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Posts Tagged ‘Zariyah Allen’

Arley Bosler and Coupeville’s C-Team won its match Thursday afternoon. (Julie Wheat photo)

The home finale was a barnburner.

Defending their home court for the last time this season, the Coupeville Middle School volleyball squads clashed with visiting Sultan Thursday, nabbing a win and a pair of close losses.

The day was supposed to start with the C-Team playing first, but things got flipped at the last second, with varsity going first.

That change made for an extended warmup period.

Add it to an intense first match, filled to the brim with multiple time-outs and long rallies, and the clock ran out on me after just two sets, as the high school spikers were about to begin their clash with La Conner across the hallway.

Before I left, the varsity squads split the first two sets, with Sultan taking the opener 25-16, before Coupeville rebounded to snatch frame #2 by a 25-23 score.

Without my rear being abused by the rock-hard bleachers in the middle school gym, the Turks pulled out a 15-12 victory in the deciding set.

Zariyah Allen and Rhylee Inman came up big for the Wolves in the early going, with the former slicing off Sultan arms with wicked kills and the latter soaring into the air to establish a no-fly zone for the Turks at the net.

Toss in a sweet lil’ tip from Cameron Van Dyke, sending a rival sprawling to the floor, and winners from Reagan Green and Jade Peabody, and CMS was on point.

Unfortunately, an 11-6 lead evaporated as Sultan, powered by a mighty masher in the middle of its offense, closed the set on a 19-5 tear.

The second set featured nine ties before the Wolves pulled away for the win.

Inman, to the delight of a large personal fan section, was on fire at the net (and on her serve), while Allen and Faith Rivers also peppered the Turk defense while firing off serves.

The Wolves built a 19-14 lead, Sultan got back to 20-20, then CMS put the hammer down.

The Turks fought off two set points, but Coupeville sent me out of the smaller gym surrounded by the victorious screaming of teen girls by holding on to eke out the set win.

Without me in the middle school gym, the Wolf JV fell 21-25, 26-24, 15-8, while the C-Team nabbed its first win of the season, bouncing the Turks 25-22, 25-21, 10-15.

“The girls were resilient,” said CMS coach Shaloma Allen.

“I’m proud of how far they have come this season,” she added. “The energy stayed high, and I was proud of each one of them.”

Coupeville ends its season with back-to-back road trips to Lakewood and South Whidbey Oct. 21-22.

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Halle Black (left) and Reagan Green (7) both delivered strong performances on the volleyball court Tuesday. (Photo courtesy Mandi Black)

It was the big break-through.

The Coupeville Middle School volleyball squads have played strongly all season, shown growth, desire, and improvement.

But the Wolves were still looking for that elusive first win.

Until Tuesday, that is, when CMS bounced visiting Northshore Christian Academy not once, but twice, setting off the kind of celebration unique to a pack of tween girls screaming loud and long in a small gym, their joy echoing off the walls and across the prairie.

It made for a great return to the court for the Wolf spikers and their classmates, their parents, and Coupeville coaches Shaloma Allen and Katie Rohrbach.

How the day played out:

 

Varsity:

It was a tense, back-and-forth affair that ended, technically, in a tie, as both teams won 61 points.

But because volleyball is decided by sets, Coupeville’s young stars shimmied off the floor with a come-from-behind 20-25, 25-22, 16-14 victory.

To get there, the Wolves had to hold off a match point while trailing 14-13 in the final set, before closing on a 3-0 run.

Northshore misfired on a serve that might have won things, and with the ball back in their hands, Wolf snipers Cameron Van Dyke and Zariyah Allen sealed the win.

Van Dyke fired off a pair of precision serves to get things underway, while closing out point #15 with a tip winner, while Allen ended the match with a sensational flip of the ball over her shoulder, catching the line for a final winner as the visitors watched in frozen horror.

That capped off a furious frame in which there were eight ties and seven lead changes.

Tip winners from Rhylee Inman, Kaleigha Millison, Zariyah Allen, and Van Dyke kept the Wolves in the thick of things, with Inman and Reina Rivers each delivering crucial three-point runs at the service stripe.

The match was a brawl all the way from the first serve to the last tip, with neither team able to pull away.

Inman was on a roll in the opening set, mixing strong work on her serve with inspired play at the net, while both Reina Rivers and Faith Rivers peppered Northshore from the service stripe.

But while Coupeville held off two set points and got a picture-perfect tip winner off the fingers of the gracefully soaring Jade Peabody, it couldn’t quite deny its rivals, falling a set behind.

The Wolves didn’t miss a beat, however, seizing the second-set lead for good at 7-6 and never giving it back.

Reagan Green put together a four-point run on her serve to stretch the margin out to 11-6, punctuating things with an ace which split a pair of defenders as it skidded by.

Inman and Zariyah Allen formed a deadly duo at the net, with Van Dyke madly bouncing around to loft sets for her heavy hitters.

Basking in the afterglow of victory, Shaloma Allen praised her squad, which also included Emily Rains and Addy Jacobson, while giving some extra props to Peabody who “really stepped up at the net.”

The Wolf head coach was also justifiably beaming over the play of her own offspring.

“I am just super proud of Zariyah and how we have been able to rely on her encouraging the whole team.”

 

JV:

Coupeville rolled in the first set, made a major comeback in the second, then coasted in for a 25-16, 25-23, 7-15 win.

The Wolves were actually trailing 4-1 in the very early going but got the spark they needed when Emma Green came sliding in to force a side-out with a major hustle play.

From there, CMS heated up at the line, with Halle Black, Josie McColl, Emma Green, and Addy Jacobson smacking serves Northshore had no answers for on this day.

The second set took a dangerous turn, with the Wolves falling behind 17-10, but once again the hometown heroes had an answer.

This time her name was Annabelle Cundiff, who followed up a side-out by running off five straight points on her serve — the maximum allowed in middle school play before a team has to swap out servers.

Northshore only managed to get one of those five offerings back into play, but hit it straight into the net, while Cundiff cracked off the day’s nastiest ace on her second serve.

Coupeville finally reclaimed the lead at 21-20 on a Reina Rivers ace, fell back behind 22-21, then clinched the win with a 4-1 surge.

Shaloma Allen praised Halle Black, who “is doing a great job with her leadership, which is really cool to see,” and Reina Rivers, “who stepped out of her shell and really stepped up in both the varsity and JV matches today.”

Rounding out the Wolf roster in the win were Amira Anunciado, Sabrina Judnich, Maja Govorcin, Mia Goers, Arley Bosler, and Jasmine Allen.

 

C-Team:

Northshore only has two teams, not three, so Coupeville’s third unit had the day off.

 

Up Next:

The Wolves host Sultan Thursday, before finishing the season with back-to-back road trips to Lakewood and South Whidbey Oct. 21-22.

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Tamsin Ward now has 23 wins through two seasons of middle school track and field. (Photo courtesy Jandellyn Ward)

One, a coronation. The other, a most pleasant surprise.

The Coupeville Middle School track and field team put a stamp on the 2024 season Wednesday at day two of the Cascade League Championships in Lakewood, winning two individual titles.

The first, a triumph in the 100 from Tamsin Ward, was a thunderous uppercut.

It gave the Wolf 7th grader her second league title of the season, following a win in the shot-put last week, and her 12th victory of this campaign.

That pushes Ward one win ahead of the 11 she nailed down as a 6th grader and ties her with future high school state champ Alex Murdy for the second-best performance by a CMS athlete since 2008.

Only Lindsey Roberts, with 18 wins in 2015, tops the duo, and both she and Murdy did their winning work as 8th graders.

And why 2008? That’s as far back as athletic.net has CMS track marks recorded.

Young stars (left to right) Claire Lachnit, Zariyah Allen, and Kaleigha Millison celebrate the day. (Photo courtesy Shalomah Allen)

Wednesday’s second title was a bit more of a surprise, as 6th grader Zariyah Allen made them bow down in the discus.

Chucking the implement a stunning 15 feet further than her previous PR, she captured her second-ever win as a CMS track supernova and did it on the season’s biggest stage.

Zariyah’s second throw was perfect,” said Wolf coach Jon Gabelein.

“While I knew it was much farther than she has ever thrown before, she was surprised that the official confirmed the measurement.

“Passing her previous record by 15 feet is amazing.”

Wednesday’s rumble, a seven-team showdown, finished with South Whidbey winning both girls team crowns, while King’s (6th/7th) and Lakewood (8th) split the boys titles.

Coupeville might not have had the depth to topple their bigger-school rivals in the team standings, but, to an athlete, they impressed their coaches.

“Throughout our season, students were able to see how strong efforts turn into even stronger abilities,” Gabelein said.

A Wolf runner slices between two private school rivals. (Ezekiel Allen photo)

 

Wednesday’s results:

 

GIRLS:

8th grade:

200 — Laken Simpson (6th) 29.50 *PR*

400 — Taylor Marrs (4th) 1:16.59 *PR*

1600 — Mikayla Wagner (2nd) 6:22.47; Devon Wyman (5th) 6:47.07

4 x 200 Relay — Lillian Ketterling, L. Simpson, M. Wagner, Wyman (3rd) 2:12.60

Discus — Ketterling (3rd) 68-02 *PR*; Amelia Crowder (6th) 57-05.50 *PR*, Marrs (9th) 54-01

Long Jump — M. Wagner (19th) 11-03; Isa Mc Fetridge (24th) 10-07.50

 

6th/7th grade:

100 — Tamsin Ward (1st) 13.72 *PR*

200 — Hyley Farrell (3rd) 30.31

4 x 100 Relay — Brooklyn Pope, Emma Cushman, Farrell, Annaliese Powers (5th) 1:02.77

4 x 200 Relay — Farrell, Ward, Elizabeth Marshall, Sage Stavros (2nd) 2:10.58

Discus — Zariyah Allen (1st) 72-06 *PR*; Claire Lachnit (13th) 47-04.50 *PR*

Long Jump — Farrell (6th) 12-03.75; Kennedy O’Neill (11th) 11-04.25; Marshall (15th) 10-09.50; Autumn Rubin (18th) 10-07.50; Pope (21st) 10-01.50

Flying to success. (Ezekiel Allen photo)

 

BOYS:

8th grade:

100 — Beckett Green (8th) 12.61 *PR*

200 — Green (5th) 26.21

4 x 100 Relay — Edmund Kunz, Green, Shiloh Sandlin, Leonardo Rodriguez (3rd) 53.05

Shot Put — Khanor Jump (8th) 33-01.50 *PR*

High Jump — Johnathan Jacobsen (9th) 4-08

 

6th/7th grade:

100 — Collin Mirabile (4th) 13.00

200 — River Simpson (6th) 28.00 *PR*

800 — Cyrus Sparacio (7th) 2:42.58 *PR*; Lincoln Wagner (10th) 2:53.58; Sawyer Rudat (11th) 2:53.83; Ossian Merkel (13th) 2:56.68; Archer Schwarz (14th) 2:59.21 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Malachi Chapa, Xander Beaman, R. Simpson, Henry Purdue (5th) 56.72

Shot Put — Mirabile (3rd) 33-03.50 *PR*; Diesel Eck (6th) 28-05.50; Vincent Alguire (9th) 27-07 *PR*; Nolan Hunt (25th) 15-11 *PR*

High Jump — Merkel (10th) 4-04; Beaman (13th) 4-04 *PR*

“Time to go kick some fanny.” (Ezekiel Allen photo)

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