Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Cascade Christian’

   Wolf spikers (l to r) Emma Smith, Ashley Menges and Maya Toomey-Stout are headed to the state tourney. (Kimberly Bepler photo)

   Early in the day, Coupeville volleyball moms were laid-back and carefree. Things would get nerve-wracking later. (Konni Smith photo)

Wolf fans dominated the stands in Tacoma. (Bepler photo)

   JV players showed up to support their varsity counterparts, and get a first-hand view of what they one day want to accomplish. (Smith photo)

   Wolf senior Payton Aparicio celebrates with mom Tami and big sis Sydney. (Bepler photo)

State bound for the first time since 2004. (Photo courtesy Cory Whitmore)

Revenge is a dish best served cold.

Two years ago, playing for a different coach, the Coupeville High School volleyball team had its season end early in the district playoffs at the spike-happy hands of Cascade Christian.

Saturday, on the biggest stage they have faced, the six Wolves remaining from that 2015 squad got the big payback.

Knocking off the Cougars in four sets while playing on a neutral court in Tacoma, CHS claimed third-place at the West Central District 3 tourney and punched their ticket to state.

Coming on the heels of a hard-fought four-set loss earlier in the day to Bellevue Christian, the split lifts Coupeville to 13-3, tying the program single-season record for wins.

It also sends the Wolves to Yakima for the first time since 2004.

When Hope Lodell, Payton Aparicio, Kyla Briscoe, Lauren Rose, Katrina McGranahan and Emma Smith — the last of the ’15 team — arrive at the SunDome for the 1A state tourney Nov. 10-11, they will find Castle Rock waiting for them.

Win or lose that first match, they are guaranteed a second match against either King’s or defending state champ Lakeside (Nine Mile Falls).

But that’s a week away, and Saturday night all second-year Coupeville coach Cory Whitmore could do was smile, smile and smile some more.

The body and brain were exhausted, but the buzz was still pinging a mad path across his nerve endings.

“I’m so proud of this team’s fight and heart throughout the day and especially down the stretch to meet the goal, going to state,” Whitmore said. “I can’t say enough about how hard they have worked, and worked together, to accomplish this milestone.

“So proud of these girls and so happy that they get to see their hard work pay off – such an incredible experience for them and to share that is indescribable.”

Four teams entered the gym at Charles Wright Academy Saturday, with three state slots in play.

The host Tarriers claimed the district title, edging Cascade Christian in five titanic sets before knocking off Bellevue Christian in four.

BC is still the only 1A team Coupeville has lost to this season, but, after being swept in straight sets in a non-conference match early in the year, Saturday’s tourney opener was much more of a pitched battle.

The Vikings slipped away with a 25-19, 23-25, 25-19, 25-23 win, but had to scrap for every point.

“I thought that we fought incredibly hard and showed a lot of heart when playing them,” Whitmore said. “They have two very strong hitters in the middle and our plan was to keep their attacks low and we did that for the most part.

“We served tough and at time too tough, sending the ball out more often than usual, but when our serving would get consistent, we would go on mini-scoring runs by staying aggressive with our swings and scrambling on defense.”

Sophomore sensation Maya Toomey-Stout and seasoned senior Aparicio paced Coupeville at the service line, each ripping four aces.

McGranahan and Ashley Menges backed them up, lacing three straight-up winners apiece.

When the ball was in play, big-hitting Mikayla Elfrank was the final word, cranking out seven kills to lead a balanced attack.

McGranahan (6), Aparicio (6), Briscoe (4) and Smith (4) all chipped in, as Menges and Rose combined to set up their teammates while sharing time at setter.

When the ball hit the floor, Lodell and Aparicio went low to scrape it back up, each wracking up 12 digs apiece.

While taking a second loss to Bellevue could have been a crippler, the Wolves shrugged it off impressively, returning to the same court fired-up two hours later.

