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Posts Tagged ‘Lauren Rose’

Jae LeVine

Jae LeVine is on the hunt for a league title. (John Fisken photos)

Hope Lodell

Hope “The Surgeon” Lodell is ready to carve up rival pitching.

Mikayla Elfrank

   Mikayla Elfrank returns for a second season of anchoring the infield at shortstop.

Veronica Crownover is one of four returning First-Team All-League players for CHS.

   Veronica Crownover is one of four returning First-Team All-League players for CHS.

The gang’s all here.

With no seniors on last year’s team, the Coupeville High School softball squad returns virtually every starter from a team that roared out to a 6-1 start and finished with nine wins, the best showing by the program in years.

As Kevin McGranahan rambles into year two at the helm of the Wolves, the only regular he won’t have back is senior first-baseman Kailey Kellner, who’s taking time off to rest after basketball.

Everyone else returns, however, and, in a testament to the continued youth of the program, at least two-thirds of the projected starting lineup will again be underclassmen.

Heading them up is junior pitcher Katrina McGranahan, who is one of four returning First-Team All-League players for the Wolves.

Juniors Lauren Rose (3B) and Hope Lodell (OF) and sophomore Veronica Crownover (Designated Player) were also honored by league coaches last season.

Other returning starters include sophomore Sarah Wright (C), junior Mikayla Elfrank (SS) and seniors Jae LeVine (2B) and Tiffany Briscoe (OF).

Senior Robin Cedillo and sophomore Tamika Nastali both saw plenty of time in the outfield last year, while sophomore Nicole Lester, winner of Most Improved, rounds out the returnees.

“For the most part the team will look the same as last year with a few tweaks here and there,” Kevin McGranahan said. “The players showed a great deal of growth last year and I am really looking forward to pushing them even further this year.”

Joining the core is a group of four fab frosh and junior Kyla Briscoe, who started at first base as a freshman but sat out last year with an injury.

The young guns are Scout Smith, Emma Mathusek, Melia Welling and Mackenzie Davis.

The first three in that group arrive equipped with experience and a winning attitude, having led their Central Whidbey Little League juniors squad to a 13-3 record last spring.

“The freshmen are fitting in with the veteran players well and learning fast,” Kevin McGranahan said. “They will be the future of the program and we look forward to watching them grow.”

The Wolf softball guru has a strong support crew, with assistants Justine McGranahan and Ron Wright being joined by two new volunteers, Greg Thomas and Stephanie Henning.

As he eyes the schedule — CHS has 12 home games, including a rare doubleheader versus Blaine — Kevin McGranahan sees challenges, and opportunity.

“We have a tough schedule this season and will be very tested with our non-conference opponents,” he said. “This should definitely help us when we get to the postseason tournaments.

“Areas we will be working on this season will be mental toughness and our ability to have short memories and to move on to the next game and not dwell on past games, win or lose.”

Having a solid core of battle-tested players, many of whom play travel ball as well, is a huge bonus.

“The strengths of this years team will be our veteran leadership and continuity as a team,” Kevin McGranahan said. “We will be strong defensively and much improved on the offensive side as well.”

Of Coupeville’s three foes in the Olympic League, Chimacum is the two-time defending champ while Klahowya boasts a two-time league MVP in junior Amber Bumbalough.

Port Townsend, on the other hand, enters on a 37-game losing streak.

The RedHawks have not won a game in the first two seasons of the 1A Olympic League and you have to go back to April 28, 2014 to find their last victory.

The Wolves finished 9-11 overall, 3-6 in league play last year and want to ramp up those numbers.

“Our goals for the season are to improve on last year and win the Olympic League,” McGranahan said. “Of course the goal to win state is always out there, but we are keeping our eyes on the league title and then we can attack districts and state.

“I am very excited about the season and to see how this team performs.”

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Lauren Rose (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose, seen here firing off a serve in an earlier match, had a team-high 12 assists Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

Some nights you just shake your head and walk away.

This season has been so good for the Coupeville High School volleyball squad that one flat night can’t derail the fun express.

And flat was the key word, as the Wolves, flying high with a five-match winning streak, stumbled against a brutally-efficient squad ready to take advantage.

Falling 25-17, 25-14, 25-13 in a non-conference road match against 2A Sequim, Coupeville took a small step back, dropping to 7-3.

Sequim is 8-1, has won 24 of 28 sets this season and is the only school to blank CHS in a match.

“We played tentative tonight and without fire to take down a very good Sequim team,” said Coupeville coach Cory Whitmore. “We had moments of brilliance, taking aggressive swings, but then would get back on our heels.”

Katrina McGranahan paced Coupeville with four kills and four service aces, while Lauren Rose doled out a team-high 12 assists.

Mikayla Elfrank (four kills), Valen Trujillo (14 digs) and Hope Lodell (seven digs) also dropped their names into the stat sheets with stellar play.

The best news is Sequim, which has given Coupeville two of its three losses this season, is out of sight, out of mind now.

The Wolves, who sit atop the 1A Olympic League at 4-0, close the regular season with five straight conference bouts, starting with a home affair against second-place Klahowya (3-1) Oct. 18.

Having some time off to recover from the crush of Homecoming, Spirit Week and several big matches back-to-back should allow Coupeville to get its mojo back before the matches which matter the most.

“We’ll have a long week of practice to get our confidence back,” an upbeat Whitmore said.

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Lauren Rose

   Show up Saturday and you can learn the art of the spike from Wolf stars like Lauren Rose (9) and Mikayla Elfrank. (John Fisken photo)

Weekends are made for free volleyball.

If you’re in grades 3-8, you can learn the art of the spike and meet current Wolf stars (maybe even get their autograph, if you ask nicely) this Saturday.

The Coupeville High School volleyball team and head coach Cory Whitmore are hosting a free kids clinic from 10 AM-12:30 PM in the high school gym.

There’s no registration necessary. Just show up ready to go Saturday.

If you can’t make this weekend’s event, there will be a second one Oct. 15.

If you have any questions, email Whitmore at cwhitmore@coupeville.k12.wa.us or check out http://coupevillevolleyball.weebly.com for updates.

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Lauren Rose, assassin. (John Fisken photo)

Lauren Rose, smiling assassin. (John Fisken photo)

Lauren Rose is a savage.

Now, she may appear to be calm and composed, the very definition of a cool cat, an athlete who rarely betrays her emotional state as she excels in any of her three sports.

But look deep inside the chest cavity of the Coupeville High School junior and you will find a heart three times the expected size, one which grows every time she (metaphorically at least) rips off an opponents head and leaves them to bleed out.

They call her Mouse, Munchkin or Keebler Elf, but Rose played more like the Terminator Tuesday night, ripping off a run at the service stripe like I have never seen in my years of covering high school volleyball.

Spinning the ball gently from hand to hand, then dropping balls into every nook and crevice possible, she threw down 20 consecutive points on her serve to kick off the third set, propelling the Wolves to a straight-sets romp over visiting Chimacum.

The 25-16, 25-19, 25-7 romp over the Cowboys improved Coupeville to a flawless 2-0 overall, 1-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

Sitting atop the league standings (with eight more league matches to play, admittedly), the Wolves are off to a strong start in the Cory Whitmore era.

And so far they are lighting the fuse with their service game.

“Serving is our strong point; we work on it every day, twice a day,” Whitmore said. “When we’re struggling a little bit confidence-wise with our hitting, it centers us and gets us back into a nice flow.”

Rose, who put every one of her 25 serves on the night in play, recorded 10 aces, but saved the loudest fireworks for the third set.

With Coupeville comfortably ahead after holding off a Chimacum rally late in the second set, their setter stepped to the service line to kick off the third.

She almost never left.

