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Posts Tagged ‘Fall Sports Preview’

   Senior Jake Hoagland will be a key target for Wolf QB Hunter Downes as he chases school passing records. (John Fisken photos)

Senior Julian Welling returns to anchor the CHS lines.

   Wolf junior Matt Hilborn will share carries with Sean Toomey-Stout and Chris Battaglia.

Play for the postseason.

That’s the goal for the Coupeville High School football team, which wants to shed recent history and make a run at the playoffs.

“Our team goal is to play an 11th game,” said CHS coach Jon Atkins. “If we do that, we will have made many of our other goals on the way.”

To reach the postseason, the Wolves need to finish in the top two in the eight-team Olympic/Nisqually League.

With defending league champ Cascade Christian “returning basically every player for a team that went 10-0 last year heading into the playoffs,” it’s likely the other seven schools will be waging war for the #2 seed.

Last year that playoff berth went to Port Townsend, but the RedHawks took substantial hits in the off-season.

Quarterback Berkley Hill, the league’s top offensive player, graduated, then Detrius Kelsall, a three-year two-way starter who was expected to be the focal point of the offense in 2017, suddenly moved to California.

Still, the RedHawks have talent, especially sophomore Noa Montaya, a defensive whiz kid who inherits the QB job, and won’t go down without a fight.

Klahowya also took a big hit thanks to graduation, while Coupeville returns almost all of its primary weapons.

Last year, in the first year of a two-year trial period for mashing together the four-team Olympic and Nisqually Leagues for football, the Wolves finished 3-7 overall, 2-5 in league play.

CHS beat South Whidbey in non-conference play, whacked Vashon Island and Chimacum inside the league and came within a single play of unseating Charles Wright Academy and Bellevue Christian.

As the Wolves seek their first winning record since 2005, they have a favorable schedule.

Six of their 10 games are on Whidbey — five home games, including three of the final four, and the season opener vs. South Whidbey at Langley — and they don’t play Cascade Christian until the final game of the regular season.

With many of the league’s teams unsettled a bit, opportunity is there.

“I think that both Bellevue Christian and Charles Wright are looking to turn the corner and Port Townsend is always a tough match-up,” Atkins said. “The league is going to look very different than last year with the graduation of a lot of seniors in other programs. So it should be a fun season.”

Coupeville’s strengths should be its passing attack and defensive backfield, where the team boasts a pack of veterans with extensive varsity experience.

Senior quarterback Hunter Downes is back under center after a strong junior campaign.

Avoiding the injuries which derailed his sophomore season, Downes threw for 1,569 yards (#5 among 1A QB’s) and 17 touchdowns, one off of the school single-season mark.

Heading into his final year at the controls of the Wolf offense, he sits 1,773 yards and 16 TD’s from breaking the school career records, which are held by Coupeville’s Offensive Coordinator, Brad Sherman.

Downes top two targets in 2016 are also back, as Hunter Smith (49 receptions for school single-season records of 916 yards and 11 TD’s) and Cameron Toomey-Stout (21-441) return for their senior seasons.

Toss in speed demon sophomore Sean Toomey-Stout (2-52), steady senior Jake Hoagland (2-17) and junior Chris Battaglia (1-9), and Coupeville returns five of the eight players to have at least one catch last year.

Smith, who already owns at least a part of four CHS football game or season records, sits just 11 yards and five TD’s from moving past ’80s star Chad Gale to become the school’s career leader in those categories.

It could be a season of milestones for Smith, as he’s also just three interceptions away from passing Josh Bayne for that career mark.

When Downes isn’t pegging passes to his receivers, he’ll be handing the ball off to the three-headed beast of junior Matt Hilborn, Sean Toomey-Stout and Battaglia.

Opening holes for them will be a line anchored by senior Julian Welling and juniors Dane Lucero and Jake Pease.

Younger players who Atkins expects to step up include sophomores Trevor Bell, Gavin Knoblich and Andrew Martin, as well as junior Shane Losey, who “looks good returning from a shoulder injury on the defensive side of the ball.”

With its veteran players in place, Coupeville is primed to have a potent offense.

“Returning Hunter Downes, Cameron and Hunter Smith is going to make it difficult for teams to take just one weapon away,” Atkins said. “We just have to take care of the ball better and minimize mistakes on offense.”

The key to the team’s success and its playoff hopes will largely hinge on the defensive side of the ball, a weak point in many ways for Coupeville last season.

“Defensively we have to be better at making the first tackle and not giving opposing teams extra opportunities for yards,” Atkins said. “We gave up just over 30 points a game last year and for us to make our goals we have to improve on this area to get to an 11th game.”

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Emma Smith soars for a put-away. (John Fisken photos)

   Kyla Briscoe (right), here getting braids from Abby Parker, returns after missing her junior season with an injury.

