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Posts Tagged ‘Lyla Stuurmans’

Madison McMillan filled up the stat sheet, again, in a five-set thriller Tuesday night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The dynasty is dying in front of our eyes.

La Conner, four-time defending state 2B volleyball champs, and a program which hasn’t lost a Northwest 2B/1B League match in more than a decade, is no longer untouchable.

The Braves are struggling through non-conference play, sitting at 2-4 overall, and have been dinged heavily in tournament action.

Saturday, La Conner lost to both Coupeville and Mount Vernon Christian at the South Whidbey Invite, with the Wolves going undefeated to win the tourney title.

Tuesday night, back in the comfy confines of their home gym, the Braves blew a two-set lead and trailed 12-11 in the fifth, before rallying to edge CHS and (barely) keep their streak alive.

For a moment, at least.

The Wolves, and other teams like Orcas Island and Darrington, are already inside the house, and there are increasingly less places to hide for the Braves.

Ellie Marble isn’t coming to rescue you this time, is all I’m saying.

The final score Tuesday came out in favor of La Conner, to the tune of 25-23, 25-14, 23-25, 20-25, 15-12, but after watching the Braves bash the brains out of foes in previous seasons, it’s safe to say times have changed.

Coupeville may be 0-2 in league play, 1-4 overall, but that record is highly deceptive.

The Wolves, who led at some point in all five sets Tuesday, have lost in five sets three times, with their other defeat coming to undefeated Neah Bay.

The La Conner loss, while it still stings, should also hit differently for Coupeville.

Unlike the other five-set losses, where the Wolves let the lead slip away, this time they were the ones charging from behind.

A shot here, a shot there, and Tuesday’s tilt ends with the visitors screaming in joy all the way back to Whidbey Island.

Circle Oct. 24 on your calendar.

That’s Senior Night for Coupeville, and the rematch with La Conner, possibly with major playoff implications on the line.

Play like they did Tuesday, and clean a few small things up, and the Wolves could make The Rock shake.

Mia Farris cranks out another winner. (Jackia Saia photo)

Coupeville came out strongly, building a 14-9 lead in the first set thanks to strong play from Mia Farris, who fired missiles from the service stripe, while getting a hand on numerous winners while covering the entire floor.

She got plenty of help, with big hitters Lyla Stuurmans, Grey Peabody, and Teagan Calkins peppering the Braves with a mix of snappy spikes and artful tips.

La Conner fought back, however, using a 15-5 run to surge ahead 24-19.

Their backs to the wall, the Wolves fought off four set points — with three different players lashing winners — before the Braves caught a break when a long rally ended with a CHS shot which just barely missed the back line.

Not missing a beat, Coupeville bounced back to take a 6-1 advantage in set two behind a strong run at the service stripe from Stuurmans.

A disputed call kept the Wolves from pushing the margin to 7-1, while once again raising the question of why volleyball is the only high school sport to leave a significant amount of its linework in the hands of hometown parents, and not the refs.

The call, in which a ball hit out of bounds by La Conner was ruled to have grazed the fingertips of a Wolf, seemed to throw Coupeville off a bit.

The Braves took advantage, closing the set on a 23-8 surge, even as Stuurmans continued to rise up and smash the holy heck out of the ball.

In seasons past, a two-set lead for La Conner allowed Hall of Fame Coach Suzanne Marble the opportunity to light up a victory cigar.

For her successor, Pam Keller, that’s not happening as often in her first season at the helm of a new-look Braves squad.

A couple of early winners from Madison McMillan (one on a nasty slicer) and Stuurmans (delivering straight smoke) were sweet, but La Conner built a five-point lead and led as late as 20-17 in set three.

Enter a fired-up Peabody, who delighted in smashing balls off her rivals, and Calkins, who popped serve winners, as the Wolves rallied to keep their night alive.

Katie Marti will rock you. (Bailey Thule photo)

Katie Marti, who spent a considerable chunk of time flicking high, arcing sets to her hitters, delivered the final punctuation note herself, mashing a winner which left a welt on the Brave who tried, foolishly, to stop the ball.

Set four firmly belonged to the Wolves, who, riding a wave of emotion, snatched the lead at 9-8 and never gave it back.

Coupeville stretched the margin to as many as seven points, let La Conner sneak back in for a moment, then closed things out with Peabody and Stuurmans once again doing the dance o’ death at the net, strafing La Conner’s defense with laser shots.

That set up a furious finale, with the teams combining for five ties in the fifth set.

The last came at 11-11, as Stuurmans jumped to the ceiling for a tip winner, with a La Conner error on the next play staking the Wolves to a 12-11 lead.

The miracle finish wasn’t to be, though, with the Braves holding on to win after Coupeville missed their final run of shots by a combined 1.3 inches.

As he reflected on the match afterwards, Coupeville coach Cory Whitmore praised the grit shown by his team.

“Hard fight tonight and I’m proud of how the team bounced back from down 0-2 to push into a 5th,” he said.

Mia was incredible with her back row defense and covered sideline to sideline in addition to being our go-to on occasion. Grey came up with some big blocks.

“But we struggled to close when we had a chance and it cost us the fifth set.”

 

Tuesday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 11 digs
Teagan Calkins — 1 kill, 3 digs, 3 aces
Mia Farris — 15 kills, 22 digs, 2 aces
Jada Heaton — 2 kills, 1 assist
Issabel Johnson — 1 ace
Katie Marti — 2 kills, 15 digs, 34 assists, 6 aces, 1 block assist
Madison McMillan — 1 kill, 17 digs, 1 assist, 1 ace
Grey Peabody — 12 kills, 1 dig, 4 block assists, 2 solo blocks
Lyla Stuurmans — 21 kills, 10 digs, 1 assist, 3 aces, 1 block assist

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Big hitter Lyla Stuurmans rang up a team-high 18 kills Thursday night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There is a fork in the road. Which route do you take?

The Coupeville High School volleyball squad has 10 matches left on the regular season schedule, with seven of those coming against Northwest 2B/1B League foes.

Which means the Wolf spikers still have plenty of time to pull together, find a killer finishing touch, and rack up a whole bunch of wins.

Or continue to frustrate themselves and their coaches by being unable to fully harness their talent while settling for middle of the road status.

Coming off a five-set loss to Orcas Island Thursday in the conference opener for both teams, Coupeville finds itself at 0-1 in league play, 1-3 overall.

Two of those losses have come in five sets, and in both of those matches the Wolves were poised to win but didn’t.

Thursday’s defeat, coming to the tune of 25-22, 18-25, 19-25, 25-14, 15-8, wasn’t quite as much of a knife to the heart as their earlier loss to South Whidbey.

In that match, the Wolves led two sets to none, with match point in set #3, only to see things slip away.

But the Orcas defeat stings in its own special way, as it’s the first time a CHS varsity volleyball team has lost to a NWL rival other than four-time defending state champ La Conner since rejoining the league in 2020.

With those Braves (1-0, 1-4) struggling at times during their own rebuilding year, the race for the league crown seems to be wide open.

Coupeville’s next match? It’s at La Conner Sept. 26, after an appearance at this weekend’s South Whidbey Invite.

Time to choose your path.

CHS coach Cory Whitmore stresses a point in an earlier match. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coming off an impressive three-set road sweep of Mount Vernon Christian in a match considered a non-league rumble, the Wolves hit their home floor, and promptly reverted to a work in progress.

Up 3-0 in the opening set after a couple nice serves from Katie Marti and a high-flying tip winner from Lyla Stuurmans, CHS then lost the lead and never got it back.

The last tie in the first frame came at 6-6, and while Orcas never really pulled away, the Vikings kept the Wolves at bay just long enough to net the set.

Stuurmans, who walloped a team-high 18 kills, smoked a couple of winners to keep things close, but the defining play was when two Wolves crashed through the bench in pursuit of a wayward ball.

The hustle was there, but the fact they had to go so far off course in an ultimately futile effort to prolong the play added to Coupeville’s frustration.

But then the Wolves started clicking, capturing the next two sets and playing more like the team which blew MVC off the floor.

Coupeville shot out to an 8-2 lead in the second set, with Mia Farris and Teagan Calkins racking up winners at the net, gave back the lead for a hot second, then flipped the offensive power show back on.

Grey Peabody and Stuurmans took turns torturing the Vikings, spraying winners and ripping off arms, while Madison McMillan brought the complete game, sparkling on serves and mid-range slicers which found openings in the Orcas defense.

With the match knotted at a set apiece, CHS stayed on the offensive, claiming the lead at 8-7 in the third and never giving the advantage back.

Katie Marti had a picture-perfect flip over her shoulder, the ball catching the Vikings flatfooted, while Stuurmans showed off the guns, mashing winners and flexing her biceps to crowd roars.

The biggest cheer came for fan favorite Jada Heaton, who clinched the third set by bounding skyward to crush a winner at set point after Orcas (barely) got a Stuurmans nuclear blast back into play.

Jada Heaton patrols the net. (Jackie Saia photo)

Things were looking peachy at that point, but unfortunately for home fans, it was deceptive.

As fast as the fun times arrived, they vanished for the Wolves, with Orcas riding its heavy hitter, senior Bethany Carter, who became a nearly flawless mash machine across the night’s final two sets.

The fourth set slipped away fast, a 9-3 deficit morphing into an 18-9 disadvantage for Coupeville.

