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Posts Tagged ‘Valen Trujillo’

Hope Lodell (John Fisken photo)

   Hope Lodell, seen here firing a serve in an earlier match, became the first Wolf to top 100 aces in a single season. (John Fisken photos)

team

At 11-6, this year’s varsity had the most wins by a CHS team since 2004.

In the moment, it’s rough.

Later, when a little time has passed, it will be easier to appreciate all that was accomplished.

The Coupeville High School volleyball squad, playing for first-year head coach Cory Whitmore, put together the best season the school has seen since 2004.

The Wolves went 11-6, ran away with the 1A Olympic League title at 8-1 and smashed several school records, both individual and team, at the service stripe.

With a JV which went 12-2 overall, 9-0 in league play and a C-Team which finished 3-1, Coupeville’s spikers combined to win nearly 75% of their matches, finishing 26-9 as a program.

The varsity can return 11 of 14 players next season, and the coaching trio of Whitmore, Kristin Bridges and Ashley Herndon seem to be sitting on the cusp of something special.

But the reality is it will take a bit for everyone involved to be able to sit back and fully enjoy the heights they reached in 2016.

That’s largely because they still want to be playing, and they came so close to making it a reality.

The Wolves, playing on their home court Saturday, pushed Charles Wright Academy to four sets in their district playoff opener, then lost a heart-breaker of a five-set war with Klahowya.

Had they been able to convert on their one match point and put the Eagles away, CHS would have moved on to play Cascade Christian.

Instead, Coupeville was left on the outside looking in, as the Cougars quickly drilled Klahowya to join district champ CWA in advancing to state.

Match One:

The Wolves pushed Charles Wright hard, splitting the first two sets and trailing just 14-13 in the third set, before the Tarriers rode the heavy hitting of sophomore Abbie Jackson to a 25-15, 22-25, 25-14, 25-18 victory.

Jackson, who stands five-foot-eleven and hits like she’s pounding spikes on the railroad, got her feet tangled at one point and crashed hard to the ground in the early going.

She stayed there for a bit, her face screwed up in pain as her coach checked her out, but she eventually got back up and then started inflicting the pain on the ball, rat-a-tatting winner after winner.

That allowed CWA to put together several substantial runs that stung the Wolves.

Charles Wright closed the first set on a 13-5 run and broke the match open by sealing the third set on a final 11-1 charge.

In between, Coupeville roared out to a big lead in the second set, then held off another of those late Tarrier charges.

After Mikayla Elfrank pasted a winner to force a side out, Hope Lodell stepped to the line and ripped off seven straight winners on her serve to stake CHS to an 8-0 lead.

The winners included her 100th ace of the season, making Lodell the first Wolf to reach that mark.

Coupeville continued to press the advantage, using the high-soaring Katrina McGranahan and Emma Smith, who were a super-effective tip machine duo all afternoon, to stretch the lead out further and further.

When Tiffany Briscoe bashed a winner down the line, the Wolves were up 18-8 and rockin’ and rollin’.

Then came a Tarrier charge, as they sliced the lead all the way back down to 23-21.

Smith was having none of it, however, blunting the charge with two big winners to seal the set.

The first came on a spike which skipped off several arms as it blew by, while the final was a beauty that caught the last flake of paint on the back line.

Even after the late collapse in the third set, the Wolves continued to stage a solid resistance. They were as close as 13-11 in the final set, but then Jackson went to work once again.

Match Two:

Moving across the hallway to the Coupeville Middle School gym, the Wolves stared down their 1A Olympic League rivals for the fourth time this season, and for the third time went the distance.

But, after winning two of three from Klahowya in the regular season, Coupeville got nipped at the worst possible moment, falling 15-25, 25-15, 25-18, 17-25, 16-14.

The two teams went after each other like boxers who mutually decide to stand in the middle of the ring and bash each other in the face until one finally falls.

The final set, played in front of a capacity, and very loud, crowd, had eight ties and saw Coupeville scrap back from a 9-5 deficit to put itself on match point at 14-13.

Lodell skipped several more aces past the Eagles, Payton Aparicio had a huge winner in the heart of the pressure cooker and the Wolf back line made save after save to prolong the day.

Valen Trujillo and Lauren Rose chased down balls that should have been Eagle winners and the biggest play of the day may have been delivered by Ally Roberts.

Throwing out her fist at the last second, the senior spark-plug punched a Klahowya spike an inch away from her face, and not only got the ball back over the net, but directed it through a wall of Eagles for a winner.

With both teams staggering, fans hyperventilating and the small gym getting steamy, KHS reached down deep and found a final miracle.

A picture-perfect tip split the Wolf defense, held off match point and knotted things at 14, before Coupeville misfired on the game’s final two rallies.

One ball caught the net, held for a second, then flopped back into CHS territory, before a Wolf spike went long on Klahowya’s first match point.

Coupeville dominated the first set, as Smith, playing in front of aunt, and former Wolf volleyball legend Joli (Smith) Bartell, was unstoppable at the net.

Tiredness seemed to hammer the Wolves hard in sets two and three (though Allison Wenzel came off the bench to give CHS a late boost with a run at the service stripe), but they got their mojo back in set four.

Ashley Menges grooved a gorgeous ace that left the Eagles standing around slack-jawed as it flew by and caught the back-line, then Smith unloaded a spike that was so vicious it made everyone think CWA’s Jackson might have taken possession of her soul for a play.

The district tourney brought an end to the stellar prep volleyball careers of Roberts, Briscoe and Trujillo, a trio who have played together since middle school.

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Katrina McGranahan (left) and Payton Aparicio are both soaring on the stats charts. (John Fisken photos)

   Katrina McGranahan (left) and Payton Aparicio are both soaring on the stats charts. (John Fisken photos)

bench

   CHS coaches Cory Whitmore (far right) and Kristin Bridges impart wisdom during a timeout.

They like the aces.

The high-flying Coupeville High School volleyball squad has roared to a league title and a 9-3 record thanks in large part to its success at the service stripe.

The Wolves have six players who handle serving duties, and all of them land in the top 15 among 1A players for aces.

CHS junior Hope Lodell tops all 1A spikers whose teams have reported stats to MaxPreps, and her 72 aces is fourth-best across all divisions (1B-4A).

The three girls ahead of her have a huge advantage, with each having played 8-14 more sets and uncorked 36-87 more service attempts.

Lodell hits aces on 37.9% of her serves, the highest percentage by anyone in the top 10.

Coupeville stacks up quite nicely with other teams when you compare stats other than aces, as well.

Seven Wolves are currently among the top 20 performers in 1A in at least one stat category, with five of those spikers showing up in two categories.

Valen Trujillo (#5 in digs) and Payton Aparicio (#5 in aces) join Lodell in cracking the top five in a category.

CHS stats through Monday:

Sets Played:

Katrina McGranahan 42
Ashley Menges 42
Lauren Rose 42
Emma Smith 42
Valen Trujillo 42
Payton Aparicio 41
Hope Lodell 41
Tiffany Briscoe 40
Mikayla Elfrank 37
Ally Roberts 26
Sarah Wright 8
Allison Wenzel 4

Kills:

Katrina McGranahan 53 (#17 in 1A)
Lodell 51 (#18 in 1A)
Elfrank 49 (#20 in 1A)
Smith 33
Aparicio 32
Briscoe 25
Roberts 9
Wright 9
Trujillo 4
Wenzel 3
Menges 2
Rose 2

Kill Percentage:

Menges 66.7
Roberts 39.1
Elfrank 38.3
Wenzel 37.5
Wright 37.5
Smith 36.3
McGranahan 32.9
Lodell 30.2
Briscoe 28.7
Rose 25.0
Aparicio 24.8
Trujillo 19.0

Hitting Percentage:

Menges .333
Roberts .261
Wenzel .250
Wright .208
McGranahan .130
Briscoe .103
Smith .088
Elfrank .062
Aparicio .008

Digs:

Trujillo 141 (#5 in 1A)
Lodell 88 (#14 in 1A)
Aparicio 53
Roberts 28
Rose 27
McGranahan 17
Menges 16
Briscoe 10
Elfrank 6
Smith 5
Wright 3
Wenzel 2

Blocks:

Smith 10
McGranahan 7
Elfrank 4
Aparicio 2
Briscoe 1
Wright 1

Service Returns:

Trujillo 224
Lodell 151
Aparicio 95
Roberts 28
Wenzel 9
Briscoe 4
Elfrank 3
McGranahan 3
Smith 3
Menges 2
Rose 1
Wright 1

Assists:

Rose 121 (#9 in 1A)
Menges 93 (#11 in 1A)
Trujillo 6
Lodell 4
Aparicio 2
Briscoe 2
Roberts 2
Elfrank 1
McGranahan 1
Wright 1

Serving Percentage:

Elfrank 100.0
Rose 94.3
Trujillo 90.0
Aparicio 86.6
Lodell 84.2
Menges 83.0
McGranahan 81.5
Roberts 33.3

Service Points:

Lodell 115
Rose 103
Menges 84
McGranahan 83
Aparicio 78
Trujillo 65
Elfrank 3
Roberts 1

Service Aces:

Lodell 72 (#1 in 1A, #4 in all divisions)
Aparicio 42 (#5 in 1A)
McGranahan 41 (#6 in 1A)
Menges 36 (#8 in 1A)
Rose 29 (#12 in 1A)
Trujillo 28 (#15 in 1A)
Elfrank 1

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Hope Lodell had eight services aces to pace Coupeville to a straight-sets win Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Hope Lodell had eight services aces to pace Coupeville to a straight-sets win Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

Opening night was a rousing success.

Using strong serving and timely hitting, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad gave first-year coach Cory Whitmore a straight-sets win in his debut Tuesday, stomping visiting Mount Vernon Christian 25-15, 25-11, 25-21.

The non-conference win, coming against a school that finished 4th at the 1B state tourney last season, was a crowd-pleaser from start to finish.

Coupeville used long, successful runs at the service stripe from multiple players to control the match.

“That was our game plan, to take command in the first set and ramp up the pressure,” Whitmore said. “The team we have here trusts in the system and trusts me to do my best to put them in position to do well.”

Wolf junior Katrina McGranahan kicked things off early in the first set.

Stepping to the line with her squad trailing 4-2, she calmly ripped off winners on seven straight serves, with most of the action coming courtesy her own laser-powered arm.

McGranahan nailed one ace that curved in and bit a chunk of paint off the back-line at the last second.

A moment later she drilled another that left a scorch mark on the net as it crawled over (at a blistering speed), then exploded at the feet of a would-be returner.

A couple of big plays from Emma Smith — a block in which she soared to the ceiling and a knee-buckling spike — kept the Wolves close, before Valen Trujillo ended the first set on an emphatic note.

The senior captain, mixing speeds and getting crafty, took a 16-15 lead and ran off nine straight points on her serve to turn a taut battle into a runaway rout.

“It’s so tough to read her serves,” said a smiling Whitmore.

The final two sets were much the same, with Hope Lodell, Payton Aparicio and Lauren Rose joining McGranahan and Trujillo with strong runs at the service stripe.

Smith was a deadly sniper with her spikes, while Mikayla Elfrank and Tiffany Briscoe both made a bid to craft the night’s best play.

Elfrank, a junior making her CHS volleyball debut, displayed serious pop and a nice touch frequently flying in from the outside.

She had a gym-rattling spike winner late in the second set, then topped that right near the end of the match.

Mount Vernon had rallied for three straight points late in the third set, cutting the margin to 23-20 and raising hopes they could steal a set and prolong the match.

Instead, Elfrank, coming in from the left side, unloaded a spectacular cross-court laser that angled through two jumping Hurricane players and kicked off the line on the far right side of the floor.

The ball struck, there was a momentary pause as everyone strained to see if it had caught the line, then the Wolf faithful exploded as the ref signaled that yes, Elfrank was just that good.

Briscoe’s moment came at the end of one of the game’s longer rallies.

After both teams came up with big saves to keep the action hopping, Briscoe pounced on a wayward ball, and, using just her fingertips, redirected it through a maze of MVC defenders, dropping it into the one small gap available for a winner.

Whitmore, who was making his regular-season debut as a varsity coach (Coupeville had a jamboree under its belt), basked in the glow afterwards, as fans and CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith showered him with congratulations.

“Retire now and you go down with the best winning percentage in school history,” Smith joked.

Lodell and Trujillo paced the Wolves with eight service aces apiece, while Aparicio (5), McGranahan (5) and Ashley Menges (4) all chipped in.

Menges dished out a team-high 12 assists, while Rose collected seven.

Coupeville heads to Langley Saturday for the six-team South Whidbey Invite, then hosts Chimacum Sept. 13 in its 1A Olympic League opener.

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After working as an assistant at Oak Harbor High School, Cory Whitmore has taken over the Coupeville volleyball program. (John Fisken photos)

   After working as an assistant at Oak Harbor High School, Cory Whitmore has taken over the Coupeville volleyball program. (John Fisken photos)

The Wolves return almost their entire roster from a season ago, including (l to r) Emma Smith, Lauren Rose and Katrina McGranahan.

   The Wolves return almost their entire roster from a season ago, including (l to r) Emma Smith, Lauren Rose and Katrina McGranahan.

Excitement is in the air.

Coming off of its first postseason win in a decade, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad returns virtually its entire roster, welcomes a new head coach whose energy is contagious and will play two-thirds of its matches at home.

After two strong seasons under Breanne Smedley, who moved back home to take over the Columbia River program, the Wolves are led by newcomer Cory Whitmore this season.

A teacher at Oak Harbor High School, he already knew most of Coupeville’s players firsthand from his work coaching alongside Smedley with the Whidbey Fury select program.

Now, as he inherits a team which lost only McKenzie Bailey and Sydney Autio to graduation (and Kyla Briscoe to injury), Whitmore is ready to embrace the opportunity.

“Could not be more excited about the season and this group of young women,” he said. “We would love to see the gym packed during home games – it will be a fun season.”

Coupeville, which split two playoff matches in 2015, beating Seattle Christian at home before being edged on the road by Cascade Christian, opens with a  possibly unprecedented five straight matches at home.

Overall, they are set to play 9 of 15 matches on their home floor, and perhaps more if the playoff gods smile on them again.

The Wolves won four of their final six matches last season, finishing 6-10 overall, 3-3 in Olympic League play.

The JV went a crisp 7-4 as well, boding well for the future.

Whitmore will have a strong core to lean on as he makes his debut as a high school head coach.

Seniors Valen Trujillo, Tiffany Briscoe and Ally Roberts are the grizzled leaders for a squad which is still remarkably young.

“We have quite a few of our players returning with varsity experience,” Whitmore said. “Valen will definitely be a player to watch on her defensive intensity, calm passing ability and strong leadership.

Tiffany is also a senior captain and brings a heavy arm-swing and can hit at either pin,” he added.

Junior Lauren Rose and sophomore Ashley Menges will split time at the setter position (“both have worked hard in the off-season to develop their ability to run the offense and both bring a tough serve”), with a number of other players vying for floor time.

Katrina McGranahan has been making great progress in her attacking ability and is a large block that will give opponents problems,” Whitmore said. “Payton Aparicio is very solid in her passing ability and has a fast approach and quick arm-swing.

Emma Smith, Ally, Hope Lodell, Sarah Wright and Allison Wenzel each bring something different to the team,” he added. “We have many players that can play numerous positions and bring their all every day, which allows us to have competitive practices, preparing for game situations.”

One newcomer expected to make an impact is junior Mikayla Elfrank, who transferred from South Whidbey last year.

After anchoring the infield at short for the Wolf softball team in the spring, she’s expected to be a three-sport star this time around, adding volleyball and basketball to her duties.

Mikayla has the ability to play in the middle as well as on the right side, with a strong jumping ability and a fast arm-swing,” Whitmore said.

While his varsity is comprised of battle-tested veterans, the new coach was pleasantly surprised to see how big the turnout for volleyball was overall.

While some other sports at CHS are reportedly down in numbers this fall, the spikers are almost 30 deep.

“We have a strong incoming freshman class that I am very excited about,” Whitmore said. “They have made progress already as a class and are quickly figuring out the system we run and the increased pace and intensity of high school athletics.”

The new volleyball guru wants to build on what Smedley began, keeping everyone’s eyes firmly on the prize.

“My goal for the season would first and foremost be to develop and lead the team to a league championship,” Whitmore said. “From there we will then look forward to making it to state.

“I am fortunate to coach such a hard-working and dedicated group of student-athletes,” he added. “The expectations are high and we look forward to the lofty goals.”

As the Wolves head towards their opener (Sept. 6 at home vs. Mount Vernon Christian), they’re working on fine-tuning their skill set.

“Right now our team strengths start with strong leadership, which is so essential to the success of a season,” Whitmore said. “We also have a tough serve that has potential to frustrate opponents.

“Defensive intensity, both on the block and the back row digging seem to be a strength of ours as well.”

Consistency is the watchword of the day, however.

“We have put a heavy emphasis on tightening our serve receive and offensive firepower,” Whitmore said. “With a more consistent team passer rating, we will be able to use our offensive weapons in numerous positions.

“It all starts with the pass and our team recognizes that as a point of emphasis.”

Klahowya enters the season as the two-time defending league champs, but Whitmore stresses every match, league or non-league, is vitally important.

One slight change is the number of league matches the Wolves will play.

After back-to-back seasons of six, the number is now nine, pitting Coupeville against Port Townsend, Chimacum and Klahowya three times apiece.

The change, which also affects soccer, puts those sports on par with basketball, softball and baseball.

Regardless of the uniform on the other side of the net, the focus is the same.

“We will have to respect everyone that we come up against,” Whitmore said. “This includes non-league games – each and every opponent we face is a chance to get better.

“Focusing on us and taking care of our side of the net is what we will strive to manage.”

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Valen Trujillo: The Woman, the Myth, the Legend. (John Fisken photos)

Valen Trujillo: The Woman, the Myth, the Legend. (John Fisken photos)

What can we say about Valen Trujillo?

A lot, and all of it good.

The Coupeville High School senior, who celebrates a birthday today, has been as important as any athlete to the growth and success of Coupeville Sports.

She goes on a very small list, with people like Makana Stone, McKayla and McKenzie Bailey, Caleb Valko and Nick Streubel, for the impact they have had over the four years I’ve yammered away on this blog.

Miss Trujillo was an 8th grader when I first met her, a basketball fiend who made rival players cry and then came up into the stands afterward to thank me for attending her games.

Over the past four years, she has shown herself to be a completely brilliant young woman, in every way.

Athletically, it goes without saying.

Though she parted ways with the hoops world when she reached high school (I cry about that at least twice a week), Valen has blazed an extraordinary trail through the worlds of volleyball and tennis.

When she departs CHS, her memory will live on thanks to the volleyball record board in the gym hallway, as she already holds the school’s career record for digs.

Bolstered by Trujillo and classmates Tiffany Briscoe and Ally Roberts, the Wolf spikers won their first playoff match in years last season, and the outlook this year under new coach Cory Whitmore is so bright Valen might have to wear her tennis sunglasses indoors.

On the hard-court, Trujillo learned her game while backing up Jacki Ginnings, then blossomed as the #1 singles player when her mentor graduated.

A scrapper and a tactician, she’s the best player in the 1A Olympic League and has a legitimate shot at making a run at a state berth this coming spring.

And, this is all fine and good, but sports are just a small smidge of what makes Trujillo one of the true greats.

She is musically talented, both as a singer and guitar player, a brilliant baker (who has been kind enough to “bribe” me with some of her goodies), a protective, caring older sister to younger sibling Zoe, and deeply committed to her faith.

Now, maybe she’s killing hobos and burying them out behind the house. Anything is possible.

But everything I witnessed for the past four years, everything I have heard, points to one inescapable conclusion — Valen is the real deal.

She is kind, joyful, caring, genuinely friendly, whip-smart, strong as a rock, resolute and committed, essentially everything one looks for when they want to reach down and pluck up one student/athlete to show the world what Coupeville can produce.

Her parents, Craig and Amy, have done a remarkable job raising her and Zoe, and both girls reflect extremely well back on their parents, their faith, their school and their town.

When the time comes for Valen to leave CHS behind, when she hangs up her volleyball knee pads and her tennis racket and goes off to blossom in the outside world, it will be somewhat of a sad day.

I’ll miss seeing her streak across the horizon, a bright, burning ball of awesomeness illuminating all around her.

But it will also be a joyous day, because whatever she does with her life after high school, others who haven’t met her, who haven’t been able to enjoy having her as part of their life, will suddenly find themselves with a new blessing.

Trujillo was amazing as a middle school kid.

She’s been extraordinary as a high school teen.

Without a doubt, she’s going to make the entire world stand up and take notice of her as she becomes an adult.

So, happy birthday Valen.

And thank you, for letting all of us be a small part of your remarkable journey.

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