Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Willow Leedy-Bonifas’

Chelsi Stevens and her fellow CMS spikers continue to show great growth. (Photo courtesy Kristi Stevens)

It was only the first chapter.

While the Coupeville Middle School volleyball squads fell at South Whidbey Wednesday, the Wolves will get an immediate chance at redemption.

That’s because the next-door neighbors are playing back-to-back matches with each other, with the South Enders scheduled to travel up to Cow Town Tuesday, Oct. 17 for a rematch.

That’s the home finale for Coupeville, and a perfect opportunity for Wolf Nation to pack the CMS gym and create a wall of sound.

With that in mind, how Wednesday played out:

 

Varsity:

Unforced errors stung the Wolves in a 25-17, 25-17, 15-8 loss.

“We started every set strong, but we had so many errors that led South Whidbey to take the lead mid set, while we kept trying to keep the ball in play,” said CMS coach Cris Matochi.

“South Whidbey is way better than they were last year,” he added. “They were keeping the ball in play very consistently.

“They have an incredible and well-trained libero that was running for everything. She is the backbone of their team.”

Matochi also praised the Cougar staff — “They have two great coaches that are doing an incredible job training those kids” — while finding positives for his team, as well.

“Now we know what they look like, and I hope that the players step up their game so we can fight for every point next week,” he said.

“Our setter Addy (Maynes) played her heart out,” Matochi added. “She was getting to every single ball, and she always plays with her full heart.”

Giving her some help is job #1 before the rematch.

“There is only so much a setter can do when the passes are not coming to her,” Matochi said.

“We will be focusing on our serve receive and serve, and keeping the ball in play as those two skills will be imperative for us to be able to perform well.”

The Wolf coach is already counting down the days until Coupeville gets a second crack at its archrivals.

“Next week we will need to fight, and it won’t be easy,” Matochi said. “I’m hoping that being at home and having our incredible fans will boost the players confidence and give them a boost.

“I’m hoping that the girls will use this opportunity to bring their A-game next week.”

 

JV – Team A:

“I feel like I always say this but, although my teams didn’t win the game, they played so well I couldn’t be happier with their growth and progress.”

That was the feeling Wolf coach Kristina Hooks carried away from Langley after her team bounced back to claim set #3 by a 16-14 score, after South Whidbey won the first two frames 25-14, 25-18.

Battling both talented rivals and their own frustration over some questionable calls from the ref — whose seeing-eye dog had been possibly locked out of the gym — the young Wolves got stronger as the match played out.

Hooks has been working with her players on passing — “That’s really the fundamental skill of volleyball” — and was pleased with her team’s growth.

“If you can’t pass, you can’t really do anything else and all of a sudden during this game their passes started being amazing,” she said.

“This was the first game where I had my players practice being setters and getting the second ball and Brooklyn (Pope) and Cami (Van Dyke) did amazing.

“They were running all over the court to get to that second ball.”

 

JV – Team B:

Growth was again the word of the day.

While the Wolves lost 25-19, 25-8, 15-7, Hooks sees progress every time out.

“This team’s performance had a significant increase from our last game,” she said. “They played so well.

“Their passes were doing really well, and almost all of my girls were making their serves over the net, which was amazing and a little surprising.”

On a team with very inexperienced players, Hooks especially enjoys seeing how her young spikers remain positive, helping each other.

“I love the girls on this team,” she said. “They’re all so sweet to each other.

“After every point, especially a mistake, they run towards their teammate that missed a serve or shanked a pass and are encouraging them; it’s the sweetest thing to see.”

Read Full Post »

Super fan Riley White (left) hangs out with spikers Tenley Stuurmans (center) and Ari Cunningham. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The uniforms have been handed out, and the matches are ready to be played.

Coupeville Middle School volleyball coaches Cris Matochi and Kristina Hooks have a deep roster, with 36 players ready to rock.

The young Wolf spikers launch their eight-match season Monday, with a trip to Sultan.

The first home rumble is Oct. 2, when Granite Falls travels to Whidbey for what will be the first of three straight bouts in the CMS gym.

The roster as it stands today:

 

8th grade:

Cheyenne Attebury
Delilah Castellanos
Ari Cunningham
Amaiya Curry
Isabella de Souza
Denali Kalwies
Willow Leedy-Bonifas
Alexandra Lo
Adeline Maynes
Alyssa McGee
Rhylin Price
Chelsi Stevens
Tenley Stuurmans
Sydney Van Dyke

 

7th grade:

Emma Cushman
Emma Leavitt
Olivia Martin
Kennedy O’Neill
Eleanor Peterson
Brooklyn Pope
Cassie Powers
Sage Stavros
Zoe Winstead

 

6th grade:

Zariya Allen
Annabelle Cundiff
Mila Gesing
Emma Green
Viktoria Grieves
Finley Helm
Samantha Howard
Rhylee Inman
Kaylee Moore
Jade Peabody
Sadie Rich
Scarlett Spencer
Cami Van Dyke

Cris Matochi returns to the CMS gym for another season of sets and spikes.

Read Full Post »

You get an “A” for defensive effort. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s still raining.

A day after a substantial amount of chunky hail peppered parts of Whidbey Island, the Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball squads dropped numerous buckets from above on visiting Granite Falls.

With 14 different Wolves scoring in their home gym Monday afternoon, CMS won a game and came within a basket of forcing overtime in another.

How the day played out:

 

Level 1:

Coupeville’s top squad built an early lead, but couldn’t hang on late, and was nipped 23-21 in a nip-and-tuck battle.

Five different Wolves kissed the ball off the backboard in the second quarter, sending CMS into the halftime break up 14-8.

Unfortunately for local fans, the visitors clamped down on the defensive side of the ball in the second half, cutting their deficit to 17-14 after three quarters, before pulling away for the narrow win.

8th grade ace Haylee Armstrong paced the Wolves with a team-high eight points, with Capri Anter chipping in with four.

Sydney Van Dyke (2), Rhylin Price (2), Tamsin Ward (2), Adeline Maynes (2), and Tenley Stuurmans (1) also scored, with Lexis Drake rounding out the active roster.

 

Level 2:

The Wolves bolted out to a quick lead, then held on for the victory in a defensive-minded rumble.

Holding Granite scoreless in the second quarter, Coupeville pushed a 4-2 lead at the first break out to a 10-2 advantage at the half, with the two teams combining for just 10 points in the second half.

Ari Cunningham had the hot hand for the Wolves, banking in six points, with Lillie Ketterling (4), Lina Shelly (2), and Melanie Wolfe (2) also tallying points for CMS.

Kennedy O’Neill, Izzy Bowder, Taylor Marrs, Amaiya Curry, and Isa De Souza Oliveira Mc Fetridge all saw floor time as well.

 

Level 3:

You got me.

The Wolves lost 28-12, but it’s tricky to know more.

My sister is in Antarctica for two weeks (seriously), so I’m holding down the farm — and three nephews, two dogs, a cat, 75,612 chickens, and assorted wayward coyotes — and unable to attend any of the home games in person.

Monday’s book?

Willow Leedy-Bonifas is visible, pulling off the Beyonce-style one-name thing, but everyone else appears to have joined the Witness Relocation Program and I have no list of players matching names with jersey #’s, so…

 

What’s next:

Coupeville has a busy week, traveling to Lakewood Tuesday, before hosting Sultan Thursday. Tipoff is 3:15 PM.

The season wraps the following week, with a final home royal rumble Thursday, Mar. 9 against South Whidbey.

Read Full Post »

Willow Leedy-Bonifas, seen here last season, played strongly Thursday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a memorable trip.

Thursday’s trek to the wilds of Sultan was about more than just volleyball for the Coupeville Middle School spikers.

Wolf coach Cris Matochi had to push through a back injury to make an appearance, while the poor air quality — 295 on the index — left the outside of the gym looking like snow was falling.

Once inside the enclosure, CMS faced off with a tough Turks program in a rematch of an earlier-season rumble, with the host teams getting a bit of revenge.

How the day played out:

 

Varsity:

Coupeville pulled out a three-set win on Whidbey Island back in early October, but this time around Sultan came out ahead 25-20, 25-21, 15-10.

Sapped by the long trip and the stagnant, smoke-filled surroundings, the Wolves hit the floor missing a bit of their mojo.

“We started with lower energy and had to dig ourselves out of a hole,” said Wolf coach Raven Vick.

“By the end they played really well, but it was just too late in the game.”

Coupeville, normally a strong-serving team, struggled a bit at the line, and that hurt, though the Wolves did “execute the game plan well and had nice ball handling from everyone.”

Vick and Matochi praised the play of Adeline Maynes, who was on fire as a setter, and Haylee Armstong, who sprayed winners all day.

Haylee was a standout, getting multiple attacks and had one kill that left us coaches speechless,” Vick said.

“She had amazing form and crushed the ball to the floor.”

 

JV:

The Wolves “played well and worked hard to get a consistent three touches but struggled with keeping the ball in” during a 25-12, 25-14, 15-8 loss.

“The times we did get all three touches, we would get the point,” Vick said.

Willow Leedy-Bonifas and Emma Leavitt were on point with their serves, setting up positive Wolf rallies.

“Everyone chipped in and did well,” Vick said. “We saw more people who have struggled with serves get at least one serve in, which was great.

“They had some positive energy which was great to see as they really wanted to play well.

“They hustled to every ball and gave so much effort. It was exciting to see.”

 

Coupeville closes its eight-match season with back-to-back rumbles against Island rival Langley next week.

The Wolves host the Cougars Monday, Oct. 24, then head south two days later.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts