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Alana Mihill pops up several times on the list of the all-time fastest CHS cross country runners. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s a weird, wild mix of numbers.

When you look up Coupeville High School cross country results on athletic.net, you can get the top times in 12 different race lengths.

Want meters? They have 3,000, 5,000, and 5,439.

Want miles? Up pops 1.0, 2.0, 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.75, 3.0, 3.1, and 3.2.

Well, except there’s nothing listed for the girls in 2.5 or 2.75 miles, and not every race has a top three.

After that, it gets even trickier however, as it’s a true mishmash thanks to some quirks in the system.

Athletic.net launched in 2004, but results from earlier state championship meets can be found there. But only state meets, and generally not pre-2004 regular season races.

Which explains why Natasha Bamberger, Kerry McCormick and their ’80s counterparts pop up here and there, but not everywhere.

Then, of course, there’s the factor that the CHS cross country program was shut down from the mid-’90s until its return in 2018.

Though, during that exile, a Wolf here or there ran in a co-op program with Oak Harbor High School, a time period which included Tyler King winning a state title in 2010 to join Bamberger (1985) atop the mountain.

So, with that all in mind, here’s a look at what athletic.net has as the best times posted by CHS cross country runners.

Why? Cause I feel like it!

Danny Conlisk ambles down the trail.

 

GIRLS:

 

3000 meters:

Catherine Lhamon (13:17.3)
Alana Mihill (15:16.2)

 

5000 meters:

Catherine Lhamon (20:35.3)
Mikayla Wagner (21:35.4)
Noelle Western (22.44.8)

 

5439 meters:

Helen Strelow (30:21.2)
Bryley Gilbert (32:39.7)
Claire Mayne (33:38.2)

 

1 mile:

Aleera Kent (6:24.1)
Kayla Crane (6:44.4)
Mikayla Wagner (7:01.4)

 

2.0 miles:

Catherine Lhamon (14:00.0)
Aleera Kent (14:52.0)
Alana Mihill (15:07.7)

 

2.4 miles:

Alana Mihill (19:25.9)

 

2.6 miles:

Mikayla Wagner (18:18.8)
Aleksia Jump (19:15.7)
Noelle Western (19:17.9

 

3.0 miles:

Nastasha Bamberger (18:56.3)
Kerry McCormick (21:02.0)
Debbie Logan (21:09.0)

 

3.1 miles:

Catherine Lhamon (23:43.0)
Helen Strelow (24:56.0)
Cristina McGrath (25:24.0)

 

3.2 miles:

Catherine Lhamon (25:21.0)
Helen Strelow (28:15.0)
Cristina McGrath (28:41.0)

 

BOYS:

 

3000 meters:

Danny Conlisk (11:02.8)
Sam Wynn (12:15.0)
TJ Rickner (13:35.2)

 

5000 meters:

Tyler King (15:16.9)
George Spear (17:40.7)
Danny Conlisk (17:45.5)

 

5439 meters:

Mitchell Hall (22:15.8)
Carson Field (22:37.8)
Cole White (22:52.5)

 

1 mile:

Carson Field (5:07.9)
Landon Roberts (5:12.8)
George Spear (5:18.9)

 

2.0 miles:

Danny Conlisk (11:27.0)
George Spear (11:39.8)
Landon Roberts (11:50.9)

 

2.4 miles:

Danny Conlisk (13:54.2)
Henry Wynn (14:50.2)
Sam Wynn (15:34.2)

 

2.5 miles:

Jeff Fielding (13:02.0)
Bob McClement (13:19.0)
Mike Allgire (13:44.0)

 

2.6 miles:

Kenneth Jacobsen (14:51.3)
Carson Field (14:52.9)
George Spear (14:57.8)

 

2.75 miles:

Tyler King (15:13.0)

 

3.0 miles:

Tyler King (15:05.1)
Jeff Fielding (15:59.0)
Jeremy McCormick (16:38.0)

 

3.1 miles:

Mitchell Hall (19:02.0)
Cole White (19:23.0)
Carson Field (19:26.0)

 

3.2 miles:

Mitchell Hall (20:48.0)
Hank Milnes (23:17.0)
Reiley Araceley (23:39.0)

Georgie Blaine (center) and family.

A fundraiser has been launched to help a Whidbey family whose 14-year-old son is battling a brain tumor.

Georgie Blaine, a key member of a league title-winning Oak Harbor youth football team which included several Coupeville players this past fall, suffered a seizure while in Florida on vacation.

Doctors performed emergency surgery to relieve pressure on his brain, and the family’s five-day trip turned into a 25-day stay in the Sunshine State filled “with hospital visits, hotel expenses, rental-car charges, fear, and uncertainty.”

Because Georgie was not medically permitted to fly, the family had to return to Washington state by driving.

