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Posts Tagged ‘Tiffany Briscoe’

Woman down. A basketball injury has felled CHS star Tiffany Briscoe. (Amy Briscoe photo)

  Woman down. A basketball injury has brought bright new colors to the leg of CHS star Tiffany Briscoe. (Amy Briscoe photo)

Briscoe, pre-painful injury.

Briscoe, pre-painful injury.

Superstar down! Superstar down!!

A nasty-looking basketball injury has felled Coupeville High School three-sport athlete Tiffany Briscoe a mere week before the start of practice for a new volleyball season.

The injury happened Sunday during an open gym for basketball.

The sophomore got her foot caught and rolled it, with the offending leg making an audible popping noise.

Now operating under the watchful eye of mom Amy Briscoe, Tiffany is relying on ice, elevation and crutches and staying off the foot.

But, even with visible evidence of the injury, as her foot turns multiple colors, getting the tough-nosed teen to admit she’s in pain takes a bit of wrangling.

“Just keeping an eye on it for now,” Amy Briscoe said. “Yeah, it is nasty looking, but getting her to admit she’s hurt is impossible!”

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Incoming CHS freshman Allison Wenzel.

Incoming CHS freshman Allison Wenzel.

Wolf sophomores Valen Trujillo (left) and Tiffany Briscoe.

Wolf sophomores Valen Trujillo (left) and Tiffany Briscoe.

Play until you can’t move.

That’s the mantra for Coupeville High School girls who are taking part in intensive all-day workouts at a volleyball camp run by Western Washington University.

The off-season workouts may leave them sore and tired (“Watching my girls walk after two days and 12 hours of volleyball is mildly entertaining…” said mom Amy Briscoe with a laugh), but it also prepares them for the season ahead.

As Coupeville moves out of the 1A/2A Cascade Conference and into the 1A Olympic League, the time is ripe for the Wolves to reemerge as a true powerhouse.

Every extra spike, every dig, every finely-tuned serve will help them get there.

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Tiffany Briscoe

Tiffany Briscoe collected her first RBI Thursday and came extremely close to busting the game open in the seventh with a smash to second. (John Fisken photo)

So, so close.

Stranding 10 runners on base and unable to get that one elusive big hit to bust things wide open Thursday, the Coupeville High School softball squad narrowly missed out on a chance to nab a season sweep over arch-rival South Whidbey.

Suffering a 5-4 loss that ended when Tiffany Briscoe’s hard smash was knocked down at second for a game-ending out with the bases juiced, the Wolves fell to 4-8 overall, 3-8 in Cascade Conference play.

They still hold a one-game lead over the Falcons (3-10 in league play) in the race for the #1 playoff seed among 1A schools from the 1A/2A conference.

If the teams tie, Coupeville will own the tiebreaker, having taken two of three from their Langley foes this season.

The Wolves looked like they might run away with the game right out of the gate, but then things stalled.

Madeline Roberts walked to lead off the game, took second on a wild pitch and craftily stole third to rattle the Falcon hurler.

Breeanna Messner took advantage, lashing an RBI double to left center, her first of a game-high three hits and the CHS fan section was jumpin.’

Unfortunately, that was where the offense came to a skidding halt, as a ground out and two strikeouts halted the brief rally. After that, Coupeville wouldn’t score again until the fifth.

South Whidbey pieced together a couple of nice hits and took advantage of CHS errors, both physical and mental, and built a 5-1 lead.

It could have been worse, but Wolf hurler McKayla Bailey found her groove and Coupeville pulled off a couple of defensive gems.

Madeline Strasburg gunned down a runner at the plate, with Wolf catcher Messner smartly moving up the third base line to snag the throw from center and slap down the tag.

Bailey and Messner later triggered a wham-bam double play to get out of a bases-loaded jam. Bailey snagged a come-backer, fired to Messner for the force at home, then watched as her battery mate nailed the batter headed to first to end the inning.

The Wolves also got nice plays from Roberts, who sprinted over from shortstop to snag a fly ball down the line in left, and second baseman Emily Coulter, who pulled off a snazzy backhand dig on a ball hit up at the middle.

Coupeville cut away at the lead with Briscoe’s first RBI of the season, then launched what looked like it might be a game-winning rally in the seventh.

Singles by Messner, Hammer and Bailey loaded the bags, before Strasburg plated a run with a perfectly-placed blooper between the Falcon pitcher and first baseman.

Down by one, Briscoe, a freshman who has begun to swing a dangerous bat, smacked a liner to the right side of second base.

