Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Dahlia Miller enjoys her debut as a Coupeville High School cross country runner. (Photos courtesy Elizabeth Bitting)

The season is underway … in a wet way.

The Coupeville High School cross country squad traveled to Maple Valley Saturday to participate in the Tahoma Co-Ed Relays at Lake Wilderness State Park.

The event, which drew 41 teams, was a jamboree, so official times weren’t posted, but it was a great learning experience for the Wolves.

“The season started with a splash!” said CHS coach Elizabeth Bitting. “A splashing blast!!”

Runners competed in groups of five, with a mix of male and female runners, and each harrier covering 3,000 meters.

The course was a mix of surfaces, with pavement, grass, trails, and yes, water, to traverse.

Having had their first taste of competition, the Wolves return to action next Saturday, Sept. 14 when they travel to Bellingham for the Gear Up Northwest XC Preview hosted by Sehome.

Joel Norris (left) and Willie Smith have been a dynamic duo in the press box for what seems a lifetime. (David Svien photo)

And now, the end is near
And so, I face the final curtain
My friend, I’ll say it clear
I’ll state my case, of which I’m certain
I’ve lived a life that’s full

In the afterglow of Friday night’s football game between Coupeville and visiting Annie Wright, the transcendent voice of Frank Sinatra crackled from the speakers, each word carrying across the prairie.

Upstairs in the press box, a lone figure remained, as Willie Smith tidied up, while below the Wolf faithful celebrated a 51-6 victory.

The driving force of CHS athletics for the past three decades is no longer the school’s athletic director, having retired from the position after last season.

I traveled each and every highway
And more, much more than this
I did it my way

Smith is still teaching, at least for one more year, possibly two, and remains the peppiest man in the empire.

Friday night, possibly for the final time, he was on the mic, offering hot takes and frequent jokes, and spinning the hits, from the Backstreet Boys to AC/DC, Ozzy to John Denver.

He and scoreboard operator/cookie maker extraordinaire Joel Norris have been a constant in the booth since before I returned to covering prep sports full-time in 2012.

From the little wooden box full of bees (some dead, many alive) to the current cushier surroundings (if you ignore the annoying post in the middle of the press box window), Willie Smith’s voice has been the soundtrack to Friday Night Lights for a generation.

Regrets, I’ve had a few
But then again, too few to mention
I did what I had to do
And saw it through without exemption

He missed one game most seasons, thanks to the lure of hunting season, but otherwise rocked the mic at almost every step of the way.

Whether jabbing the student section for not being properly enthused during early season games, leading the charge on “and that’s a Wolf FIRST DOWN!!” or going introspective with his immortal call of “Balls … balls … balls,” Willie Smith is Coupeville football.

I planned each charted course
Each careful step along the byway
And more, much more than this
I did it my way

But now, he says this might be it, and talks of handing off the mic to a successor, perhaps as soon as the next home game.

The new guy may be a legend in the making. Could become the voice of his own generation.

But he won’t be Willie.

Time moves on, and the final link in the holy trinity of Coupeville coaches who I came up with during my early days of Whidbey sports reporting may be joining Ron Bagby and Randy King on the sidelines.

If so, it will take some getting used to.

Will the new guy segue from Miley Cyrus to Cypress Hill to Guns ‘n Roses without skipping a beat?

Will he bring candy to the press box as we inch closer to Halloween?

No, this is super important. WILL HE BRING CANDY TO THE PRESS BOX????

And will he gaze out across a fog-swept prairie, impish grin on his face, after coming up with the perfect call at a moment’s notice, tip back his water bottle, then tell us, “I am on fire tonight, boys!!”

We can only hope.

Yes, there were times, I’m sure you knew
When I bit off more than I could chew
But through it all, when there was doubt
I ate it up and spit it out
I faced it all, and I stood tall
And did it my way

Wolf seniors (l to r) Jack Porter, Marcelo Gebhard, and Johnny Porter bask in the afterglow of an opening night win. (Photo courtesy Jeff Porter)

Not today, Gators.

