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Posts Tagged ‘Port Townsend’

Kyla

  The future is now, as Kyla Briscoe (8) and fellow freshmen Lauren Rosen and Katrina McGranahan are seeing solid varsity time. (John Fisken photos)

(John Fisken photos)

  Wolf booters, fenced in, but ready to break out Thursday and claim second place in the Olympic League.

One team is in the playoffs. One will have to fight for its postseason life.

Everything will be decided Thursday. Maybe.

After absorbing incredibly narrow defeats Tuesday, both the Coupeville High School volleyball and girls’ soccer squads are facing must-win situations when they reunite with Port Townsend for their regular season finales.

Those games, coming on the heels of twin defeats on the road, will be on Whidbey (5 PM starts for both) tomorrow.

The Wolf girls’ soccer team (5-6-1 overall, 2-3 in Olympic League play) fell 1-0 to Port Townsend (3-10, 2-3), which has won back-to-back games after starting its season roughly.

With Chimacum (2-12, 1-5) losing 8-0 to Klahowya (14-1, 6-0) Tuesday, the Cowboys were eliminated from contention.

The Coupeville/Port Townsend rematch will be a battle for second place in a league where the top three make the playoffs.

While the Wolves are in, a win Thursday would be huge.

The #2 team gets a loser-out home playoff game Nov. 1 against the #3 team from the Nisqually League, while the #3 Olympic League team has to travel, facing the #2 Nisqually Valley squad.

While the booters will be playing for positioning, the Wolf spikers will be just trying to survive.

After falling 25-5, 31-33, 24-26, 25-23, 15-11 to Port Townsend, CHS (1-10, 1-4) is mired in last place, trailing Chimacum (4-9, 2-4) by a half game and the Redhawks (8-5, 2-3) by a game.

Klahowya (14-0, 6-0) has the title safely in hand, but Thursday’s rematch will decide the final two playoff spots. Or blow everything up.

A Port Townsend win would give it the #2 seed (and a home playoff match), while Chimacum would be #3 and Coupeville would be done.

But, if the Wolves can rebound and win, which is very reasonable given that they almost won Tuesday, that would create a three-way tie at 2-4.

If that happens, the three schools would have a mini-playoff to decide the #2 and #3 seeds.

The first match-up between Coupeville and Port Townsend got off to a sour start, then turned into a donnybrook.

“A tough loss tonight! They played their hearts out (with the exception of game #1) and can’t wait to take PT on again on Thursday,” CHS coach Breanne Smedley said. “We did a good job of reducing our errors and playing to our potential tonight.

“We just had a hard time holding on to some of our early leads in the fourth and fifth games, leaving us with too much catch-up to do towards the end.”

Valen Trujillo paced the Wolves with a flawless 23-for-23 performance at the service stripe, including three aces. She also went low a team-high 38 digs.

Lauren Rose doled out 37 assists, fellow freshman Katrina McGranahan collected three blocks and the big three — Hailey Hammer (15 kills, six digs), Kacie Kiel (10 kills, 25 digs) and Madeline Strasburg (eight kills, 23 digs, five aces) filled up the stat sheet.

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(Amy King photos)

Lookin’ fresh, the Wolf JV spikers hang out and wait for an opponent who never showed. (Amy King photos)

Katrina McGranahan spends her free time playing model.

Katrina McGranahan spends her free time playing model.

All dressed up and their dates didn’t show.

High winds forced cancellations by the ferry system Tuesday, leaving Port Townsend’s girls’ soccer and volleyball squads stranded on their side of the water.

That meant their scheduled Olympic League games in Coupeville had to be postponed, leaving the Wolf spikers standing around sporting new shirts for a cancer awareness night and no one to play while wearing them.

CHS players were planning to wear pink for breast cancer, blue for prostrate and red for Squamous Cell Carcinoma.

Early word is the volleyball match will be rescheduled for Thursday, Oct. 30 and the Dig for the Cure event will go on as planned.

No announcement yet on when the soccer game will be played.

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Kyla Briscoe (left) and big sis Tiffany are ready. Are you? (Amy Briscoe photo)

   Wolf varsity spikers Kyla (left) and Tiffany Briscoe are ready. Are you? (Amy Briscoe photo)

Volleyball is ready to do some work tonight.

When Coupeville hosts Port Townsend (JV at 5, varsity at 6:15), it’ll be two things in one.

On the one hand, it’s a showdown for positioning in the Olympic League standings at the halfway point of the six-game league schedule.

Coupeville (1-1 in league play, 1-7 overall) is in a tie with Chimacum (1-1, 3-6) for second place, a game off of Klahowya (2-0, 10-0).

The Redhawks (0-2, 5-4) have stumbled out of the gate after a strong non-conference stretch of the schedule, but could shake things back up with a win on the road.

To go along with the match, the two schools will also participate in a Dig for the Cure cancer awareness night.

The Wolf players will wear different colors to reflect the battles against different cancers and fans are encouraged to join in with their choice of clothing.

Pink is for breast cancer, blue for prostrate and red for Squamous Cell Carcinoma.

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Mitchell Losey rushed for 22 yards and made a pair of tackles in Friday night's loss. (John Fisken photo)

Mitchell Losey rushed for 22 yards and made a pair of tackles in Friday night’s loss. (John Fisken photo)

They can still make the playoffs.

Even after being pounded 56-20 at Port Townsend Friday, and losing their second-leading rusher to a broken hand, the Coupeville High School football squad is still very much in contention for a postseason berth.

To get there, though, the injury-plagued Wolves will need to take care of business and/or get a little help during the final two weeks of league play.

With the loss, CHS sits at 3-3 overall, 2-2 in the 1A Olympic League.

Port Townsend (4-2) and Klahowya (3-3), which routed Chimacum 41-15 Thursday, are atop the league at 3-1.

Chimacum (0-6), which Coupeville plays next Friday, Oct. 17, is 0-4 in league play.

The top two teams will advance to the playoffs, and, if the Wolves don’t stumble against the winless Cowboys, they would be in a tie for the second berth with the loser of next Friday’s Klahowya vs. Port Townsend tilt.

Coupeville closes league play Oct. 24, when it hosts Klahowya for Homecoming.

The Wolves then play a non-conference game at Concrete on Halloween night.

If Port Townsend beats Klahowya, the Redhawks would all but clinch the league title, with just a rivalry game against Chimacum remaining on its league scheule.

If that happens, Coupeville (barring an upset loss to the Cowboys) and Klahowya would face off at 3-2 with the second playoff berth on the line.

If Klahowya avenges an earlier loss to Port Towsend, however, then comes to Cow Town and stumbles, and the Redhawks still tame the Cowboys, all three schools not named Chimacum would finish at 4-2, having split games against each other.

After that, I have no idea.

To get to that point, however, Coupeville will need to get its defense back to where it was over the first four games.

After a strong start Friday — the game was tied 14-14 after one quarter and Coupeville was within two scores at the half — the Wolves were shredded in the second half.

“Our defense is missing right now,” said CHS coach Tony Maggio.

Port Townsend ran the score up in the second half, tacking on three touchdowns to widen a 35-20 halftime bulge.

The Wolf defensive unit is one currently scarred by injuries, and it added another when junior two-way terror Lathom Kelley broke his hand prior to the game and was unable to play.

Along with being a force on defense, Kelley is also the team’s second leading rusher and ran for 189 yards and three touchdowns when Coupeville beat Port Townsend 29-21 two weeks ago.

Josh Bayne paced the Wolf ‘d’ Friday, recording 10 tackles and assisting on three others, while Wiley Hesselgrave (8-2), Oscar Liquidano (7-0), Aaron Wright (4-2), Matt Shank (5-0), Hunter Smith (4-0) and Jacob Martin (3-0) all chipped in.

Mitchell Losey (2 tackles), Ryan Griggs (1), CJ Smith (1) and Isaac Vargas (1) also got their names in the stat sheets, with Wright and Vargas recovering fumbles.

On the offensive side of the ball, Coupeville had a nice mix, throwing for 200 yards and rushing for 123 more.

Wolf QB Joel Walstad, still recovering from a hip pointer, connected on 16 of 32 passes for 157 yards and a touchdown, while Bayne hooked up with Griggs on a 43-yard pass on his only attempt.

Griggs led the Wolf receivers, hauling down four catches for 92 yards. Bayne (5-51), Hesselgrave (3-39), Martin (3-17) and CJ Smith (1-1) were also effective targets.

Where Port Townsend excelled was in largely shutting down the Wolf running game, which had blistered them the first time around.

Playing in Coupeville, the Wolves rumbled for 333 yards. Friday, that number went way, way down, with Bayne, the #2 rusher in 1A, held to 61 yards on 17 carries.

Martin (4-33), Losey (3-22), Hesselgrave (1-6) and Walstad (1-1) all carried the ball as well, with limited success.

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Josh Bayne is the #1 rusher in 1A this season. (John Fisken photos)

Josh Bayne is the #1 rusher in 1A this season. (John Fisken photos)

CJ Smith hits wrap drive. (John Fisken photos)

CJ Smith hits warp drive.

Ryan Griggs has the bloodlines for athletic success. His dad is former Wolf star Kit Manzanares, who I used to cover back in my Whidbey News-Times days.

Ryan Griggs has the bloodlines for athletic success. His dad is former Wolf star Kit Manzanares, who I used to cover back in my Whidbey News-Times days.

First place is on the line.

And yes, this is still early in the season, but when Coupeville hosts Port Townsend Friday night (5:30 kickoff), it’s for sole possession of first place in the 1A Olympic League football standings.

The Wolves, who will be playing their fourth straight home game (four of the next five are on the road) are 2-1 overall, 1-0 in league play, a record shared by the visiting Redhawks.

League mates Chimacum and Klahowya, which will pair off Friday, are both 0-3, 0-1.

The battle for the top spot will feature some of the biggest stat compilers in 1A this season.

Coupeville has the #1 rusher (Josh Bayne, 436 yards), #2 quarterback (Joel Walstad, 652 yards) and three of the top ten receivers (#2 CJ Smith, #7 Bayne and #10 Ryan Griggs) in their classification.

Port Townsend answers with the #3 rusher (David Sua, 292 yards), #6 passer (Jeff Seton, 435 yards) and #8 receiver (Austin Khile) in 1A.

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