Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Hailey Hammer’

Lauren Rose (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Rose, seen here in an earlier match, played with the same wild abandon in Thursday’s win over Chimacum. (John Fisken photos)

Madeline Strasburg

   When spirited, vocal team leader Madeline Strasburg (20) is done playing, she might make a very good coach.

When the match started, there were about two fans in the stands. When it ended, it sounded like there were two hundred.

With an early 4 PM start catching a lot of Coupeville High School’s cheering section seemingly by surprise (visiting Chimacum didn’t have a single fan show up and only one extra player on its ultra-thin bench), Thursday afternoon’s Olympic League volleyball match-up kicked off in front of a nearly empty gym.

At the end, with fans having straggled in bit by bit, the joint was a little more rockin’, never more so than when the Wolves closed out a 25-20, 15-25, 25-23, 25-18 victory, their first ever under coach Breanne Smedley.

The win lifted Coupeville to 1-7 under the first-year head coach, 1-1 in league play. That’s the more important stat, as it means CHS jumped into second place in its four-team league.

Klahowya was 1-0 entering a Thursday night showdown with Port Townsend (0-1), while the Wolves and Chimacum now sit at 1-1.

The top three teams advance to the postseason and three of the Wolves’ final four league matches will be against Port Townsend and Chimacum.

Only a Oct. 27 rematch with unbeaten Klahowya (9-0), the #8 team in 1A polls, looms as a major stumbling block.

With Port Townsend up next Tuesday, Oct. 21 (it’s a home match with CHS putting on a cancer awareness night), Smedley is confident her team took a positive turn with the victory.

“This is a win they should feel really good about,” she said. “They competed well with this team and it should give some confidence and show them that they can win, that they’re capable.”

Other than a brief dry spell in the second set, the Wolves came out on fire, delivering big hits and big emotion.

At a key moment in the first set, with Coupeville clinging to a 21-20 lead, senior captain Madeline Strasburg came bounding out of a timeout, grabbing each of her teammates for a moment.

“We can do better, ladies! We can do better!!,” she said in a crisp, firm voice.

Then Strasburg proved it, winning the next point for the Wolves on a thunderous spike that shook the floor, the bleachers and, possibly, half the town.

Spurred on by her words, and her actions, Coupeville quickly put the set away on serves from Valen Trujillo that exploded with a zing, and another, just as brutal, spike off of Strasburg’s patented Arm ‘o Death.

The Wolves were the clear aggressor all match, with Strasburg, Hailey Hammer and Kacie Kiel launching laser shots.

Hammer drilled a Chimacum player in the body, but it was Strasburg (who else?) who lashed one winner off of a hapless Cowboy’s face (sort of by accident).

When it wasn’t putting the ball to the floor hard on spikes, Coupeville found myriad other ways to thwart Chimacum’s best efforts.

McKenzie Bailey and Lauren Rose dropped picture-perfect tips into open space repeatedly, while Trujillo chased down every last ball, cartwheeling end over end frequently.

The perfect punctuation came from Wolf senior Monica Vidoni, the team’s tallest player.

Timing her jump perfectly, Vidoni virtually scraped the ceiling on a play midway through the fourth set, catching the ball on her fingertips at its highest point and flicking it downwards.

Her tip knifed through a wall of Chimacum players, none of whom could catch up to it, and Vidoni was left to jump, scream and dance her way back to her teammates, who mobbed her in joy.

A complete team effort, the win had contributions from everyone, whether it was a nice, slicing winner from Kyla Briscoe, dependable work from Tiffany Briscoe or inspired late-match serving from Ally Roberts.

Springing off the bench, the irrepressible Roberts combined with Kiel to provide a one-two punch that knocked Chimacum out cold.

First Kiel smoked a winner off the back line — allowing her dad Steve, calling lines, to about jump out of his skin calling the point for CHS — then Roberts twirled an ace that caught the very farthest corner of the court.

Hammer (11 kills), Strasburg (8) and Kiel (7) shared the power display, while Trujillo went low for 26 digs and Rose dealt out 22 assists.

Read Full Post »

Kayla Briscoe (John Fisken photos)

Freshman Kyla Briscoe keeps the point alive. (John Fisken photos)

The CHS student section brought back their costumes

   The CHS student section brought back their costumes and paint jobs for the first time since midway through last season.

Lauren Rose: "Did you see that up there? That's school spirit, reborn!"

Lauren Rose: “Did you see that up there? That’s school spirit, reborn!”

Wolf super fan Steve Kiel approves. The student section has returned.

Wolf super fan Steve Kiel approves. The student section has returned.

Allison Wenzel

Allison Wenzel tracks down a runaway ball.

Wynter Thorne's sunglasses

  The bright lights and big cheers are captured in CHS hoops star Wynter Thorne’s sunglasses.

Hailey Hammer does Rose's hair before th ematch.

Multi-talented Hailey Hammer does Rose’s hair before the match.

Lauren Gorve

  Lauren Grove (left) delivers the Punch ‘O Death to the ball, as Katrina McGranahan (11) moves in to help out.

Wolf QB Joel Walstad gets his game face on.

Wolf QB Joel Walstad gets his game face on.

celebrate

Celebrate, good times, come on!

The noise hath returned.

Bringing back costumes and face paint for the first time since midway through last season (when a dust-up with school administration put a damper on things), the student cheering section for CHS volleyball matches was at its loudest ‘n proudest Wednesday night.

Whether the section will one day return to being fully crammed — as in years past — is still an open question.

But it was a huge step in the right direction, one spurred on by Wolf football players such as Joel Walstad, Matt Shank, Josh Bayne, Isaac Vargas, Ryan Griggs and Gabe Wynn.

Also on hand, because it wouldn’t be the same without him, the man, the myth, the legend — Coupeville tennis god Kyle Bodamer.

Patrolling the gym snapping pics of both the revived student section and the action on the court was John Fisken.

To see more of his photos (and possibly purchase some, thereby supporting scholarships for Wolf student/athletes), pop over to:

Varsity — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=6989&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

JV — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=6988&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

Read Full Post »

Madeline Strasburg goes airborne for a kill in an earlier match. (John Fisken photos)

Wolf senior Madeline Strasburg goes airborne for a kill in an earlier match. (John Fisken photos)

While still seeking their first win, the Wolves have stayed united

While still seeking their first win, the Wolves have stayed united.

Both teams had a zero in their records before the match, and both still do.

Unfortunately, that means the Coupeville High School volleyball squad couldn’t overcome powerful Klahowya Tuesday night and exited Silverdale still seeking its first win of the season.

The 25-14, 25-10, 27-25 victory lifted the host Eagles to 9-0 overall, 1-0 in Olympic League play. The Wolves sank to 0-6, 0-1.

Coupeville, which has had huge chunks of down time lately, with just one match in a three-week period, will get a fast turnaround this time.

The Wolves kick off the second half of their 12-match schedule with a non-conference tilt against Darrington (7-1) Wednesday. JV plays at 5:00 PM, varsity at 6:15.

They then get back to league play the very next night, capping three matches in three days when Chimacum (1-4) visits. The Cowboys don’t have a JV, so varsity will slide up into the 5 PM slot.

With five league matches to play (two against Port Townsend (5-2) and Chimacum and a rematch with Klahowya) before the regular season wraps Oct. 28, Coupeville still has an excellent shot at making the playoffs.

All it has to do is find a win or two.

The top three teams in the four-team league will advance to face off with the top three teams from the Nisqually League in a tournament, with two teams qualifying for state.

Facing off with the most formidable of their league foes Tuesday, the Wolves got stronger near the end of the match, while getting big contributions from several players.

Senior Hailey Hammer paced CHS with six kills, three blocks and six digs, while Madeline Strasburg nailed four kills and went low for 11 digs.

Valen Trujillo record a team-high 12 digs while freshman setter Lauren Rose doled out 13 assists and piled up six digs of her own.

Read Full Post »

Learn to play like Madeline Strasburg! (John Fisken photos)

Learn to play like Madeline Strasburg! (John Fisken photos)

A few of your teachers.

