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Ashley Menges had five kills, five assists and five aces Thursday as Coupeville routed Friday Harbor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They were back in black (uniforms), and bad to the bone.

Pounding the ball with glee, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad opened a new season Thursday in style, savaging visiting Friday Harbor in a display of cold precision mixed with electrifying shot-making.

The Wolves stormed to a huge lead, hit the snooze button for a brief moment in the middle of the match, then flicked things back into over-drive, romping to a 25-8, 25-19, 25-16 win.

“We came out confident and firing in the first set, then got a little too comfortable,” CHS coach Cory Whitmore said. “I was excited with how we responded, though.

“We got some good starting lessons and made steps in the right direction,” he added. “Going forward, we want to continue to put our best foot forward in every match. It was a good first outing.”

Coupeville, coming off its first trip to the state tourney in 13 years, lost seven seniors to graduation.

Two of those spikers, Hope Lodell and Mikayla Elfrank, were in the gym Thursday, with Lodell on the bench as a volunteer assistant coach, and Elfrank winning the hearts of the crowd with the public debut of her new baby daughter.

The mass exodus left the current Wolf roster with just four returning varsity players — Emma Smith, Ashley Menges, Scout Smith and Maya Toomey-Stout — but the new mix of players met with immediate success.

Younger players like Emma Mathusek, Hannah Davidson and Chelsea Prescott stepped into the starting lineup with ease, while Lucy Sandahl, Raven Vick, and Zoe Trujillo contributed strong cameos off the bench.

The Wolves snatched control of the match from the word go, riding six straight points off of serves from Scout Smith to claim an early 7-0 lead.

The junior co-captain smoked an ace off the last bit of paint in the far left corner, then zinged her very next serve right off of the chin of a rival player.

The sting was real, both to the Friday Harbor spiker who crouched, rubbing her chin and praying the ball would go the opposite way after that, and to her teammates, who deflated around her.

Another successful run at the service line, this time from Menges, broke the set wide open, while the rest of the Wolves took turns trying to outdo each other with plays primed for the highlight reel.

Toomey-Stout dropped a gorgeous winner that sliced off a Friday Harbor kneecap as it went by, while Emma Smith decided to see if she could reach up and touch the roof of the gym.

The senior standout, a graceful powerhouse who evokes memories of aunt Joli Smith, a Wolf volleyball legend, caught an elevator straight to the clouds on one play, catching the ball with just the tips of her fingers.

That was enough to re-direct it between two flailing foes for a winner.

A few plays later, she was back at it, this time pounding the snot out of the ball on a spike which ripped a chunk out of the gym floor as it skipped away for a winner.

The second set was basically a mirror image of the first, with Emma Smith once again mangling the hapless volleyball (and potentially giving PTSD to the Friday Harbor players).

Meanwhile Toomey-Stout spent her time hoppin’, hangin’ in mid air for an eternity, then unleashing lasers, while Davidson fired off a variety of aces while on serve.

Up 19-8, Coupeville had its only setback, and it was a self-inflicted one.

While Friday Harbor went on a 10-2 run to pull back within 21-18, it would be hard to point out anything the visitors did to achieve the momentary burst of success.

Pretty much, they kept the ball in play, and the Wolves mentally went out to get a snack, handing away some points.

After a timeout or two, and some gentle words of wisdom from Whitmore, however, CHS got its mojo right back.

Menges fired off a couple more winners from the service stripe, before Prescott popped in from the side, elevating and snapping off a perfectly-placed tip to close out the set.

In the moment, it was like the Coupeville sophomore was Moses and the Friday Harbor players were the Red Sea, as three went one way, three went the other way, and the ball splashed down right in the middle.

The final set, while semi-close in the early going, again allowed the Wolves to showcase their skill-set.

Mathusek, Prescott and Vick all had strong runs on serve, Emma Smith hit the ball so hard it may be permanently bruised, and then there was Toomey-Stout once again doing things that defy the laws of physics.

“The Gazelle,” while hanging in mid-air for a solid 90 seconds, had to reach far behind her head, where a wayward ball was trying to make a run for freedom.

