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Valen Trujillo

Valen Trujillo: a Hall of Famer on the court and in life.

This is sort of odd, if you think about it.

Today, as I hold my weekly induction into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, the 72nd class is comprised of one lone athlete going in by herself.

And yet that athlete, maybe as much as any I have covered in my years of writing, is the very embodiment of a true team player.

Every step of the way, from the first time I watched her play basketball in middle school until the final time she dove on a floor and cartwheeled Saturday, trying to keep her prep volleyball career alive as long as possible, Valen Trujillo was all about her team.

Even when she’s on a tennis court playing singles, one of the ultimate solitary athletic pursuits, she always wants to know how her fellow players are doing.

Win or lose (and she usually wins), she always stays to watch and support her classmates and friends, whether they’re fighting for a varsity win or playing way down on the JV ladder.

It is an enduring testament to her spirit, which has always soared far above her stellar athletic talent.

And yes, I know she’s not done with her high school sports career.

Valen will be back on the tennis court this spring for one final run at net glory (and who knows, she might shock me and return to basketball when practice starts in a week — I’m not holding my breath … or am I?).

But the end of the volleyball season Saturday is one of those seminal moments that will echo for some time, and I say, why wait to induct her?

It was on the volleyball court where she has lived and died (metaphorically, at least) and left a fair amount of her skin.

Trujillo was a libero, the rock anchoring the back line, and her stats can stand with any Wolf to ever put on the uniform.

When the volleyball record board is updated, her name will tower large on it, as she smashed numerous records during her four-year run.

But more than the records, it was her love for the game which will endure in our memories.

The way she poured out her heart on every play.

Whether crouched low on the court, awaiting a serve, like a wild cat ready to pounce, or madly bouncing off a wall as she sprinted full-bore after a ball her mind (but not her heart) already knew was long gone, Valen never, ever gave you less than her best.

Every coach she had spoke of Trujillo with a reverence which is rare.

It was a universal reaction I have witnessed with only a handful of other Wolf athletes, fellow Hall of Famers such as Makana Stone, Nick Streubel and Breeanna Messner.

There are great athletes and great people, and when the two meet, it is something special.

Valen is something special.

The first time I put a face to the name was at a middle school girls basketball game five years ago.

Trujillo smiled and politely said hello to the five King’s players on the other side of the court before tip-off, then made two of those rivals run out of the gym crying once the game started.

She wasn’t a dirty player, but she was a bulldog, one who brought back memories of the immortal Baddest Woman Alive herself, Jodi (Christensen) Crimmins, who once gave a CHS hoops teammate a black eye during a battle for a rebound.

Valen, like Jodi, believed without a doubt that EVERY loose ball belonged to her, and that no girl, now or forever, was going to take it away from her.

And then, after the game, after Coupeville won and Trujillo went down the line hugging each and every one of her teammates, she passed by as she went to her parents, Craig and Amy, who were seated in the stands not far from where I was.

Stopping for a second, this young woman, who I had never met before, looked at me and said “Thank you for coming to my game.”

For a second I thought she was being sarcastic.

Five years, and a few thousand other “thank you for coming to my games” have taught me that couldn’t have been further from the truth.

My greatest disappointment in my run here at Coupeville Sports was that Trujillo left basketball behind when she entered high school. It would have been glorious!

But I understand her desire to focus on schoolwork and singing, and I’ve dealt with it.

Plus, the home-made cookies and chips and salsa Valen gave me certainly helped ease the “pain…”

Baker, warbler, guitar picker, student, athlete, bright shining beacon of light and love to everyone she meets, Miss Trujillo is a rare gem.

It’s not much in the grand scheme of things, but today, I welcome her to my lil’ digital hall of honor.

As long as Coupeville Sports exists on the internet, Valen Trujillo will live on, up at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

So, let me flip it around on you.

“Thank you, Miss Trujillo, for letting me come to your games.”

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Joey Lippo

Joey Lippo contemplates attacking the cameraman. (John Fisken photos)

William Nelson

William Nelson gets elegant.

Now they wait six months and hope for a miracle.

Coupeville High School netters William Nelson and Joey Lippo went back to Tacoma Tuesday for one more round of postseason action, but failed to get the win they needed to guarantee their season would continue.

The Wolf juniors got stronger as the match progressed, but couldn’t overcome their private school foes, falling 6-1, 7-5 to Micha Wibowo and Jack Jorgenson of Charles Wright Academy.

With the win, the CWA duo claimed second place at the 1A West Central District tennis tourney, giving the Tarriers a sweep of the top two doubles slots.

Wibowo and Jorgenson will join district champs Dylan Sam and Raghav Agrawal at the state tourney in Yakima next spring.

For the Coupeville pair, who finished third in a field of eight teams at districts, their season is 99.98% done.

Why not 100%?

Because Washington state high school sports are a mess.

Some schools play boys tennis in the fall (like CHS), while a ton wait until the spring.

With that in mind, the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association doesn’t announce state tourney allocations for each district until May, regardless of when that district plays.

Coupeville’s current home, District 3, is guaranteed two state slots, and there’s a (very) slim chance of landing a third.

Which means you can hold onto hope even if longtime Wolf coach Ken Stange admitted earlier in the week it would be “very unlikely.”

Of course, six months is a long time, and if something were to happen to either Charles Wright duo (skiing accidents? alien abduction? bribes?), Coupeville is first up as an alternate, as well.

If nothing else, Nelson and Lippo, who should be playing soccer and baseball, respectively, when spring arrives, led a strong Wolf showing in the postseason.

After winning its second straight 1A Olympic League title, Coupeville advanced eight netters to districts, most of any team there, and most in Stange’s decade-plus run as the school’s net guru.

Singles players Nick Etzell and Jakobi Baumann and doubles duos Joseph Wedekind/John McClarin and Grey Rische/Jimmy Myers joined Lippo and Nelson at districts.

Of that group, Etzell, Baumann, Lippo and Nelson are underclassmen and can return next season.

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Wolf netters William Nelson (top, left) and Joey Lippo will hitch a ride to Tacoma Tuesday with coach Ken Stange. (John Fisken photos)

   William Nelson (top, left) and Joey Lippo will hitch a ride to Tacoma Tuesday with coach Ken Stange. Win and they’re off to state this spring. (John Fisken photos)

They enjoyed Tacoma so much they’re going back.

Coupeville High School juniors William Nelson and Joey Lippo won two of three matches Thursday at the 1A West Central District tennis tourney, keeping their state dreams alive.

The Wolf duo and coach Ken Stange will return to the Sprinker Tennis Center Tuesday, Nov. 1 for one more match.

Lippo and Nelson will face Micha Wibowo and Jack Jorgenson of Charles Wright Academy to decide 2nd and 3rd place, with the winner punching their tickets to state.

The loser Tuesday might (and it’s a very big might) also advance, as high school tennis in Washington state is a complicated mess.

With some schools playing in the fall and others in the spring, state is not held until May 26-27 in Yakima.

Along with the delay, the WIAA also doesn’t release allocations for each district until the spring.

That means District 3, where Coupeville plays, won’t know if it gets two or three slots to state for months.

For now, the district champs (Dylan Sam and Raghav Agrawal of CWA) are definitely in, as are the winners Tuesday.

To get to that match, Lippo and Nelson had to knock off their own teammates, beating CHS seniors Joseph Wedekind and John McClarin for the first time this season.

The older duo had been Coupeville’s #1 doubles team for two seasons.

The Wolves were strongly represented at districts, with eight players. Charles Wright had six, Klahowya four and Cascade Christian and Vashon Island three apiece.

It was the final tourney for Coupeville seniors Wedekind, McClarin, Jimmy Myers and Grey Rische.

Complete Thursday results:

Singles:

Nick Etzell

Lost to Zane Mian (CWA) 6-0, 6-1
Lost to Jimmy Opitz (CWA) 6-1, 6-2

Jakobi Baumann

Lost to Jack Hannah (CC) 6-0, 6-1
Lost to Caden Haga (K) 6-0, 6-3

Joseph Wedekind/John McClarin

Lost to Mason Rice/Finley Oswald (V) 7-6(7-3), 7-6(7-5)
Beat Grey Rische/Jimmy Myers (CP) 6-3, 4-6, 6-3
Lost to Joey Lippo/William Nelson (CP) 6-1, 6-3

Joey Lippo/William Nelson

Beat Wulf/Bartels (CC) 6-7(4-7), 6-4, 6-3
Lost to Dylan Sam/Raghav Agrawal (CWA) 6-1, 6-2
Beat Wedekind/McClarin (CP) 6-1, 6-3

Grey Rische/Jimmy Myers

Lost to Jack Jorgenson/Micha Wibowo (CWA) 6-3, 6-0
Lost to Wedekind/McClarin (CP) 6-3, 4-6, 6-3

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John McClarin teamed with Joseph Wedekind to win the doubles crown at Saturday's 1A Olympic League tourney. (John Fisken photos)

   John McClarin teamed with Joseph Wedekind to win the doubles crown at Saturday’s 1A Olympic League tourney. (John Fisken photos)

Nick Etzell finished third in singles play, earning a trip to districts.

