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Posts Tagged ‘Hope Lodell’

Some of the people and events which shaped Coupeville Sports in 2016. (John Fisken photos)

   Some of the people and events which shaped Coupeville Sports in 2016. (John Fisken and Shelli Trumbull photos)

High points. Low points. Moments in between.

2016, like every year, was a mixed bag, and that carried over to sports accomplishments.

Having put some research time in (not a lot, but some), here’s my personal picks for the 16 most memorable moments from ’16.

16) Paul Schmakeit, a former CHS athlete and member of the Central Whidbey Little League junior baseball team that won a state title in 2010, pleads guilty for his role in a home burglary that left a man paralyzed.

He’s currently serving a sentence of a year and eight months. After starting at the Washington Corrections Center in Shelton, he was recently transferred to the Monroe Correctional Complex.

15) Willie Smith returns to reclaim the Athletic Director role at CHS.

The longtime coach, quote king and bon vivant immediately slaps the unwieldy school sports schedule into shape and brings the district volleyball tourney to Cow Town. Millions rejoice in the streets (well, I do, at least).

14) Five-foot-four sharpshooter Mason Grove drops seven three-balls in one game, propelling the Wolf JV boys basketball squad to a wild win over arch-rival South Whidbey and its two 6’5 freshmen.

13) They had to stretch the sign-up time just to field a roster, but once Central Whidbey Little League had a juniors softball squad in place, things went peachy keen.

Under the direction of diamond gurus Charlotte Young and Connie Lippo, the Venom, led by Chelsea Prescott, Scout Smith and Mollie Bailey, finish 13-3, outscoring foes 185-85.

12) Hunter Smith hits the stone-cold, ice-water-in-your-veins shot of the year, nailing a trey from the corner at the buzzer in Klahowya, lifting the Wolves to a 54-53 win in the regular season finale of the 2015-2016 campaign.

11) Mia Littlejohn rips up the record book, throwing down 27 goals on the soccer pitch this fall and earning co-MVP honors in the 1A Olympic League.

The Wolf booters put together the first winning season in program history, while their captain smashed program (Kalia Littlejohn-10) and school (Abraham Leyva-20) scoring marks.

10) Makana Stone caps her stellar prep hoops career by signing a letter of intent to play college ball at Whitman.

After compiling 1,000+ points, 800+ rebounds and 200+ steals as a Wolf, she’s now the first player off the bench for a Blues team which is off to a 10-0 start and ranked in the top 25 in the nation.

9) Before she leaves CHS, Stone leads her team to state, the first time a CHS hoops squad has made it to the big dance in a decade.

The Wolves shred Seattle Christian at districts to stun the Sumner crowd, then fall to Cashmere at regionals, finishing 16-6.

8) After two years of going on its own, the 1A Olympic League hooks up with the Nisqually League to create an eight-team football-only conference.

Cascade Christian claims the inaugural title, while Coupeville wins two league games (Vashon, Chimacum) and comes within a play of winning two others (Bellevue Christian, Charles Wright).

7) The Wolves continue to surge to the front of their league, winning girls basketball, baseball, girls tennis, volleyball and boys tennis titles in 2016.

The volleyball title is the first for Coupeville since 2004, while the baseball team notches its first league title since 1990.

6) The coaching shuffle continues, with the biggest moves involving new head coaches for volleyball (Cory Whitmore) and football (Jon Atkins) and an involuntary exit for cheer coach Cheridan Eck.

Atkins wins three games in his first go-round, an improvement on the previous regime, which won a single game in 2015, while Whitmore launches what looks like the start of a volleyball dynasty.

Eck vanishes from the sidelines midway through the season, school officials refuse to comment and, as of a few days ago, the school is accepting applications for the position.

5) Racing the end of the summer and the start of football, CHS puts the finishing touches on its brand new track. Funded by a successful levy, it will allow the Wolves to host home track meets for the first time since their old track began to crumble back into the Earth.

4) Playing under Atkins for the first time, the Wolf football squad thrashes visiting South Whidbey 41-10 on opening night to bring The Bucket home.

The trophy is a bit dented, as the Falcons take out their frustration on Coupeville’s logo, but dent or no dent, The Bucket is back where it belongs.

3) Records fell left and right, from Littlejohn on the pitch to the track big board being rewritten by Jacob Smith, Jordan Ford, Dalton Martin, Stone, Sylvia Hurlburt, Lauren Grove and Lindsey Roberts.

Not to be outdone, Hunter Smith smashes football single-season marks for receiving yards and touchdowns and Hope Lodell records more service aces in one SEASON (110) than any Wolf spiker amassed in their entire CAREER.

2) CHS track has a long and storied history, but the Wolves performance at the state track meet last spring stands as one of the best the school has ever put together.

It would take forever to go through all the accomplishments, but two things really stand out.

Stone and Roberts became the first Wolf girls to ever win three medals at one state meet, while Martin was the first CHS athlete, male or female, to win three medals in the throwing events.

1) This one is personal.

After much work, research, fundraising and arm-twisting, we reclaim 116 years worth of CHS sports history, creating a Wall of Fame in the school’s gym.

Honoring all league and district titles, top 10 state performances by Wolf teams and individual state titles from 1900-2016, it’s a start.

Now, about that football record board…

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Hope Lodell

   Hope Lodell (left) is joined by Hunter Smith and Mia Littlejohn. (John Fisken photos)

We’re spanning the generations today.

As we open the doors to welcome our 73rd class into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, the athletes and performances being honored stretch from 1925 all the way up to a mere eight days ago.

It’s a diverse group, as we welcome four Wolves into this hallowed digital shrine.

One goes in for his entire career, while the other three, who are much younger, are honored for crafting major moments which shattered records.

With that we welcome Roy Armstrong, CHS Class of 1926, and Hope Lodell, Mia Littlejohn and Hunter Smith, all on their way to being part of the CHS Class of 2018.

Armstrong is the only one of the four being honored for his entire body of work, mainly because the other three aren’t done writing their story yet.

While it’s very likely Lodell, Littlejohn and Smith will be returning to the Hall one day to be inducted as athletes, for today they’re being hailed for what they accomplished this fall.

All four, however, will be found hanging out together at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab, after this ceremony.

Our first inductee, Armstrong, is also the first person I’ve put into the Hall without a photo.

While I couldn’t tell you what ol’ Roy looked like, I can tell you he left a sizable impression on the stat sheets of the past.

The campaign which really stands out (because I happen to have lucked into possession of a rare 1925 CHS annual) is Armstrong’s junior year of 1924-1925.

During that school year, he lettered in three sports (football, basketball and track), leading all three to Island County championships.

With Armstrong front and center on all three squads, Coupeville thrashed Oak Harbor and Langley to claim Island supremacy that year.

On the gridiron, he scored a key offensive touchdown in the title-clinching win over the North Enders, while also pulling off a memorable 60-yard fumble recovery in a “sea of mud” against Fairhaven for another score.

Once he moved to the hard-court, Armstrong was Coupeville’s primary scoring weapon, as he accounted for 80 of his team’s 177 points.

That included dropping in 18 of 41 points during a three-game run at the district tourney.

In the spring, he was captain of the track squad, winning the pole vault and running on a dominant relay squad as CHS demolished its Island rivals in the year’s big meet.

Coupeville rolled up 70 points in the 1925 Island County Track Meet, while Langley (28) and Oak Harbor (21) mounted little resistance to the farm boys from Cow Town.

Armstrong’s three companions on this induction day followed in his (long ago) footsteps, putting together record-setting seasons as juniors.

Littlejohn, who had eight goals through her first two seasons on the pitch, went ballistic this fall, torching the nets for 27 as she led the Wolf booters to the first winning season in program history.

That topped the 20 notched last spring by Abraham Leyva and was almost three times the previous girls single-season record of 10 tallied by lil’ sis Kalia Littlejohn in 2015.

Our third inductee, Smith, has been a two-way star on the gridiron since the first moment he pulled on a CHS helmet, and he’s on the cusp of shattering numerous career marks on both sides of the ball.

This season, he knocked off two single-season receiving marks, rolling up 915 yards and 11 touchdown receptions.

The first erased a record which had stood since Chad Gale set it in 1987, while the second nipped a more recent mark set by Josh Bayne in 2014.

Along the way, he also tied a CHS single-game record, pulling in three of those TD catches against Bellevue Christian.

Our final inductee, Lodell, not only broke a single-season record, but she did it in a way which actually broke two records at once.

After dropping 31 service aces as a sophomore, the ever-springy one found a new zone as a junior, raining down 110 aces as Coupeville volleyball put together its best season in 12 years.

Now pause for just a second.

Not only was the 110 aces a single-season record, but, by itself, it allowed Lodell to break the Wolf CAREER ace record (109 by Hall o’ Famer Mindy Horr).

With 141 aces to her credit and a season left to go in her vaunted career, she now has a chance to put the career mark way out of reach.

But that’s the future, a time when we will most likely be revisiting 2016’s terrific trio and inducting them into the Hall a second (or third or fourth) time.

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Your 1A Olympic League volleyball MVP, Katrina McGranahan. (John Fisken photo)

   Your 1A Olympic League volleyball MVP, Katrina McGranahan. (John Fisken photos)

Cory Whitmore

It took Cory Whitmore a single season to be named Coach of the Year.

Every time Katrina McGranahan hit the volleyball this season, it exploded.

