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Katie Marti is Coupeville’s best hammer thrower. (Emma Garcia photo)

It was the little rumble before the big battle.

Three Coupeville High School track and field athletes traveled to Snohomish High School Friday to take part in the hammer throw at the Sunny and 70! Invitational.

The remainder of the meet, which has 30 teams signed up, goes down Saturday at Lakewood High School.

Friday it was just about tossin’ the hammer, and CHS had juniors Katie Marti and Mason Butler and senior Erica McGrath in the field.

Marti finished 9th with a throw of 75 feet, three inches, while McGrath was 11th with a chuck of 59-10.

Butler placed 16th among the male competitors at 67-08.

Sophomore Kimberly Beard of King’s and senior Calvin Gutierrez of Mariner won individual titles.

Wolf grad Dominic Coffman is pursuing football dreams overseas. (Photos courtesy Coffman)

First season, first title game.

Coupeville High School grad Dominic Coffman, who now plays semi-pro football in Spain, will play for a championship Saturday, May 4.

He and his teammates with the Las Rozas Black Demons will square off with their arch-rivals, OSO Rivas.

Coffman and Co. are 8-1 after a playoff win over the Barcelona Dragons.

The former Wolf has been a force on both sides of the ball during his debut season overseas, scoring 38 points and cracking 500+ yards as a running back.

He also had 15 tackles and an interception on defense during the regular season.

Bringing the pain in Spain.

During his Coupeville days, Coffman, a 2023 grad, went to the state tourney in football, basketball, and track and field, joining Jonathan Valenzuela as the only Wolf boys to pull off the trifecta since at least the ’70s.

He ran a leg on a 4 x 100 relay unit which finished second in all of 2B, while earlier being named Northwest 2B/1B League MVP for his play on the gridiron.

Lydia Price set a PR in the 3200 Thursday at Lynden. (Parker Hammons photo)

They squared off with the big-timers and did pretty well.

The Coupeville High School track and field squad traveled to rainy Lynden Thursday and went toe-to-toe, and javelin throw-to-javelin throw with three athletic powerhouses.

The 2A hosts swept to both team titles, while 3A Ferndale, 1A Nooksack Valley, and lil’ 2B Coupeville battled it out behind the Lions.

The Wolves eventually won three individual titles, with Katie Marti (Javelin), Reese Wilkinson (Discus), and Nick Guay (High Jump) occupying the top step on the awards podium.

Overall Coupeville athletes racked up 44 PRs in their next-to-last regular season meet.

Next up is the Sunny and 70’s Invitational at Lakewood High School Saturday (the hammer throw is Friday), and then it’s off to start the postseason jaunt as the calendar flips to May.

Speed demon Preston Epp slows down long enough for his image to be caught on film. (Thomas Studer photo)

 

Thursday’s results:

 

GIRLS:

100 — Issabel Johnson (16th) 14.81

200 — Devin Neveu (15th) 33.15 *PR*; Ivy Rudat (16th) 33.87; Reagan Callahan (17th) 34.54 *PR*

400 — Neveu (5th) 1:12.66; I. Rudat (9th) 1:17.87; Callahan (10th) 1:18.02 *PR*; Ayden Wyman (11th) 1:19.88

800 — Lyla Stuurmans (5th) 2:41.00; Kayla Crane (7th) 2:48.00 *PR*; Aleera Kent (8th) 2:52.00

1600 — Kent (2nd) 6:16.48; Crane (3rd) 6:20.43 *PR*; Lydia Price (10th) 7:16.19

3200 — Price (4th) 15:07.10 *PR*; Aleksia Jump (5th) 15:57.23

100 Hurdles — Myra McDonald (8th) 21.88; Lexis Drake (10th) 22.63

300 Hurdles — Drake (5th) 1:00.75

4 x 100 Relay — Jump, Carly Burt, Johnson, Drake (5th) 58.35

4 x 200 Relay — Stuurmans, Burt, Johnson, Drake (5th) 2:04.38

Shot Put — Katie Marti (3rd) 30-06.25; Reese Wilkinson (4th) 28-08.25; Erica McGrath (10th) 23-01.50; Alysia Burdge (18th) 20-01.50

Discus — Wilkinson (1st) 107-00 *PR*; McGrath (4th) 73-03; Marti (5th) 68-07; Callahan (16th) 49-06 *PR*; Burdge (28th) 40-03

Javelin — Marti (1st) 99-11; Burdge (15th) 58-02; McGrath (18th) 48-01; Wilkinson (19th) 46-07

High Jump — Wyman (4th) 4-04; Frankie Tenore (8th) 3-10; McDonald (8th) 3-10

Pole Vault — Burt (3rd) 7-00; Johnson (7th) 5-06; Jump (7th) 5-06; I. Rudat (9th) 5-06

Long Jump — Stuurmans (2nd) 14-04.25

Aleera Kent preps the jump pit. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

BOYS:

100 — Nehemiah Myles (11th) 12.08; Preston Epp (12th) 12.13 *PR*; Marquette Cunningham (14th) 12.22 *PR*; Davin Houston (16th) 12.35 *PR*; Dayvon Donavon (25th) 12.74; Marcelo Gebhard (29th) 12.94 *PR*; Alex Merino-Martinez (30th) 12.98; Matthew Ward (31st) 12.99 *PR*; Cael Wilson (33rd) 13.10 *PR*; Matthew Kuzma (36th) 13.33 *PR*; Timothy Nitta (46th) 13.85

200 — Cunningham (9th) 25.34 *PR*; Blake Burrows (11th) 25.72 *PR*; Donavon (13th) 26.06 *PR*; Ezekiel Allen (15th) 26.31 *PR*; Matthew Ward (16th) 26.57 *PR*; Kuzma (18th) 26.95 *PR*; Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim (20th) 27.58; Dane Hadsall (22nd) 27.66 *PR*; Nitta (25th) 28.62 *PR*; Ethan Walling (26th) 28.63; Axel Marshall (27th) 29.26 *PR*

400 — Burrows (7th) 58.11; Wilson (10th) 1:00.63; Kuzma (11th) 1:01.55 *PR*; Hadsall (11th) 1:01.55; Simpson-Pilgrim (13th) 1:01.58; Hank Milnes (14th) 1:01.99; Solomon Rudat (18th) 1:05.92; Walling (21st) 1:06.92 *PR*

800 — Kenneth Jacobsen (5th) 2:25.22 *PR*; Carson Field (7th) 2:27.51; Thomas Strelow (9th) 2:31.25; Santiago Ojeda Fernandez (10th) 2:38.04; S. Rudat (12th) 2:43.67; Preston Howard (13th) 2:46.56

1600 — Field (4th) 5:11.08; Jacobsen (7th) 5:14.59 *PR*; Malachi Somes (8th) 5:15.96; Strelow (11th) 5:25.08; Allen (12th) 5:26.04; George Spear (16th) 5:30.20; Walling (21st) 6:10.99 *PR*; Howard (24th) 6:17.90; Sam Richards (26th) 6:58.33; Damiano Giacobbe (28th) 7:06.77

3200 — Spear (3rd) 11:49.61 *PR*; Nicholas Wasik (8th) 13:16.30; Marshall (10th) 13:32.65

110 Hurdles — Spear (6th) 24.84 *PR*

300 Hurdles — Mikey Robinett (6th) 51.60; Spear (8th) 58.42 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Cunningham, HoustonEpp, Nick Guay (3rd) 46.89

4 x 400 Relay — Myles, Burrows, Epp, Guay (3rd) 3:54.42

Shot Put — Zane Oldenstadt (5th) 37-07.75 *PR*; Zac Tackett (7th) 37-06; Robinett (9th) 35-11.75 *PR*; Zachary Saho (13th) 35-01 *PR*; Gebhard (14th) 31-08 *PR*; Jacobsen (27th) 27-05 *PR*; Jacob Schooley (29th) 26-00.50 *PR*; Mason Butler (30th) 25-09.50; Giacobbe (36th) 18-08.75; Zach Blitch (37th) 18-06.50 *PR*

Discus — Tackett (3rd) 112-09; Oldenstadt (5th) 93-04; Butler (11th) 89-04; Schooley (12th) 87-03; Saho (23rd) 67-01 *PR*; Wasik (27th) 55-10; Peerapong Prombut (27th) 55-10; Giacobbe (30th) 49-00; Blitch (31st) 46-06

Javelin — Gebhard (12th) 113-03; Somes (20th) 97-02; Robinett (25th) 92-06; Schooley (27th) 85-05 *PR*; Butler (30th) 75-07; Hadsall (36th) 70-00; Wasik (38th) 65-08 *PR*; Ojeda Fernandez (39th) 62-09; Nitta (40th) 61-07; Giacobbe (41st) 59-08 *PR*; Prombut (47th) 43-00

High Jump — Guay (1st) 5-08; Houston (4th) 4-10

Pole Vault — Marshall (10th) 7-00

Long Jump — Myles (6th) 17-01.50; Robinett (12th) 15-08.25; Burrows (13th) 15-07; Merino-Martinez (15th) 15-00.25; Somes (18th) 14-06; Marshall (19th) 14-05; S. Rudat (22nd) 14-00.50; Ojeda Fernandez (23rd) 13-08.25; Field (24th) 13-03.25; Hadsall (25th) 13-03; Captain Teuscher (26th) 12-07; Kuzma (27th) 12-05.50; Walling (28th) 12-01; Howard (29th) 11-10

Triple Jump — Cunningham (6th) 33-07; Milnes (8th) 33-00; Ward (10th) 31-07; Simpson-Pilgrim (11th) 30-02.50 *PR*

Davin Houston glides over the bar. (Thomas Studer photo)

The trumpet wails no more, and the piccolo is silent.

The Coupeville School District likely killed its secondary music/band program Thursday, at least in the short term, as part of the first round of budget cuts.

By a 4-1 vote, the school board adopted a “modified education plan” brought forward by outgoing Superintendent Steve King, part of a move to ultimately slash up to $1.66 million in an effort to restore the fund balance.

Thursday’s cuts call for the likely elimination of the middle/high school music program as well as an elementary school specialist program “to be determined” — likely STEM or art/music.

The plan also authorizes the reduction of up to six certificated teachers.

King stated at an earlier board workshop that the district already has “papers in hand” for four teachers who are either retiring or resigning.

Potential teacher RIFs (Reduction in Force) and “impacted program reductions” have to be in place by May 1 by “state law and contractual obligations.”

Other cuts, which will need to account for close to a million of the $1.66 million — if current projections hold up — will likely be announced to the public by the end of May, King said.

In his presentation Thursday, the Superintendent, who has resigned and will depart at the end of the school year to be replaced by Shannon Leatherwood, offered hope the shuttering of the music program is not permanent.

“Recommended program reductions are temporary,” King said. “And the district is dedicated to restoring them when resources are available.”

The superintendent spoke of his own children’s positive experiences with music while growing up, and he offered an apology to Mary Western, a CMS 8th grader who spoke in favor of retaining the music program.

“I’m really sorry to you and your classmates,” King said.

In his presentation, the superintendent pointed to declining participation numbers as a primary reason for eliminating the music program.

Though, there is an elephant in the room everyone tiptoes around — the longtime CHS/CMS music teacher having spent much of this year on paid administrative leave after years of parent and student complaints.

The night’s public comment section was full of parents who spoke of the positivity of music and the growth in the Coupeville program they see under a replacement teacher.

“I’m so sad for these kids who won’t have access,” Erin Howard said. “Music is universal, and cutting this program, even temporarily, does a great disservice and will have a huge impact.”

Kerry Western, a kindergarten teacher and mother of three, talked about the growth she has seen in the three years her daughter Mary has been involved in the music program.

“She had no prior musical experience, and it has changed the life of my daughter,” she said.

Describing how Mary had come to her classroom this afternoon and played the flute “so beautifully,” she brought several in the audience, and on the board itself, to honest tears.

Board member Alison Perera, whose children are musicians, spoke to dual emotions warring in her.

As part of the board’s budget committee, she knows how hard Coupeville needs to work to repair its finances.

“When the neon lights started flashing five or six years ago, it should have been an enormous red flag warning,” Perera said. “We didn’t take heed and it has led us here.

“If we had course corrected, we might be able to make small changes now, but that’s not where we are.

“We have to take it seriously; we have to make our district solvent.”

But Perera also expressed the fear that once the music program is shut down, it may never recover.

To that, she proposed an amendment to the “modified education plan” concerning the music program.

Perera called for the word “elimination” to be struck and replaced with “reduction,” with the words “by up to $150,000” added.

She failed to get a second, however, and the amendment did not move forward.

When the vote was taken, Sherry Phay was the lone dissenting vote, with Perera and fellow board members Nancy Conard, Morgan White, and Charles Merwine approving the plan.

In the immediate aftermath, half of the room slowly trickled out, disappointment etched on their faces, as the meeting continued.

The mood in the Kathleen Anderson boardroom was muted. Much like the music program itself.

The Coupeville High School Class of 2016 continues to make positive change in the world.

Wolf grad Makana Stone, now a professional basketball player overseas, is launching a scholarship in honor of her friend and fellow athlete Lathom Kelley, who passed away in 2022.

The “Live Like Lathom” scholarship will be awarded to a CHS senior who is a student/athlete “passionate about pursuing trade school and/or a career in welding, and shows exemplary behavior in sportsmanship, teamwork, and community.”

Kelley attended Coupeville schools from elementary school to senior year and was a standout football and track and field athlete at the high school level.

More so, he was “the living embodiment of “the strength of the pack is the wolf.”

“A passionately driven student-athlete, Lathom did everything with fire in his eyes and the word “QUIT” wasn’t in his vocabulary,” Stone said.

“Whatever he decided to pursue – whether that be tackles on the football field, sprinting on the track, fixing motor vehicles, artistic and occupational welding, or being a family man and friend – he did everything with passion and love in his heart.”

“A leader by example, Lathom treated everyone in his community as his family. He took care of his Wolfpack. He lived life in the moment. He lived life to the fullest. He lived like Lathom.”

Stone is working with the Community Foundation for Coupeville Public Schools, and you can donate to the scholarship by hopping over to:

https://www.flipcause.com/secure/cause_pdetails/MjA2NTQ=