Plan foiled, as Toomey-Stout snagged the orb, her arm flashing forward and driving the ball over the net with sweet vengeance.

I’d like to tell you Friday Harbor tried to make a play in response, but it’s closer to reality to report all six players rocked back on their heels, mouths agape, as the winner cracked the gym floor in half and exploded out the side door.

Meanwhile, Toomey-Stout is still hanging in mid-air and doesn’t appear to be coming down anytime soon.

As they celebrated their opening night win, the Wolves did so as their beaming coach nodded appreciatively as he surveyed a very-balanced stat sheet.

Emma Smith paced the Wolves with seven kills, while fellow senior captain Menges collected five kills, five assists and five service aces.

Scout Smith peppered Friday Harbor for six aces and nine assists, Toomey-Stout collected eight digs and five kills and Davidson pounded out five kills.

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   Kameryn St Onge ripped off a series of silky shots Wednesday as she and partner Maggie Crimmins sailed to a straight-sets win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a genteel beat-down.

In a match where every other sentence began with “thank you” and the sound of laughter-laced conversation drifted from almost every court, Wednesday’s girls tennis match was far from a fight to the death.

Even if one team convincingly crushed the other between the lines.

The victor was a Coupeville High School squad which captured its fourth win in its last five matches, blanking visiting Friday Harbor 5-0.

The non-conference victory, coming against a longtime foe, lifts the Wolves to 4-5 on the season.

Adding two wins in three JV matches (against Friday Harbor’s varsity players), Coupeville was on cruise control all afternoon.

In fact, CHS coach Ken Stange gave his top two players a break, sending doubles duo Payton Aparicio and Sage Renninger off to train with a volunteer assistant coach rather than play against Friday Harbor.

The Wolves who did take the court were often deadly efficient, with Kameryn St Onge and Avalon Renninger, in particular, ripping off some extremely-nasty left-handed winners in two different matches.

The biggest drama came at #1 singles, but it didn’t involve any shot-making or rallies.

Instead, it arrived thanks to a broken shoelace which momentarily brought Coupeville ace Claire Mietus down low midway through the second set.

But, after pulling out the remaining lace, moving it around and retying a now much-shorter lace, she was able to keep her shoe on her foot long enough to close out her second win in as many days.

 

Complete Wednesday results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Claire Mietus beat Alli Benz 6-2, 6-4

2nd Singles — Genna Wright beat Laurel Robertson 6-2, 6-3

1st Doubles — Avalon Renninger/Tia Wurzrainer beat Midi Thomas/Joely Loucks 6-0, 6-2

2nd Doubles — Maggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge beat Katie Kulseth/Tori Polda 6-2, 7-6(7-5)

3rd Doubles — Jillian Mayne/Zara Bradley beat Rachel Snow/Kai Di Bona 6-0, 6-2

JV:

4th Doubles — Heather Nastali/Megan Behan beat Thomas/Loucks 8-6

5th Doubles — Jaimee Masters/Emily Fiedler lost to Benz/Robertson 6-4

6th Doubles — Nanci Melendrez/Elaira Nicolle beat Di Bona/Snow 7-5

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   Nicole Laxton, here making a play in a home game, had a spectacular diving catch Saturday as Coupeville whacked Friday Harbor 13-4. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Wolves had six days to think, to plan, to prep, to refine their swings.

Pity Friday Harbor.

Aggressively bouncing back from their weakest offensive afternoon of the season, the Coupeville High School softball squad smashed 17 hits Saturday, decimating their hosts to a happy tune of 13-4.

The resounding non-conference victory, which came a week after a doubleheader sweep at the hands of Forks, lifts the Wolves to 7-3.

CHS has one more tune-up, a road trip to La Conner, next Thursday, Apr. 19, before playing its biggest game in 16 years.

The Wolves host Klahowya Apr. 20, and a win would clinch Coupeville softball’s first league crown since 2002.

Accomplish that and CHS will carry the #1 seed out of the Olympic League to districts in May.

As league champs, they would open the playoffs in the double-elimination round, needing two wins in three games to punch a ticket to the state tourney.