As Rose built a 20-0 lead, she mixed in serves which skidded off Cowboy arms and out of bounds with a few (a very few) where Chimacum actually got the ball back in play.

On those, Wolf snipers Mikayla Elfrank and Katrina McGranahan made short work of any rallies.

Swinging from their heels, the duo pounded the ball off of bodies and even made linesman Craig Trujillo jump a bit as the ball ricocheted past his head several times.

Elfrank painted the corners with her lasers, while McGranahan climbed a staircase to heaven on one play, hung there for what seemed like an eternity, then uncorked and lashed the ball on a line right between two Cowboys who both swung and whiffed on the ball.

With a loud ‘n proud Julian Welling-led Wolf student section hailing Rose on every serve, she almost pulled off the near impossible and served out the entire set herself.

Alas, a CHS spike during a mini-rally caught a little too much net and flopped backward, briefly ending the magical joy ride five points short of history.

For her part Rose flashed a small smile as fans chanted her name, already digging in and ready to return serve herself.

As she did so, she briefly tugged at her jersey, rubbing the wrist on her serving hand, for a fleeting second, maybe the smallest testament to it being sore after such an epic run.

Coupeville controlled play all evening, only trailing for a brief second in the opening moments.

After back-to-back spikes misfired, the Wolves found themselves down 4-2 in the first set, but forced a side out, then flipped the ball to McGranahan and the match was effectively over on the spot.

Her run of four straight service points, two on aces, staked Coupeville to a lead it would never relinquish, and the Wolves never trailed at any point in the remaining hour of the match.

A key five-point surge late in the first, all coming off of serves by Hope Lodell and highlighted by a gorgeous winner off of Elfrank’s fist, sealed the deal and set the tone.

Coupeville blew out to an 8-1 lead in the second, again fueled by Lodell’s high-octane serving (“she’s a high risk, high reward server”), then stretched it to 23-15.

The Cowboys put together their best sustained run of the night, slicing off four straight points to momentarily make things uncomfortable, before Lodell captured back-to-back points on a nasty spike and a nastier tip that froze every Chimacum player on the floor in place.

After that it was the Lauren Rose Experience set to overdrive.

Stats-wise, the Wolves got something from everyone.

For the match, Rose dealt out six assists to go with her stellar service, while Ashley Menges set up her teammates four times.

Elfrank, who has “been working really hard,” paced the Wolves with seven kills, while McGranahan had four and Lodell added three.

Valen Trujillo (8) and Payton Aparicio (5) were the team dig-masters, with Tiffany Briscoe providing solid all-around play and Emma Smith using her height and long reach to help CHS control play at the net.

Coupeville gets an immediate chance to keep its hot streak going, with 2A Sequim coming to town Wednesday for a non-conference match.

JV and C-Team action tips at 4:15, varsity at 5:30.

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Tiffany Briscoe (John Fisken photos)

  Wolf senior Tiffany Briscoe is super-excited to be back in the gym. (John Fisken photos)

Maddy Hilkey

   Maddy Hilkey, moments before she zapped the ball out of the air with laser bursts from her eyes.

Ashley Menges

Ashley Menges, why so serious?

team

A great turnout for a Tuesday, crutches and all.

Katrina

   Katrina McGranahan preps the net supports to withstand the beating her laser spikes will soon be giving them.

Elfrank

Briscoe and new teammate Mikayla Elfrank bond.

Nicole Lester

Nicole Lester, a happy warrior.

Rose

   Lauren Rose (left) and Hilkey break up the monotony of stretching with a little high-five time.

The schedule lies.

I lit a fire under wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken by promising him three separate practices/open gyms were listed on the Coupeville schools web site for Tuesday.

Turns out only 33% of that schedule actually came true, as Wolf cheerleaders and boys basketball players were nowhere to be seen, despite what the schedule might have indicated.

But, the CHS spikers were back at it, putting in off-season work, just like they promised.

So, they get all the camera time.

All of it, I said!

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