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Posts Tagged ‘Kacie Kiel is a beast’

(John Fisken photos)

Allison Wenzel: “Huff and puff all you want, but I’m gonna score, by the hair on my chinny chin chin!!” (John Fisken photos)

Kacie

Kacie Kiel muscles her way in for two.

Tiffany

Tiffany Briscoe got the rebound. Now, she just needs to find a way back out of this forest.

Monica

“This gym is mine!!” Monica Vidoni lays down the law in the paint.

Brisa

Brisa Herrera wraps a pass around a defender’s arm.

Julia

When Julia Myers sees an open basket, she gets moving in a hurry.

Lauren

Out in front of the pack, Lauren Grove glides in for a breakaway bucket.

The wins keep coming, and so do the snappy pics.

With victories against Port Townsend Tuesday, both the Wolf varsity and JV girls teams sit at a spiffy 7-0 in Olympic League play.

To commemorate that, seven photos of CHS players being awe-inspiring, courtesy John Fisken.

To see more, pop over to:

Varsity — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=7992&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

JV — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=7993&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

P.S. — Use secret code EB79924962 before Feb. 17 and you’ll get 15% off your order. Plus, any purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes.

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Julia (John Fisken photos)

  Julia Myers (right) will not be denied. Seriously. The other girl is still having Nam-style flashbacks two days later. (John Fisken photos)

Skyler

Denied! Skyler Lawrence rejects your request for a basket.

"Get in my hands!!" Allison Wenzel (15) gets dramatic.

“Get … in … MY HANDS!!” Allison Wenzel (15) gets dramatic.

Lauren

   One second you’re dreaming of an easy basket. Then Lauren Grove comes sailing in to ruin your day.

watch

Hailey Hammer (left) and Makana Stone form an impenetrable wall of rebounding excellence.

KK

“Yoink!!” Kailey Kellner: Professional Pickpocket.

trio

   We pause for a moment brought to you by the Hand Model Society of Coupeville — (l to r) McKenzie Bailey, Kacie Kiel and Lindsey Roberts.

kiel

“Hand model comin’ through. Don’t touch the merchandise, sister!!”

"I'm just gonna sit here for a while.

“That’s it! I’m just gonna sit here for a while until you all stop stealing the ball from me!!”

They are a scrappy bunch.

As much as they love their photo ops, the Coupeville High School girls’ hoops stars love nothing more than thoroughly beatin’ the crud out of any hapless foe who dares to try and touch a basketball that the Wolf player already had their eye on.

Whether it be a rebound, a steal or a battle for a loose ball — all depicted in the photos above — the Wolves are a pack of marauders let loose.

Which is why both the varsity and JV have winning records and are (by far) the most successful hoops squads on Whidbey Island once again this winter.

Like what you see? Want more? Pop over to:

Varsity — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=7541&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

JV — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=7539&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

And, as always, purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes.

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Kacie Kiel is a two-way threat. First, she'll score on you. Then she'll shut you down when you try to score. (John Fisken photos)

Kacie Kiel is a two-way threat. First, she’ll score on you. Then she’ll shut you down when you try to score. (John Fisken photos)

on the bench

Kiel hangs out with her teammates.

“I believe I have the best defender in the league in Kacie.”

Coupeville High School girls’ basketball coach David King preaches defense, defense, defense. And no one buys in quite as obsessively as the junior with the mega-watt grin and deceptive intensity, Kacie Kiel.

She may not have weight-room muscles or overwhelming height, but the wiry wonder doesn’t back down from anyone.

Snatching boards away from bigger foes, gliding step-for-step with the player she’s guarding, rarely letting them get past her, Kiel is a firebrand.

King generally puts her on the other team’s best scorer, and Kiel has been lights-out.

Savanna Hanson of King’s scored 34 against Cedcarcrest, a top-five 2A school? Kiel held her to 10 the next night.

It’s been that way all season, and even more since she’s returned after a brief battle with a gimpy knee.

Having a ballhawk to team with Julia Myers, whose sunny off-court personality is contrasted with the withering stare-downs she drops on anyone who tries to take a rebound away from her, gives King a strong defensive punch.

Kacie has really stepped up since she came back from her knee injury,” King said. “I’m able to keep Makana (Stone) fresh by giving Kacie the person we want to slow or shut down. This also allows Makana to play a bigger or stronger post player and have help defense.

Julia comes in and lately has given Kacie a breather and she gets the assignment to shut down the other teams scorer,” he added. “Or if both are in, she moves into the post and battles.”

As the Wolves (9-11) emerge from the 2A-heavy Cascade Conference and prepare to open the 1A district playoffs Tuesday at Mount Baker, defense is what will make or break their postseason hopes.

So it’s a good thing King likes what he sees from his roster, top to bottom.

Fellow starters Breeanna Messner, Madeline Strasburg and Amanda Fabrizi join Stone, a certified shot-blocking sensation, and Kiel, to form a strong core.

When Coupeville goes to its bench, headed up by “super sub” Myers, there’s little to no letdown on the defensive side of the ball.

McKayla (Bailey) and Wynter (Thorne) have always been defensive-minded players,” King said. “They both bring something different to the defensive end. Wynter the speed and anticipation and McKayla the strength and willingness to defend girls sometimes six or more inches taller than her.

Monica (Vidoni) has come a long way with her effort on defense,” he added. “We need her to continue to be hungry and want to make a difference on defense.”

The last woman off the bench generally is freshman Carlie Rosenkrance, who has spent much of her playing time leading the Wolf JV. The sister of two-time CHS Athlete of the Year Cassidi Rosenkrance, she’s a player to watch, however.

Carlie hasn’t gotten much playing time at the varsity level, but her length, instincts and speed will be an asset,” King said.

Whether it’s Kiel wreaking havoc, Messner adding to her legendary collection of floor burns diving for loose balls or Bailey tearing opponent’s heads off while wrestling for rebounds, the Wolves are on the attack and their coach abides.

“I preach defense and that defense wins games,” King said. “And they have all bought into this!”

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Hercules! Hercules! Kacie Kiel's shot went up and stayed up. (Amy King photo)

Hercules! Hercules! Kacie Kiel’s shot went up and stayed up. (Amy King photo)

There are losses that shred a coach’s soul, and than there are losses that almost seem like a win.

Tuesday night, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team put together one of the latter, allowing coach David King to walk away 99% pleased with what he witnessed.

While he still would have preferred to flip the score on a 50-48 loss at Archbishop Thomas Murphy, his team’s defensive intensity and unwillingness to back down from a top-level 2A squad led by one of the Cascade Conference’s best players satisfied him.

“We wanted to put a complete game together, that meant all facets of the game,” King said. “To do this we had to move the ball on offense, hit our shots, rebound well, minimize our turnovers, play under control and play defense.

“This was one of our best games along with getting contributions from everyone,” he added. “A total team effort.”

With the Wonder Twins — Wolf defensive dynamos Kacie Kiel and Julia Myers — forcing ATM’s Megan Wall to work hard for every one of her 15 points, Coupeville stayed with the Wildcats down to the final moments.

Refusing to let Wall beat them, CHS forced her to pass the ball off in the final seconds, only to be stung by Haley Sizelove, who drained a three to give ATM a 49-48 lead.

After turnovers by both teams and a Wall free-throw, Coupeville got a strong look at a game-tying basket, but Makana Stone’s shot at the buzzer refused to stay in the basket.

Now 8-10 as they head into Senior Night Friday against Granite Falls (1-17), the Wolves will wrap the regular season Saturday at King’s (15-3), before hosting a 1A district playoff game Tuesday, Feb. 11.

If his team plays the way it did Tuesday, King expects the Wolves to be a force to be reckoned with in the double-elimination district tourney, the first step on a possible path to the state tournament.

“They are working hard at this daily and last night we saw improvement,” King said. “If we bring the effort and energy we played with last night, we will represent well.”

And, while the Wolves have several players who can put up big numbers on the score board — Stone threw down 19 Tuesday — a team-wide commitment to rabid defense is the key.

“I can’t say enough about our defensive effort,” King said. “Kacie and Julia really held their scorer in check.

“But from top to bottom each and everyone else stepped up and did their part by playing help defense and getting out on their shooters.”

After holding Wall to just a bucket in the opening quarter, Coupeville held a 15-12 lead at the first break. At one point, the silky-smooth Stone rained down seven consecutive points.

The game was back-and-forth from that moment on, with neither team able to pull away. A huge part of that was Wall’s inability to take control of the game, as she often does.

Kacie played lights-out defense on Megan and took two charges in the low block on her,” King said. “After the game I talked to Kacie about her defensive effort and she told me that her goal was to get in Megan’s head.

“Between Kacie and Julia, they stuck with her throughout the game,” he added. “She started throwing up some rushed shots and at one point in the fourth appeared to be frustrated. There wasn’t any letting up by Kacie or Julia.”

Stone corralled 14 rebounds and rejected four ATM shots to go with her game-high 19 points, while senior captains Amanda Fabrizi (10 points, including a huge three-pointer, and two steals) and Breeanna Messner (nine points, six rebounds, four steals, three assists) backed her up superbly.

Kiel knocked in eight points and snared seven boards, while Madeline Strasburg dropped in a bucket and made off with three boards and four assists.

Myers chipped in with three assists, a block and 32 stare-downs of ATM players stupid enough to try and score on her.

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