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Posts Tagged ‘Monica Vidoni’

Wolf softball sensation McKayla Bailey loses her flippin' mind after lil' sis McKenzie drains a buzzer-beater. (John Fisken photos)

Wolf softball sensation McKayla Bailey loses her flippin’ mind after lil’ sis McKenzie drains a buzzer-beater. (John Fisken photos)

Monica had seven points and pulled off two huge plays in the late stages of Friday's win.

Monica Vidoni scored seven points Friday and pulled off two huge plays in the late stages of her team’s win.

This year’s edition of the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad is a very tight-knit one, which helps on nights when you can only suit up eight players.

Everyone knows their role and everyone picks each other up, and it’s paying benefits.

That was very evident Friday, as the Wolves overcame the absence of injured spark-plug Madeline Strasburg (who stalked the sidelines like a second coach, high-fiving, screaming out defensive assignments and even operating the dry erase board like a pro at one point) to pummel visiting Darrington 47-31.

The non-conference win improved CHS to a flawless 2-0 heading into a Saturday home tussle with Bellevue Christian (12:15 tip), while showcasing many of its strengths.

Strength one — they’ve got a genuine star in junior Makana Stone, who can take control of the game at a moment’s notice.

Against the Loggers, who were three steps slower and much more ground-bound than she was, it wasn’t just the game-high 17 points she poured in.

It was also the countless rebounds she corralled, the steals she made off with or set up for others and the way her mere presence in the paint made Darrington players step back and reconsider their shot choices.

Strength two — any player can kill you, at any time.

Coupeville hit its only offensive road bump in the third quarter, missing a string of shots and allowing Darrington to pull within 10.

Enter Monica Vidoni and exit any hopes the Loggers still had.

First the senior pulled off the smoothest play of her high school career, taking the ball and spinning to her left, throwing down a rolling hook shot while being hammered.

Shaking off the blow, she dropped in a free-throw for a three-point play that all but cinched the win.

Not satisfied, she then used her height to her advantage in the fourth, drawing a defender to her before firing a flawless pass over the top to a suddenly wide-open Hailey Hammer for a quick and satisfying layup.

And it wasn’t just Vidoni, as fellow Wolf reserves Mia Littlejohn and McKenzie Bailey came up big-time when on the floor.

Bailey fed Vidoni for a first-quarter bucket, then rained down a pair of elegant jumpers of her own.

The second banked off the glass and dropped in a millisecond before the buzzer signaled the end of the quarter, sending big sis McKayla Bailey into a screaming fit in the stands.

“That’s my sister! THAT IS MY SISTER!!!,” she thundered while beating everyone near her over the head with the hand-written sign she had made in honor of McKenzie.

Littlejohn, a freshman with speed to burn, opened the fourth quarter with a thunder clap almost as loud.

Picking the pocket of a hapless Logger, she shot down the left sideline, with Darrington players in pursuit.

One almost caught her, at which point Littlejohn slipped into another gear entirely, leaving visible tread marks on the hardwood as she blazed in for a layup.

Strength three — Julia Myers, Kacie Kiel, Wynter Thorne and Hammer will cut a girl, if necessary.

OK, maybe not cut a girl, but beat the snot out of her within the rules and guidelines of basketball, yes.

Flying to every ball, ripping rebounds away from foes who wanted it less and, in the case of Myers, dropping an occasional inadvertent full-body slam on a fool who tried to wrestle a ball from her grasp (it is to laugh…).

Darrington had talent, it had a deadly outside shooter who, behind her glasses, had the eyes of a long-range killer and the Loggers played with passion and heart.

But Coupeville wanted this one more. They wanted to make another step on the path to their goal of breaking years of drought and carrying the Wolf banner back to the state tourney.

And they did. Emphatically.

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Monica Vidoni (John Fisken photos)

  CHS senior Monica Vidoni looks super-enthusiastic during conditioning. With games kicking off, expect the mood of players to be much happier. (John Fisken photos)

Joel Walstad (5)

Joel Walstad (5) is shadowed by Hunter Downes during practice.

And so it begins.

Basketball is officially back today, as the first high school games tip off in the CHS gym. For the next three months or so, the sound of shoes squeaking on the hardwood will echo across the land.

Up first is a non-conference boys’ battle, as the Wolves host Meridian. JV tips at 5:15, varsity at 7.

Coupeville hits the road Tuesday for a twinbill in Langley against their longtime Island rivals, South Whidbey.

Now a non-conference affair with CHS having jumped from the 1A/2A Cascade Conference to the 1A Olympic League, that doesn’t diminish the annual rumble for bragging rights.

The Wolf girls play at 5, the boys at 6:45, with the teams respective JV squads going at opposite times.

