Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘CMS Wolves’

Aram Leyva (left), seen here at a CHS girls' soccer game, had a hat trick Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

   Aram Leyva (left), seen here scoping out the action at a CHS girls’ soccer game, had a hat trick Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

Put them out of their misery fast.

That’s what Aram Leyva and his teammates on the North Whidbey Deception FC-01 boys’ soccer squad wanted to do Saturday.

Playing a team that was greatly over-matched, the Deception, fueled by their Coupeville mercenaries, romped to a 5-0 win in a game that could have had twice as big a margin.

Leyva took care of a huge chunk of the scoring responsibilities, raining down a hat trick, then tossed in an assist to go with his three goals.

Fellow Wolves Matthew Kelley and Sage Downes banged home the team’s other two goals, while Kelley also collected an assist.

Read Full Post »

(Alysabeth Bonifas photo)

   Wolf 7th graders (l to r) Ivy Leedy, Lacy McCraw-Shirron, Jaimee Masters and Alexis Czarnik bask in the glow of their first win. (Alysabeth Bonifas photo)

We're coming for all your wins! (Konni Smith photo)

We’re coming for all your wins! (Konni Smith photo)

No answers.

That’s what Chimacum had Thursday, as the Coupeville Middle School volleyball squads thrashed their visitors in straight sets to kick off a new season.

Both Wolf squads were made up of players who were too tall, too quick, too efficient, too confident, too composed and too talented for the overwhelmed Eagles to have much of a fighting chance.

Whether it was the tall, graceful “Terminator Twins” — big-hitting CMS 7th graders Morgan Pease and Chelsea Prescott — or the unstoppable force of nature known as Melia Welling, who served 18 straight winners during one stretch in the 8th grade match, Coupeville was on point all afternoon.

The 7th graders presented new head coach Casie Dunleavy with a 25-12, 25-15, 25-23 win that was much more of a rout than the score might indicate, before the Wolf 8th graders cruised 25-6, 25-15, 25-8.

Wolf prodigy Savannah Smith kick-started the rampage, reeling off five straight points at the service stripe, to open the 7th grade match.

The younger sister of high school VB star Emma Smith, Savannah might have run the entire first set, but 7th grade matches require a change of servers after five points, giving Chimacum a brief moment to catch its breath.

At which point Prescott, a lean, mean, fastball-firing machine on the baseball diamond, slid behind the service stripe and unleashed a shot that burned the top of the net on its way across and scattered the Eagle returners like so many falling pins on a bowling alley.

With Jaimee Masters, Emily Fiedler, Megan Behan and Genna Wright all taking turns dominating on serve (Wright was unleashing cannon shots), CMS cruised.

Then Prescott and Pease took control and Chimacum’s players all started edging closer and closer to the protection of the bench.

At 23-15 in the second set, Prescott skied high and delivered the afternoon’s one truly scary spike, shredding her foes kneecaps with a laser.

When she added an especially hard-hit ace in the third set, it looked like it would be the most fearsome serve of the day, until Pease went her one better, unleashing a bomb that exploded off the back-line and drilled itself into the gym wall.

Coupeville High School players in the stands exchanged side glances and began to mentally compute if they’ll still be in school when the Terminator Twins arrive on the scene.

More than one sigh of relief was heard from current juniors and seniors.

The 8th graders are just a year away from the big time, but Welling is already ready in many ways.

Coming up third as a server, after Hannah Davidson and Ashleigh Battaglia combined to stake Coupeville to a narrow 7-6 lead in the first set, Welling went off.

It wasn’t just that she ripped off 18 straight winners, but that she did it with every serve echoing through the gym, every serve kicking around, aces slamming off of the shoes of Chimacum players while Welling’s smile got larger and larger.

The few times the Eagles managed to return the ball, Coupeville promptly ended the rally, with Emma Mathusek and Welling sliding into position for picture-perfect tips.

The Wolves actually won 23 straight points, with Scout Smith dropping the hammer for five straight points to open the second set.

Only a serve that narrowly went wide stopped the rampage, but, even then, it was but a small bump in the road.

No matter who CMS 8th grade coach Sadi Foltz sent to the line, the Wolves responded in style.

Willow Vick reeled off six straight, with Jillian Mayne putting away one winner on a tip that froze three Eagles.

Later it was Zoe Trujillo and Maya Toomey-Stout coming up with winners, while Lucy Sandahl and Cassidy Moody combined on back-to-back big hustle plays.

In the end, it may have been only one match. But it felt like a coronation for both Wolf teams.

The future is here, and it is an exciting one for Coupeville volleyball.

Read Full Post »

Sean Toomey-Stout (far left) was a rampaging force of nature on both sides of the ball Wednesday afternoon. (Deb Smith photo)

   Sean Toomey-Stout (far left) was a rampaging force of nature on both sides of the ball Wednesday afternoon. (Deb Smith photos)

CMS coach Bob Martin

   CMS coach Bob Martin (red hat) and his staff meet with their players after the game.

There is a wild beast stalking the sidelines.

