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“The Red Dragon” is ready to rumble. Diamond dazzler Teagan Calkins is back for her senior season. (David Somes photo)

“I’m never satisfied and neither are the players. We can improve in all phases.”

Aaron Lucero’s first season as head coach of the Coupeville High School softball program was an impressive one, with the Wolves splitting four games at the 2B state tourney, eliminating Colfax and Raymond-South Bend en route to finishing 20-3.

But while that was a good start, it was just a start for the diamond sage, and one he and his players want to take further.

So, while the Wolves will have to adapt to losing several key players to graduation, they are also champing at the bit with a roster which is both young and already varsity tested.

Sophomore slinger Adeline Maynes returns to the pitcher’s circle, where she’ll be chucking fastballs to senior catcher Teagan Calkins.

The duo is deadly, but so is the #2 unit, with junior Haylee Armstrong peppering pitches to sophomore backup backstop Ava Lucero.

“Pitching and catching are big assets for us,” Aaron Lucero said.

Adeline has a lot of experience in the circle and is a rock out there. She gets better every year.

Teagan plays like Teagan and will be the anchor as she’s got a huge amount of experience to go with her talent.”

Wheel in Armstrong and Ava Lucero, who will be everyday starters at other positions, and there’s not much slippage.

“I feel we have the two best catchers in the league in Teagan and Ava, and the two best pitchers in the league with Adeline and Haylee,” Aaron Lucero said. “They’re a pretty tough 1-2 combination. Fortunate to have had them for so many years.”

Adeline Maynes (middle) is a fireball-flinging destroyer of worlds. (Jackie Saia photo)

Graduated starters Madison McMillan, Mia Farris, Jada Heaton, and Taylor Brotemarkle will be missed, but the core of last year’s squad, the fourth Wolf softball crew to advance to state, returns.

Along with Calkins, Maynes, Armstrong, and the younger Lucero, Coupeville welcomes back young players such as Sydney Van Dyke, Capri Anter, and Chelsi Stevens, who will all take on bigger roles this time out.

Anter, formerly an outfielder, is sliding in as the starting second baseman — “Very excited for that move for her” — while Stevens brings considerable pop to the lineup.

Chelsi has put in a lot of work and is hitting fantastic,” Aaron Lucero said. “We’re looking forward to her everyday role and the big bat she’s got.”

Young guns (l to r) Sydney Van Dyke, Capri Anter, Ava Lucero, and Haylee Armstrong are back to claim more success. (Jackie Saia photo)

Another young player on the rise is 8th grader Cami Van Dyke, who is slotting in at shortstop.

Overall, 11 of the 19 Wolves on the roster play the sport year-round, giving them a leg up on being ready to have an impact from day one.

“We have a number of freshmen who I expect to be key contributors and likely earning significant field time,” Aaron Lucero said. “We also have some new to the sport players who look more like veterans after just eight practices.

“We have seven 8th graders and I’m very excited to see that strong of a number with the young players, as they are the future.”

In the present, the Wolves know Friday Harbor will likely be their biggest obstacle in defending their Northwest 2B/1B League crown and have stuffed the non-league portion of the schedule with challenging opponents.

“We’ve got some tough teams on the calendar to push us to be better for league and state,” Aaron Lucero said. “Oak Harbor, Lakewood, a doubleheader with Forks, and Klahowya, who is always tough.”

The path is different each season. The goal remains the same, however.

“Win the league, districts, and get back to state!”

Halle Black hits turbo drive. (Julie Wheat photos)

What a difference a month makes.

When Coupeville and South Whidbey kicked off the middle school girls’ basketball season back in early February, the Cougars won both games between the Island rivals.

Jump forward to Tuesday, and it was advantage Wolves, as CMS hit the road and claimed two victories in three contests against their neighbors.

Now, all that’s left for Brooke Crowder and Kassie O’Neil’s rampaging hardwood assassins is a road trip Thursday to Granite Falls for the season finale.

And probably some birthday well-wishes to O’Neil Wednesday, when the former Wolf gunslinger turned ol’ ball coach hits her cake day.

 

How Tuesday played out:

 

Level 1:

Coupeville hung tough with a talented South Whidbey squad, but a third-quarter shooting slump ultimately doomed the Wolves in a 32-14 loss.

Now 1-6 on the season, CMS trailed 9-6 after one quarter and found itself down 19-10 at the half.

The Cougars were deadly in the third frame, however, using an 11-0 run to ice things, before the Wolves rebounded to claim a defensive-minded final quarter by a slim 4-2 advantage.

Laurel Crowder paced Coupeville with five points, with Emma Green (2), Anna Powers (2), Zayne Roos (2), Bella Sandlin (2), and Aubrey Flowers (1) also etching their names in the scorebook.

Kaleigha Millison, Sabrina Judnich, Finley Helm, and Claire Lachnit also saw floor time for the Wolves.

While CMS lost the rematch, it made huge inroads in slowing down South Whidbey’s Jayda Coleman, who torched the nets for 28 in the opener.

Laurel and Bella made a major impact by focusing on shutting down the opposing team’s top scorer,” Brooke Crowder said.

“They held her to just 12 this time around through disciplined defense and constant pressure,” she added. “Bella also added several steals and showed strong shot selection on the offensive end.”

Brooke Crowder praised Emma Green, who “stepped up to take on point guard responsibilities, bringing steady energy to the floor and confidently getting shots up over the defense.

“Her willingness to lead the offense helped keep the team attacking throughout the game.”

Coupeville pushed the play on offense, but the rim was unforgiving at times.

“Despite consistently attacking the basket and getting looks at the hoop, the shots simply didn’t fall our way tonight,” Brooke Crowder said.

“The effort and willingness to keep driving the lane never wavered, however.”

 

Ruby Folkestad plays big in the paint.

Level 2:

The game of the day, with Coupeville rallying late to force overtime, before claiming its first win of the campaign.

Juniper Dotson, Halle Black, and Addison Jacobson all banked in buckets in the extra period, sparking the Wolves (1-6) to an electrifying 30-28 victory.

The game was a vintage back-and-forth affair, with the hosts up 5-2 at the first break, before Coupeville rode six second-quarter points from Black to reclaim the lead at 10-9 heading into halftime.

South Whidbey had an answer, surging ahead 19-16 through three quarters, before the Wolves responded in kind, knotting things up 24-24 with Annabelle Cundiff pouring in six points in the fourth.

Six CMS players scored in the win, led by Black, who pumped in a season-high 11 points.

Cundiff (7), Jacobson (4), Dotson (4), Ava Alford (2), and Emily Rains (2) also made the scoreboard bounce, while Ruby Folkestad, Claire Lachnit, Abby Hunt, Reagan Green, and Arianna Vinson rounded out the rotation.

Despite playing for the second time in less than 24 hours, the Wolves brought big effort to the floor, something the coaching staff appreciated.

Ruby stood out defensively by stepping into passing lanes and creating disruption for the opposing offense,” Brooke Crowder said.

Addison contributed key box-outs that helped secure rebounds, while Halle showed strong effort on the boards and increased her offensive involvement by putting up more shots.

Arianna brought relentless defensive pressure with active hands and strong positioning, stopping drives and shutting down players underneath the basket.”

 

Level 3:

After not playing the first time around, the school’s third squads clashed in a half-game this time around, with Coupeville holding on for a 10-8 nailbiter.

The victory, and it’s official because this blog you’re reading says so, lifts the Wolves to a crisp 3-1 on the season coming on the heels of a win against Sultan Monday night.

CMS jumped out to a 4-2 lead through the game’s first seven minutes, before the squads slugged it out through a back-and-forth second frame.

Daisy Leedy-Bonifas, a 6th grader who is second among all Wolves in scoring this season, continued her torrid shooting, rattling the rims for a game-high six points, while Ellie Callahan and Millie Somes each chipped in with a bucket.

Amira Anunciado, Leah Hernandez, Nikolette Dunham, Arianna Vinson, Abby Hunt, and Danielle Halsing also saw floor time for Coupeville’s winningest team.

Daisy set the tone with aggressive play on both ends of the floor,” Brooke Crowder said. “She actively hunted the ball, created steals, and pushed the pace whenever she had the opportunity.

Ellie contributed strong defensive play along with solid rebounding and several put-back attempts around the basket and Millie rounded out the effort with nonstop hustle and smart shot selection.”

Across all three games, the Wolves demonstrated they are more confident and accomplished than they were a month ago.

“Overall, the teams showed strong defensive growth, aggressive play, and continued effort attacking the rim, exactly the habits that lead to improvement as the season progresses,” Brooke Crowder said.

CHS seniors Finn Price and Danica Strong celebrate their excellence. (Photo courtesy Robin Bernardy)

Winter has been good to them.

Coming off of strong seasons as a basketball player and swimmer, respectively, Wolf seniors Danica Strong and Finn Price are being recognized by the Coupeville Lions Club.

The duo has been tabbed as Students of the Quarter for the third section of the 2025-26 academic year.

The Lions honor two students each quarter, with the winners picked by the school staff.

Founded in 1938, the club annually awards scholarships to top CHS grads, and selects two Wolves as the Students of the Year.

Criteria used in the selection of the top students include community service, effort, character, social relationships, scholarship, ethical behavior, and integrity.

Danica Strong, drillin’ three-balls and takin’ names. (Julie Wheat photo)

Danica Strong, daughter of CHS grad Danette Beckley, plays softball and basketball, while also operating as the manager for the Wolf football team.

She stays busy as a member of Future Farmers of America, ASB, and Skills USA, while volunteering with youth sports, the food bank, and community cleanup.

When she’s not in class, where her favorite subjects are history and English, Strong can be found working part-time jobs at Home Depot and Aqua Gifts.

After graduation this spring, she plans to attend college to major in dental hygiene.

Finn Price ponders his place in the universe. (Photo courtesy Rachel Price)

Finn Price, son of Craig and Rachel Price, qualified for the state swim meet three times, despite CHS not having a pool or an aquatic program.

The water wizard trained and competed with Mukilteo during the regular season, before splitting off on his own each postseason.

Having earned Eagle Scout status, Price also competes as a track athlete for the Wolves and is on the Exec Board and a member of the National Honor Society.

In his limited spare time, he works as a lifeguard and is involved in community service through the Scouts and with various festivals and conservation projects.

Price plans to attend Whitman College, which recruited him as a swimmer, while studying filmmaking.

Laurel Crowder rolls to the hoop. (Julie Wheat photos)

It was a prime-time showdown in Cow Town.

Playing their final home games of the season Monday, the Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball squads went wire-to-wire with visiting Sultan, producing three royal rumbles, two of which came down to the final seconds.

And while the Skyhawks managed to escape with a pair of wins, the Wolves captured the final bout, sending the locals to their cars riding a wave of good will.

How the day played out:

 

Level 1:

A second-half rally fell just short for Coupeville, with a potential game-winning three-ball bouncing off the rim at the buzzer in a 28-26 loss.

The defeat drops CHS to 1-5 on the season, but the Wolves win/loss record is deceptive, as they’ve been competitive almost every time out.

Monday’s game was a big step forward for Coupeville after a lopsided loss to Lakewood, the Cascade League’s best team by a country mile.

The Wolves got on the board first this time out, with Aubrey Flowers draining a jumper, and led three times in the opening quarter before Sultan crept ahead 8-6 at the first break.

The defensive effort was strong all across the roster, with Laurel Crowder and Finley Helm cleaning the boards, and Cami Van Dyke popping up in every nook and cranny to make off with multiple steals in the early going.

The offense, however, took a hit, with Coupeville not converting a field goal in the second quarter until Crowder made off with a steal and turned it into a breakaway bucket with just 11 ticks left on the first-half clock.

Trailing 15-8 at the half, the Wolves needed a spark, and almost immediately found one as the third quarter began.

Helm crashed through the paint, banked in a basket and earned a free throw — which she made — before Van Dyke splashed home a three-ball from the right side, and suddenly Sultan was on its heels.

CMS kept the visitors scrambling, with Kaleigha Millison and Zayne Roos tickling the twines to turn the deficit into an advantage.

Millison knocked down two gracefully arcing free throws, with each ball almost scraping the ceiling before dropping through the net, then nailed her own three-ball while flying up court, giving her team its first lead since the opening quarter.

Sultan pulled back ahead 22-21 at the end of the third, though, and never gave the lead back during a tense final frame.

Big defensive moments — Roos rising up to deliver a block, Emma Green forcing turnovers on consecutive plays — kept Coupeville close, and it had the ball with four seconds to play.

Needing to go the length of the floor under extreme pressure, the Wolves did, and the final shot, lofted on the run, had a realistic chance but wouldn’t go down, allowing Sultan’s often-yappy fans to breathe easier.

Coupeville spread out its offensive attack, with eight of 11 players scoring.

Crowder (6), Millison (5), and Helm (5) led the way, with Van Dyke (3), Flowers (2), Roos (2), Green (2), and Anna Powers (1) also notching points.

Bella Sandlin, Sabrina Judnich, and Claire Lachnit also saw floor time, with all three bringing heat on the defensive end of the floor.

“Tonight was a strong team effort from all the teams,” said CMS coach Brooke Crowder.

Kaleigha set the tone with her energy and aggressive drives to the basket. Zayne gave us great help defense and attacked the rim with confidence.”

 

Kaleigha Millison makes it rain.

 

Level 2:

Another strong second-half performance, another narrow loss, as Coupeville fell 28-17 after pulling to within five late in the game.

The Wolves, now 0-6, led twice in the early going, with Annabelle Cundiff opening the game’s scoring and Reagan Green turning an offensive rebound into a bucket to stake her squad to a 4-3 advantage.

Unfortunately for CMS, it went about 12 minutes without a field goal after that put-back and had to play catch-up the rest of the way.

Down just 5-4 after one quarter of action, the Wolves saw the margin widen to 11-4 at the half and 15-4 at the halfway point of the third quarter.

Juniper Dotson finally broke the scoreless streak, lofting in a free throw, and the charity shot seemed to spark something for the hardwood heroes, as they suddenly started hitting just about everything.

Cundiff banked in a pair of runners to close out the third, before Halle Black and Abby Hunt drilled line-drive shots to open the fourth.

With Dotson diving and darting and dishing some very John Stockton-like passes, Coupeville ripped off 13 points in a six-minute-plus run, and what had been a blowout was cut all the way down to 22-17, fueling hopes of a comeback win.

To give Sultan credit, the Skyhawks didn’t panic, and came up big down the stretch, closing things out with a 6-0 mini-run, but Coupeville’s girls displayed big-time grit, selling out on defense and flashing a great deal of promise for the future.

Cundiff rattled the rims for a team-high six, with Dotson (3), Black (2), Emily Rains (2), Green (2), and Hunt (2) also scoring, while Arianna Vinson, Claire Lachnit, and Ava Alford rounded out the rotation.

And a big shout-out to 6th grader Halle Black who unofficially ripped down 12,742 rebounds, give or take one or two, as she thoroughly dominated the glass-cleaning business.

Brooke Crowder also praised the play of a trio of other big-effort players.

Juniper played with a lot of composure, moved the ball well, and contributed with hustle and smart help defense,” she said.

Claire took on the tough assignment of guarding their top scorers and did a great job disrupting them. Annabelle was aggressive getting to the rim, communicated well with teammates, and added key scoring for us.”

 

Nikolette Dunham splits the defense.

Level 3:

With other, larger schools not having the numbers to match Coupeville’s roster, the third Wolf squad has only gotten to play three games this season yet is now 2-1 after rolling to a 21-17 win.

Unlike the first two games Monday, where CMS suffered through scoring droughts, this time around it was the home team that went off on a torrid run.

After giving up the game’s first bucket, the Wolves lit the fuse on an explosion to stake themselves to a solid 14-5 lead at the half.

Daisy Leedy-Bonifas was a wild woman, terrorizing Sultan on defense with steal after steal, before crashing through the paint, hunting buckets even while being repeatedly hit in the face, often sending her glasses off on their own adventure.

She combined with a rampaging Danielle Halsing, who went coast-to-coast for one basket before backing her defender down and banking in another, the 6th grade duo providing a potent one-two combo.

While both team’s offense sputtered a bit in the third, with Sultan outscoring Coupeville by a modest 3-1, things revved back up in the final frame.

Ellie Callahan hit a turnaround jumper, followed by Halsing putting a rebound back up and in, and the Wolves were rockin’ and rollin’ up 19-10.

But Sultan wasn’t done.

The Skyhawks trimmed the deficit back to 19-17 and had multiple shots to tie as the clock crashed down (ever so slowly) to 0:00 but couldn’t force the stalemate.

Instead, it was time for Nikolette Dunham to come up with the biggest play of her young hoops career to ice the win.

With the ball skittering across the floor with under 20 ticks to play, and all 10 girls grabbing at it, it was Dunham who came up with the loose ball.

And Dunham who, instead of trying to milk the clock, immediately turned and rained down a game-busting jumper from the side.

Ice cold, and the perfect dagger.

That final bucket gave Dunham four points, while Halsing and Leedy-Bonifas each went for six to top the Wolves.

Abby Hunt (2), Callahan (2), and Amira Anunciado (1) also scored, with Ruby Folkestad, Millie Somes, Leah Hernandez, and Arianna Vinson joining the victory celebration.

The Wolf coaches praised their entire roster, while giving a little extra spotlight to three who made key contributions.

Amira worked hard defensively with strong body positioning and disciplined closeouts,” Brooke Crowder said.

Dani created momentum with steals, knocked down some big shots, and found open space in the offense. Nikolette showed great tenacity going after the ball and stepping up to take good shots.”

 

What’s next:

Coupeville finishes the season on the road this week, with trips Tuesday to South Whidbey and Thursday to Granite Falls.

Malachi Somes clamps down on defense. (Julie Wheat photos)

Another season in the books.

The 109th campaign for Coupeville High School boys’ basketball reached its end Friday, as head coach Brad Sherman and his assistants honored their players at an awards banquet.

Senior Chase Anderson, who finished his run as the #7 scorer in program history with 943 points, topped things off by being selected as team MVP.

La Conner attempts to slow down Chase Anderson by any means necessary.

He was joined by fellow varsity players Camden Glover, who was tabbed Offensive Player of the Year and Malachi Somes, named Defensive Player of the Year.

After battling back from extensive injuries, senior Aiden O’Neill received the “Our Way” Character Award, while sophomore Carson Grove was the Rookie of the Year.

Wolf seniors were also acknowledged for their long-term commitment to the CHS program.

Anderson, O’Neill, Glover, and Somes received Four-Year Awards, with Easton Green honored for putting in three years on the high school hardwood.

Nathan Coxsey soars to the hoop.

 

Varsity letter winners:

Chase Anderson
Liam Blas
Camden Glover
Easton Green
Carson Grove
Davin Houston
Riley Lawless
Aiden O’Neill
Malachi Somes

 

Varsity Participation:

Sage Arends
Nathan Coxsey
Khanor Jump
Liam Lawson

 

JV Certificates:

Nathan Coxsey
Diesel Eck
Jaden Flores-Garcia
Khanor Jump
Liam Lawson
Jayden McManus
Kamden Ratcliff
River Simpson
Treyshawn Stewart
Brian Thompson
Trent Thule
Ayden Warren
Christopher Zenz