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Hannah Davidson collected 10 kills and five blocks Tuesday as the undefeated CHS varsity volleyball team won a four-set thriller. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a thriller and a chiller and a killer.

It was a four-set, two-hour battle royal, with two very good teams slugging it out for volleyball supremacy.

And, in the end, it was a win for the home team, which left Coupeville High School coach Cory Whitmore with a frazzled, but happy, smile on his face as the gym emptied out Tuesday night.

Having survived the best visiting Cedar Park Christian could throw at his team, he and his Wolves emerged with a 25-22, 25-23, 23-25, 25-23 victory, ensuring CHS would remain undefeated on the season.

With the win, the Wolves sit at 1-0 in North Sound Conference play, 4-0 overall.

Coupeville is in a three-way tie atop the league with King’s (1-0, 4-0) and South Whidbey (1-0, 2-1), while Cedar Park (0-1, 3-2), Granite Falls (0-1, 2-2), and Sultan (0-1, 2-3) sit a game off the lead.

The Wolves are off to the seven-team South Whidbey Invite this Saturday, Sept. 28, then return to match play Oct. 1, when they host South Whidbey.

As he scanned the stat sheet and reflected on what he had just witnessed — a night full of electrifying plays, but also a few stumbles, mainly in the third set — Whitmore was philosophical.

“It’s good to learn some lessons … but also to be able to pull out a win,” he said. “People really stepped up when they needed to, and that was nice to see.”

While he liked the grit and desire all of his players demonstrated under fire, Whitmore gave a special bit of praise to setter Scout Smith, who, as usual, was a calming influence on her squad.

The senior captain had herself a night, racking up 39 assists to go with four kills, five service aces, eight digs, and a solo block.

Coupeville would need every single stat Smith etched into the book, and big-time plays from all of her teammates, to fend off a hot-hitting Cedar Park team.

The opening set began as a back-and-forth affair, with four ties in the early moments, before Lucy Sandahl popped onto the floor and sprinkled some magic everywhere.

Coming in to serve, the senior spark-plug turned a 6-5 lead into an 11-5 advantage, delivering two crisp aces wrapped around a pair of sweet plays from running mate Hannah Davidson.

Showing she can kill you with power and kill you with subtlety, Coupeville’s main woman at the net rejected one CPC shot right back in the face of an Eagle, then nimbly tip-toed in and flicked a tip for another winner.

Cedar Park wouldn’t go away in the opening set, hanging around within 2-3 points most of the way, but the visitors also couldn’t get over the hump to retake the lead after Sandahl’s run at the line.

Two winners from Zoe Trujillo, one on a running tip, the other on a strong spike back up the middle, staked Coupeville to a lead it wouldn’t lose, then Maya Toomey-Stout went to work.

“The Gazelle” came flying in from the right side to lash a winner, rose up and blasted a hardwood-denting kill on the next play, then capped things with a service ace a play later.

With a set in hand, the Wolves went for a 2-0 lead and got it, but not without some effort.

After jumping out to a 3-0 lead thanks to strong serving from Smith, and an eardrum-rattling kill off the fiery fingers of Maddie Vondrak, CHS let things slip away for a bit.

The Wolves eventually found themselves down 16-11, but got back in stride thanks to stellar serving from Smith and Chelsea Prescott.

Even then, Coupeville didn’t actually reclaim the lead until 19-18, then had to endure five ties which pushed the set out to 23-23.

Needing a big-time play to seize the momentum, the Wolves found it, thanks to Prescott.

With a furious rally going on, the Wolf junior slipped through a crowd, bounded airborne and dropped a tip which was so pretty it froze three CPC players in place as they watched it arc past them, then splash down and skip away.

Up two sets to none, Coupeville seemed almost untouchable, but the third set brought the Wolves back down to Earth a bit.

It’s best to look at the frame as two separate pieces.

In the first, the Wolves seemed to forget completely what had worked for them, falling behind 17-6 and frustrating Whitmore enough he almost bent his clipboard in half.

But, after their coach delivered a terse, passionate call to arms, the real Wolves reappeared, closing the set on a torrid 17-8 run which came within a hair of completely reversing things.

The Wolves got back within a single point twice, at 23-22 after Toomey-Stout roughed up the ball on a smash, and 24-23 after a put-away from Davidson.

While Coupeville never made it all the way back in the third set, the resolve they displayed in staging the comeback was a major plus, and fueled them through the fourth, and final, frame.

Once again, the Wolves had to come from behind, but this time from just 7-3.

A tip winner from Vondrak put CHS back ahead at 9-8, then another big-time play from Prescott, on which she smoked a kill which hit the net at full speed, debated for a second, then flopped over for a winner, really got things hopping.

Cedar Park refused to leave the joint quietly, however, forcing ties at 20-20, 21-21, and 23-23, before the Wolves prevailed.