Last year was just the beginning.

In his first season at the helm of the Coupeville High School volleyball program, Cory Whitmore guided the Wolf spikers to their best season since 2004, winning 11 matches and an Olympic League title.

Now, with a deep, veteran squad at his disposal, the goal is to go further, to hold serve in a competitive conference, but also launch a successful postseason run.

If there was any disappointment after finishing 11-6 overall, 8-1 in league play (the JV went 12-2, 9-0 and the C-Team 3-1), not being able to get out of district play after hard-fought losses to Charles Wright Academy and Klahowya has provided incentive.

“Having gained some confidence from last season, this group is very much looking forward to pushing to and beyond our finishing position from last year,” Whitmore said. “While the goal is to push to make it to state, we know that we have to take each game as a step up the ladder, never looking past a team and an opportunity to improve.

“Starting at WWU Team Camp, this group has bought into “the process,” that small improvements, day in and day out can add up to the success we hope for.”

Coupeville has to replace three players — Ally Roberts, Tiffany Briscoe and Valen Trujillo, the school record-holder for digs, all graduated — but Whitmore has great depth to call on, with almost every player in the mix having extensive prior varsity experience.

Headlining the cast are seniors Katrina McGranahan, the 2016 Olympic League MVP, and Hope Lodell, who smashed school single-season and career records at the service line.

“We are very excited to get back on the court this fall and this time, with some significant varsity experience,” Whitmore said. “Katrina brings a ton of experience to the front row and the serving line.

Hope will be making a switch in positions to focus on anchoring the back row as libero,” he added. “Her ball control and defensive tenacity helps to fill the vacancy Valen leaves.”

Junior Emma Smith will anchor the team at middle blocker (“with each practice she gets faster, making herself more of an available option for the setters,” while a pack of seniors provide Whitmore with multiple weapons.

Payton Aparicio, Lauren Rose, Kyla Briscoe, Mikayla Elfrank and Allison Wenzel join Lodell and McGranahan in forming an unusually deep senior class.

The return of Briscoe, a two-year letter winner who missed her entire junior season with a leg injury, is a particular bonus.

“I’m very proud of Kyla and her return to the court after her season-ending injury last summer,” Whitmore said. “She has worked so hard this off-season to become a dynamic outside hitter and has earned the opportunity to have a fantastic senior year.”

Aparicio sparkled at the team’s summer camp (“she has worked tirelessly to continue growth at the outside hitting position”), while the big-hitting, high-energy Elfrank has been busy in the off-season.

Mikayla is our “stay-after” player, meaning she asks for extra work after practice, honing her abilities as a right-side hitter,” Whitmore said.

Junior Ashley Menges rounds out the varsity returners, and she will share time at setter with Rose.

Lauren and Ashley both work incredibly hard and take responsibility for their hitters’ success, which is a great quality in a setter,” Whitmore said. “Both also step back to the service line and cause problems for opponents.”

With a senior-dominated roster, opportunities are somewhat limited for younger players, but, sophomore Scout Smith could be a break-through player.

Scout had a fantastic summer and has put herself in a position to see varsity playing time, potentially at the other right-side position,” Whitmore said.

He also hailed sophomores Maya Toomey-Stout, Lucy Sandahl and Zoe Trujillo for their work at summer camp (“all three are incredibly coachable and also put forth great off-season effort”) and twin sisters Raven and Willow Vick, who were fixtures at SST workouts.

Raven Vick was a flawless 25 of 25 attending the strength and conditioning sessions.

Whitmore is also pleased with his first official look at the next wave of stars, who made their practice debut this week.

“Our freshman group is exciting as well,” he said. “They are excited to learn and improve and are making the jump from middle to high school as well as can be expected.”

With the core of the Wolf varsity being a group which has played together all the way through high school, Whitmore is looking forward to putting a well-oiled unit on the floor in any situation.

“We believe that our strengths this season start with solid team cohesion,” he said. “Having played with each other for numerous seasons, this team communicates well on and off the court and have already exuded a strong ability for cohesion.”

The Wolves were deadly at the line last season, with several players among the best in 1A.

Lodell had the third-most aces in her class, barely edged out by two girls whose schools played many more contests than Coupeville.

“Our serving will continue to be a focus of ours and the returning players all have varsity experience from the service line,” Whitmore said. “We also hope to push our passing line to be consistent and I’m pleased with what I have seen thus far.”

While Coupeville doesn’t have any glaring weaknesses, the Wolves are always looking to fine-tune their game, which will be key to making a deep run into the postseason.

“Being early in the season, there is plenty to work on,” Whitmore said. “Specifically, as a team, we sat down at the start of the off-season and decided we would focus on our hitting consistency, looking to eliminate unforced errors.

“We need to walk the line between “aggressive” and “consistent” and it has been on our hitters’ minds as we kick off the 2017 season.”

