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Posts Tagged ‘Chelsea Prescott’

   Having battled back from injury, Maddy Hilkey filled up the stat sheet Saturday as the Wolf JV stormed to another win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

And then, at the very end, a ray of sunshine.

On a Saturday night when Coupeville High School basketball in general absorbed a beating, one team refused to go along with the story line.

The Wolf JV girls squad, Amy King’s band of scrappers and ball-hawks, is the lone CHS hoops unit to currently be posting a winning record.

So, it should come as little surprise that, even playing with virtually no bench, they still stormed past host South Whidbey 28-21 to run their record to 3-2.

“I guess we were the game of the night,” said King with a quietly satisfied smile.

Coupeville won despite playing with just over half its roster (six of 11 girls) in uniform.

“100% praise to our JV team – the warriors!,” said CHS varsity coach David King. “They communicated, moved as one on defense and ran their plays very well.

“My hope is varsity watched the effort and will learn from the JV team after tonight.”

With just one player sitting next to her on the bench at any given time, Amy King rubbed her hands together, knew she had the Falcons where she wanted them, and promptly unleashed defensive Hell.

The Wolves forced a shot-clock violation on South Whidbey’s first possession, and the tone was set.

“I was very impressed with our defense,” Amy King said. “The girls really were working as one unit – talking and making their own adjustments together during the game.

“They did this very effectively.”

While the Wolves surged out to a 16-10 lead heading into halftime, it was how her players reacted in the locker room which impressed their coach the most.

“I talked about what I was seeing and what we needed to do, but I also had the players telling me what they were seeing and talking about which plays were working and which were not,” Amy King said. “They were asking if we could make a change here or do something differently there.

“Excitement was in the air and they were owning their game,” she added. “As a coach, I was impressed with their input and conversation as a team.”

Playing with fire on defense, the Wolves got big performances from all six players in uniform.

Maddy Hilkey “was very impressive with playing up top on our defense, getting steals,” while Mollie Bailey was an equal opportunity thief.

When South Whidbey did get to the basket, Kylie Chernikoff “played fantastic defense, ripping rebounds all night and putting shots back up when she could.”

Toss in Avalon Renninger terrorizing everyone foolish enough to get in her way, and a fired-up Julia García Oñoro hitting the boards, and there were few options for the Falcons.

Chelsea Prescott, even after hitting the floor hard enough to be checked for a concussion, continued to be a stellar two-way star. She singed the nets for a game-high 16 points, while yanking down eight rebounds.

With all of her players firing as one, King’s squad controlled the pace of the game, repeatedly broke South Whidbey’s press and was relentless in pursuit of victory.

Renninger collected five points, eight boards and three steals, while Bailey had three points, six rebounds, three steals and two assists.

Chernikoff (nine rebounds, two assists) and Hilkey (four steals, two assists) rounded out the scoring with a bucket apiece.

As she basked in the win, Amy King praised her iron women for a job well done.

“This group played like a team,” she said. “They pushed through their tired legs. They ran their plays, moved and talked on defense and did it all together.

“I could not have asked for a better way to end the day.”

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   Wolf frosh Mollie Bailey, seen here in an earlier game, dropped in 10 points Friday against Sequim. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Never say die.

It’s one of the trademarks of any Amy King team, and Friday was no different.

Shaking off an extremely lackluster first quarter, the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball team spent the rest of the night fighting to get back into its game against visiting 2A Sequim.

Give them two or three more minutes, and we might be talking about a win.

Instead, after slicing a 12-point deficit away, the young, thin Wolves finally ran out of time and luck, falling 41-36 to the invaders.

The loss drops Coupeville to 2-2 headed into another non-conference game Saturday, this one coming on the road at South Whidbey.

Friday, the Wolves, who played very, very early (a 3:30 PM tip), took eight minutes to wake up.

Down 15-3 at the first break, Coupeville was in trouble.

“We came out so slow tonight,” King said. “Our defense in the first quarter really did not exist.

“On offense, we had turnover after turnover on our first four to five possessions,” she added. “Both offense and defense for us were passive and just not clicking.”

Coupeville desperately needed a spark, and it arrived in the form of swing player Avalon Renninger.

Needing to save playing time in case the varsity needed her services later (it did), the sophomore sensation sat out the first quarter. Once in the game, though, she was raring to shake things up.

Avalon made a noticeable difference with the energy,” King said. “She instantly scored and had fresh legs for defense that seemed to help energize her teammates.”

With energy crackling from one end of the floor to the other, Renninger’s teammates fed off of her go-go-go attitude.