The final two points of the night were artful, inspired, and very satisfying for an enthusiastic, pro-Coupeville crowd.

At 23-23, Vondrak and Trujillo united to stuff a would-be CPC kill, then at 24-23, Prescott kept the play alive with a lightning-fast save in which she threw up both fists just in time to deflect the ball before it hit her in the chest.

With the play kept alive, the teams rallied for a moment, until Davidson flicked one final dagger through the heart of the Eagles, using the very end of her fingertips to redirect the ball just past the outstretched hands of a rival player who could only swing and miss.

That capped a game in which all nine Wolves who saw floor time chipped in to the cause.

Toomey-Stout blasted a team-high 17 kills and went low for 20 digs, while Davidson (10 kills, five blocks), Prescott (eight kills, 10 digs), and Emma Mathusek (18 digs and a billion hustle plays) all had solid nights.

Also joining in the fun were Raven Vick (two aces), Vondrak (three kills), Trujillo (four kills), and Sandahl (four aces, two digs), while Lucy Tenore, Willow Vick, and Kylie Chernikoff provided huge vocal support for their teammates.

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Heidi Meyers delivered a run of winners at the service line Tuesday, as the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad scorched visiting Cedar Park Christian. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It started with a bang and ended with a bang.

In between, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad dominated play Tuesday against visiting Cedar Park Christian, rolling to a straight-sets win.

The 25-20, 25-21, 25-16 victory lifts the Wolf young guns to 1-0 in North Sound Conference play, 2-1 overall.

The match was fairly evenly played, but Coupeville time and again did what it had to do at the exact right moments to carry the day.

Things got off to a nice start, with Maddie Georges ripping off four service points to open the match, thanks to some help from Lucy Tenore and Taygin Jump.

Like a Viking warrior stalking the net, Tenore struck first, rising up into the rafters on the opening point, then lashing a solid kill that scattered her foes in all directions.

Not to be outdone, the multi-talented Jump finished off the next three points by herself, and all with different shots.

The first was a little bump on the run, as she dropped the ball into a small gap between two Cedar Park players.

After that, Jump ripped a spike which singed the top of the net as it slid over, followed up by a slicer which caught the back line for another winner.

CPC fought back, and actually took the lead for a bit in the opening set, overcoming wicked winners from Tenore and Kylie Chernikoff.

But, eventually, the Wolves turned the flow of the tide for good, thanks to strong serving from Heidi Meyers, an artful winner or two off of the fingers of Anya Leavell, and then some highlight reel work from the pumped-up Chernikoff.

She crushed one winner to knot the set up at 18-18, then put CHS ahead for good with a run of sizzlin’ aces at the service stripe.

The second set was almost a mirror image of the first, with the two teams battling in the center of the ring, exchanging body blows, until Coupeville flipped a switch.

Tenore and Chernikoff were a two-woman wreckin’ crew at the net, spraying nasty kills in all directions, while this time around it was Jaimee Masters who had an impressive run on serve.

While the win was already in the bag for the Wolves after taking the first two sets, the teams opted to play a third frame for extra floor time.

Alita Blouin opened the set with a gorgeous spike for a winner which she delivered while hanging out in midair in the back half of her side of the court.

After that, Chernikoff decided to see how many heads she could crack by peppering balls at any Cedar Park players in her way.

With Georges flipping perfectly-placed sets, and Ivy Leedy chipping in with a couple nice hustle plays, the Wolves eventually had everything clicking in the final set, strolling in for the sweet sweep.

Cedar Park put up a fight on a couple of intense rallies, but deflated after Jump flicked a tip for a winner and Chernikoff smashed a hole through the center of the universe on her final kill.

Just to make sure the visitors knew they had been fully and completely beaten, the hometown Wolves closed the match with back-to-back service aces from Masters, which sent her great-grandparents home happy.

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Izzy Wells and Coupeville softball are the #1 playoff seed from the North Sound Conference. (Karen Carlson photo)

I love it when a plan comes together.

Everything broke perfectly Thursday, guaranteeing the Coupeville High School softball squad heads to districts next week as the #1 seed from the North Sound Conference.

The Wolves, 9-3 in league play, 12-7 overall, finished in a three-way tie atop the conference with Cedar Park Christian (9-3, 14-4) and Granite Falls (9-3, 12-7).

That was assured Thursday when CPC crowned South Whidbey 19-4 and Granite smushed Sultan 16-8 on the last day of the regular season.

Wolf softball gets to add a league title plaque to the Wall of Fame in the CHS gym for a second-straight year.

Things were a little more complex, however, when it came to playoff seeding.

With three teams tying for the best record, the first tie-breaker (head-to-head play) solved nothing.

Coupeville won two of three against Cedar Park, but lost two of three to Granite, which lost two of three to Cedar Park, leaving the tie intact.

