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   After two seasons playing football for South Whidbey High School, Alex Turner returns to Coupeville for his senior year.

Started as a Wolf, and will finish as a Wolf.

Alex Turner, an All-Conference lineman with South Whidbey, will be suiting up in Coupeville colors Wednesday when football practice begins.

A move related to an illness in the family is bringing him back to CHS for his senior year.

Turner worked his way up through the sports programs at Coupeville Middle School, then played football for CHS as a freshman before heading South.

During his sophomore season at SWHS, he was tabbed as a First-Team All-Conference pick on the offensive line by Cascade Conference coaches.

South Whidbey played an independent schedule last season, as the Falcons worked on rebuilding their program, so Turner and his teammates weren’t eligible for All-Conference honors.

Still, he helped the Falcons go 7-2, winning seven straight against 2B and Canadian schools after season-opening losses to Coupeville and Chimacum.

A six-foot, 210-pound middle linebacker/tight end, Turner hooked up with Falcon QB Kody Newman on several touchdown plays during their junior seasons.

One of those, a 20-yard snag, came against Concrete, a team coached by Marcus Carr, who is now Coupeville’s new head coach.

Turner will likely face his old teammates Oct. 12, when the Wolves travel to Langley with plans to rain on South Whidbey’s Homecoming parade.

CHS has won back-to-back games in the Island rivalry series, and wants to hold on to The Bucket for a third-straight year.

The game will also be a league contest, as Coupeville and South Whidbey are reuniting in the new North Sound Conference.

One wrinkle in the move is Turner also developed into a quality wrestler during his time at SWHS.

Coupeville doesn’t have a wrestling program of its own, but there is a chance he can attend one school and wrestle at another.

Over the past few years, Coupeville and South Whidbey have had an arrangement for sports not offered by CHS, such as golf and cross country.

In the deal, Wolf athletes were responsible for getting themselves to SWHS, then trained and traveled with the Falcons, while competing for Coupeville.

Whether that will be possible for wrestling is unknown at the moment.

“My wrestling is up in the air right now, which really sucks, but I’m doing everything I can to try and wrestle with SW,” Turner said.

“But, if that doesn’t happen, I’d probably go back to basketball, even though I’m not good at it,” he said with a determined laugh.

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After two years of running with South Whidbey, Danny Conlisk will help Coupeville relaunch its own in-school cross country program this fall. (Dawnelle Conlisk photo)

Paper work first.

If you’re planning on playing a sport or participating in an activity this fall for Coupeville High School or Middle School, you need to visit the high school office Tuesday, Aug. 14 between noon-6 PM and get registered.

This is the time to pay fees and fill out paperwork, NOT get physicals. But, if you don’t have a current one of those, get scramblin’.

CHS offers volleyball, football, boys tennis, girls soccer, cheer and cross country in the fall. The harrier program is returning to the school after a two-decade absence.

The middle school is also relaunching cross country, in addition to offering volleyball and football.

For more info, contact Eileen Stone at estone@coupeville.k12.wa.us or Lisa Yoder at lyoder@coupeville.k12.wa.us.

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Former D1 scholarship athlete Kwamane Bowens is part of an all-new Coupeville High School football coaching staff. (Photo courtesy Bowens)

It’s a whole new group on the sideline.

Coupeville High School football has made a major transition this year, hiring Marcus Carr as its head coach, and now bringing in five new assistants.

The hiring of Nathan Bellamy, Tyson Boon, Robert Carr and Kwamane Bowens was officially approved by the school board at its July 30 meeting.

Bennett Richter, a volunteer assistant coach, rounds out the staff.

With the start of a new season just a week away (Washington state teams can start practicing Aug. 15), the group is rarin’ to get going.

Marcus Carr replaces Jon Atkins, who stepped down after two seasons, and is Coupeville’s fifth head coach in nine years.

Prior to that, Ron Bagby coached the Wolves for 26 years.

Coupeville’s new head coach went 13-6 in two seasons at Concrete, winning a Northwest League title last fall, and is looking to bring that same success to CHS, which hasn’t finished above .500 since 2005.

To help him build the Wolf program, Marcus Carr recruited men with long-term playing and coaching experience, much of it here on Whidbey Island.

Among the new Wolf assistant coaches are a former D1 scholarship athlete and several guys who played for the 2006 Oak Harbor High School football squad which won a 4A state title.

A primer on the new assistant coaches, with commentary by Marcus Carr:

 

Nathan Bellamy (Defensive Coordinator):

Lived on the Island for 23 years, has 13 years of coaching experience. Huge fan of Buddy Ryan.

Passionate about helping the youth in our community.

Blessed to be in the position to help rebuild the Coupeville football program and bring back a standard of excellence.

 

Tyson Boon (Offensive Line):

Oak Harbor graduate 2006, where he was the varsity center.

He has played semi-pro football for the Bellingham Bulldogs.

He coaches because he wants the kids to understand that what we do is bigger than football.

When kids graduate he wants them to leave with more than just football skills. He wants them to have gained a better sense of self worth.

There are many life lessons that are taught playing football.

 

Kwamane Bowens (Receivers/Defensive backs):

23 years old. Played D1 football at Hawaii and Texas State.

He ran track as a youth for Coupeville Middle School.

Coach Bowens is ready to help the athletes succeed and to bring the football program to prominence.

 

Bobby Carr (Running back/Linebackers):

29 years old, played 13 seasons of football; WIAA state champ in ’06 with Oak Harbor.

Coached six seasons of youth football in Oak Harbor. Professional painter. 

 

Bennett Richter (Running backs/Linebackers):

Graduated from Oak Harbor 2009 and was a member of the ’06 Oak Harbor state champs.

Has been coaching youth sports for the last several years.

He looks to bring energy and teach solid football fundamentals and techniques while instilling a love and passion for the game.

Wants the players to know they are part of something bigger than themselves – a sense of community, and the idea that they are learning far more than just the principles of football, but of life.

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Andrew Martin and Coupeville High School football kick off their season Aug. 25 at a jamboree. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Three weeks from today it gets real.

The Coupeville High School football team heads to Anacortes Saturday, Aug. 25 for a jamboree, marking the start of the fall sports season.

The 1A Wolves will play mini-games against 2B Concrete and their 2A hosts, with action starting at noon.

The match-up against Concrete is a reunion for Marcus Carr.

Coupeville’s new head coach led the Lions program the last two seasons, posting winning records both times out.

The regular season kicks off Friday, Aug. 31, when CHS travels to Port Townsend for a non-conference tilt against their former Olympic League rivals.

Coupeville volleyball then travels up-Island to play in the Oak Harbor Jamboree Sept. 1, and, with that, fall sports are fully underway.

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With a new football season on the horizon, CHS coaches are holding a parents meeting Aug. 9. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Clear your schedule.

If you have a child who wants to play football for Coupeville High School, you need to get yourself to the CHS gym next Thursday, Aug. 9 for a parent meeting.

It all goes down at 6:30 PM that night, when new head coach Marcus Carr and his staff will lay out all the important details on the upcoming season.

And a new gridiron campaign is just around the corner.

The first day Washington state high school football teams can practice is Aug. 15, and Coupeville’s opening game is Aug. 31 at Port Townsend.

After four years of being rivals in the Olympic League, the Wolves and RedHawks have reverted to non-conference foes with CHS joining the new North Sound Conference.

Coupeville’s home opener is Sept. 7 against Vashon, and its league opener is Sept. 28, when the Wolves host King’s.

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