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Mikayla Elfrank (John Fisken photos)

   Wolves Tiffany Briscoe (left) and Mikayla Elfrank vie for a rebound. (John Fisken photo)

Five days, four teams, two berths in the state tournament.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad will be traveling back and forth to Bellarmine Prep High School this week, making two, and possibly, three trips to Tacoma, as it seeks postseason glory.

The Wolves open the double-elimination portion of the West Central District 3 tourney 6:00 PM Tuesday against Seattle Christian.

Bellevue Christian and Cascade Christian follow at 7:45 on the same “neutral” court.

Win or lose Tuesday, Coupeville returns on Thursday for another game, with a possible third visit set for Saturday.

With just two state berths available to District 3 (down from three last season), Coupeville has to win twice to punch its ticket to be one of the state’s final 16 teams for a second straight year.

You can check out the bracket here:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2187&sport=12

The postseason match-up with Seattle Christian will be the third in as many years for the Wolves.

SC knocked Coupeville out of the playoffs in 2015, winning an overtime thriller 50-44, before the Wolves rebounded to drill the Warriors 49-33 last year.

That CHS win punched a ticket to state for the first time in a decade, while sending Seattle Christian home.

Coupeville’s reputation as road warriors — they played 12 of 19 away from home, including an unprecedented eight straight, yet still went 9-3 on the road — will come into play.

The Wolves travel 91.4 miles one way to Bellarmine Prep (2300 S. Washington St. in Tacoma), further than the other three teams combined.

For some background info on each of the teams, check out these capsules:

 

Coupeville:

Season record: 15-4

Seed: Olympic League #1

Coach: David King

Tallest player: Lindsey Roberts – 5’10

Smallest player: Lauren Rose – 5’2

Miles to Bellarmine Prep: 91.4

Most recent trip to state: 2016

Student body size (WIAA classification count): 227

Mascot: Wolves

RPI ranking: #13

ScoreCzar ranking: #27

 

Bellevue Christian:

Season record: 16-4

Seed: Nisqually League #1

Coach: Mark DeJonge

Tallest player: Molly Olson – 6’1

Smallest player: Elizabeth Lew – 5’3

Miles to Bellarmine Prep — 38.0

Most recent trip to state: 2016

Student body size (WIAA classification count): 254.50

Mascot: Vikings

RPI ranking: #6

ScoreCzar ranking: #8

 

Seattle Christian:

Season record: 15-2

Seed: Nisqually League #2

Coach: Dave Jansen

Tallest player: Julia Seibel – 6’1

Smallest player: Olivia Clark – 5’4

Miles to Bellarmine Prep: 35.1

Most recent trip to state: 2012

Student body size (WIAA classification count): 171.75

Mascot: Warriors

RPI ranking: #19

ScoreCzar ranking: #11

 

Cascade Christian:

Season record: 9-11

Seed: Nisqually League #3

Coach: Bryan Peterson

Tallest player: Mindy McCreary and Shelaine Lorenz – 5’10

Smallest player: Kinsley Nohr – 5’4

Miles to Bellarmine Prep: 11.5

Most recent trip to state: 2015

Student body size (WIAA classification count): 239.75

Mascot: Cougars

RPI ranking: #28

ScoreCzar ranking: #20

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Emma Smith

   The last second before a once-happy volleyball discovered the true meaning of pain, thanks to the ferocious Emma Smith. (John Fisken photos)

Valen Trujillo

   Ally Roberts (left) and Hope Lodell (right) flank Valen Trujillo as she goes low for the 22,709th return of her stellar career.

bench

   The Wolf bench, caught up in the back-and-forth of a five-set thriller with Klahowya in a jam-packed CMS gym.

Lauren Rose

Trujillo and Lauren Rose, warriors and friends.

Tiffany

Tiffany Briscoe drops the boom on Charles Wright Academy.

payton

Payton Aparicio’s fan club shows the Wolf ace some love.

Mikayla Elfrank

Mikayla Elfrank gets artful, nimbly firing a winner between two Tarriers.

team

One team, one dream.

They went out with a bang.

Having put together the best season by a Coupeville High School volleyball team since 2004, the Wolf spikers fought until the final point Saturday at districts.

Along for the ride, camera in hand and hopping back and forth between gyms, was local paparazzi John Fisken, who delivers us the pics above.

To see more (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/VB-20161105-Coupeville-Distric/

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Hope Lodell (John Fisken photo)

   Hope Lodell, seen here firing a serve in an earlier match, became the first Wolf to top 100 aces in a single season. (John Fisken photos)

team

At 11-6, this year’s varsity had the most wins by a CHS team since 2004.

In the moment, it’s rough.

Later, when a little time has passed, it will be easier to appreciate all that was accomplished.

The Coupeville High School volleyball squad, playing for first-year head coach Cory Whitmore, put together the best season the school has seen since 2004.

The Wolves went 11-6, ran away with the 1A Olympic League title at 8-1 and smashed several school records, both individual and team, at the service stripe.

