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Posts Tagged ‘Chimacum’

Lauren Rose (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Rose, seen here in an earlier match, played with the same wild abandon in Thursday’s win over Chimacum. (John Fisken photos)

Madeline Strasburg

   When spirited, vocal team leader Madeline Strasburg (20) is done playing, she might make a very good coach.

When the match started, there were about two fans in the stands. When it ended, it sounded like there were two hundred.

With an early 4 PM start catching a lot of Coupeville High School’s cheering section seemingly by surprise (visiting Chimacum didn’t have a single fan show up and only one extra player on its ultra-thin bench), Thursday afternoon’s Olympic League volleyball match-up kicked off in front of a nearly empty gym.

At the end, with fans having straggled in bit by bit, the joint was a little more rockin’, never more so than when the Wolves closed out a 25-20, 15-25, 25-23, 25-18 victory, their first ever under coach Breanne Smedley.

The win lifted Coupeville to 1-7 under the first-year head coach, 1-1 in league play. That’s the more important stat, as it means CHS jumped into second place in its four-team league.

Klahowya was 1-0 entering a Thursday night showdown with Port Townsend (0-1), while the Wolves and Chimacum now sit at 1-1.

The top three teams advance to the postseason and three of the Wolves’ final four league matches will be against Port Townsend and Chimacum.

Only a Oct. 27 rematch with unbeaten Klahowya (9-0), the #8 team in 1A polls, looms as a major stumbling block.

With Port Townsend up next Tuesday, Oct. 21 (it’s a home match with CHS putting on a cancer awareness night), Smedley is confident her team took a positive turn with the victory.

“This is a win they should feel really good about,” she said. “They competed well with this team and it should give some confidence and show them that they can win, that they’re capable.”

Other than a brief dry spell in the second set, the Wolves came out on fire, delivering big hits and big emotion.

At a key moment in the first set, with Coupeville clinging to a 21-20 lead, senior captain Madeline Strasburg came bounding out of a timeout, grabbing each of her teammates for a moment.

“We can do better, ladies! We can do better!!,” she said in a crisp, firm voice.

Then Strasburg proved it, winning the next point for the Wolves on a thunderous spike that shook the floor, the bleachers and, possibly, half the town.

Spurred on by her words, and her actions, Coupeville quickly put the set away on serves from Valen Trujillo that exploded with a zing, and another, just as brutal, spike off of Strasburg’s patented Arm ‘o Death.

The Wolves were the clear aggressor all match, with Strasburg, Hailey Hammer and Kacie Kiel launching laser shots.

Hammer drilled a Chimacum player in the body, but it was Strasburg (who else?) who lashed one winner off of a hapless Cowboy’s face (sort of by accident).

When it wasn’t putting the ball to the floor hard on spikes, Coupeville found myriad other ways to thwart Chimacum’s best efforts.

McKenzie Bailey and Lauren Rose dropped picture-perfect tips into open space repeatedly, while Trujillo chased down every last ball, cartwheeling end over end frequently.

The perfect punctuation came from Wolf senior Monica Vidoni, the team’s tallest player.

Timing her jump perfectly, Vidoni virtually scraped the ceiling on a play midway through the fourth set, catching the ball on her fingertips at its highest point and flicking it downwards.

Her tip knifed through a wall of Chimacum players, none of whom could catch up to it, and Vidoni was left to jump, scream and dance her way back to her teammates, who mobbed her in joy.

A complete team effort, the win had contributions from everyone, whether it was a nice, slicing winner from Kyla Briscoe, dependable work from Tiffany Briscoe or inspired late-match serving from Ally Roberts.

Springing off the bench, the irrepressible Roberts combined with Kiel to provide a one-two punch that knocked Chimacum out cold.

First Kiel smoked a winner off the back line — allowing her dad Steve, calling lines, to about jump out of his skin calling the point for CHS — then Roberts twirled an ace that caught the very farthest corner of the court.

Hammer (11 kills), Strasburg (8) and Kiel (7) shared the power display, while Trujillo went low for 26 digs and Rose dealt out 22 assists.

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Jared Helmstadter, not afraid to show his eyeballs in regular glasses.

Jared Helmstadter was pleased with the day’s results. (Wendy McCormick photo)

Complete and utter domination.

Winning all seven matches, two by default, and even beating the onset of bad weather to keep their no-rainout streak alive for the season, the Coupeville High School boys’ tennis squad enjoyed a romp Friday afternoon.

By the time the Wolves were done bouncing visiting Chimacum all over the court, they had a 7-0 win, their third straight team match win.

Now 3-4 on the season, CHS will finish 2014 on the road, with matches at Klahowya, Sequim and Chimacum, before participating in its first 1A Olympic League postseason tourney.

With Chimacum only able to shepherd eight players on to the ferry and across to Whidbey, the Cowboys had to forfeit two of the four doubles contests.

The #3 and #4 Coupeville doubles duos played one-set matches against Chimacum players pulling double duty in matches that didn’t count into the team score.