Coupeville Middle School eighth grader Sean Toomey-Stout isn’t the biggest football player on the field, but he never stops attacking.

Quick, nimble, explosive and fearless, prone to pulling off highlight reel moves just like older brother Cameron, he was the main attraction Wednesday afternoon.

While Toomey-Stout’s heroics weren’t enough to lift the Wolves to a win — CMS fell 27-0 to visiting Stevens, a school that boasts 600+ students — his play, especially in the second half, gave Coupeville fans something to holler about.

After surrendering all 27 points in the first half, the Wolves clamped down on defense after the break, hitting with more aggression the further into the game they got.

Toomey-Stout single-handedly changed Stevens flow, forcing the visitors to go four and out on a series in which the rampaging Wolf made four consecutive tackles in the back field.

The most bone-crunching of the smack-downs came on an aborted pitch, as Toomey-Stout arrived at the exact moment the startled Stevens rusher felt the ball start to graze his fingertips.

A millisecond later, he was flat on his back, and asking if anyone saw the bus that had just flattened him.

Not content to star on just one side of the ball, Toomey-Stout followed up his defensive stand with Coupeville’s best offensive play of the game.

Taking a pitch from Wolf quarterback Dawson Houston, Sean the Shifty went on a twisty rampage, bolting through and around almost all 11 would-be tacklers before finally being hauled down 42 yards from where he started.

Unfortunately, Coupeville’s lack of a battering ram in the red zone prevented them from scoring on the drive, as the Wolves stalled out at the five-yard line after Toomey-Stout’s rampage.

Stevens, however, had a battering ram. Well, more than just one.

Their running backs and a chunk of their line looked like they were already in high school, and they spent the early stages of the game just running straight at, and straight through, Coupeville’s undersized defenders.

With several players already dinged up, and others forced to play out of position, the Wolves opened the game tentative, before getting their second wind and an injection of steel into their collective spines.

The first jolt came from Toomey-Stout (who else?), but then Gavin Knoblich, Trystan Ford, Trevor Bell and Jean Lund-Olsen all stepped up with strong defensive plays of their own.

Houston, when he had time to set up and throw, looked sharp on several heaves, with his best target being Toomey-Stout.

Read Full Post »

Chelsea

   Chelsea Prescott is one of several CMS 7th graders who have already begun to make an athletic name for themselves. (John Fisken photos)

Maya

Prescott will join grizzled vets like 8th grader Maya Toomey-Stout.

There are some new spikers in town.

High school volleyball has already been going for a bit, but Coupeville Middle School officially kicks off a new season Thursday, when the Wolves play host to Chimacum at 3:30 PM.

CMS has 26 players on its roster currently, with an almost perfect mix of eighth graders and seventh graders.

Among the names to watch, returning stars like Scout Smith, Zoe Trujillo and Maya Toomey-Stout.

And, while I don’t have much of a feel for what the Wolf seventh graders have to offer yet, two names pop out.

Genna Wright is the final child from a family of top-drawer athletes, following in the footsteps of older siblings Aaron and Sarah, while Chelsea Prescott has already made a name for herself as a little league baseball pitcher.

The rosters, as they stand now:

8th grade:

Ashleigh Battaglia
Luci Coleburn
Hannah Davidson
Natalie Hollrigel
Emma Mathusek
Jillian Mayne
Cassidy Moody
Lucy Sandahl
Scout Smith
Maya Toomey-Stout
Zoe Trujillo
Raven Vick
Willow Vick
Melia Welling

7th grade:

Megan Behan
Kylie Chemikoff
Alexis Czarnik
Emily Fieldler
Ivy Leedy
Catherine Lhamon
Jaimee Masters
Lacy McCraw-Shirron
Morgan Pease
Chelsea Prescott
Savannah Smith
Genna Wright

Read Full Post »

Matthew Kelley (6) fights for control of the ball. (Pat Kelley photo)

Matthew Kelley (6) fights for control of the ball. (Pat Kelley photos)

Aram Leyva (left) celebrates his goal.

Aram Leyva (left) celebrates his goal.

A few more grey hairs for the coach, but a win to save the day.

Despite squandering a three-goal lead, the North Whidbey Deception FC-01 boys’ soccer squad escaped with a thrilling 4-3 win over its Crossfire arch-rivals Saturday, thanks largely to its Coupeville mercenaries.

Matthew Kelley poked home the winning goal, off of an assist from fellow Wolf Aram Leyva, to pull out the victory.

With time running down, Leyva forced an attack on the goal, then slid the ball to Kelley, who drew the net-minder out.

Once he had the Crossfire goalie in no man’s land, Kelley popped the ball over his head for the eventual winning score.

The comeback was necessitated after the Crossfire, who had tied the Deception in two previous meetings, ripped off three straight goals to climb back into the game.

Whidbey had jumped out to a large lead off of a penalty kick, a goal set up by Kelley and a booming score from 20-yards out off of Leyva’s toe.

The win sent the Deception into sole possession of first place in their league.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »