
Savina Wells, one of Coupeville’s best and brightest, has moved to Florida. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)
Savina Wells has taken her talents to South Beach.
Or, at least somewhere close to there.
A family move to Florida will subtract the rising sophomore from Coupeville High School sports rosters, bringing an end to a stellar run in Wolf uniforms for the youngest child of Lyle and Katy Wells.
The move also affects Cow Town’s teaching depth, as Katy Wells was an Elementary Paraeducator for the Coupeville School District.
Savina, who followed in the footsteps of Ulrik and Izzy, who both graduated from CHS, has been at the forefront of Coupeville athletics since she was old enough to walk.
In the early days, you’d be at one of her siblings’ games, and there would be Savina doing a series of never-ending cartwheels, all while never losing the bag of chips she was bringing back from the snack bar.
Once she was old enough to capture the spotlight, she was a gold-plated star from day one.
Did I think about calling Savina “The Chosen One?”
Possibly.
Did I show restraint for once, though, and not refer to her as that in print until now?
Definitely, though it was a tough battle with the shameless hype master living inside me.
A standout in little league and youth sports, Savina made her high school basketball debut as a precocious 8th grader and was second on the team in scoring during a pandemic-shortened season.
Through her first year-and-half of high school hoops, she racked up 133 points, leaving her 85th all-time among Wolf girls for a program which started in 1974.
Older sister Izzy graduated with 204 points to her credit and is #58 all-time.
Savina was also a varsity volleyball and softball player for CHS during her freshman year.
On the volleyball court, she registered 70 kills, 47 digs, five block assists, and 42 service aces in her debut, ranking #2 on the team in aces and #3 in kills.
When spring rolled around this year Savina was Coupeville’s starting catcher, where she hauled in pitches from her sister.
The lanky fab frosh was a dangerous hitter and a fleet-footed runner, cracking a steady string of extra-base hits for a Wolf squad which went 16-3.
Coupeville has taken a hit in the offseason from family moves, losing four talented athletes in the prime of their prep careers.
Along with the Wells clan moving to Florida, other Wolves departing include sisters Olivia and Amaya Schaffeld and three-sport star Mikey Robinett.
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