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   Heather Nastali’s win at #3 singles Friday clinched Coupeville’s 17th straight win in 1A Olympic League play. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The path to a girls tennis Olympic League title starts and ends in Coupeville.

Has for the past three years, and nothing looks likely to change in 2018.

Knocking off both their arch-rivals in a little over 24 hours, the Wolf netters bounced visiting Chimacum Friday 5-2.

The win, coming on the heels of a victory over Klahowya Thursday, lifts CHS to 2-0 in conference play, 3-5 overall.

Chimacum (0-1, 1-6) and Klahowya (0-1, 1-5) sit a game-and-a-half back as Coupeville seeks a fourth-straight league crown.

After enduring an early schedule jam-packed with 2A schools, the Wolves have won three of their last four matches and are now 17-0 all-time against 1A Olympic League foes.

Coupeville’s latest win came thanks to its depth in doubles, where the Wolves swept to four wins, all in straight sets.

With start times staggered depending on court availability and Chimacum pulling out wins at #1 and #2 singles in third-set tiebreakers, the actual clinching point came from Heather Nastali.

Romping to a 6-0, 6-0 win at #3 singles, the Wolf senior slapped a final winner down the line to end her match and give CHS its fourth team point on the afternoon.

The day was a vintage Whidbey production, as rain threatened (but never developed) and gusts of wind periodically swept across the frozen tundra (I mean tennis courts…).

Half the entertainment came in watching players try to knock balls back over the fence when they came flying in from other courts.

The slashing wind made that difficult, with at least three balls not making it back up and over, but instead blowing right back in the face of the girl who launched the shot.

While not hurricane-level maybe, the persistent wind also affected a number of shots during on-court action.

Often players would start one way, then have to lurch backwards or fall forward at the last second as the incoming shot suddenly changed directions.

Which doesn’t mean there wasn’t some great shot-making along the way, especially from the Wolf lefties, who seemed somewhat shielded from the breeze, which came primarily from their right side.

Coupeville has four southpaws — Kameryn St Onge, Sage Renninger, Nastali and Avalon Renninger — and all of them slashed with power and precision, making the Cowboys run from side to side while futilely chasing the ball.

Complete Friday results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Claire Mietus lost to Makaela Caskey 3-6, 6-4, 10-7

2nd Singles — Genna Wright lost to Vilma Jurmu 6-2, 4-6, 10-7

3rd Singles — Heather Nastali beat Chiara Vignale 6-0, 6-0

1st Doubles — Payton Aparicio/Sage Renninger beat Renee Woods/Emma Craighead 6-1, 6-0

2nd Doubles — Avalon Renninger/Tia Wurzrainer beat Grace Yaley/Chloe Patterson 6-2, 6-1

3rd Doubles — Maggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge beat Marley Music/Anna Pace 6-0, 6-0

4th Doubles — Jillian Mayne/Zara Bradley beat Denisse Lopez/Madison Hess 8-2

JV:

5th Doubles — Elaira Nicolle/Nanci Melendrez won 4-1 (Chimacum left to catch ferry)

6th Doubles — Jaimee Masters/Emily Fiedler won 6-0

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   Payton Aparicio teamed with Sage Renninger Monday for a dramatic win at #1 doubles against 2A powerhouse North Kitsap. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Welcome back. Now try and beat the giants.

Coming off a 13-day sabbatical, the Coupeville High School girls tennis squad faced a daunting task as 2A juggernaut North Kitsap swung by the Island.

The Vikings, with a deep, talented roster, entered play Monday boasting a 7-0 mark this season and a 56-2 record over the past five years.

In what could hardly be described as a surprise, North Kitsap kept that streak alive, overpowering the less-experienced Wolves 6-1.

Coupeville, a 2B-sized school forced to masquerade as a 1A school, has faced a brutal early-season schedule.

Five of its first six foes hail from 2A, and there’s still one more big school foe to go with a trip Wednesday to North Mason.

So, when you look at the Wolves 1-5 mark (they toppled previously unbeaten Granite Falls), remember that this early stretch has been mainly about enduring and surviving.

All six matches against Coupeville’s 1A Olympic League foes, Chimacum and Klahowya, are still ahead, with the first two set for the end of this week … if the weather cooperates.

Monday was a chance for the Wolves to see if they could be competitive with a true powerhouse.

The Vikings are led by three-time defending state 2A singles champ Danya Wallis, who is ranked as the #4 college prospect among female players in Washington state.

It doesn’t get much easier after that, as North Kitsap has talented players at every rung and a former highly-ranked college netter, Jordan Prince, installing daily lessons as a coach.

While Coupeville’s inexperienced singles players were overwhelmed Monday, the Wolf doubles duos put up a strong fight, especially at the #1 and #3 slots.

Sophomore Avalon Renninger and freshman Genna Wright teamed for the first time, with Renninger’s normal partner, Tia Wurzrainer, on her way home from a spring break trip to Austria.

Both strong natural athletes who are still coming in to their own as tennis players, the Wolf young guns forced a tiebreak in their first set and made their foes work hard for the victory.

Coupeville’s brightest spot came at the top of the ladder, as seniors Payton Aparicio and Sage Renninger played inspired tennis to topple a pair of crafty sisters.

Mixing guile (Renninger dropping shots behind her opponents backs) with bursts of raw power (Aparicio slicing an overhead off the back line), the Wolf duo pulled out a very-satisfying straight-sets win.

Complete Monday results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Claire Mietus lost to Danya Wallis 6-0, 6-0

2nd Singles — Heather Nastali lost to Grace Hansen 6-0, 6-0

3rd Singles — Megan Behan lost to Anna Bronchal 6-0, 6-0

1st Doubles — Payton Aparicio/Sage Renninger beat Amalia Barreith/Noelani Barreith 7-5, 6-3

2nd Doubles — Maggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge lost to Eunice Moran/Tori Carver 6-2, 6-1

3rd Doubles — Avalon Renninger/Genna Wright lost to Jessica Raper/Rachel Griffel 7-6(7-2), 6-3

4th Doubles — Jillian Mayne/Zara Bradley lost to Jackie Marshall/Riley Rabedeaux 6-2, 5-1 (ferry)

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   Wolf junior Lindsey Roberts offers offensive pop and defensive intensity to a basketball squad seeking a fourth-straight league title. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Kalia Littlejohn brings speed, scrappy defense and a never-say-die attitude to the floor every night.

“I still believe we are the team to beat.”

David King has been coaching long enough to see his share of both highs and lows. While he knows this year’s Coupeville High School girls squad is a team in transition, he’s ready for another battle.

After making a run to the state tourney two years ago, the Wolves returned to the district playoffs as Olympic League champs in 2016-2017, only to be unceremoniously bounced.

To which King says, shake it off.

“With improving daily and playing our best, we are gunning for the playoffs and taking the top spot in our league,” he said. “Last year we made it to the double-elimination round of districts, didn’t play well in either game.

“With time to reflect, we have a better understanding of what we need to do to prepare if we are in the position again.”

In the short run of the 1A Olympic League, which is entering its fourth season of basketball, Coupeville’s girls have been the undisputed big, bad beast.

Three straight conference titles and a 27-0 mark against rivals Port Townsend, Klahowya and Chimacum earns the Wolves a big target on their back. But it also increases their eagerness to defend and preserve that streak.

“The gap has closed with the other teams in our league,” King said. “Each team has some very good players, us included.

“At that point it comes down to the strengths you have as a team and how you can conquer and/or minimize your weaknesses.”

Port Townsend, led by senior Kaitlyn Meek, “has always played us tough and can challenge for the top spot” while Chimacum “battles every game and doesn’t quit until the final buzzer.”

Add in Klahowya, which “is a good defensive team, is always up for a challenge and plays us well,” and Coupeville has to bring its best game each night.

That shouldn’t be an issue, as talent runs deep on the Wolf bench.

While CHS lost key players – Lauren Grove, Kailey Kellner and Tiffany Briscoe graduated, Mia Littlejohn transferred and Lauren Rose is taking the season off — the Wolves retain considerable strength.

Juniors Lindsey Roberts and Kalia Littlejohn and seniors Mikayla Elfrank and Kyla Briscoe are the top returning veterans, while senior Allison Wenzel, juniors Sarah Wright and Ema Smith and sophomore Scout Smith are expected to play major roles.

Roberts and Elfrank, both entering their third season on the Wolf varsity, boast the most playing time of any returning veterans.

“Both will bounce between the wing and post,” King said. “They are our better post defenders, along with having the length and speed to guard very well on the perimeter.”

The duo will also see some time at point guard, a slot where Littlejohn and Briscoe will also be called upon.

Kalia came out and made great strides last year for our team,” King said. “This year, she has a year under her belt, more confidence and is comfortable. The obvious choice is having her be our spark plug from the point guard position.

Kyla is right up there with the other three; she was slowed last year with returning from an injury,” he added. “She’ll mainly be a wing-type player, but can lead us from the point guard position and also play the post when called upon.”

With his core four all able to bounce from position to position, and handle each role’s intricacies, King is afforded the luxury of being able to mix and match at will.

“The great thing about this foursome is that they have become very versatile and excel in each position they play,” he said. “They all can play multiple positions with minimal to no drop off at any of the positions.”

Sophomore Avalon Renninger will be a swing player, pulling time on both varsity and JV, while several other Wolves have a strong shot at eventually joining her in a similar role.

Juniors Ashlie Shank, Maddy Hilkey and Nicole Lester, sophomore Tia Wurzrainer and freshman Chelsea Prescott form that group.

“They’ll start out on JV (with coach Amy King), with the opportunity to showcase their skills and talent,” David King said. “There will be opportunities for each to earn and possibly become a swing player as the season progresses.

“All of them need to get the valuable playing time on the JV court to improve and hone their skills,” he added. “Right now, with eight to nine varsity players ahead of them, it would be hard to get playing time on a varsity court.”

Rounding out the Wolf roster are freshmen Mollie Bailey, Heidi MeyersGenna Wright and Kylie Chernikoff and foreign exchange student Julia Garcia Onoro.

Maddie Vondrak is team manager.

“What this group lacks in experience (being freshman or never playing before), they are showing they make it up with hustle and determination,” King said. “They aren’t afraid to step in and give 100% effort in each drill.

Mollie and Genna went to camp with us, which helps their learning curve at this stage,” he added. “All of them are fitting in really well and show a willingness to learn and get better.”

As both the varsity and JV prep for a new campaign, Wolf coaches have several areas they stress.

“To start the season our main goal is to get familiar with ourselves as a team,” King said. “Understand each other’s strengths and recognize how we can help each other by putting ourselves in positions to be successful. Play to our strengths.

“Every team starts at a certain level on day one,” he added. “Every team then looks to improve and get better each day. We are no exception.

“By the time the end of the season rolls around we want to be playing our best basketball.”

Some areas of focus include building mental toughness, which will help come playoff time, and learning patience on offense, which will help the Wolves capitalize on their opponents mistakes.

“Each year we seem to struggle with playing too fast, which in turn is out of control,” King said with a wry smile. “A team can play fast, but if it’s not controlled it leads to turnovers, bad shots and fouls. I like the fast pace, we just need to get better at playing fast and when to pull it back.

“We preach that mistakes will happen on every possession,” he added. “It’s the team that can move past that, that has the advantage. Learn from it, don’t quit and move forward.

“We are also working on players recognizing what the other teams are giving us and taking advantage of that.”

While Coupeville will have to figure out a way to replace the scoring punch offered by the players no longer in uniform, King likes the makeup of his current players, and the intangibles they bring to the floor.

“The players love to play defense and be disruptive and, top to bottom, many of the players are capable of being able to play two or three different positions,” King said. “We may not be the tallest team, but our athletic ability and overall team speed is second to none.

“Our post and wing players aren’t afraid of contact and are willing to do the dirty work and play strong in the post area.”

The greatest intangible, though, might be their chemistry.

“The team has a positive outlook with their teammates,” King said. “They are a family and are willing to help each other and have a great attitude.”

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   Hitting a variety of sweet winners Tuesday, Kameryn St Onge teamed with Maggie Crimmins to sweep to a 6-0, 6-0 win. (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf seniors (l to r) Rubi Melendrez, Fanny Deprelle, Bree Daigneault and Valen Trujillo celebrated their last home match. (Craig Trujillo photo)

Daigneault goes out swinging. (Ken Stange photo)

The sun departed, but the winning remained.

After playing under blue skies Monday, the Coupeville High School netters bundled up again Tuesday, as a more typical cold, overcast “spring sports” kind of weather descended on Cow Town.

But, not a single rain drop was anywhere to be seen, giving the Wolves a chance to pull off that rarest of rarities this season — complete matches on consecutive days.

And, just like Monday, Coupeville rolled, this time bouncing visiting Chimacum 6-1 on Senior Night.

The win lifts CHS to 2-0 in Olympic League play, 4-3 overall.

Winners of four straight matches, the Wolves hit the road (weather permitting) the next two days, heading to South Whidbey and Klahowya.

Facing Chimacum for the first time this season — an earlier match was postponed by rain — Coupeville moved with precision and put the Cowboys away quickly.

Sage Renninger and Payton Aparicio remained perfect at first doubles, winning so fast at least one Wolf grandmother had barely settled into her court-side seat when the final winner was hit.

Several Wolves had especially strong days, but maybe none more so than Avalon Renninger.

The fab frosh used her wicked left-hand shot to drop winner after winner over her befuddled foes head’s, then bounced enthusiastically over to high-five doubles partner Zoe Trujillo each time.

The day’s most back-and-forth match came at second singles, where Port Townsend gunslinger Amelia Breithaupt pulled out a three-set stunner over Fanny Deprelle.

PTHS doesn’t have a tennis program, so a few Redhawks latch on with Chimacum each season, and the ever-affable Breithaupt has been a regular presence on the court.

On this day, she pulled out a tough tiebreaker in the opening set, got rocked hard by Deprelle (to the tune of 6-0) in set two, then rallied for the victory in a match where the two combatants played the day’s longest match.

Chimacum gives the Coupeville girls a run for its money in being the most polite tennis team in all the land, and that was evident all afternoon.

At first singles, Cowboy Renee Woods and Wolf Valen Trujillo had a love-fest, repeatedly praising each other’s shots.

That tone carried from court to court, with the topper, of course, being CHS singles player Bree Daigneault, who was born to gush sunshine.

After dismantling her rival, she spent the walk back to their respective coaches praising the Chimacum player’s service game and left her with a smile on her face, even in defeat.

With the match being Senior Night for Coupeville — the Wolves have a string of road matches still left on the schedule — it was the final chance for Daigneault, Trujillo, Deprelle and Rubi Melendrez to rep their school on their home court.

How appropriate that, in the final moments of her final home match, Daigneault was doing what she does best — showing a genuine love and respect for the game, and people who play it with her, regardless of what uniform they wear.

Complete Tuesday results:

Varsity:

1st singlesValen Trujillo beat Renee Woods 6-2, 6-1

2nd singles Fanny Deprelle lost to Amelia Breithaupt 7-6(7-4), 0-6, 10-6

3rd singlesBree Daigneault beat Gladys Hitt 7-6(7-2), 6-3

1st doublesSage Renninger/Payton Aparicio beat Amy Plastow/Christina Bell 6-0, 6-0

2nd doubles Avalon Renninger/Zoe Trujillo beat Jordyn Johnson/Marley Music 6-1, 6-1

3rd doublesMaggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge beat Marianne Eastwood/Claire Jorgensen 6-0, 6-0

4th doublesTia Wurzrainer/Claire Mietus won by forfeit

JV:

5th doublesJillian Mayne/Zara Bradley lost to Christina Bell/Amelia Breithaupt 6-0

5th doublesHeather Nastali/Sophie Furtjes trailed Marley Music/Jordyn Johnson 4-2 (match called for ferry)

7th doublesRubi Melendrez/Nanci Melendrez lost to Marianne Eastwood/Claire Jorgensen 6-0

8th doublesTia Wurzrainer/Claire Mietus lost to Renee Woods/Amy Plastow 6-1

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   Katrina McGranahan whacked a double, triple and home run while also tossing 11 strikeouts Monday in a win over Meridian. (John Fisken photo)

“We ended it early so we could go to Taco Time for dinner.”

Raining down pain on host Meridian Monday, the Coupeville High School softball squad made quick work of another opponent, leaving coach Kevin McGranahan smiling.

“The whole team fought from the beginning to the end,” he said. “Another solid win for the Wolves.”

By the time CHS was done pasting the ball — all nine starters had at least one hit, with Katrina McGranahan tallying a double, triple and home run — the Wolves had rolled to a 12-2 win called early thanks to the mercy rule.

The win, the fifth straight for Coupeville, lifts it to 12-1 on the season.

That matches the 2002 Wolf sluggers, who finished 3rd at state, for the best start through 13 games.

Facing their second straight foe from the always-dangerous Northwest Conference, Coupeville showed the same resolve (and big bats) which helped them thump Lynden Christian Saturday.

The Wolves got to Meridian’s starting pitcher in a hurry.

Lead-off hitter Lauren Rose swatted a single, then, two batters later, Katrina McGranahan jacked her fourth home run of the season, parking it deep over the fence in right-center.

A couple of walks, a Meridian error and a single off the bat of Hope Lodell plated two more runs before the inning was done, and the Wolves were off in style.

Coupeville added two in the third, then put together three-run rallies in both the fourth and sixth to ice the game.

Continuing her torrid pitching of late, McGranahan mowed down 10 of the first 11 batters she faced, allowing only one runner until the fourth inning.

Never in danger (Meridian scraped together its two runs in the sixth after trailing 12-0), she whiffed 11 and, when necessary, got a little prime-time help from her defense.

The very first batter singled, only to be gunned down trying to steal second by Wolf catcher Sarah Wright.

CHS had everything going for it — pitching, defense, and, as usual, high-powered offense.

All three of McGranahan’s hits were for extra bases, and she was only denied a chance to hit for the cycle when Meridian walked her the fourth time she strode to the plate.

Wright (a single and double) and Lodell (two singles) backed her up, while Rose, Jae LeVine, Mikayla Elfrank, Veronica Crownover, Tiffany Briscoe and Tamika Nastali all added a base-knock.

Freshman Scout Smith scored twice and had a pair of steals as a pinch-runner.

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