior Lauren Grove, who made her varsity basketball debut in 2015-2016, received Honorable Mention from league coaches.

Coupeville, which went 16-6, advanced to state for the first time in a decade and is now a flawless 18-0 in two years of Olympic League competition, also received the conference’s Sportsmanship Award for the second straight year.

So, basically, their streak of crushing league foes could scream “rise of the Evil Empire,” but their poise and manners betrays that a bit.

They’re sort of like the Detroit Pistons “Bad Boys” of the late ’80s-early ’90s, only a lot more couth and considerate.

The other honors handed out Tuesday:

Captain Awards:

Kailey Kellner
Mia Littlejohn
Makana Stone

4-Year Letter Award:

Makana Stone

Most Improved:

JV: Maddy Hilkey
Varsity: Kyla Briscoe

Most Inspirational:

JV: Sarah Wright and Ema Smith
V: Makana Stone

Best Defense:

JV: Brittany Powers
V: Lauren Grove

Best Offense:

JV: Lauren Rose and Sarah Wright
V: Mia Littlejohn and Makana Stone

Wolf Pride:

JV: Nicole Lester
V: Makana Stone

Courageous Wolf:

Ashlie Shank

Leader of the Pack:

Kailey Kellner

Varsity letter winners:

Kyla Briscoe
Tiffany Briscoe
Lauren Grove
Kailey Kellner
Skyler Lawrence

Mia Littlejohn
Lindsey Roberts
Lauren Rose

Makana Stone
Allison Wenzel

Varsity certificate of participation:

Sarah Wright

JV certificate of participation:

Brisa Herrera
Maddy Hilkey
Lindsey Laxton
Nicole Lester
Brittany Powers
Ashlie Shank
Ema Smith
Sarah Wright

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