The ultimate tie-breaker was a blind draw done by league Athletic Directors before the season started, and Wolf AD Willie Smith had the magic touch, plucking out the best number.

Having cashed his golden ticket, Coupeville is the #1 seed to the eight-team, double-elimination district tourney, from which three teams advance to state.

Cedar Park is #2 (based on head-to-head), while Granite, which had a big lead in the standings just a week-and-a-half ago, before losing back-to-back games, slides to #3.

South Whidbey (2-10, 5-13) goes as #4, while #5 Sultan (1-11, 1-14) has to survive a play-in game with Meridian (7-12), the #4 team from the Northwest Conference, to make the main draw.

Coupeville opens districts May 16 at Janicki Fields in Sedro-Woolley, with its first game against the Sultan/Meridian winner.

During the regular season the Wolves beat the Trojans 11-1 in a non-conference game, and swept the Turks in league play, winning 12-0, 7-4, and 15-2.

 

The bracket:

http://www.nscathletics.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2923&sport=15

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Heidi Meyers walked, scored, and played strong defense Monday, as Coupeville’s JV softball squad battled through a close game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a brawl.

In a game in which the home plate ump took a wicked shot to the fingers, a fouled-off softball smashing his hand and (eventually) ballooning it out three times the normal size, Coupeville and Cedar Park’s JV softball teams went toe-to-toe.

Thanks to a strong defensive stand at the end Monday, the host Eagles escaped with a 12-10 win, sweeping the season series from their rivals.

Of five North Sound Conference schools playing softball this spring, CPC and CHS were the only two to field JV teams.

Cedar Park improves to 4-0 with the win, while the loss drops the young Wolves to 3-6.

Coupeville’s JV closes its season Thursday, when it hosts Burlington-Edison (2-10) for a 4 PM doubleheader.

Monday’s battle featured five lead changes, and a bevy of big blows, with Abby Meyers crunching a double and triple and Audrianna Shaw smoking a three-bagger of her own.

Both of Coupeville’s runs in the top of the first came without a single base-knock, however, as walks to Meyers, Kylie Van Velkinburgh, and Marenna Rebischke-Smith, conspired with a CPC error to get things started.

While the Eagles plated five in the bottom of the first, the Wolves immediately grabbed the lead back with five of their own in the second.

The rally started with back-to-back walks from Morgan Stevens and Amanda Thomas, with Stevens being plunked by a wayward pitch, before Meyers rifled a two-run triple.

It was almost an inside-the-park home run, but the Wolf shortstop missed first base by an inch or two and had to whirl back and tap her foot on the bag before heading off pell-mell around the bases.

A passed ball brought Meyers in, Mckenna Somes walked to keep things alive, and then it was Shaw’s turn to get medieval on the ball, slamming her own rainbow shot to the wall.

Van Velkinburgh connected on the first of her two RBI-producing ground-outs, both of which scored Shaw, to bring Coupeville to the JV-maximum five runs for the inning, and the game was truly on.

From there, both teams traded body blows.

CPC tied the game at 7-7, Abby Meyers crunched an RBI double to push Coupeville back in front by one, but then the host Eagles swung things with a five-run bottom of the third.

Needing four runs to stay alive in the top of the fourth — the final inning the JV teams were set to play — the Wolves got halfway there before their final rally died along with the sinking sun.

Walks to Heidi Meyers and Rebischke-Smith were crucial, while Shaw’s second hit of the day, a madly-spinning RBI single, did some damage before the Wolves hit their limit on outs.

Coupeville put 14 runners aboard in the game, with Abby Meyers and Shaw collecting two hits apiece.

The 10 walks accrued by the Wolves were led by two each from Thomas and Rebischke-Smith, while Ivy Leedy walked and scored at the plate, then struck out two Eagles while flinging heat from the pitcher’s circle.

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Scout Smith crunched two doubles Monday, but Coupeville lost a tough road game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sela Flynn had an amazing Monday afternoon.

Sadly, that’s not good news for Coupeville High School softball fans.

Flynn, who suits up for Cedar Park Christian, went on a rampage like you rarely see, smacking two home runs, and narrowly missing a third, while picking up eight RBI’s.

Fueled by a white-hot slugger, two defensive plays which ripped the heart out of the Wolves, and one of the most inconsistent home plate umps to ever go into a semi-crouch, CPC defended its turf, sending Coupeville home on the wrong end of a 9-5 score.

The loss drops the Wolves to 5-3 in North Sound Conference play, 8-7 overall, and (for the moment) knocks them into 3rd place in the standings.

Coupeville trails Granite Falls (8-1, 11-5) and CPC (6-3, 11-4), while Sultan (1-6, 1-9) and South Whidbey (1-8, 4-11) bring up the rear.

There is a silver lining, however.

