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Posts Tagged ‘Lucy Tenore’

Heidi Meyers delivered a run of winners at the service line Tuesday, as the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad scorched visiting Cedar Park Christian. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It started with a bang and ended with a bang.

In between, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad dominated play Tuesday against visiting Cedar Park Christian, rolling to a straight-sets win.

The 25-20, 25-21, 25-16 victory lifts the Wolf young guns to 1-0 in North Sound Conference play, 2-1 overall.

The match was fairly evenly played, but Coupeville time and again did what it had to do at the exact right moments to carry the day.

Things got off to a nice start, with Maddie Georges ripping off four service points to open the match, thanks to some help from Lucy Tenore and Taygin Jump.

Like a Viking warrior stalking the net, Tenore struck first, rising up into the rafters on the opening point, then lashing a solid kill that scattered her foes in all directions.

Not to be outdone, the multi-talented Jump finished off the next three points by herself, and all with different shots.

The first was a little bump on the run, as she dropped the ball into a small gap between two Cedar Park players.

After that, Jump ripped a spike which singed the top of the net as it slid over, followed up by a slicer which caught the back line for another winner.

CPC fought back, and actually took the lead for a bit in the opening set, overcoming wicked winners from Tenore and Kylie Chernikoff.

But, eventually, the Wolves turned the flow of the tide for good, thanks to strong serving from Heidi Meyers, an artful winner or two off of the fingers of Anya Leavell, and then some highlight reel work from the pumped-up Chernikoff.

She crushed one winner to knot the set up at 18-18, then put CHS ahead for good with a run of sizzlin’ aces at the service stripe.

The second set was almost a mirror image of the first, with the two teams battling in the center of the ring, exchanging body blows, until Coupeville flipped a switch.

Tenore and Chernikoff were a two-woman wreckin’ crew at the net, spraying nasty kills in all directions, while this time around it was Jaimee Masters who had an impressive run on serve.

While the win was already in the bag for the Wolves after taking the first two sets, the teams opted to play a third frame for extra floor time.

Alita Blouin opened the set with a gorgeous spike for a winner which she delivered while hanging out in midair in the back half of her side of the court.

After that, Chernikoff decided to see how many heads she could crack by peppering balls at any Cedar Park players in her way.

With Georges flipping perfectly-placed sets, and Ivy Leedy chipping in with a couple nice hustle plays, the Wolves eventually had everything clicking in the final set, strolling in for the sweet sweep.

Cedar Park put up a fight on a couple of intense rallies, but deflated after Jump flicked a tip for a winner and Chernikoff smashed a hole through the center of the universe on her final kill.

Just to make sure the visitors knew they had been fully and completely beaten, the hometown Wolves closed the match with back-to-back service aces from Masters, which sent her great-grandparents home happy.

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Lucy Tenore is bringing her volleyball (and tennis) skills to Coupeville High School this fall. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Spike, bump, serve, relax.

For Lucy Tenore, life on the volleyball court offers the perfect escape.

“It gives you a chance to forget about everything that day and do something you love and can count on,” she said.

Tenore, who will be a freshman at Coupeville High School this fall, plans to play tennis as well, but it’s volleyball she digs the most.

“I love it because I always get to be with my teammates,” she said. “I believe my strength is being a cheerleader for my teammates.”

She’ll enter high school play already possessing one thing coaches love to see – height – and brought a nicely-developing skill set with her whenever she hit the floor during middle school action.

A hard worker, both in practice and matches, Tenore always tries to stay positive. Though sometimes that takes a little extra effort.

“I’d like to work on not getting so down on myself when I make mistakes,” she admitted.

But with the support and encouragement of her main cheering section — “my parents, my dog, and my little sister” — Tenore has big dreams.

“My goal is to be on the volleyball varsity team all four years of high school,” she said, with confidence in her voice.

Away from the volleyball floor, Tenore stays busy, keeping up with school work and extracurricular activities.

In addition to her sports pursuits, she’s joined the Scouts BSA program and pledges to stay loyal to her life-long fascination with all things from the House of Mouse.

“My deepest love is for Disney,” Tenore said. “I have always had an addiction to Disney music, Disney movies, and, most of all, Disneyland.”

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What do I want to see in 2019? I want to see every Coupeville athlete show the heart Alita Blouin does. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

How best to end 2018? With a story.

It’s one small moment from a year, but it says so much, without a word being spoken aloud.

To set the scene, I will say this — in the world of high school and middle school sports, nothing, and I mean NOTHING, matters as much as heart.

I’m not naive. Talent is huge. Top-level facilities, inspiring coaches, access to quality equipment, all obviously have a major impact.

Camped here in the middle of a rock, which sits in the water, quite a distance from the opportunities enjoyed by big city schools, or Richie Rich private schools, or the combination of both, provides a major hurdle for Coupeville teams and athletes.

It is what it is.

You can complain all day, or you can get working.

And that is where heart comes in.

The best athletes I have witnessed come through Cow Town, the most-successful teams, all have something in common – they do not quit, they do not stop working, and they believe, down deep in their soul, that there is absolutely, positively NO REASON they can’t be the best.

