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Jacob Burke volleys Wednesday during Coupeville’s tennis match against visiting Bear Creek. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Even bothered by a shoulder injury, Mason Grove drops in another winner.

In a battle of animals, or at least animal mascots, the smaller, feistier one carried the day Wednesday afternoon.

Sweeping singles, and picking up a key win at #2 doubles, the Coupeville High School boys tennis squad slipped past visiting Bear Creek 3-2.

The victory, proving Wolves can topple Grizzlies, lifts CHS to 2-2 on the season.

It also confirms Coupeville, a small public school suddenly jammed into the ultra-ritzy Emerald City League for tennis, has no plans to back down from its new private school rivals.

Other than Island mate South Whidbey, which is also along for the ride, Coupeville has little history with the remaining ECL schools, all big-city, big-bucks, big-brains institutions.

That means almost every match, at least the first time through the schedule, will feature the Wolves feeling out their new foes, while also playing to win.

CHS coach Ken Stange, who has seen a little bit of everything during his time mentoring Wolf tennis players, came away pleased with what he witnessed.

Especially from the guys at the top of the lineup.

“I can’t say enough about (singles players) Jakobi (Baumann) and Drake (Borden),” Stange said. “They were both showing the perfect combination of controlled aggression and patience.

“They were relentless.”

Coupeville clinched the match with a win at #2 doubles, which featured an injured Wolf and an enterprising one.

Mason Grove took a nasty fall in warm-ups before the previous match, landing awkwardly on his shoulder, and was expected to be day-to-day.

Wednesday that translated into “I’m playing today.”

Mason, playing with one arm, was a model of excellence,” Stange said. “He dialed it down quite a bit, which paid off big time.”

Grove’s partner, first-year player James Wood, was on service in the second set, down 5-4, when he pulled off something even his wily veteran coach had never witnessed.

“Big Game James was lights out at times, and he even did something I’ve never seen in my 27 seasons in Coupeville,” Stange said.

Wood blasted a serve that nailed the Bear Creek player at the net, inflicting not only a potential bruise, but winning the point in unexpected fashion.

“The ball was nowhere close to being in, but the rules state that if the ball hits a player before it hits the ground, the player who got hit loses the point,” Stange said with a chuckle. “Good stuff!”

 

Complete Wednesday results:

 

Varsity:

1st Singles — Jakobi Baumann won 6-3, 6-3

2nd Singles — Drake Borden won 6-3, 6-4

1st Doubles — Zach Ginnings/Jacob Burke lost 7-5, 7-5

2nd Doubles — Mason Grove/James Wood won 6-3, 7-6(7-3)

3rd Doubles — Jaschon Baumann/Tiger Johnson lost 6-1, 6-4

 

JV:

4th Doubles — Koby Schreiber/Andrew Aparicio lost 7-6(7-3)

5th Doubles — Harris Sinclair/Thane Peterson lost 6-4, 6-3

 

To see more photos from Wednesday’s action, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Tennis-2018-2019/BT-2018-09-19-vs-Bear-Creek/

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Wolf senior Jaschon Baumann teamed with Tiger Johnson to play Monday’s closest match. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Over and done with.

Until next time, at least.

Missing a key player after Mason Grove injured his shoulder pre-match Monday, the Coupeville High School boys tennis squad absorbed a methodical beating at the hands of host Overlake.

The ritzy private school Owls cruised to a 5-0 win in Redmond, dropping the Wolf netters to 1-2 on the season.

Coupeville, which is running the gauntlet this season by playing as a member of the Emerald City League, the top 1A tennis conference in the state, returns to action Wednesday with a home match against Bear Creek.

 

Complete Monday results:

 

Varsity:

1st Singles — Jakobi Baumann lost to Gavin Ybarra 6-2, 6-1

2nd Singles — Drake Borden lost to Anath Iyer 6-1, 6-1

1st Doubles — Zach Ginnings/Jacob Burke lost to Nachiket Kermarkar/Zander Gillett 6-1, 6-0

2nd Doubles — Tiger Johnson/Jaschon Baumann lost to Evan Lauer/Vignav Ramesh 6-4, 6-2

3rd Doubles — James Wood/Koby Schreiber lost to Sammy Yang/Yosup Cho 6-1, 6-1

 

JV:

4th Doubles — Harris Sinclair/Andrew Aparicio lost to Noah Wilson/Rohan Chatterjee 8-0

5th Doubles — Sinclair/Aparicio lost to Brandon Marcus/Yohan Cho 8-1

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Senior Jakobi Baumann heads up a scrappy Wolf tennis squad ready to take on the big boys in the Emerald City League. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“We are the CHS team that has the toughest schedule.”

