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Posts Tagged ‘Mollie Bailey’

   Genna Wright kicks off a smorgasbord of CHS basketball portraits. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Jonathan Partida

Kylie Chernikoff

Dane Lucero

Avalon Renninger

Tucker Hall

Mollie Bailey

Ryan Labrador

Everyone gets their portrait taken, but there’s no promise in what order they’ll run.

At the start of every sports season, photo whiz kid John Fisken clicks away merrily, recording each Wolf who shows up on Photo Day, then he’s nice enough to shoot them my way for use during the season.

As the games play out, a lot of the photos are used, though some get bumped as game action shots start to roll in.

I like to make sure all the portraits hit the internet at some point, though.

So, as we wade through a fairly quiet week (high school finals are keeping CHS players out of competition from Sunday to Thursday), here’s eight, which, for whatever reason, haven’t seen the light of day yet.

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   Jean Lund-Olsen’s fingers tell the tale — two JV games Friday, two wins for Coupeville. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The small gym was hoppin’.

While the varsity basketball teams lit up the Coupeville High School gym Friday, the Wolf JV squads took turns winning thrillers against visiting Mount Vernon Christian across the hallway.

The CHS boys pulled away in the fourth quarter for a 38-36 win, evening their record at 1-1, while the girls emerged from overtime with a 24-22 victory to climb to 2-1 on the season.

Girls fight back:

Trailing 13-7 at the half, the Wolves steadily chipped away at the lead, cutting away three points in both the third and fourth quarters.

After losing its lead, MVC hit a late bucket to re-tie the game, then had a chance to win in the final three seconds.

Wolf frosh Chelsea Prescott read the play nicely, though, intercepting the in-bounds pass and sending the game to overtime, where one perfect play won the night.

Running a play it had recently installed, Coupeville used a “soccer-style” pass from pitch vet Tia Wurzrainer to Mollie Bailey to set up the only bucket of the extra period.

The wild finish capped what CHS coach Amy King termed a “back-and-forth, soccer-style game,” in which the ball was frequently loose, bodies were frequently crashing into one another, shots kept popping back out of the cylinder and there were “a million steals.”

Prescott racked up the best numbers in the scoring column with 10 (she also had five blocks and four steals), while Avalon Renninger (6), Nicole Lester (4), Bailey (2) and Wurzrainer (2) also tallied points.

Boys win a back-and-forth affair:

Both squads took turns surging, with Coupeville up 12-7 after one, down 20-19 at the half, then tied at 25-25 heading into the final eight minutes.

Once there, the Wolves got a pair of crunch-time three-balls from freshman Alex Jimenez, one of five CHS players to score in the fourth quarter.

Sophomore Mason Grove paced Coupeville with a game-high 16, netting five three-point bombs and a crucial free throw, while Ulrik Wells pounded down low for seven points.

Jean Lund-Olsen (6), Jimenez (6), Daniel Olson (2) and David Prescott (1) all chipped in to round out the scoring attack.

“The young guys really stepped up for us tonight,” said Coupeville coach Chris Smith.

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Mollie Bailey, breakin’ ankles and takin’ names. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mollie Bailey is deceptive.

While older sisters McKayla and McKenzie were more openly vocal during their playing days at Coupeville High School, the youngest member of the family is more of a laid-back cool cat.

The Wolf freshman bops along, often looking like she’s in her own little world, a place where whatever song is playing in her head is something she, and she alone, can hear and appreciate.

And then, just when you think she’s drifting, BAM, Bailey slices you off at the kneecaps and leaves you to bleed out on the field or court.

Cause deep down, under the placid exterior, frequent one-liners and love of being an accomplished photo bomber, is a stone-cold killer who is already carving out a name for herself as a prairie legend.

The latest chapter in the best seller that is Mollie played out Wednesday night, as she outscored the visiting Blaine JV girls basketball squad by herself.

Pouring in 14 points, with eight coming in a game-busting run, she sparked the Wolves to a 25-11 win, evening Coupeville’s record at 1-1 on the season.

Playing against a 2A school with a much-deeper bench, CHS made do with just 6.5 players.

Missing four girls, and with swing player Avalon Renninger limited to just two quarters, Coupeville relied heavily on its starters, and they responded.

Bailey was in a groove from the word go, threading a beautiful pass to a sprinting Tia Wurzrainer for the game’s first bucket.

That was actually the only basket the Wolves scored in a defensive-minded first quarter, yet they still led 5-4 at the break.

With Nicole Lester, Kylie Chernikoff and Chelsea Prescott dominating on defense — Lester rejected one Borderite shot, then snatched the ball away and led the break herself — Blaine struggled mightily to get the ball in the hoop.

The visitors did briefly find a rhythm, scoring the final two buckets of the second quarter and the first one of the third to pull within 11-10, the closest they had been all game.

At which point Bailey sighed, thunked the ball a little harder on the floor as she dribbled up-court, then promptly went and ripped out her defender’s still-beating heart and showed it to her.

