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Raven Vick had a very strong night at the service stripe Wednesday, helping power Coupeville to a big bounce-back win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hannah Davidson delivered 11 kills, two aces, and two blocks in the home win over Sultan. (Brian Vick photo)

It wasn’t perfect, but it’ll do.

Two days after absorbing their only loss of the season — a brutal beat-down at the hands of state power King’s — the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad roared back to life.

Playing without explosive hitter Chelsea Prescott, who suffered a brutal ankle injury in the loss, the Wolves stuffed visiting Sultan Wednesday night 25-10, 25-9, 23-25, 25-15.

The win lifts Coupeville to 4-1 in North Sound Conference play, 8-1 overall.

The Wolves are a game back of King’s (5-0, 8-0) and a game up on Cedar Park Christian (3-2, 8-3), at the halfway point of the league season.

South Whidbey, Granite Falls, and Sultan are holding on to the bottom three slots currently.

Coupeville travels to Port Townsend Thursday for a non-conference tilt with the RedHawks (1-7), before playing four of its final five league games on the road.

With its eight seniors making their next-to-last regular-season appearance on their home floor, and both teams celebrating Dig Pink Night and the fight against breast cancer, Coupeville was looking for a bounce-back game.

And the Wolves got it, as they controlled play all night, even factoring in a brief slip-up in the third set.

“It was good to get back after it and get a win again,” said CHS coach Cory Whitmore. “We had a productive practice with a very productive team meeting and we went after making adjustments to not having Chelsea for the time being.

“We had a third set lull and relaxed too much but got it together for the fourth set and ultimately the win.”

While the Wolves wanted to wash away the bad taste from their King’s loss, they also wanted to honor those fighting against, and those lost to, cancer.

The event drew a large crowd, with money donated to the cause and attention drawn to the battle.

“The event was fantastic and the turn-out was great with incredible energy as we played for a very important cause,” Whitmore said.

With freshman Lucy Tenore replacing Prescott in the lineup, the Wolves came out firing from the start.

Scout Smith opened things up with a 5-0 run at the service stripe, and she got big-time help from her teammates.

Fellow senior Maya Toomey-Stout erupted for a big kill on the first rally, blasting a ball off the back line, then made an eye-popping one-handed save on a later ball few could have caught up with.

Sprinting in a way which reminded all the fans why they refer to her as “The Gazelle,” Toomey-Stout punched the ball skyward at the last second, angling it perfectly to a waiting Zoe Trujillo, who lashed an immediate winner, sending the Turks scurrying for cover.

There weren’t too many places for Sultan’s players to hide, however, as Hannah Davidson, stepping up and delivering her most complete performance of the season, was on the rampage.

Mixing up thunderous spikes with note-perfect tips, then tossing in some service aces and blocks at the net to complete her mid-week masterpiece, Davidson gave dad Micheal plenty to celebrate.

“That’s my girl right there!!!!!!!,” papa screamed, while Whitmore was a little more laid-back, yet just as appreciative, in his post-match dissection, smiling and nodding as he intoned, “Hannah was huge for us tonight.”

Coupeville led from start to finish in the opening frame, continuously stretching the lead out, before Toomey-Stout (with a spike off a rival’s arm) and Trujillo (with an artful tip winner) closed the set.

If big hits was the theme in set one, sizzlin’ serves dominated the conversation in the second frame.

Raven Vick ripped off three straight winners, before Toomey-Stout came around to pour gas on the fire with a 10-0 run helped out by Davidson delivering winners on four of five points during one part of the run.

Again, Sultan never led in the set, and seemed primed to accept a straight sets beatin’ and get back on the bus.

But something changed as the third set played out, from the Turks taking their first lead of the night at 2-1, then hanging tough all the way through.

Toomey-Stout, Davidson, and Trujillo were still savaging Sultan at the net, with Maddie Vondrak sliding in to deliver some soul-shaking hits of her own, but the visitors didn’t melt away the third time around.

With the set knotted at 15-15, Vick came bounding off the bench to finally, seemingly, slam the door on the Turks.

A 6-0 run on her serve, topped by a play on which Toomey-Stout went airborne while swinging one hand, then suddenly changed hands in midair and blasted a winner with arm #2, shoved the lead to 21-15.

It was over … and then it wasn’t.

Sultan got a side-out, put the ball in the hands of its best server, and threw down its own unexpected, and faintly disturbing, 8-0 run to regain the lead, while pushing Coupeville to the brink.

Vondrak finally stopped the bleeding, delivering a monstrous mash of a winner, but the damage was done, and, for only the fourth time in nine matches, the Wolves dropped a set.

If Whitmore was disturbed, he hid it well, keeping a poker face for the fans and assorted word scribblers in attendance, but leaning in close to talk to his players as they sat on the bench.

