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Posts Tagged ‘Maya Toomey-Stout’

   Cassidy Moody (left) and Ja’Tarya Hoskins, seen here last season, made their high school track debut Saturday.

It’s no longer brand new.

Coupeville High School’s shiny new, taxpayer-funded track oval made its official debut Saturday as the Wolves held an intra-squad meet.

Since it was the first time CHS has hosted a home track meet of any kind in many years, there were a lot of kinks to work out.

So, keep that in mind as you look at the results below.

Instead of being able to pluck the results off of Athletic.net, as we will in the future, we’re doing our best to pull together a bunch of pieces of paper, some hand-written and one or two that were possibly torn.

So, if you’re expecting to see your name here and it doesn’t show up, keep the screaming to a minimum.

A couple of notes, as well.

No names were listed for any of the relay teams, so we’re skipping them this time around.

And, while the order of placement in the girls 1600 was listed, the times next to each athlete are not correct.

Abby Parker is quick, but 3.12 for the mile isn’t exactly believable, whether that’s supposed to be seconds or minutes.

So, here we go, some results that are at least 58.6% correct:

Girls:

100 — Maya Toomey-Stout (1st) 13.99; Mallory Kortuem (2nd) 14.19; Ja’Tarya Hoskins (3rd) 14.62; Cassidy Moody (4th) 14.79; Natalie Hollrigel (5th) 15.31; Madison Rixe (6th) 15.79; Kayla Caudill (7th) 17.48

800 — Lucy Sandahl (1st) 3:15.30; Lauren Bayne (2nd) 3:31.18; Abby Parker (3rd) 3:37.40; Raven Vick (4th) 3:43.21

1600 — Sandahl (1st); Bayne (2nd); Parker (3rd); Vick (4th)

60 Hurdles — Lindsey Roberts (1st) 11.00; Kortuem (2nd) 13.64; Ema Smith (3rd) 14.23

Shot put — Skyler Lawrence (1st) 29-02; Alexxis Otto (2nd) 25-04.50; Charlotte Langille (3rd) 24-08; Emma Smith (4th) 24-06; Naika Hallam (5th) 20-04.50

Discus — Lawrence (1st) 78-06; Allison Wenzel (2nd) 77-06.50; Emma Smith (3rd) 73-09; Langille (4th) 56-06; Otto (5th) 54-10.5; Tomi Herrera (6th) 46-09.50

Long Jump — Roberts (1st) 15-00; Lauren Grove (2nd) 14-11; Toomey-Stout (3rd) 14-08; Aurora Zanardi (4th) 13-06; Jasmine Nastali (5th) 11-04

High Jump — Moody (1st) 4-6; Hoskins (2nd) 4-4

Boys:

100 — Jacob Smith (1st) 11.92, Jean Lund-Olsen (2nd) 12.32; Cameron Toomey-Stout (3rd) 12.80; Kyle Burnett (4th) 13.13; Greg Villareal (5th) 14.06

800 — Danny Conlisk (1st) 2:37.79; Chris Battaglia (2nd) 2:47.11; Jakobi Baumann (3rd) 2:52.73; Gabe Carlson (4th) 2:53.39; Jonathan Partida (5th) 2:57.53

1600 — Conlisk (1st) 6:54.43; Battaglia (2nd) 6:54.44; Baumann (3rd) 6:54.55; Carlson (4th) 6:55:30

60 Hurdles — Jesse Hester (1st) 11.32

Shot Put — Ryan Labrador (1st) 34-03.50; Hunter Downes (2nd) 30-06; Keahi Sorrows (3rd) 30-04; Grey Rische (4th) 22-08

Discus — Labrador (1st) 81-10; Sorrows (2nd) 80-05; Thane Peterson (3rd) 72-00; Trevor Bell (4th) 40-00

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Emma Mathusek (John Fisken photo)

   Emma Mathusek pushes the play up-court Monday night during Coupeville’s JV girls win. (John Fisken photo)

One team inadvertently helped another.

With the varsity boys holding Senior Night festivities at the same time the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad was tipping-off across the hallway Monday, the Wolves were momentarily missing starter Ashlie Shank.