Not that it mattered, since it was all Wolves, all day, regardless of the match.

The top two doubles spots both featured strong moments for Coupeville.

Loren Nelson, returning after illness cost him several matches, teamed with Connor McCormick for a win at first singles, while the #2 Wolf duo of Joseph Wedekind and John McClarin snagged their first win of the season.

Complete results:

1st Singles — Aaron Curtin beat Dylan Glessing 6-1, 6-3

2nd Singles — Sebastian Davis beat Johnny Rodgers 3-6, 6-2, 6-1

3rd Singles — Kyle Bodamer beat Ryle Gepitulan 6-1, 6-4

1st Doubles — Loren Nelson/Connor McCormick beat Sean Miller/Zack Smith 7-5, 6-0

2nd Doubles — John McClarin/Joseph Wedekind beat Nate Miller/Emmett Erickson 6-0, 6-1

3rd Doubles — William Nelson/Joey Lippo beat Kale Gonzalez/S. Miller 8-3

4th Doubles — Grey Rische/Jared Helmstadter beat Gepitulan/Smith 8-3

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Aaron Curtin (John Fisken photo)

Aaron Curtin, seen here in an earlier match, won in straight sets Thursday. (John Fisken photo)

“It was a wild day all around!”

Surviving a sketchy ferry schedule, a late arrival to its destination and several close matches, the Coupeville High School boys’ tennis squad escaped back to Whidbey, pizza in hand, with a tidy 5-2 win over Chimacum Thursday.

The second straight win for the Wolves, now 2-4 on the season, it left a huge smile on coach Ken Stange’s face.

Or maybe that was just the pizza.

“While we were on our way to the peninsula, we planned a victory dinner in advance,” Stange said. “Everyone kicked in five dollars so we could order Port Townsend’s best pizza.

“Big thanks go out to Ron and Sandra Bodamer, who picked up our order and had it waiting for us when we dashed onto the ferry,” he added. “The boys were loud and fun.

“What’s more, I didn’t even have to ask them to do a good job of cleaning up. I love those guys!”

Just getting across the water to play Chimacum, whose roster includes a lone PTHS player, was the toughest part of the day for Coupeville.

With the ferry system running only one-boat on the day, the Wolves were considerably late in arriving, forcing the teams to modify the normal two-out-of-three-sets format for several doubles matches.

With time running down and the ferry threatening to leave with the pizza, Coupeville went to tiebreakers to decide the final three doubles matches, winning two of them.

That capped a day that started with a stroll through the singles contests as all three Wolves (Aaron Curtin, Sebastian Davis and Kyle Bodamer) won in straight sets.

Sebastian and Kyle were on and off the court in short order, while Aaron faced a pesky defensive tennis player in the top slot,” Stange said. “Aaron’s opponent just wouldn’t go away.

“He kept chasing down Aaron’s big shots, but Aaron was able to consistently outlast the top Cowboy.”

Coupeville is now off for a week, with Chimacum scheduled to travel to Whidbey for a rematch Friday, Oct. 10.

No word on whether they’ll bring pizza with them.

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Aaron Curtin beat Dylan Glessing 6-3, 6-3

2nd Singles — Sebastian Davis beat Jonny Rogers 6-1, 6-2

3rd Singles — Kyle Bodamer beat Sean Miller 6-1, 6-1

1st Doubles — Joseph Wedekind/John McClarin lost to Ryle Gapitulan/Justin Tayler 6-1, 7-5

2nd Doubles — William Nelson/Joey Lippo beat Zach Smith/Chris Sevilla 6-2, 8-6

3rd Doubles — Grey Rische/Jared Helmstadter lost to Emmett Erickson/Nate Miller 3-6, 10-4, 9-8

4th Doubles — Connor McCormick/Jimmy Myers beat Kale Gonzalez/Connor Cottier 6-3, 10-8

JV:

Brian Shank/Aiden Crimmins beat John Bell/Gapitulan 7-5

“We only had time for one contest, but it was a good one!,” Stange said. “Brian and Aiden played really well, beating a team that featured half of Chimacum’s winning #1 doubles team!

“I was proud of their effort and hustle,” he added. “Brian was forceful with his racket. Aiden took the opposite approach, playing soft and smooth. Both were effective and they came out on top.”

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Travis Pennington

Travis Pennington

Pennington hauls in his second interception of the game during a win against Vashon last season.

Pennington hauls in his second interception of the game during a big win against Vashon last season.

With Coupeville leaving the 1A/2A Cascade Conference and joining Port Townsend, Chimacum and Klahowya in the 1A Olympic League this fall, now is a great time to learn a bit about some of the players who will face off with the Wolves in the future.

Travis Pennington picked a great time to have a breakout game last season.

Pennington, who will be a senior at Chimacum High School this year, picked off two passes to help the Cowboys beat Vashon Island 33-21 in a game that covered two days and ended at an unusual site.

The battle started on a Friday night at Memorial Field in Port Townsend, a stadium Chimacum shares with its closest rival.

