Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Cedar Park Christian’

Vivian Farris crunched four kills Tuesday as the Coupeville C-Team volleyball spikers rolled to their sixth win in seven matches. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Unleash the wrecking crew.

Each time Coupeville High School C-Team volleyball coach Krimson Rector has sent her spikers to the floor this season, they have delivered a stellar performance.

After thumping host Cedar Park Christian Tuesday, the Wolf freshmen sit at a tidy 5-1 in North Sound Conference play, 6-1 overall.

That non-conference victory came against 2A Anacortes, while Coupeville’s only loss was a three-set war with undefeated King’s in which the Wolf C-Team came as close as any squad has to unseating the Knights this year.

Facing off for the second time with Cedar Park, Coupeville controlled play Tuesday, especially at the service line, where the battlin’ Lucero twins, Allie and Maya, delivered eight aces apiece.

Jordyn Rogers added five aces, while Gwen Gustafson and Vivian Farris both picked up one, as well.

“The girls played great with a new lineup,” Rector said.

At the net, the Wolves were opportunistic and brutally-efficient, with Rogers leading the squad with six kills.

She was joined by Ryanne Knoblich (5), Farris (4), and Maya Lucero (1).

With a trip Thursday to South Whidbey next on the agenda, the young Wolves are in the stretch run, with four more matches between now and Oct. 28.

Read Full Post »

Scout Smith was a flawless passer Tuesday, handing out 35 assists as Coupeville volleyball drilled host Cedar Park Christian. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

At a spiffy 10-1, the 2019 Wolf squad has tied the 2004 team for best start in program history. (Photo by Lisa Toomey)

You know, Cory Whitmore is doing pretty OK.

The Coupeville High School volleyball coach is in his fourth season at the school, and he’s now produced double-digit win totals in every campaign.

After rolling up 11, 13, and 11 wins over the past three seasons, Whitmore’s spike-happy assassins sit at 10-1 after a huge win in Bothell Tuesday night.

Bouncing host Cedar Park Christian 25-18, 26-24, 16-25, 25-18, the Wolves rise to 5-1 in North Sound Conference play, which leaves them a game off of King’s (6-0, 10-0) in the race for a league title.

The 10-1 start matches the best record at this point of the season since the 2004 CHS team, which eventually peaked at 14-1 before finishing 14-3.

Coupeville’s 2019 squad still has four regular season matches left on the schedule, starting with a trip Thursday to Langley to face South Whidbey.

Squaring off with Cedar Park, the Wolves were looking for their second win against the Eagles, while trying to improve on last year, when they split regular season matches before knocking CPC out of the district playoffs in meeting #3.

Tuesday’s tilt was, in some ways, a mirror image of the first match-up between the two squads, as Coupeville swept the first two sets, had a brief stumble in set three, then righted the ship.

“We definitely had our big ups and downs,” Whitmore said. “Had to work through some moments where we weren’t controlling the tempo, but ultimately our players came up big in the fourth to seal the win.”

Coupeville was playing its third match without big hitter Chelsea Prescott, as she recovers from an ankle injury, but the Wolves compensated by getting production across the board.

Maya Toomey-Stout matched her season-high with 19 kills, while Zoe Trujillo (12), Hannah Davidson (9), Maddie Vondrak (5), and Scout Smith (2) picked up the rest of Coupeville’s put-aways.

Toss in solid work controlling the floor, with Smith (12), Emma Mathusek (10), Lucy Sandahl (9), Toomey-Stout (8), Trujillo (6), Raven Vick (1), and Davidson (1) combining for 47 digs, and few CPC shots got away from the Wolves.

Coupeville also had four players — Lucy Tenore, Vondrak, Davidson, and Smith — collect blocks at the net, while Sandahl and Davidson served two aces apiece, and Smith handed out 35 assists.

Getting something from everyone on the floor is one of Whitmore’s goals, and the Wolves accomplished the task in style.

Lucy Sandahl had great clean play with long service runs, solid defense and one spectacular diving play to keep a rally alive and turn into offense and a big point to swing things in our favor,” Whitmore said.

“I thought Scout and Maya found their connection,” he added. “And Hannah went on two serving runs that scrambled CPC and gave us control of the fourth set.”

As he headed back to the bus, enjoying the victory while already looking ahead to the next match, Whitmore knew which stat he enjoyed the most, and it starts with a W.

“Overall, happy to win on the road,” he said.

Read Full Post »

Maddie Georges handed out 18 assists Tuesday, as the Coupeville JV spikers won in straight sets on the road. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Jaimee Masters and the Wolves are now 8-2 on the season.

Kylie Chernikoff had a message for her foes Tuesday night, and she delivered it loud ‘n proud.

“Get prepared, ladies, cause the butt-whuppins’ are a’coming!!”

Now, since Chernikoff is among the friendliest of all athletes, it’s possible she didn’t say those exact words out loud.

But let’s just imagine she was thinking them.

Cause she certainly played like it.

