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   Drake Borden teamed with Zach Ginnings to roll to a straight-sets win at #3 doubles Wednesday afternoon. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The climb back to .500 continues.

Peaking at the right time, the Coupeville High School boys tennis team won for the fourth time in five matches, escaping from Chimacum Wednesday with a 5-2 victory.

The Wolves, who will turn around and host the Cowboys Thursday in their Olympic League finale, improved to 3-2 in conference play, 5-6 overall.

Coupeville’s team record is a tad misleading, as the early portion of the schedule was crammed full of big 2A schools and traditional 1A powers like Overlake and South Whidbey.

Win or lose, playing a strong schedule should help the Wolves prepare for the postseason, when they will be chasing individual glory.

Thursday’s match will be the team’s Senior Night.

Then, after a final non-conference road match with South Whidbey Oct. 16, the regular season comes to a close.

The postseason begins Oct. 19, with Coupeville hosting the Olympic League tourney for the first time.

So, basically, get new courts and you get to avoid a bus trip and ferry ride. Sweet.

Tourney play kicks off at 10:45 and goes all day, with the top four in singles and doubles advancing to districts.

Complete Wednesday results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Pedro Gamarra beat Isaiah Treibel 6-3, 7-6(7-3)

2nd Singles — Jakobi Baumann lost to JJ Klaric 4-6, 7-5, 10-7

3rd Singles — Nile Lockwood lost to Jonah Diehl 6-3, 7-5

1st Doubles — William Nelson/Joey Lippo beat Tawan Lamaichampa/Roman Powell 6-1, 6-2

2nd Doubles — Nick Etzell/Mason Grove beat Nate Miller/Emmett Erickson 6-1, 6-1

3rd Doubles — Drake Borden/Zach Ginnings beat Jack Treibel/Mason Lawson 6-0, 6-4

4th Doubles — Tiger Johnson/Jaschon Baumann beat Jack Gibbons/Zack Eagle 6-0, 6-1

JV:

5th Doubles — Thane Peterson/Koby Schreiber lost to Klaric/Lamaichampa 6-4

6th Doubles — Harris Sinclair/Ginnings lost to Powell/Eli Bufford 6-3

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   Coupeville’s 7th grade volleyball squad celebrates its win at Chimacum. (Photo courtesy Kimberly Bepler)

The power of the ace shall liberate us.

Or at least let us get some wins.

Powered by a team-wide explosion at the service line, the Coupeville Middle School 7th grade volleyball squad swept to a straight-sets win Thursday afternoon.

With Lucy Tenore and Kaielle Bepler leading the way, the Wolves stuffed host Chimacum 25-13, 25-12, 25-14 for their first varsity win of the season.

The CMS 8th graders battled until the final point in their match, rallying to take the third set 25-15 after dropping the first two 25-19, 25-21.

7th grade:

“Overwhelmingly the serves are what won us the game,” said Wolf coach Kimberly Bepler. “We worked on serves all week long after Monday’s game, and it paid off in a big way for these girls.

“Several got serves in for the first time ever in a game,” she added. “They’re pretty thrilled with their first win!”

Tenore (nine successful serves on mom Heather’s birthday) and Bepler (8) paced CMS.

Vivian Farris (5), Brynn Schmid (5), Maya Lucero (5) and Alita Blouin (4) were hot on their heels.

“We didn’t have coach (Sarah) Lyngra tonight, but her spirit was with us with our focus on serving,” Bepler said.

8th grade:

The Wolf coaches are putting an emphasis on “three hits (over and in)” and the older squad connected on 16 of those plays Thursday.

Hit 20 and coach Casie Greve has promised her team a root beer float party.

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   Wolf freshman Savannah Smith reeled off nine straight points on her serve at one point Tuesday night. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Catherine Lhamon keeps the rally alive.

Put the ball in Jaimee Masters hands and the match is done.

Unloading vicious serve after even more vicious serve, the Coupeville High School freshman put a resounding end to both the second and third sets Tuesday, as the Wolf C-Team cruised to a win over visiting Chimacum.

Masters ran off seven straight winners to close the night’s middle set, after already doing some serious damage in the first set.

Enjoying the thrill, she then went one better in the third set, ending the match with eight straight winners off her serve.

Fueled by Masters ace-happy ways, and similar laser shows from Savannah Smith and Catherine Lhamon, the Wolves strolled to a 25-17, 25-8, 25-17 victory.

The win lifts the C-Team to 3-0 on the season, 2-0 in Olympic League play.

