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Posts Tagged ‘Madison McMillan’

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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Lyla Stuurmans, destroyer of universes. (Jackie Saia photos)

Off the schneid, with a vengeance.

After opening the season with a pair of ultra-competitive losses against strong foes, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad thrashed previously unbeaten Mount Vernon Christian Tuesday night.

Drilling the host Hurricanes 25-22, 25-15, 25-17 in a non-conference match against a league rival, the Wolves get to 1-2 and make a serious statement.

MVC entered the night at 2-0, having won all six sets it had played against Friday Harbor and Lake Quinault.

Enter Coupeville, coming off a heartbreaking five-set defeat to next-door neighbor South Whidbey and a tense tussle with juggernaut Neah Bay.

On the road for the first time this season, and with a few more practices under their belts, the Wolves hit the floor in a groove, and never let up, shushing the pro-Hurricane crowd in a hurry.

“Really fun game to be a part of and guide this team through,” said CHS coach Cory Whitmore.

“MVC is much improved from some previous seasons and so we really had to earn our points, and it was done in a very connected and energetic way.”

Coupeville heavy hitters (l to r) Madison McMillan, Issabel Johnson, and Jada Heaton launch a celebration.

Coupeville got contributions from across the board, with junior setter Katie Marti unleashing perhaps the best match of her varsity career.

Katie was especially phenomenal tonight,” Whitmore said. “She made really strong decisions; whether she was in-system or pulled off the net a bit, she found and led hitters to success.

“She served tough and consistent, and collected a large number of digs.”

Whitmore cautions that the stat sheet — seen below — is a bit of a work in progress, with several young players learning the complex, often frantic job of keeping stats while under fire.

Even if the numbers aren’t flawless, however, they showcase multiple Wolves shining brightly.

Whether it was Lyla Stuurmans with a double-double (14 kills and 10 digs), or birthday girl Madison McMillan ably filling whatever role she is handed, things were clicking.

Lyla looked really at-ease out there, in addition to some really smart attacking decisions,” Whitmore said.

Madison did a great job as our libero, and commanded the space around her – she played with energy but also looked very settled in.”

Teagan Calkins channels The Karate Kid.

Praise flowed from the Wolf spiker guru to every girl in uniform, with sophomore supernova Teagan Calkins continuing to earn playing time with her hustle and skill.

Teagan also received a lot of attacking attempts and took care of the ball,” Whitmore said. “I was impressed that she seemed to get better as the night went on.

“Honestly, I could give them all shoutouts because every player on the team really gave a lot to this win.”

After two tough losses, Tuesday’s victory was a two-for-one deal, counting both in the win/loss column and in helping the psyche of the Wolf players.

“It wasn’t just the win, it was the fashion in which they took control of the space and management of the game,” Whitmore said.

“Very excited for them and what this could mean for moving forward.”

 

Match added:

Earlier in the day, Coupeville got a bonus, as CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith locked in another non-conference match to help fill out the schedule.

The Wolves will host Providence Classical Christian Oct. 16, with both varsity and JV playing that night.

Tipoff is 5:00 PM for the young guns, with the headliners set to take the floor at 6:30.

 

Tuesday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 3 digs, 2 assists
Teagan Calkins — 6 kills, 3 aces
Mia Farris — 6 kills, 10 digs, 2 aces
Jada Heaton — 1 kill
Katie Marti — 2 kills, 3 digs, 21 assists, 4 aces
Madison McMillan — 1 kill, 10 digs, 4 assists, 3 aces
Grey Peabody — 5 kills
Lyla Stuurmans — 14 kills, 10 digs, 1 assist, 2 aces

Coming to torch a gym near you.

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Teagan Calkins played strongly in her varsity volleyball debut. (Jackie Saia photo)

Point by point, it slipped away.

Up two sets to none Wednesday, one point away from a straight-sets sweep, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad couldn’t drive the last nail into South Whidbey’s coffin.

Instead, the visiting Falcons held off two match points and rallied to capture an improbable 24-26, 23-25, 26-24, 25-17, 15-10 non-conference win in the season opener for both teams.

A battle royale which lasted two-and-a-half hours in a stuffy gym, played out in front of a Wolf student section which struggled to get loud ‘n proud until late in the evening, it left players, coaches, and fans slightly stunned.

The Falcons fly home with the win, to the delight of a few fans who chose to camp out in the Coupeville side of the gym, while the Wolves head back to practice needing to work on developing a killer mentality.

CHS was the better team much of the night and got strong work from sophomore Teagan Calkins and junior Madison McMillan, but made too many unforced errors to earn the win.

In particular, the Wolves, who have a roster full of exciting servers, struggled at the stripe, launching way too many balls into the bottom of the net.

Coupeville is off for a week, returning to action September 13, when it hosts Neah Bay, which will give coach Cory Whitmore and his staff time to refine things.

The new-look Wolves, who lost five players to graduation, are a work in progress, and that was never more evident than in the opening set.

Powered by strong serving from seniors Issabel Johnson and Grey Peabody, and one particularly nasty spike off the fingertips of high-bounding Lyla Stuurmans, Coupeville built an 11-6 lead.

Then everything which could go wrong did, quickly, allowing South Whidbey to tear off a 15-2 run and reclaim the lead at 21-13.

The Wolves looked disorientated, and lost, until they didn’t.

Flipping the switch back to positive, Coupeville got a burst of energy from Mia Farris, who tore off a Falcon arm with a wicked ace.

With McMillan catching fire as she was everywhere and nowhere all at once, dancing from side to side while spraying winners, the Wolves closed the set on a 13-3 surge to come all the way back.

Farris rose up to the ceiling and cracked straight fire right down the middle of the floor to seal the 26-24 set win, and the Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde evening was well underway.

The second set featured four ties, with neither team able to pull away.

In a preview of things to come, South Whidbey held off two set points before Farris ended things with a ferocious spike which caught the top of the net, skidded along it as the Falcons watched it go by, then flopped on the other side for a winner.

The Wolves built a 5-0 lead in the third set behind the serving of Katie Marti, only to see the plucky Falcons hang around, eventually forcing eight different ties, the last at 22-22.

Peabody slammed a winner to stake CHS to a 24-22 lead, putting the home team on the brink of ending things in time for everyone to enjoy dinner at a reasonable time.

But it wasn’t to be, as the Falcons scored the final four points of the set, pulling victory from the jaws of defeat and prolonging things.

That delay turned into another hour, however, with the action resembling a slow-motion wreck at times for the Wolves.

Calkins, making her varsity volleyball debut after a stellar summer of smacking big base knocks for her select softball squad, rustled up a series of big-time hits, raining down pain on the Falcons.

But even with their sophomore sniper hard at work, the Wolves never led in the fourth set, and only once, at 5-4, in the fifth.

That lead vanished as quickly as it arrived, with Coupeville falling behind 10-5, and never getting closer than two points the rest of the way.

 

Wednesday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 7 digs
Teagan Calkins — 8 kills, 2 digs
Mia Farris — 8 kills, 4 digs, 5 aces
Issabel Johnson — 2 digs, 1 ace
Katie Marti — 1 kill, 7 digs, 25 assists, 1 ace, 1 block assist
Madison McMillan — 2 kills, 15 digs, 5 aces
Grey Peabody — 8 kills, 3 digs, 1 block assist, 1 solo block
Lyla Stuurmans — 5 kills, 10 digs, 1 ace

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Teagan Calkins, the most-stylish catcher in whatever country she may be in. (Shawn Calkins photo)

“They definitely represented their country with pride and respect!”

Diamond guru Matt Suto left the Great White North justifiably proud of what his squad accomplished.

Playing eight games in four days at the Canada Cup in Surrey, the Whidbey Island Thunder 18U softball squad not only survived the biggest tourney of the summer but thrived.

By the time things came to a wrap Monday, Suto’s sluggers finished 5-3 against tough competition, won their final four games, and swept to a runaway victory in the consolation bracket championship game.

Along the way, the Thunder players joined more than 1,600 other athletes from multiple countries, in a vast field which included a U19 Ukranian squad and seven Olympic-level teams.

Whidbey’s part of the competition included four American teams and 12 Canadian diamond squads.

The Thunder opened the tourney by going 2-3 in pool play.

A 4-3 win over the Surrey Storm in game two and a 13-9 triumph over Central Sannich Extreme in the finale were the highlights, with Whidbey hanging tough in its three defeats.

Reese Wasinger, who joined the Thunder for their Canadian trip, got the win in the pitcher’s circle against Surrey, while Lilly Norman ran wild on the basepaths.

The Oak Harbor speed demon stole second, third, and home — all on the same pitch — to give the Thunder the lead, and Whidbey’s defense was on point from there.

Back-to-back losses after that stung a bit, but there were bright spots among an uncharacteristic rash of errors.

Sedro-Woolley standout Grace Swenson put together a 19-pitch at-bat against the Abbotsford Outlaws, ending things with a resounding triple off of a frazzled rival hurler.

Whidbey wouldn’t lose again in the tourney after that, coming back from a 6-1 deficit to win the final game in pool play.

The Thunder roared fully to life in bracket play, with back-to-back shutout wins to advance to the title game.

The Thunder brings the lightning in Canada. (Kimberly Brotemarkle photo)

Swenson carved up the Richmond Islanders, tossing a no-hitter under the lights in an 8-0 win, before Whidbey garnered big-time payback in its next game.

Squaring off with Abbotsford, which won 10-1 in their pool play matchup, the Thunder mercy-ruled the Outlaws 9-0 the second time around.

Layla Suto led the way, smacking three hits and collecting three RBI, while Wasinger was dealing from the pitcher’s circle.

Toss in a much-better defense, and things were all Whidbey, all the time.

“Revenge at its finest,” Matt Suto said. “The Outlaw coach said, ‘this can’t be the same team we played Saturday.’

“I said it sure is bud, we just don’t normally make 11 errors in the first inning of a game.

“He said yeah, no kidding … but you guys are also absolutely pounding the ball all over the place.”

The hot hitting continued right through the title game, with the Thunder putting up their most runs of the tourney in a 14-7 shellacking of the Cloverdale Fury.

“The bats never stopped,” Matt Suto said. “We came out swinging and never let up. The girls jumped all over the pitcher and never took their foot off the gas.”

While Whidbey’s coaches were thrilled to end things on a run of four straight victories, the trip was about more than just wins and losses.

“What an amazing experience these girls had up here in Canada,” Matt Suto said. “This is something I know they will never forget.

“They made friends with teams from Canada, Ukraine, Australia, Greece, and Israel, watched Japan and Canada’s Olympic teams play each other, and got autographs.”

That was echoed by Thunder assistant coach Kevin McGranahan.

“The girls had a blast making friends and trading team pins,” said the CHS head man.

“What an experience for these girls from Northwest Washington and little old Whidbey Island.

“They will remember this and tell these stories to their kids and grandkids. This is why I love this game!!”

Thunder young gun Haylee Armstrong enjoys the local flavors, while her bodyguard keeps an eye peeled for Britney Spears. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

Now, the Thunder have some time off before wrapping the summer with a tourney July 22-23 in Lynnwood.

After that, some of the players head back to Coupeville, others to Oak Harbor, while Swenson and Jaymie Kallio return to Sedro.

While they may not all play together next spring, vying for different high schools, the lessons learned will carry over.

“I couldn’t be prouder as a coach,” Matt Suto said.

“To hear the small chatter from other coaches and parents saying that Whidbey Thunder team pounds the ball and their defense is spectacular as well, eh!!

“They have amazing pitching, and their attitudes and personalities were outstanding as well. Eh!!

“They were the talk of Surrey, one coach told me. We put Whidbey Thunder on the map, and it was such an amazing time!”

 

Tourney stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — Three singles, one double, one walk
Teagan Calkins — Seven singles, three walks
Jaymie Kallio — Two singles, one double, three walks
Madison McMillan — Three singles, one double, three walks
Lilly Norman — Four singles, one walk
Ramona Ryder — Six singles, two walks
Mekayla Smith-Day — One walk
Teagan Stanford — Three singles
Layla Suto — Eight singles, three doubles, one triple, one walk
Grace Swenson — Five singles, two doubles, one triple
Loto Tupu — Five singles, two doubles, one home run

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Madison McMillan (right) crunched a home run Sunday, impressing teammate Jada Heaton. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Heaton)

Everything was clicking.

The glove work was nearly impeccable. The pitching was overpowering.

And the bats? They were booming.

Putting together a rock-solid run Sunday, the Whidbey Island Thunder 18U softball squad rolled to its first tourney title of the season.

Cruising to 10-5 and 13-0 victories, the sluggers, who feature seven Coupeville players, were Silver Bracket champs at the School’s Out Invite in Mount Vernon.

“I couldn’t be more proud of the girls and this win,” said head coach Matt Suto. “It was a total team effort all weekend, and every player contributed.

“The girls absolutely tore the cover off the ball and played stellar defense behind great pitching from Grace Swenson.”

The flame-throwing hurler, one of two Sedro-Woolley players on the roster, was in control all day.

After blitzing through the Sparks in Sunday’s opening game, Swenson was 99.2% perfect in the championship tilt against the Venom Elite.

She faced just 10 hitters across three innings of work, with the Thunder ending the finale early thanks to the mercy rule.

Nine of those Venom batters went down meekly, with three striking out, and the lone player to reach base did so painfully after getting plunked by the imposing Swenson.

Coupeville’s Taylor Brotemarkle (left) and Sedro-Woolley ace Grace Swenson played strongly all weekend. (Kimberly Brotemarkle photo)

Whidbey broke the championship game open early, slapping five runs on the board in the bottom of the first.

Cranking out the hits, the Thunder got base knocks from Taylor Brotemarkle, Layla Suto, Madison McMillan, Swenson, Loto Tupu, and Jaymie Kallio, and didn’t stop there.

Three more runs in the second — fueled by three hits after they were working with two outs — stretched the lead to 8-0, then Whidbey coasted in for the win.

Layla Suto put a final punctuation mark on things with a resounding double back up the middle, coasting into second base as the Venom coach trudged across the field to surrender to his Thunder counterparts.

The semifinal game was a little closer than the championship game, but not by much.

Whidbey jumped out to a 7-0 lead, ringing up three runs in the top of the first and another four in the second frame to build a lead it wouldn’t relinquish.

The opening assault came thanks to a barrage of extra-base hits, with Brotemarkle and McMillan crunching doubles, while Layla Suto smoked a three-bagger to deep right field.

The coach’s daughter, coming off of an impressive freshman season at Oak Harbor High School, came back around to crack a double an inning later.

Before the Sparks could recover their mojo, the very next hitter, Coupeville’s longball-lovin’ Madison McMillan, went deep.

Belting a home run to dead center, the junior-to-be permanently snuffed out any lingering hopes of a comeback by her rivals.

Overall, the hard-hitting duo accounted for 11 RBIs across Sunday’s two games, with McMillan sending six runners careening for home, while Suto knocked in five of her teammates.

Swenson and Brotemarkle were hot on their heels, each picking up three RBI on the day.

From there, the Thunder defense, anchored by Coupeville catcher Teagan Calkins, went into lock-down mode.

“Just killer defense from the entire team,” Matt Suto said. “This is the momentum we need to roll into Tri-Cities next weekend for the NSA state tournament.”

The champs. (Kimberly Brotemarkle photo)

The Thunder have a 14-woman roster most days, but picked up Oak Harbor’s Addison Morales for the weekend, and she pitched for the team in pool play.

Swenson and Kallio hail from Sedro, while Ramona Ryder, Lilly Norman, McKayla Smith-Day, Layla Suto, and Loto Tupu call Oak Harbor home.

Coupeville players fill out half the roster, with Calkins, McMillan, and Brotemarkle joined by Allie Lucero, Haylee Armstrong, Jada Heaton, and Maya Lucero.

 

Championship bracket stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — Four singles, one double
Teagan Calkins — One single
Jaymie Kallio — Three singles
Allie Lucero — One single
Maya Lucero — Two singles, one double, one walk
Madison McMillan — Two singles, one double, one home run
Lilly Norman — One single
Ramona Ryder — Two singles
McKayla Smith-Day — One single
Layla Suto — Two singles, two doubles, one triple
Grace Swenson — Three singles, two walks
Loto Tupu — One single, one walk

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