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Posts Tagged ‘undefeated’

   Coupeville grad Nick Streubel hangs out with family after a game. (Photo courtesy Nanette Streubel)

   He’s like a Greek god, he is. (Photo property of Central Washington University football)

Nick Streubel is healthy and the college football world trembles.

After missing all but one game last year thanks to an injury, The Big Hurt is back in the lineup for the Central Washington University football squad and the Wildcats can not be beaten.

A 17-10 come-from-behind win over North Alabama Saturday lifts CWU, ranked #9 in the last NCAA D-II poll, to a crisp 8-0.

The Wildcats have three regular season games left, all against league foes who they beat the first time around.

Central hosts Azusa Pacific for Senior Night Oct. 28 in a game which will be streamed by ESPN3, then hits the road to face Simon Fraser and Humboldt State the next two weeks.

Streubel, a three-sport star (football, basketball, track and field) during his days wandering Coupeville’s campus, is a red-shirt sophomore.

With six games under his belt this season, he has logged time as a lineman in 13 college games during his career.

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   An injury kept Maddie Vondrak on the bench Thursday, but she was invaluable as a sideline reporter. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The road warriors continue to rock.

Half the team has yet to play a high school volleyball match at home, but Coupeville’s JV spikers haven’t let unfamiliar courts throw off their game.

After running host North Mason off the floor to a 25-15, 25-14, 25-27 tune Thursday, the Wolf young guns are a crisp 3-0 on the season.

And now, finally, their new players will get a chance to play in front of their home fans for the first time, when Coupeville hosts Klahowya next Tuesday, Sept. 26.

While the trek to the wilds of Belfair (72.6 miles one way) made for a long day, CHS pulled things together quickly against their 2A opponents.

“The JV played well today after enduring the long trip to North Mason,” said Wolf coach Chris Smith. “Our bus legs had us playing a little slow out of the gate but we mustered up the energy.”

Raven Vick put the punctuation mark on both of the first two sets, ending the first with a service ace and the second with an emphatic kill.

Camped on the bench for a night with an ankle injury, Maddie Vondrak put in time as an unpaid assistant coach, and she was a treasure trove of info.

Documenting the Wolves high points (of which there were many), she hailed Chelsea Prescott, Maya Toomey-Stout and Zoe Trujillo for “aggressive swings” and Lucy Sandahl for “awesome sets and passes.”

Coupeville passed the ball strongly all night, with Emma Mathusek, Vick and Trujillo leading the way.

The Wolves stayed on the attack in the second set, with Sandahl firing multiple aces to key the offense.

Prescott was a constant threat, praised by Vondrak for “always reading, looking for spots when serving/hitting, reaching when hitting and nice covering.”

Her other fellow freshmen were on top of their game, as well, with Kylie Chernikoff delivering “an awesome hit on the 17th point,” while Savannah Smith had “good reads and transitions.”

With the win in hand for Coupeville, the two teams opted to play a largely meaningless third set, then promptly went to war whether it mattered or not.

Vondrak gushed over her teammates hustle and refusal to let plays die, even when the ball was seemingly dead in the net.

Whether it was Mathusek’s “awesome down-balls,” Sandahl dealing with “tricky tips,” or Chernikoff and Prescott spraying service aces, everyone chipped in on the victory.

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   Jae LeVine and the hard-charging Wolf softball sluggers are a pristine 7-0. (John Fisken photo)

Hide the women and children.

There is a wild beast on the rampage and it’s chewing up and spitting out everything that gets in its way.

Crunching hits left and right, the Coupeville High School softball squad is off to the program’s best start in more than a decade, rolling to a perfect record heading into a major clash Wednesday afternoon.

The Wolves, fresh off a 16-2 dismantling of 2A North Mason Tuesday, host Chimacum 3:30 today in a battle for sole possession of first place in the 1A Olympic League.

The two-time defending champion Cowboys are 3-0 in league play, 4-1 overall, while CHS sits at 2-0, 7-0.

Coupeville will enjoy home cooking and a damp, windy prairie for their league clash, while Tuesday was all about spending most of the day on the bus.

The round-trip to Belfair gave the Wolves a solid eight-plus hours of listening to the wheels go round and round, but once CHS was on the field, it showed no ill effects.

“It was a long day but the ladies persevered and took care of business,” said Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan. “We got off the bus and got ready to play and the girls focused and got down to business right away.”

The Wolves piled up a quick three runs in the top of the first, then dropped the hammer with a five-spot the next inning around.

Coupeville beat the snot out of the ball, redirecting North Mason pitching for 12 hits, including a home run from Katrina McGranahan which cleared the center field fence with room to spare.

The Wolf hurler finished with three hits, four RBI, five runs scored (and a stolen base for good measure), while her catcher, Sarah Wright, spanked three hits as well, including a double.

She also had four RBI, while Mikayla Elfrank added two hits, three runs and a steal.

Coupeville got singles from Veronica Crownover, Robin Cedillo, Lauren Rose and Jae LeVine, as seven of nine starters recorded hits.

The only two who were denied base-knocks, Hope Lodell and Tiffany Briscoe, both reached base on walks, with Lodell scampering home to score.

North Mason could do little to rally, with Katrina McGranahan racking up six strikeouts and facing only three batters over the minimum.

“Our pitching overpowered them from the beginning and when they did hit it they were mostly weak infield hits,” Kevin McGranahan said. “Our defense again played strong behind that pitching and kept any possible rallies from starting.”

While the undefeated run is the talk of the town, the Wolves are being careful not to look too far ahead.

“I am extremely proud of these ladies and how they play as a team and for each other, not for themselves,” Kevin McGranahan said. “We are playing good softball and taking it one game at a time.”

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Makana

   Makana Stone and the quiet satisfaction of being 13-0 as a college basketball player. (John Fisken photo)

Makana Stone may never lose a college basketball game at this rate.

The Coupeville High School grad and her Whitman College women’s hoops squad rolled past the halfway point of the regular season Saturday night and they did it in style, bouncing visiting Pacific University 75-58.

The win lifts the Blues to 13-0 overall, 4-0 in Northwest Conference play.

Whitman, currently ranked #16 in the nation in NCAA D-3 play, actually fell behind in the early going, a rarity this season.

Trailing their Oregon foes 23-22 after one quarter of play, the Blues rebounded to take the lead for good in the second quarter.

Stone came off the bench to tally a bucket and snatch four rebounds during the surge, giving Whitman bang for its buck.

Chelsi Brewer knocked down 15 and Casey Poe tickled the twines for 14 as five different Blues players ended the game in double figures.

Midway through her freshman campaign Stone is averaging 5.1 points and 4.6 rebounds a game. She’s also second on the team in field goal percentage at 51.9% (29 of 57).

Whitman returns to action next weekend, when it hosts Pacific Lutheran University Friday and the University of Puget Sound Saturday.

While PLU is 1-12 and would appear to be easy pickings, UPS is 12-1 and sits in a first-place tie with Whitman at 4-0 in league play.

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Mia Littlejohn piled up eight points, three rebounds and three assists as Coupeville won its 21st straight league game Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Mia Littlejohn piled up eight points, three rebounds and three assists as Coupeville won its 21st straight league game Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

In the relatively short two-and-a-half year history of the 1A Olympic League, no program has been as successful in conference play as the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad.

The Wolves are one of four varsity teams to have never lost in league competition, and, with a come-from-behind 39-29 drubbing of host Port Townsend Tuesday, they now have the longest winning streak of any of those teams.

With the win, its third straight, Coupeville rises to 7-3 on the season, 3-0 in Olympic League play.

From 2014 to today, CHS is 21-0 against its conference foes, topping Klahowya girls soccer (20-0), Klahowya boys soccer (12-0) and Coupeville girls tennis (11-0) in the race to the top of perfection hill.

To get there, the Wolves had to overcome a bit of a slow start Tuesday.

With Port Townsend having cancelled the JV game due to low numbers caused by a toxic mix of injuries and illness, the varsity teams, who entered the game tied for first place, were the only show on the night.

And, in the early going, it was the RedHawks who seemed in control of the plot, forcing the Wolves to once again dig themselves out of a hole.

If there was a positive, it was only a small hole this time around, with CHS trailing 10-9 after one and 17-15 at the half.

“I sound like a broken record with how we start our games,” said Coupeville coach David King. “Tonight seemed to follow that same pattern, however it was a little better than the last couple of games.”

Coupeville’s stellar defense made up for some early shooting issues, but Port Townsend seized the advantage at the free throw line, knocking down five of eight freebies in the second quarter.

Whatever was said during the break seemed to light a fire under the Wolves, as they hit the floor a different team in the second half.

Seizing the lead for good three minutes in, Coupeville then methodically stretched it out to double digits.

Part of the turnaround came from completely neutralizing RedHawk star Kaitlyn Meek, who was held to a single, solitary free throw in the game’s final 16 minutes.

As she fell quiet, Wolf sophomore Kalia Littlejohn “started heating up and percolating,” going on a third-quarter rampage in which she threw down all six of her points.

Coupeville turned the game completely around in the third, rolling to a 15-6 advantage while spreading the scoring between Littlejohn, Lindsey Roberts (4), Kailey Kellner (a long three-ball) and Sarah Wright (2).

“Everything seemed to be working well for us,” King said.

The Wolves kept up the pressure on Meek, a two-time All-Conference player, using a mix of Lauren Grove, Mikayla Elfrank, Littlejohn and Kellner to stifle her.

“We are athletic and deep enough that we were able to rotate players on her all game,” King said. “The rest of the team brought their defensive game as well, minimizing the scoring opportunities with the rest of their roster.”

Once they had the lead, the Wolves put the hammer down hard, impressing their coach.

“In the fourth, Mikayla made a very good move to split a double team to score the basket,” King said. “Kailey scored her basket on a great post-up in the middle of the key, didn’t rush and took it up hard. Made the basket and got fouled.

“This is progress and something we have been talking about all season,” he added. “Don’t shy away from contact. More often than not, good things will come your way if you go strong.”

Kellner dropped in a game-high 11 to pace her squad, while Lindsey Roberts banged down 10 in support.

Mia Littlejohn (8), Kalia Littlejohn (6), Elfrank (2) and Wright (2) also scratched their names in the scoring column.

The “twins,” Roberts and Grove, each hauled down six boards, while Mia Littlejohn and Kellner dealt out three assists apiece.

“This was one of our most consistent games,” King said. “We are still a work in progress, but it’s exciting because we are seeing more consistent play from each player.”

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