Nick Etzell finished third in singles play, earning a trip to districts.

The Elite Eight. (Photo courtesy Ken Stange)

The Elite Eight. (Photo courtesy Ken Stange)

Ken Stange is going to have a lot of company.

When the Coupeville High School boys’ tennis coach heads to Tacoma next Wednesday for districts, he’ll be taking along the biggest contingent of players in his decade-plus career at the school.

Sweeping the top three doubles slots and pulling off a pair of upsets on the singles side Saturday at the 1A Olympic League tournament, the Wolves qualified eight players to advance.

Coupeville, the regular season champs, accounted for two-thirds of the players who punched their tickets, with only one Wolf, freshman Mason Grove, failing to advance.

Grove did win a match, though, as the CHS netters went a combined 9-6 on the day.

The Wolves finished 1-2-3 in doubles and claimed third and fourth in singles, while Klahowya took the top two singles slots and fourth in doubles.

Chimacum and Port Townsend failed to advance any players.

Complete results:

Singles:

Nick Etzell (3rd)

Beat Spencer Winters (K) 9-7
Lost to Taylor Fite (K) 6-0, 6-0
Beat Jakobi Baumann (CP) 4-6, 6-2, 12-10

Jakobi Baumann (4th)

Beat Isaiah Treibel (PT) 8-2
Lost to Caden Haga (K) 6-0, 6-1
Lost to Etzell (CP) 4-6, 6-2, 12-10

Mason Grove (DNP)

Beat Zackery Kienle (PT) 8-0
Lost to Fite (K) 8-0

Doubles:

John McClarin/Joseph Wedekind (1st)

Bye
Beat Grey Rische/Jimmy Myers (CP) 6-4, 6-2
Beat William Nelson/Joey Lippo (CP) 6-3, 2-6, 7-5

William Nelson/Joey Lippo (2nd)

Bye
Beat Kyle Schoening/Parker Short (K) 6-0, 6-2
Lost to McClarin/Wedekind (CP) 6-3, 2-6, 7-5

Grey Rische/Jimmy Myers (3rd)

Beat Ben Cook/Joe Bowman (K) 8-2
Lost to McClarin/Wedekind (CP) 6-4, 6-2
Beat Schoening/Short (K) 7-6(8-6), 7-5

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Zach Ginnings (John Fisken photo)

   Zach Ginnings teamed with Jaschon Baumann to put up a strong fight at #4 doubles Tuesday afternoon. (John Fisken photo)

Tuesday was the appetizer, Thursday is the main course.

Two days before it heads off to the Olympic League tournament, the Coupeville High School boys’ tennis squad wrapped up regular-season play with a 6-2 non-conference loss at South Whidbey.

The match gave the Wolves, who finished 5-8 on the season, some valuable court time, as two of their previous three matches were rained-out.

With little at stake, CHS shuffled its roster a bit Tuesday, giving doubles ace Joey Lippo his first crack at playing singles.

Thursday, the Wolves will take three singles players (Nick Etzell, Jakobi Baumann and Mason Grove) and three doubles duos to Chimacum for the league tourney.

John McClarin/Joseph Wedekind, Lippo/William Nelson and Grey Rische/Jimmy Myers will represent CHS, which went 4-0 in conference play to nab its second straight regular season league title.

The top four finishers in each flight at the league tourney advance to districts Oct. 26-27.

Complete Tuesday results:

1st singles Joey Lippo lost to Levi Buck 2-6, 6-2, 7-6(7-2)

2nd singles Nick Etzell beat Jeffrey Parker 6-3, 6-0

3rd singlesJakobi Baumann lost to Nick Simmons 7-5, 4-6, 10-2

4th singlesMason Grove beat Andrew Baeslar (retired)

1st doublesJoseph Wedekind/John McClarin lost to Ryan Wenzek/Austin Sterba 7-5, 6-2

2nd doubles Grey Rische/Jimmy Myers lost to Kody Newman/Cameron Asay 6-2, 6-2

3rd doublesAiden Crimmins/Tiger Johnson lost to Ari Rohan/Aengus Dubendorf 6-0, 6-1

4th doubles Jaschon Baumann/Zach Ginnings lost to Larsen Christiansen/Sean Drake 6-3, 6-0

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