Coupeville came out on fire, never trailing in the first two sets, then proved it could rally as well, storming back from eight down to take the final set.

Willow Vick got the Wolves started with a tip for a winner on the first point of the night, and CHS stormed out to a quick 6-0 lead in the first set.

From there, a couple of kills from Maddie Vondrak, strong set-ups from Heidi Clinkscales and a sweet tip for a winner off of the fingertips of Charlotte Nolle, and Coupeville was on cruise control.

Megan Behan ended the opening set with an explosive ace, signalling what was to come from Masters, while Kylie Chernikoff delivered several put-aways while patrolling the net.

While Masters was well, masterful, racking up 29 points on her serve over the course of the match, it was Smith who put together the best stretch of any Wolf.

With CHS facing its only deficit of the night at 10-3 in the third set, the freshman went on a rampage, zinging serves off of Chimacum faces, arms and legs.

Literally, as one Cowboy who took a Smith serve to the chin is likely to look in the mirror tomorrow and see the imprint of a volleyball on the lower half of her face.

Capping things with a laser shot of an ace which split two Cowboys who flinched and grimaced in unison as the ball exploded between them, Smith pulled the Wolves back in front 12-10, and they would never relinquish the lead the rest of the way.

Just to drive the point home, Smith resurfaced when Masters was closing out the match, going high to stuff a shot in a manner reminiscent of how older sister Emma Smith dominates at the net.

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   Lucy Sandahl and the Wolf JV volleyball squad are 6-0 after pasting Chimacum. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Emma Mathusek pleads her case to Wolf JV coach Chris Smith. “I’m gold, man, gold. You need me on the floor!”

It was beautifully, brutally efficient.

Now, I could be talking about the final point of Tuesday night’s Coupeville High School JV volleyball match, when Raven Vick flew skyward like a superhero, then launched a missile of a spike which destroyed the back-line like it had been hit by a grenade.

Or, heck, you could pick just about any point from the match, and that’s what I could be talking about.

Moving like a pack of lethal jungle cats accidentally let loose in a petting zoo, the undefeated Wolf JV spikers polished the floor with visiting Chimacum, shredding the Cowboys 25-15, 25-7, 25-10.

It was a rout, a beat-down, a KO where the ring official was too mesmerized by the carnage to stop things in time to protect the vanquished foe.

It was Lucy Sandahl smoking aces off of bodies.

It was Maddie Vondrak climbing a staircase to heaven to put away tips as her opponent’s jaws scraped the floor.

It was Chelsea Prescott colliding with her own teammate and somehow managing to both catch Maya Toomey-Stout in mid-fall, apologize to her, and still drop a winner in between two Cowboys.

All in one effortless move.

First-year Wolf JV coach Chris Smith has yet to lose — his squad improved to 6-0 overall, 4-0 in Olympic League play with the victory — and there are no signs this team has any plans to put him through any misery any time soon.

Coupeville was clicking from the first moment Sandahl bopped to the service stripe to open things, to Vick’s teeth-rattling coup de grâce.

While the first set stayed fairly close for a bit, the Wolves began to steadily pull away after Prescott and Sandahl put together strong back-to-back runs on serve.

From there, it became much more of a rout.

Sandahl opened the first set with seven straight winners, which seemed pretty dang impressive.

Until “The Gazelle” went nuclear in the second set.

Toomey-Stout, rockin’ new shoes and a quiet smile, set down her water bottle, spun the ball in her hand, then went on a serving tear that promptly killed the very last flicker of hope still beating in the collective chest of the Cowboys.

Ripping off 12 consecutive points on her serve — Chimacum successfully returned just two — Toomey-Stout took a 12-6 lead and turned it into 24-6 in the blink of an eye.

The third set was virtually a mirror image of the second set, though with a twist as Raven Vick and Prescott each ran off six straight points on their serve.

When the ball was briefly in play, a pack of Wolves flew to whatever turf  needed defending, with Kylie Chernikoff and Vondrak collecting the most electrifying winners, on a lethal kill and a superb tip, respectively.

Willow Vick, bouncing back from illness, unloaded a smokin’ ace off the back-line, while Emma Mathusek and Zoe Trujillo were rock-solid and in the middle of every play, as always.

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   Senior Lauren Rose had 13 assists and five aces Tuesday as first-place Coupeville crushed Chimacum. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Six players firing as one.

When they’re on, they’re on.

The Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad has played seven regular-season matches this year, and six times they have left the court with a straight-sets win.

