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Posts Tagged ‘Kacie Kiel’

(Amy King photos)

  Today’s heroes in 8th grade — Hailey Hammer (20), Monica Vidoni (24), Kacie Kiel (1) McKayla Bailey (13) and Madeline Strasburg (11). (Amy King photos)

Kacie Kiel

Kacie Kiel, irrepressible then, irrepressible now.

team

Livin’ on Washington state ferries, the life of a Whidbey athlete.

Maddie Big Time

   Maddie Big Time raises the question — which parent will lose it first on Senior Night? Place your bets now.

It’s their final bow. Sort of.

Five Coupeville High School volleyball players will step on to the court tonight for Senior Night, capping a run that started as a group in eighth grade (seventh grade for four of the five).

Three days later, those same girls will actually play another home match, however.

A match originally scheduled earlier in the season was postponed when Port Townsend couldn’t come to Whidbey because a wind storm shut down the ferry.

Now re-set for Thursday, that will in fact be the final home match, while tonight’s match — the original “final home match,” still gets the distinction of including Senior Night festivities.

Monica Vidoni, McKayla Bailey, Kacie Kiel, Hailey Hammer and Madeline Strasburg (she joined the Wolves in 8th grade) will be honored before the match against Klahowya.

Things kick off at 4:45, with the JV playing AFTER the varsity tonight.

To get you prepared, we poached a few pics from Wolf JV coach Amy King, who coached the girls when they were middle school players.

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(Amy King photos)

   Future Wolf spikers await words of wisdom from current varsity player Ally Roberts, as CHS coach Breanne Smedley looks on. (Amy King photos)

"We are ... COW TOWN!!"

“We are … COW TOWN!!”

wish Smedley a happy birthday.

The clinic doubles as a birthday party for the coach.

group

The gang’s all here.

The present is building the future.

For the second time this season, the Coupeville High School volleyball players and coaches gave up a chunk of their Saturday to teach the next generation a sport they love.

Offered for free to Coupeville kids in grades K-6, the clinic was set up for the Wolves to pass on basic volleyball skills while also installing another layer of pride in Wolf Nation.

With both free clinics being jam packed with bright-eyed little ones, it looks like it’s working.

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Kacie KIel (John Fisken photo)

Kacie Kiel runs the action in an earlier game. (John Fisken photos)

Lindsey Roberts

Lindsey Roberts sneaks a peek over the defense.

Five beat nine.

Despite having their opponent outnumbered Sunday, the Coupeville “fall ball” girls’ basketball squad got bounced, hard, falling 30-19 to Sehome.

The loss dropped the Wolves to 3-1.

While Coupeville had plenty of help coming off the bench, Sehome went with the same core group of five girls from opening tip to the final buzzer.

It kind of had to, since those were the only five players in uniform.

The victors benefited from mistakes by the Wolves as much as anything else.

“Nothing clicked offensively. We didn’t show up much defensively,” said CHS assistant coach Amy King, who is merely a fan during “fall ball,” as the team is coached by Scott Hay and Lark Gustafson. “Had a lot of shots go up but not many fell.

“Turnovers were the name of the game as well,” she added. “A lot of rushed passes that didn’t work out in our favor. Early foul trouble and that continued the rest of the game.”

Coupeville did continue its strong turnout this season, with nine Wolves rolling out of bed and into uniform.

Kacie Kiel, Makana Stone, Rachael Arand, Monica Vidoni, Kailey Kellner, Mia Littlejohn, Tiffany Briscoe, Lauren Grove and Lindsey Roberts all suited up.

While they had their winning streak snapped, the Wolves are fully capable of getting back on a hot streak. Commitment is the key word.

“We had more height, we had more players … it should have had a different outcome,” King said. “But we need to want to play defense the whole game, stay disciplined on offense, spreading the floor and actually running the plays, finishing our shots and playing with the desire to do well and win.

“Sehome went for everything, pushed everything and it worked out for them.”

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Valen Trujillo added to her impressive floor burn collection Tuesday night. (John Fiosken photos)

  Valen Trujillo added to her impressive floor burn collection Tuesday night. (John Fisken photos)

A Wolf Buddie displays the sign she made to support

A Wolf Buddie displays the sign she made to support her team.

Very few people can pull off the full-body forward cartwheel at max speed on the volleyball court quite like Valen Trujillo.

The Coupeville High School sophomore is the master at flinging her body every which way in pursuit of balls, even when she has to go head over tail to make the shot.

It’s a skill she showed off often Tuesday night, as her dives grew more and more desperate in an effort to counter the spikes leveled by visiting Bellevue Christian.

Unfortunately, while she’ll probably have some new floor burns to display in the morning, she couldn’t single-handedly stem the tide, and super-slow starts in every set eventually cost the Wolves.

The 25-10, 25-17, 25-18 non-conference loss dropped Coupeville to 0-5.

The match was the first in nearly two weeks for CHS (it hadn’t played since Sept. 25) and the Wolves were rusty.

All three sets featured a disturbing pattern. Dig a big early hole, start to rally, then run out of time and points.

Bellevue opened 8-1, 9-1 and 7-1 leads in consecutive sets, never allowing Coupeville to hold a lead at any point in the match.

Things warmed up a bit after the first set, which had a few nice serves and a floor-shaking spike from Kacie Kiel and little else positive to talk about.

After falling behind in the second, the Wolves finally strung together a bit of a rally.

A 7-2 run, punctuated by a service ace from Trujillo that kissed the back corner of the court and a perfectly nicked tip from Hailey Hammer that won the match’s longest back-and-forth, seemed to promise a revival.

Coupeville fought off two set points, the second when McKenzie Bailey soared up into the heavens to deliver a knee-shredding kill, but the Vikings lead was too substantial to overcome.

Cue the third set and the same exact result, almost play by play.

Down 15-5, the Wolves rallied for a bit, with one play in particular standing out.

Trujillo went head over heels to save a ball with winner written all over it, giving Coupeville time to keep the play alive.

Two hits later, Hammer, with her back to the net, dropped a winner over her head and the net, perfectly splitting two defenders who both whiffed while running into each other.

But again, too little, too late, as the Wolves held off match point three times before succumbing on the fourth try.

To go with her floor burns, Trujillo was credited with 17 digs, while Hammer (four kills), Kiel (two kills, four service aces) and Madeline Strasburg (two kills, two aces) led the stat sheet.

Freshman Lauren Rose dealt out a team-high seven assists from her setter position.

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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.

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