An inch either way and CHS runners would have been dancing around the bags, but a Falcon fielder got her glove on it at the last second and knocked it down, setting up a game-ending force play.

Messner (3) and Strasburg (2) led the hit parade for the Wolves, while Roberts, Hammer, Bailey, Briscoe and Coulter all rapped out one apiece.

With his first two hitters getting hot, CHS coach David King is anxious to see his entire lineup swing the bat consistently.

“Players are working hard every day, know what needs to be fixed, but when we get into games we revert back to being too anxious and not showing discipline at the plate and not staying back on the ball,” he said.

Bree has been our most consistent hitter up to this point and Madi Roberts is putting pressure on the defense with walking or getting her hits,” King added. “If we can get others to join in, we will be a team that will turn these one-run losses into wins.”

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Skyler Lawrence (left) and Briscoe, smiling now but ready to unleash defensive terror on their foes.

Skyler Lawrence (left) and Tiffany Briscoe may smile a lot, but they’re nobody’s pushovers. (Amy Briscoe photo)

It was one of those kinds of nights.

The sort of Friday night when you face a rough-and-tumble Sultan squad that’s not fond of making the long trip to Whidbey Island, and you get as many bruises as points scored.

That number would be 26 for the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team, with at least 17 of those bruises going to freshman post Tiffany Briscoe, who spent much of the game being hammered to the floor.

But, since she’s a born-and-bred tough girl, she would bounce back up each time, smile mostly still intact on her face, and try to tuck renegade strands of hair back into place before the next freight train smacked into her.

Her resilience under fire — and the taco salad, cookies and cupcakes supplied to the team after the game by her mom, Amy — were the big highlights for a Wolf squad that scrapped to a 20-20 tie midway through the third, before eventually falling 39-26.

With swing players Wynter Thorne, McKayla Bailey and Monica Vidoni having moved up full-time to the varsity and freshman point guard Carlie Rosenkrance limited in her JV playing time, so she’d be available for varsity action if needed, the Wolves were looking for someone to step up and take the reins.

Lauren Grove did so, directing traffic for much of the game — when she wasn’t being smacked in the face or flung to the floor — and her two first-quarter buckets helped spur Coupeville to a 12-10 lead.

McKenzie Bailey’s three-point bomb from downtown capped the first quarter, while fellow guard Emily Coulter rained down a one-handed trey that kicked off the second half and made her dad scream like a (very happy) wild man.

The Wolves fell behind by eight near the end of the third quarter, then used a 5-2 run capped by a banked-in jumper from Skyler Lawrence to get back to five at 30-25.

After that, Coupeville’s shots went ice cold, however, allowing the visiting Turks to close the game on a 9-1 run.

If nothing else, the Wolves shared the ball well, with nine of their 11 players scoring.

Coulter, Grove and Rosenkrance led the way with four apiece, while Kailey Kellner and Bailey both added three. Rounding out the scoring list with a bucket apiece were Sophia Jebrail, Briscoe, Lawrence and Mattea Miller.

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Tiffany Briscoe (33), living in the land of the flying elbows. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Tiffany Briscoe (33), hard at work in the land of the flying elbows. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Soccer star Jenn Spark makes the jump to the hardwood.

Jenn Spark (John Fisken photo)

Injuries continue to wreak havoc with the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball program.

Even as senior captain Breeanna Messner returns to action Tuesday at Granite Falls — after missing Saturday’s loss to Mount Vernon Christian after smacking her head on the hardwood a night before — the Wolves will be down several players.

The biggest impact will be felt by the loss of junior post Hailey Hammer, who may be out several weeks after hurting her ankle in the MVC game.

On crutches as recently as Monday, her absence costs the Wolf varsity (5-5 overall, 2-3 in Cascade Conference play) a starter.

“She went to the doctor yesterday and they did x-rays. Not broken. Wants to see her again next week,” said mom Linda Hammer. “They want to make sure she didn’t tear anything. I think she just rolled it.”

“It’s pretty swollen still and it’s bruising nicely,” she added. “I’m hoping she’s only out a couple weeks.”

The Coupeville JV squad has dealt with injuries all season, as well.

Miranda Engle (ankle) never saw the floor before her season was scrubbed, while McKenzie Bailey is currently wearing a sling as she recovers from a nasty fall at Sultan.

Joining them on injured reserve — at least for a bit — are sophomore Jenn Spark and freshman Tiffany Briscoe, who both have taken knocks to the head recently.

Briscoe’s came on the basketball court, while Spark slipped and whacked her noggin on a muddy soccer field in Shelton Sunday while playing with her select soccer team.

Both are expected to be out for at least a week as a cautionary measure.

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