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IT looks like current CMS 8th graders like Jered Brown (with ball) and Ultril Wells

   If current numbers hold, CMS 8th graders like Jered Brown (with ball) and Ulrik Wells will play all four years of high school ball at the 1A level. (John Fisken photo)

The 1A Olympic League seems to be safe.

On Jan. 15 the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association will officially announce its proposal for how to classify the state’s high school athletic teams for the next four years.

Once those numbers are released, there will be 10 days for schools to debate the numbers and make any counter-proposals, before the WIAA rubber stamps everything Jan. 25.

If the preliminary numbers hold up, all four members of the Olympic League will remain in 1A.

The current counts would have 65 teams each in 4A, 3A, 2A and 1A, with 62 teams apiece in 2B and 1B.

Coupeville, which had been the smallest true 1A school (2B and 1B schools with smaller student populations can opt to play above their class), would no longer hold that distinction if the current numbers hold.

Two years ago, there were 225 Wolves when grades 9-11 were counted. This time around, there are 227 and there would now be six true 1A schools below CHS.

The preliminary outlook for 1A has six schools which have opted up (you can opt up but not down) and 59 true 1A schools.

For Coupeville to slide back into 2B, it would appear those six opt-ups would have to stay opted-up, while seven 2B schools would have to suddenly decide to start playing at 1A.

Barring a seismic, unexpected change to the landscape, that means the Wolves will remain a 1A school through 2020.

The WIAA previously went on two-year counts, but 2016 will mark a change, as all classification will now happen on four-year intervals.

Coupeville’s league rivals all will remain 1A, as well.

Chimacum, which had been at 237 the last time, is now at 250, while Port Townsend has slid from 327 to 278.

Klahowya remains one of the largest 1A schools, but has dropped from 455 to 445 in two years.

While the Wolves have the smallest student body in the Olympic League, they have more than held their own in the year-and-a-half the league has been in place.

In the 10 sports in which Coupeville competes, the Wolves have 54 league wins, second only to Klahowya’s 71 — and that margin could be chopped down quite a bit as basketball plays out.

Both CHS squads are in first place in the hoops standings, with the Wolf girls the defending league champs. The teams have 16 league games remaining between them.

Port Townsend has 29 league wins across those 10 sports in that time, while Chimacum has 28.

While it would appear Coupeville’s 1A status and league affiliation are all but guaranteed, there is still a bit of intrigue out there.

Once Jan. 25 comes to pass, there may be other schools left adrift by dropping or moving up to 1A.

Some of those schools could seek a new league.

If so, the Olympic League could strengthen itself, and possibly add postseason berths, by expanding, picking up new members who would start play in the 2016-2017 school year.

That, though, is intrigue for another day.

To see preliminary enrollment figures for the 2016-2020 classification period, pop over to:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/12qwdXCBPepkgxLWG4sbxIJgXo5eDX0FZHM8flfx4pdE/pubhtml#

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Makana Stone

  Makana Stone (23) and the Wolf girls’ hoops squad have ruled their new league with an iron fist. (John Fisken photos)

Former Coupeville AD Lori Stolee deserves a large chunk of the credit for working tirelessly to get the Wolves into a new league.

  Former Wolf AD Lori Stolee deserves a large chunk of the credit for working tirelessly to get Coupeville, the smallest 1A school in the state, into a new league.

This has been a school year unlike any in recent memory at Coupeville High School.

After a decade of taking a systematic beating at the hands of large 2A schools and private schools with athletic scholarships while a member of the 2A/1A Cascade Conference, the Wolves were set free.

Thanks largely to the hard work of former CHS Athletic Director Lori Stolee (now part of the administration at Marysville-Pilchuck), Coupeville, the smallest 1A school in the state, jumped to the newly-formed 1A Olympic League.

Joining Port Townsend and Chimacum, which are much closer in size to Coupeville and are similarly public, rural, fairly isolated schools, and Klahowya (admittedly larger, but not a private sports academy), the Wolves have recaptured something that was missing for several years — a true fighting chance.

Now, it’s true. Last spring was a watershed moment for CHS, as it sent its baseball and softball teams to state, with tennis players Ben Etzell and Aaron Curtin, track star Makana Stone and golfer Christine Fields also making trips to the Big Dance.

But that achievement was attained in the postseason against other 1A schools, after the Wolves struggled mightily at times during their conference schedules.

It was a start, a great start, but the new league has been the next step that was sorely needed.

Look at the six sports which have played this year (we’re not counting any like swim in which Coupeville doesn’t have a team) — football, volleyball, boys’ tennis, girls’ soccer and boys’ and girls’ basketball.

The Wolves have 18 varsity conference wins across those sports so far, second only to Klahowya’s 27. Port Townsend has 14 and Chimacum 10.

The highlight, of course, is the Wolf girls’ basketball team, which is 6-0 in league play with three games left. They will hoist the school’s first new league championship banner since 2002.

Add in the fact the JV girls are also 6-0 and the future is a bright one for what is, right now, Coupeville’s premier program.

But it’s not just a one-team affair.

The Wolves posted a winning record in tennis (then upset Klahowya in the postseason), was competitive with eventual state champ Klahowya in soccer and came within a play of making the playoffs in football.

Even when they posted losing records, as they did in volleyball and are currently doing in boys’ basketball, it has not been the routs of before.

