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Posts Tagged ‘Katie Marti’

Madison McMillan is tied for the team lead in service aces. (Bailey Thule photos)

The halfway point is coming up fast.

Saturday’s non-conference home rumble with Forks will leave the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad with seven matches in the books, and seven to go.

The Wolves are 2-4 heading to the weekend, but that’s deceptive.

Three of those losses came in five-set thrillers and another defeat was against undefeated Neah Bay.

Flip a point here or there and CHS could be sitting at 5-1.

But it is what it is, and the Wolves, fresh off a win over Friday Harbor, are intent on putting together a successful second-half run.

As they prep for Forks, a look at season-to-date numbers for the scrappy spikers:

 

Varsity stats through Oct. 5:

 

Kills:

Lyla Stuurmans – 68
Grey Peabody – 53
Mia Farris – 46
Teagan Calkins – 24
Katie Marti – 9
Jada Heaton – 7
Madison McMillan – 6

 

Digs:

Farris – 78
McMillan – 74
Stuurmans – 59
Taylor Brotemarkle – 36
Marti – 36
Calkins – 13
Peabody – 8
Issabel Johnson – 4
Heaton – 3

 

Block – Solo:

Peabody – 4
Marti – 1

 

Block – Assist:

Peabody – 6
Heaton – 3
Marti – 3
Calkins – 2
Stuurmans – 2

 

Assists:

Marti – 154
McMillan – 7
Stuurmans – 6
Brotemarkle – 3
Heaton – 1
Johnson – 1

 

Service Aces:

Marti – 18
McMillan – 18
Farris – 16
Calkins – 15
Stuurmans – 11
Johnson – 7

Lyla Stuurmans paces the Wolves in kills.

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Wolf heavy hitters (l to r) Taylor Brotemarkle, Grey Peabody, and Mia Farris prepare to rain down pain on their rivals. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

He had places to be, and photos to take.

John Fisken was in ultra-wanderin’ mode Tuesday, bouncing between Coupeville and Oak Harbor while snapping away at multiple events.

While in Cow Town, he shot the first two sets of the varsity volleyball match between the Wolves and visiting Friday Harbor.

Then he was gone in a puff of smoke, off to the big city up North.

To see everything he shot before departing, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/CHS-Volleyball-2023-2024/VB-2023-10-03-vs-Friday-Harbor

School board candidate Leann Leavitt patrols the line.

Farris decrees she can reach any ball, from one sideline to the other.

The Wolves listen to the wise words of coach Cory Whitmore.

Craig Trujillo is a tough, but fair, enforcer of the rules.

Middle school spikers came out to watch their older counterparts.

Katie Marti has stories to tell, and points to win.

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Coupeville High School spikers Grey Peabody (left) and Katie Marti, forever connected. (Bailey Thule photo)

Here’s a camera, go capture the essence of teenagers playing sports.

Now, you’re probably not going to be able to do it in one frame and … well, dang.

Well played, Bailey Thule. Well played.

In the last two school years, you have shown an uncanny eye behind the camera.

Wherever you go after high school, whatever major accomplishments you achieve, I hope you keep clicking.

Because you have a special talent, Miss Thule.

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Lyla Stuurmans brings the heat. (Bailey Thule photo)

It’s 126 miles, one way, from Neah Bay to Coupeville.

So, when the Red Devils volleyball squad hopped on the bus Wednesday and endured the epic trek, they made sure to guarantee the trip back home would be a happy one.

While in Cow Town, Neah Bay’s varsity spikers played the top two teams from the Northwest 2B/1B League and bounced them both.

After opening play with a four-set win over La Conner, the visitors from a faraway land returned to the court and held off Coupeville 25-16, 25-19, 27-25.

The non-conference victories lift Neah Bay to 3-0, while the Wolves fall to 0-2, and the Braves — the four-time defending 2B state champs — crash to 0-3.

La Conner has already matched its loss total from last season, when Hall of Fame coach Suzanne Marble’s final run finished at 17-3.

Not that Coupeville’s players, coaches, or fans were all that concerned with the struggles of a new-look Braves squad.

Instead, they were focused on their own showdown with a 1B Neah Bay team which looks like it could make some noise come playoff time.

The Red Devils never trailed in the opening set, jumping out to a 3-0 lead, then keeping the advantage at 5-7 points the rest of the way.

Coupeville sputtered a bit at the service line, failing to launch any runs, but did get some nice sniping from Issabel Johnson, whose sharp work was hailed by Wolf coach Cory Whitmore.

Grey Peabody, who brought the thunder all night with a team-high 13 kills, delivered a couple of big-time spike winners to keep Neah Bay’s defenders on their toes, while Jada Heaton and Lyla Stuurmans combined to stuff a would-be spike.

Grey Peabody (8), Coupeville’s kill leader. (Bailey Thule photo)

Toss in a booming winner off the fist of Teagan Calkins, and Coupeville had its moments early.

Just not enough of them.

The Wolves found a bit more of a groove in the second set, taking the lead and holding it from 1-0 through 10-9.

Mia Farris mashed a winner which brought an appreciative yelp from the student section, while Peabody stalked the net like a regal lioness, daring anyone to try and hit it past her.

Most times they could not, as the CHS senior lashed winners which tore through a thicket of arms on their way to paydirt.

Neah Bay finally pulled in front at 11-10, though the Wolves fought back to force ties at 17-17 and 18-18.

Back-to-back winners from Peabody, following hot on the heels of a service ace off the electric arm of Farris made that last tie a reality.

But the Red Devils are both talented and consistent, and they quickly righted the ship, claiming seven of the final eight points to take the set.

Down two sets to none, Coupeville played its best volleyball in the third frame, leading by as many as eight points at 19-11.

Stuurmans and Madison McMillan were twin kill machines, while setter Katie Marti filled up the whole stat sheet, slapping a low, deadly kill of her own.

Madison McMillan is tearing up the court. (Bailey Thule photo)

The Wolves couldn’t hold on to the lead, but did have a set point at 24-23, after knockout hustle plays from Taylor Brotemarkle and Peabody.

Brotemarkle slid across the floor for about 107 feet, likely peeling off a layer of skin during the slide, to save a runaway ball which turned into a Wolf point.

Then Peabody, while airborne and bending backwards at the kind of angle which makes writers feel sympathy pains deep down in their own battered spines, somehow reached just high enough to catch a passing ball with her fingertips.

What should have been a Neah Bay winner instead went the other way, as Coupeville’s veteran redirected the ball back over the net, spinning it through multiple defenders and catching the Red Devils flatfooted.

The visitors held off the ensuing set point, but it took them two tries before they could convert on their own match point.

The first one was denied by, who else, Peabody, who cracked one last winner before Neah Bay delivered its own exclamation point spikes to end the match.

Cory Whitmore imparts wisdom. (Jackie Saia photo)

Afterwards, Coupeville volleyball sage Cory Whitmore looked more than a bit exhausted.

He started the day off teaching in Oak Harbor and finished it in a different town, coaching, scouting (while being interrupted by passerby), and reffing the JV game, while answering never-ending questions regarding line judges, pregame music, and even the student section’s choice of spirit clothes.

But, as he pondered the match, and possibly daydreamed of drinks on a Brazilian beach, or at least being allowed to go eat dinner at home, Whitmore graciously took the time to answer one last round of questions.

Grey did a phenomenal job tonight, and Katie was strong, finding her and putting her in a good spot to attack,” he said.

Madison got to every ball and kept us in points,” Whitmore added. “She was just strong all-around, and it was nice to see Issabel come off the bench and deliver for us on her serves.”

And then the last light in the gym went off, and things momentarily hit pause.

For a bit, at least.

Practice beckons tomorrow, another match soon, and, to slightly twist a late ’80s country music hit — the road goes on forever and the questions never end.

 

Wednesday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 12 digs, 1 assist
Teagan Calkins — 2 kills, 1 ace
Mia Farris — 6 kills, 18 digs, 1 ace
Jada Heaton — 1 kill, 1 block assist
Issabel Johnson — 1 dig, 1 ace
Katie Marti — 1 kill, 4 digs, 21 assists, 3 aces, 1 block assist
Madison McMillan — 1 kill, 10 digs, 1 ace
Grey Peabody — 13 kills, 2 digs, 1 block assist, 1 solo block
Lyla Stuurmans — 5 kills, 16 digs, 1 assist, 1 block assist

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Ryanne Knoblich cracked the 100-point club Thursday night. (Morgan White photo)

Consider it a warning shot across the bow.

Facing off with a potential playoff opponent Thursday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball team made short work of their rivals.

Getting points from nine players, the Wolves roared out to a 28-point lead on the road at Auburn Adventist Academy, then coasted in for a comfortable 42-21 non-conference win.

The third-straight victory for Megan Richter’s squad, it lifts them to 8-8 heading into the final week of the regular season.

Coupeville hosts Northwest 2B/1B League leader La Conner next Tuesday, Feb. 7 on Senior Night, then travels to Friday Harbor Feb. 10.

Two of those three teams advance to the bi-district playoffs, which are Feb. 13-15 at Coupeville High School.

La Conner is currently 2-0 in the three-team round robin of 2B schools, with the Wolves at 1-1, and Friday Harbor 0-2.

The #1 team from District 1 (Coupeville’s district) opens the playoffs against the #2 team from District 2, with the #2 squad from D-1 facing the #1 group from D-2 in loser-out games.

If things in D-1 hold through the final week, that means La Conner would face Northwest Christian (Lacey), while Coupeville and Auburn Adventist would reunite in the other game.

The winners Feb. 13 return to CHS Feb. 15 to play for the bi-district title and a trip to the state tourney.

If Thursday’s game was a playoff preview, Wolf players have to feel pretty good about things, as they dominated Auburn from opening tip to final buzzer.

Lyla Stuurmans slipped a free throw through the net to open the scoring, and Coupeville had a lead it would never relinquish.

Like never, ever.

Hitting the boards hard and playing a brisk game of “give me the dang ball or die!” on defense, the feisty Wolves bolted out to an 8-2 lead after one quarter of play and never looked back.

And, if 8-2 doesn’t sound like a huge lead, it still felt like it, as Coupeville rarely let Auburn get anywhere close enough to the hoop to launch a shot in the early going.

If a whole bunch of Wolf shots hadn’t taken weird spins off the glass or popped backwards off an unforgiving rim, they would have been up by a solid 20+ points, instead of just six.

The baskets started falling at a more-satisfying pace in the second quarter, from Katie Marti slapping home a runner off of an Alita Blouin dish, to Marti returning the favor, feeding Ryanne Knoblich for a breakaway bucket.

Blouin splashed home a three-ball right before the buzzer, sending CHS to the halftime break up 21-7, before Coupeville really got going in the third quarter.

Or, more specifically, Knoblich strode out onto the floor, screamed “Ain’t no one in this joint can stop me!” and went on a tear.

Sure, it’s possible I’m putting words in her mouth, but the Wolf senior was most certainly a savage in the second half, brutalizing any defender who dared to (meekly) step to her.

Barreling through the paint, flinging bodies in all directions, Knoblich knocked down nine of her game-high 11 points in the third, with six of those points coming courtesy offensive rebounds.

The best one was the one where she slammed two hands on the ball, ripped the ball loose from an Auburn player’s less-than-sturdy grip and sent the Falcon sprawling to the hardwood.

When Knoblich wasn’t channeling Dennis Rodman on the boards, Wolf point guard Maddie Georges was flipping note-perfect passes left, right, and every direction, setting up her teammates for easy buckets.

Don’t mess with Maddie Georges, cause you’ll lose. (Bailey Thule photo)

One Georges pass in the third quarter went to Knoblich, one went to Marti, and a third found the waiting fingers of Madison McMillan, as Georges shredded the Falcon defense at every opportunity.

Up 36-9 heading into the fourth, Coupeville pushed the margin all the way out to 40-12 before Auburn salvaged some self-respect by closing the game on a 9-2 push.

Knoblich’s 11 points helped her achieve a personal milestone, as she cracked the 100-point club and now sits with 101 for her varsity career.

Marti dropped in a season-high 10 points in support, while Blouin (9), McMillan (4), Mia Farris (2), Gwen Gustafson (2), Carolyn Lhamon (2), Stuurmans (1), and Georges (1) also scored.

Jada Heaton and Skylar Parker brought hustle to their work on the defensive end of the floor, as all 11 girls on the Wolf varsity roster saw floor time.

 

No JV Game:

Auburn only has one girls’ team, so Coupeville’s second unit had the night off.

The Wolf young guns, who are 6-8 on the season, close their season next week with games against La Conner and Friday Harbor.

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