CHS fans then get back-to-back home doubleheaders Friday and Saturday to cap the opening week of play.

Darrington hits Whidbey Friday (boys 5:15, girls 7), with Bellevue Christian visiting Saturday (girls 12:15, boys 2).

Time to lace up the high tops and let loose the dogs of war.

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Monica Vidoni

Monica Vidoni

Dear Monica Vidoni,

As you celebrate your 18th birthday today, I just want to pass on a few thoughts from those of us in the stands at your games.

We are proud of you and the confident young woman you are becoming.

The growth you have shown in the past year, in all your sports and in life, is impressive.

Seeing you walk tall, more sure of yourself, of your value in this world, is reassuring.

Never doubt your self-worth. You are capable of great things in life, Monica.

If there are those who make you doubt this, even those close to you, they are wrong. They underestimate you and that is their problem, not yours.

Life is not always easy, but you are strong and will survive. You will thrive.

I believe, and so do many others, that you are a wonderful young woman. Give others a chance to see that side of you on a daily basis, and it will come back to you.

Never stop believing in yourself, Miss Vidoni. Rise up and reach for greatness, both on the athletic field and off.

You have far more fans than you may believe. And we all want to see the best for you, both as a Wolf and in the days afterwards.

May you have an awesome birthday, Monica, and always know that you are valued.

Sincerely,

Wolf Nation

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Monica Vidoni rolls hard to the hoop. (John Fisken photos)

Monica Vidoni rolls hard to the hoop. (John Fisken photos)

Makana Stone (right) makes dang sure her player isn't getting to any rebounds.

Makana Stone (right) makes dang sure her player isn’t getting to any rebounds.

The undefeated Wolf squad brings out the gun show.

The undefeated Wolf squad brings out the gun show.

Kailey Kellner slices 'n dices.

Kailey Kellner slices ‘n dices.

Can’t be beat. Won’t be beat.

Overcoming a rash of turnovers and some early cold shooting, Coupeville’s “Fall Ball” girls’ hoops squad pounded Marysville-Pilchuck 30-21 Sunday in a game that was more of a blowout than the score might sound.

Now 3-0, the Wolves (and their one ringer from Bush High School) were the much stronger squad, but allowed their hosts to hang around for awhile.

Monica Vidoni banged inside for the game’s opening bucket, and that already equaled as many field goals as Marysville would get in the entire first half.

But numerous fouls called on a somewhat-tired Wolf squad allowed Marysville to stroll to the free throw line on numerous occasions.

Sinking six of their freebies (Coupeville only had three free throw attempts the entire game) kept the Tomahawks close at the half, trailing just 14-8.

The Wolves turned up the heat a bit in the second half, getting many of their buckets off of fast breaks.

When they didn’t convert the first time, they controlled the boards with the trio of Vidoni, Makana Stone and Rachael Arand dominating in the paint and got second, third and fourth shots.

Arand, the lone non-CHS player on the Wolf squad, paced Coupeville with nine points, while hauling down five boards and rejecting four Marysville shots.

Vidoni (seven points, four rebounds, two blocks) and Stone (four points, 12 rebounds, three assists, three steals) filled up the stat sheet, with Kacie Kiel, Lauren Grove, Kailey Kellner, Mia Littlejohn and Tiffany Briscoe each dropping in a bucket in support.

Kiel, Kellner and Briscoe each had two rebounds.

To see more photos, pop over to:

http://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf359581a5d3

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A young Monica Vidoni dreams of being a basketball star.

A young Monica Vidoni dreams of being a basketball star.

Modern day Vidoni hauls in a rebound. (John Fisken photo)

Modern day Vidoni hauls in a rebound. (John Fisken photo)

away

A rare down moment for a three-sport athlete.

Monica Vidoni roots for the wrong baseball team. Let’s just get that out there.

She’s a die-hard St. Louis Cardinals fanatic, and, the simple fact is, the Pittsburgh Pirates are the far superior MLB franchise.

Truth. End of story.

And no, I really don’t need to be told what their respective records are right now.

That changes nothing. Nothing!

But anyway, get away from her obvious blindness in matters of baseball and Ms. Vidoni, who will be a senior at CHS in the fall, has become one of my favorites.

A three-sport athlete (volleyball, basketball, softball), she took great strides as a junior, lettering twice and starting for a softball squad that went to the state tourney.

She and Wolf teammates Kacie Kiel, Wynter Thorne and Kailey Kellner recently attended a basketball camp at Western Washington University, where they came away the undefeated camp champs.

As she heads towards her final year of high school sports, there is little doubt Vidoni will be “ballin’ hard.”

Here’s to hoping her finale plays out in grand fashion.

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