Mixing power at the net, where she led Coupeville in kills for the second straight year, and at the service stripe, where she was one of the best servers in the state, the Wolf junior was fury unleashed.

And now, after helping lead the CHS spikers to their best season since 2004, McGranahan has been rewarded, being named the 1A Olympic League MVP.

She was one of five Wolves hailed by league coaches Wednesday, with Cory Whitmore being tabbed Coach of the Year and teammates Hope Lodell and Valen Trujillo earning First Team All-League honors.

Lauren Rose was also tabbed as an Honorable Mention pick.

The future looks bright for Coupeville, as well, as the league champs were the only school to have a non-senior honored in the first group.

McGranahan, who threw down 91 kills, 14 blocks, 134 service points and 62 aces and Lodell, who notched 75 kills, 137 digs, 187 service points and 110 aces, are juniors.

Trujillo closed her career with 195 digs (giving her a school record 550), 348 service returns, 35 aces and 94 service points.

Rose, a junior setter, recorded 192 assists and garnered 132 service points and 35 aces with a team-best 92.7% serving percentage.

The Wolves went 11-6 overall, 8-1 in league play under Whitmore, who is in his first season as head coach.

The complete list of winners:

Coach of the Year: Cory Whitmore, Coupeville

Team Sportsmanship: Chimacum

Most Valuable Player: Katrina McGranahan, Jr., Coupeville

Defensive MVP: Nicole Mills, Sr., Klahowya

1st Team All-League:

Valen Trujillo, Sr., Coupeville

Hope Lodell, Jr., Coupeville

Jessica Carlson, Sr., Klahowya

Ashley Sharp, Sr., Klahowya

Taylor Carthaum, Sr., Chimacum

Shanya Nisbet, Sr., Chimacum

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Two. That's how many aces Hope Lodell needs to be the first Wolf to hit 100 in a season. (John Fisken photo)

   Two. That’s how many aces Hope Lodell needs to be the first Wolf to hit 100 in a season. (John Fisken photo)

Hope Lodell is pretty much the best server playing high school volleyball in Washington state.

At least among players whose coaches have submitted stats to MaxPreps.

As Coupeville (11-4 overall) prepares to host the district tourney this Saturday, a look at the regular season numbers finds the Wolves popping up 13 times among the best 1A has to offer.

From Valen Trujillo (#5 in digs) to Emma Smith (#17 in blocks), CHS players can stand with the best in their division.

But one Wolf is taking her name to a higher level, and that’s Lodell.

The junior has ripped off 98 service aces this season — a school single-season record — which puts her #1 in 1A and #3 across all divisions (2B-4A).

But, she trails Mollie Olson of Napavine and Samantha Johnson of Northwest Christian by just a piddly two aces, despite having way less opportunities at the line than either of her fellow snipers.

Olson has fired off 366 serves, Johnson 320 and Lodell just a relatively modest 260.

And yet she trails by just TWO aces.

That’s largely because Lodell is cranking out an ace on 37.7% of her serves, the best figure compiled by anyone in the top 50.

As you count down the hours until the first district match (1:30 PM Saturday), some statsy stat stats to peruse:

Sets Played:

Katrina McGranahan 54
Ashley Menges 54
Lauren Rose 54
Emma Smith 54
Valen Trujillo 54
Payton Aparicio 53
Hope Lodell 52
Tiffany Briscoe 51
Mikayla Elfrank 49
Ally Roberts 38
Sarah Wright 12
Allison Wenzel 6
Maddy Hilkey 1
Scout Smith 1

Kills:

McGranahan 78 (#14 in 1A)
Elfrank 63 (#20 in 1A)
Lodell 62
Aparicio 40
E. Smith 40
Briscoe 38
Wright 16
Roberts 9
Wenzel 5
Trujillo 4
Menges 2
Rose 2

Kill Percentage:

Menges 66.7
Wright 38.1
E. Smith 37.4
McGranahan 36.4
Roberts 36.0
Elfrank 35.8
Briscoe 30.2
Lodell 29.5
Wenzel 29.4
Rose 25.0
Aparicio 24.7
Trujillo 18.2

Hitting Percentage:

Menges .333
Wenzel .235
Wright .214
Roberts .200
McGranahan .173
Briscoe .135
E. Smith .103
Elfrank .023

Digs:

Trujillo 175 (#5 in 1A)
Lodell 118 (#11 in 1A)
Aparicio 66
Rose 38
Roberts 37
McGranahan 24
Menges 17
Briscoe 11
Elfrank 9
E. Smith 9
Wenzel 4
Wright 3

Blocks:

E. Smith 14 (#17 in 1A)
McGranahan 12
Elfrank 4
Aparicio 3
Wright 3
Briscoe 1
Lodell 1

Service Returns:

