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Payton Aparicio (John Fisken photo)

   Payton Aparicio had nine service aces and six kills Tuesday, sparking Coupeville to a straight-sets win over Klahowya. (John Fisken photo)

There’s a new boss in volleyball land.

The first two years of the 1A Olympic League Klahowya went a combined 12-0 in league play and won back-to-back titles.

That time is done.

Playing inspired, extremely balanced ball on its home court Tuesday night, the Coupeville High School spikers roared to a convincing straight-sets win over the Eagles, moving within a win of clinching the 2016 crown.

The 25-13, 27-25, 25-18 victory lifts the Wolves to 5-0 in league play, 8-3 overall.

CHS is three games up on Chimacum and Klahowya, who are both 3-3 in conference action.

Since the Wolves already own the tiebreaker over both those schools, a win Thursday at Port Townsend (0-5) will clinch Coupeville’s first volleyball league title since 2001.

Win the crown and CHS gets a boost come playoff time, as the #1 seed from the Olympic League starts the postseason in the double-elimination round of districts.

Win twice (while playing on its home court, as Coupeville hosts districts Nov. 5) and the Wolves are state-bound.

To see the bracket, pop over to: http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2069&sport=10

And, while they continue to take it one match at a time, the Wolves, who have four regular-season bouts left, now have the most wins by a CHS varsity squad since the 2009 team went 9-6.

If the Wolves continue to play like they did Tuesday, they might make some serious inroads on the school single-season mark of 13 victories, set in 2004.

Coupeville, after a brief hiccup to start the match, lit Klahowya up with a mix of dazzling serves and bone-crunching hits.

Hope Lodell kicked things off, unleashing three straight scorching serves to spark the Wolves to their first lead of the night at 4-3, then Payton Aparicio got nasty and really blew the hinges off the door.

After dropping in a tip for a winner at 8-6, the Wolf junior strolled to the service line and ripped off nine straight winners.

The first eight balls never came back over the net, as the Eagles struggled mightily to solve Aparicio, before Emma Smith dropped a huge spike to push the lead to 17-6.

While Smith’s winner was a crowd-pleaser, it was probably only her third-hardest-hit ball of the evening, as the sophomore slugger opened a can of whup-ass on Klahowya that had no end in sight.

Maybe feeling a bit left out, Wolf teammate Mikayla Elfrank came swinging into the spotlight, capping the opening set with a pair of emphatic winners.

One was on a ferocious spike that tore off a rival girl’s arm, the other on a tip in which Elfrank tiptoed up a staircase to heaven before delicately redirecting the ball into the only open space on the floor.

To give Klahowya credit, the Eagles refused to bend easily, running out to a 17-10 lead in the second set.

While Katrina McGranahan lashed a noisy winner off of linesman Steve Kiel’s ankle and Aparicio put together another strong run on serve, things seemed to be headed towards split sets.

Except Coupeville wasn’t having any of that.

Rallying behind the steady serving of unflappable Lauren Rose, the Wolves came all the way back to take the lead, then surrendered it just as suddenly, then pulled the set win out with a bang.

Suffice it to say, it was a wild ride, especially for hyperventilating parents in the stands.

Elfrank went airborne like a ballerina with serious hops to drop in a tip, McGranahan peeled three layers of paint off the floor with a spike which exploded loud enough to wake up the dead and suddenly CHS was up 24-22 and on a 12-5 run.

Cue the sucker-punch, as a couple of mishits put Klahowya back up 25-24.

Enter Aparicio, silent as a ninja, slapping teammate Valen Trujillo’s hand for good luck, then delivering a knockout one-two punch.

First she dropped a note-perfect tip, perfectly angling it so it bounced off the posterior of a fallen foe, then she elevated and ripped a slicing spike down the line for another winner.

With CHS back in front by a point, Ashley Menges put the set away, ripping a service winner off of a Klahowya returner’s arm and letting the crowd breathe again.

There was still a set to play, but the Eagles were done, shoulders sagging, the fight ebbing from their bodies.

They tried to pull it together for a few nice rallies, but Coupeville could see the finish line and was surging.

Winners came from every direction, both expected — Smith and Elfrank mashing winners at 110 MPH — and unexpected — Lodell throwing out a balled-up fist at the last second and not only saving the ball, but redirecting it for a winner.

Appropriately on a night when she could seem to do little wrong, the final point of the match came from Aparicio, who let loose with one final service winner and then jumped into her teammate’s arms.

The resounding victory, coming on a night when the CHS spikers honored those fighting breast cancer, brought a smile to their coach’s face.

“I was very happy with our composure all night,” said Cory Whitmore. “Even when we were trailing, we chipped away and focused on fixing any issues on our side of the net instead of worrying about what the other team was doing.”