Marlene Grasser to Makana Stone, Bill Riley to Hunter Smith, heart, above all else.

And this is where we come to my year-capping story.

Over the past couple of years, I have been very impressed with the Wolf female athletes who are currently in 8th grade at Coupeville Middle School.

There is talent, desire, and heart to be found in their male counterparts, but this group, which has come up playing together, is something different.

From Maddie Georges to Gwen Gustafson to Hayley Fiedler and beyond, they have an air about them very similar to what the Coupeville High School girls of the late ’90s and early 2000’s had.

That time period is the most successful in CHS female athletic history, and I believe this current crop, especially mixed with the class or two right above and below them, is primed to make their own history.

And one moment, a small, but significant moment during warm-ups, not even in a game, has sealed the deal for me.

Of all the CMS female athletes, Alita “The Assassin” Blouin is the one, who, for me, towers above the field.

She’s not very tall, maybe, but she is quick and, this is where it gets good, every time I have seen her play volleyball or basketball, she carries herself with the look of a young woman who fully intends to beat you, and beat you badly.

Off the court, all smiles, as friendly as anyone, but on the court, she looks like she wants to rip her opponent’s knees off and feed them through a wood chipper.

To which I say, YES.

It’s about dang time a Coupeville athlete didn’t back down at the sight of a fancy uniform, time they expected to win, and win because they had put in the hard work to get there.

Which brings us to our moment.

As CMS went through warm-ups before a volleyball match this season, the 8th grade team started to run laps around the floor.

Blouin, a team captain, was out in front, serious and locked-in. No coasting for her.

At which point, one of her teammates, Lucy Tenore, who is considerably taller than Blouin and has a much-longer stride, started to try and pass her friend.

Blouin would not let it happen.

Tenore, smile growing bigger and bigger, tried a second time, then a third, while Blouin refused to give in.

Legs pumping, elbows at alert, Blouin fended off Tenore at every turn, using three steps to cover the ground Tenore covered in one, all the while with her face locked in a death mask of concentration.

Tenore, fully laughing at this point, finally relented, only to see Blouin kick it up a notch to a sprinter’s run to finish the final curve, one eye looking over her shoulder just in case anyone else wanted to get foolish.

During the match, the duo dazzled, with Blouin popping perfect set-ups for Tenore to reach up and smash. With each winner, they hugged, smacked hands and smiled.

After the match, the two hung out together in the stands, half-sprawled across each other as only teen girls can pull off, laughing and talking, the best of friends.

But the statement had been made — no one, no where, no how, is going to get past Alita Blouin, a relatively small girl with a heart the size of the universe.

I doubt very many people noticed the moment. And if they did, they might not have thought anything of it at the time.

But in that moment, everything I hope to see as a grizzled sports writer, was on display.

As we head into 2019, what do I want for Coupeville sports?

I want every single Wolf athlete, high school and middle school, to attack the day like Alita Blouin does.

Do that, and there’s greatness ahead.

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CMS 8th grader Lucy Tenore, seen here in an earlier match, delivered a big-time performance Wednesday against Langley. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One court, four matches, 10 sets, 255 minutes of sitting on the hardest bleachers in all of creation, 393 points, 12,000 screams and a million hustle plays.

Wednesday offered many things for middle school volleyball fans, from an endurance test for our rumps (we all lost…) to a chance to watch mostly-friendly Island rivals go toe-to-toe.

And while visiting Langley came away with better results, winning three of four matches, the hometown Coupeville spiker squads pulled off their share of dazzling plays and grace under fire.

The matches, in the order they were played:

 

8th grade varsity:

The second-closest match of the day, as CMS pushed Langley to three sets, before falling 25-16, 22-25, 25-8.

Coupeville got big-time performances from Lucy Tenore and Alita Blouin, among others, while Vivian Farris dropped the single most-beautiful shot of the entire afternoon right at crunch time, but the Cougars ultimately had too much power and too much precision.

Leading the way for the visitors was Morgan Batchelor, who could already be starting for a lot of high school teams even if she’s not, technically, in high school.

Unleashing spikes with a power rarely seen at the middle school level, the Langley terror dominated at the net and the service stripe, with her play reminiscent of former Coupeville star Sarah Mouw. And that’s a major compliment.

While Wolf fans say silent prayers Batchelor and her family decide to move up-Island to Cow Town for her high school days (hey, I can dream…), they can appreciate her already well-rounded game, even as her blasts left all of us a bit shell-shocked.

Tenore responded with some of her own power in the opening set, rifling several winners, while Blouin and Gwen Gustafson put together nice runs at the service stripe.

CMS fought back from five down to knot things up at 12-12, only to have Batchelor crush all the air out of the ball with a set-swinging kill which tore off a chunk of the back line.

That sparked a 13-4 run to close the set by Langley, and could have deflated all of Coupeville’s will.

Instead, the Wolves flashed some nice grit, taking a back-and-forth brawl that raged through much of the second set.

Taygin Jump and Gustafson dropped back-to-back daggers, lofting sideways shots which pierced the Langley defense, Maddie Georges and Ryanne Knoblich were strong on serve, while Blouin scraped shot after shot off the floor.

