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Posts Tagged ‘girls tennis’

Katrina McGranahan (John Fisken photos)

  Wolf hurler Katrina McGranahan, throwin’ heat on a cold day. (John Fisken photos)

Sage Renninger

Hard-court assassin Sage Renninger delivers another winner.

Matt Hilborn

Freshman phenom Matt Hilborn comes up firing at third.

Jazmine

  Net ace Jazmine Franklin gives one final look back at the opponent she just toasted.

Hunter Smith

The mound was a little mucky, but Hunter Smith’s pitches were downright nasty.

Mikayla Elfrank

   Having tagged the runner out, Mikayla Elfrank can taste the double play she’s about to finish.

mound

   Hardball guru Chris Smith (left) has a meeting of the minds with catcher Cole Payne and son Hunter.

Jae LeVine

  No softball gets past Jae LeVine. Why? She’s too quick. They don’t call her “Flash” for nothing.

team

   Silhouetted against the prairie (and the ever-present rain clouds), new Wolf softball coaches Kevin and Justine McGranahan enjoy a quiet moment with their easily-excitable squad.

The prairie was poppin’ Monday.

Despite the ever-present threat of rain (it never fully arrived) and wind (mostly absent for once), all three Coupeville High School sports teams in action were able to put an (almost) full day in.

The Wolf softball and baseball squads dropped close contests to Sultan, while the CHS netters were drubbing 2A Granite Falls when their courts got too slippery to continue.

Madly bouncing around from site to site, travelin’ photo man John Fisken snapped away, and the pics above are courtesy him.

To see more, and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes, pop over to:

Baseball http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=10939&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

Softball — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=10937&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

Tennis — http://www.cascadeathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=10934&league=2&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=21&sport=0

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Makana Stone snatched Olympic League MVP honors while leading the Wolves, who won all nine league games by double digits. (John Fisken photos)

  Makana Stone snatched Olympic League MVP honors while leading the Wolves, who won all nine league games by double digits. (John Fisken photos)

Aaron Curtin, state caliber.

Aaron Curtin, state caliber.

Not bad. Not bad at all.

The first year of the all-new, all-exciting 1A Olympic League is all but done — softball is mid-way through its season and all the other sports are in the postseason, but all league games have been played for 2014-2015.

So, how did Coupeville High School do?

Let’s just say quality beats quantity.

Despite being the smallest of the four schools in the league (with just half the student body of Klahowya), the Wolves more than held their own in the 10 sports in which they compete as a team.

For this exercise, we are looking at football, volleyball, girls and boys soccer, girls and boys tennis, girls and boys basketball, softball and baseball.

Golf doesn’t count, as Christine Fields (who just won the Olympic League postseason tourney by 10 strokes, I might add) was a one-woman team.

She played against 1A/2A Cascade Conference competition during the regular season, when she trained and traveled with South Whidbey.

We’re also not counting track, which is largely an individual sport inside a team one.

With most meets involving multiple teams from 1A and 2A (and, sometimes 3A), team wins and losses have little meaning.

Seriously, go look at the Olympic League website and try and figure out how they compute track team records. It makes no sense.

P.S. — If we go by their convoluted computing, Coupeville is the 1A girls’ regular season track champs.

But all anyone really looks at is how individual athletes (and relay teams) do at the state meet, so we’re not adding track into this team tally.

The stats:

Student body size (WIAA numbers at start of the school year):

Klahowya (455)
Port Townsend (327)
Chimacum (237)
Coupeville (225)

Total league wins across the 10 sports:

Klahowya (52)
Coupeville (40)
Chimacum (23)
Port Townsend (20)

League titles:

Klahowya (5) Volleyball, girls soccer, boys tennis, baseball, boys soccer
Coupeville (2) Girls basketball, girls tennis
Chimacum (2) Boys basketball, softball
Port Townsend (1) Football

Best league record:

Coupeville girls basketball (9-0) **Wolf JV also went 9-0**
Klahowya baseball (9-0)

State titles (so far):

Klahowya girls soccer

More positives for Coupeville, you ask?

The Wolves may have lost the regular season boys’ tennis title, but they stormed back to dethrone Klahowya in the postseason league tourney.

Plus, unlike Chimacum and Port Townsend, they garnered at least one league win in every one of the 10 sports, just like Klahowya.

In the end, what can we take away from all this?

One, Klahowya is good, especially in soccer, but didn’t really dominate across the board as much as you might have expected with its size advantage.

It is not ATM or King’s, and the Wolves can compete with the Eagles in almost any sport, any night.

Two, the numbers back my feeling that we are back in a golden age for female athletes at CHS.

Both of the new league title banners going up on the gym wall come from feminine sweat, grit and hard work, and Wolf girls accounted for 60% (24 of 40) of Coupeville’s league wins in year one.

Now, the gentlemen had their moments.

The Wolves were the only team to beat league champ Port Townsend in football and senior netter Aaron Curtin is going to state as a singles player.

In the end, take this — year one was a very good start. Year two, if the Wolves, girls and boys, believe and work, should be even better.

You know what the league is now. Go take control of it, in every sport.

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Mary

Mary Massengale

tennis

Massengale flies to the ball during her senior tennis season. (John Fisken photo)

Mary Massengale has always been her own person.

And that’s exactly how it should be.

She started her high school career as a football player and ended it on the tennis court. And never took any crap from anyone along the way.

Whether on the field or operating in the real world (we served time together in the restaurant world), she has always been feisty, independent, outspoken and, under it all, a really sweet-natured, likable young woman.

She may not have gotten the big headlines during her time as a Wolf, but I don’t think that was ever a priority with her.

Mary had talent and skill, but played the game on her own terms.