He is undergoing chemotherapy and treatment at Children’s Hospital in Seattle, requiring the family to rent an apartment in the city for three to four months while “dealing with missed work, food, fuel, parking, transportation, medical expenses, and the cost of maintaining their home in Oak Harbor.”

Georgie’s parents Sara and George have deep roots locally, with mom having worked as a labor and delivery nurse for 20+ years, while dad has been a coach for football, basketball, soccer, and baseball teams.

Friends of the family have launched a GoFundMe with a goal of $10,000 to help Georgie, his two younger brothers, and his parents, and you can read more and donate by hopping over to:

https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-georgie-fight-his-brain-tumor-and-return-to-football

Savina Wells was a homer-bashin’ hotshot as a freshman back in 2022. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

She was The Natural.

The One Born to Lead the Wolves to the Promised Land.

Why, she was, dare I say it, The Chosen One.

Oh, I did, and I was chastised by some for doing so, which I understand. Not that it stopped me.

Savina Wells was that rarity in Coupeville — a naturally gifted athlete who excelled at each and every sport she tried, who made things seem effortless at times, and was a genuine star from day one.

And by day one, I mean birth, as she followed in the footsteps of her older siblings, Ulrik and Izzy, following them around, one cartwheel at a time, before stepping up to stake her own claim to fame.

From her earliest days in little league and rec basketball, to her days at Coupeville Middle School and High School, Savina was arguably the second-most talented athlete I have written about here on the blog.

Makana Stone lives in a world of her own, and the battle for #2 during the Coupeville Sports era is a fierce one, with a group headlined by Maya Toomey-Stout, Madeline Strasburg, Lindsey Roberts, Teagan Calkins, and a few others.

Savina brought height, grace, speed, tenacity, confidence, and star quality to the stage, and left a sizable impact while we still had her in Cow Town.

Different state, same superstar. (Photo courtesy Katy Wells)

A family move to Florida after her freshman year left Wolf fans wondering what could have been, while she went on to have a super-successful run at Fernandina Beach High School as a volleyball, basketball, and track star.

Before graduating in 2025, Savina advanced to the state track meet twice in the sunshine state, while setting a school record in the high jump.

And yes, her top mark of five feet, three inches would also be a CHS girls record, if the world moved in a different way.

Before she left Coupeville, Savina played two years of varsity basketball for the Wolves, joining Lyla Stuurmans as the first 8th graders to ever start for the high school program.

She and Izzy were the #2 and #3 scorers in 2021 for a CHS hoops squad limited to a partial schedule by the pandemic, then was the #4 scorer for the Wolves as a fab frosh.

And do you need to ask? Yes, she went on to pour in nearly 700 points and snatch 500+ rebounds across her three seasons playing God’s Chosen Sport in Florida.

Pardon me while I go cry in the corner…

Rampaging on the hardwood during Covid days. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

While Savina turned to track and field to fill her spring days in her new home, she played softball for CHS as a freshman, often operating as the team’s catcher while Izzy stalked the pitcher’s circle.

They made for a dynamic duo, helping lead the Wolves to a 16-3 mark in their one season together, with Savina crackin’ extra base hits and flying around the basepaths like a wild woman unleashed.

That included a three-hit game early in the season on the road against state powerhouse Lynden Christian, capping things with a two-out home run which set Lync fans back in their pricy chairs.

The youngest Wells was also a varsity volleyball player for CHS as a freshman, piling up 70 kills, 47 digs, five block assists, and 42 service aces in her debut.

Savina hangs out with mom and big sis Izzy. (Photo courtesy Katy Wells)

Regardless of which state she was living in, Savina excelled. Pure and simple. She had great potential, and she lived up to the promise.

Selfishly I wish she had made her full run in Coupeville, like Ulrik and Izzy.

But she didn’t, and I don’t fault families for finding what works for them. Her parents, Lyle and Katy, were two of my favorite customers in the Videoville days, and they raised three really stellar children.

Seeing Savina soar to new heights, even from across the country, has given me great joy the last couple of years.

But I want her to know, that like her brother and sister and parents, she’s not forgotten about where it all began.

So today Savina joins her big sis in the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, inducted for all she accomplished in Cow Town, and all she has done since departing The Rock.

She was always special, not just as an athlete, and from now on you’ll find her up at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

Right where she belongs.

Born to be a superstar. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Anna Powers zips through the brush. (Julie Wheat photo)

The clock tells the tale.

Check out stats for the last decade of Coupeville Middle School cross country, and two runners stand tallest, with another pack hot on their heels.

At least according to cold, hard numbers, Anna Powers and Henry Purdue, who will both be high school freshmen this fall, have hit the tape faster, on a more consistent basis, than any of their teammates.

How did I arrive at this statement?

By letting athletic.net — the national clearing site for high school and middle school track and cross country results — do most of the work.