But while she helped older brother Brian celebrate his final regular season home game, freshman Avalon Renninger stepped into the starting lineup and immediately lit up the joint.

Hitting three buckets in the game’s first four minutes, she sparked CHS to a lead it would never relinquish.

Then the Wolves, with Shank putting in quality work of her own after rejoining her teammates a minute or two into the game, strolled to a 31-24 win.

Coupeville’s fourth straight win and seventh in its last eight games, the non-conference victory lifts the young guns to 10-3 on the season.

It was a classic example of every quarter featuring a different hot player, with Renninger’s first quarter burst being topped in the second by swing player Sarah Wright, who dropped all eight of her points in her only JV action of the night.

Toss in strong play from Shank, Tia Wurzrainer, Maya Toomey-Stout and pretty much everyone in a Wolf uniform, and CHS coach Amy King enjoyed her hour-plus in the middle school gym.

“Everyone played great games and we know what we need to work on over the next few practices before we meet them on Thursday,” she said.

The two squads will have a rematch, this time in Sequim, when the hope will be Coupeville’s rivals will have learned how to count.

At one point Monday, the visitors had six players on the floor and took a well-deserved technical.

Coupeville turned an 8-5 lead after one to an 18-8 bulge at the half and a 27-11 gap after three, then gave a few points back in the fourth when it hit a brief shooting slump.

Part of that came from the Wolves rotating in their full roster and working on fine-tuning plays.

Throughout the game, CHS came with a strong team-wide defensive effort, with all 11 Wolves snaring at least one rebound.

Ema Smith paced the squad with eight boards, while Wright (6), Wurzrainer (5), Toomey-Stout (4), Renninger (4) and Nicole Lester (4) were hot on her heels.

The Wolves spread out their offense, with Wright and Renninger leading the charge with eight points apiece.

Shank (5), Toomey-Stout (4), Scout Smith (3), Maddy Hilkey (2) and Ema Smith (1) rounded out the scorers.

Emma Mathusek snared two rebounds and Brittany Powers made off with two steals as Coupeville got contributions from every player on the roster.

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Maddy Hilkey was one of nine Wolves to score Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

  Maddy Hilkey was one of nine Wolves to score Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

Put ’em on the court and they will take care of business.

Capturing victories hasn’t been the problem for the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad this season. It’s getting teams not to cancel on them.

Friday night was originally going to be the third time an opponent begged off playing, but at the last minute Chimacum decided it did have enough players to take the floor.

Cue the hungry Wolves, who seized advantage of any chance to play, and promptly rolled their hosts 41-22.

The win lifts Coupeville’s young guns to 6-2 overall, 2-0 in Olympic League play.

Or 8-2, 4-0 if you give the Wolves forfeit wins for the times Port Townsend and Chimacum bailed on them earlier this season…

Friday night, CHS rode a balanced offensive attack — nine girls scored, led by Ema Smith’s game-high 11 — and, other than a third-quarter slow-down, was markedly the superior team.

A 12-4 lead after one became a 22-7 bulge by halftime, then, after a two-point bump in the road in the third, Coupeville closed on a 17-9 surge in the fourth.

“Overall, we moved the ball pretty well on offense,” said Wolf coach Amy King. “Everyone got shots up and kept looking for openings.”

After falling into their third-quarter nap, the Wolves got a wake-up call from Nicole Lester, who all but ripped a Chimacum player’s head clean off her shoulders while retrieving a rebound.

“That seemed to be the spark the JV needed to take a breath and regain our game,” King said.

Ema Smith, who filled up the stat sheet with seven rebounds, two assists and two blocked shots, set up Emma Mathusek twice for quick buckets, while Avalon Renninger and Tia Wurzrainer were ball-hawks on defense.

Coupeville’s sophomore swing players — Ema Smith and Sarah Wright — were key to the team finding, and holding its groove.

Sarah didn’t score a lot but always adds an energy to the court that is necessary to keep us going,” King said. “Ema proves every night why she is a leader on and off the court.

“She talks, explains, encourages and shows through example,” she added. “She really stepped up and got the team working together in that last quarter.”

Mathusek and Maya Toomey-Stout each dropped in six points to back Ema Smith’s 11, while Scout Smith rattled home five.

Renninger (4), Wright (4), Ashlie Shank (2), Lester (2) and Maddy Hilkey (1) rounded out the attack, with Lester snatching five boards and Wurzrainer pilfering two steals.

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Maya Toomey-Stout scored 10 points, snagged nine boards and made off with seven steals in Tuesday night's win. (John Fisken photo)

   Maya Toomey-Stout scored 10 points, snagged nine boards and made off with seven steals in Tuesday night’s win. (John Fisken photo)

Amy King loves it when a plan comes together.

The Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball coach went with a freshman-dominant starting lineup Tuesday in Concrete, and the young guns came out on fire.

Putting the game away early and decisively, the Wolves romped to a 56-10 non-conference victory that could have been far, far more lopsided if they hadn’t repeatedly stamped the brakes in the second half.

The win lifts the JV to 4-2 heading into Christmas break.

Fab frosh Maya Toomey-Stout, Emma Mathusek, Scout Smith and Avalon Renninger opened the game, accompanied by savvy sophomore Ema Smith.

That unit was stifling on defense and gave the host Lions absolutely nothing to work with.

“It was awesome to see the team come together and play the way they did,” King said.

Coupeville crashed the boards relentlessly, Scout Smith expertly moved the ball around, setting up one person after another and Toomey-Stout, AKA The Gazelle, flew down the court ahead of every break.

Nothing changed when the Wolves went to the bench.

Nicole Lester and Sarah Wright dominated the paint when in the game, while Maddy Hilkey and a very sick Ashlie Shank delivered strong play from the outside.

Up 12-3 after one, CHS stretched its lead to 30-6 by halftime, though, even before the break, King was trying to contain the carnage.

She ramped things up in the second half, going away from fast breaks and three-point shots and asking her players to burn time while working on running plays.

Even doing that, the third quarter came out 15-0 in favor of the Wolves.

With all nine active players scoring and getting at least one rebound, King was more than pleased with her squad’s effort.

“The whole team played hard, listened when asked to pull back and even performed a brand new play drawn up at half time,” she said.

Scout Smith paced the Wolf attack with 11 points, seven rebounds and seven steals, while Lester and Toomey-Stout hit for 10 apiece.

Wright (8), Ema Smith (8), Shank (3), Hilkey (2), Mathusek (2) and Renninger (2) rounded out the scorers.

Coupeville thoroughly controlled the rebounding game, as Ema Smith snatched a team-high 10 and Toomey-Stout and Renninger each made off with nine.

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Emma Mathusek (John Fisken photos)

   “You want me to shoot at the basket all the way up there?!?” Emma Mathusek contemplates her options. (John Fisken photos)

Ethan Spark

Ethan Spark gets ready to break some ankles in his return to the hard-court.

Mikayla Elfrank

Mikayla Elfrank, showing off her laser focus.

Kailey and Lauren

Kailey Kellner limbers up running mate Lauren Rose.

Brian Shank

Brian Shank has eyes only for the basket.

Gabe Wynn

Gabe Wynn, lost in the moment.

Maya Toomey-Stout

   Maya Toomey-Stout is here to drain buckets and chew gum … and she’s all out of gum.

Downes

After a successful season at QB, Hunter Downes is still looking to pass.

Basketball is officially back.

The sounds of shoes squeaking and leather smacking against the hard-wood echoes across the prairie, interrupted every so often by the soft click-click of wandering cameraman John Fisken.

The photos above, which are courtesy him, come from the first days of practice, as the CHS hoops squads get back at it.

Coupeville’s girls team, coached by David and Amy King, is a two-time defending 1A Olympic League champ coming off its first trip to the state tourney in a decade.

The boys, under the guidance of Anthony Smith and Dustin Van Velkinburgh, won nine games in 2015-2016, their best showing since 2011.

The days to come will tell the tale of how Coupeville will replace departed legends such as Makana Stone and Wiley Hesselgrave, and who will pick up the mantle.

For now, bask in the first photos and the promise of a new season.

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