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The WIAA makes life tough for District 1 schools like Coupeville. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The path to state tourney success is a narrow one.

Or, maybe more accurately, the path to getting to state in the first place is the trickiest part.

The Washington Interscholastic Activities Association released allocation numbers for fall sports this week, allowing Coupeville and its fellow District 1 rivals to see where they stand.

The numbers, as shown in this graph, reflect this year (2024-2025) and next (2025-2026).

 

 

Volleyball is being squeezed this season, with just one slot available at the 16-team 2B state tourney for a District 1 team this go around, before it reverts to two next school year,

For cross country, two boys’ teams and one girls’ team advance in 2024, though individual runners can also qualify on their own.

The numbers reflect a second District 1 team getting the call on the girls side next year.

Boys’ soccer, which has just an eight-team state tourney, will draw three teams from District 1, where Coupeville’s current co-ed program resides.

Finally, football exists in its own unique world.

There are currently only two District 1 schools playing 11-man football — Coupeville and Friday Harbor.

Those squads play twice during the regular season.

Sweep, and your league champs. Split the games, and the Wolves and Wolverines will play a tiebreaker.

Either way, the team that emerges from District 1 will face off with a team from District #4 in a full game to decide who advances to the state bracket.

And why do Districts 4, 5, and 6 get so many more state qualifiers? Because there are a ton more 2B schools in those areas.

Every district has its strengths and weaknesses, and, looking at the numbers, District 1 is strongest in 3A schools, for some reason.

Which could help Oak Harbor come postseason time. So, the Wildcats have that going for them, which is nice.

Cael Wilson (in headband) celebrates a goal with his teammates. (Finn Price photo)

Cael Wilson is making a run at family scoring supremacy.

The Coupeville High School senior, who is the only soccer player in school history to have scored a goal in five seasons, rattled home two more scores Tuesday in Bothell.

While Wilson’s outburst wasn’t enough to topple pitch powerhouse Providence Classical Christian, which claimed a 7-2 win in a non-conference soccer game between Northwest 2B/1B League rivals, it did propel the ginger sniper up the scoring chart.

His two-goal day gives him a team-best five tallies this season, and 11 for his prep career.

That ties Cael Wilson for #8 all-time on the CHS boys’ scoring chart with Zane Bundy, while leaving him just two goals shy of older brother Aidan Wilson, who punched in 13 goals during his run in the red and black.

Preston Epp leads the charge. (Bailey Thule photo)

Tuesday’s goals came off of assists from Preston Epp and Angel Partida.

Wilson’s first score was fired from the far corner, while on the second scoring run, he exchanged short passes with Partida, then slapped home a left foot shot to the corner of the net.

Providence, which finished third at the 2B/1B state tourney a year ago, has a potent scoring attack, but Coupeville coach Kimberly Kisch praised the play of her goalie, senior Hurlee Bronec.

“As always, Hurlee was a rock star, making big saves,” she said.

Now 2-4-1 on the season, Coupeville wrapped its non-conference schedule Tuesday and begins league play Oct. 11 with a road trip to Cedar Park Christian-Lynnwood.

The Wolves have eight conference games ahead, including a rematch with Providence, as they chase a playoff spot while competing in the premier 2B/1B soccer league in the state.

Kisch, and fellow Wolf coach Robert Wood experimented a bit Tuesday, using the game as a learning exercise.

“With the final non-league game, we tried some new things with our lineup,” Kisch said. “It didn’t work out, but we gleaned valuable information about their defensive line.

“I am confident that when we see Providence again on our field, we will have a much different outcome.”

Eighth grader Tamsin Ward is a vital part of a co-ed soccer squad charging into league play. (Bailey Thule photo)

Scout Smith, seen with Lyla (left) and Tenley Stuurmans, is the new Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball coach. (Sarah Stuurmans photo)

She was born for this.

The daughter of two coaches, and sister of two more, Scout Smith was always among the most cerebral of athletes during her playing days at Coupeville High School.

Now, the former three-sport star, who was a CHS Athlete of the Year winner as a senior, is joining the coaching fraternity herself.

Well, Scout has already been working with the school’s volleyball program as a volunteer assistant, but Tuesday she was tabbed as the new JV girls’ head basketball coach.

She replaces Kassie O’Neil, who left due to a family move, and her hire will be official once approved by the school board.

Scout played volleyball, basketball, and softball during her Wolf days, before moving on to earn degrees from the University of Washington and Gonzaga with an eye on becoming a teacher.

Dad Chris Smith coached through all three seasons for several years at CHS, working with volleyball, boys’ basketball, and baseball, while mom Charlotte Young was an accomplished little league guru.

Scout’s brothers, CJ and Hunter, have also coached at their alma mater in the past, with the former calling the shots for JV baseball, and the latter leading the JV boys’ hoops program.

Like having another coach on the floor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

While Scout, a 2020 CHS grad, is the youngest of Charlotte’s three-pack, she quickly made a name for herself.

In her first athletic event as a high school student back in 2016, she reeled off 27 points on her serve, including 18 straight at one point, in a straight-sets volleyball win over Mount Vernon Christian.

The final serve almost broke the Hurricane receiver’s elbow in half, and Scoutasouras Rex was born.