All of that is still fairly far down the road, however, and, on this day, all the Wolves were concentrating on was whacking the snot out of the ball.

Mission, accomplished.

“So, the weather let us play today and we came out swinging,” said Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan. “All in all, it was a good solid game and both teams played good defense, but we played error-free and they didn’t, and we hit better than them all day.

“Good day trip to the islands and a great lunch after the game, followed by ice cream of course. On to La Conner!”

Coupeville had at least one base-knock in six of seven innings, with seven doubles and a triple along the way.

And yet the game was semi-close for two innings.

The Wolves scratched out a run in the first, with Scout Smith reaching base, swiping second, taking third on a passed ball, then flashing home on a sac fly from Katrina McGranahan.

But the rally stopped there, as they stranded Sarah Wright after she doubled, and CHS couldn’t get Veronica Crownover off of first after she led off the second with a single.

Things took a dramatic turn in the third, however, as Coupeville started to mash the ball big-time, with the first seven hitters reaching base.

11 batters, four hits and six runs later, Friday Harbor escaped with their lives intact (barely), but the Wolves were up 7-0 and everyone’s fates were sealed.

The Wolves juiced the bags with Rose reaching on an error, Smith singling and McGranahan wearing a pitch.

From there it was a revolving door of RBI’s.

Wright lashed a single, Chelsea Prescott walked to force in a run, Crownover launched a two-run double, then Hope Lodell got artistic and dropped the ultra-rare RBI bunt.

Rose came back around to close the scoring with an RBI on a ground-out, and, by that time, Friday Harbor’s collective hopes and dreams were fully shattered.

The host Wolverines managed to finally get on the board in the bottom of the third, scratching out two runs, but Coupeville had an immediate response.

RBI doubles by the scorching-hot Wright and Crownover in the top of the fourth stretched the lead back out to 9-2, then CHS turned on the web gem show.

Nicole Laxton, who came on to give Mackenzie Davis some rest, immediately made an impact.

The junior whacked a shot to right in her first at-bat, then she turned the volume to 12 on a spectacular running, diving snare on a well-hit ball while playing left field.

Snagging the rapidly-descending orb, Laxton speared it with her glove, then held on through the crash back to Mother Earth, earning rapturous applause from her teammates, coaches and hardy road fans.

On another play, fab frosh Mollie Bailey, also a mid-game replacement, made a superb throw from right to Smith, who gunned it on to Wright.

The Wolf catcher caught the ball, dropped and defended the plate like a lioness guarding her cubs.

That prevented Friday Harbor from plating any runners, and gave Wolf hurler Katrina McGranahan the chance to escape one of her few jams.

The Bailey-to-Smith-to-Wright connection paid off again later in the game, this time with the throw nailing an incoming runner at the plate.

After shocking the world by not scoring in the fifth or sixth, despite several more hits, Coupeville found its run-scoring mojo again in the top of the seventh.

Rose and Smith kick-started things again, with the former poking a ball off a glove, while the latter froze all nine defenders with a note-perfect bunt that dropped and promptly dug a hole to China.

That set up the big boppers, and they were swinging for the fences.

McGranahan lashed a two-run triple before Wright and Crownover (who else?) mashed RBI doubles, with all three Wolf sluggers narrowly missing home runs on their epic blows.

Coupeville got hits from seven of the 11 girls who played, led by Wright, who was a perfect 5-5 with three doubles and two singles.

Crownover had four hits (including three doubles), while Smith (1B, 1B), Lodell (1B, 1B), McGranahan (1B, 3B), Prescott (2B) and Rose (1B) rounded out the extraordinarily-deep hitting attack.

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   Careful pitch selection was key Monday, as Coupeville turned 12 walks into a 9-0 win at Friday Harbor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Take what they give you.

Showing patience under pressure Monday, the Coupeville High School baseball squad walked its way to a blow-out win at Friday Harbor.

Turning 12 walks, and a handful of errors by their hosts, to their advantage, the Wolves cruised to a 9-0 win while only eking out four hits.