Whatever words of wisdom were passed on did the trick, as the Wolves played out the fourth set much more like sets #1 and #2 than #3.

Once again, they led the entire way, they dictated the action, and all the big blows were dealt by young women wearing black uniforms.

Vick and Trujillo added one more strong run at the line apiece, while Tenore rose up above the net to let the world know she’s coming, and the spikes will be deadly and plentiful.

But it was Toomey-Stout, as it has often been over these last four remarkable years, who provided the final punctuation.

Taking flawless sets from Smith, her close friend, “The Gazelle” attacked again and again, delivering a season-high 19 kills, each one more explosively dynamic than the previous one.

With twin brother Sean leading the student section, stomping and screaming, Maya played with a brutal beauty, daring the ball not to pop under her ferocious attacks.

Huge smile on her face, mom Lisa leaned back and whispered, “She is going to be one tired girl tonight.”

At which point her daughter, once again defying gravity, flew by and pasted a cross-court winner to end the match, then landed in a group hug as her teammates mobbed her in glee.

Port Townsend was right around the corner, with the stretch run of league play looming ahead.

But in the moment, as Emma Mathusek and Lucy Sandahl and Smith and all her teammates bounced up and down, all Toomey-Stout could do was smile the all-encompassing smile of a winner.

In the stands, her mom leaned back and smiled even bigger.

“I love it. I just love it.”

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Maya Toomey-Stout rang up 11 service aces, nine digs, and eight kills as Coupeville volleyball rolled to a three-set win on opening night. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Wolves were dominant, collecting 29 kills and 23 aces as a team.

It was raining Thursday afternoon on Friday Harbor, but the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad avoided the liquid sunshine.

Camped in the gym where it was dry, the Wolf spikers contented themselves with lashing winners from the sky, and not dodging falling raindrops.

Racking up 29 kills, to go with 23 service aces, CHS romped to a season-opening win, nailing their non-conference hosts 25-16, 25-6, 25-17.

It might not have been a perfect day of volleyball, as the Wolves adjusted to a new lineup, but it was more than enough to get the win.

“I thought we played OK for our first outing, but the first game of the season jitters were very present,” Coupeville coach Cory Whitmore said. “Took a while to settle into our offense, but serving allowed us to establish ourselves and take the pressure off.”

The Wolves were at their most-ferocious in the middle set, when they rode a long, super-successful run at the service stripe from senior Maya Toomey-Stout and blasted Friday Harbor.

“We especially played strong in the second set, starting at the service line and controlling any balls they returned,” Whitmore said.

When Friday Harbor did get the ball in the air for a potential rally, Coupeville’s big hitters answered “No, no, NOOOO!!” most of the night.

Toomey-Stout blasted eight kills, Zoe Trujillo zinged five, Chelsea Prescott walloped three, freshman Lucy Tenore unleashed the first two of her high school career, and setter Scout Smith even added one put-away.

But the biggest basher of them all was senior Hannah Davidson, who stepped into the spotlight role Thursday, delivering 10 rock-em, sock-em kills which left Friday Harbor players quivering in their shoes.

Hannah played especially well in the middle, finishing with zero errors,” Whitmore said. “She swung hard and smart, which is what we’ll need from her.”

Smith paced the Wolves with 26 assists, while Emma Mathusek collected a team-high 13 digs, and Toomey-Stout amassed nine digs and 11 service aces.

Prescott (five digs), Raven Vick (two digs, five aces), Davidson (three aces), and Lucy Sandahl (two aces) also filled up the stat sheet for Coupeville, which returns to action next Tuesday, Sept. 17, when it travels to Anacortes.

The Wolves home opener is Sept. 21, with Chimacum coming to town.

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Hannah Davidson had five points and eight rebounds Thursday as Coupeville fell to highly-ranked King’s, ending the Wolves playoff run. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Wolves enjoy a moment together during the ferry ride home. (Amy King photo)

In the end, there was one team they just couldn’t beat.

Unable to solve the big, quick, highly-disciplined pack of players private school power King’s throws at the world, the Coupeville High School girls basketball squad reached the end of its season Thursday at Shoreline.

Falling 48-11 in the second round of the District 1 playoffs, the Wolves were eliminated a win shy of qualifying for bi-districts, and finish 9-10 on the year.

Three of those losses came to the North Sound Conference champs, as all-universe freshman Jada Wynn and company swept the season series from Coupeville.

Even though their season ending with a defeat, and a long ride home on the icy back roads of America, the Wolves enjoyed a fair amount of success in David King’s seventh year at the helm of the program.

CHS, which has made the playoffs every season under King, claimed third-place in the six-team NSC, beating pre-season projections, and closed with five wins in its last eight games.

That included an 11-point home playoff win over Sultan Wednesday, in a game thrown together at the very last second.

The Coupeville girls were also one of just two Whidbey Island high school hoops teams (out of six) to make the playoffs, and the last eliminated, at least by a few minutes.

Playing earlier in the evening Thursday, South Whidbey’s boys were bashed 67-47 at Meridian and also fell a game shy of a berth to bi-districts.

The onslaught of ice and snow which ravaged Washington changed what was supposed to be double-elimination district tourneys into modified singe-elimination ones.

With the threat of round two of Snowmageddon arriving Friday, Coupeville’s second postseason bout got shoved up a night, sending the Wolves to the bus less than 24 hours after they whacked the Turks.

The quick turnaround, piled on top of an emotional home win, a long bus trip, a day of school, and the sheer talent of their rivals made for a tall mountain to scale.

“A tough game after the great win last night,” David King said. “We came out and gave everything we had.

“That said, last night’s game took a lot out of us, energy wise,” he added. “We got a lot of shots up and just couldn’t get them to fall. King’s defense is fundamentally sound; they prevented us from getting to the basket.”

Coupeville broke 40 points in seven games this season, but could only scrape together 39 points combined across its three losses to King’s, scoring 17, 11, and 11.

Thursday night the only shot which dropped in the first quarter was a three-ball from Ema Smith, and the Wolves went to the break trailing 13-3.

It didn’t get much better from there, with King’s stretching the lead out to 28-6 at the half, then completely shutting Coupeville’s offensive attack down during an 11-0 third quarter.

The Wolves continued to work hard, though, pushing the Knights long after the game was out of hand.

“The team never backed down and gave everything they had every time they stepped on the court,” King said. “Overall, a very good season.”

Davidson, a standout during Coupeville’s playoff run, capped her junior season with a team-high five points and eight rebounds.

Ema Smith finished with five points and three boards, while Chelsea Prescott netted a free throw to round out the scoring.

Bringing her prep hardwood career to a close Thursday, Smith moved past two more former Wolf greats on the career scoring list.

Finishing with 228 points, she leapfrogs Annette Jameson (223) and Mikayla Elfrank (227) to finish as the #48 scorer in program history, which stretches back to 1974.

Thursday’s game was the final one for Smith and fellow CHS seniors Nicole Laxton, a hard worker who always brought great energy to the floor, and four-year varsity vet Lindsey Roberts.

Roberts, who missed two complete games and most of a third due to a college visit and a late-season finger injury, still topped Coupeville in scoring for a second-straight season.

A player who saw quality minutes at the varsity level from day one of her freshman season, she exits with 448 points, leaving her tied with Vanessa Davis for #18 on the career chart.

While all three seniors will be missed, the cupboard isn’t bare for David King and JV coach/wife Amy, who can bring back nine of the 12 players who saw varsity floor time.

Point guard Scout Smith, now the leading active scorer for the girls program with 142 points across two varsity seasons, is one of four juniors on the team, along with Davidson, Avalon Renninger, and Tia Wurzrainer.

Sophomores Prescott and Mollie Bailey and freshmen Ja’Kenya Hoskins, Izzy Wells, and Anya Leavell should all return as well.

 

Final season scoring statistics:

Lindsey Roberts – 150
Ema Smith
– 134
Chelsea Prescott
– 101
Scout Smith
– 86
Avalon Renninger
– 56
Hannah Davidson
– 31
Tia Wurzrainer
– 18
Nicole Laxton
– 15
Izzy Wells
– 11
Mollie Bailey
– 8
Ja’Kenya Hoskins
– 5
Anya Leavell
– 4

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   Scout Smith and Coupeville led for three quarters Wednesday, but an ice-cold fourth killed their chances. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Like getting put through a wood-chipper for 32 minutes.

Riding high off of a big win the night before, the Coupeville High School girls basketball squad stumbled a bit Wednesday, enduring their own Fargo moment as they were bruised, battered and, finally, shredded 28-20 by host Chimacum.

The loss drops the rebuilding Wolves to 2-2 in Olympic League play, 4-10 overall.

Coupeville, chasing a fourth-straight league title, sits in third place, trailing the Cowboys (3-1, 6-7) and Port Townsend (3-2, 5-7), while Klahowya (0-3, 2-10) brings up the rear.

While this title hunt isn’t going as easy as the previous three, when CHS went 27-0 in conference play, the young, undermanned Wolves are still very much in the thick of things with five league games left on their schedule.

Wednesday night, take away an ice-cold fourth quarter, and despite the bruises and whiplash endured, Coupeville almost pulled off a win that would have elevated them into first place.

But that final eight minutes, when the Wolves failed to score a single point, doomed them.

Despite facing withering pressure, and committing a head-spinning 43 turnovers, Coupeville led 3-2 after one quarter, 8-7 at the half and 20-19 after three.

How they led is something CHS coach David King is still trying to figure out.

That, and how he wandered into a WWE taping instead of a basketball game.