Tuesday was more of the same, as the Wolves overpowered visiting Chimacum in every aspect of the game, cruising to a 25-17, 25-9, 25-18 win which cemented Coupeville’s status as the front-runner in the Olympic League.

Now 4-0 in conference play, 6-1 overall, CHS sits a game-and-a-half up on Klahowya (2-1, 3-5), while Chimacum (1-3, 1-5) and Port Townsend (0-3, 1-6) bring up the rear.

The Wolves, who are chasing back-to-back league titles, have a two-week gap before any more league matches.

They’ll fill the time by facing off with a pair of 2A schools — Port Angeles on the road Oct. 5 and Sequim at home Oct. 10 — before playing their final five league matches between Oct. 17-28.

If Coupeville can keep things clicking at their current levels, or take it up a notch or two, it seems primed for a strong postseason run.

At their best, the Wolves are a lethal team from the service stripe, with two strong setters (Lauren Rose and Ashley Menges) setting up a squad of kill-happy snipers.

What few points Chimacum got Tuesday came more from Coupeville’s occasional over-eagerness to destroy the ball than anything the Cowboys were able to create.

The lone exception was junior outside hitter Renee Woods, who peppered the Wolves with several strong runs at the service line.

Coupeville countered with a team-wide ace explosion, raining down 22 of the beauties.

High-impact servers Hope Lodell and Payton Aparicio lashed six apiece, while knuckleballer Rose, who has never missed a serve in her entire life, added another five.

The Wolves never trailed for a single second in the match, running out to large leads in every set, and it started with their service game.

Take the first set, where Rose opened the night with a run of five straight points.

The first came on an emphatic stuff from a hyped-up Mikayla Elfrank, which sent a bolt of energy through the Wolf football team which had gathered to cheer on their classmates.

That was closely followed by Lodell cranking a winner while stuck in the middle of the court, and the winners just kept coming.

Numerous Wolves jumped into the fray in the early going, and they all seemed to have the golden touch.

Whether it was Katrina McGranahan with a tip which froze two Cowboys in place, Kyla Briscoe with a slicing kill that carved off a rival’s kneecap, or Emma Smith exploding a winner off the back line, if it came from Wolf fingertips, it was deadly and delightful.

Lodell closed the set with an eight-point run at the line, throwing herself skyward to unleash a series of crippling serves which left the increasingly frustrated Cowboys clawing helplessly at air as the ball skidded by their arms.

It wasn’t going to get any better from there for Chimacum, a competent but, at least on this night, not very inspired squad.

Coupeville, on the other hand, continually found new ways to delight its fans.

Super sophomore Scout Smith reached behind her head while airborne, corralled a ball, then flicked it forward for a surprise winner, while Emma Smith dipped to the floor to pull off a miracle save on a ball off the net.

Somehow keeping the rally alive, Emma Smith gave Aparicio time to arrive behind her with a full head of steam built up, and the senior sharpshooter ended the point with a bang, slugging the crud out of the ball.

While the CHS varsity has a senior-heavy roster, the young guns had their moment to shine, as well.

Sophomore Maya Toomey-Stout ran off nine straight points on her serve, with her play glistening as brightly as her new shoes, while freshman Chelsea Prescott made her varsity debut in the second set.

The Wolves capped things with another burst of creativity in the final set, mixing in the power of Briscoe and Elfrank, who were twin titans of terror, with a tip for a winner on which Emma Smith seemed to defy the laws of gravity.

Going airborne, the elegant warrior hung motionless for a lifetime, then, right before having to return to the surly confines of Earth, used a couple of graceful finger-tips to direct a wayward ball one way while the Cowboy defense went the other.

The match, which had been over for a long time prior, officially ended on yet another blow off the fist of Briscoe, who was one of five Wolves to collect four or more kills on the night.

McGranahan (5), Elfrank (5), Aparicio (4), Briscoe (4) and Scout Smith (4) took full advantage of the balls set up for them by Rose (13 assists) and Menges (12), who were on top of their game as a two-headed setter supreme.

Lodell and Aparicio paced the Wolves with three digs apiece. Though, to be honest, Coupeville spent very little time having to deal with any full-scale Chimacum attacks.

While there is always room for improvement, CHS coach Cory Whitmore wore a relaxed smile as he assessed his team’s performance.

“I felt like we had moments of brilliance,” he said. “We built momentum and finished strongly.

“I especially liked that when I called timeouts, they not only made the fixes we needed to, but they anticipated what I was going to say and were already prepared to correct what needed to be corrected.”

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