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Archive for the ‘Everything changes’ Category

   The brand spanking new grandstand at Coupeville’s Mickey Clark Field continues to rise after a two-year wait. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“Hey, stop laying down on the job, man!”

Closer…

and…

closer to reality.

I’ve waited out in the rain and wind two years for a new press box, but my long national nightmare might be coming to a close.

Construction crews continue to chip away at building Coupeville High School’s new football/soccer/track grandstand, and the whole thing has taken a jump forward in recent days.

Will they really be done by Thursday (the previously announced target), so that the new stadium can debut during Friday’s final home football game of the season?

Or, more likely, will we first step onto the slice of covered paradise this spring, when boys soccer and track take over Mickey Clark Field?

Your guess is as good as mine, but, as the pics above show, progress is happening. Piece by piece.

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   Day one of putting together the 1,000 pieces that comprise the new CHS grandstands, and the question on everyone’s mind is … “What do you mean you lost the instructions?!?!” (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“No, no, it looks fine that way.”

   Later, when everything looks all fancy, people will forget about the lowly, but important piece which anchors everything. I shall call it … Thaddeus.

“I’m just saying, I could have lifted that without any machinery. No, really…”

“Up…

“it…”

“Goes!”

And we’re .02% done.

It’s like a really big Ikea project.

The two-year wait for the new Coupeville High School football/soccer/track grandstands to arrive is over.

Now we just wait for all 10 million pieces to be put together.

Will the new stands debut during one of the three remaining Wolf home football games?

Or, more likely, will butts hit the seats for the first time this spring?

Only time will tell.

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   Coupeville sports fans need to put on their best walking shoes and stroll a couple hundred extra feet this week. (David Stern photo)

   The new CHS football/soccer/track grandstand arrives. Now, it’s an Ikea project waiting to be put together. (Kristin Hurlburt photo)

This time, they want you to sneak in the back way.

Well, “sneak” might not be the operative word, but definitely go around to the back and tell ’em David sent you.

With the long-anticipated installation of new bleachers at Coupeville High School’s football field finally a go, spectators at events this week won’t be able to use the elementary school entrance.

Instead, you need to park at the baseball field parking lot, which sits right behind the football field on Terry Road.

Then walk yourself straight forward past the diamond and enter the football/soccer field through the normally closed-off back entrance.

The temporary change affects three games this week, one of which will have ticket-sellers camped out at that back entrance.

CHS girls soccer hosts Sequim Tuesday (4:00) and CMS football welcomes Port Townsend to town Wednesday (3:45), before the week is capped with Coupeville’s Homecoming football game (7:00) against Bellevue Christian.

Of the three, fans are charged admission at only the last event.

With varsity football games at home the following two weeks — Oct. 20 vs. Klahowya and Oct. 27 vs. Chimacum — the possibility Wolf fans will experience new stands this season (after just a two-year wait) has taken a giant leap forward.

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   After missing her junior season with a leg injury, Kyla Briscoe returns to add even more depth to a very-good CHS volleyball squad. (John Fisken photo)

Work continues on the CHS tennis courts. (Mike Lodell photo)

   Hunter Smith is on the cusp of breaking three CHS career football records. (Fisken photo)

No, it’s not too early to look ahead at fall sports.

I know, it’s only Aug. 2, it’s hot ‘n hazy outside (thanks to off-Island forest fires) and the first day of school is more than a month off.

But, we’re only two weeks away from the start of practice (football kicks off Aug. 16 while volleyball, tennis and soccer start Aug. 21), and I’ve never been overly patient.

So we’re taking a premature look at the biggest fall sports story-lines which loom for Coupeville High School fans.

1 — Will all the work be done:

Maintenance crews have been busy plugging away, but a lot remains in flux.

Last year, the hubbub centered around a new track oval and facilities, while this year tennis courts are being redone and new football bleachers are being installed.

When it’s done, home fans will sit in front of the apartments, right next to the parking lot, while road fans will (finally) be forced to walk all the way to the other side.

While the local guys have prepared the ground, a date for actual installation of the bleachers remains up in the air.

“We are waiting on contractors,” said CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith. “What this means is that we will start the season in the same place we were last year until the stands are completed, hopefully sooner, rather than later.

“The construction area will be cordoned off and we will figure out a plan for the visiting side.”

Having gone without a press box last year, I was looking forward to getting back under cover.

Smith, who doubles as the football announcer, is far hardier, and laughs at any hint we might be left out in the elements for more games.

“Hey, The Farmer’s Almanac says it’s supposed to be a rainy September, so bring your galoshes and yellow rain gear!”

2 — New coaches arrive (eventually):

Cory Whitmore (volleyball) and Jon Atkins (football) enter their second season at the helm of their programs, while tennis guru Ken Stange is deep into his second decade on the job.

The lone new varsity head coach this fall is hardly a newbie, as CHS boys soccer coach Kyle Nelson doubles his duties, taking over the girls soccer squad.

The biggest question mark looms for volleyball, which, 19 days before practice starts, is still looking for a JV coach to replace Kristen Bridges, who went 12-2 (9-0 in league) then took time off to bring a super-cute baby boy into the world.

3 — All your records are (maybe) ours:

Hunter Smith had a great junior year, winning the CHS Male Athlete of the Year while being a three-sport star.

During the 2016 football season, he set single-season marks for receiving yards (916) and touchdowns (11), while tying the single-game record with three receiving TD’s.

Toss in seven interceptions as a sophomore, and he shares the single-season record for that defensive stat with Dan Nieder.

Entering his final gridiron campaign Smith is on the cusp of thoroughly blowing up the board, needing just 11 receiving yards, five receiving touchdowns and three interceptions to claim CHS career records.

He trails Chad Gale 1,345-1,335 in yards and 17-13 in touchdowns, and sits right behind Josh Bayne (12-10) in picks.

Wolf QB Hunter Downes, who tied the school single-game mark with four touchdown passes at Bellevue Christian last year, has more ground to cover than Smith for career marks, but expect him to come out flinging.

The senior signal caller would need 1,773 yards and 16 TD’s this fall (he amassed 1,569 and 17 as a junior) to catch the man who now coaches him, Brad Sherman.

Downes has 1,841 yards and 18 TDs, while Sherman sits with 3,613 and 33.

4 — Even more records:

Wolf spiker Hope Lodell owns the single-season (110) and career (141) marks for service aces. How high can she take those marks during her senior campaign?

Also, expect junior booter Kalia Littlejohn to come out firing as she chases older sister Mia and Abraham Leyva in the soccer record books.

Mia, who transferred to Garfield for her senior season, scored 27 goals last year, running her three-year total to 35, while Leyva graduated with 45 career goals in three seasons of play on the boys side.

Kalia sits at 18, scoring 10 as a freshman and another eight as a sophomore.

5 — Defend your titles:

Boys tennis (4-0 in league play, as two other matches were rained out) swept to a second straight league crown last fall, while volleyball captured the program’s first conference title since 2004.

The spikers finished 11-6 (8-1 in league), just missing the ’04 team’s high-water mark of 13 wins.

6 — Make some history:

Soccer finished 8-7-1 (6-3 in league), the first winning record in 13 seasons for a CHS girls soccer team.

The next goal — after three consecutive second-place finishes in the 1A Olympic League, take down Klahowya, which has yet to lose a league contest in the sport.

For football, a 3-7 mark (2-5 in league) was two plays away from 5-5, as the Wolves lost to league rivals Charles Wright Academy and Bellevue Christian by less than a touchdown.

Both those losses came on the road, so redemption can come at home in ’17, as CHS tries to end a major drought — the Wolves haven’t had a winning football season since 2005.

7 — Back from injury:

Kyla Briscoe was a standout volleyball player as a sophomore, then missed her entire junior season with a devastating leg injury.

