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Ariah Bepler (right) heads off to track practice with partner in crime Hunter downes. (John Fisken photos)

   Ariah Bepler (right) heads off to track practice with partner in crime Hunter Downes. (John Fisken photo)

Ariah Bepler is Wolf Nation royalty.

His parents (Mark and Kim (Stuurmans) Bepler) were both strong athletes during their time at Coupeville High School, and you spread out from there.

Uncles, brothers of uncles, aunts, cousins, all the way to grandpa Cec Stuurmans, who is one of the best-regarded coaches in school history, and it’s obvious athletic success is in the bloodlines.

Which was why it was so nice to see Ariah and his family return to Whidbey Island before the start of this school year, allowing the ever-growing sophomore to rejoin the family business.

He’s made an immediate impact this year, playing basketball in the winter and competing in track and field this spring.

Bepler has taken full advantage of the freedom track offers, trying nine events this year, with his best work in the 300 meter hurdles.

“This was my year to try out all the events I think I might like,” he said. “I like the freedom of choices, and the giant group of friends working together as a team.”

“I haven’t honed in on anything in particular this year. Just feeling like a jack of all trades right now,” Bepler added. “I’ll know more about my strengths and specialize more next year.

“I’d like to find the event that suits me best so I can focus more attention on that for the upcoming years.”

Bepler first picked up the sport as a seventh grader in Oregon, where he was lured in by getting to spend time with classmates.

“It was a huge team and I wanted to compete with a fun group of friends.”

The move back to his parents old stomping grounds has reunited him with much of his sprawling family, while offering Bepler the chance to shine in a more intimate arena.

“Being in Coupeville offers me more choices than the bigger schools I have attended previously,” he said. “It makes school so much more fun to be able to participate.”

Bepler greatly enjoyed his time on the hard-court, as well (“I played basketball this year and love that sport”) and is considering picking up a fall sport for his junior year.

Regardless of which sports he ends up in, he’s guaranteed a large fan base, for which he is appreciative.

“All my family has played sports in Coupeville, but my parents have had the biggest impact encouraging me,” Bepler said.

Away from the games, he enjoys action/adventure movies (“in particular well-choreographed fight scenes”), hanging out with friends and his engineering class, where he gets to apply his design and architecture skills.

He also has a lesser-known talent of which he is justifiably proud.

“I love to make up and draw animated characters and story lines.”

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Dalton Martin (John Fisken photo)

   Dalton Martin has the third-best discus throw by a 1A athlete this spring. (John Fisken photo)

The Magnificent Seven still rides high.

As track and field teams move towards the start of the postseason, the competition is getting ever more cutthroat, and it shows up when you look at the top 10 lists.

A week ago, 10 Wolves could claim a time or distance which put them among the best 1A had to offer.

Seven days later, three of those CHS athletes — Danny Conlisk (1500), Jakobi Baumann (3000) and Jordan Ford (pole vault) have been bumped, through no fault of their own.

For the moment, at least.

But while the list is an ever-changing beast, seven Coupeville athletes are holding strong, led by senior Makana Stone, who appears four times — twice as an individual, twice as a relay runner.

And one of those relay squads, the 4 x 200 girls team of Lauren Grove, Lindsey Roberts, Stone and Sylvia Hurlburt, remains on target to do something that has happened only once in school history — win a state title.

Currently ranked #1, and by almost a full two seconds, they are the team to beat going forward through league, district and state meets.

While CHS has multiple state track title winners in individual events, the only time the Wolves have brought home a title in a relay event was in 2006, when Chris Hutchinson, Jon Chittim, Kyle King and Steven McDonald won the 4 x 400.

Wolves who have one of this year’s 10 best performances in 1A:

Girls:

400 — Makana Stone (6th in 1A) 1:00.78

800 — Stone (7th in 1A) 2:21.89

4 x 100 — Lauren Grove, Lindsey Roberts, Stone, Sylvia Hurlburt (4th in 1A) 51.10

4 x 200 — Grove, Roberts, Stone, Hurlburt (1st in 1A) 1:47.00

Boys:

200 — Jacob Smith (9th in 1A) 23.08

300 hurdles — Lathom Kelley (4th in 1A) 41.48

Discus — Dalton Martin (3rd in 1A) 158-05

To see how Coupeville compares to the rest of the track world, hop over to:

http://www.athletic.net/TrackAndField/Division/Top.aspx?DivID=73261

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Tomi Herrera set a PR in the javelin Thursday at Kingston. (John Fisken photos)

  Tomi Herrera set a PR in the javelin Thursday at Kingston. (John Fisken photos)

Lathom Kelley, practicing the look he gives foes before he rips out their very soul.

  Lathom Kelley, practicing the look he gives foes before he rips out their very soul.

Lathom Kelley is The Natural.

In six years of high school and middle school track, the Coupeville High School senior had never competed in the triple jump before Thursday.

So, how did he do in his debut on the big stage at Kingston High School?

Crushed it.

Soaring six and a half inches further than any of his foes in a 14-man field, Kelley made off with the win, one of two for him on the day.

Toss in his other victory (long jump), plus wins for Dalton Martin (discus), Makana Stone (800) and the girls 4 x 200 relay team, and Coupeville more than held its own on a day in which it faced off with three 2A schools and a pair of 1B teams.

The Wolf boys, who set 15 PRs on the day, finished second in the team standings, while the girls, who notched 14 PRs of their own, claimed third.

2A Olympic ran away with both titles, while Kingston, Port Angeles, Clallam Bay and Neah Bay also participated in the meet.

Complete CHS results:

GIRLS:

100 — Makana Stone (3rd) 13.35; Madison Rixe (12th) 14.75; Ashlie Shank (13th) 14.77 *PR*; Julia Jones (22nd) 18.11 *PR*

200 — Sylvia Hurlburt (3rd) 27.78; Shank (5th) 30.68

400 — Rixe (4th) 1:17.20 *PR*

800 — Stone (1st) 2:25.56; Abby Parker (8th) 2:52.75

3200 — Lauren Bayne (6th) 15:02.35

100 hurdles — Lindsey Roberts (2nd) 17.39 *PR*

300 hurdles — Allison Wenzel (5th) 1:02.21

4 x100 — Lauren Grove, Roberts, Stone, Hurlburt (2nd) 51.70; Wenzel, Parker, Rixe, Shank (5th) 58.57

4 x 200 — Grove, Roberts, Hurlburt, Stone (1st) 1:48.11

Shot put — Skyler Lawrence (3rd) 29-11.50; Alexxis Otto (7th) 25-03.25; Emma Smith (10th) 21-11; Naika Hallam (11th) 21-07.50

Discus — Wenzel (5th) 77-11 *PR*; Lawrence (7th) 75-10; Otto (8th) 73-03; Parker (9th) 70-04 *PR*; E. Smith (12th) 62-02; Tomi Herrera (17th) 43-08 *PR*; Jovanah Foote (19th) 41-09

Javelin — Bayne (2nd) 91-01; Wenzel (3rd) 88-04 *PR*; Hallam (5th) 84-02 *PR*; Parker (8th) 78-10 *PR*; Lawrence (11th) 66-09; Foote (14th) 60-02 *PR*; Otto (16th) 55-03, Herrera (17th) 54-03 *PR*

High Jump — Bayne (3rd) 4-04

Long Jump — Roberts (2nd) 14-11 *PR*; Shank (9th) 11-07.50 *PR*

Triple Jump — Grove (5th) 29-02

BOYS:

100 — Lathom Kelley (6th) 12.07; Gabe Eck (11th) 12.58; Mitchell Losey (17th) 13.15; Kyle Burnett (22nd) 13.58; Hunter Downes (24th) 13.92

200 — Jacob Smith (4th) 23.53; Jared Helmstadter (7th) 24.51; Jacob Martin (10th) 24.92 *PR*; Losey (18th) 27.78; Burnett (20th) 28.48

