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Arianna Cunningham (left) and Milly Somes

They’re the leaders of the pack.

Eight Wolf spikers were honored by Coupeville High School volleyball coaches this week as the program held a development camp.

The players, a mix of veterans and relative newbies, were hailed by Scout Smith and her staff for modeling the program’s core strengths of “leadership, excellence, accountability, and discipline.”

Olivia Martin (left) and Rhylee Inman

Isa Mc Fetridge (left) and Josie McColl

Capri Anter (left) and Halle Black

Cael Wilson flies the friendly skies during his high school days. (Parker Hammons photo)

He slipped under the radar.

Turns out Coupeville grad Cael Wilson, a standout soccer and track athlete during his Cow Town days, has been out there competing at the collegiate level this past school year, quietly taking care of business while not looking for any pomp and circumstance.

While we’ve been monitoring the college track adventures of former Wolves Taygin Jump at Plattsburgh State and Tate Wyman at Oregon Tech, the man who earned five state meet medals at CHS stayed incognito.

Not even his former Wolf coaches knew, and I stumbled across the info only by accident as I was looking up his high school numbers.

Well, you can run, but you can’t hide (forever) on the internet.

So, where is Wilson these days?

According to athletic.net, he’s a freshman at Benedictine College, an NAIA institution in Atchison, Kansas, which makes him a Raven now.

Wilson competed during both the indoor and outdoor seasons, vying in the high jump, pole vault, and long jump.

The former Wolf ace put together ten top-10 finishes, with his best showing a 4th place performance in the pole vault at the Spire Distance Carnival and Team Challenge in March.

During his high school days, Cael, who followed in the footsteps of older brother Aidan, was one of the most successful athletes to rep the black and red in recent memory.

On the soccer pitch, he became the first 8th grader to score a varsity goal for the Wolves, finishing his five-year run with 13 goals, tying him with his sibling for #7 all-time in program history.

When spring was sprung, Wilson piled up 30 wins as a high school track and field athlete, claimed five state meet medals, and tied a 25-year-old school record in the high jump, clearing six feet, four inches during his senior season.

You can leave your mark.

Thanks to a new fundraiser being conducted by the Coupeville Schools Foundation, now is the perfect time to make a forever tribute to your favorite Wolf grad, or teacher, or coach, or just about anything else.

Cost is $150 and all the details are in the photo above, so I won’t waste your time by repeating what you can read for yourself.

Jennifer Camarena-Herrera is part of the CHS Class of 2026. (Jackie Saia photos)

Saturday is G-Day.

Graduation arrives in two days for the Coupeville High School Class of 2026, with 53 Wolves slated to finish their run in one world and advance on to the next.

 

Your list o’ grads:

Ezekiel Allen
Chase Anderson
Abbigail Bond
Connor Booth
Dylan Burrow
Blake Burrows
Carly Burt
Teagan Calkins (Valedictorian)
Reagan Callahan
Jennifer Camarena-Herrera
Jayme Carranza
Coop Cooper
Antonio Crandall
Marquette Cunningham
Riverwind Dearmond
Gavin Fain
Miles Gerber
Camden Glover
Easton Green
Lucas Habeck
Aleksia Jump
Hayden Kendall
Aleera Kent
Duke Kutz
Joshua Lujan
Dahlia Miller
Andrew Milnes
Jeann Nitta
Aiden O’Neill
Brynn Parker
Finn Price
Aubrey Rodriguez
Avery Rude
Zachary Saho
Jacob Schooley
Aven Schroll
Killian Shaw
Kyrese Simpson-Pilgrim
Hayden Smith
Cedar Socha
Malachi Somes
George Spear (Salutatorian)
Danica Strong
Frankie Tenore
Caitlin Thomas
Justin Truex
Brookelynn Van Velkinburgh
Sydney Wallace
Hailee Wells
Noelle Western
Madison Williams
Avery Williams-Buchanan
Liza Zustiak

Easton Green and Noelle Western are off to new adventures.

Teagan Calkins was a two-time Northwest 2B/1B League softball MVP during her CHS diamond career. (Jackie Saia photos)

It was a major show of respect.

After the Coupeville High School softball team rampaged to another Northwest 2B/1B League title this season, conference coaches hailed the Wolves when they picked All-League teams.

Senior catcher Teagan Calkins was named league MVP, diamond guru Aaron Lucero was tabbed as the Coach of the Year, and seven other Cow Town sluggers were named as either First or Second Team selections.

Darrington rounded out the awards, receiving the Team Sportsmanship award.

 

First Team All-League:

Capri Anter — Coupeville
Haylee Armstrong — Coupeville
Emerald Hurley — Friday Harbor
Brandy Lawson — Friday Harbor
Adeline Maynes — Coupeville
Caylee Morton — Friday Harbor
Jillian Otis — Friday Harbor
Emilia Rios — Orcas Island
Delarosia Souryavong — La Conner
Sydney Van Dyke — Coupeville

 

Second Team All-League:

Anna Gustafson — Friday Harbor
Ava Lucero — Coupeville
Yamileth Ocampo Contreras — La Conner
Ava Pater — Darrington
Lucia Rios — Orcas Island
Isla Sasan — Orcas Island
Chelsi Stevens — Coupeville
Cami Van Dyke — Coupeville
Abrah Welborn — Darrington

 

Honorable Mention:

Ila Allen — Friday Harbor
Katarina Edwards — La Conner
Jade Souryavong — La Conner
Tina Malaspina — Orcas Island
Ivy Shaefer — Orcas Island

Sydney Van Dyke was one of eight Wolves honored by league coaches.