Then, moments after Pennington’s second pick, a transformer fire killed the power and brought the game to a screeching halt with a little over five minutes left to play and Chimacum trailing 21-20.

Three days later, action was picked up at Chimacum High School — the first time any part of a game had been played at the high school since at least the 1970’s — and the Cowboys rallied for the win behind two scores from Alex Morris.

It was a season-defining win for a Chimacum squad that was bedeviled by injuries last season — Pennington was among a chunk of Cowboys who missed the season finale at Coupeville, sitting out a 54-0 non-conference blowout with a concussion.

The Vashon game, and his key role in the win, makes for a much better memory.

“We ended up winning in Chimacum, which was the first time in a few decades CHS has done that,” Pennington said. “I’m proud to be a part of something special like that.”

As he prepares for his final season, and another crack at Coupeville now that the schools have become league rivals and will play twice, Pennington is confident he can help bring leadership to the Cowboys.

“My goals are to teach the underclassmen how to work hard and play with pride,” he said. “Football is my favorite sport because it isn’t a one person sport. It takes a team to succeed.

“I enjoy the excitement and the competition of the game,” Pennington added. “My athletic strengths are studying my opponents strengths and weaknesses and I’m very loyal to my teammates.”

While he missed out on last year’s game against Coupeville, Pennington did play against the Wolves as a sophomore.

In that game, Chimacum held on for a wild 56-39 win on a sloppy, muddy field in Port Townsend in a game that featured ejections, a ref tackled in the end zone (on purpose) and 300-pound Wolf lineman Nick Streubel getting a rare hand-off and carrying five Cowboy players on his back as he crashed into the world’s biggest mud hole on the right sideline.

Regardless of how this year’s games play out, Pennington appreciates his time as a Cowboy, and the lessons he’s learned along the way.

“Most of my coaches that I have had made huge impacts on me,” he said. “For the past four years they have pushed me to be a better student, athlete, and man.”

When he does hang up his football helmet and pads, Pennington will look to finish his final year at Chimacum on a high note, combining education with fun.

“My interests, other then sports, are graduating high school, getting a college degree so I can provide for a family and having good times with friends.”

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Chimacum's most famous export.

Chimacum’s most famous export.

Small talk. It’s a big game.

As Coupeville prepares to move into a new league this fall, you may find yourself face-to-face with fans from new schools, trying to find a common ground.

Of course, you want to be prepared, ready to pepper your conversation with little tidbits of info that make the person on the other side think you know their town inside out.

You might be bluffing, but they’ll never know.

So, here we go, some meaningless facts on the three towns which will send schools into the new 1A Olympic League to vie with your Wolves for athletic supremacy.

You’re welcome.

Chimacum:

*Despite the town being named for the American Indians who once occupied the land (the Chimakum tribe) the school mascot is … the Cowboys. Awkward.

*Author Betty MacDonald grew up on a local chicken farm and turned her childhood into a best-selling book, “The Egg and I.” Later, the book was transformed into an Oscar-nominated film in 1947 starring Fred MacMurray and Claudette Colbert.

Ma and Pa Kettle, who were supporting characters in the original film, spun off into their own series. Nine movies were produced starring Marjorie Main and Percy Kilbride, and the series was so popular it saved Universal Studios from bankruptcy.

Given second life, the studio went on to release “Jaws,” “E.T.” and “Jurassic Park” in later years and celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2012.

*’70s folk singer Linda Perhacs, who worked with Daft Punk on their 2006 film “Electroma,” recorded a song called “Chimacum Rain.” You can listen to it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qb59WCJTs_Q

Port Townsend:

*Forget about Cowboys. The school nickname for 88 years was the Redskins, until a change (amid much heated debate on both sides) this year.

During the search for a new nickname, one of the finalists was Sasquatch, but it wasn’t to be, as the more mundane Redhawks won out.

*Legendary sci-fi writer Frank Herbert (“Dune“) and mountain climber Jim Whittaker, the first American to summit Mt. Everest, both called the town home at one point.

*Glass, a progressive rock trio that played in the ’60s and ’70s, including at the first Jimi Hendrix Memorial Concert, consists of three PTHS grads (Jeff Sherman, Greg Sherman, Jerry Cook).

After being bumped out by disco and punk, they vanished for a bit, then resurfaced in time for Y2K and are back at it again.

To sample some of their recent work, which has a “Twin Peaks” goes to church vibe, try: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Su_5AEpSuy0

Klahowya:

*Officially known as the Klahowya Secondary School, and servicing grades 7-12 in Silverdale, the school was a 2A school up through last year, and just slid under the cutoff to drop to 1A when the new counts were taken in the spring.

*The youngest of the four schools which will call the Olympic League home, KSS was opened for the 1996-1997 school year, and claimed a 2A state title in girls’ soccer in 1999.

*”Klahowya” is Chinook for “Greetings” and the name is currently plastered on an 800-passenger, 87-car ferry that plies the waters in the San Juans. It also graced a sternwheel steamer that operated on the Columbia River from 1910-1915.

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