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Senior Ema Smith is one of three captains for the CHS girls basketball team. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“We want to come into the league and show that we belong. We want to compete until the final buzzer, and, if we get beat, make the other team earn the win.”

After dominating the Olympic League, winning three titles in four years, the Coupeville High School girls basketball squad faces a big challenge this season.

With the North Sound Conference prepping for its first hoops season, the Wolves, who lost three varsity players to graduation, and another three to reasons such as family moves, will have to be ready to fight from day one.

That’s something CHS coach David King knows, and looks forward, to.

“We’re basically going back to the league we left five years ago,” he said. “A new league means we are coming in to unknowns with the other teams. There are new coaches we haven’t competed against, so there will be a learning curve through the first round.

“Each day at practice and each game we want to get better,” King added. “By the end of the year, we want to see the work we put in from the beginning show that we have improved. If we do this, we should be playing our best and earn a playoff spot.”

The battle for a conference title will go through Shoreline, where perennial state power King’s has added a freshman, Jada Wynn, who played in the Junior NBA World Tournament this summer.

But it should be more than a one-team race.

“We know King’s is the team to beat. They were very good last year and have an incoming freshman that could be their best player,” David King said. “Cedar Park Christian will have something to say about the standings. They have a college-type player that leads their team.

“South Whidbey always seems to be in the mix and the games between them and us are always a battle,” he added. “Granite Falls and Sultan are unknowns since we have not played them for the last four years.

“With King’s leading the charge and CPC right behind, it may be a jumbled group with the rest of the teams.”

Coupeville will jump into action with a small, but talented and feisty, core of players.

“The team and players we have is a team I want to go to war with!,” King said. “Dedicated and competitive as well.

“The leadership we have is second to none.”

Seniors Lindsey Roberts and Ema Smith and junior Scout Smith enter the new year as captains, and anchor the team.

Lindsey has been on varsity all four years and has grown each year,” King said. “She is someone the incoming players can watch and see how a leader leads and works for her playing time.

Ema and Scout are both vocal and keep the team upbeat and positive.”

Roberts is also a player who could make a deep run on the scoring chart in her final go-around.

With 298 career points, she enter the season in 36th place all-time among Wolf girls hoops stars, and seems primed to make a run at crashing at least the top 20 before she’s done.

Juniors Hannah Davidson and Avalon Renninger and sophomore Chelsea Prescott round out the returning varsity players, while senior Nicole Laxton and junior Tia Wurzrainer make the jump from JV.

“With this group, they are so versatile that we are opening it up on the offensive end and not putting players in “set” positions,” King said.

“All, with Hannah being the exception, will be able to lead us from the point and play on the wing, while Lindsey and Ema are able to add post play to their resume.”

Laxton and Wurzrainer offer valuable support.

Tia’s strength is defense and hustle. She will fit in well with these skills,” King said. “Last year on JV she gained confidence and improved her shot and started looking to be a scorer.

Nicole brings strength and height,” he added. “Her ticket to helping us is tough rebounding and improved effort on the defensive end.”

Sophomore Mollie Bailey, who has “been working hard throughout the summer and the first week of practice,” will round out the team while swinging between varsity and JV action.

However the lineup plays out, Coupeville will live and die as a team.

“We are a tight-knit group,” King said. “The players are competitive and willing to put the work in.”

That work extends to both sides of the floor.

“We are putting an emphasis on our offensive execution and court vision,” King said. “We are minimizing our offensive sets; this, in turn, will allow us to put in the time and effort every day to run our offense with confidence.

“If we execute correctly, we will have shots we are looking for.”

To get those shots, the Wolves want to force the action on the defensive end of the floor, which has been a Coupeville trademark during King’s time on the bench.

“Defense is a staple for us. Every year the players buy into our defensive schemes and bring the effort that allows us to excel on this end of the court,” he said. “This team is no exception and are proven defenders.

“Rebounding will be something we will need to get after every day,” King added. “We may not be the tallest team, so we will have to survive on desire and effort, especially on the defensive rebounds. Need to be tenacious.”

Another key area the Wolves will concentrate on is cutting down on errors of any kind.

“Minimizing turnovers, the unforced variety,” King said. “Last year and in years past, we struggled with being too loose with the ball.

“Concentrating on our execution and court vision and improving in these areas will help us improve and lower our turnovers,” he added. “If not, the turnovers lead to easy baskets going the other way.”

While the varsity squad enters the new season with a relatively short bench, there is depth at the next level. And opportunity for those younger players.

“Our incoming freshmen and new players are athletic and competitive,” King said. They are going to push our varsity players every day in practice to get them ready for our opponents.

“Our depth could be a hindrance. Foul trouble is a concern with the bench depth,” he added. “We are hoping one or more incoming players improve as the season progresses and earns some time on the varsity bench.”

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Coupeville senior Emma Smith capped her stellar prep career by being named a First-Team All-League pick by North Sound Conference volleyball coaches. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Scout Smith (left) and Maya Toomey-Stout (right) were also honored.

Coaches like ’em. They really like ’em.

Coupeville High School landed three All-Conference picks and the Coach of the Year when North Sound Conference volleyball gurus sat down to vote.

The Wolves, who finished second in league play at 7-3, trailing just defending state champ King’s, put senior middle blocker Emma Smith and junior outside hitter Maya Toomey-Stout on the 1st team.

Junior setter Scout Smith was tabbed as a 2nd team All-Conference nod, while Cory Whitmore was picked by his peers as the coach with the most.

Fifteen girls were honored, led by league MVP Dominique Kirton of King’s.

The All-Conference squads, presented in alphabetic order:

 

1st Team All-Conference:

Noelle Alberda – King’s – 10 – Middle Blocker
Emma Leggett – South Whidbey – 12 – Outside Hitter
Ava Mason – King’s – 11 – Setter
Baily McCutchen – King’s – 12 – Outside Hitter
Kaya Nelson – Cedar Park – 10 – Libero
Emma Smith – Coupeville – 12 – Middle Blocker
Maya Toomey-Stout – Coupeville – 11 – Outside Hitter

 

2nd Team All-Conference:

Emma Hodson – South Whidbey – 10 – Middle Blocker
Chloe Johnson – South Whidbey – 12 – Setter
Irena Korolenko – Cedar Park – 11 – Outside Hitter
Abigail Miller – Sultan – 10 – Outside Hitter
Jenny Rodenbaugh – Granite Falls – 11 – Middle
Adair Rosenau – King’s – 12 – Libero
Scout Smith – Coupeville – 11 – Setter

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Coupeville super fans Michael Davidson and Charlotte Young have been busy this fall, bouncing between volleyball, football and soccer. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

One photo, so many superstars. Back (l to r): Maddie Vondrak, Aria Bowen, Kylie Chernikoff, Savannah Smith. Front (l to r): Ashley Menges, Emma Smith.

To everything there is a finish.

With the North Sound Conference down to just two teams still alive in the playoffs – King’s volleyball and soccer – this is our last league standings update.

For a few weeks.

Once high school basketball games kick off, we’ll be right back here every Sunday morning.

But, until then, this is it for fall.

If you deeply care how King’s does at the state tourney, where both of its squads are the defending 1A champs, you can easily find those results elsewhere next week.

This isn’t Knights Sports.

At least not until they come through with some of that sweet, sweet private school pay-off cash to keep me in the style I dream about…

Anyways.

Entering this past week, there were still multiple teams from other NSC schools alive, but, one by one, they all fell.

Coupeville and South Whidbey volleyball went down, Cedar Park Christian and South Whidbey soccer fell, and the league’s football squads got bushwhacked.

Big time.

Facing off the with always-tough Northwest Conference, the gridiron squads from the NSC were swept aside in four games.

Meridian drilled South Whidbey 59-8, Lynden Christian rapped King’s 42-14 and Mount Baker made it a two-fer.

The Mountainers destroyed Granite Falls 61-0 in the play-in game, then thumped NSC champ Cedar Park 49-10.

With those wins, the Northwest Conference accounts for three of the 16 football teams headed to the state playoffs, while the North Sound Conference comes up empty in year one.

At least on the gridiron, since, as I said up top, King’s can still repeat as state champs in two sports.

To which, as public school supporters, we say … yay???

Nope.