A few of your teachers.

Kacie Kiel is ready to share her volleyball secrets.

The standout Coupeville High School senior spiker and her teammates will be passing out wisdom to the next generation at two free clinics for elementary school students.

The clinics, put on by the Wolf volleyball squad and its coaches, will be held in the CHS and CMS gyms Thursday, Oct. 2 (5:30-7) and Saturday, Oct. 18 (10-11:30).

They are open to any Coupeville Elementary School student in grades K-6 and are free. No pre-registration is needed.

Just show up and and prepare to learn some basic volleyball skills.

The chance to snag an autograph from Wolf stars like Hailey Hammer or Valen Trujillo? Just a bonus.

Read Full Post »

(John Fisken photos)

 Coupeville’s injured reserve includes veterans Sydney Autio (left) and McKayla Bailey. (John Fisken photos)

Freshman Lauren Rose (9) has become the team's starting setter. Here she hangs out with Kailey Kellner (left) and McKenzie Bailey.

  Freshman Lauren Rose (9) has become the team’s starting setter. Here she hangs out with Kailey Kellner (left) and McKenzie Bailey.

They are a young team and it shows at times.

With two freshmen and a sophomore starting, two veterans sidelined with injuries and their spark-plug playing in just her first regular match of the season, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad bounced all over the place Thursday night.

When they were clicking, they had moments of brilliance — big hits from Hailey Hammer, strong hustle from Valen Trujillo and Kacie Kiel, often electrifying work from McKenzie Bailey and the just-returned Madeline Strasburg.

But when they were off, they were very, very off and it eventually hurt them, as the Wolves fell 21-25, 25-9, 25-10, 25-19 to visiting Mount Vernon Christian.

The non-conference loss dropped Coupeville to 0-4.

While the end result wasn’t what she was hoping for, Wolf coach Breanne Smedley did appreciate how her squad came out to start the match.

“We controlled the ball well in the first set and and played our pace,” Smedley said. “They (MVC) picked up their offense after that. They were very speedy and we hadn’t seen a lot of that before.

“We had some strings of great volleyball,” she added. “We just couldn’t quite string enough of those together.”

The Wolves, who will be without senior McKayla Bailey (shoulder surgery) and junior Sydney Autio (ankle in a boot) the rest of the season, will have time to work out the kinks.

They don’t play again until Oct. 7, when they host Bellevue Christian.

Coupeville would like to recapture the first-set magic it displayed against the Hurricanes Thursday and keep it percolating through an entire match.

With Hammer and Strasburg pounding the ball with fury, the Wolves pulled out a set that was more like a war. Neither team led by more than four points and there were nine ties, the last at 21-21.

CHS netted that last tie when Hammer rose into the skies and delivered a blistering spike that peeled paint off the gym floor.

Sparked by their senior leader, the Wolves closed out the set with freshman Lauren Rose at the service stripe.

MVC was unable to get returns back over the net on three of her four serves, and, the one time they did, Hammer dropped the boom, sending Hurricanes scattering in a wild race for cover.

Unfortunately, right at the moment when it should have been riding high, something largely clicked off for Coupeville.

The next two sets, while they had scattered moments of pleasure, were rough to watch.

Frequent miscommunication between players allowed a ton of balls to fall in, and not even Trujillo valiantly shredding her knees diving to the floor in pursuit of endless Hurricane spikes could stem the tide.

But then, as young, inconsistent teams often do, the Wolves suddenly flipped the switch again — this time for the positive — and hopes of pushing the match to a fifth set began to look quite promising.

Charging back behind Hammer and Strasburg, Coupeville erased a 13-8 fourth-set deficit and knotted things up at 17 when Hammer smashed a ball off the last millimeter of the back line, sending a roar through her teammates and fans.

Then click, it all went away again, as Mt. Vernon used its superior height to regain control of the net and the match.

The Wolves final two points came only when Hurricane serves sailed long.

Hammer paced Coupeville with nine kills and Bailey added three. Trujillo tallied 13 digs, Rose handed out 15 assists, while Strasburg had 11 digs, three kills and four service aces.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »