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Khanor Jump unleashes the shot-put last season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Does he get a day off? Not likely.

Does he want a day off? Probably not likely, either.

Coupeville High School sophomore Khanor Jump is staying busy as the latest track and field season unfolds, competing both for the Wolves and as a one-man wrecking crew.

Sunday, he went down to the Evergreen State College in Olympia to fling the hammer in an event which drew competitors from multiple schools.

Jump’s top throw went 100 feet, two inches, and he has broken triple digits each time out while participating in two of the three hammer series events held this spring.

His PR in the event is 117-02.

The hammer throw is not generally part of regular season meets in Washington state, so throwers have to follow their own path, with a season-long series which culminates in a state championship separate from the one offered by the WIAA.

Jump finished 22nd at the hammer throw state championships as a freshman, second-best for a 9th grader.

Tim Quinn pushes the ball up field while playing soccer for CHS in 2013. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Former Coupeville High School soccer player Tim Quinn was shot and killed Sunday during a dispute at his home in Poulsbo.

His older brother, Riley, is being held on suspicion of second-degree murder, with bail being set at $500,000 during a Mar. 24 appearance at the Kitsap County Superior Court.

The identities of both brothers were reported late Wednesday afternoon by The Kitsap Sun newspaper.

As reported by Seattle TV station King 5, court documents state “the suspect called 911 on Sunday night and told dispatchers he had killed his 30-year-old brother.

“During the call, he said his brother had pinned him down, choked him and tried to kill him.”

“Investigators reported the suspect did not have obvious signs of injury to his neck, face or hands, though they noted scratches and bruising on other parts of his body.

“Authorities believe the suspect fired five shots, striking his brother in the right leg, right arm, chest, left side of his head and back.

“Investigators said shell casings indicate the shots were fired from multiple locations in the home, and they noted the gunshot wound to the head did not appear to have been fired at close range.

“Court records also show the Kitsap County Medical Examiner determined one of the gunshot wounds was inflicted after the victim had already died.”

Riley Quinn, who has no prior criminal history, graduated from CHS in 2010, while Tim Quinn graduated in 2013.

Chelsi Stevens rocks the chain and glasses after destroying Friday Harbor pitching. (Photo courtesy Kristi Stevens)

Every day, a different level.

That’s been the tale for the Coupeville High School softball squad, which has faced teams from 3A, 2A, 1A, and 2B, and beaten them all.

Wednesday afternoon the Wolves ignored a chilly prairie breeze, bashing the ball and getting high, hard heat from pitcher Adeline Maynes as they strolled to a 17-3 victory over visiting Friday Harbor in a game mercy-ruled after five innings.

The victory, coming in the conference opener, lifts CHS to 1-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 4-0 overall, with a rematch set for Thursday on Friday Harbor.

Wednesday’s tilt started as a pitcher’s duel, at least for the first three frames.

Then the tsunami hit.

Both Friday Harbor and Coupeville opened their halves of the first inning by getting their leadoff hitter aboard thanks to a base-knock.

Then both pitchers retired the next three batters, keeping things scoreless and (briefly) sort of tense.

Add a 1-2-3 top of the second from Maynes, who whiffed the side as part of an 11-strikeout performance, and runs were at a premium.

Then the dam broke.

Capri Anter and Emma Cushman walked in the bottom of the second, before 8th grader Cami Van Dyke smacked a hard-hit ball into the hole with two outs.

Streaking down the line, the Wolf young gun not only beat the throw, but rattled Friday Harbor’s defender enough that she zinged the ball under her first-baseman’s glove, allowing a second runner to scoot across home plate on the play.

Adeline Maynes (left) and Haylee Armstrong combined for four hits Wednesday afternoon. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

Given new life, Coupeville pounced, with Haylee Armstrong lashing an RBI triple to deep left field, skidding into the bag with a huge smile on her face as she pointed at her dad.

From there, the Wolves turned it into an eight-run explosion, with Sydney Van Dyke and Teagan Calkins walking, Chelsi Stevens mashing a three-run triple to center, and Anter and Ava Lucero smoking RBI singles back up the middle.

Anter’s hit was an especially explosive one, almost inflicting grievous bodily harm on the Friday Harbor pitcher as it came within an inch or two of putting a dent in the hurler’s face mask.

With the lead in hand, the Wolves continued to pour it on, plating three in the third and another six in the fourth.

