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William Nelson is one of several key returning players for the CHS boys' tennis squad. (John Fisken photos)

   William Nelson is one of several key returning players for the CHS boys’ tennis squad. (John Fisken photos)

Koby

Koby Schreiber is one of four freshmen on this year’s team.

They have big shoes to fill and a big target on their chest.

And Ken Stange would have it no other way.

As the Coupeville High School boys’ tennis squad prepares to defend its 1A Olympic League championship, their battle-hardened coach is ready for whatever comes.

“The boys are excited to defend their league title,” he said. “It should be more difficult than last year.

“If we are able to defend, it will be all the more sweet.”

To stay atop the league, the Wolves will need to stare down Klahowya and Chimacum (and any Port Townsend mercenaries hiding on the Cowboy roster).

Coupeville is scheduled to face both foes three times apiece, though last year balky ferries, blustery weather and uncooperative schedule-makers left them only playing Chimacum once.

Still, the Wolves went a flawless 4-0 in league play when they were allowed on the court, then swept the top two singles slots at the league tourney.

Both of those players, Sebastian Davis and Connor McCormick, are gone, taken away by graduation, which will leave a hole at the top of the roster.

“We have some untested players who will vie for the three singles spots,” Stange said. “The competition should be difficult, and we should see some positive results as the season progresses.”

By contrast, Coupeville should be very strong on the doubles side of the ledger, where they return their top two teams intact.

Senior duo John McClarin and Joseph Wedekind and junior tandem Joey Lippo and William Nelson are both postseason-tested and looking for more.

Two other returning letter winners, seniors Jimmy Myers and Grey Rische, are expected to form a third doubles unit.

Junior Nick Etzell, who also lettered last year, leads a pack of players fighting for the singles slots or a position on the #4 doubles team.

In the mix are seniors Aiden Crimmins and Nick Blalock, sophomores Jakobi Baumann, Nile Lockwood, Jaschon Baumann and Tiger Johnson and freshmen Mason Grove, Koby Schreiber, Zach Ginnings and Elliot Johnson.

However it plays out, Stange, as always, is as concerned with personal improvement as much as winning titles.

“Our goals are to defend the league title, everyone grows their game, everyone has fun and everyone is an academic superstar,” he said.

“We want to earn as many spots in the district tourney as possible,” Stange added. “The season will be a success if we’re able to defend the title.

“Failing that, we will be successful if each and every player works his tail off.”

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Sage Renninger: She's kind of a big deal. (John Fisken photos)

Sage Renninger: She’s kind of a big deal. (John Fisken photos)

Ready since day one.

Sage Renninger, who will be a junior at Coupeville High School this year, has been at the forefront of Wolf athletics since her very first day as a freshman.

From the moment she stepped on the soccer pitch and tennis court to rep the red and black, Renninger, who also happens to celebrate a birthday today, has been a leader.

Sage is not a screamer, but her teammates gravitate to her anyway.

She leads by example, by busting her rear on every play, regardless of the score, and by projecting a calm coolness at all times, which always centers those around her.

Renninger’s coaches recognize this rare talent, having given her leadership responsibilities and captain honors at a fairly young age.

That she always responds to the added scrutiny, raising her own game, and helping her teammates lift their own, is a testament to her strength and drive.

Renninger is skilled (she’s a natural athlete, also superb as a runner and, back in the day, a hoops star), she is committed and she is classy.

She’s also smart as a tack, a fixture on the school’s honor roll, and seems to be universally well-liked by all those around her.

A pro at being caring to those she holds close in real life, while also being able to drop the boom on any fool who would dare invade her territory during competition, Sage is a winner, in every way.

So, as she celebrates her cake day, with a season-opening soccer jamboree in sight, we just want to take a quick moment to congratulate her on being supremely awesome and wish her all the best.

Happy birthday, Miss Renninger. May the best be yet to come.

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John McClarin (John Fisken photos)

   John McClarin, looking easy-breezy as tennis practice kicks off. (John Fisken photos)

Summer lessons have made Jakobi Baumann a lean, mean tennis machine.

Summer lessons have made Jakobi Baumann a lean, mean tennis machine.

Grey Rische

Grey Rische goes low for a volley.

Jimmy Myers

Once a young turk, Jimmy Myers is now a grizzled vet for the Wolf net squad.

juggle

The magician, Mason Grove, at work.

Joseph Wedekind: "I have to swat you. You're a tennis ball, I'm a hard-court assassin. It's just the way things are in this world."

   Joseph Wedekind: “I have to swat you. You’re a tennis ball, I’m a hard-court assassin. It’s just the way things are in this crazy, mixed-up world.”

Like the swallows returning to San Juan Capistrano, the netters have migrated back to the hard-courts.

As summer winds down, the Coupeville High School tennis players have grabbed their rackets and kicked off the opening week of practice.

While the Wolves lost several key players to graduation, they return a number of talented veterans, who will mesh with bright-eyed newcomers.

All are intent on defending Coupeville’s 1A Olympic League title and adding a fresh title board to the school’s brand spanking new historical display in the gym.

As they toiled under longtime CHS tennis guru Ken Stange Wednesday, the Wolves also had to deal with a wandering paparazzi or two, who were intent on capturing their early-season work.

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Nick Etzell gets ready to mash a return. (John Fisken photos)

Nick Etzell gets ready to mash a return. (John Fisken photos)

Etzell comes up gunning during summer ball.

Etzell comes up gunning during summer ball.

In my defense, Nick Etzell is not on Facebook.

Without the social media monster alerting me every 13 seconds that it’s someone’s cake day, the birthday beat gets a lot harder to properly run.

But, having been relentlessly prodded by Wolf fans who noticed me “slipping,” let’s take a few moments (a day late) to commemorate another trip around the sun by the youngest Etzell.

The Coupeville High School junior is the kind of easy-breezy dude who probably couldn’t care less I missed his actual birthday.

Nick has never seemed all that preoccupied with tooting his own horn, letting his play on the courts and field speak for itself.

And the kid’s got talent, just like all of his older siblings.

The lanky one may not be as willing to rip chunks of flesh from his knees as older brother Ben, but he’s still a deadly racket-wielder on the tennis court.

The top returning singles player from a year ago, after the graduation of Sebastian Davis and Connor McCormick, Etzell has the kingdom lying at his feet as he enters his third campaign under Ken Stange.

Toss in basketball, where the Wolf fan base hopes he returns after taking a year off, and baseball, where he’s a strikeout-hurling mound ace, and Nick is a star on the rise.

And one who just happens to be relentlessly smart and a great guy who lights up every room he enters.

So, a day late, happy birthday, Mr. Etzell!

PS — If you want to pretend I wrote this all yesterday, that would be sweet.

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Valen Trujillo: The Woman, the Myth, the Legend. (John Fisken photos)

Valen Trujillo: The Woman, the Myth, the Legend. (John Fisken photos)

What can we say about Valen Trujillo?

A lot, and all of it good.

The Coupeville High School senior, who celebrates a birthday today, has been as important as any athlete to the growth and success of Coupeville Sports.

She goes on a very small list, with people like Makana Stone, McKayla and McKenzie Bailey, Caleb Valko and Nick Streubel, for the impact they have had over the four years I’ve yammered away on this blog.

Miss Trujillo was an 8th grader when I first met her, a basketball fiend who made rival players cry and then came up into the stands afterward to thank me for attending her games.

Over the past four years, she has shown herself to be a completely brilliant young woman, in every way.

Athletically, it goes without saying.

Though she parted ways with the hoops world when she reached high school (I cry about that at least twice a week), Valen has blazed an extraordinary trail through the worlds of volleyball and tennis.

When she departs CHS, her memory will live on thanks to the volleyball record board in the gym hallway, as she already holds the school’s career record for digs.

Bolstered by Trujillo and classmates Tiffany Briscoe and Ally Roberts, the Wolf spikers won their first playoff match in years last season, and the outlook this year under new coach Cory Whitmore is so bright Valen might have to wear her tennis sunglasses indoors.

On the hard-court, Trujillo learned her game while backing up Jacki Ginnings, then blossomed as the #1 singles player when her mentor graduated.

A scrapper and a tactician, she’s the best player in the 1A Olympic League and has a legitimate shot at making a run at a state berth this coming spring.

And, this is all fine and good, but sports are just a small smidge of what makes Trujillo one of the true greats.

She is musically talented, both as a singer and guitar player, a brilliant baker (who has been kind enough to “bribe” me with some of her goodies), a protective, caring older sister to younger sibling Zoe, and deeply committed to her faith.

Now, maybe she’s killing hobos and burying them out behind the house. Anything is possible.

But everything I witnessed for the past four years, everything I have heard, points to one inescapable conclusion — Valen is the real deal.

She is kind, joyful, caring, genuinely friendly, whip-smart, strong as a rock, resolute and committed, essentially everything one looks for when they want to reach down and pluck up one student/athlete to show the world what Coupeville can produce.

Her parents, Craig and Amy, have done a remarkable job raising her and Zoe, and both girls reflect extremely well back on their parents, their faith, their school and their town.

When the time comes for Valen to leave CHS behind, when she hangs up her volleyball knee pads and her tennis racket and goes off to blossom in the outside world, it will be somewhat of a sad day.

I’ll miss seeing her streak across the horizon, a bright, burning ball of awesomeness illuminating all around her.

But it will also be a joyous day, because whatever she does with her life after high school, others who haven’t met her, who haven’t been able to enjoy having her as part of their life, will suddenly find themselves with a new blessing.

Trujillo was amazing as a middle school kid.

She’s been extraordinary as a high school teen.

Without a doubt, she’s going to make the entire world stand up and take notice of her as she becomes an adult.

So, happy birthday Valen.

And thank you, for letting all of us be a small part of your remarkable journey.

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