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Big team, bold results

Kenneth Jacobsen brought home a top 10 medal Saturday. (Photos courtesy Elizabeth Bitting, Amber Wyman, and Sarah Stuurmans)

She sent a whole pack to the start line.

Coupeville High School cross country coach Elizabeth Bitting had 25 runners compete Saturday at Civic Stadium in Bellingham, solid proof of how much the Wolf harrier program has grown.

The event was the 14th annual Gear Up Northwest XC Preview, hosted by Sehome High School, with 49 teams sending runners careening across the two-mile course.

Keeping things unique, the meet has runners largely compete against athletes from their own class — freshmen vs. freshmen, seniors vs. seniors, and so on.

Seniors (l to r) Landon Roberts, Thomas Strelow, and Carson Field are ready to go.

With so many runners, some of the Wolves were first timers, while always were returning to the site of past glory.

“What a great day!” Bitting said. “So many amazing PR’s!!!!”

Eight of the 11 Coupeville runners who had previously competed at the meet smashed their top times this time around.

“The most impressive PR was Reagan (Callahan). She went from a 20:41 last season to a 17:55 unofficial time this season,” Bitting said.

The Wolfpack invades Bellingham.

CHS senior Thomas Strelow knocked off almost a minute from last year, dropping from 13:34 to a hair under 12:44, while Kenneth Jacobsen nabbed Coupeville’s lone top 10 individual finish.

“Today’s race helped me a lot in seeing where each runner is and how they should be training,” Bitting said. “So many fun firsts for so many, (and a) shout out to Coach (Amber) Wyman for joining us.

“She is always so helpful!”

Wolf coaches Elizabeth Bitting (left) and Amber Wyman find a new friend.

Coupeville returns to action next Saturday, Sept. 21, but the bus trip will be a far shorter one.

The Wolves stay on Whidbey, heading south to Langley for the 45th annual Carl Westling Invitational.

Ava Lucero runs this joint, and she has the starter’s pistol to prove it.

 

Saturday results:

 

GIRLS:

 

Seniors:

Ari Armstrong (100th) 17:00.66

 

Juniors:

Aleera Kent (52nd) 14:51.96
Noelle Western (93rd) 16:02.41
Aleksia Jump (118th) 17:13.25
Reagan Callahan (132nd) 17:59.58
Dahlia Miller (138th) 18:44.23
Jeann Nitta (139th) 18:44.75

 

Sophomores:

Kayla Crane (63rd) 15:12.42
Ivy Rudat (84th) 16:04.30
Lydia Price (89th) 16:11.05

 

Freshmen:

Mikayla Wagner (57th) 15:22.00
Devon Wyman (126th) 17:32.83
Ava Lucero (160th) 20:19.00
Mary Western (167th) 22:14.00

 

BOYS:

 

Seniors:

Landon Roberts (82nd) 11:50.81
Carson Field (106th) 12:37.23
Thomas Strelow (110th) 12:43.89

 

Juniors:

Ezekiel Allen (49th) 11:50.99
George Spear (59th) 12:05.09

 

Sophomores:

Ethan Walling (132nd) 13:19.53

 

JV:

Kenneth Jacobsen (8th) 12:03.72
Isaiah Allen (43rd) 13:13.01
Johnathan Jacobsen (83rd) 15:14.12
Beckett Green (86th) 14:07.92
Zach Blitch (136th) 19:31.95

Coupeville’s seniors claim control of the soccer pitch. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There’s always something new.

Robert Wood is 48 games into his run as a soccer coach at Coupeville High School, but Saturday’s home opener against Crosspoint provided a different wrinkle.

Playing through a few rain drops spit from an overcast prairie sky, the Wolves rallied in the second half to forge a 1-1 tie with their private school rivals, the first ever stalemate under their pitch guru.

With the contest being a non-conference one, the teams passed on playing overtime or going to a shoot-out to decide things. Instead, a mixed result for both squads.

And while Wood felt his team played better than it had in an earlier road loss to Auburn Adventist Academy, he wasn’t terribly overjoyed with Saturday’s result.

“We beat ourselves,” he said. “Just the very definition of apathetic.

“We didn’t play well enough to keep control of the ball and were tentative a lot of the time. Stuff to work on.”

The Wolves, now 0-1-1 on the season, play at home twice next week, welcoming Northwest 2B/1B League foes Friday Harbor and Grace Academy to Coupeville for non-conference games Tuesday and Saturday, respectively.