The stat sheet was exactly the way the volleyball guru likes to see it — balanced in the extreme.

Aparicio led the way with nine service aces and six kills, while Lodell (nine digs, five aces, four kills), Menges (11 assists, four aces) and Rose (nine assists, four aces) all chipped in.

Trujillo went low for nine digs, while McGranahan (7), Smith (4) and Elfrank (4) all soared for key kills.

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Katrina McGranahan (John Fisken photos)

Katrina McGranahan uncorks a killer serve. (John Fisken photos)

celebrate

   Wolves (l to r) Emma Smith, Allison Wenzel and Sarah Wright celebrate a big point.

It’s in their hands.

Sweep its matches this week and the Coupeville High School volleyball squad clinches its first league title since 2001.

The Wolves, who sit atop the 1A Olympic League at 4-0, host Klahowya Tuesday (4 PM varsity/5:15 JV and C-Team), then hop across the water to face Port Townsend Thursday.

Win both and they’ll be 6-0, which would put them three games up on both Chimacum and two-time defending league champ Klahowya with three matches to play.

Since they would then finish no worse than a tie with either rival, and would own the tiebreaker over both schools, the command would go out — order a new title board for the CHS Wall of Fame.

Coupeville’s two previous league titles in volleyball came in 1997 and ’01, when the Wolves played in the Northwest Conference.

While nothing is set in stone yet, CHS volleyball reaching for the crown is the highlight of this week’s look at the current league standings in the four fall sports the Wolves compete in.

Rain-outs stung the Wolf netters, as matches against Klahowya and Chimacum were washed away.

With Coupeville having already clinched the title, neither bout will be rescheduled, which costs CHS a chance to add to its overall collection of league wins.

Picking up a win in soccer, Klahowya moved up into a tie with Coupeville, with 13 varsity wins across the fall sports.

Port Townsend (5) and Chimacum (3) are well back.

Those numbers will change tonight, as two football games which were knocked out Friday by the closing of the Hood Canal Bridge (Klahowya at Port Townsend and Chimacum at Vashon Island) will be played.

Standings through Monday morning:

Olympic/Nisqually League football:

School League Overall
Cascade Christian 4-0 7-0
Port Townsend 3-0 4-2
Klahowya 2-1 4-2
Bellevue Christian 2-2 2-5
Charles Wright 2-2 3-4
COUPEVILLE 1-3 2-5
Chimacum 0-3 1-5
Vashon Island 0-3 0-6

Olympic League volleyball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 4-0 7-3
Klahowya 3-2 4-5
Chimacum 3-3 6-6
Port Townsend 0-5 2-8

Olympic League girls soccer:

School League Overall
Klahowya 5-0 7-1-2
COUPEVILLE 4-1 6-4-1
Port Townsend 2-4 3-7-1
Chimacum 0-6 1-7-1

Olympic League boys tennis:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 4-0 5-7
Klahowya 3-2 4-8
Chimacum 0-5 0-12

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William Nelson has played a key role on back-to-back league champion CHS tennis teams. (John Fisken photos)

   William Nelson has played a key role on back-to-back league champion CHS tennis teams. (John Fisken photos)

(John Fisken photo)

  The champs, minus Jimmy Myers, who was absent the day team photos were taken.

Prepare the wall, we have incoming.

Taking advantage of another sunny day, the Coupeville High School boys’ tennis squad scorched visiting Chimacum 6-1 Wednesday, clinching their second consecutive 1A Olympic League title.

Now 4-0 in league, 5-6 overall, the Wolves will hang another title board on the school’s Wall of Fame, regardless of how they do in their final two conference bouts.

Coupeville finishes the regular season with four straight road matches, including one each against Klahowya (2-2) and Chimacum (0-4).

Even if they were to somehow lose both of those matches, the Wolves could finish no worse than 4-2 in league play and own the tiebreaker, having swept their first two matches against Klahowya.

With year three just underway, CHS has won seven Olympic League crowns, with four coming on the tennis courts.

Wednesday they shredded the Cowboys final hope by savaging them in doubles play.

The Wolves swept all four of those matches, surrendering just a single game at #1 doubles.

Complete results:

1st singlesNick Etzell lost to Isaiah Treibel 7-6, 6-2

2nd singlesJakobi Baumann beat Nate Miller 6-1, 7-5

3rd singlesMason Grove beat Jonah Diehl 6-0, 7-5

1st doublesJoseph Wedekind/John McClarin beat Zach Engle/Jack Meissner 6-1, 6-0

2nd doubles Joey Lippo/William Nelson beat Mason Lawson/Bradon Coleman 6-0, 6-0

3rd doublesJimmy Myers/Grey Rische beat Rowan Powell/Zackery Kienle 6-0, 6-0

4th doublesAiden Crimmins/Tiger Johnson beat JJ Brennan/Jack Gibbons 6-0, 6-0

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(Charlotte Young photo)

   Just ten players deep, the Venom went 13-3 and won a league title. (Charlotte Young photo)

If they represent the future, it is a bright one.

Crunching visiting Anacortes 10-0 Thursday, the Central Whidbey Little League Juniors softball squad clinched a league title in style.

The Venom finished 13-3 on the season, having won their final three games against their toughest rival.

While Central Whidbey split the season series with Anacortes, all three losses were extremely close, while all three wins were extremely NOT close.

The Venom ten-runned Anacortes twice and outscored the off-Islanders by 18 runs over the six-game series.

With the regular season having ended Thursday, a couple of CWLL players may join up with South Whidbey for All-Star play.

That’s still up for debate, but the Venom won’t go forward as a team, with only three of their 10 players available to play in the postseason.

It took a remarkable last-last-last-minute run by coach Charlotte Young to even pull together a Central Whidbey squad this season.

Last season, there wasn’t enough Coupeville girls to make a local team, and the few future Wolves who played had to choose between traveling to North or South Whidbey.

This time around, Young won a reprieve from league officials, pulled off a player drive to beat the clock, and assembled a fully-functioning roster which showed up for every game — unlike the other Whidbey teams — and scored at will.

That high-octane offense (the Venom were +100 runs, outscoring foes 185-85) was on full display, and early, Thursday.

Jumping on the Anacortes pitching staff for seven runs in the bottom of the first, Central Whidbey dropped an early KO.

They did it by sending 13 batters to the plate, eking out six walks and getting some key hits.

The first came from Marenna Rebischke-Smith, who beat out a chopper into the gap between short and second, while two runs came charging home.

Up 4-0 at that point, the Venom then started swinging from the heels.

Melia Welling crunched a laser shot of an RBI single to center, while Scout Smith and Maya Toomey-Stout dropped in infield singles.

In total, eight of Central’s nine starters reached base in the first inning, via a walk, hit or error.

The run explosion was more than enough for Venom hurler Chelsea Prescott, who was so locked-in on mom Josie’s birthday, she could have made do with a single run.

Tossing the team’s first shutout of the season, she had pinpoint control, ripping off five strikeouts while pacing in the pitcher’s circle like a caged lioness.

The few times Anacortes managed to get a bat on the ball, the Venom defense stepped up with big-time plays to snuff out even the hint of a rally.

Cynthia Rachal came up with a huge running catch in center field to end the fifth, while several players conspired to pull off the night’s biggest wham-bam moment.

With a runner at first and two outs in the top of the third, an Anacortes batter hit a chopper into the hole.

Toomey-Stout lunged, snared the ball and almost pulled off a dazzling throw to nab the runner, but it hit the top of Hannah Davidson’s glove at first and squirted away.

Which is where things got fun.

Trying to avoid the throw, the Anacortes first base coach lurched backwards, lost control and did an awkward, but very entertaining, half-cartwheel.

As he did so, the ball bounced perfectly, allowing Davidson to grab it, spin and lay a flawless throw right into Emma Mathusek’s glove at second.

Mathusek had the bag blocked and stayed low, slapping on the tag, ending the inning and causing at least one Venom fan to nearly fall off the bleachers as she threw her hands skyward and screamed in joy.

With Prescott poppin’ in strikes to catcher Mollie Bailey, making the game an easy one to call for home plate ump Martin Mazdra, the Venom didn’t need much more to put a stamp on their season.

But they got it, tacking on a single run in the second (Rebischke-Smith’s RBI ground-out), third (Smith flying home on a passed ball) and fifth inning.

The final run, which triggered the ten-run mercy rule, came when Prescott walked, stole second, then shot around to score when Davidson’s grounder was airmailed into left field.

As the Venom celebrated their win and title, Coupeville High School coach Kevin McGranahan looked on with a smile.

Eight of the 10 Venom players — Toomey-Stout, Smith, Mathusek, Davidson, Rebischke-Smith, Welling, Rachal and Willow Vick — will be freshmen in the fall and could join the Wolf softball program next spring.

Battery-mates Prescott and Bailey are the only 7th graders on the squad.

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Jason McFadyen, back in his homer-hittin' CHS baseball days. (Photos courtesy the Carmen McFadyen Archives)

   Jason McFadyen, back in his homer-hittin’ CHS baseball days. (Photos courtesy the Carmen McFadyen Archives)

The end of the road for the '91 Wolf baseball squad.

The end of the road for the ’91 Wolf baseball squad.

What a difference 25 years makes.

