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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Coupeville senior Chelsea Prescott plans to play volleyball at Medaille College in New York. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville’s Renaissance woman is going to New York.

CHS senior Chelsea Prescott, who can rip out and replace a toilet, fix a car, bake a cake, excel in every sport she plays, and do about a million other things, is taking her substantial skill-set to Medaille College.

While attending the private school in Buffalo, she’ll study to be a  Veterinary Tech, while also playing volleyball for the Mavericks.

Medaille, a member of the Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference, competes at the NCAA D-III level.

Prescott found the school through a recruiting website, and ultimately decided she was ready to travel across the USA in pursuit of her next set of challenges.

“So exciting!,” she said. “Even though the school is really far, I thought a change of scenery would be nice.”

Celebrating with fellow Wolves (l to r) Kylie Chernikoff, Maddie Vondrak, and Jaimee Masters. (Photo courtesy Coupeville volleyball)

Prescott has been at the forefront of Coupeville athletics in recent years, a standout through youth sports, middle school and high school.

In little league, she opted to play baseball most years instead of softball, and was one of her team’s top pitchers.

Middle school brought more success, including the time Prescott blasted a volleyball spike off of a rival player’s face — almost breaking the girl in half.

From day one of her freshman year at CHS, the multitalented Wolf has shone brightly on the volleyball court, basketball hardwood, and softball diamond.

Prescott went to the state tourney in her very-first semester at CHS, a young gun on a senior-dominated volleyball squad.

She was back at the big dance during her sophomore softball season, showcasing a booming bat, quick wheels, and a gun of an arm, which she often deployed from deep in the hole at shortstop.

That Wolf diamond team thumped highly-ranked Dear Park at the state tourney, and came within a play of upending Cle Elum.

Prior to Coupeville’s opener against eventual state champ Montesano, Prescott ripped a vicious foul ball which clanged off the leg of a rival coach who had been talking smack.

He had a pronounced limp the rest of the weekend, and a quieter mouth.

Covid prevented Prescott from getting back to state, cancelling her junior softball season last spring, and erasing any postseason activity during her senior year.

However, she has seized whatever moments have been granted her.

After teaming with longtime running mate Mollie Bailey to lead their final CHS softball squad to a 12-0 record this spring, Prescott is atop the stat sheet for a Wolf volleyball team which sits at 3-1.

Prescott leads the Wolves to a five-set win last Saturday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

While the pandemic will eventually fade, Prescott’s star will continue to rise.

Chelsea has shown a willingness, and ability, to adapt, filling her lockdown days with the aforementioned toilet and car repairs, as well as pressure washing a house, and keeping her academic skills sharp.

Wherever she goes in life, and whatever she does — sports or real-world stuff — she’ll continue to be a bright, shining supernova.

Of that, you can be dang sure.

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Hunter Smith drills a jumper back in the day. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coach can shoot.

Coupeville High School is reaching into its recent past to add to its coaching staff, with Hunter Smith coming out of retirement to take over the reigns of the JV boys basketball team.

Smith, a 2018 CHS grad, needs to be officially confirmed by the school board, but that’s 99.2% certain.

In a unique twist, Hunter replaces his dad, Chris Smith, who stepped down from the JV boys basketball job after moving off-Island.

The Wolf young guns will have a chance to learn from three of the program’s biggest stars of yesterday.

Smith rippled the nets for 847 points during his varsity hoops career, placing him 12th on the all-time CHS boys basketball scoring list.

Wolf varsity coach Brad Sherman is 8th on that chart, with 874 points, while volunteer assistant Greg White is 30th, having tallied 604 points on the high school hardwood.

In addition to his hoops highlights, Hunter Smith owns half the record board for CHS football, and was a star pitcher and shortstop for Wolf baseball.

The middle of Charlotte Young’s three children — trailing CJ and preceding ScoutHunter holds the school’s career records for receiving yards, receiving touchdowns, and interceptions.

He also holds single-season marks in all three of those categories, and the single-game record for receiving TD’s.

With the start of a pandemic-shortened basketball season just around the bend, Sherman and his assistants — longtime coach Randy Bottorff is helping out as well — are primed to go.

“Really excited to have Hunter coming onboard,” Sherman said. “To be able to bring in someone of such high character, who not only knows the game, but is passionate about the success of the program, is a huge win for our athletes.

Hunter is a great fit to lead our JV team and I know the whole coaching staff can’t wait to get started in a couple weeks.”

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Olivia Schaffeld leads off a collection of Coupeville High School fall sports portraits. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Time for your closeup.

We have portraits showing off the faces of Coupeville High School athletes from four traditional fall sports.

Volleyball, football, and girls and boys soccer are represented today, and come to us courtesy John Fisken.

To see his action pics, pop over to:

John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

Alex Jimenez

Katelin McCormick

Andrew Williams

Jordyn Rogers

Dakota Eck

Audrianna Shaw

Cole White

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Coupeville grad CJ Smith is a fully-commissioned officer with the Mercer Island Police Department. (Photo courtesy Charlotte Young)

He’s Instagram official.

Coupeville grad CJ Smith was sworn in as a fully-commissioned officer with the Mercer Island Police Department Monday, but he got that sweet little extra internet recognition Wednesday morning.

Smith, son of Chris Smith and Charlotte Young, and older brother of Hunter and Scout Smith, graduated from the Basic Law Enforcement Academy.

He spent five months-plus at the academy in Burien, receiving 720 hours of law enforcement training.

Now it’s on to the streets of Mercer Island, where the former Wolf three-sport star begins field training this week.

During his time in Coupeville, the man known as Captain Cool (at least in Coupeville Sports stories…) played football, basketball, and baseball for the Wolves.

CJ arrived in town midway through his sophomore year, and immediately made an impact in all three sports, with his work on the diamond garnering the biggest raves.

He pitched the Wolves to an Olympic League title in 2016, the first baseball crown for the program since 1991.

After high school graduation, CJ studied Criminal Justice and played baseball for Green River College alongside Hunter.

Making the jump from being a starting pitcher to a relief ace, CJ stormed out of the bullpen to become Auburn’s answer to Mariano Rivera, earning accolades as a shut-down closer.

 

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Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith, the hardest-working man in sports entertainment during the Age of Coronavirus, awaits the buzz of his phone signaling another schedule change. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Scritch-scratch, scritch-scratch, the pencil continues to mark up the schedule.

Pandemic concerns have erased three more games from the fall sports campaign, with Coupeville High School volleyball losing two matches, and boys soccer one game.

In the world of spikes and sets, both Darrington and La Conner have put their programs into two-week quarantines following positive Covid cases.

That means Coupeville x’s out a road trip to La Conner April 29, and a home match against Darrington May 1.

Over on the soccer pitch, the Wolf boys were scheduled to head to Grace Academy in Marysville Wednesday, but the Eagles announced Tuesday they couldn’t play.

From a quick look at the Grace Academy schedule, the school has eliminated its next three matches.

And we roll on, pencil in hand, eraser(s) at the ready, here in the Age of Coronavirus.

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