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Posts Tagged ‘McKenzie Bailey’

Bob Engle

Bob Engle

God bless the farmers.

They built this town and it is their legacy that makes Coupeville what it is today.

It’s a Sunday afternoon and time for the 19th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, but I want to take a detour.

It is only a small tribute to a mountain of a man, but today, as his family, friends and community mourn his passing, I am inducting Bob Engle.

He and his wife, Cheryl, were among the first to support my efforts with this blog.

Their check was appreciated, but, even more so, the note of encouragement that came with it will always mean a lot to me.

It hangs on the wall above my computer where I write my ramblings.

I like to think it, along with the other letters, notes and words it sits among, guide me as I go forward, trying to honor Coupeville’s past while celebrating the new memories, sports and otherwise, which are being crafted here each day.

Mr. Engle was a throw-back to a time when you worked hard and you worked every day, but you always had time for your family.

He was related to 99.2% of the town (or at least it feels that way) and a quick glimpse at Facebook shows his impact — both on his relatives and those who he made feel like they were part of his family.

His wife is one of the most genuinely sweet people I have ever met, and that carried down through their children and grandchildren.

There wouldn’t be a Coupeville Sports, or a need for one, without the trio of McKayla, McKenzie and Mollie Bailey — my photo bomb queens #1, #2 and #3 — and I know every time we ran a photo of them, every time they fired a fastball or put away a kill, their grandpa smiled.

Bob Engle’s life touched every part of Cow Town. He made us a better town for his presence, for his dedication, his hard work and love for the land and his neighbors.

It is an honor to add him to my silly little Hall, but he never needed that.

He was already in all of our hearts, and that will remain true forever.

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McKenzie Bailey (John Fisken photos)

  McKenzie Bailey, sort of comfortable in front of the camera. (John Fisken photos)

Autios

Sydney Autio spends some quality time with her parents.

Baileys

   Lil’ sis Mollie Bailey (second from right) arrives to inform the family the spotlight (and McKenzie’s room) will soon be all hers.

Coaches

   The Wolf coaching staff basks in the glow of a season that has produced 12 wins (five varsity, seven JV) so far.

Sydney

The camera lures them back in again.

Autios

Reppin’ their daughter.

seniors

“Another photo?!? Well, I don’t know … OK, if you insist!!!”

team

   Wolf volleyball guru Breanne Smedley (white sweater) talks strategy, while Bailey can hear the click of a camera from 3,000 yards away.

They were little in numbers, but big in personality.

The Coupeville High School volleyball squad only has two seniors this season, but both McKenzie Bailey and Sydney Autio have a life-long love of the camera and the spotlight.

So, it was easy for travelin’ photo man John Fisken to get some pics Thursday as the duo were honored before their eventual win against Port Townsend.

Both Bailey and Autio have another home game ahead of them — a playoff contest next week — but on this night, as usual, the focus was on them and their megawatt smiles.

Job well done, ladies.

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Mattea Miller (Jon Fisken photos)

CHS track star Mattea Miller is tutu fast for you to catch. (John Fisken photos)

suit

“Business up top, speed demon down below, baby.”

Wonder Woman

   “Well yes, I would like to know why Wonder Woman has had to wait so long for her own movie…”

T2 intensity

   The last time I saw this look, I was in a theater watching “Terminator 2,” and the T-1000 was chasing Arnold down a freeway.

McKenzie Bailey

She works hard for the money. McKenzie Bailey, the brains behind everything.

knight

   Now, it’s possible the guy on the right lost his trusty steed and is actually chasing his horse. Never know.

heart

“Take my photo and I chop your head off, paparazzi!!”

"Take me out for a walk, they said. Didn't say nothing 'bout no costumes..."

   “Take me out for a walk, they said. Didn’t say nothing ’bout wearing no costumes. If the other dogs hear about this…”

old man

“Keep up, old man! I’m gonna lap you!!”

Wonder Woman was in town Saturday.

In fact, at least two versions of her, and a whole ton of other costume-clad folks, were on display as the Coupeville Boys and Girls Club held a costume 5K.

We could try and track down who won, and what their times were, or we could just skip all that and move on to the photos.

Photos, it is.

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Wolf freshmen (l to r) Maddy Hilkey, Emma Smith and Ashley Menges bask in a win. (Jennifer Menges photos)

   Wolf freshmen (l to r) Maddy Hilkey, Emma Smith and Ashley Menges bask in a win. (Jennifer Menges photo)

Payton

   Valen Trujillo gets carried away by Payton Aparicio (left) and Hope Lodell. (Photo courtesy Trujillo)

No mercy. No hesitation.

Putting together its most complete match of the season, including fully applying the choke hold when the time was right, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad cruised to a win Thursday night.

The 25-12, 25-20, 25-9 dismantling of visiting Port Townsend was a textbook example of one team firmly stomping on another.

It lifted the Wolves to 2-6, gave them a huge jolt of confidence heading into conference play and was a complete reversal from their last home match, when they squandered a two-set lead.

This match, like that one against Chimacum, were “non-conference” matches against 1A Olympic League rivals, added at the last second to bulk up the schedule.

Neither the brutal five-set loss to the Cowboys or the three-set romp over the RedHawks will count in the battle for playoff berths.

Only the next six matches — two each against Klahowya, Chimacum and Port Townsend in a run that kicks off Oct. 13 — truly matter as the Wolves vie for a league crown and/or a trip to the postseason.

But, since four of those six matches are against teams they manhandled (they were crushing Chimacum before a late letdown), spirits have to be high.

Jumping right into things Thursday, as Port Townsend no longer fields a JV squad, the Wolves thundered out to a quick lead.

Katrina McGranahan provided the first of many emphatic winners, jolting the RedHawks with a laser-tipped spike that exploded and scorched shoelaces as it skidded off.

Building off the moment, Hope Lodell, AKA “The Surgeon,” immediately went to work carving up Port Townsend from the service stripe.

She dropped in an ace, then ripped off a serve that nicked a hunk of flesh out of a rival player’s arm as it ricocheted away.

Already jumpy, the RedHawks were back-pedaling, but not fast enough.

A brief rally went Coupeville’s way, as freshman Emma Smith climbed the stairway to heaven for a second-chance spike that went screaming down, deflating whatever brief spark of resistance was still lodged in the Redhawks hearts.

From there, the first set played out almost completely in favor of the Wolves, whether it was Payton Aparicio windmilling a spike for a winner or Lauren “Keebler Elf” Rose closing things out with five straight serves, none of which were returned back over the net.

The second set was more of the same, with Sydney Autio kicking things off with a long run at the service line and Smith and McGranahan being joined by McKenzie Bailey as a three-headed spiking machine.

At a crucial point, Port Townsend rallied to knot things up at 16, but The Surgeon immediately resurfaced, painting the corners like a pro.

Lodell zipped an ace down the left side that caught a fleck of paint on the line to stay in, then launched her next serve down the right side, with the result the same.

The match could have ended after two sets, with Bailey rising up and putting down the final winner like a beast, causing six sets of shoulders to slump on Port Townsend’s side of the net.

But, the rules require best three of five, so the two teams played on, though, this time, Coupeville never let its foot off the gas pedal.

A nice run on serve from Tiffany Briscoe, a beautiful tip from Kyla Briscoe that slid between two defenders, freezing them in place, and a whiplash-inducing spike off of Ally Robert’s fingertips set the stage, with Autio providing the final punctuation.

Up 22-7, the CHS senior unleashed a serve that not only hit for an ace, but caused two Port Townsend girls to run into each other while simultaneously whiffing on the ball.

RedHawks down in a heap, while the Wolves whooped it up as a team at mid-court — the perfect symbol for the night’s romp.

After the Chimacum collapse, Coupeville coach Breanne Smedley has seen her squad rise back up to fight exceptionally hard in a narrow road loss at Bellevue Christian, then cream Port Townsend.

“We’ve been focusing on working on mental toughness, practicing pressure situations, and it paid off,” she said. “We’re getting them to believe in themselves.”

With her team sailing along, Smedley gave all of her bench playing time, including freshmen Maddy Hilkey, Ashley Menges and Sarah Wright, who were swinging up from the JV team.

Bailey pounded out a team-high nine kills, libero Valen Trujillo compiled a 2.7 passing average (“Her best of the season!”) and Autio racked up nine aces and 11 assists.

McGranahan tossed in five kills, Trujillo had six digs and Lodell dropped in five service aces.

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Keep moving forward, like Payton Aparicio is doing on this shot. (John Fisken photo)

   Keep moving forward, like Payton Aparicio is doing on this shot. (John Fisken photo)

Dear Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad,

This is a conversation we’d all prefer not to be having.

In a perfect world, the finish Thursday night would have matched the beginning, and all we’d be discussing is a victory, one that played out in front of a raucous home crowd, one that could have been a defining moment for a young team.

But, things happen.

Leads evaporate, wins turn into losses, slipping through your fingers before you fully know what has happened.

The reality is, Chimacum somehow escaped with a 13-25, 11-25, 25-22, 25-21, 15-11 win and, there’s no two ways about it, that stings.

It stings because it drops you to 1-5, but there is a small silver lining.

While the Cowboys are a 1A Olympic League rival, Thursday’s match was tossed onto the schedule at the last second and is considered a non-league match.

It wouldn’t have helped or hurt you in the pursuit of a playoff spot, no matter how the score played out.

You will get two more chances to play Chimacum — Oct. 15 at their place and Oct. 22 back in the CHS gym.

Those two matches are the ones you will be graded on, and you know, without a doubt, this is a team you can beat. A team you should beat.

Which is why tonight, as you reflect on your performance, and tomorrow, when you return to practice, and next Tuesday, when you return to match play, you need to decide something.

Each and every one of you who pulls on a Wolf uniform needs to look inside themselves and say, this was a bump in the road, a learning lesson. It will not break us, it will not define us.

If you embrace the challenge, and don’t give in to the despair of the moment, there is a lot left to play.

Two more non-conference matches, then the six that will decide whether you, the 2015 Wolves, will make the postseason.

Nothing is set in stone. Your future is yours to decide.

If you play like you did in the first two sets, when you were a free-swinging team pushing the pace, playing quickly and ferociously, you can stun some folks.

In that first set, you were on fire, from the first point.

Lauren Rose served things up and McKenzie Bailey put the first point down with emphasis, blasting the ball off of the shoelaces of a Cowboy caught like a deer in the headlights.

And that’s how it was for most of the early going.

You, the Wolves, weren’t content to keep the ball in play and hope Chimacum made mistakes. You forced them to, and then took advantage when they frequently did.

Whether it was Katrina McGranahan going airborne to stuff a would-be spike, Emma Smith slicing a winner off a Cowboy shoulder, Tiffany Briscoe snapping off a string of nonreturnable serves or Ally Roberts and Valen Trujillo being freakin’ everywhere, Coupeville was large and in charge.

Nothing changed in the second set.

Smith and McGranahan teamed up for a stuff, Bailey and Payton Aparicio were dropping lasers and you closed out the set with a truly scary spike that came off of Smith’s fingertips like a cannon shot.

But then something happened.

You were never out of the match in any of the final three sets, never rolled over, never quit.

But you did get tentative, and Chimacum, given a chance to stay alive, did just enough to slip through and snatch one away.

Maybe it was the noise — give Chimacum’s JV players some credit, they held their own audibly against a hyped-up Wolf student section led by Ryan Griggs and Lathom Kelley — but you didn’t wilt.

You went down swinging, fighting off set points in both the third and fourth, once on a nasty service ace from McGranahan and once on an even-nastier spike by Bailey.

Playing from behind, as you did in all three of the final sets, is hard. Every error is magnified, and the margin of error gets slimmer and slimmer.

But, we’re not going to focus on the final score. It is what it is, and it alone won’t define your season.

You put up some nice stats, with Trujillo (20 digs, six aces), Rose (18 assists, five aces), Sydney Autio (15 assists, four aces) and Bailey (13 kills) leading the way.

Toss in Briscoe (seven aces, 14 digs) and McGranahan (three aces, nine kills) and the stat sheet got filled.

Of course, that’s not much solace, but it’s not meant to be.

In the end, you have been given a chance, an opportunity to decide for yourselves how this season will play out.

You can feel sorry for yourself and give up, or, if you are as strong as I believe you to be, you can take tonight’s match and use it to drive yourself onward and upward.

Do not give in. Do not doubt yourself.

Embrace what went right tonight and have the guts to look at what went wrong, and why it went wrong.

Come out stronger tomorrow, just as dedicated and determined as you have been this entire time.

One loss does not define you as a team or as individual players. Getting back off the mat after that loss is what will define you.

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