There is little doubt about that, as Ken Stange’s 14th year at the helm of the Coupeville High School boys tennis program arrives complete with an epic new challenge.

While other Wolf teams will face off with fellow North Sound Conference foes, the netters have a slightly different path to travel.

Coupeville and South Whidbey are the only schools in the new six-team league which play boys tennis, so they are linking up with the ultra-ritzy, ultra-competitive Emerald City League.

That puts the Wolves up against potentially the toughest tennis conference in all of 1A, one where private school players compete year-round in one sport and benefit from ready access to private coaches and indoor courts.

University Prep is the two-time defending team state champs, and the ECL has won five of the last six singles titles.

In four of the past six years, at least two ECL teams have finished in the top five in the team standings at the state tourney, with U Prep being in that exclusive group every season.

In other words, things have changed.

“It was nice winning two of four league titles in our old league (Olympic League), but that was then,” Stange said. “We can either complain about it, or we can work at getting better.

“I choose the latter.”

The new league also brings a format change, as the Wolves go from a three singles, four doubles set-up for varsity matches to two singles, three doubles.

With three fewer varsity spots available, the battle at practice will rage.

“We have quite a few returning players with experience,” Stange said. “There will be some stiff competition this season within our team.

“We lost our top players from last year and we are moving into a new league that is full of private schools. We have our work cut out for us, but we’re working hard to raise our collective game.”

Gone are #1 singles player Nick Etzell and #1 doubles duo Joey Lippo and William Nelson, but nine of the 12 players on the Wolf roster are returning letter winners.

Junior Mason Grove and senior Jakobi Baumann, who both played strongly a season ago, head up the team.

Joining them are Jaschon Baumann, Zach Ginnings, Drake Borden, Tiger Johnson, Koby Schreiber, Thane Peterson and Harris Sinclair, while three newcomers – James Wood, Jacob Burke and Andrew Aparicio – round out the roster.

Through good times and bad, big wins and tough losses, Stange has always approached his time on the court the same way – head up, wicked sense of humor intact and deeply committed to getting the best out of each of his players, regardless of their talent level.

“The new league raises expectations but we haven’t seen the competition yet. It should be challenging and fun,” he said. “I hope we can be competitive and be a solid part of our new league. I also hope we can get a couple of entries into the district tourney.

“This season will be a success if we can win a few matches and have some individual success,” Stange added. “The real success will be in whether or not we are able to improve our results in the second run through our league schedule.”

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Coupeville boys tennis players like Mason Grove will face a substantial challenge next season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

If you want to be the best, you have to play the best.

People say that all the time, and it’s something the Coupeville High School boys tennis team will get to test out this fall.

With CHS jumping ship from the 1A Olympic League and joining the new 1A North Sound Conference starting with the 2018-2019 school year, everyone’s schedules will change up.

Klahowya, Port Townsend and Chimacum will be gone, at least as league rivals.

Meanwhile, the Wolves will reunite with former Cascade Conference foes South Whidbey, Sultan, Granite Falls and King’s, plus Cedar Park Christian (Bothell), which replaced Coupeville when it departed that 1A/2A league.

But there will be one CHS program facing a different set of foes, and that’s boys tennis.

While King’s doesn’t play softball and Sultan and CPC don’t play girls tennis, that still leaves those sports with five and four league teams, respectively.

Every other sport the Wolves compete in, including cross country, which returns to CHS after two decades, has a full six-team set-up.

And then there’s boys tennis, where South Whidbey is the only one of Coupeville’s five new foes to field a team.

Instead of just a two-team mini-league, the Wolf male netters will step outside the North Sound Conference, joining the Falcons in playing as interlopers in the ultra-ritzy Emerald City League.

Otherwise known as the toughest tennis conference in the state.

Seriously.

The league is comprised of small, ultra-ritzy private academies, where most of their tennis players are exclusive to the sport and benefit from ready access to private coaches and indoor courts.

Of the ECL schools, University Prep, Seattle Academy, Overlake, Bush and Bear Creek play boys tennis, while South Whidbey and 2A Archbishop Thomas Murphy have joined them on the courts in recent years.

With the Cascade Conference shattering apart, its 1A members have formed the North Sound Conference, while the WIAA forced Wesco to accept ATM (after its athletic directors voted 21-0 to deny such a move).

While the Wildcats will likely take the courts against 3A schools like Oak Harbor from now on, tennis has never been a priority for ATM, and the school is an also-ran in the sport.

The five private schools awaiting Coupeville in the Emerald City League are anything but also-rans, however.

With the exception of Charles Wright Academy out of the Nisqually League, the ECL features all of the dominant 1A tennis programs in the region.

As in, the last five boys state singles champs (four from U Prep, one from Bear Creek) have come from ECL schools.

Seattle Academy won the boys double title in 2016, beating a U Prep duo, and had the state runner-up in singles in 2015, while U Prep is the defending team state champs.

In four of the past five seasons, at least two ECL teams have finished in the top five in the team standings at the state tourney, with U Prep being in that exclusive group every season.

Of the five ECL schools, only The Bush School has failed to make a top five team appearance between 2013-2017.

With two doubles teams and a singles player in this weekend’s state tourney draw, U Prep, which went 11-0 in ECL play, is a strong bet to repeat as state champs, though you can never count out Charles Wright.

Basically, this is a long way of getting around to acknowledging the Coupeville boys tennis program faces an uphill battle.

While South Whidbey has always had a stellar tennis program, at least by rural public school standards, the Falcons have made just a few inroads in their time in the ECL.

SWHS went 4-4 in league play last fall, and two years ago got then-freshman Kody Newman, now a football player, to the state tourney.

While he has never shied away from a challenge in 13 years at the helm of both Coupeville tennis teams, Wolf coach Ken Stange admits his two squads will have different paths ahead of them.

“The boys’ tennis team will face tougher competition than any other CHS team,” he said. “Multiple perennial state powerhouses will be our norm.”

Cue the “Rocky” theme music.

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(John Fisken photo)

Rachael Arand fires up a shot while playing with Coupeville’s “fall ball” girls’ hoops squad. (John Fisken photo)

Rachael Arand

Arand

Need cookies? Rachael Arand is your go-to person.

“I think I spend an abnormal amount of time making cookies,” Arand said with a laugh. “I look for any reason to make them — birthdays, holidays, class meetings, the fact that it’s a Monday morning.

“There’s something about the rhythm of adding ingredients that is totally soothing to me.”

Making and baking cookies is a nice slow-down activity for the very-busy high school senior, a standout basketball player who spends much of her time bouncing between two off-Island high schools and her home on Whidbey.

Arand lives with her family in Langley, but attends the Seattle Waldorf School.

Since that school doesn’t have a basketball program, and the two-hour commute made it impossible to play with South Whidbey, Arand sat out two seasons before finding a school in the Seattle area that would allow her to play hoops.

That turned out to be Bush and Arand won both the MVP and Rookie of the Year in the Emerald City League last year as a junior.

“I can’t stress how grateful I am to coach Webb and administration at Bush for letting me do this,” Arand said.

Arand, who also plays Ultimate Frisbee and volleyball, has continued to work hard on her hoops skills, playing alongside Coupeville High School star Makana Stone on a traveling team this summer. It’s an experience she won’t forget.

“Traveling around the U.S. was a fantastic experience. I got to travel while doing something I love with a great team,” Arand said. “The whole trip was surreal; we played in a tournament in Chicago where there were 46 courts in one space. That’s a lot of games happening at the same time.

“We were seeing girls that were six-foot-nine, making me look short at 6-1.”

Playing conditions varied, with one stop in California making a big impact on the girls from the Pacific Northwest.

“We played in a facility in San Diego that I swear was a greenhouse with some courts set up inside,” Arand said. “Because of the heat and humidity teams were drained by just walking in and warming up.

