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Posts Tagged ‘Mikayla Elfrank’

Tiffany Briscoe (John Fisken photos)

   Coupeville senior Tiffany Briscoe etched her name in 8 of 11 stat categories in 2016. (John Fisken photos)

Katrina McGranahan

   Junior Katrina McGranahan was second on the Wolves in service points, aces and blocks and first in kills.

Hope Lodell finished #1, at least for the moment.

Adding 12 service aces during the district tourney Saturday, the Coupeville High School junior finished with a school single-season record of 110.

Those aces, by themselves, are more than any other Wolf player has had in their entire CAREER.

Lodell’s two-year total of 141 aces (she had 31 as a sophomore) sends her skyrocketing past former CHS career record holder Mindy Horr, who compiled 109.

Fellow junior Katrina McGranahan is in the on-deck circle to pass Horr, as well.

With 62 aces this year, she sits at an even 100 heading into her final season.

The 110 aces this season puts Lodell #1 across all divisions in Washington state (2B-4A), at least in terms of those who have reported stats to MaxPreps through Tuesday morning.

Coupeville, which had four players (Lodell, McGranahan, Payton Aparicio and Ashley Menges) land in the top 10 for aces by 1A players, destroyed the team single-season mark.

The Wolves launched 327 aces, easily topping last year’s mark of 201.

Looking at the final stats, several players made runs during the final weekend, with Emma Smith and McGranahan, in particular, surging in several categories.

Allison Wenzel also took advantage of what playing time was given her, accumulating her first serving stats of the season in the crucible of the playoffs.

Senior Valen Trujillo capped a remarkable run, pushing her school career record for digs to 550.

The final season-to-date stats for the Wolf spikers, who at 11-6, had their best season since 2004:

Sets Played:

Katrina McGranahan 63
Ashley Menges 63
Lauren Rose 63
Emma Smith 63
Valen Trujillo 63
Payton Aparicio 62
Hope Lodell 61
Tiffany Briscoe 60
Mikayla Elfrank 58
Ally Roberts 47
Sarah Wright 12
Allison Wenzel 7
Maddy Hilkey 1
Scout Smith 1

Kills:

McGranahan 91 (#16 in 1A)
Elfrank 77 (#19 in 1A)
Lodell 75
E. Smith 52
Aparicio 47
Briscoe 41
Wright 16
Roberts 9
Wenzel 5
Trujillo 4
Menges 2
Rose 2

Kill Percentage:

Menges 66.7
E. Smith 39.4
Wright 38.1
McGranahan 35.5
Elfrank 35.3
Roberts 33.3
Lodell 31.0
Wenzel 29.4
Briscoe 27.2
Aparicio 24.4
Rose 22.2
Trujillo 18.2

Hitting Percentage:

Menges .333
Wenzel .235
Wright .214
McGranahan .160
E. Smith .144
Roberts .111
Briscoe .073
Elfrank .023

Digs:

Trujillo 195 (#7 in 1A)
Lodell 137 (#14 in 1A)
Aparicio 70
Rose 47
Roberts 45
McGranahan 27
Menges 18
Briscoe 13
Elfrank 10
E. Smith 10
Wenzel 6
Wright 3

Blocks:

E. Smith 17
McGranahan 14
Elfrank 7
Aparicio 3
Wright 3
Briscoe 1
Lodell 1

Service Returns:

Trujillo 348
Lodell 239
Aparicio 145
Roberts 64
Wenzel 12
Briscoe 4
McGranahan 4
E. Smith 4
Elfrank 3
Menges 3
Rose 2
Wright 1

Assists:

Rose 192 (#11 in 1A)
Menges 148 (#12 in 1A)
Trujillo 6
Lodell 4
Roberts 4
Briscoe 3
Aparicio 2
McGranahan 2
Elfrank 1
Wright 1

Serving Percentage:

Elfrank 100.0
Rose 92.7
Trujillo 91.4
Aparicio 86.0
Lodell 83.8
McGranahan 82.9
Menges 81.9
Wenzel 80.0
Roberts 40.0

Service Points:

Lodell 187
McGranahan 134
Rose 132
Menges 116
Aparicio 102
Trujillo 94
Elfrank 3
Wenzel 3
Roberts 2

Service Aces:

Lodell 110 (#1 across all divisions in state)
McGranahan 62 (#3 in 1A, #17 in all divisions)
Aparicio 52 (#7 in 1A)
Menges 46 (#10 in 1A)
Rose 35 (#19 in 1A)
Trujillo 35 (#19 in 1A)
Elfrank 1
Wenzel 1

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The CHS fall ball coaching brain trust is (l to r) Sherry Roberts, Aimee Bishop and Kyla Briscoe. (Amy King photos)

   The CHS fall ball coaching brain trust is (l to r) Sherry Roberts, Aimee Bishop and Kyla Briscoe. (Amy King photos)

Maddy Hilkey

Watch your digits around Granite Falls. Maddy Hilkey got bit in game two.

A little bit of sadness, then a whole lot of happiness.

That’s what Coupeville High School’s fall ball girls’ basketball squad experienced Sunday in Skagit County, as they split a pair of games with bigger schools.

After absorbing a 32-12 loss to 4A Mount Vernon, the Wolves rebounded with a fury in the nightcap, drilling 2A Granite Falls 36-14.

The split left Coupeville, one of the smallest 1A schools in the state, at 2-2 at the midway point of the fall ball season.

After a two-week break, the Wolves wrap things up with doubleheaders on Oct. 23 and 30.

CHS clicked in every aspect in game two Sunday, cutting down its turnovers, sharing the ball on offense and hitting the boards with a vengeance.

The Wolves roared out to a 17-5 lead at the half, then continued to stretch things out in the second half, with eight of 10 players scoring in the game.

Kailey Kellner popped for 12 to lead Coupeville, while Mikayla Elfrank and Mia Littlejohn chipped in with six apiece.

One big highlight was seeing freshman Avalon Renninger knock down her first fall ball bucket in the second half, getting a strong roar of approval from her older teammates.

The opening game wasn’t quite as thrilling, as difficulty breaking the press in the early going, and a cold shooting touch after the half conspired to hurt the Wolves.

While the halftime margin was just 12-5, Mt. Vernon got hot from the field after the break and refused to let Coupeville back in the game.

Littlejohn paced the Wolves with four points, five rebounds and four steals, while Kellner snared a team-high seven boards.

Tiffany Briscoe, Maddy Hilkey, Ema Smith, Lindsey Roberts, Lauren Grove and Kalia Littlejohn join Kellner, Elfrank, Renninger and Mia Littlejohn on the CHS squad, which is coached by Sherry Roberts, Aimee Bishop and Kyla Briscoe.

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Birthday buddies (clockwise, from left) Emma Smith, Mikayla Elfrank and Ethan Spark. (John Fisken photos)

   Birthday buddies (clockwise, from left) Emma Smith, Mikayla Elfrank and Ethan Spark. (John Fisken photos)

Birthdays, as far as the eye can see.

There’s so many possible candles on so many possible cakes today, the entirety of Whidbey Island could be a fire hazard.

The never-ending alerts on Facebook (I got it the first seven times your algorithms harassed me, Zuckerberg!) for Sept. 25 stretch out across 237 pages.

Or at least it feels that way.

Anyway, we’re here to narrow it down to the triplets, three current Wolf stars who all hit their cake day today.

Without further ado, we want to send birthday wishes out to Ethan Spark, Emma Smith and Mikayla Elfrank, who between them have a presence on what could be eight (or more) CHS sports squads.

First up (by random coin flip) is Spark, a high-octane, high-scoring soccer (and sometimes basketball and tennis) ace who inherited his dynamic kicking leg from older sister Jenn.

The rest of his talent and charisma? On loan from God.

Spark can crack a soccer ball half the length of a field, bend it like Beckham and drop it into the goal as sweetly as anyone in the biz.

With the graduation of school career scoring leader Abraham Leyva, Spark will be the leading returning goal scorer this spring, having scorched the nets for eight goals last season.

That being said, my favorite moment of his came when he was playing hoops a year or two back and wrecked a Port Townsend player so completely, the RedHawk wiped out the entire Wolf bench.

Spark, who was on a tear in the game — which Coupeville won — spun viciously to the hoop for a key basket, losing his defender in the process.

Unable to slow his roll, the RedHawk went face-first, at full speed, into the Wolf water-dispensing machine, carrying it into the stands with him as chairs (and players) went flying like bowling pins.

By the time the hapless hoopster had come to a halt, most of the CHS bench was destroyed, paper cups were blowing in the breeze, and water covered half the gym.

Spark?

He knocked down the shot, then stood off to the side, eyeing the carnage with a small smile. Like a boss.

Our second birthday buddy, Smith, often wrecks people as well, but she does it by elevating to the gym ceiling and lashing spikes that cause volleyball foes to run away screaming.

A power hitter who always makes her feats of spiker destruction look elegant, Emma is also a track star on the rise, throwing the shot put and discus for the Wolves.

One of the best in the game at delivering pre-game photo ops to wandering paparazzi, Smith, who comes from a long line of Wolf greats (including grandpa Steve and aunt Joli, to name but two) was born to be a star, and she embraces her heritage.

Whether dropping on-court dance moves with her pack (volleyball and real-life buddies Maddy Hilkey and Ashley Menges) or gracing the school’s honor roll on a regular basis, Emma is as impressive as they come.

Giving her a run for her money is Elfrank, who has been a Wolf for the shortest time of the birthday trio, but has already made a huge impact.

South Whidbey’s loss has been Coupeville’s gain, as we inherited a three-sport supernova who combines boundless talent with impeccable class.

Mikayla made her debut in red and black as a softball player last spring, and has now taken her spot on the volleyball court as a junior.

Still to come — a stint as a basketball player, which bodes extremely well for a Wolf program seeking its third-straight league title.

