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   Hope Lodell had a team-high 11 digs Thursday as Coupeville swept 2A North Mason in a match ended prematurely. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Official or not, a victory is a victory, never to be turned down.

In my world, at least, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad sits at 3-1 after sweeping 2A North Mason on the road Thursday night.

There is some slight confusion, however, since the non-conference tilt was supposed to be a best-of-five-sets affair and the teams only got two sets finished.

Perhaps not thinking things out all the way, North Mason elected to play the JV match first, and it went long.

Then, after Coupeville won the first two (very long) sets of the varsity match 25-23, 26-24, the clock simply ran out on everyone.

Having traveled 70+ miles to Belfair for the match, the Wolves couldn’t miss their ferry back to Whidbey and were forced to ankle for the exit before they could officially seal the deal.

If it was a league match, the teams would reschedule and restart the match.

Being a non-conference tilt, no one’s headed back to North Mason this season. That’s for sure.

And with CHS in complete control of the match, as well, it would seem pretty safe to stick it in the W column. At least unofficially.

So, in the impartial (ha!) world of Coupeville Sports, the Wolves are 3-1 and finally headed home.

With four matches, and tournament appearances from Langley to Yakima under its belt, Coupeville makes its home debut next Tuesday, Sept. 26.

That match will be a big one, as the Wolves, defending Olympic League champs, clash with arch-rival Klahowya for sole possession of first-place.

KSS (2-0 in league play) holds a half-game lead on CHS (1-0) at the moment.

Wolf coach Cory Whitmore liked the scores Thursday, but would have enjoyed seeing his team get a chance to put a true stamp on a win.

“We did not play particularly consistent tonight in the two sets we did play,” he said. “I think we as a team would have liked another set to end on a strong note.”

Coupeville claimed the edge against North Mason thanks to its passing, Whitmore said.

Hope Lodell, who led the Wolves with 11 digs, and Maya Toomey-Stout both had very high passer ratings, and things flowed from there.

Lauren Rose (nine assists) and Ashley Menges (four) put the ball into play for CHS, with Mikayla Elfrank (five kills), Katrina McGranahan (four) and Scout Smith (three) slamming winners.

Coupeville’s always-strong service game was paced by Payton Aparicio, who recorded a pair of aces from the stripe.

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   An injury kept Maddie Vondrak on the bench Thursday, but she was invaluable as a sideline reporter. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The road warriors continue to rock.

Half the team has yet to play a high school volleyball match at home, but Coupeville’s JV spikers haven’t let unfamiliar courts throw off their game.

After running host North Mason off the floor to a 25-15, 25-14, 25-27 tune Thursday, the Wolf young guns are a crisp 3-0 on the season.

And now, finally, their new players will get a chance to play in front of their home fans for the first time, when Coupeville hosts Klahowya next Tuesday, Sept. 26.

While the trek to the wilds of Belfair (72.6 miles one way) made for a long day, CHS pulled things together quickly against their 2A opponents.

“The JV played well today after enduring the long trip to North Mason,” said Wolf coach Chris Smith. “Our bus legs had us playing a little slow out of the gate but we mustered up the energy.”

Raven Vick put the punctuation mark on both of the first two sets, ending the first with a service ace and the second with an emphatic kill.

Camped on the bench for a night with an ankle injury, Maddie Vondrak put in time as an unpaid assistant coach, and she was a treasure trove of info.

Documenting the Wolves high points (of which there were many), she hailed Chelsea Prescott, Maya Toomey-Stout and Zoe Trujillo for “aggressive swings” and Lucy Sandahl for “awesome sets and passes.”

Coupeville passed the ball strongly all night, with Emma Mathusek, Vick and Trujillo leading the way.

The Wolves stayed on the attack in the second set, with Sandahl firing multiple aces to key the offense.

Prescott was a constant threat, praised by Vondrak for “always reading, looking for spots when serving/hitting, reaching when hitting and nice covering.”

Her other fellow freshmen were on top of their game, as well, with Kylie Chernikoff delivering “an awesome hit on the 17th point,” while Savannah Smith had “good reads and transitions.”

With the win in hand for Coupeville, the two teams opted to play a largely meaningless third set, then promptly went to war whether it mattered or not.

Vondrak gushed over her teammates hustle and refusal to let plays die, even when the ball was seemingly dead in the net.

Whether it was Mathusek’s “awesome down-balls,” Sandahl dealing with “tricky tips,” or Chernikoff and Prescott spraying service aces, everyone chipped in on the victory.

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   Mallory Kortuem and Coupeville’s defense played strongly Thursday in a narrow 2-1 loss. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Be careful what you wish for.

After playing five of its first seven games on the road, capped by a narrow 2-1 non-conference loss Thursday at North Mason, the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad is finally coming home.

But while five of its next eight games are on the CHS field, the first one, next Tuesday, Sept. 26, is a clash with the beast of the Olympic League, Klahowya.

The Eagles (3-0 in league play, 5-0 overall) have yet to lose in 23 league clashes between 2014-2017.

That’s the second-longest streak in conference history, trailing only the Coupeville girls basketball team, which is 27-0 all-time in league games.

CHS will enter play that night at 2-0 in league play, 4-3 overall.

North Mason, a 2A school, snapped the Wolves two-game win streak, slipping in a pair of goals to net its first victory of the season.

Coupeville’s lone score came off the toe of junior Kalia Littlejohn, who was set up by frosh Genna Wright.

It gives Littlejohn a team-high 13 goals on the season and 31 all-time, leaving her four shy of tying the CHS girls soccer career scoring record.