By the time she wrapped up her CHS sports career, she had helped lead both volleyball and softball to state tourney success.

A team captain in all of her sports, she often played positions (setter, point guard, pitcher) which put her in leadership roles, something she always accepted and lived up to.

Scout racked up stats, brought home All-Conference and team honors, and earned respect from fellow players, coaches, and rivals by being one of the hardest-working, smartest athletes to ever pull on a Wolf uniform.

Across a span of six years (two middle school, four high school) she was a rock for Coupeville sports teams, as dependable as any athlete this blog has ever covered.

Scout with the parental figures. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It wasn’t just that Scout could make the play, but that she was so deeply ingrained in her knowledge, that she always knew what the right play was — even during a few times when everyone else was (incorrectly) screaming at her to do something differently.

She played through pain — refusing to come off the court even after turning half her face into a giant bruise after slamming into the floor during a playoff volleyball match — and she handled good times and bad with style and grace.

Scout lost her senior softball season, and a chance to make back-to-back state tourney runs, when the pandemic wiped out all spring sports.

That stung badly, and I have no doubt she would return to the field today in a heartbeat if given a replay, but she has moved on to find new milestones to make.

She’s taught two of my three nephews as a substitute PE teacher this fall, and the CHS volleyball players have benefited greatly from her presence.

Every coaching change comes with unknowns.

Falling back on sports cliches, some hires become home runs, while a rare few are closer to strikeouts.

This one? Bringing Scout into a leadership position where she can continue the family tradition of coaching excellence?

That feels like destiny coming true.

Many spikes, many lessons

Cameron Van Dyke, seen here during softball season, is also a top volleyball player.

It was super-sized.

Coupeville Middle School volleyball made its home debut Monday, in an event which lasted 193 minutes, featured exactly 300 points (seriously), and contained roughly 107,451 screams unleashed by hyped-up teen girls.

And a few hundred more from their male counterparts, at least until a Lakewood coach plopped herself down in the midst of the Wolf support crew and lectured them for chafing her servers with their grunts and psychological warfare.

While Coupeville lost all three matches to their visitors, who hail from a much-larger school which funnels students to a 2A high school, there were bright moments for the hometown spikers, and promise of success to come.

How the day played out:

 

Team A:

The Wolves played their best ball in the middle set, eventually falling 25-3, 26-24, 15-7.

Of that opening frame, the best to say was that it was over quickly.

Little went right for CMS, though both Cameron Van Dyke and Rhylee Inman made superb saves on wayward balls in the late going.

The former pulled the ball back out of the net with a flick of her wrist, while the latter launched the ball back over her shoulder while scrambling towards the gym wall at warp speed.

Things got much, much better in set #2, however.

Riding strong service runs from Van Dyke and Emma Leavitt, the Wolves broke out to a 10-2 lead, completely changing the mood in the gym.

While Lakewood fought back hard from its deficit, Coupeville held the advantage almost all the way to the finish line.

There were three ties along the way, at 15-15, 17-17, and 22-22, but the visitors didn’t pull ahead until very late, finally going up at 23-22.

Inman launched an impressive winner from the back row at one point, while Cassie Powers dropped a pretty lil’ tip that split the defense to knot things back up at 23-23.

CMS fought off one set point, but Lakewood wasn’t to be denied in the end.

While the match was decided, the two squads played a third set for practice, which was highlighted by Leavitt ripping off a string of winners on her serve in the early going.

 

Team B:

The middle match of the day went a lot like the first rumble, with Lakewood claiming a 25-6, 25-18, 15-8 victory.

While the first set was over too fast, the Wolves did get a service ace from Savannah Niewald, solid hustle from Annabelle Cundiff, and a picture-perfect winner off the fingertips of Scarlett Spencer.

Spearing a ball out of the air, Spencer flipped a return which caressed the net as it went back over, then plunged to the floor and skidded away for a winner as Lakewood’s players all froze in place.

Once again, the second set was Coupeville’s strongest, as the Wolves hung tough, staying within a handful of points most of the way.

The final frame was a back-and-forth affair, with the best moment coming when CMS pulled off a huge save on a ball which had winner written all over it.

Three different Wolves combined to keep the play alive, with Cundiff, punching like she was in the middle of the boxing ring, knocking the ball back over the net to catch Lakewood by surprise.

 

Team C:

Coupeville’s more inexperienced players put up a fight, before Lakewood slipped away with a 25-14, 25-14, 15-10 triumph.

Maja Govorcin delivered Coupeville’s best effort at the service stripe in the first set, including cracking an ace which skipped off a Lakewood arm, while Bella Sandlin and Emma Green delivered key hustle plays in support.

Ultimately, the match was the most dangerous of the day, as two different players, one from each team, absorbed a volleyball to the face.

Both spikers laughed it off, however, with no one, thankfully, recreating that moment several years back when Wolf-legend-in-the-making Chelsea Prescott accidently exploded her rival’s face with a spike.

 

Up next:

Coupeville hosts its next two matches, starting with Sultan visiting Cow Town this Wednesday, Oct. 2.

After that, King’s comes to Whidbey Oct. 7.

Want to know what’s going on at Coupeville Elementary School?

The answer is simple — show up for curriculum night.

All the info you need? It’s in the pic above, so move your eyes upward.