That will give the Wolves a chance to work on tightening up their attack and finding the fire in their collective bellies.

It’s not hard to believe it’s there, as there was moments Saturday when things sparked to life.

Trailing 1-0 early in the second half, despite outshooting Crosspoint, Coupeville finally found the counter when Sage Arends knocked in his first varsity goal with 32 minutes left to play.

The Wolves had at least two chances to claim the lead in the late going but came up just short.

Senior Preston Epp sent a penalty kick just barely wide left, the ball coming tantalizingly close to finding the back of the net as Crosspoint’s goaltender watched his life flash before his eyes.

Then, with the game in stoppage time, 8th grader Tamsin Ward, already having an impact in her high school debut, bashed a high arcing shot under pressure.

While the ball needed to be several feet lower to hit paydirt, it was still an impressive wallop from a young gun who shows no fear on the pitch.

Coupeville is playing as a co-ed team for the second straight season, while rebuilding the roster for a girls’ team, with female booters like Ward, Ayden Wyman, Lillian Ketterling, and Taylor Marrs holding their own in male-centric games.

Crosspoint tallied the afternoon’s first score 19 minutes into play, when freshman Caleb Smart slipped a shot through a thicket of players in front of the net.

Other than that shot, on which he was largely blocked from seeing the incoming ball, Wolf goalie Hurlee Bronec was lights out.

At one point the senior netminder deflected a shot at close range, then soared high to punch another ball up and over the goal.

Coupeville’s defensive front made Bronec’s job a lot easier after that, largely keeping Crosspoint at bay across the game’s final 50 minutes or so.

With a strong core of seniors, which includes Cael Wilson, Mason Butler, Dane Hadsall, Epp, Wyman, Bronec, Angel Partida, and Matthew Ward, the Wolves are primed for a successful run.

While Saturday’s tie was a mixed bag, Wood remains focused on the positives.

“We’ll keep working, that’s for sure,” he said as he headed into the night.

The Island Vipers celebrate softball tourney success this past summer. (Photo courtesy Grant Van Dyke)

Softball is booming on Whidbey Island and you can help local players be on a competitive footing with their big city rivals.

The Island Vipers, who field U14 and U16 travel squads, pull diamond dandies from all three area high schools, with Wolves, Falcons, and Wildcats joining together to form dynamic squads.

As they look ahead to future seasons, the players and coaches are reaching out to their community for support with a GoFundMe which will help with travel expenses and much more.

The Whidbey slugger you finance today is the potential superstar of tomorrow, so consider shaking out the ol’ wallet.

For more info and to donate, pop over to:

https://www.gofundme.com/f/island-vipers-select-all-island-softball-team?qid=fa8188291a48e3e62765c8e23ac5384b

Jayme Carranza and crew are ready to chew up their foes. (Bailey Thule photos)

She’s an artist with the camera.

Bailey Thule, Coupeville High School senior and noted softball slugger, has showcased a superb eye for capturing her classmates.

With these pics from the first Wolf gridiron game of the new school year, she proves to be in mid-season form.

A mix of football and cheer pics, they’re the work of a very talented young woman.

Angel Partida, seen here last season, scored twice Wednesday in Coupeville’s soccer opener. (Jackie Saia photo)

Right into the deep end.

The Coupeville High School co-ed soccer team kicked off a new season Wednesday by traveling to the mainland to face an Auburn Adventist Academy program which has qualified for the state tourney the past two years.

And the Falcons, who thrashed La Conner in their own opener, proved to be as tough as advertised, bouncing the Wolves 5-2.

But while Coupeville starts the new campaign at 0-1 after the non-conference loss, Wolf coach Robert Wood came away pleased with a lot of what he saw.

“Good first game. Strong, big opponents,” he said. “Pleased with the team.

“Starting games are always an unknown in high school soccer. Coming together two weeks ago, they look good … we just need to do it better across the board.”

Angel Partida punched in both of Coupeville’s goals, pushing his career total to three.

His scores came off nimbly slipping through the defense to redirect rebounds past the Auburn goalie after Preston Epp and Sage Arends rattled the netminder with shots.

“Good shots on target, and both heads up plays,” Wood said.

Coupeville now gets to spend most of the rest of the month at home, playing four of its next five games at Mickey Clark Field.

First up is a 1:00 PM Saturday showdown with Crosspoint (0-0-1), which played to a 1-1 tie with La Conner in its first game of the new season.

Admission is free.