“I was very impressed with this group’s ability to mentally recover from a loss to be in a loser-out situation game,” Whitmore said. “It’s a testament to our experience with a large group having been in that very situation a year before to turn around and come ready to fight for that last spot to state.”

Knowing Cascade Christian was aggressive, the Wolves matched their attack, taking chances and swinging for big play after big play.

While its service game dipped a bit in the second match, Coupeville made up for it with strong play at the net and a refusal to bend to a private school playing much closer to home.

With a large contingent of Cow Town fans making a considerable amount of noise, the Wolves took the opening set 27-25, then slipped a bit, dropping set two 25-20.

Not ruffled in the least, CHS —  maybe channeling a need for revenge, maybe not  — closed things out 25-19, 25-22.

Lodell was “all over the court,” racking up 15 of her team’s 55 digs, while Rose had four aces and eight digs and McGranahan (10 kills) and Smith (8) were a one-two hitting machine.

Aparicio gave her team a bit of everything, collecting 11 digs, two aces and seven kills, including the one that sent Coupeville to state.

The Wolves suited up 12 players Saturday, with Scout Smith, Chelsea Prescott and Emma Mathusek also in uniform. Senior Allison Wenzel was at a prestigious music performance, but will return for state.

Whether they were the six getting a bit of revenge for themselves and 2015 coaches Breanne Smedley and Heidi Wyman, or part of the new wave of players prospering under Whitmore, Chris Smith and Ashley Herndon, every Wolf shares one trait today.

They’re scrappers, they’re winners, and they’re Yakima bound.

Read Full Post »

   The only thing associated with Coupeville High School football which wasn’t injured this season. (David Stern photo)

The season started with great promise, only to end with great frustration.

With a roster ripped asunder by injuries, a severely-depleted Coupeville High School football team could have made a pretty good argument in favor of forfeiting its finale.

But the Wolves skipped the easy way out, pulled together what players they had left and traveled to Puyallup Saturday, where they were hammered 70-6 by a state-ranked, playoff-bound, very-healthy Cascade Christian squad.

The loss, Coupeville’s fifth straight after losing explosive two-way stars Hunter Smith and Sean Toomey-Stout, drops them to a final mark of 1-6 in Olympic/Nisqually League play, 3-7 overall.

After starting the season 2-0, with wins over South Whidbey and La Conner, CHS was flying high.

Even after tough losses to Nooksack Valley and Charles Wright Academy, both of which have qualified for the 16-team state tourney, the Wolves rebounded by thrashing Vashon.

But that night, while a romp on the scoreboard, was the beginning of the end.

Smith, the team’s leading receiver and owner of seven Wolf football records, and Toomey-Stout, the team’s leading rusher and tackler, were both lost for the season after sustaining devastating injuries.

After that, the pain never stopped coming, claiming, among others, key two-way starters Matt Hilborn, Chris Battaglia, Andrew Martin, and, in the final game, the team’s leading scorer, Cameron Toomey-Stout.

Coupeville went to Puyallup missing its top four rushers, and six of the 10 players with at least one rushing attempt, and the Cougars savaged what was left of the Wolf roster.

In a small win for the Wolves, they became only the second league team to score against Cascade Christian this season, something even Charles Wright failed to do.

Wolf quarterback Hunter Downes tossed the 35th and final touchdown pass of his career, dropping it into the hands of fellow senior Jake Hoagland to momentarily pull Coupeville to a 6-6 tie early in the first quarter.

With both teams on the board, but having missed PATs, there was the briefest thought the game might be close.

It was, though, the briefest of brief.

Cascade Christian tacked on four more touchdowns in the first quarter, with one coming off of a 53-yard bomb on the first play after the Cougars took over on downs, and the rout was officially on.

Five more TDs and a safety came in the second quarter, as the Cougar starters wrapped up their night with a 37-point second-quarter.

