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Posts Tagged ‘Katrina McGranahan’

   Maya “I have no use for your stinkin’ stats!!” Toomey-Stout. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Gazelle is too fast for the stat-keepers.

We know super sophomore Maya Toomey-Stout has been tearing up the volleyball court for Coupeville High School this fall — she torched Chimacum for five service aces alone.

But she’s nowhere to be seen when you look at the CHS stat sheet on MaxPreps, which is a surprising (and probably completely accidental) oversight.

To make up for that, she gets to grace our first volleyball stats story with her picture.

We know you exist, Maya, even if MaxPreps tries to insist otherwise.

Free The Gazelle!

Or at least free her stats…

Anyway, as the Coupeville spikers head off to North Mason today for a non-conference match, the fourth straight road trip for the Wolves, here’s a look at up-to-the-moment stats.

Stats through 9/20 (three matches):

Sets Played:

Payton Aparicio 9
Kyla Briscoe 9
Hope Lodell 9
Katrina McGranahan 9
Ashley Menges 9
Emma Smith 9
Scout Smith 9
Mikayla Elfrank 8
Allison Wenzel 7
Lauren Rose 6

Kills:

McGranahan 11
Briscoe 10
Aparicio 9
Elfrank 9
E. Smith 9
S. Smith 5

Kill Percentage:

McGranahan 52.4
Aparicio 47.4
Elfrank 39.1
E. Smith 37.5
Briscoe 34.5
S. Smith 23.8

Hitting Percentage:

McGranahan .476
Aparicio .474
E. Smith .208
Briscoe .172
Elfrank .087

Digs:

Lodell 9
Briscoe 7
Aparicio 6
Rose 3
Elfrank 2
McGranahan 2
Menges 1
E. Smith 1
Wenzel 1

Blocks:

Elfrank 7
McGranahan 4
E. Smith 2
S. Smith 1

Service Returns:

Aparicio 32
Lodell 26
Briscoe 20
Menges 1
McGranahan 1
E. Smith 1
S. Smith 1
Wenzel 1

Assists:

Menges 24
Rose 21
S. Smith 7
Elfrank 1

Serving Percentage:

McGranahan 96.6
Rose 95.7
Aparicio 91.7
Briscoe 88.9
Menges 81.1
S. Smith 77.8
Lodell 70.6
Wenzel 66.7

Service Points:

Aparicio 37
Menges 25
McGranahan 21
Rose 15
Lodell 10
S. Smith 7
Briscoe 5
Wenzel 4

Service Aces:

Menges 15
Aparicio 14
Lodell 8
McGranahan 5
Rose 5
Briscoe 3
S. Smith 3
Wenzel 2

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   Emma Smith (13) has a brief moment of rest in between the six matches she and her Wolf volleyball teammates played Friday. (Photo courtesy Konni Smith)

   The Wolves hit the floor at the 32-team SunDome Volleyball Festival. (Cory Whitmore photo)

Now they know.

Getting a first-hand look at what a trip to the state tourney would look and feel like, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad invaded Yakima and came away rich with victories and valuable experience.

The Wolves left the Island Thursday afternoon and returned to their home gym at 2:30 AM Saturday, having won four of six matches in between at the SunDome Volleyball Festival.

The event, played on the very same courts which host the 1A state tourney, attracted 32 teams from four classifications (2B, 1B, 1A, 2A) for Friday’s battle royale.

Coupeville finished second in its four-team pool, then jumped into bracket play and claimed second again, this time after facing off with the other #2 seeds.

And they did that all in the middle of a madhouse.

“The team (myself included) has been very excited about this tournament for a long time,” said CHS coach Cory Whitmore. “I’m very happy with the challenges that we faced and worked through.

“I was impressed with our ability to settle into our game in a very large and distracting environment,” he added. “There were eight courts playing at once, loud fans, bright lights up in high ceilings, but this did not seem to effect the girls to a great degree.

“Down the stretch, it will be very valuable to have this experience under our belts.”

Coupeville took 10 of its 11 varsity players (Allison Wenzel was auditioning for a symphony) and six top JV spikers on the trip, giving a large group of Wolves a chance to enjoy the big time.

“The whole experience was meant to be used as a team-bonding experience, a competitive challenge and a test of our ability to travel and perform,” Whitmore said.

The Wolves opened pool play with a hard-fought loss to powerful La Salle, falling 25-19, 25-10, then immediately found their groove.

After thrashing Lyle-Wishram 25-8, 25-8, Coupeville belted Kittitas — which had split sets with La Salle — 25-23, 25-18 to clinch second place.

“I was very pleased to see us get back to an aggressive and consistent play,” Whitmore said. “Our servers were very strong and aggressive and then our hitting approaches were bigger, resulting in more dynamic attacks.”

Three matches in and just at the halfway point of their day, the Wolves grabbed a quick bite before jumping into bracket play, this time with longer matches.

While pool play featured two-set matches, bracket play was a best two-of-three format.

Rolling at that point, Coupeville clouted 2A Selah’s JV team 25-22, 18-25, 15-8, then whomped on Overlake (“a very tough team with very strong hitters”) 25-22, 25-18 to advance to the championship match in its bracket.

In the title tilt they faced off with Brewster, which has advanced to state five of the past seven years, and tired bodies finally betrayed the Wolves as they lost in straight sets.

“We played well, but were always chasing a very good Bears team,” Whitmore said. “We ran out of attacking steam.

“I was happy to see our passing and defense remain consistent, but, without a tough serve, Brewster was able to run their offense very effectively.”

As he reflected on the tourney and his team’s success, Coupeville’s volleyball guru exuded a satisfied glow.

He hailed Payton Aparicio, Katrina McGranahan, Lauren Rose, Ashley Menges, Hope Lodell and Maya Toomey-Stout for doing “a phenomenal job from the service line” all tourney.

“They served tough and to specific spots, taking out hitters and their effectiveness.”

Once the ball was in play, fellow Wolves like Mikayla Elfrank, Scout Smith, Kyla Briscoe and Emma Smith “were able to put up a solid block, slowing their attack and allowing our back row to turn defense into offense.”

Being able to bring top-level play even when it was on its sixth match of the day, is a huge positive for a Coupeville squad which will take its 2-0 regular season record back into play Tuesday at Bellevue Christian.

“I was very happy to see how we performed at the end of a long day, in a new environment and deep on the road,” Whitmore said. “It is a testament to this team’s tenacity and resilience.”

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Emma Smith soars for a put-away. (John Fisken photos)

   Kyla Briscoe (right), here getting braids from Abby Parker, returns after missing her junior season with an injury.

Last year was just the beginning.

In his first season at the helm of the Coupeville High School volleyball program, Cory Whitmore guided the Wolf spikers to their best season since 2004, winning 11 matches and an Olympic League title.

Now, with a deep, veteran squad at his disposal, the goal is to go further, to hold serve in a competitive conference, but also launch a successful postseason run.

If there was any disappointment after finishing 11-6 overall, 8-1 in league play (the JV went 12-2, 9-0 and the C-Team 3-1), not being able to get out of district play after hard-fought losses to Charles Wright Academy and Klahowya has provided incentive.

“Having gained some confidence from last season, this group is very much looking forward to pushing to and beyond our finishing position from last year,” Whitmore said. “While the goal is to push to make it to state, we know that we have to take each game as a step up the ladder, never looking past a team and an opportunity to improve.

“Starting at WWU Team Camp, this group has bought into “the process,” that small improvements, day in and day out can add up to the success we hope for.”

Coupeville has to replace three players — Ally Roberts, Tiffany Briscoe and Valen Trujillo, the school record-holder for digs, all graduated — but Whitmore has great depth to call on, with almost every player in the mix having extensive prior varsity experience.

Headlining the cast are seniors Katrina McGranahan, the 2016 Olympic League MVP, and Hope Lodell, who smashed school single-season and career records at the service line.

“We are very excited to get back on the court this fall and this time, with some significant varsity experience,” Whitmore said. “Katrina brings a ton of experience to the front row and the serving line.

Hope will be making a switch in positions to focus on anchoring the back row as libero,” he added. “Her ball control and defensive tenacity helps to fill the vacancy Valen leaves.”

Junior Emma Smith will anchor the team at middle blocker (“with each practice she gets faster, making herself more of an available option for the setters,” while a pack of seniors provide Whitmore with multiple weapons.

Payton Aparicio, Lauren Rose, Kyla Briscoe, Mikayla Elfrank and Allison Wenzel join Lodell and McGranahan in forming an unusually deep senior class.

The return of Briscoe, a two-year letter winner who missed her entire junior season with a leg injury, is a particular bonus.

“I’m very proud of Kyla and her return to the court after her season-ending injury last summer,” Whitmore said. “She has worked so hard this off-season to become a dynamic outside hitter and has earned the opportunity to have a fantastic senior year.”

Aparicio sparkled at the team’s summer camp (“she has worked tirelessly to continue growth at the outside hitting position”), while the big-hitting, high-energy Elfrank has been busy in the off-season.

Mikayla is our “stay-after” player, meaning she asks for extra work after practice, honing her abilities as a right-side hitter,” Whitmore said.

Junior Ashley Menges rounds out the varsity returners, and she will share time at setter with Rose.

Lauren and Ashley both work incredibly hard and take responsibility for their hitters’ success, which is a great quality in a setter,” Whitmore said. “Both also step back to the service line and cause problems for opponents.”

With a senior-dominated roster, opportunities are somewhat limited for younger players, but, sophomore Scout Smith could be a break-through player.

Scout had a fantastic summer and has put herself in a position to see varsity playing time, potentially at the other right-side position,” Whitmore said.

He also hailed sophomores Maya Toomey-Stout, Lucy Sandahl and Zoe Trujillo for their work at summer camp (“all three are incredibly coachable and also put forth great off-season effort”) and twin sisters Raven and Willow Vick, who were fixtures at SST workouts.

Raven Vick was a flawless 25 of 25 attending the strength and conditioning sessions.

Whitmore is also pleased with his first official look at the next wave of stars, who made their practice debut this week.

“Our freshman group is exciting as well,” he said. “They are excited to learn and improve and are making the jump from middle to high school as well as can be expected.”

With the core of the Wolf varsity being a group which has played together all the way through high school, Whitmore is looking forward to putting a well-oiled unit on the floor in any situation.

“We believe that our strengths this season start with solid team cohesion,” he said. “Having played with each other for numerous seasons, this team communicates well on and off the court and have already exuded a strong ability for cohesion.”

The Wolves were deadly at the line last season, with several players among the best in 1A.

Lodell had the third-most aces in her class, barely edged out by two girls whose schools played many more contests than Coupeville.

“Our serving will continue to be a focus of ours and the returning players all have varsity experience from the service line,” Whitmore said. “We also hope to push our passing line to be consistent and I’m pleased with what I have seen thus far.”

While Coupeville doesn’t have any glaring weaknesses, the Wolves are always looking to fine-tune their game, which will be key to making a deep run into the postseason.

“Being early in the season, there is plenty to work on,” Whitmore said. “Specifically, as a team, we sat down at the start of the off-season and decided we would focus on our hitting consistency, looking to eliminate unforced errors.

“We need to walk the line between “aggressive” and “consistent” and it has been on our hitters’ minds as we kick off the 2017 season.”

Klahowya won back-to-back league titles before Coupeville seized the throne last season, with the Wolves winning two of three regular season matches.

While the Eagles would seem to be the biggest regular-season hurdle for CHS, Whitmore is a firm believer in overlooking no one.

“Chimacum, Klahowya and Port Townsend, all of them, (are the team to beat),” he said. “We are focusing on each team across the net, one at a time.

“We will need to approach each match and team with the respect they deserve,” Whitmore added. “League or non-league, 1A or 2A, we look to compete at our own highest ability, seeing each match as a chance to improve and take a step closer toward our long-term goals.”

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   Coupeville High School Athlete of the Year winners (clockwise from left) Hunter Smith, Katrina McGranahan and Valen Trujillo. (John Fisken photos)

Many competed, and three rose to the top.

Coupeville High School coaches honored a trio Tuesday night, naming juniors Hunter Smith and Katrina McGranahan and senior Valen Trujillo as CHS Athlete of the Year winners.

It’s the first time any of them have received the school’s highest athletic honor.

All three will see their photos go up in the hallway of the CHS gym, joining previous winners such as Corey Cross, Sherry (Bonacci) Roberts, Brad Sherman and Makana Stone.

A look at what earned them the award, in alphabetic order:

McGranahan — She started and ended the year as an MVP.

In the fall, she teamed with Trujillo to lead the CHS volleyball squad to its first league title since 2002.

The Wolves went 8-1 in Olympic League play and made a run at the program single-season record for wins (13), finishing 11-6 after two down-to-the-wire losses at districts.

Among the state leaders in kills and service aces, McGranahan was tabbed as league MVP, then took the winter “off” to get ready for her #1 sport, softball.

The spring was the season of the Kat, as she used her electric pitching arm and ferocious bat to lead the Wolves to a 19-5 record (second-best in program history) and within an out of advancing to state.

Throwing every pitch at districts, she hurled 33 innings in less than 26 hours as Coupeville split four games, two of which went to extra innings.

McGranahan, who led the Wolves in almost every offensive category and went 18-5 in the pitcher’s circle, shared Olympic League MVP honors with Shanya Nisbet of Chimacum.

Smith — A First-Team All-Conference pick in all three of his sports (football, basketball, baseball), with football coaches honoring him on both sides of the ball.

He opened the year by setting new CHS single-season records for receiving yards (916) and touchdowns (11) and sits on the threshold of owning Coupeville’s career records in both those categories, as well as interceptions.

As a defensive back who teams rarely dared to test, he recorded 49 tackles and three picks.

During the winter, Smith led the Wolf boys basketball team in scoring, dropping 332 points in 20 games, including 29 in a playoff loss to Bellevue Christian.

When the spring came, he worked both as a pitcher and infielder, while holding down lead-off duty in the lineup for a CHS squad which finished second in league play behind Klahowya.

In a quirky side note, Smith beat the odds, twice named a WIAA Athlete of the Week winner, despite the award’s rules stating an athlete can only receive it once a school year.

Trujillo — The anchor to two league-title winning teams, as she helped pace the volleyball and girls tennis teams to triumphant seasons.

On the court, she exits as the school record holder for digs in a game, season and career.

A three-year starter, the Wolf libero was a constant tumbling ball of fire, racking up more floor burns than any player in the league.

Needless to say, she was a First-Team All-Conference player three years running.

When spring rolled around, she returned to the court for another season as Coupeville’s #1 singles player and went on to win a second-straight individual league title.

She followed that up by placing third at districts, winning the final three matches of her prep career.

Led by her play, and her quiet but very effective leadership (Trujillo never left a match until all of her teammates had finished playing), the Wolves won their third consecutive regular season team title, remaining unbeaten in Olympic League action.

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   Hope Lodell was one of four First-Team All-Conference picks for CHS softball. (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Rose has been a First-Team pick three years running.

Epic home runs and laser throws led coaches to praise Mikayla Elfrank.

   A two-way terror, Wolf pitcher Katrina McGranahan shares league MVP honors with Chimacum’s Shanya Nisbet.

   The Wolves wrap up their season with a Friday night shindig. (Rebecca Lodell photo)

Killer Kat’s school year was all that, and more.

Coupeville High School junior pitcher Katrina McGranahan shared 1A Olympic League softball MVP honors with Chimacum senior shortstop Shanya Nisbet when league coaches announced All-Conference picks.

The selection follows on the heels of McGranahan being tabbed league MVP during volleyball season.

With Mia Littlejohn winning co-MVP honors for soccer, CHS had at least a share of three of the four top awards given to female athletes by Olympic League coaches in 2016-2017.

The selection of McGranahan and Nisbet broke a two-year run by Klahowya’s Amber Bumbalough.

The Eagle junior pitcher/shortstop was MVP as a freshman and shared honors with Chimacum’s Ryley Eldridge last season.

McGranahan, who led Coupeville in virtually every offensive category, while also going 18-5 in the pitcher’s circle, was honored by league coaches for a third consecutive season.

Junior third-baseman Lauren Rose was also an All-Conference First-Team pick for the third time, while junior center fielder Hope Lodell was honored for a second time.

Junior shortstop Mikayla Elfrank, a first-time honoree, rounds out Coupeville’s All-League picks.

When CHS coaches handed out their own awards Friday, McGranahan and sophomore catcher Sarah Wright shared team MVP honors.

Also bringing home awards were Veronica Crownover (Offensive MVP), Rose (Defensive MVP), Tamika Nastali (Hustle Award), Kyla Briscoe (Most Improved), Scout Smith (Rookie of the Year) and Elfrank (Coaches Award).

Coupeville finished 19-5 after splitting four games in 26 hours at districts. It was the second-best record in program history.

To acknowledge his player’s accomplishments, Wolf head coach Kevin McGranahan lettered everyone on the roster.

“All of them did everything as a team. Practice, long bus rides and everybody played in varsity games this year,” he said. “It took the whole team to do what we did this year.”

Varsity letter winners:

Kyla Briscoe
Tiffany Briscoe
Robin Cedillo
Veronica Crownover
Mackenzie Davis
Mikayla Elfrank
Nicole Lester
Jae LeVine
Hope Lodell
Emma Mathusek
Katrina McGranahan
Tamika Nastali
Lauren Rose
Scout Smith
Melia Welling
Sarah Wright

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