One Orcas player airmailed a serve moments after accidentally hitting herself in the face while bouncing the ball at the service line, but that was small consolation for the Wolves.

All of which set up a fifth and deciding set, which looked like it would be a heavyweight brawl in the middle of the ring.

Until it suddenly wasn’t.

Three times in the final frame Coupeville players hit the floor and made one-handed saves to keep a point alive, with both Calkins and Marti doing it during the same rally.

But a 7-7 tie slipped away, with Orcas running off six straight points on its serve, and the Wolves never fully recovered.

In the aftermath of the loss, which leaves Coupeville winless at home this season, the quandary lingers.

The talent is there. The heart is there. But will these Wolves find their killer instinct?

Only time will tell.

 

Thursday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 2 digs
Teagan Calkins — 4 kills, 5 digs, 1 block assist
Mia Farris — 5 kills, 20 digs, 2 aces
Jada Heaton — 2 kills, 3 digs, 1 block assist
Issabel Johnson — 1 assist, 3 aces
Katie Marti — 2 kills, 6 digs, 37 assists, 1 solo block, 1 ace
Madison McMillan — 1 kill, 20 digs, 2 assists, 5 aces
Grey Peabody — 10 kills, 2 digs
Lyla Stuurmans — 18 kills, 10 digs, 3 aces

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Madison McMillan leads Wolf varsity spikers in aces. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Is our tally perfect? Probably not.

Pretty close to reality and likely to get me some sweet, sweet page hits? Absolutely.

With Coupeville High School’s varsity volleyball squad hitting the 20% mark, having played three of 15 regular season matches, it’s time for a quick look at stats.

Why?

Because, in the words of Stanley Ipkiss in The Mask … “It’s party time! P-A-R-T-why? Because I gotta!”

Of course, that Jim Carrey classic also gave us “Look at that! It’s exactly three seconds before I honk your nose and pull your underwear over your head.”

Which is awesome sauce, yet doesn’t really fit here…

Anyways, back to the land of spikes and sets.

Our stats come from CHS coaches, but were recorded by players, some of whom are still learning on the job.

So, if not every kill or dig made it into the record book, it is what it is.

Or, in the words of The Mask, “No Milo, not the cheese … The keys!”

What?? Exactly.

Grey Peabody (left) and Katie Marti defend the net. (Bailey Thule photo)

 

Varsity stats through Sept. 20:

 

Kills:

Grey Peabody – 26
Lyla Stuurmans – 24
Mia Farris – 20
Teagan Calkins – 16
Katie Marti – 4
Madison McMillan – 4
Jada Heaton – 2

 

Digs:

Stuurmans – 36
McMillan – 35
Farris – 32
Taylor Brotemarkle – 22
Marti – 14
Peabody – 5
Issabel Johnson – 3
Calkins – 2

 

Block – Solo:

Peabody – 2

 

Block – Assist:

Marti – 2
Peabody – 2
Heaton – 1
Stuurmans – 1

 

Assists:

Marti – 67
Stuurmans – 5
McMillan – 4
Brotemarkle – 3

 

Service Aces:

McMillan – 9
Farris – 8
Marti – 8
Calkins – 4
Stuurmans – 3
Johnson – 2

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Katie Marti enjoys her life on the court. (Delanie Lewis photo)

“The buy-in and belief with this team is exciting.

“I think there is laser-focus on being our best and that is always something to celebrate when starting a fun season.”

Coupeville High School volleyball coach Cory Whitmore is still fresh-faced and exuberant, yet, as he enters his eighth season at the helm of the program, he’s a grizzled vet as well.

With tennis guru Ken Stange retiring after a two-decade career, Whitmore and CHS softball head man Kevin McGranahan, who starts his ninth season next spring, have the longest runs of any active Wolf coaches.

After taking over for Breanne Smedley — who has gone on to her own super-successful stint at Columbia River — the king of spikes and sets has racked up seven-straight winning seasons.

Whitmore is 76-36 at Coupeville, with double-digit victories every season except 2020, when the pandemic limited the schedule to just nine matches.

Now, with the battle at the top of the Northwest 2B/1B League as open as it has been in years, after the retirement of La Conner Hall of Fame coach Suzanne Marble, CHS is aiming to make some noise.

Since returning to the NWL, the Wolves have only lost in conference action to one school — the four-time defending 2B state champs — and the path to state is (potentially) easier this season.

That’s because the District 1/2 tourney offers two tickets to state this fall, instead of just one as in recent years.

Whitmore, of course, wants his team to maintain that laser focus.

“As always we will need to respect every team we face,” he said. “But I also believe that if we are focused on our side of the net, playing to OUR best ability, we have a strong chance of doing well in the league and beyond.