With a JV which went 12-2 overall, 9-0 in league play and a C-Team which finished 3-1, Coupeville’s spikers combined to win nearly 75% of their matches, finishing 26-9 as a program.

The varsity can return 11 of 14 players next season, and the coaching trio of Whitmore, Kristin Bridges and Ashley Herndon seem to be sitting on the cusp of something special.

But the reality is it will take a bit for everyone involved to be able to sit back and fully enjoy the heights they reached in 2016.

That’s largely because they still want to be playing, and they came so close to making it a reality.

The Wolves, playing on their home court Saturday, pushed Charles Wright Academy to four sets in their district playoff opener, then lost a heart-breaker of a five-set war with Klahowya.

Had they been able to convert on their one match point and put the Eagles away, CHS would have moved on to play Cascade Christian.

Instead, Coupeville was left on the outside looking in, as the Cougars quickly drilled Klahowya to join district champ CWA in advancing to state.

Match One:

The Wolves pushed Charles Wright hard, splitting the first two sets and trailing just 14-13 in the third set, before the Tarriers rode the heavy hitting of sophomore Abbie Jackson to a 25-15, 22-25, 25-14, 25-18 victory.

Jackson, who stands five-foot-eleven and hits like she’s pounding spikes on the railroad, got her feet tangled at one point and crashed hard to the ground in the early going.

She stayed there for a bit, her face screwed up in pain as her coach checked her out, but she eventually got back up and then started inflicting the pain on the ball, rat-a-tatting winner after winner.

That allowed CWA to put together several substantial runs that stung the Wolves.

Charles Wright closed the first set on a 13-5 run and broke the match open by sealing the third set on a final 11-1 charge.

In between, Coupeville roared out to a big lead in the second set, then held off another of those late Tarrier charges.

After Mikayla Elfrank pasted a winner to force a side out, Hope Lodell stepped to the line and ripped off seven straight winners on her serve to stake CHS to an 8-0 lead.

The winners included her 100th ace of the season, making Lodell the first Wolf to reach that mark.

Coupeville continued to press the advantage, using the high-soaring Katrina McGranahan and Emma Smith, who were a super-effective tip machine duo all afternoon, to stretch the lead out further and further.

When Tiffany Briscoe bashed a winner down the line, the Wolves were up 18-8 and rockin’ and rollin’.

Then came a Tarrier charge, as they sliced the lead all the way back down to 23-21.

Smith was having none of it, however, blunting the charge with two big winners to seal the set.

The first came on a spike which skipped off several arms as it blew by, while the final was a beauty that caught the last flake of paint on the back line.

Even after the late collapse in the third set, the Wolves continued to stage a solid resistance. They were as close as 13-11 in the final set, but then Jackson went to work once again.

Match Two:

Moving across the hallway to the Coupeville Middle School gym, the Wolves stared down their 1A Olympic League rivals for the fourth time this season, and for the third time went the distance.

But, after winning two of three from Klahowya in the regular season, Coupeville got nipped at the worst possible moment, falling 15-25, 25-15, 25-18, 17-25, 16-14.

The two teams went after each other like boxers who mutually decide to stand in the middle of the ring and bash each other in the face until one finally falls.

The final set, played in front of a capacity, and very loud, crowd, had eight ties and saw Coupeville scrap back from a 9-5 deficit to put itself on match point at 14-13.

Lodell skipped several more aces past the Eagles, Payton Aparicio had a huge winner in the heart of the pressure cooker and the Wolf back line made save after save to prolong the day.

Valen Trujillo and Lauren Rose chased down balls that should have been Eagle winners and the biggest play of the day may have been delivered by Ally Roberts.

Throwing out her fist at the last second, the senior spark-plug punched a Klahowya spike an inch away from her face, and not only got the ball back over the net, but directed it through a wall of Eagles for a winner.

With both teams staggering, fans hyperventilating and the small gym getting steamy, KHS reached down deep and found a final miracle.

A picture-perfect tip split the Wolf defense, held off match point and knotted things at 14, before Coupeville misfired on the game’s final two rallies.

One ball caught the net, held for a second, then flopped back into CHS territory, before a Wolf spike went long on Klahowya’s first match point.

Coupeville dominated the first set, as Smith, playing in front of aunt, and former Wolf volleyball legend Joli (Smith) Bartell, was unstoppable at the net.

Tiredness seemed to hammer the Wolves hard in sets two and three (though Allison Wenzel came off the bench to give CHS a late boost with a run at the service stripe), but they got their mojo back in set four.

Ashley Menges grooved a gorgeous ace that left the Eagles standing around slack-jawed as it flew by and caught the back-line, then Smith unloaded a spike that was so vicious it made everyone think CWA’s Jackson might have taken possession of her soul for a play.

The district tourney brought an end to the stellar prep volleyball careers of Roberts, Briscoe and Trujillo, a trio who have played together since middle school.

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Joey Lippo

Joey Lippo contemplates attacking the cameraman. (John Fisken photos)

William Nelson

William Nelson gets elegant.