With the set tied at 22-22, CMS needed a hero, and Farris was ready.

The two teams kept the ball hoppin’ during an intense rally, with the Cougars appearing to have a put-away to go ahead.

Instead, Farris, sliding in from the side, dropped a sweet, and perfectly-placed, shot up and over her shoulder.

The ball kissed the top of the net, hung in air for an eternity, then dropped like an anvil on Langley’s side, bouncing away for an unexpected winner as all the Wolves and Cougars screamed in unison.

Coupeville seized the momentum, with Tenore blasting a serve off of a Langley player’s face, and a point later, the match was headed to a third and final set.

While the last frame went too quickly, and in the wrong direction, for the Wolves, they did get a beauty of a fingertip block from Tenore, a great one-armed hustle save from Hayley Fiedler and a note-perfect jump tip from the appropriately-named Jump.

 

8th grade JV:

The brawl to end them all, as the two teams split, with Langley taking the opening set 27-25, before Coupeville rebounded to claim the second frame 25-22.

Since we ended up being in the gym for 4+ hours, would it have hurt to trim some of the (many, many) warm-up periods and let these two squads play a deciding third set?

I think not, but those kind of decisions are above my pay grade, so I content myself by sitting back and whining about things afterward.

Anyways.

The opening set, despite a flawless tip winner from Jill Prince and a smokin’ hot ace off the hand of Cypress Socha, seemed to be all Cougars, all the time.

Until it wasn’t.

Down 21-10, Coupeville went on a 9-3 run, powered by some nasty, and very effective, Allie Lucero serves, to make it a fight.

Even then, the Wolves trailed 24-19, with the Cougars on match point.

Cue the second, even-more impressive CMS run.

Katie Buskala lobbed a drop shot winner which split a pair of Cougar defenders, than the other Lucero twin, Maya, got the ball in her hands and went berserk at the line, lacing aces which spit fire as they singed the net on their way past.

From the brink of defeat, the Wolves held off five set points, eventually grabbing their first, and only, lead of the set at 25-24.

While Langley calmed down and pulled away with three straight points to claim the frame, the comeback lit a fire under the Coupeville players.

The second set was their showcase, as Gustafson lashed a winner from the middle of the court to kick things off, before Socha, Buskala, Gustafson and Maya Lucero dominated on serve.

CMS led almost start to finish, just falling behind by a single point twice, with Buskala and Prince coming up with big shots to hold off Langley down the stretch.

 

7th grade JV:

Langley’s serving dominance carried it to a 25-9, 25-15 victory.

Coupeville’s MVP in the opening set was Lauren Marrs, who dropped in several winners and staged a one-woman rally on a point in which she was the lone Wolf to hit the ball, and kept it in play through four exchanges.

The Wolves only claimed a single point off their serve in the first frame, but it was a sizzlin’ ace from Melanie Navarro.

Jordyn Rogers emerged as Coupeville’s best hope at the line in the second set, popping a pair of aces during a run of four straight points on her serve, while Brenna Silveira lobbed a winner off a return, catching the last flake of paint on the back line.

 

7th grade varsity:

With very few 7th graders on its roster, Coupeville essentially played the same lineup as in the JV match, and Langley’s top squad, crammed full of ferocious servers, rolled to a 25-4, 25-11, 25-9 victory.

The first set featured a phenomenal shot by Desi Ramirez, as the Wolf youngster lobbed the ball back over her head, while looking the other way.

The ball caught the back line and caught the Cougars flat-footed, for maybe the only time in the match.

After that, highlights included Marrs putting together two more solid runs on serve, Kaitlyn Leavell sliding a winner across the net on mom Sarah’s birthday, and solid all-around play from Jesse Ross-McMahon.

Every Wolf in action Wednesday contributed, whether it was hustle, chipping in on rallies or chattering positively to teammates, with Ava Mitten, Lily Meyers, Skylar Parker, Hayley Thomas and Mercedes Kalwies-Anderson giving the jam-packed CMS gym something to cheer.

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Lucy Tenore and the CMS spikers launched a new season Tuesday. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Alita Blouin directs traffic.

Calm, cool, collected (and secretly a killer on the court), it’s Allie Lucero.

Grey Peabody made a strong debut, jumping right into the thick of action on almost every play.

Vivian Farris shows off her hops.

Cypress Socha smashes a winner.

Arm booming like a cannon, Maddie Georges sprayed aces to every corner of the court.

8th grade captain Taygin Jump was a fireball, flying from one side of the court to the other while keeping up a steady patter of encouragement to her teammates.

The start of a new season only becomes truly official when the first photos arrive.

So, luckily for the Coupeville Middle School spikers, wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken spent a fair amount of time in Cow Town Tuesday, snapping away as the Wolves battled visiting Sultan.

The pics above are courtesy him.

To see everything Fisken shot, and possibly buy some glossies for grandma, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Volleyball-2018-2019/MSVB-2018-09-18-vs-Sultan/

And, when you do, remember (or learn for the first time), purchases help fund yearly scholarships awarded to two graduating CHS seniors.

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