Look up CMS, and the site lists the top times for the Wolves in races covering seven different distances — 3,000 meters, 2,751 meters, 2,500 meters, 1.7 miles, 1.6 miles, 1.5 miles, and one mile.

Taking the top five times at each distance, I awarded five points for first, four for second, three for third, two for fourth, and one for fifth.

Add it all up, and bingo, bango, you have Anna and Henry.

Take it for what it’s worth — a way to fill a little bit of the summer break other than watching rain clouds slide across the prairie.

Henry Purdue has fleet feet. (Kelly Powers photo)

 

The numbers:

 

GIRLS:

 

Top 10:

Anna Powers – 20
Claire Mayne – 11
Lydia Price – 11
Sarai Dangerfield – 8
Carolyn Lhamon – 8
Mikayla Wagner – 7
Olivia Hall – 5
Ayden Wyman – 5
Hazel Goldman – 4
Marlen Montiel – 4

 

2500 meters:

Ayden Wyman (12:04.0)
Marlen Montiel (12:14.0)
Edie Bittner (12:25.0)
Lillian Stanwood (12:26.0)
Erica McGrath (12:54.0)

 

2751 meters:

Carolyn Lhamon (11:45.3)
Claire Mayne (11:48.6)
Helen Strelow (13.23.7)
Cristina McGrath (13:27.2)
Erica McGrath (13:59.4)

 

3000 meters:

Anna Powers (11:47.8)
Sarai Dangerfield (12:26.8)
Allie Powers (13:33.1)
Mikayla Wagner (13:43.6)
Lydia Price (13:50.8)

 

1 mile:

Anna Powers (7:13.5)
Hazel Goldman (7:45.9)
Claire Lachnit (7:48.5)
Abby Hunt (11:53.0)
Mia Goers (11:53.2)

 

1.5 miles:

Anna Powers (10:05.8)
Lydia Price (10:19.0)
Olivia Hall (10:40.0)
Mikayla Wagner (10:41.0)
Lillian Ketterling (11:04.1)

 

1.6 miles:

Lydia Price (12:15.7)
Claire Mayne (12:26.0)
Mikayla Wagner (12:42.5)
Lillian Ketterling (12:46.7)
Teagan Calkins (12:51.2)

 

1.7 miles:

Anna Powers (11:03.5)
Sarai Dangerfield (11:13.4)
Carolyn Lhamon (12:05.7)
Olivia Hall (12:08.6)
Lydia Price (12:09.5)

 

BOYS:

 

Top 10:

Henry Purdue – 19
Cole White – 15
Lincoln Wagner – 12
Colton Ashby – 11
Landon Roberts – 9
Jack Porter – 6
Archer Schwarz – 6
Calvin Kappes – 5
Cyrus Sparacio – 5
Aiden Anderson, Hayden Harry, Hank Milnes – 4

 

2500 meters:

Cole White (9:47.0)
Landon Roberts (9:52.0)
Jack Porter (9:53.0)
Hank Milnes (9:55)
Hayden Harry (10:42)

 

2751 meters:

Cole White (10:34.0)
Aiden Anderson (11:40.0)
Tate Wyman (12:08.0)
Hayden Harry (12:59.2)
Andrew Williams (13:01.9)

 

3000 meters:

Henry Purdue (10:25.2)
Lincoln Wagner (10:40.3)
Colton Ashby (10:46.4)
Cyrus Sparacio (10:56.8)
Archer Schwarz (11:01.7)

 

1 mile:

Calvin Kappes (6:03.5)
Henry Purdue (6:04.8)
Colton Ashby (6:21.9)
Archer Schwarz (6:34.7)
Jonathan Kappes (6:51.3)

 

1.5 miles:

Henry Purdue (9:06.6)
Lincoln Wagner (9:07.3)
Cyrus Sparacio (9:18.5)
Colton Ashby (9:30.1)
Archer Schwarz (9:33.0)

 

1.6 miles:

Landon Roberts (10:48.0)
Cole White (10:49.1)
Jack Porter (10:51.3)
Hank Milnes (11:07.7)
Beckett Green (11:23.3)

 

1.7 miles:

Henry Purdue (9:39.4)
Lincoln Wagner (9:39.6)
Colton Ashby (10:13.4)
Archer Schwarz (10:19.3)
Cole White (10:26.9)

Wolves (l to r) Tamsin Ward, Lillian Ketterling, and Taylor Marrs are blazing a path to success. (Photo courtesy Jandellyn Ward)

They’re on a first-name basis with the back of the net.

When a new fall sports campaign kicks off in late August, Tamsin Ward and Sage Arends will lead a pack of Wolf booters hoping to add to their career totals.

Ward, who will be a sophomore, and Arends, part of the Class of 2027, are the active scoring leaders for Coupeville High School’s soccer programs.

Sage Arends surveys his home pitch. (Jackie Saia photo)

But they’re not the only Wolves looking to continue their assault on the career goals chart, as there are 13 players with at least one tally to their credit who can take the field this fall.

The current generation is chasing Mia Littlejohn and the Leyva family, who sit atop the record books.

Littlejohn owns both the single-season and career marks for CHS female pitch powerhouses, with 27 and 35 respectively.

Meanwhile, Abraham Leyva’s 45 goals top all male Wolf scorers, while his cousin, Derek, notched 24 in one campaign, but lost his senior year (and a chance to shatter the career mark) to a pandemic.

Coupeville’s soccer programs launched in 2004, and my tally of goals is not 100% complete, as the Whidbey News-Times failed to report on multiple games in the early going.

But we’re rock-solid during the Coupeville Sports era (2012-today), and I’m absolutely confident in the names (and goal totals) at the top of the charts.

With that being said, my still-a-work-in-progress CHS soccer goal-scoring lists, with active players in bold:

 

GIRLS:

Mia Littlejohn – 35
Kalia Littlejohn – 33
Genna Wright – 20
Lindsey Roberts – 17
Tamsin Ward – 15
Ayden Wyman – 13
Avalon Renninger – 12
Sophie Martin – 8
Sage Renninger – 8
Marisa Etzell – 7
Alexia Hemphill – 7
Micky LeVine – 7
Carolyn Lhamon – 7
Lyla Grose – 6
Lillian Ketterling – 6
Mallory Kortuem – 6
Eryn Wood – 6
Anna Dion – 5
Britt Harpe – 5
Audrianna Shaw – 5
Jenn Spark – 5
Tia Wurzrainer – 5
Erin Hickey – 4
May Rose – 4
Erin Rosenkranz – 4
Hayley Waterman – 4
Bree Daigneault – 3
Arisbeth Montiel – 3
Makana Stone – 3
Lauren Bayne – 2
Courtney Boyd – 2
Chelsea Harpe – 2
Paige Hill – 2
Kim Kisch – 2
Ema Smith – 2
Knight Arndt – 1
Wynter Arndt – 1
Jacki Ginnings – 1
Hazel Goldman – 1
Sophia Greene – 1
Finley Helm – 1 
Carmen Houk – 1
Nezi Keiper – 1
Lily Leedy – 1
Ariella Lee-Spaulding – 1
Ana Luvera – 1
Ashley Manker – 1
Ava Mitten – 1
Caitlin Phillips – 1
Taylor Sherman – 1
Ashley Smith – 1
Tori Wellman – 1
Reese Wilkinson – 1

Ariella Lee-Spaulding glides into action. (Jackie Saia photo)

 

BOYS:

Abraham Leyva – 45
Derek Leyva – 38
Aram Leyva – 29
William Nelson – 20
Ethan Spark – 17
Nick Guay – 14
Aidan Wilson – 13
Cael Wilson – 13
Zane Bundy – 11
Sage Arends – 10
Mike Duke – 10
Micah Einterz – 10
Geoff Wacker – 10
Cole White – 10
Jon Chittim – 9
Preston Epp – 9
Ezra Boilek – 8
Sebastian Davis – 8
Edmund Wilson – 8
Sean Donley – 7
Sage Downes – 7
Sam Wynn – 7
Xavier Murdy – 6
Zack Nall – 6
Angel Partida – 6
James Wood – 6
Jeremy Copenhaver – 5
Hunter Downes – 5
Alex Murdy – 5
Cameron Epp – 4
Nathan Lamb – 4
Greg Mottet – 4
Tony Sherman – 4
Brian Thompson – 4
Evan Bailey – 3
Colin Belliveau – 3
Chris Cernick – 3
Pedro Gamarra – 3
Miguel Puente – 3
Tom Rogers – 3
Jaren Tso – 3
Joel Walstad – 3
Josh Wilsey – 3
Taylor Anthony – 2
Reiley Araceley – 2
Jack Armstrong – 2
Andre Avila – 2
Will Butela – 2
Garrett Compton – 2
Tyler Harvey – 2
Uriel Liquidano – 2
JT Quinn – 2
Alex Smith – 2
Grant Steller – 2
Justin Adams – 1
Eli Berggren – 1
Laurence Boado – 1
Cameron Boyd – 1
Josiah Campbell – 1
Tony Garcia – 1
Zach Hauser – 1
Tanner Kircher – 1
Edmund Kunz – 1
Liam Lawson – 1
Jason Leavitt – 1
Garrit Manker – 1
Cody Menges – 1
Hank Milnes – 1
Loren Nelson – 1
Jonathan Partida – 1
Ehren Phillips – 1
Matt Scott – 1
Spencer Tack – 1
Andrew Williams – 1
Zeb Williams – 1

Edmund Wilson pushes the attack. (Julie Wheat photo)