The biggest weapon for Cascade, as it has been all season, was Madden Tobeck, son of 14-year NFL veteran (and former Seahawk) Robbie Tobeck.

Coupeville’s depleted defense had no answer for him, or Tyquan Coleman or Parker Johnson. Or, basically for anyone in a Cougar uniform.

That job now falls to Cascade Christian’s first-round playoff foe, Nooksack Valley, and the other 14 teams gunning for a 1A state title.

For the Wolves, time to put away their pads and helmets, try and focus on the positives of the season, and, for those healthy, turn their attention to basketball.

Read Full Post »

(Amy King photo)

   Even with two tough playoff losses, the Wolf girls finished 15-6, best of any of Whidbey Island’s six high school teams. (Amy King photo)

The magic ran out.

A very successful season came to an unfortunate end Thursday for the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad.

Unable to buy a bucket in the first half, or cut into a double-digit deficit in the second, the Wolves fell 39-17 to Cascade Christian.

The loss, Coupeville’s second in three days on the faraway court at Bellarmine Prep High School in Tacoma, eliminated the Wolves from the district playoffs.

The CHS girls finished 15-6, by far the best record of any of Whidbey Island’s six varsity high school teams.

They went 9-0 in Olympic League play (running their record to 27-0 all-time), won their third straight conference crown and brought home the Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic title for a second consecutive season.

Seattle Christian stunned Bellevue Christian 36-34 in Thursday night’s second playoff game to win the district title and punch its ticket to state.

BC and CC face off Saturday to determine District 3’s other state-bound squad.

Based on their play during the regular season, the Wolves entered districts with high hopes of returning to state for a second straight season.

Instead, something about making the 90+ mile trip each time and the unfamiliar court seemed to drain a lot of the life out of Coupeville’s players.

A team that played extremely strong defense all year struggled to recapture that lock-down style in both of its playoff games, and it stung them badly.

After a truly horrifying shooting performance Tuesday, the Wolves had much better shot selection Thursday, but couldn’t buy a bucket.

Shot after shot spun out of the cylinder, popped free or flat-out refused to take a friendly bounce.

And when the Wolves couldn’t score — they netted just five points in the first half Thursday — the pressure on their defense built greater and greater.

The game was briefly knotted up at 3-3 midway through the first quarter, but then Cascade Christian started to find a bit of a groove on the offensive end.

A 14-0 run from the Cougars that started in the final moments of the first and carried through much of the second quarter was a back-breaker for Coupeville.

Mia Littlejohn finally snapped her team’s epic cold streak with a little runner in the paint, but Cascade Christian responded with its only three-ball of the game on the very next possession, negating any brief Wolf hopes.

Coupeville, which trailed 22-5 at the break, did put up a far better fight in the second half, when coach David King played mix-and-match with his lineup.

The Wolf reserves lit a bit of a spark, with players like Lauren Rose and Ema Smith crashing around, making a silent bid for increased playing time next season.

With her younger teammates fighting for every ball, senior Kailey Kellner stepped up to provide a bit of a scoring punch, draining all seven of her points in the second half.

But, while the Wolves lost the second-half battle just 17-12, they were unable to score back-to-back buckets at any point in the game, effectively snuffing out comeback hopes.

Coupeville’s final basket came on maybe its best play of the night, as Kalia Littlejohn made off with a loose ball, led the break, then hit Kellner in stride for a layup.

While CHS held Cascade Christian’s leading scorer, Allison Downs, to just a pair of free throws, the Cougars got big games from Shelaine Lorenz, who scored 18, and Hailey Brandner, who knocked down 13.

Mia Littlejohn was the only Wolf to score in the first half, netting all five of her points, while Tiffany Briscoe (2), Mikayla Elfrank (2) and Lindsey Roberts (1) rounded out the limited attack.

Roberts and Elfrank hauled in eight boards apiece, with Briscoe snatching five.

The playoff loss was the swan song for Coupeville’s three seniors — Lauren Grove, Briscoe and Kellner.

