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Posts Tagged ‘Emma Smith’

   Lucy Sandahl (left) and Scout Smith are thrilled to be at volleyball camp. (Konni Smith photos)

Scout reunites with Maya Toomey-Stout (left) and Emma Smith.

   Sandahl, Ashley Menges (center) and Payton Aparicio come well-equipped for the multi-day stay.

The Wolves cap a successful camp with a group photo. (Cory Whitmore photo)

Coming off of its best performance in a decade, the Coupeville High School volleyball team is primed to make an even bigger splash this fall.

Helping the Wolves get ready to defend their Olympic League title, coach Cory Whitmore and 11 of his spikers attended an intensive four-day camp at Western Washington University July 5-8.

The view from court-side, courtesy Coupeville’s second-year coach:

Camp lasted a very full four days by normally being on the court by 8 AM and working until 8:30 PM at WWU’s newly remodeled Carver Gymnasium.

Our camp was the first open to summer camps – this put the WWU players and coaches in very excited moods and was fun to be able to have a sneak peek into the new facilities.

This year, we were able to bring along Lauren Rose, Payton Aparicio, Hope Lodell, Mikayla Elfrank, Kyla Briscoe, Ashley Menges, Emma Smith, Scout Smith, Maya Toomey-Stout, Lucy Sandahl and Zoe Trujillo.

It was a great mix of experience and upcoming talent. 

It’s hard for me to choose any one particular stand-out for their growth and/or effort, because every single one grew in some way or another and all put in a huge amount of effort.

I’m proud of the growth this group made as a whole – taking a new mix of girls to camp, some playing different positions, a lot of questions try to get answered while at team camp and I’m encouraged by the direction we took in both meshing as a unit and competing against other teams

Coupeville has been attending WWU Volleyball Team Camp for years now and that kind of familiarity creates consistency for planning and comfortability for coaches and players.

Their program is extremely successful under their coaching staff with a wealth of knowledge to instill upon each program that attends.

I also like the proximity and familiarity our players have to their program. Our players have gotten to know a number of their player over the years which has been fun to watch their progression.

And being that Bellingham is only an hour and a half up the road, we are able to return during the fall season as a team trip and see the Vikings compete themselves.

We were also lucky enough to have the same camp coach from the previous year, senior setter Kristina Tribley.

She was fantastic working with the girls and the two-year connection made the experience even more special for our team.

Another part of this particular camp that I like is that it is not simply a tournament – players work on skills based on individual positions, in small groups, as a team and then regularly compete as a team.

With various type games and focuses, it is not just scrimmaging. Our players were able to grow on numerous levels for various skills.

Throughout the camp, we learned out to focus on “the process” – the WWU program values growth over results and that mentality was instilled into us.

Players had to learn how to be patient and look at the little victories over the results and that fostered a comfortability in making mistakes as a part of growing.

We also made a focus to improve our communication style. As a team, progress was definitely made this camp.

Our last goal was to improve our hitting efficiency.

This was where “the process” was especially key – player had to learn how to lose a point due to a mistake, while celebrating a success in another area of the hit.

By the end of camp, that comfortability in letting mistakes go, translated into confidence which then led to kills.

In addition, our “volleyball IQ” was improved as well (where to place the ball, when to swing away).

After a post-camp, nearly full day of sleep, I’m energized toward our fall season.

I’m very much looking forward to seeing the girls take the lessons learned at camp, implementing them throughout the season and spreading that message to other players in the CHS volleyball program.

We have strong leaders on the team that grew as leaders but also helped to teach our younger players how to lead.

That experience is invaluable because it carries throughout summer, this season and into future volleyball season, being further passed down.

At the end of camp, the WWU players (camp coaches) recognize one player from their team deserving of recognition.

Coach Kristina said it was very hard for her to choose just one but she was incredibly impressed with Payton.

Payton was very strong from the service line, extremely consistent in the passing formation, made growth as an attacker and was a rock mentally for the rest of the team.

I could not agree more and I’m very happy Payton was recognized – her efforts in the off-season deserve notice.

Even though Kristin Bridges will not be able to coach this upcoming fall season, she had planned on attending camp with us, but due to early contractions she was hospitalized and roughly two weeks later she gave birth to Grayson Reid Bridges!

We are so excited for her and her family and can’t wait to meet the newest Bridges!

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   Jacob Martin and Emma Smith kick off our Prom photo spectacular. (John Fisken photos)

   King and Queen Kory Score and Amanda Neitzel (center) are joined by soccer star Megan DePorter.

Gabe Wynn (left) and Zack Nall exchange dance tips.

   A who’s who of Wolf sports stars featuring (l to r) Lauren Bayne, Lauren Rose, Fanny Deprelle, Payton Aparicio and Sage Renninger.

