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Posts Tagged ‘Hope Lodell’

Hope Lodell, seen here in an earlier match, lit the fire for Coupeville Thursday, dropping in nine service aces. (John Fiskenb pohoto)

   Hope Lodell, seen here in an earlier match, lit the fire for Coupeville Thursday, dropping in nine service aces. (John Fisken photo)

(Photo courtesy Valen Trujillo)

   Pink jerseys and hair ribbons were on display as the Wolves held a breast cancer awareness night. (Photo courtesy Valen Trujillo)

Tiffany Briscoe celebrates with Wolf gridiron star (and huge volleyball fan) Jacob martin.

   Tiffany Briscoe celebrates with Wolf gridiron star (and enthusiastic volleyball fan) Jacob Martin. (Amy Briscoe photo)

They were feeling it.

Riding a wave of energy from an amped-up student cheering section, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad roared back to stagger visiting Chimacum Thursday night, forcing a tie for second place in the 1A Olympic League standings.

Sparked by spectacular serving from Hope Lodell and an aggressive team-wide approach to hitting, the Wolves knocked off the pesky Cowboys 20-25, 25-13, 25-23, 25-15.

The win, avenging a tough five-set loss to Chimacum earlier in the season, a night when the Cowboy JV outshouted the Wolf fans, was sweet for all involved.

As her players whooped and the remaining fans stomped the bleachers, CHS coach Breanne Smedley beamed.

“The best we’ve played; we stayed focused on winning the next point, moving ahead,” she said. “The girls are making it not “about me,” but “about the team,” which is very nice to see.”

The victory lifted Coupeville to 2-2 in league play, 4-8 overall.

The Wolves are tied with Chimacum (2-2, 7-7) two games behind Klahowya (4-0, 7-6) and two ahead of Port Townsend (0-4, 1-9) with two to play.

CHS travels to Klahowya Monday, then hosts Port Townsend Thursday on Senior Night.

The top three teams make the postseason — something the Wolf spikers did not do last year — and Coupeville is one win or one RedHawk loss from clinching a berth.

The Wolves started things with a bang Thursday, as sophomore Katrina McGranahan pounded a spike between two Cowboys to open the night’s scoring.

After that, the first set was a herky-jerky affair, with Coupeville strong at first (winners from McKenzie Bailey and Kyla Briscoe) then surprisingly unfocused for a bit, then offering a late rally that fell just short.

The second set was a different matter.

Lodell joined the action and her presence in the lineup immediately gave the Wolves a noticeable jolt.

The high-jumping sophomore was on fire at the service stripe (she would finish with nine aces on the night) and Coupeville claimed the early lead and never relinquished it.

Clinging to a 13-12 lead, the Wolves ripped control of the set away when McGranahan came roaring up on the outside, mashing a frozen rope of a spike that dug a trench three feet deep as it exploded on the end line for a winner.

Chimacum buckled and went down meekly, with the Kat Attack continuing.

Ally Roberts dropped in a gorgeous tear-drop tip over the heads of two players, Bailey touched the gym ceiling as she soared to reject a Cowboy shot and then McGranahan closed out the set with a six-point run on serve.

With the joint jumpin’, though, things took a sharp left turn.

As quickly as they had seized control, the Wolves threw it away, falling behind 7-0 in the third set.

Enter The Surgeon and exit Chimacum’s heart.

Operating with an uncanny precision, Lodell zipped serves to the right, to the left, right down the middle and off of the elbows and knees of flailing Cowboys.

One of the few times Chimacum mounted any kind of return, a brief rally broke out only to be brought to a screeching halt by Roberts and McGranahan, who teamed for an emphatic stuff at the net.

Still, despite battling back ferociously, Coupeville couldn’t quite seem to get over the last hump.

Seven ties, but only one momentary lead at 8-7, and then the Wolves found themselves down 23-20, returning serve.

Never fear.

The Wolves thwarted a Chimacum stuff attempt, before handing the ball to a Keebler Elf with ice water running in her veins.

Lauren Rose is as steady a player as there is in Wolf Nation, in any sport, and I swear I have never seen her miss a serve in almost two full seasons.

Barely cocking one eyebrow (she was so calm, you had to look really closely to see if she was still breathing), Keebs laid down four straight winners.

The final one? An ace that ripped a small divot out of the back line and tore a much bigger chunk out of the Chimacum coach’s heart.

As the rival spiker guru howled in a mix of agony, disbelief and wonderment, Rose strolled past, moving McConaughey-style, her quiet smile uttering a very loud “Alright, alright, alright.”

Their spirit broken, the Cowboys went down quickly in the night’s final set, aided by a couple of laser spikes off of Tiffany Briscoe’s fingertips and a sensational save on a play by Emma Smith.

The freshman, maybe the tallest player on the Wolf squad, was headed to the floor and caught in an awkward position almost beneath the net, yet still managed to punch the ball skyward at the last second, keeping a key rally going for a few more seconds.

As the now hoarse-voiced crowd filtered out, all that was left to do for the Wolves was add up their stats.

Roberts and Tiffany Briscoe led the way with eight kills apiece (Rally Ally had a perfect hitting night, with no errors) while Rose and Sydney Autio both chipped in with 12 assists.

Working the back line and picking up another two dozen floor burns for her ever-growing collection, Wolf libero Valen Trujillo came away with 16 digs.

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Sarah Wright (John Fisken photos)

This ain’t Sarah Wright’s first rodeo. (John Fisken photos)

Kyla

Kyla Briscoe floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee.

Abby

   Kenzi LaRue (16) flies in and joins (l to r) Kayla Rose, Maggie Crimmins and Abby Parker for a quick group photo.

emma

Emma Smith uncorks a little shot they call “The Decimator of Souls.”

Menges

Ashley Menges prefers this shot, known simply as “Tiptoe Thunder.”

Valen

They call her Professor. Valen Trujillo teaches a class on intensity.

Maddy

Maddy Hilkey sneaks into position.

Hope

Hope Lodell controls the flow.

First impressions were good.

Having watched her squad play Saturday in a jamboree in Oak Harbor, CHS volleyball coach Breanne Smedley was very happy.

“I was pleased with how the team competed today!,” she said. “The jamboree is a time for us to try out different rotations and combinations of players on the court, and they all did a great job of working through that in order to find their flow.”

With the season-opener Tuesday at home against Island rival South Whidbey (JV 5:00, varsity 7), the Wolves spent Saturday working out the kinks and finding a nice rhythm.

Katrina (McGranahan) and McKenzie (Bailey) were our strong go-to hitters through the middle,” Smedley said. “While Valen (Trujillo), Hope (Lodell) and Tiffany (Briscoe)’s passing allowed our offense to get up and running.

“Also, Sydney (Autio) provided us with another offensive weapon as we transitioned to a 6-2 offense, allowing her to hit in the front row.”

 

P.S. — To see more pics (and possibly buy some, thereby supporting college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

Varsity — http://www.wescoathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8908&league=3&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=10&sport=0

JV — http://www.wescoathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8907&league=3&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=10&sport=0

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New season, new uniforms for the CHS spikers.

New season, new uniforms for the CHS spikers. (Breanne Smedley photos)

throwin' down

Still quite capable of throwin’ down, however.

The look of Wolf volleyball is an ever-changing one.

When the Coupeville High School spikers kick off the season at home Sept. 8 against Island rival South Whidbey, they’ll be playing in a gym that boasts new state-of-the-art bleachers.

And, they’ll be wearing new duds.

In the photos above, the Wolves debut their new look, which features black uniforms for home matches and white ones for road trips.

And, if you’re wondering, the players pictured in the first photo start with sophomore Hope Lodell (2) in the middle.

Going front to the back on the left: Lauren Rose, Jae LeVine, Valen Trujillo, Kyla Briscoe, Maddy Hilkey, Sydney Autio and Tiffany Briscoe.

Front to back on the right: Kayla Rose, Ally Roberts, Ashley Menges, Payton Aparicio, McKenzie Bailey, Emma Smith and Nicole Laxton.

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Hope Lodell (Becca Lodell photo)

Hope “The Surgeon” Lodell breaks out the gun show. (Rebecca Lodell photo)

(Kolby photo)

  Dinner time at Boomer’s Drive-In for the Storm and coach Ron Wright. (Kolby Doerge photo)

“We are more than a combined team from Mt. Vernon and Coupeville/South Whidbey. We have become a family that lifts each other up and stands behind one another when times get tough.”

Those thoughts from NW Storm coach Kolby Doerge perfectly capture what the select softball squad has accomplished.

It gives players such as Wolves Hope Lodell, Sarah Wright, Katrina McGranahan and Lauren Rose a way to build their skills, but also a way to build their characters.

And, if they win a bunch of games along the way, so much the better.

Pounding the ball with authority over the weekend, the Storm came close to bringing home another tourney title, but were turned away at the end.

“We won some and lost some,” said the philosophical Doerge.

The Storm opened with a hard-fought loss to the eventual tourney champ, falling in the final inning to the Bellingham Bash in a slugfest.

Mount Vernon’s Tyanna Wittman crushed a 225-foot grand slam to pace the Storm, while South Whidbey hurler Bella Northup tossed a “gem of a game.”

Bouncing right back from a loss in “the game of the weekend,” the Storm found themselves in a hole in game two.

Down 7-0 after a rough first inning, the Storm held firm and rallied, pouring in 14 runs of their own in a two-inning span to shred the Seattle Fury.

“It really tested the heart of the team,” Doerge said. “Giving up seven runs in the first inning I called a time out to give one message to the team. I said the rules say they have to let us bat once, too!

Katrina was the pitcher in this game and the true measure of a leader is how they respond to adversity,” he added. “I gave her the option to come out after the first inning. She said no, took the ball and shut the door on a solid team from the city.

“As a coach that was the response I wanted! We both agreed afterwards that she showed maturity in the moment that will help her as her career progresses.”

From there, the Storm lost two of their final three, but ended things on a positive note, winning their final game Sunday.

Lodell and Wright earned MVP honors, with The Surgeon (Lodell) being tabbed in game two for a gorgeous running left-handed bunt.

Wright claimed game three honors for “her outstanding defense behind the plate and her consistent power at the plate.”

Rose broke out of a slump, as well, lashing a three-run home run against a Canadian squad.

“I had a quick message. Keep it simple, swing for the fence,” Doerge said. “The inning prior to the at-bat, I mention how one of the best hitters in baseball, Robinson Cano, couldn’t buy a hit, but, like Lauren, he was one solid hit away from getting back in the groove.

“She did just that.”

With next weekend’s Thunder in the Valley Tournament in Skagit County looming, Doerge sent his victorious squad back to their homes with a positive message ringing in their ears.

“My final post-game comments energized the girls,” Doerge said. “The one thing I know about the Thunder Tournament is that there is a Storm rolling in!!

“They almost came out of there cleats with excitement. Gotta love it!”

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storm (Photo courtesy Kolby Deorge)

   Storm players, including Hope Lodell (back left), Katrina McGranahan (back right) and Lauren Rose (in front of Lodell) celebrate. (Photo courtesy Kolby Doerge)

Whidbey’s best are tearing up the diamond as road warriors.

CHS freshmen Katrina McGranahan, Hope Lodell and Lauren Rose, along with CMS eighth grader Sarah Wright and South Whidbey freshman Bella Northup, continue to play on as members of the NW Storm select softball squad.

Keeping its recent hot streak alive, the Storm snatched second place at the Western Worlds Championships over the weekend.

Coming off of a tourney title in Selah, the sluggers went 2-1 on Saturday to earn the #2 seed headed into play Sunday.

Brimming with confidence, the Storm jumped all over their semifinal opponent to the tune of eight first-inning runs, igniting hopes of a runaway win.

Things got a little more complicated when their foe came right back, taking advantage of a few tricky “turf bounces” to score six runs of its own in the bottom of the first.

Clinging to a 10-8 lead in the third, the Storm went to another level, dropping 14 straight runs in a 45-minute display of raw power.

Facing off with the Abbotsford (British Columbia) Outlaws in the final, the Storm found themselves pitted against the only team to have beaten them in the last month.

“You could feel the tension as both teams realized a battle was at hand,” said Storm coach Kolby Doerge.

And, while a few Storm missteps allowed the Outlaws to snatch away the title, their coach left satisfied with what he saw.

“The game was full of great defensive plays, good pitching and little give from both sides,” Doerge said. “We did gain their respect and two classy teams finished with trophies.”

With tournaments in Bellingham and Skagit County the next two weekends, the softball guru sees a bright future for his squad.

“I see a couple more trophies on the horizon!!”

Doerge’s Whidbey warriors were key to Storm success all weekend.

Katrina played her heart out at shortstop, making many tremendous defensive plays wowing the crowd,” Doerge said. “Leaping backhand outs to double plays at the most opportune times.

“Her hitting is always there for us, but knowledge and the speed on the bases again applies so much pressure on the opponent,” he added. “It is tough to defend her.”

When describing The Surgeon, he drew comparisons to the Northwest’s most famous ballplayer.

“I know what it felt like for Lou Piniella to have Griffey junior in center field,” Doerge said. “Hope Lodell in center field sends would-be hitters back to the dugout as easy routine outs.

“When she gets to first base it is a formality that I will see her over at third base ready to score another run,” he added. “Offense generator. Always wearing a huge smile.”

Rose and Wright give the Storm varied weapons, with both bringing a different, yet very effective, style to the plate.

Lauren has taken on the tough task as our lead-off batter. I put the most pressure on this hitter and she in turn teaches me a thing or two with her abilities,” Doerge said. “Often I ask her to see many pitches that help the others gauge the new pitcher.

“Always battling through tough at-bats, once on base the other team cannot help but to keep their attention on her, losing focus on the current hitter. A rally starter!

Sarah has the boom-stick power like Nelson Cruz and the ability to adjust her swing to help the team out with a run-scoring single if needed,” he added. “Holding down the catcher’s position, she gives great effort, always with a big heart and smile.

“Would-be base runners aren’t smiling when she is done with them, though!”

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