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Posts Tagged ‘Ema Smith’

Ema Smith

   Ema Smith did “an awesome job in box” while sharing goaltender duties with Lauren Grove Tuesday night. (John Fisken photos)

Mallory Kortuem

   Mallory Kortuem (left) and Megan DePorter (23) both had strong games against 2A Sequim.

Troy Cowan had a quandary.

As Coupeville High School girls soccer coach, he wants to win every time his team takes the pitch.

That being said, he went into play Tuesday at Sequim with a checklist of items: several key players with nagging injuries, multiple bench players who hadn’t seen much action and the knowledge the game, as a non-conference affair, wasn’t life or death.

So, Cowan took the practical route, sitting starting defender Lindsey Roberts (“she desperately needed a day of rest”), playing back-up goalie Ema Smith for a half and running in every one of his subs for substantial playing time.

And Coupeville still largely held its own against a 2A squad while playing on the road.

While Sequim slipped a pair of second-half goals into the net to escape with a 2-0 victory, Cowan came away 99% pleased with what he saw (he still wanted a win).

“It was a loss but felt like a win,” he said “The girls played really awesome; I am so proud of all of them!”

The defeat drops Coupeville to 6-4-1 on the season.

The Wolves have another non-conference game Saturday at Bellevue Christian, before they begin their final run of league games.

CHS currently sits at 4-1, a half-game off of Klahowya (4-0) for first place in the 1A Olympic League.

With Roberts idle and Lauren Bayne running at about 50%, Cowan juggled his defensive lineup, even moving goaltender Lauren Grove out of the net and into the field after a scoreless first half.

With Grove set to graduate this spring, sophomore Ema Smith is her heir apparent and she got a rare chance to anchor the defense against Sequim.

Ema did an awesome job in box,” Cowan said. “She came out strong and stopped several scoring attempts and her drop kick was impressive.”

He also praised the play of Megan Thorn, Cassidy Moody and foreign exchange student Fanny Deprelle, as well as young guns Tia Wurzrainer and Mallory Kortuem.

“Those two did a terrific job tonight and worked really well together!,” Cowan said.

Two Wolf stars, midfielder Sage Renninger and defender Megan DePorter, anchored the squad all night.

Sage was our offensive spark plug tonight, winning so many balls and starting our offensive runs,”Cowan said. “She was just tremendous tonight and really leads by example.

Megan was our lifesaver. Multiple times Sequim had what looked like sure goal scoring breakaways and from out of nowhere came screaming Megan to save the day!!,” he added.

“She really found another gear tonight and was absolutely fearless.”

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JV players listen intently to Wolf coach David King during a timeout. (Amy King photos)

  JV players listen intently to Wolf coach David King during a timeout. (Amy King photos)

Shark Bait

Each group of players have marked their room this week.

team

Still standing (even if some of them are sitting).

crossword

   Senior Kailey Kellner (left) leads her group as they work on a basketball crossword during a team competition.

Big, Bad Wolves

The Big, Bad Wolves get extra credit for their animal-drawing skills.

outside

King takes his pep talk outside, proving the sun still shines outside the gym.

t-shirt

The team’s extremely snazzy camp t-shirt.

Pray for David King.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball coach is down in Ocean Shores for four days, one lone man adrift in a sea of 20 women.

Wife/assistant coach/team photographer Amy King and 19 Wolf hoops stars are his companions, as Coupeville takes part in their annual summer hoops camp.

Long hours are the norm, with Coupeville playing between 16-18 games this year.

Having an unusually large number of players making the commitment this time, the surging Wolves, two-time defending 1A Olympic League champs, are fielding both a varsity and JV squad.

Each team opened with two games Monday, another three Tuesday, play twice Wednesday (with some time set aside to hit the beach) and then close Thursday with at least one and possibly two more games.

With tons of teams in play, the earliest start time has been 7 AM, and the latest midnight, though (so far) the Wolves have not gone earlier than 8 AM or later than 10 PM.

Toss in injuries — two CHS players have gone down, one after having her head landed on, another with a tweaked finger, though both were able to return later — and the coaches are busy bees.

“It’s long days,” said David King,who plans to sleep for a month upon returning home. “Other than that, we are all surviving.”

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Ema Smith (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf hoops star Ema Smith (bottom) gets a pregame hug from her #1 fan, Kalia Littlejohn. (John Fisken photos)

messner

   Home from college, Hall o’ Famer Breeanna Messner (green coat) multitasks, doing mom Aimee Bishop’s hair while catching up with grandpa Paul Messner.

grad years

   CHS sports legends Messner, Courtney Arnold (center) and Hailey Hammer compare graduation years.

"You guys are OLLLLLLLLLDDDDDD!"

“You guys are OLLLLLLLLLDDDDDD!”

CJ and Syl

   CJ Smith has got this worked out. Hang around dance queen Sylvia Hurlburt, and the camera will come to you.

Vidoni

   It’s a mini-reunion of the 2014-2015 league champ CHS girls’ hoops squad, as (l to r) Monica Vidoni, Wynter Thorne and Kacie Kiel make it back to town.

Curtin

   That moment when former CHS Athlete of the Year Aaron Curtin (far left) can’t decide whether he left the stove on or not.

ema

“You go out and kick some butt for mama, lil’ pookie!!”