“Unreal and so very rough. I think that’s the only way I can describe tonight’s game,” he said. “Chimacum is aggressive and we wilted against everything they threw at us.

“How good was their press?,” King asked. “According to our play and turnovers, it appears it is a top-tier press. In reality, it’s aggressive and good — we just made them look like all-stars.”

While Chimacum’s defensive heat and willingness to whack a girl certainly helped, most of the Wolves turnovers were self-inflicted, as King ticked off a list of miscues.

“Throwing passes into defensive arms/hands. Overthrowing, throwing behind a teammate or trying to dribble-drive up the court out of control,” he said. “We will go back to the basics and see if we can fix this reoccurring issue.”

Where Coupeville was effective was on the boards, where four different players snared at least seven rebounds.

Lindsey Roberts hauled in 10 caroms, while Allison Wenzel, Ema Smith and Hannah Davidson added seven apiece.

The Wolves shared the offensive load, as well, with Roberts tossing in seven points to lead the way.

Kyla Briscoe (4), Ema Smith (4), Sarah Wright (2), Davidson (2) and Scout Smith (1) rounded out the limited attack.

The game also marked the varsity debut of Wolf juniors Ashlie Shank and Maddy Hilkey.

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   Kyla Briscoe racked up nine points, four steals and three assists Wednesday, sparking Coupeville to a huge win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was the perfect Christmas present.

Heading into a nine-day break between games, the Coupeville High School girls basketball squad put a win under the tree Wednesday night.

Shredding a visiting Concrete team that offered little match for the Wolves aggressiveness, especially on defense, CHS romped to a 47-7 win.

And no, that’s not a misprint.

Three different Wolves — Ema Smith, Kyla Briscoe and Lindsey Roberts — outscored the Lions by themselves, as Coupeville snagged a much-needed non-conference victory.

In a season of transition, with a roster which has been further shuffled as the season has progressed, the Wolves have been better than their 2-7 record might indicate.

Four of their losses have been by six or less points, and there is little question talent runs deep on this squad.

The key, as they deal with the loss of four starters from last season’s league title-winning team, has been to get all the parts working together. To find that perfect rhythm.

And while no one will call Wednesday’s romp perfect, it was still a big step forward.

Nine of 10 Wolves scored, including sophomore Hannah Davidson, who was making her varsity (and season) debut after a family move this week brought her back from a year-long exile in California.

Reunited with her former teammates, she gave Coupeville an immediate presence in the paint and on the boards, while dishing the ball with panache on back-to-back assists.

The first came on a picture-perfect feed to Scout Smith, a fellow Class of 2020 star, who snagged Davidson’s in-bounds pass and drained a long jumper in one smooth motion.

The very next play it was Davidson, showing a surprising nimbleness for an inside banger, picking off a pass in the open court, whirling and feeding Kyla Briscoe, who slapped home the running layup.

Briscoe, one of three seniors on this year’s squad, has begun to step up and take a featured role in the Wolf offensive attack.

Wednesday night, she was on fire in the second quarter, dropping in seven points, with a pair of layups topped with a sweet three-ball from the top.

Using a withering defensive onslaught, including a frequent trap, the Wolves essentially kept Concrete from getting a decent shot off for 98.7% of the game.

Coupeville rolled to an 11-0 lead at the end of the first quarter, didn’t give up a point until nearly three minutes into the second, and surrendered exactly one field goal all night.

Concrete’s only basket came 30 seconds into the fourth quarter, at a time when the Wolves were safely ahead 37-3.

Other than that, it was four free throws, a handful of misses and a lot of broken-up passes and turnovers for the Lion offense.

CHS, by contrast, had a lot of good looks. While they didn’t always take advantage of every opportunity, they did push the flow of the game, at times playing as if they were involved in a free-flowing scrimmage.

Some of the shots were poppin’ fresh.

Freshman Chelsea Prescott, who recently moved up to varsity full-time, had a scintillating drive down the baseline for a bucket, Ema Smith knocked down a gorgeous runner off the glass and Sarah Wright abused the Lions in the paint.

Working her elbows like a pro, and flashing some vintage Detroit Pistons Bad Boys-style grumpiness while fighting for loose balls, the junior post player made sure Concrete would remember her name, and her game.

Ema Smith led the most-balanced scoring attack of the season, draining 10 points, while Briscoe netted nine and Roberts sank eight.

Wright (6), Prescott (4), Scout Smith (4), Mikayla Elfrank (3), Davidson (2) and Allison Wenzel (1) also scored, while Avalon Renninger spent her time setting up her teammates with crisp passes and defensive hustle.

Davidson led the Wolves on the boards, ripping down eight caroms in her return, while also piling up two assists, two steals and two blocks.

Briscoe pilfered four steals and handed out three assists, with Wright finagling three steals of her own.

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