While he would have preferred a win, Wolf coach Kyle Nelson thought his team played strongly on an unfamiliar field.

“Great effort from the ladies as we continue to use each game as a learning experience to get better through the season,” he said. “Next up is Klahowya, a big test for us.”

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   Zack Nall scored his first goal of the season Friday in a 5-3 Wolf win. (John Fisken photo)

   William Nelson (left) and Brandon Jansen watch the play unfold. (Susan Hulst photo)

   Freshman Aram Leyva tallied two goals, giving him three on the season. (Fisken photo)

Claim the wind, claim the game.

Playing with the Whidbey wind at its back in the first half Friday, the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad built a 4-0 lead, then coasted home for a 5-3 win over visiting 2A North Mason.

The non-conference win evened Coupeville’s record at 2-2-1 on the season.

The Wolves put their 1-0 record in Olympic League play on the line the next two games, when they travel to Klahowya Tuesday, Mar. 28, before returning home to host Port Townsend Friday, Mar. 31.

Eight of their next 10 games are league affairs.

Coupeville spread out its scoring Friday, with four booters hitting pay-dirt.

Freshman phenom Aram Leyva torched the North Mason goaltender twice, while Ethan Spark, Uriel Liquidano and Zack Nall all had the magic touch as well.

Spark leads the Wolves with five goals this season, with Leyva hot on his heels with three.

Walter Sebastian-Montejo, Chris Ramsey and Brock Mullins tallied goals for the visitors.

“North Mason did make it interesting late in the game, but the boys held steady,” said Coupeville coach Kyle Nelson. “A good tough, physical win for us.”

JV edged:

Freshman Mason Grove found the back of the net for Coupeville, but North Mason escaped with a narrow 2-1 win.

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   Jonathan Thurston struck out nine in four innings Friday, leaving with a 4-2 lead in what turned into a 14-7 win. (John Fisken photo)

A whole lot of runs, a whole lot of screaming.

Playing on a windy, often very chilly Friday afternoon, the Coupeville High School JV baseball squad took advantage of an endless stream of walks and errors, drilling visiting North Mason 14-7 in their first game of the season.

With the Wolves piling up 16 walks and the Bulldogs committing 10,904 errors (give or take one or two), the game went more than three hours, eventually being called after five innings because of encroaching darkness.

Before the game ended, fans were treated to a solid pitching outing from CHS starter Jonathan Thurston, who whiffed nine and gave up just two unearned runs in four innings of work.

They were also treated to either the world’s most entertaining, or annoying (depending on your pain tolerance) rival player.

We may never know the name of North Mason’s catcher, but his voice, which ripped across the diamond on every single pitch for 180+ minutes — it was like he was channeling a young Ozzy Osbourne working as a baseball announcer when he was in the dugout — will never be forgotten.

Well played, young sir, well played.

The game he was so deeply committed to started with a quick run in the top of the first for North Mason, and it was a run which set a tone for the next 20.

A Bulldog hitter struck out, but reached base when the pitch got loose and bounced off the backstop.

A pick-off throw went wild to move him to second, then a steal of third was capped by the ensuing throw landing deep in left field while the North Mason runner skipped home.

Luckily for Coupeville, while that style of creating runs continued all afternoon, after that it was the Wolves pulling off the creative scoring.

CHS collected two of its four hits in the first — singles from Joey Lippo and Kyle Rockwell — and combined that with four Bulldog errors and two walks to retake the lead 3-1.

The Wolves added another run in the second, off of an RBI single from Lippo, and the game actually played out as a bit of a pitcher’s duel for three-and-a-half innings.

Then, with Coupeville up 4-2 headed into the bottom of the fourth, things got kooky, to the tune of 15 runs in the next inning and a half.

A whopping 12 batters strolled to the plate in the bottom of the fourth, with six different Wolves reaching on a walk.

Add in four North Mason errors — coming on four consecutive plays — and a string of stolen bases, and Coupeville threw six runs on the (non-existent) scoreboard in the inning.

Without once hitting the ball out of the infield.

Up 10-2 with the bases still juiced and just one out, CHS was rolling, but a strikeout and a force at home kept the Wolves from entering 10-run territory.

Still, they were in solid control of the game … until they weren’t.

With Thurston done for the afternoon, Coupeville hit a rough patch in the top of the fifth, suddenly committing the same kind of wild-eyed errors the Bulldogs had been in love with all game.

Taking advantage of throws sailing from the pitcher’s mound into deep right field, and a missed tag here and there, North Mason picked up a five-spot of its own, tightening things back to 10-7.

The Wolves escaped though, after relief pitcher Lippo teamed up with infielder Nick Etzell to pick two straight runners off of second base, ending the threat.

CHS padded the lead out in the bottom half of the inning, and took long enough doing it to run through the remaining daylight.

Freshman Ulrik Wells punched a single to load the bases, before the Wolves plated four more, three on walks to Elliott Johnson, Cameron Dahl and Jonathan Carlson.

For the game, 14 of the 15 Wolves to see action reached base, with Jake Pease getting on four times, thanks to three walks and a Bulldog error.

Jacob Zettle walked three times, Shane Losey turned two errors and a walk into three trips around the base-paths and Gavin Knoblich reached base twice, while spending his “down” time sprinting from the dugout like a madman every time a foul ball landed within 200 feet of him.

James Vidoni, Gavin Straub and Seth Weatherford rounded out the Wolf roster, with Vidoni and Weatherford collecting walks.

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