Mollie Bailey and Kylie Chernikoff “hit a few really pretty shots,” Nicole Lester knocked down a bucket, then Chelsea Prescott went off, rattling the rim with shot after successful shot.

Coupeville came all the way back to claim a short-lived lead in the fourth quarter, off of a Prescott bucket set up by a Renninger pass and a Bailey screen.

Sequim, blessed with a much deeper bench (CHS was missing four players), used its fresh legs to reclaim the lead, however, and held on down the stretch.

King still walked away happy, pleased with her team’s refusal to go down easy.

“I know a few of the girls were not feeling well tonight and we’re still short-handed, but the girls fought their hardest,” she said. “I was happy for them with their comeback. They are learning with every game.”

Prescott led the way with 13 points, 11 rebounds, a steal and a block, while Bailey torched the nets for 10 points.

Renninger (5), Chernikoff (4) and Lester (4) rounded out the scorers, with Maddy Hilkey (in her season debut) and Julia García Oñoro also seeing floor time.

Playing a strong all-around game, Chernikoff snared five rebounds and delivered two soul-searing blocks.

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   Wolf freshman Chelsea Prescott knocked down 12 points Monday in her first high school basketball game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Bench? Amy King don’t need no stinkin’ bench.

Opening a new season Monday in Bellingham, the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball squad had only six of its 11 players in uniform.

Then the Wolves lost fab frosh Genna Wright to a painful leg injury in the third quarter, leaving their coach with no more ability to sub players.

So, it doesn’t come as a huge surprise that the CHS young guns fell 41-22 to their large-school 2A rivals in a non-conference tilt.

With tired players and a Red Raiders squad which featured twin towers — the sight of players standing six-foot-one and 5-10 in a girls JV game is, shall we say, super-rare — Coupeville absorbed a few lessons.

One of those is to be wary of rival JV coaches up by 20 in the fourth quarter on opening night who are still screaming at their defenders to double on the ball-handler.

But playing against a coronary waiting to happen or not, the Wolves impressed their own coach with their refusal to back down.

“We didn’t have it easy; we worked for everything we got,” King said. “The girls did great. I was very happy with the effort they gave and the way they played.

“Now we just need to get a few more healthy bodies before the next game.”

Despite not having any players who physically matched up to Bellingham’s 6-1 banger, the Wolves shut her completely down, limiting her to a single bucket in the second half.

Four of the six Wolves took her at one point or another on defense, with Nicole Lester, Chelsea Prescott, Kylie Chernikoff and Genna Wright all denying the Red Raider skyscraper.

Bellingham boasted a full bench, and took advantage of the disparity to run the Wolves ragged.

Coupeville fought back, though, with Prescott knocking down a team-high 12 points in her first high school hoops game.

When she wasn’t shooting, the fast-rising freshman set up her teammates, with one pass to Chernikoff a particular highlight.

Chelsea had a great drive to the basket,” King said. “The defense came out to stop her and boom… a sweet bounce pass out to Kylie and a basketball player is born.

Kylie’s first basket in her first year playing.”

Chernikoff also had the defensive play of the night, “chasing a girl down the court, running her down, hand out, and making the block to stop a fast break lay up.”

“Our side of the gym erupted!,” King added.

Freshman spark-plug Mollie Bailey backed up Prescott with five points, while Wright dropped in three and Chernikoff added a bucket to round out the scoring.

Lester and Tia Wurzrainer were stellar on defense, helping to disrupt Bellingham’s game plan.

TiaNicole and Chelsea all had steals,” King said. “Which is so great to see, the anticipation and focus they have.”

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   Wolf freshman Chelsea Prescott makes her debut on the varsity stat sheet. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’re sailing to new heights.

When this year’s seniors were raw freshmen, Coupeville High’s varsity volleyball team finished 1-11.

Jump forward three seasons, and the Wolves are rampaging along at 9-2, with three regular season matches left to play.

CHS is undefeated in league play (6-0), one win away from clinching back-to-back league titles and closing in quickly on the program’s record for victories in a season.

That mark is 13, set in 2004 by the last Wolf spiker squad to advance to the state tourney.

Coupeville just missed last year in Cory Whitmore’s first season as head coach, finishing 11-6 after two narrow losses at districts.

As the Wolves head into the final week of the regular season, now is a perfect time to catch up on all the stats piled up by the 12 young women who have appeared in a varsity match.

