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Posts Tagged ‘Tiffany Briscoe’

Tiffany Briscoe, seen here earlier in her career, paced CHS with eight points and eight boards Tuesday night. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Tiffany Briscoe, seen here earlier in her career, paced CHS with eight points and eight boards Tuesday night. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Positives? Positives, positives…

Well, I had a really good whiskey barbecue hamburger before the game. That was certainly nice.

Other than that, Tuesday night was not especially cheery for Coupeville basketball fans who made the trip to the wilds of Tacoma for the district playoffs.

The Wolf girls, who sailed in the door carrying a 15-4 record and a #1 seed from the Olympic League, did not have their “A” game going.

Or their “B” game.

Or their “C” game.

Struggling from start to finish, with a few bright spots if you looked really closely, Coupeville simply, in the words of coach David King, “didn’t give ourselves a chance to win.”

The result was a 45-32 loss to Seattle Christian which puts the Wolves with their backs to the wall.

CHS can still make it to state for a second straight year, but, to do so, it needs to win back-to-back games back in Tacoma.

Up first is a loser-out tilt with Cascade Christian (9-12), which fell 41-25 to Bellevue Christian in Tuesday’s nightcap.

That game is set for 6 PM Thursday at Bellarmine Prep High School.

Win and the Wolves return to the same gym for a third time Saturday to face the loser of Thursday’s district championship match-up between BC and SC.

The winner Saturday nabs District 3’s second and final berth to the state tourney.

To make it back to state, Coupeville needs to quickly recapture the magic which fueled its success this season.

Stop throwing more passes to the fans than to each other.

Hit a free throw, any free throw (the Wolves were an ultra-deadly 2 of 17 Tuesday at the charity stripe).

Take the court with confidence fully in place.

Whether it was the 90+ mile trip, the 10-day layoff between games or a buildup of injuries and illness chipping away at their morale, the Wolves, with a few exceptions, looked flat and out of sorts from about two seconds after tip-off.

Coupeville claimed the ball first, thanks to Lindsey Roberts, then promptly did little to nothing with it.

“We played timid on offense and it started after we won the tip,” King said. “Instead of being in attack mode and looking to get something quick and taking it strong to the basket, we moved the ball slowly and ended up using most of the shot clock before getting a shot up.

“The playoff nerves got to us as well,” he added. “This really showed up with our shooting. Many of our shots were very short and some very hard and long.”

The Wolves fell behind early, and never recovered, or held the lead for any of the game’s 32 minutes.

CHS was down just 4-2, after Kailey Kellner popped an offensive rebound back up in and in, but then, in the blink of an eye, it was 9-2.

Kellner responded with a pair of long three-balls, one from each corner, to get the Wolves within 10-8, only to have Seattle Christian respond with its own trey with just a single tick left on the first quarter clock.

Coupeville opened the second with back-to-back buckets off of inside power moves from Mikayla Elfrank and Tiffany Briscoe to narrow things to 13-12.

Then the bottom fell out of the defense, first in short spurts and then consistently.

“One thing that has been a constant all year for us, defense, was left in Coupeville and didn’t make the trip with us,” King said.

“We had a game plan on how to defend their offense and the players we wanted to stop,” he added. “Our defensive rotation wasn’t there until late in the fourth quarter. The three players we couldn’t let beat us, did.”

Those three Warrior shooters King had earmarked combined to score 41 of Seattle’s 45 points.

With Coupeville’s defense far from lock-down, its shot selection scattershot and its ball control having little control (16 turnovers in the first half alone), it made for a long evening.

Seattle Christian stretched the lead out to eight at the half, pushed it to 11 after three quarters, then used a 9-0 run to open the fourth.

Down 45-25, the Wolves finally seemed to click into place during the game’s final two-and-a-half minutes.

Mixing Briscoe with reserves Lauren Rose, Allison Wenzel, Sarah Wright, Ema Smith and Kalia Littlejohn, Coupeville finally found its groove, closing the game by scoring the final seven points.

Briscoe knocked down consecutive layups off of nice feeds from Wright and Rose before Littlejohn drained a runner in the paint to close the night out.

King singled out his senior workhorse, who finished with eight points and a team-high eight rebounds, for being the one Wolf to play a consistent game from start to finish.

Tiffany played well on offense and rebounding. She showed up to play.”

He also liked the intensity Elfrank and Littlejohn showed during their time on the court.

Mikayla and Kalia brought some much needed fire and effort off the bench,” King said. “They both bring it defensively nightly.”

Kellner paced Coupeville with 10 points, while Elfrank and Briscoe went for eight apiece. Kalia (5) and Mia Littlejohn (1) rounded out the offensive attack.

Elfrank (7), Roberts (6) and Mia Littlejohn (6) helped on the boards.

While he was less than thrilled with much of Tuesday’s game, King remains confident his players can find their groove again quickly.

“We have some things to figure out in a very short period. I have the utmost confidence in the players to do just that.”

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Kyla Briscoe has a season-high five points Tuesday, helping tip the Wolf girls over the top against Concrete. (John Fisken photo)

   Kyla Briscoe has a season-high five points Tuesday, helping tip the Wolf girls over the top against Concrete. (John Fisken photo)

Courage under fire.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad showed just that Tuesday night, overcoming three missing players, early foul trouble and a rampaging opposing player to escape with a big win on the road.

The come-from-behind 46-41 non-conference victory over Concrete came thanks to season-best performances from Wolf role players, and a deadly eye at the free throw stripe in the game’s final seconds.

Mia Littlejohn and Mikayla Elfrank combined to drain four straight free throws in the game’s final 20 seconds, silencing the pro-Concrete crowd and sealing the win, which lifts the Wolves to 5-3.

CHS is now off for nine days thanks to Christmas break, not playing again until Dec. 30, when it travels to Orcas Island.

Having rallied from an eight-point halftime deficit, the Wolves were clinging to a one-point lead in the game’s final minute, when they turned the ball over.

Concrete took immediate advantage, knocking down a bucket to reclaim the lead at 41-40.

But, if they expected Coupeville to panic, they were flat out wrong.

Instead of calling a timeout, the Wolves pushed the Lions back on their heels, immediately in-bounding the ball and quickly running a play for their leading scorer, Kailey Kellner.

The senior gunner got the ball on the wing, faked her defender into the third row of the bleachers, drove hard to her right and viciously threw down a back-breaking jumper from just inside the key.

Concrete, by contrast, did blink.

Under pressure from Wolf defenders, the Lions booted the ball on the ensuing play and were forced to foul Coupeville to keep the clock from running out.

Littlejohn, who has been battling illness (like many of her teammates), calmly dropped both ends of her 1-and-1 opportunity through the net, then the CHS defense came up epic again.

Another play under pressure, another turnover for Concrete — this time courtesy of a long pass that caught air and sailed over its intended target by several feet.

Two more free throws, this time from Elfrank, and the deed was done.

The ending was a beautiful capper to a game that wasn’t all that pretty for Coupeville in the first half.

The Wolves jumped out to an early 4-0 lead, off of a put-back from Kyla Briscoe and a jumper by Lauren Grove (set up by a cross-court pass from Kellner), but then things fell apart for awhile.

Foul trouble (Concrete was in the bonus by the end of the first quarter and shot 16 free throws in the first half) hurt Coupeville, as did the Wolves inability to stop Jaycelyn Kuipers.

The Lion post player, who finished with a game-high 26, scored inside, outside and at the line and dominated in three of four quarters of play.

The one quarter she went AWOL though was the game’s turning point.

Down 25-17 at the break, Coupeville came out of the halftime locker room in a different mindset and held Kuipers scoreless during a 15-4 Wolf run.

“We came out in the third with some fire on the defensive end and created some tough shots and turnovers for Concrete,” said CHS coach David King. “This led to some quick buckets for us.”

The Wolves got something from everyone in the quarter, with Kellner hitting for five and setting up a baseline three-ball from Kyla Briscoe with a great set-up pass.

Lauren Grove added four, while Elfrank tossed in three as Coupeville snatched control of the game back.

“We won the quarter with hustle, smart defense and making the extra pass on offense,” King said.

With Lindsey Roberts, Charlotte Langille and Allison Wenzel all missing Tuesday, sophomore Ema Smith got a chance to swing up from JV and make her varsity debut.

“As expected, she gave us some good minutes and hustle,” King said. “She keeps working like she has on the JV team, she may earn the opportunity to be a swing player down the road this year.”

Sarah Wright and Tiffany Briscoe also earned praise, with the duo snatching seven rebounds apiece. Briscoe also had a team-high five steals.

Tiffany and Sarah probably had their best games on the season. This should launch their confidence,” King said. “Kyla played well; if she keeps making strides like last night, she will be another force coming off the bench and earning more playing time.”

Grove paced CHS with 10 points (she also snagged four boards, dealt out two assists and had Coupeville’s lone block on the night), while Elfrank and Kellner dropped in nine apiece.

Wright (6), Kyla Briscoe (5), Tiffany Briscoe (3), Lauren Rose (2) and Mia Littlejohn (2) also scored, while Kalia Littlejohn chipped in with two assists.

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Hope Lodell (John Fisken photos)

   Hope Lodell shows off her cannon of an arm, peppering the audience with little pink duckies. (John Fisken photos)

Payton

Payton Aparicio was locked in from opening tip to final point.

Emma

   Emma Smith and Co. are all smiles as they sail towards Coupeville volleyball’s first league title since 2004.

team

The Wolf bench always appreciates a good butt-whuppin’.

Tiffany

Tiffany Briscoe fights for a point at the net.

Valen Trujillo

How low can Valen Trujillo go to save a point? Very, very low.

Katrina

   Ashley Menges (14) gazes in awe as Katrina McGranahan pulls off some mid-air magic.

(Diane Fisken photo)

   John Fisken becomes a fuzzy pink wonder in tribute to his sister, Mary, who fought breast cancer for a decade-plus. (Diane Fisken photo)

Coupeville was in the pink Tuesday night.

The rampaging Wolf volleyball squad rolled to a straight-sets win over its biggest rival, while also raising money and awareness for the fight against breast cancer.

When he wasn’t snapping pics, John Fisken also participated in the Dig for the Cure festivities, letting CHS spikers turn his silver locks pink in honor of his sister Mary, who passed away recently after a 10-year battle with the disease.

To see more photos (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/VB-20161018-Klahowya-at-Coupev/

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Emma Smith gets diabolical. "Pardon me, 'scuse me, I'm just going to drop this tip right behind your back all sneaky like. We good?" (John Fisken photos)

   Emma Smith gets diabolical. “Pardon me, ‘scuse me, I’m just going to drop this tip right behind your back all sneaky like. We good?” (John Fisken photos)

Tiffany Briscoe

Tiffany Briscoe: “We good!”

Ally Roberts

Ally Roberts gets vertical and dials up another ace.

Aiden Crimmins

Wolf super-fan Aiden Crimmins demonstrates his skill with markers.

Allison Wenzel

Allison Wenzel uncorks “The Slicer.”

Etzell

   Even Joey Lippo (right) seems confused by the sign Ariah Bepler is holding. Nick Etzell (left), however, is just here for the free candy.

Sarah Wright

Sarah Wright gets medieval on some fools.

Life on the bench.

   Life on the bench (and one very eagle-eyed, camera-lovin’ Roberts doin’ what she does.)

The Wolves are flying high these days.

Three wins in three league matches have placed the Coupeville High School spikers firmly atop the 1A Olympic League standings a third of the way through the conference season.

But, while they’re busy smokin’ foes with killer spikes and vicious serves, the Wolves still find time to appear in glossy photos guaranteed to make grandmas everywhere very, very happy.

The pics above come to us courtesy John Fisken.

To see more of his work from Thursday night’s CHS win against Port Townsend (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes!), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/VB-20160929-Coupeville-vs-Pt-T/

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Valen Trujillo, seen here in an earlier match, spent much of Tuesday scraping balls off the floor to keep rallies alive. (John Fisken photo)

   Valen Trujillo, seen here in an earlier match, spent much of Tuesday scraping balls off the floor to keep rallies alive. (John Fisken photo)

It was not a perfect night, by any stretch of the imagination, but the seeds of progress continue to be sewn.

While the Coupeville High School volleyball squad fell in four tough sets to visiting Bellevue Christian Tuesday, the Wolves were able to come away with their share of positives.

A couple of cold stretches, and some unexpected struggles at the service stripe, ultimately sent CHS to a 22-25, 25-10, 25-21, 25-21 loss.

The non-conference defeat evens Coupeville’s record at 2-2 on the still-young season.

“There was not a whole lot of cohesion tonight,” said Wolf coach Cory Whitmore. “We missed some uncharacteristic serves at times that killed our momentum.

“And yet, we also had some really good serves at other times, such as in the first set,” he added. “Our service game was a doubled-edged sword.”

Even though Coupeville won the first set, Whitmore actually was more impressed with how his team played in the remaining sets, refusing to go down easily to a virtually error-free Vikings squad.

“I was impressed with our energy after the second set,” he said. “We’ll get back in the gym and tweak some things and look to keep our defensive intensity high.”

The Wolves trailed only once in the opening set (at 7-6) and rode several booming spikes from super-charged Hope Lodell to take the lead for good.

Once it was ahead, Coupeville mixed big kills (Tiffany Briscoe blasting one into the corner) with precision tips (Emma Smith tip-toeing through the air, her long, graceful fingers perfectly guiding the ball into open space) to put the set away.

The Wolves also got a bit of help on set point, when one Viking awkwardly ran over another, causing the girl in front to lurch forward and whiff on a spike.

Bellevue Christian pulled itself back together quickly though, using a 17-3 run to close out the second set and knot things up.

Mikayla Elfrank had a nice put-away and Lodell was droppin’ lasers from all angles, but the Wolves genuinely struggled for a long stretch of time in the second set, with miscommunication and poor hitting choices derailing their efforts.

The final two sets were more of an all-out war, as Coupeville upped its game and Bellevue responded.

The Wolves held leads in both sets (6-5 in the third and 14-11 in the fourth), but couldn’t hold off the Vikings, who, while not overly dynamic, were terribly consistent.

Allison Wenzel had a gorgeous tip for a winner, Smith had back-to-back winners on powerhouse swings and Briscoe came up big on several plays to highlight Coupeville’s final stand.

Tiffany Briscoe is working really hard and adapting well to playing a new position,” Whitmore said. “She has been, by far, our best-producing right side hitter.”

Lodell, who spent most of the match hopping around like she had springs in her shoes, paced the Wolves with seven kills, while Smith and Briscoe uncorked three apiece.

Valen Trujillo (14), Payton Aparicio (12) and Lodell (7) racked up big dig numbers, helping keep CHS in the match with their ability to keep points going.

The ultimate example of that came early in the fourth set, when Lodell sprinted off the court on a dead run, spearing a ball and redirecting it back into play a millisecond away from crashing head-first into the Bellevue cheering section.

Coupeville has a chance to get back on a winning streak when it hosts North Mason Thursday (varsity 4:00/JV and C-Team 5:15).

The non-conference tilt will cap a five-match, season-opening home stand.

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