In the gap that exists between this year’s Coupeville High School baseball squad winning a league title and the last Wolf diamond squad to do so, technology has exploded, countries have fallen (and risen), the Cold War ended and baseball players started looking like they were wearing pajamas.

But fashion trends aside (modern-day players need to pull their pants up and start showing their socks again, and that’s my rant for the day…), how do these two squads compare?

Well, from looking at score-books, the ’91 squad was a heck of a lot more dominant, for sure. At least in terms of inflicting beat-downs.

Record-wise, they’re kind of similar.

Playing in the six-team Northwest B Conference at the time, the old school Wolves went 9-1 in league play, losing only to Darrington in their finale.

By comparison, today’s squad, competing in a four-team 1A Olympic League, sits at 7-1 with one game left.

But the ’91 squad won 12 of 13 at one point, slicing through opponents on their way to finishing 13-6 after a remarkably tough playoff loss (more on that in a bit).

The current squad is 10-9 and guaranteed at least three more games, two in the playoffs, so they can tie the win total, but have already lost more games and haven’t been able to put together a streak to match the ’91ers.

What really sets the two teams apart is their offense.

While today’s team has outscored opponents 106-90, the ’91 team bopped foes to a 145-79 tune, and that’s skewed a bit by the 16 runs they gave up in their playoff loss.

The modern-day Wolves have poked out a fair amount of singles, but their big blows have been limited to doubles and an occasional triple.

In ’91, Coupeville hit the long-ball, and they hit it regularly.

As I deciphered the book and newspaper clippings from the time, I found at least four Wolves — Brad Haslam, Jason McFadyen, Matt Cross and Frank Marti — who went yard that season.

After being shut-out twice by Sequim on Opening Day, Coupeville only scored fewer than four runs in a game once the remainder of the year.

Along the way, they carved up Grace Academy for 16 runs, La Conner for 14 and 13, Winlock for 13, Sultan and Concrete for 12 apiece and Friday Harbor, Concrete and Orcas for nine in separate games.

In those 10 league games (two each against Darrington, Friday Harbor, La Conner, Orcas and Concrete) they outscored their foes by an 84-25 count.

So, through 19 games, the ’91 squad averaged 7.63 runs per game (while giving up 4.16), while the ’16 team sits at 5.58/4.74.

The two teams also differ in their pitching styles.

Senior CJ Smith is the epitome of calm, cool and collected as the staff ace this year.

The ’91 team featured some Marti and a lot of Haslam, who was a raging inferno on the hill, a scary, scary giant who flung a no-hitter and topped double digits in strikeouts in more than two-thirds of his starts.

Where this year’s team would like to differ the most from the ’91 squad, though, is in playoff success.

Back then, the Wolves were primed to make a long run, only to fall a strike short.

Coupeville opened the regional playoffs at Marysville, playing a Winlock team which carried a 9-9 mark into the game, but had won its final six games.

The Wolves, getting a big day at the plate from seniors McFadyen and Chris Frey, who combined for seven hits, charged out to a 13-6 lead heading into the seventh and final inning.

Faced with the possibility they would be playing a second game in the same day if they won the opener, Coupeville’s coaches had juggled their pitching staff to deal with inning restrictions then in force.

That kept Haslam off the mound until the team fell apart in the seventh, and, by the time he took the ball, things were getting out of control.

Having surrendered four runs thanks to a run of errors (the Wolves had nine miscues on the day), CHS clung to a 13-11 lead with two outs and two strikes.

Not yet in a flow, Haslam missed on a pitch and Winlock took advantage, hammering a two-run single up the middle to send the game to extra innings.

Once there, the Wolves bats utterly deserted them for one of the few times in their miracle run, and they fell 16-13 in 10 innings.

The loss, while painful in the moment, capped one of the most successful school years for boys sports in the 116-year history of the school.

McFadyen had quarterbacked the Wolf football team to a 9-0 mark, a league title and a home state playoff game, then moved to the basketball court and sparked CHS to the tri-district playoffs.

Talked into joining baseball at the last second, he made it three-for-three that spring, then departed along with Frey, Marti and hot-hitting Brian Barr.

As we look back at ’91, there’s also one semi-tenuous connection between the two programs.

Jon Crimmins, who was a varsity bench player as a sophomore in ’91, is now a dad, and his son Aiden, plays for the Wolf JV in 2016.

And why do I bring that up?

Because it gives me the chance to recount this story from the ’91 playoff game.

The elder Crimmins and his teammates were all given per diem money for food when they went to regionals, but he and fellow sophomore Keith Currier opted to spend most of their money on baseball cards.

“We sat around the hotel room and opened packs of cards all day. That was my playoff payoff!,” Jon Crimmins said with a laugh.

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