“Playing there really showed where you were as a player. Many girls learned that they were very out of shape,” she added. “But overall it was a pleasure to play against the talent we saw at those tournaments.”

Now back home, she’s preparing for her senior season at Bush by playing with Coupeville’s “fall ball” team, reuniting her with Stone.

Led by the dazzling duo, the Wolves are 3-0.

“It’s a super welcoming team, like Bush, that took me in when I didn’t have anywhere to play,” Arand said. “So a giant thank you to them is owed as well!”

While she enjoys all her sports (“I really like the difference between the sports I play; I like that no matter how good you think you are at a sport, there is always someone better and you can constantly be trying to get better and learn new things”), Arand’s heart belongs to the hard-court.

“To someone who doesn’t play basketball it’s hard to explain what it feels like to sink the perfect three-pointer or free throw,” she said. “When the ball falls directly where you want and you can finally feel the thousands of shots you’ve taken pay off, the feeling is unparalleled.

“Basketball is a game of skill, it’s not something you can pick up in an afternoon,” Arand added. “Like anything else, putting in that hard work and effort is what makes it so special.”

On the court, Arand brings a mix of grit, hustle and good times. She can fill up the stat sheet, but she always keeps one eye on trying to help her teammates.

“I think as an athlete I’m very reliable. I show up to practice, I work hard while trying to crack jokes and keep the spirit of the team alive through intense workouts,” Arand said. “I try my best to be a leader. I spend a large chunk of my game assisting and trying to get my teammates to push themselves to do their best.

“Many see this as a fault — trying to set up my teammates, and I’ve been told on hundreds of occasions to be more selfish,” she added. “I can work on this aspect of my game as well as my athleticism; someday I hope to be able to keep up with my good friend, Makana.”

A veteran of the student council and yearbook editor, Arand balances books with ball, and would like to attend a college that allows her to keep that mix.

Away from the court, she enjoys hanging out with friends and family (“Whether it’s watching “Mulan” or eating whole tubs of coffee ice cream, we’re always together”) and entertaining them.

“I love singing, period, in the shower, in musicals, but especially in the car with my mom on long road trips,” Arand said. “I like going to Costco and looking for all the sample carts because I absolutely love eating!

“I also love telling stories. I love memories and reliving them through my stories is definitely one of my favorite pastimes,” she added. “Anyone close to me hates it when I meet new people because out come my favorite stories … again!”

When she meets people in her life, Arand is fond of pulling something from their experiences and using it to enrich her own life.

“I think that from the moment we’re born we are being imprinted with small bits from every person we meet,” Arand said. “In the realm of athletics I owe every bit of skill and determination to my dad.

“He is the one who has shown me how to have arc on my shot, how to pass, and most importantly, how to play defense,” she added. “He spends countless hours at the gym trying to teach me new things.”

But it’s more than just basketball skills which have been passed on from father to daughter.

“I think the most important thing I’ve learned from him, whether he was trying to teach it to me or not, is the notion of never giving up on a person,” Arand said. “He’s one of those few people who care too much.

“He puts everything he has into helping others. He changes people, whether he knows the impact he has or not.”

She also credits her teachers for helping shape her as a student and a human being.

“My teacher, Ms. Bowman. This is a woman who, no matter how disruptive a class can be, she comes to school with a smile,” Arand said. “She honestly tries harder than any other person I have ever met.

“She wins the hearts of students by truly caring in what they have to say, making me respect her on a level much higher than most people,” she added. “I hope someday I can attain this kind of respect from the people I love.”

Her African drumming teacher, a man “whose autobiography would possibly make the best movie of this lifetime,” has made a huge impact on her soul.

“Mr. Ryan has traveled following his passion throughout his entire life. He is so secure in who he is and what he is meant to do,” Arand said. “He tells stories of playing with great drummers in Africa that remember all the traditions and dances of the older generations. And here, thousands of miles away and years later, I am being taught how to pay respect to these phenomenal musicians.

“These are people that know how to have fun and how to believe very strongly in the healing of being together and doing something they love,” she added. “They are passionate, a quality we all need to have in our lives.”

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