Now they wait six months and hope for a miracle.

Coupeville High School netters William Nelson and Joey Lippo went back to Tacoma Tuesday for one more round of postseason action, but failed to get the win they needed to guarantee their season would continue.

The Wolf juniors got stronger as the match progressed, but couldn’t overcome their private school foes, falling 6-1, 7-5 to Micha Wibowo and Jack Jorgenson of Charles Wright Academy.

With the win, the CWA duo claimed second place at the 1A West Central District tennis tourney, giving the Tarriers a sweep of the top two doubles slots.

Wibowo and Jorgenson will join district champs Dylan Sam and Raghav Agrawal at the state tourney in Yakima next spring.

For the Coupeville pair, who finished third in a field of eight teams at districts, their season is 99.98% done.

Why not 100%?

Because Washington state high school sports are a mess.

Some schools play boys tennis in the fall (like CHS), while a ton wait until the spring.

With that in mind, the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association doesn’t announce state tourney allocations for each district until May, regardless of when that district plays.

Coupeville’s current home, District 3, is guaranteed two state slots, and there’s a (very) slim chance of landing a third.

Which means you can hold onto hope even if longtime Wolf coach Ken Stange admitted earlier in the week it would be “very unlikely.”

Of course, six months is a long time, and if something were to happen to either Charles Wright duo (skiing accidents? alien abduction? bribes?), Coupeville is first up as an alternate, as well.

If nothing else, Nelson and Lippo, who should be playing soccer and baseball, respectively, when spring arrives, led a strong Wolf showing in the postseason.

After winning its second straight 1A Olympic League title, Coupeville advanced eight netters to districts, most of any team there, and most in Stange’s decade-plus run as the school’s net guru.

Singles players Nick Etzell and Jakobi Baumann and doubles duos Joseph Wedekind/John McClarin and Grey Rische/Jimmy Myers joined Lippo and Nelson at districts.

Of that group, Etzell, Baumann, Lippo and Nelson are underclassmen and can return next season.

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Wolf netters William Nelson (top, left) and Joey Lippo will hitch a ride to Tacoma Tuesday with coach Ken Stange. (John Fisken photos)

   William Nelson (top, left) and Joey Lippo will hitch a ride to Tacoma Tuesday with coach Ken Stange. Win and they’re off to state this spring. (John Fisken photos)

They enjoyed Tacoma so much they’re going back.

Coupeville High School juniors William Nelson and Joey Lippo won two of three matches Thursday at the 1A West Central District tennis tourney, keeping their state dreams alive.

The Wolf duo and coach Ken Stange will return to the Sprinker Tennis Center Tuesday, Nov. 1 for one more match.

Lippo and Nelson will face Micha Wibowo and Jack Jorgenson of Charles Wright Academy to decide 2nd and 3rd place, with the winner punching their tickets to state.

The loser Tuesday might (and it’s a very big might) also advance, as high school tennis in Washington state is a complicated mess.

With some schools playing in the fall and others in the spring, state is not held until May 26-27 in Yakima.

Along with the delay, the WIAA also doesn’t release allocations for each district until the spring.

That means District 3, where Coupeville plays, won’t know if it gets two or three slots to state for months.

For now, the district champs (Dylan Sam and Raghav Agrawal of CWA) are definitely in, as are the winners Tuesday.

To get to that match, Lippo and Nelson had to knock off their own teammates, beating CHS seniors Joseph Wedekind and John McClarin for the first time this season.

The older duo had been Coupeville’s #1 doubles team for two seasons.

The Wolves were strongly represented at districts, with eight players. Charles Wright had six, Klahowya four and Cascade Christian and Vashon Island three apiece.

It was the final tourney for Coupeville seniors Wedekind, McClarin, Jimmy Myers and Grey Rische.

Complete Thursday results:

Singles:

Nick Etzell

Lost to Zane Mian (CWA) 6-0, 6-1
Lost to Jimmy Opitz (CWA) 6-1, 6-2

Jakobi Baumann

Lost to Jack Hannah (CC) 6-0, 6-1
Lost to Caden Haga (K) 6-0, 6-3

Joseph Wedekind/John McClarin

Lost to Mason Rice/Finley Oswald (V) 7-6(7-3), 7-6(7-5)
Beat Grey Rische/Jimmy Myers (CP) 6-3, 4-6, 6-3
Lost to Joey Lippo/William Nelson (CP) 6-1, 6-3

Joey Lippo/William Nelson

Beat Wulf/Bartels (CC) 6-7(4-7), 6-4, 6-3
Lost to Dylan Sam/Raghav Agrawal (CWA) 6-1, 6-2
Beat Wedekind/McClarin (CP) 6-1, 6-3

Grey Rische/Jimmy Myers

Lost to Jack Jorgenson/Micha Wibowo (CWA) 6-3, 6-0
Lost to Wedekind/McClarin (CP) 6-3, 4-6, 6-3

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