Elfrank has raw talent for days, which makes her capable of gunning down runners with laser throws from the hole at short or tattooing folks with high-flying spikes.

But what makes her the complete deal is the joy she takes in competing, the way she meshes with her teammates, and the class she shows off the field of battle.

This trio, all of whom have several more seasons to ply their trade for CHS, are winners, both in the games they play as Wolves and in the game of life.

Sept. 25 produced a bevy of talented student/athletes, and our town hit the jackpot with these three.

So happy birthday, Ethan, Emma and Mikayla, and thank you.

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Raven Vick (John Fisken photos)

   Freshman spiker Raven Vick leads off our series of fall sports portraits. (John Fisken photos)

Aiden Crimmins

Aiden Crimmins, senior, tennis.

Megan Thorn

Megan Thorn, freshman, soccer.

Gavin Knoblich

Gavin Knoblich, freshman, football.

Jaschon Baumann

Jaschon Baumann, sophomore, tennis.

Kalia Littlejohn

Kalia Littlejohn, sophomore, soccer.

Chris Battaglia

Chris Battaglia, sophomore, football.

Mikayla Elfrank

Mikayla Elfrank, junior, volleyball.

Everyone approaches their portrait differently.

Some smile. Others go as far to the opposite extreme as possible.

Whichever route they pursue, John Fisken (and his trusty camera) are there to document their choice.

The pics above are just a small taste of those he captured at recent CHS fall sports practices.

To be fair, I randomly selected two athletes from each of the sports (volleyball, tennis, soccer and football), varsity and JV, to showcase some of his work.

To see more (purchases help fund college scholarships for Wolf student/athletes), pop over to:

Volleyball — http://www.johnsphotos.net/Portraits/Coupeville-VB-2016/

Football — http://www.johnsphotos.net/Portraits/Coupeville-FB-2016/

Soccer — http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/GS-20160901-Coupeville-vs-Sout/

There isn’t currently a link for the tennis portraits, but if you contact Fisken at http://www.johnsphotos.net/, he can let you know what he has to choose from.

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Mikayla Elfrank crushed an epic double and made several sparkling defensive plays at short Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Mikayla Elfrank crushed an epic double and made several sparkling defensive plays at short Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

It’s a learning process.

Fielding a team without a single senior, with almost all of its key players freshmen or sophomores, the Coupeville High School softball squad is still very much a work in progress.

The early days of the season were a heady time, as the rally caps came out often en route to a 6-1 start.

Now, after taking a 7-1 loss at home to Klahowya Tuesday, the team’s third straight defeat, the Wolves are experiencing the bumps in the road.

The loss dropped Coupeville to 6-4 overall, 1-2 in league play and the Wolves slid into third-place in the 1A Olympic League standings.

Defending champ Chimacum (2-0, 6-4) sits on top, with Klahowya (1-0, 6-4) and Port Townsend (0-2, 0-6) sandwiched around Coupeville.

The Wolves, though, will have a strong opportunity to get back to their winnings ways, as they travel to Port Townsend Thursday, where they will try and add to the RedHawks two-year, 29-game losing streak.

If nothing else, the hits should come easier than they did Tuesday.

Klahowya hurler Amber Bumbalough, who was named the league MVP as a freshman, is continuing to roll in her second season of high school ball, and she was scorching as usual.

Coupeville, a fairly strong-hitting team, couldn’t get a base knock off of her until the fifth inning, when Tiffany Briscoe whacked a single to left.

Coming on the heels of a walk to Mikayla Elfrank, that gave the Wolves two on with nobody out, and a familiar pattern seemed to be emerging.

Fall behind early — in this case 4-0, largely on the basis of a three-run triple — then rally right back into the game.

Only, on this day, an alert Klahowya coach sprang from the dugout and got the hit negated on a technicality.

When Briscoe had entered the game, replacing Tamika Nastali in the second inning, CHS coach Kevin McGranahan had forgotten to declare the change to the ump.

So, instead of a single, Coupeville was given an out.

“That’s on me, not Tiffany,” McGranahan said. “She did a great job up there, I just made a mistake. My mistake all the way.”

Coupeville finally got an official hit (or two) off Bumbalough in the sixth, when Lauren Rose lashed a lead-off liner to center field, followed by a gorgeous bunt single off of the bat of Hope Lodell.

“The Surgeon” dropped the ball neatly in front of and to the side of the Klahowya third-baseman, then burned down the base path to beat the throw by half a step.

The Wolves netted their lone run in the inning, with Rose scampering home on a fielder’s choice ground-out by Sarah Wright, but the rally died too quickly for the local fan’s liking.

Klahowya put the game away for good in the seventh, with an RBI triple, followed by a two-run dinger that cleared the fence.

With the game slipping away, Elfrank refused to go down easy.

Capping a solid all-around game, the sophomore sensation crushed a lead-off double in the seventh, pounding the ball about a foot short of a home-run.

Her big blow, combined with several nifty web gems at short, caught her coach’s eye.

Mikayla played strongly,” McGranahan said. “She was a rock for us; always nice to see.”

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