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Sage Renninger, seen here earlier this season, is one of several key Wolf booters who could return next season. (John Fisken photo)

   Sage Renninger, seen here earlier this season, is one of several key Wolf booters who could return next season. (John Fisken photo)

It was simple but effective.

Spreading out the field and using precision passing to run its opponent ragged Saturday, the visiting Vashon Island High School girls’ soccer squad held Coupeville without a shot on goal and headed home with a 2-0 district playoff win.

The loss, coming on the sodden, rain-soaked turf at Oak Harbor’s stadium, a larger field than the Wolves normally play on, dropped Coupeville’s final mark to 6-7-3.

That ties last year’s team for the most wins in program history, but both of those six-win teams had their season ended by the same foe.

Last year, in a “home” game played much, much further down the road, the Wolves fell 3-0 to Vashon.

The Pirates put this year’s contest away early, breaking through less than two minutes into the game.

A Vashon forward got behind the Wolf defense — one of the few times that would happen all day — and made a run up the left side, angling the ball past CHS goalie Lauren Grove.

Vashon’s second goal came not that long afterwards, in the game’s eighth minute, when a ball glanced off of a limb during a scrum in front of the net and shot into the back of the net.

From that point on, the action settled into what true soccer fans would probably view as scintillating, but the causal fan could best describe as “ehhhhhh…”

The Pirates played keep-away, peppered Grove with a series of shots (the first-year goalie was spot-on over the final 72 minutes, making several nice saves) and kept Coupeville from launching any sort of counter-attack.

The game seemed to sit on one side of the field for much of the running time.

Coupeville tried to get out on the attack, but leading scorers Kalia and Mia Littlejohn were swarmed every time they touched the ball, and the Vashon goalie rarely, if ever, moved all game.

The closest the Wolves came to the net was a free kick from Jenn Spark after a Vashon hand ball.

The sturdy senior captain lit up the ball, but caught too much air underneath it and shot the ball through the football uprights for a flawless field goal.

Sadly, the refs failed to give Spark any style points and the shut-out remained intact.

After the early goals, Coupeville’s defense visibly toughened up, with Lauren Bayne, Mckenzie Meyer, Taichen Rose, Spark and Lindsey Roberts clamping down on the Pirates.

One of the few times Grove was out of position, Roberts stifled Vashon’s bid for a third score, using her leg to save the ball at the mouth of the goal and shoot it back downfield.

The playoff loss was the final high school game for Spark and fellow Wolf seniors Jovanah Foote and Kirsten Pelroy.

The Wolves could return Grove, much of their defense and eight of the nine players who scored goals this season.

Kalia Littlejohn set a program record with 10 goals as a freshman, while Mia Littlejohn notched five during her sophomore campaign.

Other potential returning scorers include May Rose (3), Arisbeth Montiel (3), Sage Renninger (3), Bree Daigneault (2), Roberts (1) and Ashley Smith (1).

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Sydney Autio rises up and lays down some heat Thursday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Sydney Autio rises up and lays down some heat Thursday night. (John Fisken photos)

Ally Roberts

The volleyball thinks it’s going to get away. Ally Roberts has other ideas.

It wasn’t the prettiest of wins, but it was a win, and that was all that really mattered.

Showcasing an ability to scramble and rally, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad roared from behind in two of three sets Thursday night.

By the time the Wolves were done, they had a 25-20, 25-13, 26-24 win over visiting Port Townsend and were primed to plunge into postseason waters.

The victory, the third in the last four matches for CHS, lifted it to 5-9 overall, 3-3 in 1A Olympic League play.

The Wolves, who finished in the cellar a season ago, tied Chimacum for second place this year.

Since Coupeville and the Cowboys finished with identical records and split their two matches, a coin flip will decide playoff seeding.

The winner of the flip will be the league’s #2 seed and will open the playoffs at home against the Nisqually League’s #3 team Thursday, Nov. 5.

The loser gets the #3 seed and a home playoff opener against Nisqually League #4 Tuesday, Nov. 3.

You can monitor the playoff bracket by popping over to: http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1690&sport=10

Whichever day the Wolves play, it will be their first home volleyball playoff match in a decade.

When Coupeville was part of the Cascade Conference, it always had to go to Lynden Christian and King’s for postseason action, regardless of record.

Last year, in the first go-round in the Olympic League, CHS failed to qualify for the playoffs.

