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Posts Tagged ‘Valen Trujillo’

Cousins Sara Bryant (left) and Hope Lodell

   South Whidbey’s Sara Bryant (left) and Coupeville’s Hope Lodell shared a cousin bonding moment before their teams played Tuesday. (John Fisken photos)

Catch a rising star. Young guns (l to r) Emma Smith, Lauren Rose and Katrina McGranahan.

   Catch a rising star. Young guns (l to r) Emma Smith, Lauren Rose and Katrina McGranahan.

Opening nights are about far more than wins and losses.

And yes, they do keep score for a reason, and when the scoreboard clicked off Tuesday night, it wasn’t in favor of the local team, as a very, very young Coupeville squad fell 25-6, 25-6, 25-14 to a very, very seasoned South Whidbey team.

A loss is a loss, and it’s rarely pleasant to take one, but the Wolves showed heart and pluck, especially in the case of Valen Trujillo.

Immediately re-staking her claim to being the Floor Burn Queen, the junior libero spent much of the match cartwheeling from sideline to sideline, trying to track down the laser spikes flying off of the hands of Falcon hitters.

And I’m not just saying that because Trujillo led a pack of her teammates who surprised me with a post-match plate of opening night cookies.

Seriously.

Her coach, who, to my knowledge, was not bribed with chocolate chips, backs me up on this.

Valen did a great job tonight,” said Wolf guru Breanne Smedley. “She fought for every point.”

See? Not just the cookies talking. Though they do whisper … sweetly.

But, more than wins and losses, opening night is about side things like that.

Getting reacquainted with returning stars and their families, but also seeing an influx of younger players who bring a new wave of family support with them.

It’s about meeting Kathy O’Brien, aunt to hard-hitting Wolf JV spark-plug Abby Parker, in person for the first time, and seeing Heidi Monroe, aunt of even-harder-hitting Sarah Wright, again for the first time in a long while.

Opening night is former Wolf stars like Kacie Kiel and Madeline Strasburg, now graduated but resurfacing to bestow hugs on former teammates and classmates.

It’s always a bit odd to see former players no longer clad in uniforms we have grown so accustomed to them wearing with pride, but the tradition of coming back and passing something on — a word, a hug, a smile — to the next generation of players, is what binds us in a small town like Coupeville.

The first match is about beginnings.

It’s about a boisterous freshman taking the mic and absolutely ripping through the player introductions, laying down nicknames left and right and working the crowd like a pro.

Her name is Sarah Wright and she is a ball o’ fire, and her majestic run is just beginning at CHS, on and off the court.

And, the first match is about endings, or, at least, the beginning of endings, as new seniors take those first steps down the path towards graduation.

This year’s Wolf squad only has two seniors in Sydney Autio and McKenzie Bailey, but they both had an impact on opening night.

With Autio, seeing her happy and healthy and bouncing around the court, after she spent much of her junior year limping after a season-wrecking injury, matters more than the final score.

And Bailey, who has inherited the mantle of Photo Bomb Queen from now-graduated big sis McKayla?

The only member of the Class of 2016 who played for both of last year’s league-title winning teams (basketball, tennis), she began her victory lap by expressing arched-eyebrow disapproval of my Wazzu t-shirt.

But, since she will provide me with a years-worth of awesome photos, cause she can’t resist the siren call of the camera, I’m gonna ignore that.

Also, cause Wazzu, or at least its football team, is sorta putrid at the moment.

Point, Bailey.

Opening night is about CHS football coach Brett Smedley sneaking stealthily (he thought) through the crowd to bring his wife and fellow coach flowers for her season opener, while all the parents in my row went “awwwwwwwww” in unison.

It’s about the very snazzy, yet still pretty dang butt-crushin’ bleachers installed in the CHS gym over the summer. The ’70s (and its seats) are long gone in Cow Town.

And on an Island where family lines run deep, opening night is also about the joy of cousins on rival teams getting to play each other for the first, and only time.

Wolf sophomore Hope Lodell and Falcon senior Sara Bryant faced off across the net, but before and after the match embraced each other, smiling and posing for pics — a reminder that wins and losses matter, but blood matters more.

On the court, Katrina McGranahan and Kyla Briscoe rose up for a team-up on a beautiful stuff, Tiffany Briscoe zipped a gorgeous ace on a serve that singed the net as it crawled over the tape at 102 MPH, and Trujillo?

She’s still out there, diving for loose balls, refusing to cede the night.

Ultimately, it was a loss and one in which one team was quite obviously stronger, but it was opening night and there was a lot more than just a simple match going on.

You just needed to look around for a moment and take in the whole big show for all it was.

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Lauren (John Fisken photos)

   Being a freshman, Emma Smith (right) is required to carry Lauren Rose everywhere she wants to go. (John Fisken photos)

Valen

   McKenzie Bailey (right) is a tad concerned Valen Trujillo (center) may be making a bid for her role as #1 photo subject. No one comes for the Queen.

Katrina

   Katrina McGranahan (back) is ready for her close-up, while Kyla Briscoe is still a little peeved she had to get up so early.

Sarah

   Sarah Wright, having scarred the court with some powerhouse kills, attempts to buff out the damage.

Breanne

   No one escapes Bailey, the Photo Bomb Queen. No one. Not even Wolf coach Breanne Smedley.

team

The pride of Coupeville.

Hope

   Hope Lodell, always ready to operate as “The Surgeon.” No one tell her that the scissors aren’t real, though…

Payty

   Payton Aparicio (7) finds herself the center of attention in a pack of camera-friendly Wolves.

The first spike has landed.

More importantly perhaps, the first photo has also landed.

Making their official 2015 debut Saturday, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad squared off with a pack of rivals at a jamboree in Oak Harbor.

For more on the actual on-court action, you’ll have to wait a hot moment or two until the next story pops up here on the blog tonight.

This one? It’s all about the photo ops.

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Wolf junior Tiffany Briscoe is a key returning player. (John Fisken photos)

Wolf junior Tiffany Briscoe is a key returning player. (John Fisken photos)

Sophomore Katrina McGranahan is back and ready to unleash her power game.

   Sophomore Katrina McGranahan is back and ready to unleash her power game.

Never back down.

That captures the attitude shown by the Coupeville High School volleyball squad, which is looking to bounce back from a fourth-place finish in the 1A Olympic League last year.

While those Wolves went 1-11, many of the matches were close affairs and CHS was rarely, if ever, blown out.

The loss of five players to graduation will sting a bit, but much of the core of the team was young last year, which bodes well for this season and the future.

“My expectation is that our team competes every day, gives maximum effort for the sake of their team, and challenges each other to become better,” said Wolf coach Breanne Smedley. “Our goals are to improve with each week, earn a league title, and compete into the post season.

“We are out to beat them all! We talk about all other teams as just another jersey,” she added. “We are constantly competing with ourselves and focusing on what is going to help us improve each week.

“All else will fall into place if we are successful in this.”

As Smedley heads into her second year at the helm of the Wolves, she’ll have a roster that is still fairly young, with just two seniors.

Middle blocker McKenzie Bailey and setter Sydney Autio, who was out injured much of last year, are those veterans, and they’ll be joined by juniors Valen Trujillo (libero), Tiffany Briscoe (OH) and Ally Roberts (OPP).

Sophomores Kyla Briscoe (OH/OPP), Katrina McGranahan (MB), Lauren Rose (setter), Hope Lodell (OH) and Payton Aparicio (OH) and freshman phenom Emma Smith (MB) are also in the mix.

It’s a group that has stepped up in off-season workouts and is intent on toppling Klahowya, Port Townsend and Chimacum.

“Our strengths include the ownership the girls are taking over the program, and their competitiveness to continually improve,” Smedley said. “We have depth from pin to pin in our offense, which will prove to become a strength for us if we can focus in on quality first ball contacts.”

As their season opener approaches (Sept. 8 at home against South Whidbey), the Wolves remain hard at work.

“We need to work on controlling the first ball contact on serve receive and in defense,” Smedley said. “We are also working on getting our middles to run quicker through the middle and introducing combinations into our offense.

“It is all dependent on the first ball contact, though.”

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Kenzi LaRue (John Fisken photos)

Kenzi LaRue has eyes only for the volleyball. (John Fisken photos)

Payton Aparicio

Payton Aparicio launches herself skyward to save the day.

Kameryn St Onge

Kameryn St Onge demonstrates a laser-like focus.

Kyla Briscoe

Tip-toeing across the court, Kyla Briscoe sneaks up on the ball.

Hope Lodell

Hope Lodell, AKA “The Surgeon,” gets ready to operate.

Sarah Wright

   Sarah Wright is one of several 9th graders looking to make an immediate impact for the Wolves.

Valen Trujillo

Wolf junior Valen Trujillo, here laying down some flawless form, will be one of Coupeville’s captains this fall.

Ashley Menges

   Freshman Ashley Menges reaches for the heavens as teammate Allison Wenzel looks on.

Fall is upon us.

Well, fall sports, at least.

Monday brought the first official day of practice for the Coupeville High School volleyball, boys’ tennis, cheer and girls’ soccer squads. Football kicked off Aug. 19.

Travelin’ photo man John Fisken, whose work has been shortlisted for this year’s Washington Newspaper Publishers Association awards (classy!), strolled through town and snapped some pics for us.

First up, the Wolf spikers, led by second-year head coach Breanne Smedley and returning stars like Valen Trujillo and Sydney Autio.

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Valen Trujillo: one woman, many talents.

Valen Trujillo: one woman, many talents.

The first time I saw Valen Trujillo, she made two girls cry, and it was beautiful.

And we should probably stop right there for a second, cause that makes her sound like a brute, and, in reality, she is as far from that as you could possibly imagine, and then some.

Miss Trujillo, in her everyday life, is a muffin-bakin’, sweet song-singin’, hyper-intelligent, well-spoken, kind and thoughtful ray of sunshine, someone who makes those who know her extremely proud.

And, since she has an ever-expanding group of friends, what with being super friendly to all, it pretty much means the whole world is proud of Valen and all she is accomplishing.

But, back to the crying for a moment.

My introduction to Valen, who celebrates a birthday today, came when she was a middle school basketball player.

Coupeville was playing King’s (the most dastardly of schools) and, in keeping with that school’s time-honored tradition, the Knights were using a style known as “smack your foe with an elbow at all times, then act all pious afterwards.”

Enter Miss Trujillo, who, soft smile still intact, opened a can of whup-ass on King’s.

Nothing illegal.

Just one whirlwind crashing across the court, fighting like a wild beast for every rebound, every loose ball, with an intensity that would have made the Detroit Piston “Bad Boys” of the ’80s and early ’90s weep with joy.

At one point, she wrested a ball from a King’s player with such a determined jerk, she sent the Knight airborne, and then, running out of the gym, sobbing.

That Knight was soon joined by a teammate, followed by Valen politely handing the ball to a ref, the smallest of grins on her face.

For someone who has seen way too many Coupeville kids play timidly on the court, this was a landmark moment.

And then, in what would become her trademark style — though I didn’t yet know it — when the game was done, Valen, on her way up into the stands to see her parents, Craig and Amy, stopped as she passed me.

“Thank you for coming to see my game.”

First time in 20 years a teen athlete had said that to me, and, as I have discovered since, true to how Valen conducts herself every time I see her.

She is as ferocious a competitor as any I have seen wear a Wolf uniform, but she also goes to great lengths to show respect and kindness to her teammates, her opponents and those who come to watch her play.

The day she decided not to play basketball in high school was a dark day, the day Coupeville Sports almost shut down in mourning (am I joking … maybe, maybe not).

But Valen is super-busy and has many irons in the fire, and basketball wasn’t something she wanted to continue. So be it, even if I cry at the start of every new season.

She has taken that white-hot intensity to the volleyball court, where she is the queen of the floor burn, and tennis, where we all fear she will be the queen of the court burn.

We get two more years of her at CHS, and then she’ll be off to impress new fan bases, either as an athlete, or a singer, or a baker, or any of a million other talents she possesses.

Valen is a bright, blazing star, and, from what I’ve seen, all my words won’t make her puff up with pride and start acting the diva.

She is centered and knows herself. She is proud of what she can accomplish without lording it over others.

She is the real deal, and we are all lucky to be a sliver of her life.

Happy birthday, Valen. I hope this day, like all of your days, is wonderful.

P.S. — A new high school basketball season starts Nov. 16. Just sayin’…

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