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Monica

  Monica Vidoni, seen here in an earlier match, was one of five Wolves honored on Senior Night Monday. (John Fisken photos)

trio

  Madeline Strasburg (20), Kacie Kiel (16) and Hailey Hammer (26) brought the same intensity to the Klahowya match that they have displayed all season.

They made the titans tremble a bit.

Sparked by a string of big spikes from their heavy hitters, who were celebrating Senior Night, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad pushed the #9 team in 1A, unbeaten Klahowya, hard Monday night.

And while the Wolves couldn’t quite pull off what would have been a huge upset, falling 25-18, 25-23, 26-24, they walked away heads high.

Part of that is the knowledge that if it plays at this level over its final two matches — at Port Townsend Tuesday and then back home for a rematch with the Redhawks two days later — Coupeville can, and should, grab a playoff berth.

While CHS is 1-9 overall, 1-3 in the Olympic League, they still have a chance to finish anywhere from second to fourth in the four-team league. The top three teams net a ride to the postseason.

Klahowya (13-0, 5-0) already punched its ticket long ago, while Chimacum (4-7, 2-2) and Port Townsend (6-5, 0-3) were set to play late Monday night.

After the Fab Five (seniors Madeline Strasburg, Monica Vidoni, Kacie Kiel, Hailey Hammer and the injured but always photogenic McKayla Bailey) were honored in pre-match festivities, the Wolves came out with little fear.

Led by the forever-young Kiel, who could still pass as a freshman, Coupeville actually out-hit the Eagles most of the night.

Kiel, the eternally laid-back Hammer and Strasburg, who was so supercharged she was vibrating in place at times, laid down spine-cracking shots.

When they stayed in, the Wolves pushed Klahowya back on its heels.

Ultimately however, too many spikes sailed long in the first set, and a 9-8 deficit turned into a 23-15 hole in the blink of an eye.

Strasburg made one final bid to spark a rally, unleashing a wicked shot that exploded at the feet of an Eagle and skidded off, slammed into the back wall of the gym and shot back onto the court with almost as much force as when it left.

Maddie Big Time then punctuated the winner with a bellow that rivaled anything to ever exit Tarzan’s mouth.

Coupeville kept at it, with a chance to pull out a win in both of the next sets.

McKenzie Bailey joined in on the power display, freshman Lauren Rose ran into the second row of the seats in a bid to save a runaway ball and Valen Trujillo added floor burns #14,314-#14,401 while refusing to let any ball get past her without a diving effort.

The third set also saw the varsity debut of freshman Katrina McGranahan, who immediately teamed with Bailey to form a sometimes-potent duo at the net.

The match ended on a briefly sour note, as a 24-24 tie in the third set was broken when Coupeville was penalized for a rotation error.

On match point, three Wolves went to the floor in an effort to save the winning point, with Kiel whacking her face a bit.

To their credit, the Klahowya players applauded when the scrappy Wolf senior bounced up and was able to exit the floor under her own power.

And, unlike some other juggernauts in previous years (cough, ATM and King’s, cough) the Eagles were gracious winners .

Strasburg (seven kills, five digs), Kiel (five kills, 12 digs) and Hammer (four kills) paced the heavy hitters while Rose collected 18 assists. Trujillo had a team-high 16 digs and was credited with 11 perfect passes.

 

Barely a match: Despite facing a JV squad that managed to incorporate a big-time hitter who had already played two sets in the varsity match, the Wolves were rallying when time ran out on them. Literally.

Coupeville had cut an eight-point deficit back to four at 22-18 in the first set when the clock hit 7 PM and Klahowya had to hightail it to the ferry.

With the threat of a quick exit hanging over the event, a decision was made to bump up the varsity into the opening slot. After the three sets took up substantial time, the JV squads did a breakneck warmup and hurtled into action.

Other than a beautiful, slicing serve for a winner off the fingertips of Allison Wenzel, the early going was a bit rough for Coupeville.

Klahowya, taking advantage of a setter and a big hitter who were playing at a level beneath their talents, jumped out to to a quick 7-2 lead, then stretched it to 20-12.

The Wolves rallied, however, with McGranahan slamming a spike off the back line for a winner.

Sparked by her crowd-pleaser, CHS got big winners from Hope Lodell and Payton Aparicio.

Lodell cranked a shot from her back-court that sailed over multiple heads and dropped in, peeling the paint off the back line, while Aparicio went high to execute a gorgeous tip that plopped squarely between two Klahowya defenders who teamed up to whiff on the return.

Then the Eagles ran away with their “win.” Sorry, not buyin’ it.

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Jerry Helm plays "Amazing Grace" to honor former Wolf Adam Garcia and the victims at Marysville-Pilchuck. (John Fisken photos)

  Jerry Helm plays “Amazing Grace” to honor former Wolf Adam Garcia and the victims at Marysville-Pilchuck. (John Fisken photos)

Wofl seniors

Wolf seniors (l to r) Aaron Wright, Matt Shank, Carson Risner, Josh Bayne, Oscar Liquidano, Isaac Vargas and Joel Walstad.

It was heartbreaking.

Real. Immediate. Crushing in the moment.

But Friday was a day awash in genuine heartbreak. A day when Marysville-Pilchuck should have sent its football team to Whidbey Island to play Oak Harbor before a school shooting tragically reshaped the day for all involved.

So, in the end, having a high school football game stolen away from you in the final seconds is not the end of the world.

Yes, Coupeville came within one minute and 14 seconds of clinching a playoff berth, before a questionable ref’s call gave Klahowya renewed life.

And yes, the Eagles rose to the moment, scoring twice in those final 74 seconds to escape with a wild 42-35 win and leave Wolf Nation deflated.

But, as much as it meant to the young men on the field, and to the fans in the stands and overflowing across the track and on to the grass in every direction, it was just a game. A very good one at that.

A Homecoming game that started with an emotional tribute to former Wolf Adam Garcia, who was murdered in Oak Harbor at age 21 last week.

Kenney Chesney and Brad Paisley songs led into a moment when the Coupeville players went over to hug Garcia’s relatives, then Central Whidbey firefighter Jerry Helm followed a moment of silence with a haunting bagpipe performance of “Amazing Grace.”

A game that had everything — huge touchdown plays, bone-crunching sacks that blew up the quarterback and forced fumbles, frequent lead changes and two or three moments at the end that will linger for a long time.

The first came with Coupeville clinging to a hard-earned 35-28 lead and Klahowya facing fourth and ten from the Wolf 15 with less than a minute and a half on the clock.

Eagle quarterback George Harris fired a ball into the end zone, the Wolves defended it almost perfectly, the ball hit the ground and the roar from the pro-Coupeville crowd could be heard for miles.

CHS would run the clock out and two weeks later be in the 1A playoffs.

Except, from the corner, a ref who had done little all game dropped a flag and took the first jab at Wolf Nation’s psyche.

The call was pass interference, though there was no contact and seemingly no reason to think twice about the play.

Given a reprieve (and five extra yards it probably shouldn’t have had) Klahowya took advantage, with Harris zinging a game-tying TD pass on his second attempt at fourth down.

The ball came in low, very low.

How low?

From many angles, it looked like it might have skipped into the Eagles receiver’s hands, but, in the high school world of no instant replay, the ref’s arms shot up and the lead was gone.

With the ball back in its hands, Coupeville chose to come back all guns firing. Not content to run out the clock and head to overtime, the Wolves went to the air repeatedly in the final minute.

And it worked, big time. Until it didn’t.

Wolf quarterback Joel Walstad hit three different receivers on consecutive passes, tearing off chunks of yardage and quickly moving Coupeville into game-winning territory.

Josh Bayne snagged a 19-yard strike. CJ Smith hauled in a short pass, then side-stepped defenders and turned it into a 22-yard catch-and-run. Then Wiley Hesselgrave went airborne and made a sensational snag on a 20-yard bomb while splitting defenders.

With the ball at the Klahowya 25, Coupeville sent in a running play, only to have its signals scrambled.

Running for his life, Walstad refused to go down easily (he had repeatedly evaded Eagle tacklers and kept plays alive all night long) and made a bid for a fourth straight big pass.

Unfortunately, the ball, heaved towards the left sideline, landed on the fingertips of a Klahowya defensive back, who brought the ball back 75 yards for a game-busting pick six with just 24 ticks on the clock.

Even then, with defeat having sucker-punched likely victory, Walstad never buckled, hitting two passes after the kickoff, before the clock ran out on him and his team’s postseason chances.

With the win, Klahowya (4-4 overall, 4-2 in Olympic League play) will join Port Townsend (6-2, 5-1) in the playoffs.

Coupeville (4-4, 3-3) closes its regular season Oct. 31 with a non-conference game at Concrete.

The Wolves will likely pick up another home game against a team from the Nisqually Valley League that also missed the playoffs the following week.

While Friday’s game will be remembered for how it finished, it was, hands down, the most action-packed affair of the season.

The two teams went toe-to-toe in the first half, racking up a combined 56 points.

Down 7-0, Coupeville responded with back-to-back touchdown lobs from Walstad to Hesselgrave. The first covered 15 yards, while the second was a thing of beauty.

An Eagle rusher had Walstad’s jersey in his hands, only to watch the senior slip his grasp, spin and lob a little eight-yard gem into his receiver’s arms.

Coupeville added two more scores in the second quarter.

Bayne busted out a six-yard scoring run in which he started in one speed, then hit the corner and found three more speeds in three steps, then the Wolves got tricky.

Walstad pitched the ball to Hesselgrave, who stopped on a dime and threw a long pass that hung in the air for a half hour, before tumbling over and over and landing in Bayne’s grasp 46 yards away.

After battling to a 28-28 halftime stalemate, the team’s switched gears in the third and put on a defensive clinic.

Twice Hesselgrave came flying around the Klahowya line and blindsided Harris, knocking the ball loose both times with an audible pop. Matt Shank and Jake Lord snagged the resulting fumbles.

But even with the turnovers, the Wolves couldn’t break through in the second half themselves until they put together a 57-yard drive in the fourth.

Hammering away with short runs, Coupeville ground up yardage and the clock.

After a roughing the passer penalty kept the drive alive, Lathom Kelley, who played like a one-man wrecking crew while wearing a heavy cast on one arm, punched the ball in from the one with 3:28 to play.

The final three minutes was two exhausted teams standing in the middle of the field and punching like mad.

Harris jabbed with quick passes to his fleet-footed, hard-to-track receivers. Hesselgrave exploded around the end for a back-dislocating sack that set up the fateful fourth-and-ten at the 15.

It was a game that deserved a great ending, and, if you were a Klahowya Eagle, you got the one you wanted.

If you were a Coupeville Wolf, you did not.

But whether you jumped and screamed and dog-piled at the end, or mingled with fans and classmates who rightly praised you for leaving every last ounce of effort, sweat and commitment on the field, you got to play a game Friday night.

A very entertaining, very competitive game.

Some days that is enough.

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Joel Walstad is the #3 passer in 1A and he's healthy again. (John Fisken photos)

Joel Walstad is the #3 passer in 1A and he’s healthy again. (John Fisken photos)

Wiley Hesselgrave

   Wiley Hesselgrave, here cradling the ball after a reception, has been a two-way terror for the Wolves.

How many marbles? All the marbles.

The Coupeville High School football season comes down to this — one 48-minute bout on its home turf.

Coming off of three straight road games, the Wolves (4-3 overall, 3-2 in Olympic League play) host Klahowya (3-4, 3-2) tonight for Homecoming.

The town’s annual parade is at 2 PM, starting at the school and heading down Main Street to Front Street.

Kickoff is at 5:30 and the rules are simple.

Win and you’re in the playoffs. Lose and you’re not.

Barring an upset of epic proportions, Port Townsend (5-2, 4-1) will blow out Chimacum (0-7, 0-5) tonight and claim the first football title awarded in the new four-team league.

That leaves the Wolves and Eagles playing for the second playoff berth, which would send them on the road to play the #1 team from the Nisqually League (likely Cascade Christian) Nov. 7 or 8.

Win or lose, Coupeville will wrap its regular season Oct. 31 with a non-conference game at Concrete.

While the Wolves were rolled 49-6 the first time they faced Klahowya this season, there are multiple reasons to believe they can gain some revenge tonight.

First, they’ve shown they can drop a beat-down on a big-time opponent when everything is clicking.

Unlike Klahowya, Coupeville was the lone Olympic League team to take down Port Townsend this season.

The Eagles were drubbed in both of their match-ups with the Redhawks, while the Wolves stepped up and knocked PTHS down hard the first time the schools faced.

Second, CHS is healthier than it has been in awhile.

Quarterback Joel Walstad, the #3 passer in 1A, has recovered from a hip pointer that made it hard for him to plant when throwing.

Carson Risner, Oscar Liquidano, Aaron Wright? All playing. Lathom Kelley (hand injury) is expected to be the only starter out.

Third, emotion.

It’s Homecoming and Coupeville will also honor former player Adam Garcia, murdered at 21 last week, prior to the game.

Fourth, the Wolves need to prove the computers wrong again.

ScoreCzar.org has Klahowya pulling out a 29-20 win. But the computers picked Port Townsend the first time around, and Coupeville shocked the world.

Fifth, Josh Bayne is running wild, currently the #2 rusher in 1A and #6 in all classifications, with 1,038 yards (he’s topped Jake Tumblin, who snagged 1,016 last season).

Awesome Joshsome is ready to erupt.

And last, and certainly not least, this is our town, our night.