With King’s and Archbishop Thomas Murphy gone, a psychological block has been lifted.

Win or lose, you can see it in the eyes of the Coupeville athletes. They can compete with these schools, and it is a huge deal.

When you put banners up, you inspire the kids coming up behind you.

When you compete on a nightly basis, regardless of the sport, you draw more fan interest, you push athletes who were wavering to commit.

You build your numbers, you build your base, you build your spirit.

Do the games start earlier now? Often, yes. Are the travel arrangements still in flux? Certainly.

But those are minor things compared to what the change in leagues has given the Wolves.

Hope.

It burns again in Coupeville, and we should thank Lori Stolee for going the extra mile to bring that back before she had to leave us.

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The most clicked-on photo in Coupeville Sports history.

The most clicked-on photo in Coupeville Sports history.

Chelsea Randall, Mistress of Awesome

Chelsea Randall, Mistress of Awesome (Kelsey Simmons photo)

Savanna Dohner, Mistress of Awesome, Jr. (Jenn Dohner photo)

Savanna Dohner, Mistress of Awesome, Jr. (Jenn Dohner photo)

Someone keep an eye on this Chelsea Randall kid, cause she’s about to break all the records.

The most talented person I know, the dancer/choreographer/writer/director/editor/restaurant manager/ferocious cookie eater/owner of the awesomeness gene has the second most-viewed ad on Coupeville Sports, and she’s done it in less than two months.

And it’s not even really an ad.

One day, when I had too much time on my hands, I put up a fake ad for the Chelsea Randall Fan Club (cause, as I said, she’s awesome) and people started clickin’ on it on a regular basis.

What did they find when they did?

One of the best photos I’ve ever seen, a pic that captures Chelsea and her very talented younger sister Savannah when they were just gettin’ going on rulin’ the world.

So, take a moment. Go over to the right side of this page and click on the ad. It’s right there under Sherman’s Pioneer Farm.

OK, you’re back? See, don’t you feel better about life in general now that you basked in the patented Randall Awesome Glow ™?

Yes, yes you do. You’re welcome.

So, anyway, as I hit 23 months of doing this blog tomorrow, I decided to take a look at my stats. I do it from time to time. As I said, I have a LOT of time on my hands, now that I’m out of the dish pit.

And what did I find, other than confirmation that Chelsea is popular?

I found that the top photo above, a collage of female CHS athletes, is the number one most clicked-on photo in the history of Coupeville Sports.

The infamous Brian Norris-provided boys’ shower pic that I’m haunted by on a daily basis (“shower boys” brings folks my way EVERY DAY and I don’t think they’re finding what they’re looking for…) is #4 all-time.

So, there’s that…

Most viewed ad of all-time?

Kelsey Simmons Design, but Chelsea’s comin’ up fast on the outside. Gazing In (my sister’s blog), Island Jenn and the B & B at Crockett Farms round out the top five.

By coincidence, a story about Kelsey’s dog, Sitka, going on a walkabout (she was found after a bizarre 36-hour adventure) is my highest-rated story about an animal. #26 all-time (out of 2,234 stories).

What are people searching for when the web brings them my way?

“Cold water challenge” is by far the runaway winner, and, of course, “shower boys.” Yes, thank you Brian

Most searched athlete? It’s Aaron Curtin, followed by Wiley Hesselgrave, Kwamane Bowens, Nick Streubel and the Luvera sisters, Ana and Ivy.

Iris Ryckaert (at #6) is the most-searched foreign athlete, and former CHS volleyball coach Kim Meche is the most-searched non-athlete, closely followed by Wolf mom Amy Briscoe, former coaches Henry Pope and Paul Mendes and (her again) Chelsea Randall.

When you break down the stories, four of my ten most-viewed articles were centered around polls, with the recent battle royal for the banner photo at the top of the blog my #1 story (by a HUGE margin).

CJ Smith for the win.

Also making the top ten, my exclusives on the woman behind the “I Support the OLF” movement and my most controversial story of all time, the tale of Hayley Newman walking out on the South Whidbey girls’ basketball team — still the only story where I eventually had to freeze the comment section.

Memories. Sweet, sweet, profanity-riddled memories…

If we’re talking about feature stories, the old guard holds up well, with five of the ten most-viewed being stories about former Wolf greats.

Brad Sherman, Sherry (Bonacci) Roberts, Mike Engle, Jerry Helm and Mitch Aparicio — gone, but never forgotten.

The single most-viewed feature of all time, though? Not an athlete and proof that, from time to time, it pays to branch outside of my main area of coverage.

Savanna Dohner, bass player of the Gods, holds off Wolf football/soccer star Brett Arnold and GU18 Whidbey Islanders soccer ace Jacalyn Hefflefinger to claim the #1 feature, and she sits at a very impressive #12 all-time.

And what does that prove? People respect talent.

What about me? I am thrilled to provide people a chance to catch a glimmer of greatness, to get a moment with supernovas like Savanna Dohner and Chelsea Randall.

But, at the end of the day, of the 2,234 articles, if I have to pick one, I go with this one starring Caleb Valko and Hunter Hammer:

https://coupevillesports.com/2013/01/30/caleb-valko-wants-your-sweet-sweet-cupcakes/

Cause it still makes me laugh every time.

But then, I’m easy and I have a lot of time on my hands.

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