Klahowya won back-to-back league titles before Coupeville seized the throne last season, with the Wolves winning two of three regular season matches.

While the Eagles would seem to be the biggest regular-season hurdle for CHS, Whitmore is a firm believer in overlooking no one.

“Chimacum, Klahowya and Port Townsend, all of them, (are the team to beat),” he said. “We are focusing on each team across the net, one at a time.

“We will need to approach each match and team with the respect they deserve,” Whitmore added. “League or non-league, 1A or 2A, we look to compete at our own highest ability, seeing each match as a chance to improve and take a step closer toward our long-term goals.”

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   Sophomore Ashleigh Battaglia returns for a second season of CHS cheer. (John Fisken photo)

   Mica Shipley, standing tall in the center, gets ready to fly during a recent cheer camp. (Emily Stevens photo)

New coaches, same hunt for excellence.

Former Coupeville High School cheerleaders Emily (Norris) Stevens and Amanda (Streubel) Jones have returned to their alma mater to reinvigorate the cheer program of their teen years.

The duo replace the departed Cheridan Eck, and are hard at work as fall sports practice officially begins.

Stevens, the head coach, has 21 girls on a tentative roster, though that may change as the Wolves work towards the football season opener Sept. 1.

Seniors Claire Mietus and Mckenzie Meyer, both veterans, lead the way.

“The cheer team is going to stop being influenced by the stereotype that “We’re Coupeville,” Mietus said. “We want to have pride in our squad as well as ourselves and not have our actions defined by others expectations.”

The current roster (which is still in flux):

Jessica Acosta
Ashleigh Battaglia
Julie Bucio
Kayla Caudle
Coral Caveness
Maggie Crimmins
Kaley Grigsby
Gaby Halpin
Abby Hamilton
Ja’Tarya Hoskins
Isabel Hucke
Nanci Melendrez
Mckenzie Meyer
Claire Mietus
Mira Mostafavinassab
Heather Nastali
Abby Parker
Moira Reed
Mica Shipley
Emma Somes
Melia Welling

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Jon Atkins (John Fisken photos)

   Jon Atkins is Coupeville’s fourth head football coach in the last seven years. (John Fisken photos)

Ryan Labrador

Sophomore Ryan Labrador (front) will help anchor the lines.

Everything’s new.

New head coach, new assistants (well, two of three), new league (sort of), a new set-up for the fans (for a season at least) and, ultimately, everyone hopes, newfound success on the field.

When the Coupeville High School football team kicks off its season at home Saturday, Sept. 3 with an Island rivalry game against non-conference foe South Whidbey (7 PM), it will be a team looking to the future, and not the past.

Intent on improving on last year’s 1-9 mark, the Wolves want to post the program’s first winning record since 2005, they want to make the playoffs, they want to put a league title on the gym wall.

To do all of that, or any of that, though, they need to build each step of the way, something preached by first-year head coach Jon Atkins.

“A successful year would be that we improve each week,” he said. “And that we stay true as a team to our core values of Competition, Leadership, Family, Commitment and Toughness.”

Atkins is the school’s fourth gridiron head coach in the last seven years, jumping from an assistant job at Oak Harbor to replace Brett Smedley, who left after one season to return home to work at Columbia River.

His staff includes one holdover in veteran assistant coach Ryan King, a former Wolf player who was on that 2005 team, and two relative newcomers in Brad Sherman and Jonathan Martin.

Both are former star prep players themselves, with Sherman a prairie legend for his career at CHS, where he still owns the school passing records.

Along with a turnover in coaching staff, Coupeville football has two new wrinkles this season.

With the home bleachers having been ripped out to make room for the installation of a brand new eight-lane track oval around the football field, temporary seating will be used this season.

Bleachers will be brought over from baseball and tennis, but fans are encouraged to bring lawn chairs and/or embrace the idea of standing for one season.

Permanent covered bleachers are planned for the 2017 season, and will spring up on what is currently the road team’s side, in front of the apartments.

While you’re lounging in your lawn chair, you’ll also get a chance to get familiar with a few new teams, as Coupeville and its three fellow 1A Olympic League rivals have merged with the Nisqually League for football.

The agreement means the Wolves will play a seven-game league schedule (after opening with three non-conference tilts) and no longer have to play schools more than once a season.

In addition to Port Townsend, Klahowya and Chimacum, Coupeville now faces Vashon Island, Bellevue Christian, Cascade Christian and Charles Wright Academy in league play.

Depending on how allocations break out, the combined league will either send its top two or three teams straight on to the state playoffs.

Two-time defending Olympic League champ Port Townsend, which has a new coach in former Coupeville assistant Alex Heilig, and perennial state title contender Cascade Christian are the heavyweights, while Vashon boasts the state’s top rusher in Bryce Hoisington.

