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Posts Tagged ‘Valen Trujillo’

CHS doubles ace Sage Renninger is 9-0 this season. (John Fisken photos)

   Valen Trujillo avenged an earlier loss to Klahowya’s Sydney Jackson, beating her twice.

Clear some space on the Wall of Fame.

Rolling to two wins Thursday, the Coupeville High School girls tennis team clinched its third straight 1A Olympic League title.

Scrambling to catch up from the ravages of a rain-soaked spring, the Wolves wrapped up a suspended match first, then strolled to another victory in their regularly-scheduled rumble.

Both wins came by identical 5-2 scores over host Klahowya.

With the two-for-one deal, Coupeville stretched its winning streak to six matches and sits 4-0 in league play, 6-3 overall.

The Wolves have never lost a conference tilt in the three-year history of the Olympic League, and their streak sits at 15 straight.

That’s the fourth-best run behind Coupeville girls basketball (27-0), Klahowya girls soccer (20-0) and Klahowya boys soccer (19-0).

Thursday’s action picked up where things left off Apr. 18 in Coupeville.

With the Wolves up 2-0 and four matches in action on court, rain unleashed and refused to stop.

Given better weather Thursday, the two squads wrapped up things, then skipped the normal two-out-of-three sets format and played pro sets in match #2.

First doubles duo Payton Aparicio and Sage Renninger added two more wins to their ledger, running their season record as a duo to 8-0.

Renninger is 9-0, having won a match with sister Avalon when Aparicio was out of town.

Complete results from Thursday:

Match One:

1st singlesValen Trujillo beat Sydney Jackson 6-0, 6-0

2nd singles Fanny Deprelle lost to Haley Sargent 6-7(5-7), 6-4, 10-6

3rd singlesBree Daigneault beat Sophie Koveleskie 7-5, 6-3

1st doublesSage Renninger/Payton Aparicio beat Mary Ann Marker/Taylor Bruce 6-0, 6-3

2nd doubles Avalon Renninger/Zoe Trujillo beat Anna Wells/Kelisha Harris 6-4, 6-1

3rd doublesMaggie Crimmins/Claire Mietus lost to Maddy Rienks/Emma Parker 8-7(7-5)

4th doublesTia Wurzrainer/Jillian Mayne beat Emma Heckert/Angelina Robinson 8-0

 

Match Two:

1st singlesValen Trujillo beat Sydney Jackson 8-0

2nd singles Fanny Deprelle lost to Haley Sargent 8-6

3rd singlesBree Daigneault lost to Sophie Koveleskie 8-4

1st doublesSage Renninger/Payton Aparicio beat Mary Anne Marker/Taylor Bruce 8-1

2nd doubles Avalon Renninger/Zoe Trujillo beat Maddy Rienks/Hannah Katt 8-3

3rd doublesMaggie Crimmins/Claire Mietus beat Anna Wells/Kelisha Harris 8-4

4th doublesTia Wurzrainer/Jillian Mayne beat Emma Heckert/Emma Parker 8-3

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   Bree Daigneault beat Beyonce Monday. Seriously. OK, maybe not THAT Beyonce, but certainly a Beyonce. (John Fisken photo)

Dangerously close.

For the second time this season the Coupeville High School girls tennis team faced a 2A school, and for the second time the scrappy Wolves came within a single match of upending their big school rivals.

In the end, however, Olympic, like Sequim before it, escaped Whidbey with a narrow 4-3 non-conference win.

The loss, coming in Coupeville’s first match in 11 days, drops the Wolves to 0-3 on the season.

After having a big gap between live opponents, the Wolves are hoping to get in a lot of competitive tennis this week.

CHS is scheduled to hit the road twice, with trips Tuesday to Granite Falls and Thursday to Port Angeles.

The two-time 1A Olympic League champs don’t open defense of their most recent title until April 13-14, when they play Klahowya and Chimacum back-to-back.

By then, if the schedule holds, the Wolves should be battle-hardened, having played six of their first seven matches against 2A opponents.

Monday, CHS got wins at first and third doubles and third singles.

Coupeville’s top doubles duo, juniors Payton Aparicio and Sage Renninger, remain flawless at 3-0 this season.

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st singlesValen Trujillo lost to Chiarra Droell 6-0, 6-2

2nd singles Fanny Deprelle lost to Marissa Nemeth 6-0, 6-3

3rd singlesBree Daigneault beat Beyonce Oresceko 6-1, 6-1

1st doublesPayton Aparicio/Sage Renninger beat Karli Taylor/Sydney Troy 6-3, 6-4

2nd doubles Zoe Trujillo/Avalon Renninger lost to Sarah Polsin/Brooklyn Horo 6-1, 6-0

3rd doublesMaggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge beat Gimalaine Estepa/Jemina Estepa 6-3, 6-0

4th doublesTia Wurzrainer/Jillian Mayne lost to Maddie Tofts/Maddie Bonk 7-5, 6-2

JV:

5th doublesSophie Furtjes/Julie Bucio lost 6-0

6th doublesClaire Mietus/Heather Nastali lost 6-2

7th doublesNanci Melendrez/Rubi Melendrez tied 4-4 (match called for ferry)

8th doubles Zara Bradley/Julie Bucio lost 6-0

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Sage and Payton (John Fisken photos)

   Sage Renninger (left) and Payton Aparicio are the defending Olympic League doubles champs. (John Fisken photos)

Kameryn St Onge

Kameryn St Onge is one of six returning letter winners for the Wolves.

Bree Daigneault

   Senior Bree Daigneault returns to serve up more winners (and frequent compliments to her foes).

Ken Stange has been around the block a few times.

The tennis sensei has been at the helm of the Coupeville High School tennis programs for a decade-plus, a time period when he’s racked up league titles and guided Wolves of both genders to the state tourney.

But this spring he feels like he’s on the edge of seeing CHS make a true break-through in a sport often dominated by ritzy big city private schools.

“Five times, I’ve been fortunate enough to coach players who have qualified for state,” Stange said. “This year, for the first time, I feel that we have an excellent shot at taking more than one entry into the state tourney.”

Valen (Trujillo), Payton (Aparicio) and Sage (Renninger) have the ability, mindset, and desire to do it,” he added. “I look forward to seeing them progress toward the end goal.”

That trio, who are the defending Olympic League champs in singles and doubles, lead off a team deep in talent and numbers.

Stange has 18 girls on his first-week roster, led by Trujillo, a senior entering her second season as the team’s #1 singles player.

She’s joined by fellow senior Bree Daigneault and four juniors — Aparicio, Renninger, Maggie Crimmins and Kameryn St Onge — giving Coupeville six returning letter winners.

As he tries to figure out his varsity lineup, Stange has seen three newcomers (foreign exchange student Fanny Deprelle and freshmen Zoe Trujillo and Avalon Renninger) jump to the front during the opening practices.

Competition for the fourth doubles duo is wide-open, with a group of nine first-year players in the mix.

That includes foreign exchange student Sophie Fürtjes, juniors Heather Nastali and Claire Mietus, sophomores Julie Bucio and Abby Hamilton and freshmen Tia Wurzrainer, Nanci Melendrez, Jillian Mayne and Rubi Melendrez.

Coupeville enters play this season having never lost in 1A Olympic League play.

The Wolves are 11-0 over the past two years, the fourth-longest streak of any conference program, behind Coupeville girls basketball (27-0) and Klahowya girls (20-0) and boys (12-0) soccer.

Keeping that streak alive and bringing home another title are big, and it’s a mission fueled by the hard workers at the top of the score sheet.

“We will be strong at the top of our lineup, and that will go a long way to ensuring we can secure a third-straight 1A Oly League title,” Stange said.

“One of our best strengths is our team’s leadership,” he added. “Valen and Bree are vocal leaders who encourage and inspire other players. Then there are Payton and Sage, who lead by quiet example.

“It’s a great balance of styles.”

While he knows what to expect from his top players, after that it’s an adventure, but one Stange always looks forward to helping guide.

“We are untested in our bottom half of the lineup,” he said. “It’s going to be a learn as we play type of situation. I have confidence, though.”

Part of that confidence stems from seeing how his netters, both veterans and newbies, are reacting to playing in “spring”-like weather conditions.

“Another strength is our team’s work ethic,” Stange said. “They’ve been doing some conditioning work, and they have been working hard, despite the wind and rain.”

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Your 1A Olympic League volleyball MVP, Katrina McGranahan. (John Fisken photo)

   Your 1A Olympic League volleyball MVP, Katrina McGranahan. (John Fisken photos)

Cory Whitmore

It took Cory Whitmore a single season to be named Coach of the Year.

Every time Katrina McGranahan hit the volleyball this season, it exploded.

Mixing power at the net, where she led Coupeville in kills for the second straight year, and at the service stripe, where she was one of the best servers in the state, the Wolf junior was fury unleashed.

And now, after helping lead the CHS spikers to their best season since 2004, McGranahan has been rewarded, being named the 1A Olympic League MVP.

She was one of five Wolves hailed by league coaches Wednesday, with Cory Whitmore being tabbed Coach of the Year and teammates Hope Lodell and Valen Trujillo earning First Team All-League honors.

Lauren Rose was also tabbed as an Honorable Mention pick.

The future looks bright for Coupeville, as well, as the league champs were the only school to have a non-senior honored in the first group.

McGranahan, who threw down 91 kills, 14 blocks, 134 service points and 62 aces and Lodell, who notched 75 kills, 137 digs, 187 service points and 110 aces, are juniors.

Trujillo closed her career with 195 digs (giving her a school record 550), 348 service returns, 35 aces and 94 service points.

Rose, a junior setter, recorded 192 assists and garnered 132 service points and 35 aces with a team-best 92.7% serving percentage.

The Wolves went 11-6 overall, 8-1 in league play under Whitmore, who is in his first season as head coach.

The complete list of winners:

Coach of the Year: Cory Whitmore, Coupeville

Team Sportsmanship: Chimacum

Most Valuable Player: Katrina McGranahan, Jr., Coupeville

Defensive MVP: Nicole Mills, Sr., Klahowya

1st Team All-League:

Valen Trujillo, Sr., Coupeville

Hope Lodell, Jr., Coupeville

Jessica Carlson, Sr., Klahowya

Ashley Sharp, Sr., Klahowya

Taylor Carthaum, Sr., Chimacum

Shanya Nisbet, Sr., Chimacum

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Valen Trujillo

Valen Trujillo: a Hall of Famer on the court and in life.

This is sort of odd, if you think about it.

Today, as I hold my weekly induction into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, the 72nd class is comprised of one lone athlete going in by herself.

And yet that athlete, maybe as much as any I have covered in my years of writing, is the very embodiment of a true team player.

Every step of the way, from the first time I watched her play basketball in middle school until the final time she dove on a floor and cartwheeled Saturday, trying to keep her prep volleyball career alive as long as possible, Valen Trujillo was all about her team.

Even when she’s on a tennis court playing singles, one of the ultimate solitary athletic pursuits, she always wants to know how her fellow players are doing.

Win or lose (and she usually wins), she always stays to watch and support her classmates and friends, whether they’re fighting for a varsity win or playing way down on the JV ladder.

It is an enduring testament to her spirit, which has always soared far above her stellar athletic talent.

And yes, I know she’s not done with her high school sports career.

Valen will be back on the tennis court this spring for one final run at net glory (and who knows, she might shock me and return to basketball when practice starts in a week — I’m not holding my breath … or am I?).

But the end of the volleyball season Saturday is one of those seminal moments that will echo for some time, and I say, why wait to induct her?

It was on the volleyball court where she has lived and died (metaphorically, at least) and left a fair amount of her skin.

Trujillo was a libero, the rock anchoring the back line, and her stats can stand with any Wolf to ever put on the uniform.

When the volleyball record board is updated, her name will tower large on it, as she smashed numerous records during her four-year run.

But more than the records, it was her love for the game which will endure in our memories.

The way she poured out her heart on every play.

Whether crouched low on the court, awaiting a serve, like a wild cat ready to pounce, or madly bouncing off a wall as she sprinted full-bore after a ball her mind (but not her heart) already knew was long gone, Valen never, ever gave you less than her best.

Every coach she had spoke of Trujillo with a reverence which is rare.

It was a universal reaction I have witnessed with only a handful of other Wolf athletes, fellow Hall of Famers such as Makana Stone, Nick Streubel and Breeanna Messner.

There are great athletes and great people, and when the two meet, it is something special.

Valen is something special.

The first time I put a face to the name was at a middle school girls basketball game five years ago.

Trujillo smiled and politely said hello to the five King’s players on the other side of the court before tip-off, then made two of those rivals run out of the gym crying once the game started.

She wasn’t a dirty player, but she was a bulldog, one who brought back memories of the immortal Baddest Woman Alive herself, Jodi (Christensen) Crimmins, who once gave a CHS hoops teammate a black eye during a battle for a rebound.

Valen, like Jodi, believed without a doubt that EVERY loose ball belonged to her, and that no girl, now or forever, was going to take it away from her.

And then, after the game, after Coupeville won and Trujillo went down the line hugging each and every one of her teammates, she passed by as she went to her parents, Craig and Amy, who were seated in the stands not far from where I was.

Stopping for a second, this young woman, who I had never met before, looked at me and said “Thank you for coming to my game.”

For a second I thought she was being sarcastic.

Five years, and a few thousand other “thank you for coming to my games” have taught me that couldn’t have been further from the truth.

My greatest disappointment in my run here at Coupeville Sports was that Trujillo left basketball behind when she entered high school. It would have been glorious!

But I understand her desire to focus on schoolwork and singing, and I’ve dealt with it.

Plus, the home-made cookies and chips and salsa Valen gave me certainly helped ease the “pain…”

Baker, warbler, guitar picker, student, athlete, bright shining beacon of light and love to everyone she meets, Miss Trujillo is a rare gem.

It’s not much in the grand scheme of things, but today, I welcome her to my lil’ digital hall of honor.

As long as Coupeville Sports exists on the internet, Valen Trujillo will live on, up at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

So, let me flip it around on you.

“Thank you, Miss Trujillo, for letting me come to your games.”

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