Jonathan Thurston and Kyla Briscoe.

The boys are back in town.

Ben Olson and Mia Littlejohn.

   Mckenzie Meyer (second from left) cracks up (l to r) Jaschon Baumann, Tamika Nastali, Madison Rixe and Jacob Smith.

227 photos and they’re all free.

Taking a break from shooting sports, local paparazzi to the stars John Fisken brought his cameras to Coupeville High School’s Prom Saturday and fired away.

The eight pics I have here on Coupeville Sports are just a taste. Follow the link below and you can see everything he shot.

And, there’s two ways to collect as many of the pics as you’d like.

Fisken is allowing these photos to be downloaded for free (there’s a button for that right next to the “buy” button on each image).

Or, if you want glossy prints, you can order those as well, with standard rates applying.

To see the pics, pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Events/Coupeville-Prom-2017/

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Tiffany Briscoe (John Fisken photos)

   Coupeville senior Tiffany Briscoe etched her name in 8 of 11 stat categories in 2016. (John Fisken photos)

Katrina McGranahan

   Junior Katrina McGranahan was second on the Wolves in service points, aces and blocks and first in kills.

Hope Lodell finished #1, at least for the moment.

Adding 12 service aces during the district tourney Saturday, the Coupeville High School junior finished with a school single-season record of 110.

Those aces, by themselves, are more than any other Wolf player has had in their entire CAREER.

Lodell’s two-year total of 141 aces (she had 31 as a sophomore) sends her skyrocketing past former CHS career record holder Mindy Horr, who compiled 109.

Fellow junior Katrina McGranahan is in the on-deck circle to pass Horr, as well.

With 62 aces this year, she sits at an even 100 heading into her final season.

The 110 aces this season puts Lodell #1 across all divisions in Washington state (2B-4A), at least in terms of those who have reported stats to MaxPreps through Tuesday morning.

Coupeville, which had four players (Lodell, McGranahan, Payton Aparicio and Ashley Menges) land in the top 10 for aces by 1A players, destroyed the team single-season mark.

The Wolves launched 327 aces, easily topping last year’s mark of 201.

Looking at the final stats, several players made runs during the final weekend, with Emma Smith and McGranahan, in particular, surging in several categories.

Allison Wenzel also took advantage of what playing time was given her, accumulating her first serving stats of the season in the crucible of the playoffs.

Senior Valen Trujillo capped a remarkable run, pushing her school career record for digs to 550.

The final season-to-date stats for the Wolf spikers, who at 11-6, had their best season since 2004:

Sets Played:

Katrina McGranahan 63
Ashley Menges 63
Lauren Rose 63
Emma Smith 63
Valen Trujillo 63
Payton Aparicio 62
Hope Lodell 61
Tiffany Briscoe 60
Mikayla Elfrank 58
Ally Roberts 47
Sarah Wright 12
Allison Wenzel 7
Maddy Hilkey 1
Scout Smith 1

Kills:

McGranahan 91 (#16 in 1A)
Elfrank 77 (#19 in 1A)
Lodell 75
E. Smith 52
Aparicio 47
Briscoe 41
Wright 16
Roberts 9
Wenzel 5
Trujillo 4
Menges 2
Rose 2

Kill Percentage:

Menges 66.7
E. Smith 39.4
Wright 38.1
McGranahan 35.5
Elfrank 35.3
Roberts 33.3
Lodell 31.0
Wenzel 29.4
Briscoe 27.2
Aparicio 24.4
Rose 22.2
Trujillo 18.2

Hitting Percentage:

Menges .333
Wenzel .235
Wright .214
McGranahan .160
E. Smith .144
Roberts .111
Briscoe .073
Elfrank .023

Digs:

Trujillo 195 (#7 in 1A)
Lodell 137 (#14 in 1A)
Aparicio 70
Rose 47
Roberts 45
McGranahan 27
Menges 18
Briscoe 13
Elfrank 10
E. Smith 10
Wenzel 6
Wright 3

Blocks:

E. Smith 17
McGranahan 14
Elfrank 7
Aparicio 3
Wright 3
Briscoe 1
Lodell 1

Service Returns:

Trujillo 348
Lodell 239
Aparicio 145
Roberts 64
Wenzel 12
Briscoe 4
McGranahan 4
E. Smith 4
Elfrank 3
Menges 3
Rose 2
Wright 1

Assists:

Rose 192 (#11 in 1A)
Menges 148 (#12 in 1A)
Trujillo 6
Lodell 4
Roberts 4
Briscoe 3
Aparicio 2
McGranahan 2
Elfrank 1
Wright 1

Serving Percentage:

Elfrank 100.0
Rose 92.7
Trujillo 91.4
Aparicio 86.0
Lodell 83.8
McGranahan 82.9
Menges 81.9
Wenzel 80.0
Roberts 40.0

Service Points:

Lodell 187
McGranahan 134
Rose 132
Menges 116
Aparicio 102
Trujillo 94
Elfrank 3
Wenzel 3
Roberts 2

Service Aces:

Lodell 110 (#1 across all divisions in state)
McGranahan 62 (#3 in 1A, #17 in all divisions)
Aparicio 52 (#7 in 1A)
Menges 46 (#10 in 1A)
Rose 35 (#19 in 1A)
Trujillo 35 (#19 in 1A)
Elfrank 1
Wenzel 1

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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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First-year CHS volleyball coach Cory Whitmore has his team at 7-2 and storming up the state stat charts. (John Fisken photos)

   First-year CHS volleyball coach Cory Whitmore has his team at 7-2 and storming up the state stat charts. (John Fisken photos)

Katrina McGranahan

   Katrina McGranahan is second among all 1A players in service aces, trailing only teammate Hope Lodell.

Hope Lodell is dangerous.

Through nine volleyball matches, the Coupeville High School junior has recorded 66 service aces, which puts her #1 among all 1A players who have had their stats reported to MaxPreps.

Lodell currently sits #3 across all divisions (2B-4A), trailing only Samantha Johnson of Northwest Christian (72 aces) and Mollie Olson of Napavine (68) for the top spot.

And it’s not really a fair fight, as Johnson has played four more sets than Lodell, with 75 more service opportunities, while Olson has an extra 13 sets and 84 chances at the stripe.

When the Wolf ace fires up a serve, she hits an ace on 42.6% of her attempts, a mark matched by only Sophia Spoja of Steilacoom (43.8%), who benefits from having put up only 80 serves to Lodell’s 155.

After all that, it should come as no surprise that the high-flying, rocket-serving young woman known as “The Surgeon” has already shattered Coupeville’s single-season ace mark.

With six more regular season matches and a playoff run ahead, Lodell is now four ahead of the 62 aces achieved by Mindy Horr in 2004.

So, while digesting all that info, here’s more, the stats season-to-date for all 12 Wolf varsity players who have helped CHS roar out to a 7-2 record overall, 4-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

Sets Played:

Katrina McGranahan 33
Ashley Menges 33
Lauren Rose 33
Emma Smith 33
Valen Trujillo 33
Payton Aparicio 32
Tiffany Briscoe 32
Hope Lodell 32
Mikayla Elfrank 29
Ally Roberts 17
Sarah Wright 3
Allison Wenzel 3

Kills:

Lodell 41 (#16 in 1A)
Elfrank 39 (#17 in 1A)
McGranahan 39 (#17 in 1A)
Smith 23
Aparicio 21
Briscoe 21
Roberts 7
Wright 4
Trujillo 3
Wenzel 3
Menges 1
Rose 1

Kill Percentage:

Menges 50.0
Wenzel 50.0
Elfrank 39.4
Wright 36.4
Roberts 35.0
Smith 32.9
Lodell 32.3
McGranahan 31.5
Briscoe 30.9
Aparicio 21.6
Rose 20.0
Trujillo 17.6

Hitting Percentage (State leaders need 106.7 attempts):

Wright .364
Wenzel .333
Roberts .200
Briscoe .162
McGranahan .121 (#12 in 1A)
Elfrank .071
Smith .043

Digs:

Trujillo 101 (#4 in 1A)
Lodell 67 (#10 in 1A)
Aparicio 50
Rose 19
Roberts 18
Menges 12
McGranahan
10
Briscoe
8
Elfrank
5
Smith
3
Wright
2
Wenzel
1

Blocks:

Smith 7 (#19 in 1A)
McGranahan 5
Elfrank 4
Aparicio 2
Briscoe 1

Service Returns:

Trujillo 167
Lodell 115
Aparicio 80
Roberts 13
Wenzel 4
Elfrank 3
McGranahan 3
Smith 3
Menges 2
Briscoe 1
Rose 1

Assists:

Rose 92 (#6 in 1A)
Menges 68 (#9 in 1A)
Trujillo6
Lodell 4
Aparicio2
Roberts 2
Briscoe 1
Elfrank 1

Serving Percentage:

Elfrank 100.0
Rose 93.5
Trujillo 87.7
Aparicio 85.4
Lodell 85.2
Menges 84.2
McGranahan 80.5

Service Points:

Lodell 98
Rose 84
Menges 70
McGranahan 64
Aparicio 58
Trujillo 47
Elfrank 3

Service Aces:

Lodell 66 (#1 in 1A, #3 in all divisions)
McGranahan 35 (#2 in 1A)
Aparicio 31 (#5 in 1A)
Menges 26 (#7 in 1A)
Trujillo 26 (#7 in 1A)
Rose 20 (#9 in 1A)
Elfrank 1

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