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Mia (left) and Vivian Farris. They’re kind of legendary. (Photo courtesy Susan Farris)

Sister, my sister.

Coupeville High School has a long history of siblings excelling in athletics, whether on the same team or separately.

In recent times, one of the best examples of that is Vivian and Mia Farris, who both shone brightly while always being hugely supportive of each other.

The duo has a large and faithful fan club, headed up by parents Fred and Susan, but always seemed to be each other’s most faithful backer.

When one was watching the other play, the quiet pride which reflected in their faces was always evident, and heartwarming.

Vivian, the older of the pair, played multiple sports during her Coupeville days, but found her greatest success as a tennis player and figure skater.

Vivian Farris and Hayley Fiedler became queens of the ice rink. (Photo courtesy Susan Farris)

On the court or ice, she teamed with Hayley Fiedler, her “sister from another mister,” and was always a high achiever.

Vivian’s love of skating developed during the pandemic, when she was looking for an outlet when almost everything was shut down.

Hooking up with the Bellingham Figure Skating Club, Farris and Fiedler blossomed in pairs skating, competing at Ice Fest, while also participating in multiple holiday-themed shows.

When the weather was (slightly) warmer, Vivian patrolled the tennis court for CHS, operating as half of the Wolves top doubles duo.

Equally deadly while patrolling the net or slapping winners from the baseline, Vivian was part of a very strong group of Class of 2023 seniors who helped send longtime Wolf net coach Ken Stange into retirement after winning the District 1/2/4 team title.

Celebrating Senior Night. (Jackie Saia photo)

Following in the footsteps of her big sis, Mia Farris graduated in 2025 as one of the most-accomplished athletes in school history.

A two-time CHS Female Athlete of the Year winner, she starred for Wolf volleyball, basketball, and softball teams, helping take the former and latter to state tourney success.

Mia Farris, off to blast spikes off of rival player’s knees. (Photo by JohnPhotos.net)

Mia the Magnificent,” who celebrates her 19th birthday today, was a key player for a spiker squad which set program high-water marks during her senior season.

She pounded out 174 kills, went low for 179 digs, and ripped off 38 service aces in her final campaign.

That helped spark Coupeville, which went 18-2, won league and bi-district titles, was undefeated until the final day of the season, and finished 4th at the 2B state tourney.

For her sparkling play in the spotlight, Mia was named to the Washington State Volleyball Coaches Association All-State Tournament Team.

Not content to end there, Vivian’s favorite sister finished her basketball career as the #50 scorer in CHS girls’ history, singing the nets for 247 points, while being an absolute beast on defense.

Going, going, gone. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

And then it was on to softball, where Mia played center field but ran down balls (and crashed through fences) in right and left, as well.

A hit machine at the plate who could belt home runs into the wild blue yonder or slap base hits into tiny gaps in the defense, she was part of a stellar group which won 64 varsity games over their four-year run in CHS uniforms.

That included a pair of victories at the state tourney as a senior, as Mia and friends came within a play or two of bringing home another trophy.

While both of the Farris sisters have departed the hallways and playing fields of CHS, off to pursue new hopes and dreams, the memories of their excellence remain.

To help keep that fire burning, to pay tribute to a pair of elegant assassins, we swing open the doors of the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame today and induct them as a duo.

After this, you’ll find Vivian and Mia up at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab.

Sister my sister, supremely successful in all things and richly deserving of our praise.

Mom and big sis carry their injured hero off the field in earlier days. (Photo courtesy Susan Farris)

Aiden O’Neill (left) and Carson Grove play aggressive defense in an earlier game. (Melanie Wolfe photo)

The winning streak hit a bump in the road.

The Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball squad entered play Monday having won three of its last four games but couldn’t get past Auburn Adventist Academy.

The Falcons, who are in the top 10 in the state’s current RPI rankings for 2B schools, jumped on the visiting Wolves from the opening tip and ran away with a 66-35 victory.

The non-conference loss drops CHS to 4-7 on the season, with back-to-back home games against Darrington and Napavine set for this Friday and Saturday.

Brad Sherman’s squad fell behind 17-7 in the first quarter Monday and never got back into the game.

Auburn pushed the lead out to 39-20 at the half, then 51-30 through three quarters, cruising in for a victory which lifts it to 6-2 on the campaign.

Coupeville got most of its scoring from the duo of seniors Camden Glover and Chase Anderson, who banked in 15 and 12 points respectively.

Davin Houston (3), Carson Grove (2), Malachi Somes (2), and Aiden O’Neill (1) also chipped in to the scoring effort, while Nathan Coxsey, Liam Blas, Riley Lawless, and Easton Green rounded out the rotation.

The host team was effective from everywhere on the floor, with Auburn holding a 5-3 advantage on three-balls while also netting seven of nine free throws.

Coupeville got to the line more often than the Falcons did, but couldn’t take advantage, finishing just 10-19 from the charity stripe.

With his 12 points, Anderson moves to 777 for his high school career, which pushes him from #18 to #16 all-time on a CHS boys’ scoring chart which started in 1917.

He passed old-school Wolf legends Barry Brown (769) and Jack Elzinga (770) while in Auburn, with Hawthorne Wolfe (800) and Corey Cross (811) next up.

Willow Leedy-Bonifas fires off a pass under pressure. (Teagan Calkins photo)

Everything was clicking.

And I mean everything.

Getting contributions from all 11 players in uniform Monday, the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team rolled to an impressive road win.

Scorching host Auburn Adventist Academy 42-12, the Wolves get to 2-7 and head home to prepare for a Friday night showdown with Darrington.

Alita Blouin’s squad was dominant Monday in every aspect of the game, rolling out to a 14-3 lead by the first break.

From there, the Wolves stretched the lead to 22-7 at the half and 35-9 through three quarters of play.

CHS spread out the offensive love, with Ava Lucero rippling the nets for a game-high 12 points and Cami Van Dyke banking in 11 of her own.

Lucero splashed home a pair of three-balls, while Van Dyke knocked down a fourth quarter trey to keep Auburn at bay.

Anna Powers (6), Taylor Marrs (6), Zayne Roos (5), and Willow Leedy-Bonifas (2) rounded out the balanced attack, while Finley Helm, Elizabeth Marshall, Allie Powers, Olivia Hall, and Emma Cushman also saw floor time.

Adeline Maynes gets fired up. (Jackie Saia photo)

The basket was jumping.

Raining down buckets from every angle Monday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball team set a season-high, scorching host Auburn Adventist Academy 64-29.

The non-conference road win lifts the Wolves to 3-9 on the season heading into a home rumble Friday with Northwest 2B/1B League rival Darrington.

Scout Smith’s squad poured it on, and never relented Monday, with the 64 points easily besting their previous high of 48.

Eight minutes into play the game was all but over, with Haylee Armstrong and Teagan Calkins combining for 14 points to spur a game-opening 21-2 surge.

From there CHS pushed the advantage out to 36-13 at the half and 52-20 through three quarters.

The Wolves snapped the nets on five shots from behind the three-point arc, with Armstrong, Calkins, and Danica Strong all netting treys.

Coupeville also put together one of its better shooting performances at the free-throw line, hitting on nine of 14 shots, while Auburn clanked its way to a 4-19 performance at the stripe.

Armstrong almost outscored her rivals by herself, accounting for a game-high 20 points, while Adeline Maynes knocked down a season-high 10 in support.

Tenley Stuurmans (8), Calkins (8), Strong (5), Kennedy O’Neill (4), Sydney Van Dyke (4), Arianna Cunningham (3), and Capri Anter (2) also tallied points, while Lexis Drake hit the boards hard.

Brian Thompson pulls up for a jumper. (Jackie Saia photo)

He who scores last often scores best.

Pulling out the game in the final two-minutes plus, the Auburn Adventist Academy JV boys’ basketball squad held off hard-charging Coupeville Monday, making off with a 45-37 victory.

The road loss, coming against a non-conference foe, drops the Wolves to 4-6 on the season, with a home clash against Darrington on Friday next up on the schedule.

Monday’s melee started badly for Coupeville, then got a lot better, before falling apart a bit down the home stretch.

Auburn scraped out a 7-4 lead through one quarter of play, before really ramping things up with a 20-8 surge in the second frame.

The Wolves didn’t buckle, however, as they roared back behind a third-quarter scoring explosion from Khanor Jump.

The CHS sophomore pumped in eight of his game-high 16 in the frame to help propel his squad on a 17-4 burst, cutting the deficit all the way back to just 31-29.

But it wasn’t to be for the Wolves, as Auburn nailed a couple of late three-balls to hold on for the narrow win.

Jayden McManus banked in eight points in support of Jump, while Liam Lawson (6), Josh Stockdale (5), and Ayden Warren (2) also scored.

Trent Thule, Chris Zenz, Brian Thompson, Nathan Coxsey, and Jaden Flores Garcia also saw floor time for the Wolves.