Delivering 15 kills, five services aces, and six digs, Chernikoff filled up a huge chunk of the score-book by herself, pacing the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad to a straight-sets win in Bothell.

The 25-16, 25-22, 25-9 dismantling of host Cedar Park Christian lifts the Wolf young guns to a sterling 5-1 in North Sound Conference play, 8-2 overall.

With nine players seeing floor time for CHS, Wolf coach Chris Smith got a balanced, and very-effective attack.

The fab frosh were busy, as Maddie Georges doled out a team-high 18 assists, Alita Blouin went low to scrape five digs off the floor, and Taygin Jump mashed five kills, nailed five aces, and collected four digs.

Georges added four aces to the cause, while Abby Mulholland (one kill, one dig), Jill Prince (one kill), Jaimee Masters (two kills, one ace, one dig), Anya Leavell (one kill), and Ivy Leedy all brought intensity and hustle to their roles for the high-flying Wolves.

Coupeville returns to action Thursday, when it travels to Langley to face arch-rival South Whidbey.

The Wolves will be going for the season sweep of their next-door neighbors.

Read Full Post »

Knight Arndt rattled home a goal Tuesday night against Cedar Park Christian, but both Coupeville’s varsity and JV girls soccer squads fell to their league foe. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sister, my sister.

Coupeville High School senior Avalon Renninger reached a milestone Tuesday, moving into a tie for #5 on the Wolf girls soccer program’s scoring list.

The former CHS player she’s tied with?

Big sis Sage, now a student at Washington State University.

Avalon knocked in her second goal of the season, and eighth of her career, but that was all Coupeville could muster, as it fell 7-1 to visiting Cedar Park Christian.

The loss drops the Wolves into sole possession of last-place in the six-team North Sound Conference, though there’s still a lot of season to play.

Coupeville, 0-3 in league play, 0-5-1 overall, is a game off of Cedar Park (1-2, 3-2), Granite Falls (1-2, 2-4), and Sultan (1-2, 1-4-1), with seven conference tilts still to play.

King’s (3-0, 4-1) and South Whidbey (3-0, 5-0) are currently deadlocked in a two-way race for the league title.

While the Wolves couldn’t get the win against Cedar Park Tuesday, they did get a little bit of history.

Avalon Renninger entered the game in a tie with Marisa Etzell, Alexia Hemphill, and Micky LeVine, before moving up to join her sister.

The Renningers trail just former Wolves Mia Littlejohn (35 goals), Kalia Littlejohn (33), and Lindsey Roberts (17) and current junior Genna Wright (17), who has been sidelined since an injury early in the season opener.

 

JV scores first goal:

After back-to-back shutouts, the Wolf JV notched its first score of the season, with Knight Arndt beating the Cedar Park goalie during an 11-1 loss.

Coupeville’s second squad is 0-3 on the season.

Read Full Post »

Freshman Allie Lucero scored 21 points on her serve Tuesday, including 17 in a row at one point, as she sparked the CHS volleyball C-Team to a decisive win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There is hot.

There is red hot.

And then there is the level Allie Lucero was playing at Tuesday night.

Firing killer serves from every angle, the Coupeville High School freshman almost demolished visiting Cedar Park Christian by herself.

By the time she was done peppering the Eagles, Lucero had rung up 21 points on her service, including an eye-popping 17 in a row.

That run was dangerously close to catching what is believed to be the CHS record of 20 straight, set by Lauren Rose against Chimacum in 2016.

Toss in some stellar play from her teammates to go with Lucero’s torrid service game, and it’s little wonder the Wolf C-Team romped to a 25-12, 25-7, 25-4 win.

The victory lifts Coupeville’s young guns to 1-0 in North Sound Conference play, 2-0 overall.

First-year CHS head coach Krimson Rector came away pleased with what she saw on the floor.

Especially with how the Wolves dominated with the volleyball in their hands.

“This was definitely a match won by tough and consistent serves,” she said.

While Lucero was front and center, her teammates were hardly slouches, as Jordyn Rogers, Vivian Farris, and Ryanne Knoblich all chipped in with five aces apiece.

The Wolves also shared the load at the net, with Knoblich pounding home four kills, while Rogers and Gwen Gustafson picked up three each.

Gwen impressed me by her ability to step into an unfamiliar position and still play hard,” Rector said. “She gave us kills from the middle, as well as playing a strong defensive back row as usual.”

The C-Team will join Coupeville’s JV at a tournament in Oak Harbor this Saturday, Sept. 28, giving the young Wolves plenty of floor time.

Regardless of the opponent or the setting, Rector emphasizes looking inward and focusing more on yourself than the person across the net.

“Our goal for this game was to be focused on our side of the net and on what we as a team had control of,” she said. “We started out strong and only got better through each set.

“We kept energy and focus, which can sometimes be difficult in game situations where the ball is rarely coming back to us,” Rector added. “But I was proud of the girls for focusing in on each point and being ready to play our game when given the chance.

“We are excited to get back into practice and continue our hard work.”

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »