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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

They teach, you learn. (Photo courtesy Gerry Oliver)

One of the most-successful college softball programs in the nation is coming to Whidbey Island.

The University of Washington will hold a skills clinic October 26 at Oak Harbor High School for local softball players ages 8-17.

Cost is $75 for a 90-minute all-skills portion, or $50 for a 60-minute pitching clinic.

For registration info, pop back up to the photo above.

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Anya Leavell delivered her top performance of the season Monday, as Coupeville’s JV volleyball squad waged a war with King’s. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Taygin Jump was strong at the service line. (Brian Vick photo)

In one sense, they won. In another, they didn’t.

The Coupeville High School JV volleyball team came out scorching hot Monday, scared the crud out of visiting King’s, then fell in a three-set thriller.

But, while the final score of 12-25, 25-23, 25-19 went in favor of the Knights, the Wolves actually won more points on the night, coming out on top 67-62.

Yes, it’ll go down in the book as a loss, one which drops Coupeville’s second crew to a still perfectly-good 3-1 in North Sound Conference play, 5-2 overall.

But don’t think the Wolf young guns didn’t ruffle King’s, cause they certainly made the Knights coach turn a lovely shade of pink in the face as he had a spirited discussion with his players between sets.

It’s possibly because if he lost, the private school coach might have had to walk back to Shoreline.

I’m just saying, buses are for winners.

And, in the first set, the upstarts from Coupeville were taking a paddle to the richniks.

Wolf freshman Maddie Georges came out offering up serves which zipped over and around the King’s players outstretched hands, and things went from there.

Kylie Chernikoff, having herself quite the night, delivered a knee-shaking kill, then teammate Anya Leavell slid across the court and straight-up knifed the Knights, sticking the shiv in and twisting it.

On a play set up by a deadly Alita Blouin serve, Leavell ripped off a slicer which caught the very back end of the line, before skidding away out towards the road the King’s coach was contemplating having to walk home on.

Coupeville surged out to a double-digits lead in the first set, and never let the Knights recover.

At one point, the Wolves lashed three straight big-time kills, with Lucy Tenore swinging the hammer of the gods on a blast which sent her rivals running, before Chernikoff got downright nasty on back-to-back put-aways.

Whatever the King’s coach said to his players during the set break seemed to light a bit of a fire under their souls, as the second set was a war.

Coupeville continued to come up with huge plays, from Tenore skying above the net to stuff a shot, to Georges dropping a jump spike which caught the net and flopped over, to Taygin Jump zinging aces on her serve.

The second set saw nine ties, the last at 18-18, and the Wolves seemed on their way to a big win after a Chernikoff ace pushed CHS ahead 20-18.

But it wasn’t to be, as King’s surged on a 6-1 run, before Coupeville fought off two set points to pull back within 24-23.

For half a second, it looked like the Wolves would force yet another tie, but a spike which would have knotted things at 24-24 went an inch too far, and it was on to a third and deciding set.

Again, Coupeville played strongly, with Leavell and Chernikoff droppin’ spikes and Jump peppering the Knights with serves, as the Wolves forced nine more ties in the final frame.

King’s finally pulled ahead for good, however, and once it was up by five points, didn’t let the lead slip away.

The Wolves came strong until the end, with Tenore crushing a winner at the tail end of an epic rally in which both teams made great saves to keep the point going long after it should have ended.

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Net sensei Ken Stange and the CHS tennis team kicked off a busy week with a trip to Redmond. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s a busy week for the Wolf netters.

Barring any more rain, the Coupeville High School boys tennis team is scheduled to play four matches in the next five days as they hurtle towards the end of the regular season.

While other fall sports still have as much as half their schedule to play, the netters are set to wrap up action Oct. 15, before heading to the Emerald City League championships Oct. 19.

Monday afternoon a depleted Wolf roster was on the courts in Redmond, where they fell 5-0 to Overlake in a match far closer than that score might sound.

Coupeville, now 1-9 on the season, came within a tiebreaker of winning at first and second doubles.

The Wolves, who only have a nine-man roster at full strength, were missing two players Monday, which also meant they ended up forfeiting at #2 singles.

 

Complete Monday results:

1st Singles — Drake Borden lost 6-3, 6-0

2nd Singles — Forfeit

1st Doubles — James Wood/Mason Grove lost 6-2, 4-6, 10-8

2nd Doubles — Zach Ginnings/Andrew Aparicio lost 7-6(7-1), 3-6, 10-4

3rd Doubles — Miles Davidson/Thane Peterson lost 6-1, 6-3

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Freshman Lucy Tenore had two kills and a block off the bench for Coupeville High School’s varsity volleyball squad Monday, as the Wolves fell to King’s in a first-place showdown. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The bigger loss was an ankle injury which removed Chelsea Prescott from the lineup midway through the first set. (Cory Prescott photo)

One loss does not undo an outstanding season.

The Coupeville High School varsity volleyball team has been sailing along, winning its first seven matches by a wide margin.

That ended Monday.

Facing a King’s squad which looks like a state title contender, the Wolves were overpowered on their home court, falling 25-10, 25-7, 25-14.

The loss drops Coupeville to 3-1 in North Sound Conference play, 7-1 overall, while King’s (4-0, 7-0) takes sole possession of first place in the six-team conference.

But, as much as the defeat hurts in the moment — and the biggest pain comes from the loss of standout junior Chelsea Prescott, who suffered a vicious ankle injury — there is still half a season to play.

CHS has seven matches remaining, six in league play, including a rematch with King’s Oct. 24 in Shoreline, and plenty of time to respond to this gut-check.

First up is a home match Wednesday with Sultan, when the Wolves will also honor those who have fought against cancer.

They will be without Prescott, who crashed hard to the floor midway through the first set.

Early reports from the ER indicate a severe sprain, but no sign of a fracture.

Without one of their biggest hitters, and a player who plays all six rotations, the Wolves will need other players to step up and fill the big hole Prescott’s absence creates.

Monday night junior Kylie Chernikoff and freshman Lucy Tenore were called on for sub duty, and both played well under duress.

Tenore recorded two kills and a block while playing most of the third set, showing great promise for the future.

But it was hard for Coupeville to get anything going against King’s, which attacked from all sides, made few errors, and hit with tremendous power and precision.

The Knights are a tall, talented team, and with the exception of a couple of missed serves, they dictated play and gave the Wolves little to work with.

CHS came up with scattered big kills, such as in the first set, when Maya Toomey-Stout slammed a winner off the back corner, and Maddie Vondrak mashed another ball off an unlucky foe’s chest.

But too many times, the Wolves thought they had a winner, only to see King’s scrape the ball off the floor or chase it down in a faraway, dusty corner of the gym.

Once they had it back in play, the Knights were brutally-efficient in ending rallies, lashing winners which curved and exploded.

Coupeville’s best stand came in the third set, when it hung around until midway through the frame.

Wolf libero Emma Mathusek came up with her team’s best play on the night, flying in from the side to loft a perfectly-placed drop shot which landed into the smallest of gaps and skipped away for a winner.

Zoe Trujillo also delivered an especially-impressive service ace as her team fought off its fate.

Crunching the ball, she launched it down the left side of the court, dropping it right on the back-line as two King’s players watched in disbelief as it found pay-dirt.

Coupeville’s stats were muted in the loss, but Scout Smith led the way with nine assists and three digs.

Toomey-Stout and Hannah Davidson collected three kills to go with Tenore’s two, Vondrak had a block, and Mathusek scraped four digs off the floor.

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The voters have spoken, and BreAnna Boon is your Top Coach of the Fall. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The bigger school is back on top.

Breaking a run of three straight polls won by Coupeville Middle School coaches, CHS cheer guru BreAnna Boon has claimed the title of Top Coach of the Fall.

Boon, who finished second last year, held off CMS cross country coach, and defending champion, Elizabeth Bitting, to win a slug-fest which drew 8,000+ votes over the past 50 hours.

While there’s no physical award, the internet fame, and resulting warm glow in the chest of the winner, is undeniable.

Boon, who led most of the way, then put the hammer down early Monday, finished with 3,081 votes to Bitting’s 2,219.

Rounding out the top five were three newcomers to the world of Coupeville Sports coaching polls.

CHS C-Team volleyball coach Krimson Rector (995 votes), CHS cross country coach Luke Samford (341), and CMS boys soccer coach Reese Cernick (254) all had strong showings in a field of 21 coaches.

While she didn’t win, CMS volleyball coach Jenna Vester had the biggest climb in the waning hours, jumping from 19th to 6th as the contest wore down.

With Top Coach of the Fall voting in the books, there have been six coaching polls run by Coupeville Sports, with CHS and CMS now having split at 3-3.

Past winners include Ryan King (CHS football), Randy King (CHS track), Bitting (CMS cross country), Dante and DeAndre Mitchell (CMS basketball), and Jon Gabelein (CMS track).

Now, it’s on to Top Coach of the Winter in a few months, when Boon will have a chance to go back-to-back, if she can best the combined forces of CHS and CMS basketball.

Time to get in some training now.

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