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Posts Tagged ‘Maddie Vondrak’

Wolf heavy hitters (l to r) Kylie Chernikoff, Maddie Vondrak, and Maddie Georges celebrate a big play on Senior Night. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’ve been part of a renaissance.

Coupeville High School volleyball has soared in the five years Cory Whitmore has been at the helm, and Friday the Wolf coach honored four players who each have made major contributions.

Chelsea Prescott, Jaimee Masters, Kylie Chernikoff, and Maddie Vondrak were celebrated on Senior Night, as seen in the photos above and below.

Jaimee Masters and her parents, Nate and Leann.

Chelsea Prescott brings out the fan club, including parents Josie and Cory.

Bob and Joanne Chernikoff, and their super senior, Kylie.

David and Terri Vondrak jetted into town to watch Maddie, the Mad Masher, unleash missiles.

The fab four, who have each had a big impact on a soaring Wolf spiker program.

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Maddie Vondrak, comin’ right at you. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Let the spikes hit the floor, and the photos hit the internet.

Wanderin’ pic clicker John Fisken haunted the Coupeville High School gym Saturday, capturing the images seen above and below.

To marinate in everything his cameras caught, while pondering the possibility of purchasing some mementos, pop over to:

VB 2021-04-17 vs MVC – John’s Photos

Gwen Gustafson visualizes the ace she’s about to rip off.

Former CHS star Hope Lodell is back, but now she’s tracking the exploits of a new generation of spikers.

Kylie Chernikoff shows off her laser focus.

Issabel Johnson cranks up the power to 11.

One name, two legends. Emma Mathusek (left) and Emma Smith scope out the Wolf players trying to follow in their (large) footsteps.

Chelsea Prescott gets artful.

75% of the Kiel family follows their favorite sport. L to r, it’s Katie, Lanie, and Steve, while only Kacie is MIA.

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Big-hitting sophomore Lucy Tenore is a key part of this year’s CHS volleyball team. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Cory Whitmore has come home, after a fashion.

As he enters his fifth season at the helm of the Coupeville High School volleyball program, the Wolf coach and his players have jumped from 1A to 2B, joining the Northwest 2B/1B League.

For Whitmore, it’s a bit like returning to his own days as a young’un at Ritzville, where he played football, basketball, and track at the 2B level.

“I look forward to the change in classification, particularly our new league,” he said. “This league regularly produces teams that go deep into playoff runs and even some state champions.

“We will need to bring it every night, and our standards and expectations are wherever we hold them to.”

Coupeville has found dramatic success under Whitmore, racking up a 48-18 record over the past four seasons.

The Wolves started with back-to-back 1A Olympic League titles, and a trip to state in 2017, then finished second behind powerhouse King’s the past two seasons in the 1A North Sound Conference.

That last season, which ended way back in the fall of 2019 before the pandemic put the world on pause, CHS went 14-5, tying the program record for wins in a single season.

Now, King’s is gone, but La Conner, the two-time defending 2B state champs, is the big baddie on the block.

Whitmore, ever enthusiastic, is ready for the challenge.

“Entering a new league without much prior experience with any teams in the league, we will enter each game as an opportunity to perform our absolute best and respect every team we face across the net.

“We know that La Conner always puts together very strong teams and has been recent state champions at the 2B classification,” he added. “They will of course put together a wildly strong team, and we will work to do the same.”

That squad, while down eight seniors from the last go-around, has several players with considerable experience.

Seniors (l to r) Kylie Chernikoff, Maddie Vondrak, and Chelsea Prescott will be team leaders.

Senior Chelsea Prescott, who has been a lethal weapon since day one, anchors the team, with a diverse group of players around her.

Chelsea will handle a large load of the offensive weight we will bring this year,” Whitmore said. “She has built a lot of experience at the varsity level over these last few years and has worked hard to be where she is at today.

“She was on the edge of her breakthrough before going down with her ankle injury – she has bounced back tremendously and we are excited to see what she can do.”

Joining Prescott will be big hitters like seniors Maddie Vondrak and Kylie Chernikoff, as well as sophomore sensation Lucy Tenore.

“We will rely on (Maddy and Lucy’s) experience as we race through an abbreviated season that will be one full of adaptations,” Whitmore said.

Kylie saw the varsity court a couple times last season and anchored the offensive attack her junior year on JV,” he added. “She has made the leap to varsity without missing a beat and adds a spark of energy we will need.”

Other players expected to have big impacts at the varsity level include sophomores Maddie Georges, Alita Blouin, and Jill Prince, junior Abby Mulholland, and seniors Jaimee Masters and Heidi Meyers.

Georges replaces the graduated Scout Smith at setter, an especially crucial spot.

Maddie has used the “off-season” — if we can call it that — very productively and is going to jump in to manage the offense at the setting position,” Whitmore said. “She’s ready for the next step.”

Sophomore Maddie Georges will run the offense from the setter position.

Alita, Jaimee, and Heidi have also grown since our last season – they have grown as passers and defenders in the back row, and all three get after the ball in practice, daily raising our competitiveness in the gym.”

While there has been a lot of turnover on the roster, the girls moving up are used to success, with the JV going a crisp 11-3 last season.

“Losing eight strong seniors from our 2019-2020 group has left plenty of question marks that needed to be addressed,” Whitmore said. “But having last season’s strong JV performance has definitely been important to reloading and keeping our expectations and standards as high as possible.

“This newer group had some terrific examples to learn from, and they have taken those lessons and in many ways have applied them already.”

While the Wolves had a chunk of pandemic time where they weren’t allowed to work together as a unit, individual players remained focused on what was ahead.

“The team will definitely look very different, having only four returning players with varsity experience,” Whitmore said. “But so many in this new group have worked hard, stayed engaged throughout the challenges and have earned this chance to compete and get out there to play.

“Growing pains are to be expected, but we also expect this group to grow right through them.”

The pandemic-shortened fall sports season, being played after spring sports this time around, will present unique challenges, with matches compressed into a one-month sprint.

“I know the time will fly by fast in this abbreviated season, but we definitely have some very clear goals that we will be progressing toward,” Whitmore said.

The Wolves want to work on team dynamics and chemistry, from day one to the end of the lightning-fast season, and beyond.

“With so many new faces and some new roles, it will be a shift for many to work with those they haven’t had the opportunity to just yet,” Whitmore said. “Our older members are very welcoming, but will have to also be mindful of the time that it can take for younger members to adapt to new speeds and systems; empathy and patience will go a long way.”

The Wolf coach will also continue to teach his charges, with the belief they can adapt on the fly.

“Another goal for this season will be for our group to take risks in learning newer concepts,” Whitmore said. “Based on new personnel, they will have to be adaptable and ready to make in-game changes and work through the natural level of comfort that comes with that.

“A lot of our success will come from this willingness to learn at an accelerated pace and take risks in order to progress as individual players and as a team and program.”

As always, the CHS spikers are aiming for first-place, no matter what rivals may be lurking in their path.

“We also always shoot to be finishing at the top of the league by the end of the season,” Whitmore said. “This is more so assessed on the basis of whether or not we are “peaking” at the right time as a unit.

“That can be hard to measure, but our mindset is growth, and “success” will naturally follow that growth,” he added. “This group has already demonstrated an impressive willingness to learn. I can’t overstate how important that is, not only for this year but every year.”

To build a program similar to what La Conner, with its five state titles, has achieved, takes talented players, but also a deep commitment from all involved. That’s something Whitmore preaches.

“Each player that we have worked with during our “off-season” months really worked hard on staying diligent to setting and being mindful about goals,” he said. “They regularly ask questions, request feedback and have even been resourceful in attempting to learn the game.”

Abby Mulholland is one of many JV players making the jump to varsity.

Over the course of a 12-match season, the Wolves will strive for wins, but also continued growth, as players and as a program.

“This season will be a great time to push ourselves in our versatility on both offense and defense,” Whitmore said. “We will have to be good at adapting, but this season will afford that as an actual goal of ours.

“We will try out some different defensive schemes and work to see where our offensive attack can be improved by mixing up our areas of threat.”

One key component of the game Whitmore wants his squad to focus on is service return.

“Serve receive is one of the hardest skills to perform in volleyball, but will always remain as one of the most important to determining the results of a set/match,” he said. “Serve receive takes a diligent attention to detail, but also just a ton of reps in order to gain experience that applies to the court on game days.”

As the season plays out, Whitmore and his staff, which includes Cris Matochi and former Wolf player Ashley Menges, will work on building leaders, for the short term and long term.

“It’s crucial to foster a strong leadership dynamic on the team,” Whitmore said. “With a large number of younger players filling large roles, it will be critical to their development this year and in potential future seasons/teams that they start to shift their attention to the intangibles, such as leadership qualities and skills.

“It’s a huge component and sometimes overlooked aspect of successful programs and so we hope to work on training leadership through active discussion and facilitation.”

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Trinity McGee (center, in headband) and associates lead off a collection of pics showing Wolf fans in their natural habitat – the gym. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The fans have claimed the spotlight.

In between snapping pics of basketball action this winter, wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken has also snagged an assortment of photos depicting the wide world of Wolf supporters.

They put the fan in fantastic.

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Lucy Sandahl ripped five aces Monday, sparking Coupeville to a big win. (Brian Vick photos)

They closed like killers.

The Coupeville High School varsity volleyball team wasn’t flawless Monday night in Sultan, but it was ruthless when it mattered most.

Wrapping up all three frames with a bang, the Wolves swept the Turks in straight sets, a cut above the team’s first meeting, when it took Coupeville four sets to escape with the W.

Winning 25-23, 25-17, 25-18, CHS put a bow on its regular season, finishing 8-2 in North Sound Conference play, 13-2 overall.

The Wolves claimed 2nd place in their six-team league for the second-straight season, with their only losses to King’s, which is ranked #2 in 1A headed into the playoffs.

The postseason begins with the district tournament, which runs Nov. 2 and 5.

As the #2 seed from the North Sound Conference, Coupeville opens against the #3 team from the Northwest Conference, which should be Nooksack Valley or Meridian.

To see the bracket, pop over to:

http://www.nscathletics.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=3120&sport=10

With 13 wins heading into the playoffs, this year’s team has tied the 2017 Wolves for the second-most victories in a single season in program history.

The all-time record of 14 wins was set by the 2004 CHS squad.

Hannah Davidson (left) and Emma Mathusek are 13-2 heading into the playoffs.

Now 48-18 under Cory Whitmore over the past four seasons, the senior-dominated Wolves came out with a roar Monday, jumping out to a quick 9-2 lead in the opening set.

With Zoe Trujillo dancing and firing darts at the service line, setting up big kills for herself, Maya Toomey-Stout, and Maddie Vondrak, Coupeville was rolling.

And then the wheels on the car started to wobble, while thankfully not completely falling off.

Playing with emotion on their Senior Night, the Turks came roaring all the way back to snatch the lead away at 18-17, then twice stretched the margin out to two points.

While that might not sound like a lot, it felt like it in the moment, as Coupeville, despite big plays from numerous players, couldn’t seem to get back in gear.

Facing a 22-20 deficit, and the very real possibility of dropping the opening set, the Wolves finally found the key.

It was in the hand of senior Lucy Sandahl, who bounded off the bench, twirled the volleyball across her palm, then lit the Turks up.

A genuinely nasty service ace, which left a noticeable burn mark on the hand of the Sultan player unlucky enough to try and return it (or so I’d like to think), kicked things off.

Not letting up, Sandahl kept pouring heat out of her cannon of a serving arm, and the Turks melted under the onslaught.

One bad hit pulled Sultan back within 24-23 for a hot second, but then Toomey-Stout came strolling along, shaking her head in a silent “not gonna happen” moment.

Rising up from the ground like a phoenix reborn, “The Gazelle” tore the cover off the ball on set point, her kill ripping cross court and burying itself in the gym wall, never to be pulled back out again.

After that, the momentum had definitely shifted towards the young women in the black uniforms, which greatly pleased the large contingent of Wolf fans who made the trek to the hinterlands of Sultan.

“Take that one!” whispered Craig Trujillo, and, down on the floor, his daughter Zoe responded, elevating and lashing a frozen rope of a winner.

Zoe Trujillo brought her A-game, delivering five kills, two aces, and seven digs.

“Blow the gym up, baby!!” screamed Lisa Toomey (OK, maybe I’m paraphrasing on this one, but I think I’m close…) and, down on the floor, Maya Toomey-Stout dropped a few nuclear bombs disguised as kills.

With Scout Smith bobbing and weaving, firing up graceful sets for her big hitters to wallop, then running and diving, scraping balls off the floor, freeze-framing the Turks, before twisting in mid-air to flick winners off her fingertips, mom Charlotte Young nodded ever so slightly.

“Girl’s OK … I guess.”

And then she smiled the big smile of a mom whose heart soars each time her offspring dazzles and delights.

Which is often.

While the second set went back and forth, with seven ties, Coupeville never trailed, thanks to big plays from freshman Lucy Tenore, stuffing a would-be kill, and senior Hannah Davidson, ruthlessly dominating at the net.

With Sultan still hanging around at 19-17, Toomey-Stout dropped the hammer, reeling off six straight points on serve – the final coming on a dramatic ace which snagged the top of the net, then flopped over, falling to the ground and piercing the heart of everyone in Turk Nation.

After the comeback in set #1, and the often-tense action of set #2, the final set was almost anticlimactic, but in a good way for the Wolves and their fans.

Up early, up big, and never really pushed, Coupeville relied on big serving from Trujillo, Sandahl, and Raven Vick, plus tons more bashin’ of the ball from Toomey-Stout, Davidson, and Vondrak to close out the evening.

Sultan fought hard to stay alive, holding off four-straight match points at the end, but its fate was already written.

Putting an appropriate cap on things, Trujillo whipped a cross-court kill, a slicer ‘n dicer of a shot, to end things and send the Wolf faithful to the exits with smiles on their faces.

Toomey-Stout (16 kills), Smith (27 assists), Sandahl (five aces), and Trujillo (seven digs) topped the stat line, with Smith and Tenore each collecting a block.

“Playoffs, here we come!!”

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