That has changed this season, as a young squad (only two Wolves, McKenzie Bailey and Sydney Autio, were honored on Senior Night) has begun to jell as the season progresses.

Not that there was much jelling going on early in the first set Thursday.

A lack of communication allowed a number of balls to drop in uncontested as the Wolves fell behind big early, eventually trailing 13-5.

Enter the calming influence of junior libero Valen Trujillo, who settled in at the service stripe by immediately lashing an ace that skidded off the back-line.

Katrina McGranahan punched home a winner off of Trujillo’s next serve, ripping a bullet of a tip that left notches in three RedHawks as it whistled through a crowd.

With Port Townsend unable to get much going in way of returns, the Wolves ran off 10 straight points with Trujillo on serve.

On one play, McGranahan threw out an arm at the last second to save a rally, popping the ball up in the air as she sprawled to the ground.

Given new life, Coupeville took advantage, with Payton Aparicio rising up and sending a slicing kill shot to cap the rally.

Once they had the lead, the Wolves never relinquished it, bringing the first set to an end when Bailey jumped out of the joint to deliver a knee-buckling spike that scattered a pack of Port Townsend players.

The second set, by contrast, was all Coupeville all the time.

The Wolves got successful service runs from Maddy Hilkey, Hope Lodell, Lauren Rose and Tiffany Briscoe, a gorgeous tip for a winner from the ever-limber Ally Roberts and an emphatic spike from high-flying frosh Emma Smith.

Then, comfortably ahead, Coupeville hit the snooze button for a moment or two in the third set, before waking back up just in time to put an end to the evening.

CHS fell behind by as many as seven points and had seemingly given away the set, facing a string of set points down 24-20.

Showing no signs of panic, the Wolves scrambled for the match’s final six points, with a Briscoe smash off the last flake of paint on the back-line at 24-22 a particular highlight.

As line judge Steve Kiel thrust out both hands dramatically to call the shot a winner, a ripple of electricity shimmered through the large, enthusiastic Coupeville student section.

In answer, all the shoulders on the RedHawks players slumped as one, a perfect image for a team that knew its season had about three minutes left.

Turned out to be more like 80 seconds.

As the Wolves and their fans celebrated, the stats were added up, and Trujillo moved a step closer to a school record.

She recorded five digs, leaving her just five away from claiming the career mark.

Trujillo has 338 in her stellar career, while the school record of 342 is held by Jessica Riddle.

Rose was flawless at the service stripe (13 of 13), while Briscoe delivered seven kills with no hitting errors. Aparicio had four kills and three aces.

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Lathom Kelley and the other Coupeville seniors will get an extra half of (John Fisken photo)

   Lathom Kelley and the other Coupeville seniors will get an extra half of action (and a bus ride to Sequim) next Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

“Playoffs? We’re talking about the playoffs?!?!”

Yeah, we’re talking about the reality that we could have a 1-8 football team in the playoffs.

Don’t like it? Not gonna change reality.

The 1A Olympic League gets three playoff spots this year, up a spot from last year when Coupeville went 5-5 overall, 3-3 in league play and was denied a postseason run.

With the extra berth this year, either the Wolves or Chimacum, who both sit at 1-7 today, will travel to Puyallup Saturday, Nov. 7 to face the defending 1A state champs from Cascade Christian in a game in which they will be a billion-to-less-than-one long-shots.

But, first, they have to decide which (current) one-win team is slightly more deserving.

After the two schools wrap regular season play this Friday with non-conference games (Coupeville hosts Concrete for Senior Night at 7 PM, while Chimacum hosts Vashon Island), they will have a very short turn-around.

Both squads will head to a neutral field at Sequim High School Tuesday, Nov. 3, where they will play half a game. Kickoff is set for 5 PM according to a report today by the Peninsula Daily News.

That could put the game directly opposite a home playoff game for Coupeville’s volleyball squad, which would play the same day if they are the #3 seed.

If the Wolf spikers win their final match and triumph in a tiebreaker of their own, though, they would be the #2 seed and not play at home until Thursday, Nov. 5.

The winner of the football mini-playoff gets to go face a juggernaut four days later, while the loser will get a season-ending crossover game on the road with another non-playoff team Nov. 6 or 7.

We’re in this situation because Coupeville surrendered a touchdown with 1.6 seconds to go at Homecoming, allowing Chimacum to escape with a 14-9 win that snapped an 18-game losing streak.

The Wolves had won the first meeting, 28-26, on the road.