The non-conference victory, Coupeville’s third straight triumph and fourth in its last five games, lifts CHS to 6-3 on the season.

The Wolves, off to their best start in more than a decade, don’t play again until Saturday, when they host 2A Cedarcrest.

Using the Olympic League’s web site and Max Preps, I can go back as far as 2008, and, during that time, no Coupeville baseball squad has gotten off to better than a 5-4 mark.

The Wolves hit that mark in 2017, 2015, 2013 and 2010, but this time around they turned Friday Harbor’s weaknesses into a sixth, very satisfying win.

With hurler Hunter Smith firing BB’s on the mound (whiffing nine and retiring eight of the final nine hitters he faced), Coupeville didn’t need much offense.

Which doesn’t mean it wasn’t happy to accept what Friday Harbor offered.

The Wolves scraped out the only run that mattered in the top of the first, using a single from Matt Hilborn, a sacrifice from Joey Lippo, a passed ball and an RBI single by Smith to “bust” things open.

Coupeville added two more runs in the third, a single tally in the fourth and a game-capping five-run explosion in the top of the seventh, while not notching a single hit in those innings.

In the third, Hilborn and Lippo each walked, stole second and came around to score on Friday Harbor errors, while Nick Etzell pulled off the same maneuver in the fourth.

The Wolves gave Smith a much-bigger cushion in the fifth, again using a mix of walks (five this time) and booted balls by their hosts (two more) to plate five.

The final run came home off of a ground-out by Hilborn, one of the few times CHS was given a chance to put the ball into play in the latter stages of the game.

After collecting two base-knocks way back in the first, Coupeville didn’t get another hit until Smith ripped a fifth-inning single.

But, like Dane Lucero, who led off the sixth with a double, he was left high and dry, stranded and unable to score.

Not that it mattered much, as the Wolves capitalized on what they were given, with seven of nine hitters scoring at least once.

Hilborn and Lippo each tapped home plate twice to lead the scoring attack, while the only two starters not to score, Kyle Rockwell and Jake Pease, both picked up RBIs with bases-loaded walks.

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   Drawing power from her henna tattoo, Raven Vick flies down the backstretch. (John Fisken photos)

Cameron Toomey-Stout lets it all hang out.

Unleash the Wolves.

Hosting its second official meet at its new home facilities, the Coupeville High School track and field team was a ruthless host Monday afternoon.

Obliterating two of its former long-time rivals, Friday Harbor and Lopez, the Wolves, even shuffling their lineup around, were extraordinarily dominant.

The CHS girls won 14 of 17 events, while the Wolf boys finished first in 11 of 15.

Coupeville won four relays, and had 17 different athletes win an individual event, led by double winners Mckenzie Meyer, Skyler Lawrence, Jacob Martin, Lauren Grove, Mitchell Carroll and Lindsey Roberts.

The Wolves set 28 PRs in the meet, with one of the most impressive performances coming from Allison Wenzel.

Throwing the javelin on a clear, sunny afternoon on her home turf, the CHS junior shattered her previous best by an astonishing eight feet, six inches.

Complete CHS results: 

Girls:

100 — Maya Toomey-Stout (1st) 13.54; Mallory Kortuem (2nd) 13.95 *PR*; Madison Rixe (7th) 14.78; Ja’Tarya Hoskins (8th) 14.86

200 — Lauren Grove (1st) 28.09; Rixe (4th) 33.32

400 — Ashlie Shank (1st) 1:14.92

800 — Kortuem (2nd) 2:38.33 *PR*; Lucy Sandahl (3rd) 2:38.71 *PR*; Abby Parker (5th) 2:56.61

1600 — Raven Vick (3rd) 7:03.03 *PR*

100 Hurdles — Lindsey Roberts (1st) 16.55; Hoskins (5th) 21.19

300 Hurdles — Mckenzie Meyer (1st) 56.00; Allison Wenzel (2nd) 1:04.31

4 x 100 Relay — Kiara Burdge, Shank, Wenzel, Natalie Hollrigel (2nd) 57.59

4 x 200 Relay — Grove, Roberts, M. Toomey-Stout, Kortuem (1st) 1:49.36

4 x 400 Relay — Grove, Shank, Roberts, M. Toomey-Stout (1st) 4:41.05; Parker, Rixe, Meyer, R. Vick (2nd) 5:21.20