“It is no secret that La Conner will miss some of their usual firepower from previous years, but Pam Keller is an excellent coach, and they still have players with experience – we will need to be ready.”

Coupeville, which opens with seven of its first nine matches at home, lost a strong group to graduation, but returns a pack of younger players who already have a fair amount of varsity experience.

The core of the team is its juniors, who have grown up playing three sports a year alongside each other.

“Very excited to be back with this group,” Whitmore said. “Grey Peabody had a very strong junior year and established herself as one of our top scorers.

“She will of course be back for her senior year, and she had a great summer, working on her range in the middle as well as further developing her leadership skills.”

Lyla Stuurmans and Madison McMillan are key players from a stellar junior class. (Jackie Saia photo)

That pack of juniors is both the present and the future for Whitmore, who is pleased with what he saw in the offseason.

“A number of other players had a great summer and will likely move from their limited role last year to potentially playing a full six rotations,” he said.

Mia Farris, Madison McMillan, and Lyla Stuurmans all bring previous varsity-level experience and a strong handle of all six skills – it will be exciting to work out where best to use their talents.

“Although Katie Marti has seen sporadic varsity playing time these past two years, she had a great summer and I’m confident that she is ready to step into the role of setter and run our offense.”

Senior Issabel Johnson and juniors Jada Heaton and Taylor Brotemarkle also saw some varsity floor time last season, while Coupeville’s next generation is already starting to gel.

“Our incoming group of freshmen appears small in numbers at the moment,” Whitmore said.

“But a few of them really bought into the level of commitment we are looking for, and I’m excited about how quickly they learned and blended in with the group.”

When practices begin next week, the Wolves will sit down with their coaches and outline team goals.

“As always, we set goals about our academics, volunteerism, mental strength training, and even goals centered around teammate connection,” Whitmore said.

“We will keep our focus on the process and the areas that will make us most successful down the road,” he added.

“Hitting efficiency is always a determining factor, because it involves so much more than hitting, and everyone on the court will have ownership – strong passing leads to strong setting and the attack from there hopefully generates points on the board.

“If we emphasize our preparedness and practice effectiveness, I think this team will be able to meet any goal we set and challenge we face.”

Blessed with a tight-knit group of players, the Wolves have also shown a willingness to incorporate newcomers.

“Most of them have known each other and played multiple sports together for years, but I’m also impressed with their eagerness to include others,” Whitmore said.

“To make it through a long season, with multiple challenges along the way, the bond becomes incredibly important.”

Mia Farris patrols the line. (Jackie Saia photo)

Whitmore hails the team’s service game, both in firing off outgoing missiles and receiving incoming balls, as a major potential weapon.

“I am pretty excited about our starting place on the serve,” he said. “When focusing on technique, this team has a good shot at having a full six rotations of really difficult serves for our opponents to handle.

“In keeping with our team identity, I think this group also has a strong back row defense,” he added. “We will have to make quick and early progress at this skill in order to meet some of our other goals.”

With that in mind, the Wolves emphasized back row play during summer practices and camps.

“I’m encouraged by our growth, but it will always be an area to work on,” Whitmore said.

“From there we will really work on making our attack high, fast and consistent,” he added.

“There is athletic ability in this group and if we maximize that while keeping things fluid, we could really be a challenge for opponents’ defenses.”

With Coupeville’s spikers aiming to return to the state tourney for the first time since 2017, the Wolves need to be able to attack on the fly.

“Another area I’m hoping to stress with this group is our ability to make adjustments and to make them quickly,” Whitmore said.

“Being able to play multiple positions or adjust to attack opponents’ weakness or counteract their strengths will be a huge benefit to our success, especially facing strong teams in the post-season.”

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Speedy Lyla Stuurmans slows down just long enough to snap a pic with the parental units. (Photo courtesy Sarah Stuurmans)

“The Franchise” is in awards-winning mode.

Coupeville High School sophomore Lyla Stuurmans was honored Thursday by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association, named as an Athlete of the Week winner.

Each week during the school year, the WIAA and Gesa Credit Union hail a male and female athlete from each classification (4A-1B) in the state.

Stuurmans, who competes for the 2B Wolves, was honored for her performance at last weekend’s District 1/2 Track and Field Championships in Coupeville.

Running wild on her home oval, the oldest of Scott and Sarah’s four children claimed three titles and will advance to the state meet in all of them.

Lyla won the 400 and 800, then ran the anchor leg on a triumphant 4 x 400 relay squad.

A three-sport star who also plays volleyball (school and club) and has been a varsity basketball starter since she was in 8th grade, Stuurmans has won 15 times this track season, spread across four events.

 

To see more info on Lyla and the other WIAA winners, pop over to:

https://www.wiaa.com/subcontent.aspx?SecID=347

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