Both teams finished 1-5 in league play, while Port Townsend (6-0) and Klahowya (4-2) grabbed the top two slots.

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Katrina McGranahan (John Fisken photo)

   Katrina McGranahan, seen here in an earlier match, had two aces, four kills and three blocks Monday. (John Fisken photo)

Huge leaps and bounds.

A year ago, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad went 1-11 and failed to make the playoffs.

Jump forward to this season, and the Wolves are postseason bound and now capable of pushing the league champs hard.

Coupeville did lose Monday, falling 25-15, 25-20, 26-28, 25-21 at Klahowya, which allowed the Eagles to officially clinch the 1A Olympic League title.

But the Wolves scrapped like a wild beast and are gelling as the stakes get higher.

“At times, played some of the best volleyball all season tonight,” said CHS coach Breeanne Smedley. “We battled and fought hard for every point.”

That was most evident in the third set, when the Wolves somehow battled back from being down 24-17, holding off match point after match point, before eventually winning the set.

“Klahowya is a strong team all around, and I’m pleased with the way we were able to not only hang with them, but take a game off them for the first time since we entered into this league,” Smedley said. “Players stepped up in key times and were playing smart by adjusting to their offense.

“It’s a great place for us to be in as we take on Port Townsend and head to post-season play,” she added. “The team is peaking at the right time.”

Coupeville (2-3 in league play, 4-9 overall) hosts the Redhawks (0-5, 1-10) Thursday in their regular season finale (6:45 start, no JV), while Chimacum (3-2, 8-7) faces Klahowya (5-0, 8-6).

A Wolf win and a Chimacum loss and Coupeville would finish in a tie for second place.

Since they split their two matches with the Cowboys, we’d then have to wade in to tiebreaker territory to decide postseason seeding.

Both the #2 and #3 teams from the Olympic League host their playoff opener, but #3 would have to play an additional loser-out game.

To see the brackets, pop over to: http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1690&sport=10

Regardless of who or when they play, the Wolves are hoping for the kind of effort they got Monday, when nearly everyone on the roster filled up the stat sheet.

Tiffany Briscoe (four aces, six kills, 14 digs), Sydney Autio (three aces, 12 assists, nine digs), Hope Lodell (four aces, four kills, five digs) and Katrina McGranahan (two aces, four kills, three blocks) paced Coupeville.

Valen Trujillo went low for nine digs, Ally Roberts soared for five kills and Lauren Rose doled out 11 assists.

Meanwhile, super sophomore Payton Aparicio (12/12 serving, two aces, seven digs) and fab frosh Emma Smith (three kills, one block) helped control the flow of the match.

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May Rose (John Fisken photo)

   May Rose scored her second goal of the season Thursday, helping lift Coupeville to a playoff berth-clinching win. (John Fisken photo)

Goal one — make the playoffs — accomplished.

Goal two –unseat Klahowya as league champs — still attainable.

Riding goals from May Rose and Kalia Littlejohn, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer team upended scrappy Chimacum 2-1 Thursday night and punched its ticket to the postseason.

The win, the third in the last four games for the Wolves, lifted them to 3-1 in 1A Olympic League play, 5-5-3 overall.

It also guaranteed the Wolves will finish no worse than second in the conference for the second straight year.

They have two regular season games left and could still catch the defending 1A state champs in the standings.

Coupeville travels to Klahowya (4-0, 10-3-1) Monday for a battle royale, then holds Senior Night Tuesday, with Port Townsend (0-4, 0-10-2) in town.

The Wolves controlled play for much of Thursday night’s action.

“The Chimacum goal was us getting lazy and not taking care of business,” said Wolf coach Troy Cowan. “Don’t let the close score fool you; they were handled.”

Rose opened the scoring, taking a pass from Kalia Littlejohn and pounding it home. It was the fleet-footed junior’s second goal of the season.

May Rose played lights out; she has really worked hard and improved her game!,” Cowan said. “Her first touch has become a real weapon and she is getting hungry for the ball, which is bad news for defenders!!!”

Having helped out on the first score, Littlejohn put the second one away herself, notching her ninth goal.

The score was set up by big sis Mia Littlejohn, who tallied her team-high eighth assist.

“Of course, Batman and Robin (Littlejohn sisters) are still on course to break every record in the sport of women’s and probably men’s soccer,” Cowan added. “And don’t ask me which one is Batman and which one is Robin.

“They are just talented, very competitive, driven young ladies that love soccer!,” he added. “I’m glad they play for CHS!!!”

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