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Posts Tagged ‘Katrina McGranahan’

Rose (John Fisken photo)

   The future (and present) of Wolf volleyball — freshmen Maddy Hilkey (left) and Emma Smith (back) and sophomore Lauren Rose. (John Fisken photo)

The sophomores were sensations.

For whatever it’s worth, three 10th graders lead the way in the final CHS volleyball stats.

Lauren Rose, Katrina McGranahan and Payton Aparicio each pop up in 10 of 11 categories, with Rose at the absolute top in a team-high five categories.

Now, I know, back-line players don’t appear as often in the offensive categories, and the spike happy snipers who patrol the net don’t get a lot of chances to rack up digs, service returns and assists.

I get it.

But still, appearing in all but one of the categories would seem to imply the terrific trio were versatile as all heck.

So, there you go.

But go ahead and look for yourself. If you know more about volleyball than I do (not hard…) you may come to a different conclusion.

And, as always, remember, if you don’t like your numbers, go talk to your coaches.

They’re the ones who posted them on MaxPreps.com. I just came along later and plucked them off and slapped them up here in pursuit of page hits.

That’s my game.

Final varsity stats (16 matches):

Sets Played:

Sydney Autio 54
Katrina McGranahan 54
Lauren Rose 54
Tiffany Briscoe 52
Valen Trujillo 51
Ally Roberts 49
Payton Aparicio 47
McKenzie Bailey 45
Kyla Briscoe 45
Hope Lodell 45
Emma Smith 36
Maddy Hilkey 5
Ashley Menges 1
Sarah Wright 1

Kills:

McGranahan 70 (#20 in 1A)
Bailey 67
Roberts 54
Aparicio 42
T. Briscoe 40
K. Briscoe 37
Smith 32
Lodell 19
Trujillo 2
Autio 1
Rose 1

Kill Percentage:

Rose 50.0
Roberts 37.2
Aparicio 31.8
Bailey 31.0
Smith 30.2
T. Briscoe 30.1
McGranahan 26.1
Lodell 25.3
K. Briscoe 23.6
Trujillo 16.7
Autio 9.1

Hitting Percentage:

Rose .500
Roberts .131
Aparicio .114
McGranahan .041
T. Briscoe .030
Bailey .005

Digs:

Trujillo 157 (#9 in 1A)
T. Briscoe 71
Lodell 63
Aparicio 61
Rose 28
Autio 24
McGranahan 15
Roberts 13
K. Briscoe 6
Hilkey 5
Bailey 3
Smith 2

Blocks:

McGranahan 14
Smith 7
Bailey 5
K. Briscoe 3
Roberts 3
Aparicio 1

Service Returns:

Trujillo 264
T. Briscoe 187
Aparicio 148
Lodell 104
Hilkey 26
Bailey 25
Roberts 15
K. Briscoe 12
Autio 6
McGranahan 6
Rose 2

Assists:

Autio 147 (#10 in 1A)
Rose 132 (#11 in 1A)
Menges 2
Roberts 2
K. Briscoe 1
Smith 1
Trujillo 1

Serving Percentage:

Rose 96.0
Aparicio 88.7
Hilkey 85.7
Trujillo 83.0
Autio 77.4
T. Briscoe 76.1
Lodell 75.9
McGranahan 75.5
Bailey 60.0

Service Points:

Rose 103
Aparicio 80
McGranahan 78
Autio 77
Lodell 67
Trujillo 65
T. Briscoe 50
Hilkey 4

Service Aces:

Autio 45 (#8 in 1A)
McGranahan 38 (#13 in 1A)
Rose 35 (#18 in 1A)
T. Briscoe 33 (#20 in 1A)
Trujillo 33 (#20 in 1A)
Aparicio 32
Lodell 31
Hilkey 4

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Tiffany Briscoe delivered 10 service aces Tuesday to spark Coupeville to its first win in league play. (John Fisken photo)

   Tiffany Briscoe delivered 10 service aces Tuesday to spark Coupeville to its first win in league play. (John Fisken photo)

You take W’s any way you get them.

Especially when you’re knee-deep in the battle for a playoff berth.

Getting a boost at a crucial moment, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad dug down and eked out a four-set win at Port Townsend Tuesday night.

The 25-13, 22-25, 30-28, 25-19 victory lifted the Wolves out of the 1A Olympic League cellar, where they had been tied with the Redhawks.

Now 1-2 in league play, 3-8 overall, Coupeville sits in third place, a game behind Chimacum (2-1, 7-6), which lost to Klahowya (3-0, 6-6) in a first-place showdown.

The top three teams in the Olympic League go to the postseason, and all three will host their opening playoff match, so the first goal is to stay ahead of Port Townsend (0-3, 1-8).

Coupeville can make a move on second-place Thursday, when it hosts Chimacum.

After that is a road trip to Klahowya Oct. 26 and the regular-season finale at home Oct. 29 vs. Port Townsend.

Following the oldest rule in the sports cliche book — play them one game at a time — the Wolves took care of business Tuesday.

Which is all that matters.

“It wasn’t pretty … but a win’s a win right?!,” said CHS coach Breanne Smedley. “We were able to finish, which was great.

“We put ourselves in unnecessary situations through our hitting and serving errors,” she added. “However, their ability to fight and close out the game was something that we will build on for Chimacum.”

Coupeville got a big boost from its service game, with Tiffany Briscoe sparking things with ten service aces.

Sydney Autio and Payton Aparicio added nine aces apiece, while Valen Trujillo delivered six and Katrina McGranahan popped for five.

Autio doled out 17 assists, with a variety of Wolves rising to the occasion to put the ball down, hard.

McGranahan led the assault on the stat sheet with nine kills, while McKenzie Bailey, Ally Roberts and Kyla Briscoe each had four.

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Katrina McGranahan leads teh Wolves in blocks (John Fisken photos)

   Katrina McGranahan leads the Wolves in blocks and sets played and is second in kills. (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Rose

   Lauren Rose tops the CHS spikers in four categories, yet still finds time to swing by and watch the Wolf booters play.

Stats are not just for football.

Every week we plop down an updated list for Coupeville High School football, and then, boom, this afternoon I finally notice the Wolf spikers have stats on MaxPreps as well.

So, here you go, with two caveats.

One, it’s varsity only (that’s all I have), and two, if you disagree with your totals, talk to your coaches.

I’m just relaying the stats, not recording them.

With that being said, some pertinent info, through 10 matches:

Sets Played:

Sydney Autio 32
McKenzie Bailey 32
Katrina McGranahan 32
Lauren Rose 32
Payton Aparicio 30
Tiffany Briscoe 30
Valen Trujillo 29
Ally Roberts 27
Kyla Briscoe 26
Hope Lodell 25
Emma Smith 22
Maddy Hilkey 4
Ashley Menges 1
Sarah Wright 1

Kills:

Bailey 56 (#19 in 1A)
McGranahan 41 (#25 in 1A)
Aparicio 31
Roberts 28
K. Briscoe 22
T. Briscoe 15
Smith 15
Lodell 12
Trujillo 1

Kill Percentage:

Roberts 37.3
Aparicio 34.4
Bailey 31.3
T. Briscoe 26.8
Smith 25.4
K. Briscoe 24.7
McGranahan 24.6
Lodell 24.5
Trujillo 14.3

Hitting Percentage:

Aparicio .178
Roberts .133
McGranahan .060
Bailey .028

Digs:

Trujillo 107 (#12 in 1A)
T. Briscoe 37
Aparicio 36
Lodell 26
Autio 11
Rose 9
K. Briscoe 5
Hilkey 5
Roberts 5
McGranahan 4
Bailey 2
Smith 1

Blocks:

McGranahan 7
Bailey 4
Smith 4
K. Briscoe 2
Roberts 2
Aparicio 1

Assists:

Rose 84 (#10 in 1A)
Autio 78 (#12 in 1A)
Menges 2
Roberts 2
Smith 1

Serving Percentage:

Rose 96.8
Aparicio 89.4
Hilkey 87.5
Trujillo 84.6
T. Briscoe 78.0
McGranahan 77.6
Autio 77.2
Lodell 66.7
Bailey 66.0

Service Points:

Rose 64
Aparicio 41
Autio 41
McGranahan 37
Trujillo 24
T. Briscoe 23
Lodell 15

Service Aces:

Autio 26 (#17 in 1A)
Rose 22 (#25 in 1A)
McGranahan 20
T. Briscoe 15
Trujillo 13
Aparicio 12
Lodell 9
Hilkey 2

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Kyla Briscoe (John Fisken photo)

Kyla Briscoe was a hitting machine Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

This one counted.

After two “non-conference” matches against league foes (still confusing…), the Coupeville High School volleyball squad officially kicked off 1A Olympic League play Tuesday night.

They might want a do-over, however.

Despite noticeably improving as the match played out, the Wolves fell 25-17, 25-20, 27-25 to visiting Klahowya, dropping their record to 2-7 overall, 0-1 in league play.

Chimacum swept Port Townsend in straight sets in the other league opener Tuesday, so, for the moment, Coupeville is in the basement with the RedHawks.

That could change quickly, however, as the Wolves get a chance for redemption Thursday, when they pop over to the mainland to face Chimacum.

In one of those two “non-counting” match-ups against league foes, Coupeville savaged the Cowboys in the first two sets, before inexplicably falling apart and dropping the final three sets and the match.

The sometimes schizophrenic nature shown by a young Wolf team was on full display again Tuesday.

When they were clicking, they knocked the Eagles on their heels. And, when they weren’t, their mistakes hurt far more than anything the visitors did.

The opening set was a back-and-forth affair, at first at least.

Kyla Briscoe delivered a crushing second-chance spike for a winner and Katrina McGranahan was electric, both at the service stripe and laying down slicing spikes.

Riding a service winner from Sydney Autio, the Wolves closed within 13-12, only to fall back as quickly as they had risen up.

A string of returns that went wide sent Coupeville tumbling into a hole, as the Eagle lead ballooned out to 24-15.

With their backs to the wall, the Wolves made things interesting with back-to-back winners off of McKenzie Bailey’s fingertips, as the senior stalked the net, claiming it as her own.

But it wasn’t enough, as Klahowya closed out the set with a spike that looked like it was flying out the door, but dove and caught the back line at the very last second.

The second set was virtually a replay of the first one, but a step closer.

Payton Aparicio ripped a winner that lopped off an Eagle arm or two as it zipped through, Tiffany Briscoe brought the thunder, Kyla Briscoe was a hitting machine and McGranahan pulled off a nifty two-in-one play.

Bouncing around with mad glee, the Wolf sophomore went high for a potential winner on a spike, then, when denied, immediately sprang back skyward to stuff Klahowya’s return in the face of a surprised Eagle.

Deciding to shake things up a bit, the two teams broke from the pattern in what would turn out to be the final set.

Coupeville roared out to an 8-1 lead on hot serving from Autio and Aparicio, with McGranahan once again pulling off a perfectly-timed stuff at the net.

Klahowya was not to be denied, however, fighting back to reclaim the lead at 17-16.

From that point on, the Wolves would never again be in the lead, though they did force five ties and stave off two match points before succumbing.

The fight left in Coupeville was evident, as both times it fought off match point, it did so by outright winning the point and not merely popping the ball up and hoping the visitors would commit an error.

The first time Hope Lodell came zipping in from the side, appearing almost as if by magic at the last second, to catch the ball on the very tip of one finger and perfectly plop it in for a winner.

On the next, Ally Roberts got elastic, reaching behind her head while airborne to snag the ball and deliver a knee-quaking spike.

Lauren Rose paced the Wolves at the service stripe, converting 92% of her serves, while also doling out six assists.

Valen Trujillo (11 digs), McGranahan (four kills, three blocks) and Kyla Briscoe (three kills) also lodged their names on the stat sheet.

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McKenzie Bailey (John Fisken photo)

   McKenzie Bailey paced Coupeville Wednesday in Darrington with eight kills and three blocks. (John Fisken photo)

If they could have served all night, and done nothing else, we’d be talking about a win.

Unfortunately, playing volleyball requires multiple skills, and struggles in a few other areas Wednesday cost the Coupeville High School spikers.

While their service game kept them in the match for a bit, too many hitting errors ultimately killed the Wolves, sending them to a 25-23, 23-25, 25-17, 25-19 non-conference loss at Darrington.

The defeat dropped Coupeville to 1-4.

The Wolves will get an immediate chance to bounce back into the win column, however, as they return home Thursday to face 1A Olympic League rival Chimacum in a non-league match.

That match (JV tips at 4:30, varsity at 6:15), and one Oct. 8 against Port Townsend, will share the unusual distinction of not counting in the race for playoff spots and seeding, even though they are against fellow league teams.

All three schools needed extra matches, but only Coupeville’s final six matches (Oct. 13-Oct. 29) — two each against Klahowya, Chimacum and Port Townsend — count in the official league standings.

Regardless of how Thursday’s match is classified, the Wolves will hope to stay on point with their serving, which was their primary weapon at Darrington.

Led by Valen Trujillo, who was flawless at the line, and Katrina McGranahan, who ripped off five straight aces at one point, Coupeville hit on a superb 90% of its serves.

Sydney (Autio), Katrina, Lauren (Rose), Payton (Aparicio) and Valen did a great job putting the pressure on from the service line,” said Wolf coach Breanne Smedley.

What killed the Wolves in the end was an inability to put away points.

“We had solid passing and serving throughout the match,” Smedley said. “Hitters struggled to execute, giving away multiple points on errors.

“The girls did a great job battling for every point and closing leads by serving, though.”

Trujillo sparked the Wolves, compiling a 2.6 passing average and going low for 18 digs.

Valen had her best of the season so far,” Smedley said. “She was focused, reading well and making amazing plays in the back row.

“She was a solid constant for our team.”

Coupeville’s two seniors stepped up, with McKenzie Bailey pounding away for eight kills and three blocks, while Autio had six service aces and dealt out 12 assists.

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