1600 — Henry Wynn (9th) 5:18.53; Jakobi Baumann (14th) 5:56.62 *PR*

3200 — Wynn (3rd) 12:12.54 *PR*; Baumann (4th) 12:53.55 *PR*

110 hurdles — Ariah Bepler (9th) 22.13

300 Hurdles — Bepler (8th) 52.04 *PR*

4×100 — J. Smith, Eck, Helmstadter, Jordan Ford (3rd) 46.83; Downes, J. Martin, Grey Rische, Connor Thompson (4th) 50.14

Shot Put — Dalton Martin (2nd) 44-04.50 *PR*; Thompson (6th) 35-11.75 *PR*; Ryan Labrador (7th) 34-11.50; Rische (9th) 29-00.75 *PR*; Luke Carlson (11th) 26-02.25 *PR*

Discus — D. Martin (1st) 151-06; Chris Battaglia (6th) 82-04; Labrador (7th) 76-01

Javelin — Rische (3rd) 118-11; Battaglia (4th) 118-09 *PR*; J. Martin (8th) 103-00; Losey (9th) 102-04; Carlson (12th) 88-03 *PR*; Labrador (16th) 79-01

High Jump — Ryan Griggs (2nd) 5-10 *PR*; Battaglia (6th) 5-02; Ford (6th) 5-02

Pole Vault — Ford (2nd) 11-06

Long Jump — Kelley (1st) 19-00 *PR*; J. Martin (4th) 17-11; Eck (5th) 17-10; Griggs (6th) 17-06; Mitchell Carroll (7th) 17-02; Ford (8th) 16-11; Battaglia (10th) 16-00; Bepler (11th) 15-05.50; Downes (13th) 14-05

Triple Jump — Kelley (1st) 38-09 *PR*; Carroll (3rd) 37-11; Griggs (4th) 36-05; Thompson (7th) 35-01.25; Bepler (11th) 32-09.25 *PR*

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Koa Davison is ready for his close-up. (Deb Smith photos)

Koa Davison is ready for his close-up. Maybe. (Deb Smith photos)

guys

A pack of fleet-footed Wolves, hanging out and waiting for their next event.

"I'm still cold!!"

“Nope, I’m still cold!!”

girls

“Yep, we’re coming for your records. All of them.”

Aram

Aram Leyva busts a gut down the backstretch. (Pat Kelley photos)

Zoe

Relay mates Zoe Trujillo (back) and Avalon Renninger celebrate.

And so it begins.

A brand new middle school track season officially kicked off Wednesday, as Coupeville hopped over to Port Townsend for a three-team meet.

Bringing 42 athletes, the Wolves outnumbered their hosts from Blue Heron Middle School, who had 26, but fell way short of Stevens.

A large school that funnels students to 2A high school Port Angeles, Stevens had a whopping 119 athletes on site.

Even so, Coupeville dominated the day.

“We undoubtedly won the meet,” said CMS coach Bob Martin. “Our athletes swept many of the events; they’ve put in the work and it showed!”

With so many athletes involved, Martin and co-coach Elizabeth Bitting did extraordinary work keeping track of Coupeville’s stats.

Keep in mind, it’s the first meet, everything was topsy-turvy and a good chunk of these athletes are new to Coupeville Sports and try not to go bonkers if I flip some numbers or names here.

(Pretty) complete results:

GIRLS:

60 — Ja’Tarya Hoskins 8.30, Cassidy Moody 8.39; Lily Zustiak 8.50; Helen Sinclair 9.62; Raven Vick 9.72

100 — Mallory Kortuem 14.37; Morgan Pease 14.47; Zustiak 15.44; Natalie Hollrigel 15.63; Mica Shipley 15.70; Ashleigh Battaglia 16.40; Mikaela Labrador 16.93

200 — Moody 29.00; Lucy Sandahl 31.00; Zustiak 33.87; Zoe Trujillo 34.35; Labrador 34.38; Jillian Mayne 38.60