After battling back, she’s healthy, hard at work in the school’s weight-training program and ready to close her net career in style.

8 — Run, run far away:

Cross country has a rich history at CHS, but no active team. That may be changing.

Wolf harriers Danny Conlisk and Henry Wynn will train and travel with South Whidbey for a second year, with Sam Wynn making it a trio this year, but talk of reviving the program in Coupeville is picking up steam.

May I make a suggestion?

Natasha Bamberger, the winningest runner in school history (five individual state titles — one in XC and four in track) is back home and ready to coach. Just sayin’.

So, there you be, some story-lines to keep in mind as we head into the great unknown.

Of course, like every year, who knows what surprises await and what will really be the talk of the town this fall.

Will there be a surprise transfer, a modern-day twist on an Amanda Allmer or Sarah Mouw or Linda Cheshier, dominant athletes who suddenly showed up in Cow Town for one incredible year before graduating?

Or, maybe, there’s a Coupeville native, someone we already know, maybe a lower-level athlete, who spent the summer getting bigger, faster or stronger, who will come in and shock us all.

And hey, we still have 30 days until the first game of the season — football vs. South Whidbey Sept. 1 — more than enough time for a major scandal or two to erupt.

As I contemplate what to write the next couple of weeks, I can only hope and dream.

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South Whidbey football, seen here getting its rear spanked by Coupeville's Hunter Smith, is leaving the Cascade Conference. (John Fisken photo)

   South Whidbey football, seen here getting its rear spanked by Coupeville’s Hunter Smith, is leaving the Cascade Conference. (John Fisken photo)

Coupeville’s old stomping grounds aren’t what they used to be.

The 1A/2A Cascade Conference is falling apart before our very eyes, and football inequality is at the heart of the matter.

First 2A Lakewood fled for the Northwest Conference after a failed move to combine two leagues for football, then five of the league’s remaining seven schools refused to play eventual 2A state champ Archbishop Thomas Murphy, AKA “The Best Team Money Could Buy This Side of Bellevue.”

Now, 1A Cedar Park Christian has hired former Bellevue coach Butch Goncharoff, ensuring the school will likely launch a recruiting war with fellow private school ATM (I mean “offer academic opportunities to underprivileged 250-pound linemen”).

Taking advantage of a swinging exit door, 1A South Whidbey has fled the scene.

Coupeville’s closest rival, which suffered badly during a win-less 2016 season that started with a 41-10 pounding by the Wolves, is breaking with its league for football, and will try and put together an independent schedule for next fall.

CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith confirmed the move does not affect South Whidbey’s annual Battle for the Bucket with Coupeville, set for Sept. 1 in Langley.

What it does mean is the Falcons, who will be on their third head coach in four seasons, will cobble together a schedule of non-conference games with 1A and 2B schools.

Not having residence in a league makes qualifying for the postseason harder, though not impossible, and will require some scrambling from South Whidbey’s AD, who won’t be able to automatically plug six of 10 games with league foes.

Coupeville went down a partially similar path several seasons ago, when their gridiron program was also hit hard by injuries, forcing them to play freshmen and sophomores against the seasoned, weight-room-living juniors and seniors employed at ATM and King’s.

The Wolves got permission to play a limited league schedule, facing only the smaller schools, as they rebuilt, but did not go totally rogue like the Falcons.

Of course, CHS followed that up by making a bigger change, jumping to be a founding member in the new 1A Olympic League in 2014.

While many of South Whidbey’s athletic programs are not in the same disarray that football is, I, for one, again raise the call — it’s time for the Falcons to fully get while the getting is good.

I am an idiot, and no one is going to listen to me, but I think there are many, many great reasons for South Whidbey to fully reunite with Coupeville and grow the Olympic League to a five-school joint.

Pop over and read my thoughts at https://coupevillesports.com/2016/09/27/falcons-time-to-fly-home/ before you outright dismiss me.

It’s time, Falcon Nation, it’s time. Come home.

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