Metaphorically…

A free throw, a three-point play the hard way (bucket and free throw), then back-to-back dead-eye jumpers staggered Blaine and the rout was on.

And Bailey had plenty of help as she KO’d the Borderites.

The ever-friendly Lester transformed superbly into an on-court wild woman, swinging sharp elbows as she hauled in rebound after rebound.

Meanwhile, Chernikoff turned a broken play into a buzzer-beating bank shot after snaring a loose ball, Prescott cleaned the glass and turned it into a second-chance bucket and Renninger drilled a jumper from the top of the key.

Toss in a nice little bit of floor time for foreign exchange student Julia Garcia Onoro, and Coupeville JV coach Amy King walked off with yet another win.

It took Bailey a few extra minutes to join her coach in the locker room, though. She had to remove all the bodies she carved up first.

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   Avalon Renninger is ready to hug every person in the stadium after scoring her second goal of the season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Former Wolf superstar McKenzie Bailey swings by her alma mater to hang out with mom Donna and watch lil’ sis Mollie.

“Mom! MOM! Mommmmmmyyyyy!!! I smell corn dogs!!!”

   Lauren Bayne goes Pulp Fiction on the ball. “And I will strike down upon thee with great vengeance and furious anger!!”

Kalia Littlejohn dances a saucy tango with the ball.

Cheering is hungry work.

Wolf netminder Mollie Bailey climbs the stairway to heaven to deny a goal.

   Having finished her roster-announcing duties, Sherry Roberts (left) cracks open some M & M’s with fellow Wolf moms Tammy Smith (center) and Irene Echenique.

Landon Roberts builds up his muscles carting his cousin around.

Tia Wurzrainer unleashes the hammer of the gods.

The goals were poppin’, and so were the cameras.

While the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad rained down seven scores on Mount Vernon Christian Monday, several photographers were busy clicking away.

One of them, John Fisken, delivers unto us the photos seen above.

To see all of the action shots he nailed (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2017-2018-Coupeville-Soccer/2017-09-18-vs-MV-Christian/

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Softball sensation Melody Wilkie. (Photo courtesy Debbie Wilkie)

Melody Wilkie paces around the pitcher’s circle, stops, then lets loose with another fireball.

The ball zips homeward, the batter swings and misses (by a lot) and the ball finds its destination in the waiting mitt of catcher Mollie Bailey, one more strike in what often seems like a never-ending run of K’s.

Wilkie, an 8th grader who is using her electric arm to power the Central Whidbey Little League Juniors softball squad through a winning season, is already well ahead of the curve for players her age.

Toss in a powerful bat and slick defensive moves, and she’s a fast-rising star in the tradition of Whidbey Island high school hurlers like Katrina McGranahan and Mackenzee Collins.

While she enjoyed running cross country for Langley Middle School, the softball diamond is where Wilkie’s heart truly resides.

“I started playing when I was five,” she said. “I always watched my older brother (Cody) play baseball and he was always having so much fun on the field and it really inspired me to play and be like him.

“There’s so many things I enjoy about softball,” Wilkie added.

“I love the competition and the adrenaline rush in close games; I love always having your team to back you up — they’re always there for me — and I enjoy that there’s always ways to improve.”

That constant desire to fine-tune her game, to find new ways to excel, is what drives Wilkie.

“I think for high school I will really focus on softball and working on my pitching all year around,” she said. “One of my strengths as an athlete would probably be that I always want to improve more and work harder.

“There are lots of areas I would like to improve on.”

Wilkie, who enjoys hanging out with friends and working at a local pet store when she’s not playing softball, would like to have a long, successful run in her chosen sport.

“Some of my goals as I go into high school would be to relax a little in tough situations on the field,” she said. “And I would really like to learn some new pitches as well and improve as an all-around player.

“I would really like to play softball in college,” Wilkie added. “It would be really cool to play for UW. I love watching the Huskies play and I could stay close to my friends and family and still be doing what I love.”

Spending this spring playing on a new team has introduced her to new teammates, coaches and fans, and it’s been a fun ride for the young gunslinger.

“Playing for Coupeville, I’ve made lots of new friends,” Wilkie said. “I have to give a lot of credit to Mollie. When I’m pitching, she always knows what to do and where I should pitch it.

Coral (Caveness), Kylie (Van Velkinburgh), Audrianna (Shaw) and Anya (Leavell) are always there to cheer me on and I think that has really helped me this year,” she added. “My coaches, Mimi (Johnson) and Connie (Lippo), too.”

Whether it’s hurling strikeouts, or cracking game-busting hits (“One of my best memories was my first home run. I don’t think I’ve ever been so excited!”), Wilkie’s support crew is always there to cheer her on, through big wins and tough losses.

“There’s so many people that have had huge impacts on me,” she said. “My mom and my dad have always told me to never get upset when I have a bad game, just get it next time.

“Some of my best memories from playing sports would have to be playing with my friends. I love being able to cheer them on and be there to cheer them up too.”

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