As a junior, he ripped Coupeville for a state-record 573 yards and nine touchdowns in the team’s non-conference finale, capping a season in which he gained a state-record 2,929 yards.

Vashon comes to Coupeville Sept. 30.

The Wolves counter with a number of returning players, led by junior quarterback Hunter Downes.

He got off to a strong start in 2015, connecting on 26 of 47 passes for 272 yards, before injuries sidelined him for much of his sophomore campaign.

Healthy, with a stronger arm and a bigger body, and working with Sherman on a daily basis, Downes is primed for a breakout season and will have some help getting there.

Junior Hunter Smith was the second-best receiver in the Olympic League last year, hauling in 32 passes, and he could swing between receiver and running back this time around.

Seniors Jacob Martin (the team’s leading returning rusher), Clay Reilly and Mitchell Carroll and sophomores Chris Battaglia and Teo Keilwitz are all potential backfield weapons, while juniors Jacob Zettle, Cameron Toomey-Stout and Jake Hoagland will be counted on as receivers.

The lines will be anchored by senior Uriel Liquidano, juniors Julian Welling and James Vidoni and sophomores Dane Lucero, Josh Robinson, Ryan Labrador and Jake Pease.

Coupeville will count on a bevy of hard-hitting linebackers (Battaglia, Martin, Welling, Liquidano, Keilwitz) to control things on defense, with ball-hawks like Smith and Reilly holding down the corners.

Smith set a school record with seven interceptions as a sophomore, which tied him for best in the state among players from all divisions.

Reilly might have been Coupeville’s best weapon a year ago, however, as he led all 1A punters, racking up 1,156 yards on 34 boots, earning First-Team All-League honors.

While returning players are expected to lead the way, Atkins doesn’t rule out newcomers like hard-charging freshman Sean Toomey-Stout making an impact.

“We have some freshmen that should get to see the field on some special teams,” Atkins said. “I think everyone on the roster will contribute this year.”

However the roster plays out, the Wolves are hard at work, building for a competitive future.

“Our biggest strength is our players desire and work ethic to be great,” Atkins said. “Learning a new system and a new coach can be difficult, but they are flying around and learning, watching film and doing what is needed to get done to make a great team.”

At the end of the day, win or lose, the head coach wants his team to be remembered for the right reason.

“I want Coupeville football to be known as the toughest team in the Olympic/Nisqually League.”

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William Nelson is one of several key returning players for the CHS boys' tennis squad. (John Fisken photos)

   William Nelson is one of several key returning players for the CHS boys’ tennis squad. (John Fisken photos)

Koby

Koby Schreiber is one of four freshmen on this year’s team.

They have big shoes to fill and a big target on their chest.

And Ken Stange would have it no other way.

As the Coupeville High School boys’ tennis squad prepares to defend its 1A Olympic League championship, their battle-hardened coach is ready for whatever comes.

“The boys are excited to defend their league title,” he said. “It should be more difficult than last year.

“If we are able to defend, it will be all the more sweet.”

To stay atop the league, the Wolves will need to stare down Klahowya and Chimacum (and any Port Townsend mercenaries hiding on the Cowboy roster).

Coupeville is scheduled to face both foes three times apiece, though last year balky ferries, blustery weather and uncooperative schedule-makers left them only playing Chimacum once.

Still, the Wolves went a flawless 4-0 in league play when they were allowed on the court, then swept the top two singles slots at the league tourney.

Both of those players, Sebastian Davis and Connor McCormick, are gone, taken away by graduation, which will leave a hole at the top of the roster.

“We have some untested players who will vie for the three singles spots,” Stange said. “The competition should be difficult, and we should see some positive results as the season progresses.”

By contrast, Coupeville should be very strong on the doubles side of the ledger, where they return their top two teams intact.

Senior duo John McClarin and Joseph Wedekind and junior tandem Joey Lippo and William Nelson are both postseason-tested and looking for more.

Two other returning letter winners, seniors Jimmy Myers and Grey Rische, are expected to form a third doubles unit.

Junior Nick Etzell, who also lettered last year, leads a pack of players fighting for the singles slots or a position on the #4 doubles team.

In the mix are seniors Aiden Crimmins and Nick Blalock, sophomores Jakobi Baumann, Nile Lockwood, Jaschon Baumann and Tiger Johnson and freshmen Mason Grove, Koby Schreiber, Zach Ginnings and Elliot Johnson.

However it plays out, Stange, as always, is as concerned with personal improvement as much as winning titles.

“Our goals are to defend the league title, everyone grows their game, everyone has fun and everyone is an academic superstar,” he said.

“We want to earn as many spots in the district tourney as possible,” Stange added. “The season will be a success if we’re able to defend the title.

“Failing that, we will be successful if each and every player works his tail off.”

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