400 — Kortuem 1:11; Sandahl 1:14; Trujillo 1:16

800 — Tia Wurzrainer 3:00.97

75 hurdles — Moody 14.02; Hoskins 14.50; Battaglia 16.00; Vick 16.98

200 hurdles — Kortuem 32.09; Pease 35.95

4 x 100 relay  — Hoskins, Sandahl, Kortuem, Moody (1st) 59.00; Zara Bradley, Hollrigel, Avalon Renninger, Wurzrainer (2nd) 59.15

4 x 200 relay — Hollrigel, Renninger, Trujillo, Wurzrainer 2:06.28

Discus — Renninger 54-9; Shipley 35-8; Battaglia 33-04

Javelin — Vick 72-9; Mayne 59-4; Sinclair 53-6

Long Jump — Pease 12-1; Battaglia 10-7, Sinclair 10-1; Shipley 9-1

BOYS:

60 — Sean Toomey-Stout 7.75; Jaylen Nitta 8.08; Sage Downes 8.09; Ethan Clavette 8.18; Nick Wielandt 8.39; Gabe Carlson 8.73;

100 — Toomey-Stout 12.85; Jean Lund-Olsen 13.03; Wielandt 13.48; Jake Mitten 14.01; Downes 14.33; Carlson 14.35; Clavette 14.53; Matthew Kelley 14.56; Ben Smith 17.01; James Mayne 17.01

200 — Wielandt 26.29; Thane Peterson 26.92; Nitta 28.70; Chris Cernick 31.80; Zach Ginnings 36.52; Mayne 36.88

400 — Aram Leyva 1:05; Peterson 1:08; TJ Rickner 1:23

800 — Leyva 2:38; Rickner 3:02

1600 — Leyva 5:19; James Wood 5:30; Koa Davison 5:45; Tucker Hall 5:48; Aiden Juras 6:07; Rickner 6:21

75 hurdles — Lund-Olsen 13.37; Mitten 13.87; Cernick 14.79; Smith 19.08

200 hurdles — Mason Grove 34.7; Smith 40.4

4 x 100 relay — Lund-Olsen, Toomey-Stout, Nitta, Weilandt 53.18; Mitten, Downes, Kelley, Smith 57.05

4 x 400 relay — Davison, Hall, Leyva, Wood 4:46

Shot Put — Trystan Ford 23-04; Ricky Rebischke-Smith 20-02, Tian Yu 19-09

Discus — Peterson 95-06; Clavette 47-04; Ford 37-00, Rebischke-Smith 37-0; Yu 34-00

Javelin — Carlson 70-05; Ford 68-10; Ginnings 58-09; Yu 46-01; Rebischke-Smith 42-07

High Jump — Kelley 4-08; Mitten 4-04; Grove 4-02

Long Jump — Toomey-Stout 16-06; Lund-Olsen 15-11; Downes 13-06, Carlson 12-00, Ginnings 10-01

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(John Fisken photos)

   Mica Shipley is coming to claim all your track records. All of them, I said. (John Fisken photos)

relay

   Fleet-footed duo Jaylen Nitta (left) and Jean Lund-Olsen work on relay hand-offs.

Mason Grove

   Hoops star Mason Grove hopes to follow in the track footsteps of highly-successful older sister Lauren.

girls

“A camera?!?!?!?! Yeah, we don’t need to practice…”

girl

Mikaela Labrador is on the move.

Avalon

   Avalon Renninger (left) and Sage Downes are back at it again, preparing to destroy all their rivals at yet another sport.

Logan

   He’s not on the CMS team yet (one more year), but Logan Martin is already a natural.

Sean Toomey-Stout

   Sean Toomey-Stout (left) takes the baton from Nick Wielandt and prepares to hit Mach-3.

The countdown has begun.

Coupeville Middle School’s track and field team makes its debut Wednesday, with a meet in Port Townsend, and the Wolves are deep into preparations.

As they went through a practice Monday, wanderin’ photo man John Fisken, who was in town to shoot CHS baseball, softball and tennis, stopped by to snap some pics.

The photos above are courtesy him.

If you like what you see, maybe buy him a Diet Coke. I hear he likes ’em.

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