 

Final fall sports standings (* = league champs):

 

North Sound Conference volleyball:

School League Overall
King’s * 10-0 17-1
COUPEVILLE 7-3 11-5
South Whidbey 6-4 12-9
CPC-Bothell 5-5 9-9
Granite Falls 1-9 4-13
Sultan 1-9 4-11


North Sound Conference football:

School League Overall
CPC-Bothell * 5-0 7-2
King’s 4-1 4-6
South Whidbey 3-2 6-4
Granite Falls 2-3 2-8
Sultan 1-4 2-7
COUPEVILLE 0-5 3-6


North Sound Conference girls soccer:

School League Overall
King’s * 9-1 17-2
Granite Falls 7-3 9-8-1
South Whidbey 7-3 11-8-1
CPC-Bothell 4-6 9-9-1
Sultan 2-8 6-11
COUPEVILLE 1-9 2-12-1


Emerald City League boys tennis:

School League Overall
Seattle Academy * 13-0 13-0
University Prep 11-3 11-4
Overlake 9-3 9-3
COUPEVILLE 7-6 8-6
Bush 6-8 6-8
South Whidbey 5-8 5-8
Bear Creek 2-12 2-12
Eastside Prep 0-13 0-13

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Sean Toomey-Stout was named a 1st team All-League pick at three positions by North Sound Conference coaches. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They know his name, and they respect his game.

Coupeville High School junior Sean Toomey-Stout was named a 1st Team All-Conference pick at three different positions when North Sound Conference coaches voted for their league’s best players.

“The Torpedo,” who led the Wolves in almost every statistical category, was tabbed at running back, defensive back and for his special teams play.

Toomey-Stout rumbled for more than 1,000 yards on the ground and scored 10 touchdowns for a Coupeville team which had no other player score more than two.

He was joined by seniors Dane Lucero (defensive line) and Alex Turner (linebacker) on the 1st team, while four CHS players were named as 2nd team picks.

Seniors Ryan Labrador (offensive line), Matt Stevens (defensive line) and Shane Losey (linebacker) and junior Gavin Knoblich (tight end) rounded out the Wolf award winners.

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Cam Dahl (18) scraps during Coupeville football’s season finale. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolf fans jam the bleachers.

It’s edge of your seat time.

With every fall sport having wrapped regular season play, we’re fully into playoff mode.

10 North Sound Conference teams are still alive for a state title, though the only one we truly care about on this blog is the Coupeville volleyball squad.

Having split two matches at the district tourney Saturday, the Wolf spikers sit a win away from advancing to bi-districts.

That match arrives Tuesday, when CHS travels to Lynden to face Nooksack Valley.

King’s (volleyball, football, soccer) and South Whidbey (VB, FB, soccer) account for six of the other nine squads still alive in the playoffs.

Meanwhile, Cedar Park Christian is alive in football and soccer and Granite Falls is still kicking in football, though Tiger soccer, which tied for second-place in the NSC, is the highest seed to have been knocked out of the postseason.

Sultan, with every team eliminated, gets ready for winter sports.

 

Standings through Oct. 28 (* = league champs):

 

North Sound Conference volleyball:

School League Overall
King’s * 10-0 15-1
COUPEVILLE 7-3 11-4
South Whidbey 6-4 10-7
CPC-Bothell 5-5 9-9
Granite Falls 1-9 4-13
Sultan 1-9 4-11


North Sound Conference football:

School League Overall
CPC-Bothell * 5-0 7-1
King’s 4-1 4-5
South Whidbey 3-2 6-3
Granite Falls 2-3 2-7
Sultan 1-4 2-7
COUPEVILLE 0-5 3-6


North Sound Conference girls soccer:

School League Overall
King’s * 9-1 16-2
Granite Falls 7-3 9-8-1
South Whidbey 7-3 9-7-2
CPC-Bothell 4-6 9-8-1
Sultan 2-8 6-11
COUPEVILLE 1-9 2-12-1


Emerald City League boys tennis:

School League Overall
Seattle Academy * 13-0 13-0
University Prep 11-3 11-4
Overlake 9-3 9-3
COUPEVILLE 7-6 8-6
Bush 6-8 6-8
South Whidbey 5-8 5-8
Bear Creek 2-12 2-12
Eastside Prep 0-13 0-13

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