Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Valen (Trujillo) Printz joins Coupeville volleyball coaches Cory Whitmore (left) and Cris Matochi on their wedding day.

“The day was so special.”

When Coupeville volleyball gurus Cory Whitmore and Cris Matochi eloped last summer, the intimate affair included one of their former players.

Valen (Trujillo) Printz, who starred on the court for the Wolves from her libero position, is now dazzling folks as a photographer, and she and husband Hunter joined the Wolf coaches for their romantic getaway.

“The location was amazing, the weather was incredible, we were surrounded by our closest family and friends doing exactly what we enjoy doing,” Whitmore said.

“But it was made that much more special to have Valen there as a part of our big day!”

From chasing down wayward volleyballs to documenting her coach’s wedding day, the former Wolf ace has been indispensable.

Valen and Hunter are so wildly talented and a blast to be around,” Whitmore said.

“I really love being able to say that we had our wedding photos taken by a former player of mine!

“She not only captured the moment in photographs but I’m telling you, she captured the feeling of being there.

“I am so very proud of her, finding a passion to make into a career, and she is damn good at what she does.”

 

To see more of Valen’s work, pop over to:

https://valenleephoto.com/

 

Mighty mat masher Izzy LeVine (second from left) shows off her latest medal. (Photo courtesy Sean LeVine)

She’s always on the prowl, looking for more victories.

Izzy LeVine, who grew up in Cow Town alongside older sisters (and Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Famers) Micky and Jae, continues to dominate in the high stakes wrestling world.

Now a junior at Casteel High School in Arizona, Izzy claimed another title this past weekend, going a pristine 5-0 at the 60th annual Doc Wright Invitational in Winslow.

The youngest of Sean and Joline’s three superstar daughters collected two pins and two wins by technical fall en route to the final.

Once there, Izzy closed things out with a solid 9-4 victory to claim the crown.

Casteel, which placed three grapplers on the podium, finished 8th out of 35 teams, with wrestlers from four states participating in the tourney.

Some near, some far

Defensive dynamos Teagan Calkins (left) and Lyla Stuurmans get physical. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A little home cooking, a little far-flung adventure.

Coupeville High School basketball teams have a split schedule in the week ahead, starting at home and finishing on the road.

The Wolves host Concrete Tuesday, with both varsity teams and the girls’ JV suiting up, while the second boys’ squad has the night off.

Then, come Friday, all four CHS squads hit the road for a trip to Orcas Island.

With the regular season entering the stretch run, wins and losses are at a premium for everyone, but especially for varsity teams fighting for playoff positioning.

Where things sit through Jan. 19:

 

Northwest League boys’ basketball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 5-0 7-6
La Conner 4-1 7-8
Coupeville 3-2 4-10
Friday Harbor 2-3 2-11
Concrete 1-3 5-9
Darrington 1-4 6-8
Orcas Island 1-4 3-11

 

Northwest League girls’ basketball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 5-0 11-2
Concrete 3-1 11-3
La Conner 3-1 6-8
Coupeville 3-2 6-7
Friday Harbor 1-3 2-11
Orcas Island 1-4 8-8
Darrington 0-5 4-8

Kassidy Upchurch (left) and Bella Karr brought their A-game to every competition. (Photos by Bailey Thule and Brittany Kolbet)

The season was a success.

While a return trip to state evaded the Coupeville High School competition cheer squad this season, the Wolves left it all on the mat.

An appearance at the Last Chance Qualifier in Yelm Saturday brought an end to the run for CHS, but coach Jennifer Morrell exited with head held high.

“We did not qualify for state this year, but we learned a lot,” she said.

“They are already planning next year’s routine.”

Coupeville, a small school competing against much larger institutions, beat the other 2B team in its category both of the last two weeks.

Saturday that was Chief Leschi, while last week it was Forks.

The Wolves also had wins over bigger schools this year, including knocking off 2A Kingston in December.

Taygin Jump, a star in whatever town she finds herself in. (Photo courtesy Christina Jump)

It’s been a bit.

Competing for the first time in six weeks, Coupeville grad Taygin Jump got right back into the flow of things Saturday in Vermont.

Competing at the Middlebury Winter Invitational, the Plattsburgh State sophomore claimed 6th place in the weight throw and 16th in the shot put.

Jump chucked the shot put 27 feet, 05.50 inches, while lobbing the weight throw implement a sturdy 41-00.25.

The former Wolf ace, who was a big contributor for both CHS volleyball and track and field teams, is majoring in Environmental Planning and Management/Geology.

She and her Cardinal teammates are back in action next Saturday, Jan. 25, when they compete at the St. Lawrence Invitational in Canton, New York.