Sometimes I think they could skip playing the games altogether.

Just open the gym, put folks into the stands and let travelin’ photo man John Fisken loose with his camera, and all would be well.

Cause, long after the scores have faded, the pics remain, painting a portrait of Wolf Nation.

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Ashlie Shank (John Fisken photo)

   Ashlie Shank, mere seconds before she won the game for Coupeville Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

The youngest one is making a play for the throne.

Coupeville High School freshman Ashlie Shank has been living in the athletic shadow cast by older brothers Matt and Brian, but Friday night she seized the spotlight all for herself.

Nailing a running jumper a tick before the buzzer, she completed a wild final play and lifted the Wolf JV girls’ basketball team to a thrilling come-from-behind 26-24 win over visiting Klahowya.

The victory, which kept CHS girls’ basketball perfect in 1A Olympic League play (the Wolf varsity and JV are a combined 20-0 since the league debuted last year), lifted the JV to 2-3 overall, 1-0 in league play.

And it only happened thanks to a game-ending surge and a final play that worked to perfection.

Having snagged the ball with the game tied and the clock madly ticking down, Ema Smith shot up the right side of the court.

As a defender lurched at her, the Wolf frosh rose up and lobbed the ball to Kyla Briscoe, who caught it, whirled and found Shank in stride.

With no hesitation at all, Shank went straight at the hoop, pulling up at the last second and letting fly with a soft lil’ jumper that splashed nothing but net.

As the ball dropped through, hitting the floor, the clock went under two seconds, and all Klahowya could do was throw a full-court desperation heave that only traveled less than half the distance before crashing back to Earth.

Shank’s dagger capped an 8-2 run to close the game for the Wolves.

After leading for the entire first half, Coupeville briefly lost the advantage in the third, then regained it, only to give it right back thanks to a stretch of ice-cold shooting.

Trailing 22-18, the Wolves got huge plays from Smith, who banged home a rebound to cut the margin to two, and Briscoe, who hit back-to-back jumpers.

Her only two buckets of the game, the first one forced a 22-22 tie, then the second one re-knotted the game at 24 after Klahowya had reclaimed the lead off of an offensive rebound.

The Eagles had the ball and a chance to take the lead, but failed against a hawkish defense employed by five Wolves who had listened to coach Amy King in the timeout huddle and came out aggressive but smart.

That set up Smith to Briscoe to Shank, which will now reside in lore when folks talk about great finishes at Coupeville hoops games.

Shank and Lauren Rose paced the Wolves with seven points apiece, with Rose dropping all of her points in the first half, when she was a one-woman wrecking crew.

Her steal and breakaway bucket, coming on the heels of a softly arcing jumper from Maddy Hilkey, gave Coupeville its biggest lead at 5-0.

Smith and Briscoe added four apiece, while Hilkey and Allison Wenzel each chipped in with a bucket to round out the scoring stats.

Skyler Lawrence didn’t score, but thoroughly controlled the paint, ripping down rebound after rebound, staring down any Eagle who dared to put a finger on the ball.

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team (Amy KIng photo)

The Wolf JV, already pros at having their picture taken. (Amy King photo)

“Of course, I love to find the new successes!”

If ever there was a coach born to nurture and bring along young JV players, it is Coupeville High School hoops guru Amy King.

So, while her squad, playing without any of its veteran swing players Saturday, fell 41-20 at Friday Harbor, she was able to come away with a checklist full of accomplishments to herald.

From freshman Maddy Hilkey knocking down her first-ever buckets, to Brittany Powers notching her first free throw of the season, to the hustle her entire squad showed, King knows JV ball is all about improvement.

Brisa (Herrera) got a rebound and drove down the court. Both Lindsey (Laxton) and Nicole (Lester) were going after rebounds, ripping the ball out of the hands of their opponents,” she said. “Both got shots off, that’s a great step.”

Of course, King also wants to win — she went 14-5 last year with a squad which sent a chunk of its players up to the varsity this season — and Coupeville came out strong Saturday.

Powered by Hilkey and Ema Smith, who each went for four in the quarter, the Wolves claimed an 8-5 lead after the first eight minutes of play.

Then the hosts, who had a far more seasoned team, switched things up.

“We started out great; guess we ticked off the home team, because in the second quarter they attacked with a full court press and caused us many turnovers,” King said. “Our young team would get successful passes only to have the ball stolen or we would end up in a trap.”

Using a 16-1 second-quarter run to blow the game open, Friday Harbor decided they liked the press so much they’d keep it on for almost the entire game.

Even after the score was lopsided.

“This game was tough,” a philosophical King said. “We will get better at breaking the press as the season goes on. It really is a learning process.”

She came away pleased with a lot of the in-game improvement she continues to see. That includes a freshman point guard who’s never played the position before.

Ashlie (Shank) is moving with more confidence, setting up plays and starting to direct,” King said. “She even pulled up several times, taking jump shots from the outside. That is new for her.

Maddy and Brittany flew around on defense all night and Sarah (Wright) was a force in the key, shutting down anyone trying to come into the key,” she added. “All the girls talked and worked hard on defense.

“We just need to be patient, we are getting it and wins will happen.”

Smith paced the Wolves with a team-high 10 points, while Hilkey (4), Wright (3), Shank (2) and Powers (1) all chipped in.

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