Trujillo 291
Lodell 192
Aparicio 123
Roberts 47
Wenzel 12
Briscoe 4
E. Smith 4
Elfrank 3
McGranahan 3
Menges 3
Rose 2
Wright 1

Assists:

Rose 163 (#10 in 1A)
Menges 124 (#11 in 1A)
Trujillo 6
Lodell 4
Roberts 3
Aparicio 2
Briscoe 2
Elfrank 1
McGranahan 1
Wright 1

Serving Percentage:

Elfrank 100.0
Rose 92.8
Trujillo 90.3
Aparicio 87.2
Lodell 83.8
McGranahan 82.3
Menges 82.3
Roberts 40.0

Service Points:

Lodell 161
Rose 122
McGranahan 121
Menges 103
Aparicio 91
Trujillo 85
Elfrank 3
Roberts 2

Service Aces:

Lodell 98 (#1 in 1A, #3 in all divisions)
McGranahan 56 (#3 in 1A, #18 in all divisions)
Aparicio 49 (#6 in 1A)
Menges 42 (#8 in 1A)
Trujillo 34 (#14 in 1A)
Rose 33 (#16 in 1A)
Elfrank 1

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Mikayla Elfrank (John Fisken photo)

   Mikayla Elfrank and her fellow CHS spikers are flying high at 10-3. (John Fisken photo)

It wasn’t flawless, but it didn’t need to be.

The high-flying Coupeville High School volleyball squad let visiting Chimacum hang around a bit longer than anticipated Tuesday, but still was able to drop the hammer when it mattered most.

Closing out the night with a bang, the Wolves made off with a 25-19, 25-21, 18-25, 25-12 decision, their eighth win in their last nine matches.

The victory lifts Coupeville to 7-0 in 1A Olympic League play, 10-3 overall.

It’s the most wins in a single season for the CHS spikers since the 2004 team set the school record with 13 victories.

The Wolves have two more league matches — Thursday at Klahowya and Saturday at Port Townsend — then host the district playoffs Nov. 5.

Win twice that day and they punch their ticket to the state tourney.

Playing on Senior Night (Coupeville honored Tiffany Briscoe, Ally Roberts, Valen Trujillo and long-time manager Kailey Kellner), the Wolves took a bit to get warmed up.

CHS trailed at some point in all four sets, but was able to use strong runs at the service stripe from Hope Lodell — who threw down a match-high 12 aces — and big hits from a number of players to pull away.

While he’s always happy to pocket a win, Wolf coach Cory Whitmore sees plenty of room for growth.

“We’re going to ramp up our work in practice and get back to basics,” he said. “If we want to go to state, we need to be more consistent.”

Still, Whitmore liked how his squad bounced right back from dropping the third set, closing the match with conviction.

“I’m extremely happy with the way we responded in set four,” he said. “We really ramped up the pressure and ended things on a strong note.”

Coupeville grabbed the lead for good at 7-5 in the fourth set when Briscoe rifled a winner off of a Chimacum defender’s arm, lighting the fuse on the coming explosion.

From that point on, the Wolves finally found their lock-down mode, spraying winners left and right.

Lodell went on a tear at the service stripe, firing off three consecutive aces, before Katrina McGranahan closed the night with winners on six straight serves.

Sarah Wright, bouncing around giddily on the right side, delivered three of those winners, cracking balls that scattered Cowboys and made the grin on her own face grow larger with each passing moment.

The coup de grâce came from sophomore sensation Emma Smith, who took an elevator up to the top floor of the penthouse, hung motionless in the air for an eternity, waiting for the ball to arrive, then hit it with so much force she may have left a permanent dent.

Smith’s kill may have been just one point of many on the night, but it was the type that scars the psyches of rival players for years to come.

Coupeville controlled the net all match, with Lodell using her killer hops to elevate for some putaways that were hit with enough force to blow the back doors on the gym open.

As they have done all season, the Wolves came away with a very balanced attack.

Lodell had seven kills to go with her dozen aces, while Payton Aparicio collected five aces and seven digs.

McGranahan tattooed the ball for a team-high nine kills, with Briscoe (5), Mikayla Elfrank (4) and Wright (4) all joining in on the fun.

Meanwhile, Trujillo (20 digs), Lauren Rose (15 assists) and Ashley Menges (11 assists) also scribbled their names firmly on the stat sheet.

As he basked in the win and looked at the road ahead, Whitmore, who is in his first season as a head coach, paid tribute to his veterans.

“This is my first senior group and they have trusted in me and formed the backbone of the team for us,” he said. “They have supported us emotionally and on the floor, and that’s huge.”

And while a 10-3 record looks pretty dang good, it’s not the final stop for these Wolves.

“We’re very happy to have won the league title, but we’re not satisfied to stop there,” Whitmore said. “That’s not where we think we can peak.”

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