Final season scoring stats:

Kailey Kellner – 180
Mikayla Elfrank – 128
Mia Littlejohn – 119
Lindsey Roberts – 83
Kalia Littlejohn – 68
Tiffany Briscoe – 53
Lauren Grove – 38
Lauren Rose – 30
Sarah Wright – 16
Kyla Briscoe – 7
Allison Wenzel – 4
Charlotte Langille – 2

Read Full Post »

Hunter Smith (John Fisken photo)

   Hunter Smith broke CHS single-season records for receiving yardage and TD receptions. (John Fisken photos)

Sean Toomey-Stout

   Sean Toomey-Stout, seen here making a tackle in an earlier game, had a breakout freshman season on offense, defense and special teams.

Four weeks from now Cascade Christian could very likely raise the trophy as 1A state football champs.

The Cougars have a 6-foot-3 freshman QB with a cannon for an arm and a stable of super-quick running backs and receivers, and it’s not hard to figure out how they’ve gone 10-0 this season.

That being said, victim #10, Coupeville, walked off the field Friday holding its collective heads high.

With two of three senior captains (Clay Reilly and Jacob Martin) out with injuries and quarterback Hunter Downes ripped up by a stomach illness, the Wolves chances of upsetting the #5 team in the Associated Press poll were slim.

So it wasn’t a huge surprise Cascade Christian rolled to a 47-8 win to close out Olympic/Nisqually League play.

But Coupeville, which tripled its win total from a season ago, finishing 3-7, refused to go down easy, scoring late to accomplish something league runner-up Port Townsend couldn’t against the Cougars.

The Wolves didn’t get waxed like Vashon Island (which was crushed 82-6), weren’t shut-out like the RedHawks (who fell 42-0) and stayed scrappy until the end.

Not that the game was especially close, as Cascade Christian rode a four-touchdown performance from senior running back Zach Bartolome to snag a 40-0 halftime lead and trigger a running clock in the second half.

But, under that running clock, Coupeville “won” the second half 8-7, even with the Cougars leaving their starters in until the fourth quarter.

The Wolves closed the season on a strong note, ramming a late touchdown down Cascade Christian’s throat.

It came on a short four-yard lob from Downes to Hunter Smith (the junior receiver tacked on a two-point conversion) and was set up by Matt Hilborn softening the Cougar defense with an 18-yard bolt through traffic on the previous play.

The scoring strike was significant, as it allowed Smith to break his second record of the night.

He hauled in nine catches for 124 yards Friday, finishing the 2016 campaign with 915 receiving yards and 11 touchdown receptions.

Both those marks are school single-season records, besting Chad Gale (844 yards in 1987) and Josh Bayne (10 TD catches in 2014).

Smith will enter his senior season with very little work left to do to claim three CHS career marks.

He has 1,334 yards and 13 TD’s as a receiver, and Gale’s records are 1,345 and 17. With 11 interceptions, Smith also sits just one off of Bayne’s career record.

After spending Thursday night and Friday morning heaving, Downes reached down deep to make it on the field for the finale, and went out slinging passes until the game’s final play.

He racked up 143 yards against Cascade Christian — Cameron Toomey-Stout pulled in two passes for 19 yards to supplement Smith — and, after missing most of his sophomore year with an injury, put together one of the best seasons ever by a Wolf quarterback.

Downes finished with 1,559 yards passing and 17 TD’s, one shy of Joel Walstad’s single-season mark.

While the Hunter to Hunter combination was clicking, the young guns stepped up and made an impact running the ball.

With Martin (hand surgery) and Reilly (concussion), the team’s top two rushers, sidelined, freshman Sean Toomey-Stout and sophomores Hilborn and Chris Battaglia stepped into their shoes.

All three had at at least one carry of ten-plus yards.

The game marked the end for six Wolves.

Kory Score, Taylor Consford and Jonathan Thurston all saw playing time for CHS this season, with Thurston on the field Friday, but Coupeville’s three senior captains will leave the biggest hole.

Martin was a rock for four years, doing the dirty work on both sides of the ball, especially shining when it came to laying down block after block for runners like Bayne, Wiley Hesselgrave and Lathom Kelley.

Reilly was a superb defender in the backfield and a beast in the kicking game during his career.

He ripped off a 70-yard punt at one point (it was all leg), and made the guys in the press box at Bellevue Christian fall out of their chairs with his supersonic PATs.

Their co-captain, Uriel Liquidano, was the only one of the trio healthy enough to play Friday, and he more than earned the bring-down-the-house ovation he received during pre-game introductions.

Like his older brother Oscar before him, Woody was an animal in the trenches and a gentleman the rest of the time.

After the final buzzer had sounded, the captains joined their team for one final talk by first-year head coach Jon Atkins, who had the Wolves a play or two away from going 5-5, which would have matched the best CHS record of the past decade-plus.

The huddle was packed with young players, established stars like Downes and Smith, fast-risers like Sean Toomey-Stout and still green youngsters such as Dawson Houston, Andrew Martin and Gavin Knoblich.

It is a team full of promise, and the key will be whether the new leaders work as hard as the three captains who stood together at the heart of the huddle.

The season ended with a loss, but the feeling on the field in the afterglow was of seeing a program make a turn for the positive.

Different players will carry the banner going forward, but what was started links directly to those three young men — Martin, Reilly and Liquidano.

They honored their uniform, their school and their families. They played and practiced with passion, and they went out as brothers.

Read Full Post »

Lauren Rose

   Lauren Rose and the Wolves host, and play in, the district tourney Saturday. (John Fisken photos)

team

“Our gym, our time!”

Welcome to volleyball’s version of Thunderdome.

Four teams enter, two emerge happy.

The stakes are high Saturday, as Coupeville High School hosts, and plays in, the 1A West Central District tourney.

Win two matches, while not losing more than one, and the Wolves are off to state for the first time since 2004.

Here’s some basic info as we sit a day away from the madness.

What: district volleyball playoffs.

When: Saturday, Nov. 5

Where: Coupeville High School and Middle School gyms.

There are two matches at 1:30 (one in each gym, which are part of the same complex, separated by a hallway), two more at 3:30 and one at 5:30 in the big gym.

CHS opens in the HS gym against Charles Wright Academy, while Cascade Christian and Klahowya play in the MS gym.

The two winners clash in the HS gym at 3:30, with the district title and a berth to state at stake.

Meanwhile, match #1 losers move to the MS gym for a loser-out battle.

The survivor of that bout returns to the HS gym at 5:30 to play the loser of the title tilt for the second, and final, berth to state.

Admission (good for all day):

$8 Adults/Non-ASB
$5 Students with ASB
$5 Sr. Citizens (62+)
$4 Elementary

 

Team capsules:

 

Coupeville:

Season record: 11-4

Vs. district foes: 2-1

Sets W/L: 36-18

Coach: Cory Whitmore

Mascot: Wolves

MaxPreps ranking: #25 in 1A

 

Cascade Christian:

Season record: 12-1

Vs. district foes: 2-1

Sets W/L: 37-10

Coach: Matt Cruzan

Mascot: Cougars

MaxPreps ranking: #9 in 1A

 

Charles Wright Academy:

Season record: 13-4

Vs. district foes: 1-1

Sets W/L: 44-18

Coach: Mindy McGrath

Mascot: Tarriers

MaxPreps ranking: #8 in 1A

 

Klahowya:

Season record: 8-7

Vs. district foes: 1-3

Sets W/L: 28-27

Coach: Kim Renken

Mascot: Eagles

MaxPreps ranking: #38 in 1A

 

To see the bracket, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2069&sport=10

Read Full Post »

Older Posts »