Shot put — Skyler Lawrence (1st) 28-03; Alexxis Otto (2nd) 26-10.75 *PR*; Emma Smith (3rd) 26-04.25; Charlotte Langille (4th) 25-08.50 *PR*; Ema Smith (6th) 22-02.50

Discus — Lawrence (1st) 83-08.50; Wenzel (2nd) 79-11.50 *PR*; Otto (3rd) 78-06; Emma Smith (4th) 75-02 *PR*; Langille (5th) 71-05

Javelin — Wenzel (1st) 99-08 *PR*; Lauren Bayne (2nd) 92-04; R. Vick (3rd) 86-09 *PR*; Naika Hallam (4th) 84-00; Parker (5th) 82-03; Jasmine Nastali (7th) 75-02 *PR*

High Jump — Bayne (1st) 4-08 *PR*; Cassidy Moody (1st) 4-08; Hoskins (3rd) 4-02; Willow Vick (4th) 3-10

Pole Vault — Meyer (1st) 6-00

Long Jump — Roberts (1st) 15-10.25 *PR*; Ema Smith (3rd) 12-06.75 *PR*

Triple Jump — Grove (1st) 31-04.75 *PR*

Boys:

100 — Jean Lund-Olsen (2nd) 12.52, Luke Carlson (6th) 13.52 *PR*; Greg Villareal (7th) 13.52; Kyle Burnett (8th) 13.56; Andrew Martin (9th) 13.99 *PR*; Ryan Labrador (10th) 15.23

200 — Danny Conlisk (1st) 24.41 *PR*; Jacob Martin (2nd) 24.63; Henry Wynn (4th) 25.47 *PR*; Lund-Olsen (5th) 25.53; Thane Peterson (7th) 28.09 *PR*; Burnett (9th) 28.35; Villareal (10th) 33.07

400 — Wynn (1st) 1:00.65; Gabe Carlson (2nd) 1:03.63 *PR*

800 — G. Carlson (5th) 2:45.03

3200 — Jakobi Baumann (2nd) 12:40.10

300 Hurdles — Baumann (2nd) 55.15 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — J. Martin, Jacob Smith, Cameron Toomey-Stout, Lund-Olsen (1st) 46.47; Burnett, L. Carlson, Connor Thompson, Villareal (4th) 53.29

4 x 400 Relay — Conlisk, J. Smith, Mitchell Carroll, Wynn (1st) 3:51.30; Chris Battaglia, Baumann, G. Carlson, Grey Rische (3rd) 4:26.58

Shot Put — Labrador (1st) 36-07; Battaglia (3rd) 35-02.50; Rische (6th) 30-09.75; Keahi Sorrows (8th) 29-11; Trevor Bell (11th) 25-07.50

Discus — Battaglia (1st) 107-01 *PR*; Rische (4th) 88-07; Peterson (5th) 83-05; Labrador (6th) 82-07; Sorrows (9th) 68-03; Bell (10th) 55-08

Javelin — J. Martin (1st) 137-06 *PR*; Battaglia (2nd) 123-10; Rische (3rd) 109-11; L. Carlson (5th) 97-00 *PR*; A. Martin (7th) 81-06; Peterson (9th) 67-09

High Jump — C. Toomey-Stout (1st) 5-02

Pole Vault — Carroll (1st) 8-00; G. Carlson (2nd) 6-00; Conlisk (3rd) 5-06

Long Jump — J. Martin (1st) 19-06; Lund-Olsen (2nd) 19-05 *PR*; Carroll (3rd) 19-02; C. Toomey-Stout (4th) 18-06; Burnett (7th) 16-00; Baumann (10th) 15-03; A. Martin (11th) 13-05.25 *PR*

Triple Jump — Carroll (1st) 42-06.50 *PR*

 

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

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-Coupeville-Track/20170424-at-Coupeville/

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