The first of those two rallies featured a three-run inside-the-park home run from Calkins, as “The Red Dragon” played bash-the-ball-and-run-like-a-gazelle, and the senior catcher wasn’t done.

She came back around an inning later to launch a three-run triple to center, Calkin’s second blow part of a highlight reel package including Sydney Van Dyke ripping an RBI liner off a defender’s glove and Stevens and Anter bopping RBI lasers to left.

The only thing stopping the hit parade was CHS coach Aaron Lucero taking the foot off the gas pedal in the fourth, twice having runners leave early to give Friday Harbor outs.

 

Wednesday stats:

Capri Anter — Two singles, two walks
Haylee Armstrong — One single, one triple, one walk
Teagan Calkins — One single, one triple, one home run, one walk
Emma Cushman — Two walks
Ava Lucero — One single, one walk
Adeline Maynes — Two singles
Chelsi Stevens — One double, one triple
Cami Van Dyke — Two singles
Sydney Van Dyke — Two singles, two walks

Madison McMillan (left) catches up with high school teammate Mia Farris. The duo is currently excelling in the college sports world. (Photo courtesy Susan Farris)

Her bat remains lively; her team remains deadly.

Coupeville grad Madison McMillan delivered another strong performance Wednesday, helping her Edmonds College softball team sweep yet another doubleheader.

Raining down hits from every direction, the Tritons clobbered visiting Highline 28-9 and 17-2 to improve to 10-0 in conference play, 18-1 overall.

Edmonds has won 18 straight after losing to Mt. Hood in the season opener back on Feb. 20.

McMillan played a big presence in the opener of Wednesday’s twin-bill, bashing a pair of doubles, scoring twice, walking once, and picking up an RBI.

The former Wolf ace is hitting .440 this season, fourth-best on the team.

She and her teammates are off for a bit, returning to action Wednesday, Apr. 1 with a home doubleheader against Everett.

Carson Grove reached base three times in Wednesday’s win. (Julie Wheat photos)

The big dog is back and barking.

Making his first start on the mound since his sophomore season, Coupeville High School senior Chase Anderson tossed a 16-strikeout no-hitter Wednesday to lead the Wolves to a 4-0 win over visiting Friday Harbor in the conference opener for both teams.

The victory lifts the Wolves to 1-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 2-1 overall, with a rematch of the squads set for Thursday on Friday Harbor.

For Anderson, it was a return to form.

A top pitcher as a freshman and sophomore on CHS teams which went to the state tourney, he was limited by injuries as a junior and switched to track and field for a season.

Now he’s back on the diamond and already dialed in.

After a brief one-inning relief appearance in his team’s prior game, Anderson got the call Wednesday from coach Steve Hilborn and responded with a classic performance.

He limited Friday Harbor to just a pair of walks, retired the final 12 hitters he faced, and was never in danger.

Anderson recorded strikeouts in every inning, whiffing the side in both the second and fifth innings, while letting his defense step up to record the game’s other five outs.

At the plate, Coupeville got the only run it would need in the bottom of the second, thanks to some nimble base-running from Carson Grove.

The sophomore sensation walked to lead off the frame, stole second, then came whipping around to score on an error by the visiting catcher.

CHS tacked on two more tallies in the third, and a final insurance run in the fourth, before coasting in for the victory.

In the third, senior Aiden O’Neill — making his season debut — reached on an error, followed by a single from Camden Glover and a walk to Coop Cooper.

With the bags juiced, Coupeville brought two runners in thanks to an RBI single off the bat of Grove and a bases loaded walk to Riley Lawless, who wore a pitch to get aboard.

Coupeville’s finally run came courtesy a pair of doubles, with O’Neill raking one to left, then coming around to tap home after a shot to center from Cooper.

While Anderson shut Friday Harbor’s bats down all day, the Wolves tallied eight hits and seven walks, with Glover leading the hit machine with a pair of singles.

That gives the CHS senior shortstop nine base knocks across the first three games of the season.

 

Wednesday stats:

Chase Anderson — One single
Coop Cooper — One double, two walks
Camden Glover — Two singles, one walk
Carson Grove — One single, two walks
Riley Lawless — One walk
Aiden O’Neill — One double
Leo Rodriguez — One walk
Killian Shaw — One single
Trent Thule — One single

“We win, son, we win.”