Annie Wright will get its first-ever varsity football win at some point in the future, but it didn’t come on Cow Town soil Friday night.

Playing a private 1A school suiting up for just its second game as a varsity unit, Coupeville, a 2B high school, made short work of the visitors, romping to a 51-6 win on opening night.

The victory, coming in front of a packed crowd on a steamy early September night on the prairie, was keyed by an explosive running attack and a ferocious defense.

With every player in uniform seeing field time, Wolf coach Bennett Richter kicked off his third year at the helm in most convincing style.

When the spotlight hit, whether it was a senior or a freshman, every player in red and black stepped up.

And they did it from the very first play of the season, as Chase Anderson hauled in the opening kickoff, then sliced through the Annie Wright defense for 30 yards.

Taking the reins at quarterback after two seasons as a receiver, the Wolf junior was on point in the opening drive, peppering the Gators from every angle.

Anderson busted out a 25-yard run, connected with Jack Porter on a 26-yard pass play, then capped things by scooting into the end zone on a lil’ three-yard scoring rumble.

Tacking on the PAT, with the ball flying off his foot like a missile and disappearing far into the night air, Coupeville’s most electric gridiron warrior staked the Wolves to a quick 7-0 lead and the rout was on.

Proving they could give the offense a run for its money, the CHS defense unleashed holy heck on the visitors, immediately having an impact.

Marcelo Gebhard, who spent the night cracking people in half, blew up a run, followed by Jack Porter manhandling half the line as he crashed through on his way to a QB sack.

Facing fourth down and backed up to its own 22-yard line, Annie Wright showed guts, choosing to fire a pass instead of punting.

Unfortunately for the Gators, the ball caromed off a Wolf defender, popped upwards, and was snatched out of the air by Liam Blas.

Cradling the ball as carefully as his mom Stephanie once held the DVD for her beloved Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights back in her Videoville days, the fab frosh earned big raves from his coaches.

Liam had some big hits and really played his role well,” Richter said. “We had a lot of young guys step up tonight, and I’m so excited to see that.”

Freshman Liam Blas had a big impact in his high school debut. (Photo courtesy Kevin Blas)

Not content to sit on a one-score lead, Coupeville rammed home two more touchdowns before the first quarter was done.

Johnny Porter punched in a 10-yard scoring run, before Marquette Cunningham, shedding would-be tacklers with each dynamic step, blasted away for a 22-yard touchdown jaunt.

The second quarter kicked off with the Coupeville student section singing along to the Backstreet Boys warbling I Want it That Way, a song which is now 25(!!) years old.

While the playback of the song stopped in mid-sentence, as Annie Wright went to launch a punt, a pack of teenagers not alive in 1999 finished the song themselves, absolutely nailing the lyrics.

You know who else absolutely nailed something, but in a far more painful way?

The Annie Wright punter, who later in the quarter, shanked the ball off of the teammate standing right in front of him.

The ball bounced backwards, with Jack Porter roaring in from the outside to land on the wayward pigskin for the game’s only defensive touchdown, and the stadium was rocking.

Add in a two-point conversion run from Anderson, then big defensive stops from Riley Lawless, Jackson Sollars, Davin Houston, and Camden Glover, and the game was a lopsided 29-0 at the half.

Annie Wright didn’t roll over, however, and showed a fair amount of pluck, especially for a fairly new program.

A sensational one-handed catch by Kient’e Caldwell brought oohs and ahs even from a rival crowd, and the Gators finally got on the board early in the third quarter.

A long pass play which caught the Wolf defenders flat-footed set up a short scoring run by freshman Jackson Wright, though CHS stuffed the conversion attempt.

That was the signal for Anderson to get fancy, as the Wolf gunslinger whipped passes to Johnny Porter and Malachi Somes before collecting his second and third touchdown runs of the night.

The first one covered five yards, with a conversion pass to Cunningham making it 37-6, while his final scoring burst covered 73 yards, as he merrily skipped down the left side of the field, two steps too fast for the defense.

That titanic tear was impressive, but there was more. Far more.

Cunningham, saving something special for the final moments, accepted a handoff deep in his own territory, then left a trail of tears behind him.

All 11 Gators had a chance to tackle the quicksilver one, but no one was capable of completing the job as he romped to paydirt.

Covering 70+ yards on Coupeville’s final offensive play, the Wolf junior brought the house down.

“This was his big breakout game, and I’m so proud of him,” Richter said. “Marquette has really built towards this for the last two years. He earned it.”

Wolf fans went home happy. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Heaton)

Lyla Stuurmans brings the pain last year while playing in a very dry Coupeville High School gym. (Jackie Saia photo)

If you see an ark floating by, it’s probably headed towards Maxwelton.

Two flooding incidents during the summer have left the South Whidbey School District under water and will force a change in venue for Coupeville High School’s first volleyball match of the new season.

The Wolves are slated to head down island this coming Tuesday, Sept. 10, for a non-league matchup with the Falcons.

JV is slated to tip at 5:15 PM, with varsity following at 6:45.

But because of a wrecked SWHS gym, thanks to a pipe that burst in August, the contests will not be held at the high school.

Instead, they’ll be played at the South Whidbey Community Center, which is located at 723 Camano Ave. in Langley.

The August flood, which left the high school gym under a solid quarter inch of water, happened during a weekend and was not discovered for several days.

The Whidbey News-Times reported the incident is believed to have “originated from an old pipe that surrounded a 500-gallon water heater” located in a mechanical room.

It came on the heels of district workers “repairing the pumphouse, and the well that feeds the high school, and other district buildings located on Maxwelton Road.”

The high-pressure fire system “pushed water into the domestic lines of the high school, (likely) weakening the already old and failing water pipe.”

The water leak went on for approximately 36 hours before being discovered, affecting the gym floor and rooms connected to the girls’ locker rooms, with floorboards “cupping and curling.”

The district will have to “replace the floor, remove and demolish the water heater, tear out the sheetrock behind the water heater and replace the plumbing, while the oldest water heaters and attached plumbing will also be replaced.”

Superintendent Jo Moccia said insurance should cover all repair costs, and the district hopes to have the gym ready for use by basketball season, which begins in November.

School officials told the WNT they believe the incident was not related to an earlier accident, where a company doing soil testing on school property punched a hole through a pipe.

Those who worked on repairing that boo-boo estimated the loss at upwards of 150,000 gallons of water, though school officials declined to confirm that when asked by the WNT.

A pipe on South Whidbey School District property gushes water after being breached. (Photo courtesy Anania Trucking & Excavating)

 

Young spikers also switch gyms:

The middle school volleyball opener Sept. 26, with Coupeville traveling to South Whidbey, will also be affected, with the match moved from the SWHS gym to the community center.

Elizabeth Bitting’s pack is on the prowl.

The Coupeville High School boys’ cross country team, which returns all seven runners from the squad which finished 10th at last year’s state meet, is garnering some preseason hype.

The Wolves sit at #6 among 2B/1B schools in a preseason poll released Thursday by the Washington State Cross Country Coaches Association.

That puts them one slot ahead of Northwest 2B/1B League archrival Mount Vernon Christian.

Not bad for a CHS harrier program which only returned in 2017 after a two-decade absence.

The Wolves are not the only team from The Rock to get some love, as South Whidbey’s boys are currently ranked #4 among 1A schools by WSCCCA.

But this blog is called Coupeville Sports, so we’re focusing on Cow Town, where state meet veterans Carson Field, Landon RobertsEzekiel AllenGeorge SpearThomas StrelowKenneth Jacobsen, and Axel Marshall are all back in action.

And while the Coupeville girls might not be ranked as a team (yet), they also boast a two-time state meet qualifier in Noelle Western.