
Three-sport athlete Hannah Davidson, seen here last season, has returned to Coupeville after living in California for a year. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The move allows Davidson to reunite with former teammates and close friends. (Charlotte Young photo)
They got the band back together.
Coupeville High School’s Class of 2020 boasts some very-talented female athletes, and the roster just got deeper (and taller).
Hannah Davidson, a 5-foot-11 sophomore who plays volleyball, basketball and softball, registered and began attending classes at CHS Monday morning.
She and her family, which includes two younger brothers, moved to California midway through her freshman basketball season.
With a second family move now bringing her back to Whidbey, Davidson is immediately eligible to play, as she already participated in the required number of practices while in California.
She began practicing with the Wolves Monday, and is expected to be in uniform Wednesday for a home non-conference game against Concrete.
Since she’ll have a chance to play more than 50% of the schedule (13 of 21 regular season games remain), Davidson will also be eligible for postseason play.
She gives a rebuilding CHS varsity girls hoops squad an injection of height (she edges 5’10 junior Lindsey Roberts as the tallest Wolf), and re-enters a system she already knows well.
After playing through middle school and into her freshman year with her current teammates, Davidson also attended basketball camp with them this past summer.
During her first go-around in Cow Town, Davidson was a tower of power in all three of her sports.
She was tabbed as the MVP of the Wolf JV volleyball team as a freshman, then dominated in the four games she played on the hardwood before the move to Cali.
The last time Davidson wore a Wolf uniform, she poured in 15 points, snatched 10 boards and rejected a pair of shots in a JV win over Klahowya.
While she hasn’t had a chance to play softball for CHS (yet), she was a key member of a Central Whidbey Little League juniors squad which rolled to a 13-3 record and a league title when she was an 8th grader.











































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