Stats through Oct. 22:

Sets Played:

Payton Aparicio 33
Kyla Briscoe 33
Hope Lodell 33
Katrina McGranahan 33
Ashley Menges 33
Scout Smith 33
Mikayla Elfrank 32
Emma Smith 32
Lauren Rose 30
Maya Toomey-Stout 17
Allison Wenzel 16
Chelsea Prescott 2

Kills:

Briscoe 58
Elfrank 52
McGranahan 49
Aparicio 43
E. Smith 35
S. Smith 23
Menges 5
Prescott 3
Lodell 2
Toomey-Stout 2
Rose 1

Kill Percentage:

Prescott 75.0
Toomey-Stout 50.0
Menges 45.5
McGranahan 41.9
E. Smith 36.8
Briscoe 36.0
Elfrank 34.4
Aparicio 30.1
S. Smith 23.7
Rose 11.1
Lodell 10.0

Hitting Percentage:

Toomey-Stout .500
Menges .364
McGranahan .248
Briscoe .236
Aparicio .140
E. Smith .137
Rose .111
Elfrank .020

Digs:

Lodell 102
Aparicio 63
Toomey-Stout 29
Briscoe 28
McGranahan 24
Rose 24
Elfrank 12
Menges 11
S. Smith 5
Wenzel 5
E. Smith 4
Prescott 2

Blocks:

Elfrank 20
McGranahan 15
E. Smith 11
S. Smith 3
Briscoe 2
Aparicio 1

Service Returns:

Lodell 163
Aparicio 121
Briscoe 91
Toomey-Stout 20
Wenzel 18
McGranahan 4
Rose 3
E. Smith 3
Menges 2
S. Smith 1

Assists:

Rose 138 (#9 in 1A)
Menges 98
Aparicio 16
S. Smith 9
Lodell 6
E. Smith 2
Elfrank 1
McGranahan 1
Prescott 1

Serving Percentage:

Prescott 100.0
Rose 95.7
Toomey-Stout 94.1
McGranahan 91.8
Aparicio 88.5
S. Smith 77.8
Menges 77.7
Briscoe 76.7
Lodell 75.3
Wenzel 57.1

Service Points:

Aparicio 122
Rose 85
McGranahan 79
Menges 56
Lodell 47
Briscoe 25
S. Smith 7
Toomey-Stout 6
Wenzel 4

Service Aces:

Aparicio 50 (#1 in 1A)
Rose 29
Lodell 26
McGranahan 25
Menges 19
Toomey-Stout 14
Briscoe 12
S. Smith 3
Wenzel 2
Prescott 1

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   Raven Vick is a key part of an undefeated Wolf JV volleyball squad. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   CHS coach Chris Smith is hyper-focused, Maddie Vondrak maybe not so much and Lucy Sandahl (8) makes plans to unleash death ‘n destruction on her volleyball foes.

You can’t beat them, you can only hope to slow them down.

And good luck on that.

Rolling to its fifth straight win Thursday, the undefeated Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad annihilated host Port Townsend.

Getting action for everyone in uniform, Wolf coach Chris Smith led his young warriors to a 25-10, 25-7, 25-23 victory, raising the team’s Olympic League record to 3-0.

It was a savage display of pinpoint serving (with Emma Mathusek especially en fuego) and solid teamwork, all documented by ace sideline reporter Maddie Vondrak.

As the Wolf frosh rehabs an injury, she has stepped forward to track her teammate’s play, and has played an indispensable role for her coach and for writers everywhere.

Vondrak was especially taken with the play of Maya Toomey-Stout (“awesome passes and kills all around”) and Savannah Smith (“a killer kill”) in the early going.

Mathusek “got the lead back with nine serves in a row with the help of Maya’s dominating kill,” while Chelsea Prescott had “a great block” and Lucy Sandahl ripped off winners on seven straight serves, five on aces.

Coupeville put the hammer down hard in the second set, with Mathusek spending a long, successful stretch of time at the service line.

By the time she was done Thursday, the Wolf sophomore had accumulated 12 aces, with the best one “sitting on the net and falling over.”

Prescott “saved the ball from going into the bench” on one wild play, while Toomey-Stout and Raven Vick quickly put away anything Port Townsend could return.

With the match in hand, Chris Smith gave his youngest players serious floor time, and they responded strongly.

Jaimee Masters ran off seven straight winners on serve, Catherine Lhamon and Megan Behan delivered kills and Charlotte Nolle had a sweet save.

The Wolf JV players get a chance to pick up big-time experience Saturday, when they head to Sequim for a tournament.

“As a coaching staff we are excited to focus on the JV this weekend,” said CHS head coach Cory Whitmore.

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