Seven seniors (Wright, Risner, Isaac Vargas, Liquidano, Walstad, Bayne and Matt Shank) have a chance to exit as immortals.

Cow Town doesn’t bow down. Not tonight, not ever.

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Julia Myers (John Fisken photo)

Julia Myers (John Fisken photo)

Not even renegade cars can stop Julia Myers.

Bouncing back after being in a car accident in front of the CHS gym Saturday right before the Wolf girls’ soccer squad was set to get on the bus for its trip to Silverdale to play Klahowya, the senior goaltender tracked down her team and caught them right before they boarded the ferry.

Then she went out and made 18 saves against a highly-ranked team that features three Division 1-bound players.

Julia came running out of nowhere to jump on the bus with us,” said CHS coach Troy Cowan. “I didn’t think she would be able to make it due to the accident; she was physically not hurt, but was visibly shook up when we left.

“Thankfully, her parents were there to help and make sure everything went OK,” he added. “She is an amazing young woman with a non-stop motor and unquenchable desire to compete.”

Even with Myers heroics, however, the Wolves were unable to tame Klahowya, which competed in the 2A state tourney the past five years before the school (barely) dropped down to 1A after the most recent count of students.

The Eagles improved to 10-1 overall, 2-0 in Olympic League play with a 5-0 win.

Even with the loss, Coupeville remains in second-place in the four-team league at 1-1.

Now 4-4-1 overall, the Wolves get a chance to bounce back when they host Port Townsend (1-9, 0-2) Tuesday.

Facing off with Klahowya, which boasts a high-powered offense led by twin terrors McKenzie Cook and Izzy Severns, CHS was a bit compromised.

Myers was shook up and Coupeville was missing its top two defenders, with Jenn Spark (knee) and Jacki Ginnings (concussion) sidelined.

With Marisa Etzell and Kirsten Pelroy also absent, the Wolves only suited 14.

But those who where there didn’t go down easily.

“The team we played today was good. They have strong players at every position,” Cowan said. “Although the score board reflected a one-sided affair, I can tell you that Klahowya earned every one of those goals and earned every inch of ground.

“I couldn’t have been prouder of the girls,” he added. “Going into hostile territory, unmanned and out-gunned and they refused to lay down and quit.”

Cowan praised Christine Fields, Ivy Luvera, Mckenzie Meyer and Mia Littlejohn, calling their performances “their best defensive game of our season.”

Ivy Luvera was a brick wall today, just refusing to allow anything down the middle,” Cowan said. “Mia playing the other half of our back line just added to Klahowya’s struggles scoring down the middle.

Mia is one of the smartest players I’ve ever coached,” he added. “She knows when to attack, when to drop and just has wonderful instincts.”

What ultimately derailed Coupeville’s chances was Klahowya’s ability to fire away from long distance, and to do so with uncanny precision.

“They just had some serious thumpers,” Cowan said. “They could shoot from distance and that is what they did.”

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Sebastian Davis uncorks a little serve he likes to call "The Crippler."

Sebastian Davis was the lone Wolf to win Monday. (John Fisken photo)

The weather finally caught up to them.

After playing an almost unprecedented seven straight matches to start the fall season without suffering a single rain-out, the Coupeville High School boys’ tennis squad finally ran into liquid hell Monday.

The Wolves were actually at the halfway point of their match in Klahowya before court conditions reached the point of no return.

Trailing 3-1, with three varsity matches still in play, they had to accept reality and head back to the bus.

No word on whether it’s an official loss (CHS entered the day 3-4 on the season).

Coupeville wraps regular season play with back-to-back road matches (weather permitting), traveling to Sequim Wednesday, before popping over to play Chimacum Thursday.

The Wolves will participate in the Olympic League tourney Oct. 22-23.

Complete results from Monday:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Aaron Curtin lost to Jacob Gotchall 6-1, 6-2

2nd Singles — Sebastian Davis beat Eric Tyler 6-3, 6-0

3rd Singles — Jimmy Myers trailed Kyle Shoening 6-2, 3-4

1st Doubles — Loren Nelson/Connor McCormick lost to Jake Zieser/Ryan Gotchall 6-0, 6-3

2nd Doubles — John McClarin/Joseph Wedekind lost to Caden Haga/Connor Roberts 6-1, 6-0

3rd Doubles — Joey Lippo/William Nelson trailed Cam Dammeyer/Josef Woloschek 7-5, 2-0

4th Doubles — Grey Rische/Jared Helmstadter trailed Ryan Davis/Spencer Short 7-6, 0-1

JV:

Geoffrey McClarin/Garrett Compton beat Max Short/Cole Knuckey 6-3

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