The Wolves play their final four regular-season games on Whidbey, with Granite coming to Coupeville Wednesday and Sultan arriving Friday for a doubleheader.

CHS closes with a short trip to Langley May 7 to face South Whidbey.

While Coupeville is a half-game off of Cedar Park, if the teams finish tied, the Wolves would get the higher seed to the district playoffs, as they own the tiebreaker, having beaten the Eagles two out of three this season.

In the early going Monday it looked like it would be three out of three.

Coupeville pushed across three runs in the top of the first, mainly by taking advantage of CPC mistakes.

Scout Smith suffered an extremely-rare strikeout to lead off the game, but alertly bolted to first when the catcher missed the ball and could only watch in horror as it ping-ponged off the backstop and away from her.

A walk to Emma Mathusek, followed by a crisp single to right off of Chelsea Prescott’s bat, juiced the bags with no one out, and it looked like the Wolves were preparing to savage their hosts.

No matter how many times the home plate ump changed his entire strike zone pitch to pitch.

It wasn’t to be, though, as runs came home twice on errors by the CPC defense and once on a walk to Mackenzie Davis, but the Wolves couldn’t find another hit in the inning.

Still, with fab frosh Izzy Wells carrying a no-hitter into the bottom of the third, Coupeville looked solid. Even if its own offense stranded three more runners across the next two innings.

Things took a dire turn though, when the indecisive, inconsistent ump finally got consistent about one thing – not giving Coupeville’s hurler any strike calls unless she all but grooved the ball.

Forced to enter Flynn’s power zone, the Wolves paid dearly, as the Eagle slugger crunched a three-run home run to straight-away center – her team’s first hit and a game-changer at that.

If nothing else, the blow seemed to knock some of the lethargy out of the Wolves, who responded by almost, but not quite, blowing the game back open in the top of the fourth.

Doubles from Smith and Prescott gave CHS the lead back at 4-3, and a walk to Sarah Wright put two aboard as Mollie Bailey strode to the plate.

The sophomore third-baseman, who has spent the season lashing big hits, did it again, smoking a ball into the gap between second and first.

Except…

Ellie Chi, CPC’s sophomore second-baseman, made a play which was nothing less than sensational.

You can hate the result if you’re a Wolf fan, but dang, you have to (reluctantly) applaud.

Launching her body airborne while jerking to the left, glove parallel to the ground, Chi yanked Bailey’s hot shot out of the air, holding on as she crashed back to bounce off the soccer-field turf the Eagles have dropped their makeshift softball diamond upon.

Ball gets through, both runners come home, it’s a three-run lead and a big inning is brewing.

Chi makes the play, though, and it deflates everything.

Well, except for the Eagles, who, having escaped their jam, went out and added three more runs in the bottom of the fourth to snatch the lead.

An RBI single tied things up, before Flynn bounced a two-run double off the wall in left-center.

And yet, the game wasn’t lost at that point.

The two pitchers buzzed through the fifth, then Coupeville made another move to blow things open in the top of the sixth, only to be denied again by the thinnest of margins.

Smith conked another double, this one flying to the wall in the left field corner, then scampered home on an RBI ground-out by Prescott, and it was a one-run game.

Tying run at second, clean-up hitter Wright bending her bat in half at the plate, just one out, and things looked promising.

And, just like with Bailey in the fourth, Wright cracked the heck out of the ball, sending a rocket back up the middle, where it connected with the CPC pitcher’s leg.

Ball hitting flesh made a sound reminiscent of a watermelon being fired out of a cannon before colliding with a brick wall, and yet, to the amazement of all, Eagle hurler Erica Giles stayed on her feet.

Which would be an accomplishment in itself.

That she staggered backward for a second, before ignoring whatever pain was coursing through her body and scrambled to retrieve the ball and nail Wright by a step at first, deserves a tip of the hat.

Hate the result maybe, but credit where credit is due – it was a gutsy play.

Given another reprieve, Cedar Park made it official in the bottom of the sixth.

Coupeville decided to play with fire and pitch to Flynn, and she bombed another three-run tater, dropping this one over the left field fence to cap a remarkable offensive show.

For CHS coach Kevin McGranahan, the game was a missed opportunity, one which could have turned out better if one or two plays went differently.

“We came out a little flat and paid for it later,” he said. “We just couldn’t get our big bats going when we needed them.

“All in all, we beat ourselves, but they played good defense and we didn’t hit like we can.”

Smith (two doubles) and Prescott (1B, 2B) led Coupeville at the plate, while Nicole Laxton and Mathusek added singles.

Laxton had the most entertaining steal of the season after her base-knock, beating the throw to second base by pulling off a fairly-spectacular face-first dive into the bag, just evading the sweeping tag.

Wright and Mathusek walked twice apiece, while Davis eked out a free pass to round out the attack.

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