The one time a photographer was able to snap a picture of her playing tennis, it made her mom, Bobbie, thrilled.

Mary just arched an eyebrow, rolled her eyes slightly and went back about her business.

She declined to re-hash her time as a football player, because, even though others found it note-worthy that a freshman girl had suited up and held her own on the gridiron, it was just a small slice of her life.

As she celebrates her birthday today, I hope that Miss Massengale is fully appreciated by all around her.

She is talented, she is her own woman, and she consistently surprises. There is nothing she can’t do.

While Mary may not waste much time sitting around talking about how awesome she is, it’s a word that fits.

She’s not going to toot her own horn, so we’ll do it for her.

Mary Massengale — a quiet winner who deserves some loud applause.

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YOur 2014 CHS softball squad. (Amy King photo)

 Your 2014 CHS softball squad. Back (l to r): McKayla Bailey, Breeanna Messner, Tiffany Briscoe, Monica Vidoni, Hailey Hammer, Madeline Strasburg, Haley Sherman. Front: Erin Josue, Robin Cedillo, Jae LeVine, Madeline Roberts, Emily Licence, Emily Coulter. (Amy King photo)

Cue the rain. Cue the wind. It’s time for spring sports on Whidbey.

Did you really think the gentle, balmy, blue sky-drenched weather that we’ve seen the last week would last into the start of the actual seasons?

Oh, you sad, sad fool…

Well, weather or not, the 2014 spring sports season — the last one for Coupeville High School in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference — officially kicks off today, when the Wolf boys’ soccer squad hosts a jamboree (2 PM) at Micky Clark Field.

Lake Stevens and South Whidbey are in town, the event officially puts a stamp on Kyle Nelson’s hiring as Wolf coach (replacing the retired legend, Paul Mendes), and it will go on, regardless of weather.

Soccer doesn’t stop for anything short of a hurricane, and then it depends on what category of hurricane we’re talking about.

The lone CHS golfer, two-time state meet qualifier Christine Fields, was actually supposed to kick off the new season Friday, but excess rain caused a scheduled match at Useless Bay Golf and Country Club between South Whidbey, Overlake and the Lone Wolf to be postponed.

Monday, weather permitting, the season will move into being a full-on reality, with baseball traveling to South Whidbey, softball hopping across to Port Townsend and girls’ tennis welcoming Port Townsend to town.

Tuesday, Friday Harbor comes to Coupeville for soccer and tennis, Fields and her Falcon traveling mates go to Bush and softball squares off at home with arch-rival South Whidbey and its new coach.

Get your bets in now. How many games will be postponed and rescheduled due to weather in ’14?

I’m saying 71, and I feel pretty confident in that number.

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Allie Hanigan is the early favorite to be Coupeville's #1 player in 2w014. (John Fisken photo)

  Allie Hanigan is the early favorite to be Coupeville’s #1 player in 2014. (John Fisken photos)

Julia Myers is one of many returning letter winners for the Wolves.

Julia Myers is one of many returning letter winners for the Wolves.

The queen is gone. Long live the queen.

Amanda d’Almeida has graduated and is off in college playing soccer, leaving the #1 singles slot open as the Coupeville High School girls’ tennis squad gears up for a new season. Let the battle for hard-court supremacy begin.

Longtime Wolf tennis guru Ken Stange has numerous options to fill the top spot, and will hold an inter-squad tourney to see who wants to claim top dog status.

The early favorite, however, has to be senior Allie Hanigan. With two strong seasons behind her, the graceful netter is the top returning player on a veteran-heavy team and sliding up one spot on the rankings ladder would seem in the cards.

How the other varsity spots play out, both at #2 singles and with the doubles teams, should be interesting.

They might also change somewhat from match to match, with CHS having a number of battle-tested players fighting for the jobs.

Samantha Martin, who played in last year’s district doubles tourney, is joined by returning letter winners Jacki Ginnings, Micky LeVine, Ana Luvera, Ivy Luvera, Breanna Koym, Maureen Rice, Wynter Thorne, Julia Myers and McKenzie Bailey.

If any of them stumble, three newcomers are waiting for their time to shine, as well.  Senior Sydney Aparicio is jumping over from softball and freshmen Valen Trujillo and Bree Daigneault have been impressive in off-season workouts.

“I’ve seen Sydney play, and she could challenge for a varsity spot,” Stange said. “So could Valen and Bree. They’ve been practicing, even in bad weather.”

While he’ll have a deep roster (“I’ve got bunches of returning players and my new kids seem to be eager to get out there and play”), no one on the current roster has played at the very top for a consistent amount of time.

“I’ve got lots of girls who have played varsity tennis, but none of them have played much at #1 singles or doubles,” Stange said. “We’ll have to learn by beating up on ourselves, and then we’ll see what we can do against the competition.”

The cream of that competition will be the usual suspects from down the Island. Even with the loss of state meet veteran Hayley Newman, South Whidbey is still the team to beat.

“It’d be nice to take it to the Falcons,” Stange said. “South Whidbey, even though they don’t have any more Newman sisters, is always tough. Karyle Kramer runs a solid program.”

The Wolves will face more teams than in years past, as Stange and Coupeville AD Lori Stolee have been able to expand the schedule to seven teams and 13 matches.

Archbishop Thomas Murphy, Granite Falls, Lakewood and South Whidbey join the Wolves as Cascade Conference schools fielding squads, while perennial rival Friday Harbor, powerful Blaine and the combined forces of Port Townsend and Chimacum (the two schools play as one for tennis) round out the opponents.

Regardless of who is on the other side of the net, or which Wolf players end up in the varsity slots, Stange has one overwhelming wish. The same one he takes into every season on typically weather-torn Whidbey.

“I’m just hoping for some dry courts!!”

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