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Rising stars (left to right) Lillian Ketterling, Tamsin Ward, Olivia Stewart, and Amelia McGrath. (Photo courtesy Jandellyn Ward)

It’s never too early to think about playing at the next level.

Four Whidbey Island soccer players pulled themselves out of bed at 4:15 AM Sunday morning to make the trek to Bellevue and participate in a College Coaches Showcase Camp.

Sophomore sensation Lillian Ketterling and fab frosh Tamsin Ward attend Coupeville High School, while freshmen Olivia Stewart and Amelia McGrath do their schooling in Oak Harbor.

All four play together on the Deception FC soccer squad when not suiting up for their high school teams.

The Showcase Camp, hosted by Bellevue College, was for “high school players who want direct coaching and evaluation from college coaches on the field.”

The event featured coaches from 11 colleges, including Washington State University, Seattle University, and Oregon State University.

Those coaches ran the drills and scrimmages, offering players first-hand evaluations of their performances.

There was also a parent-inclusive recruiting seminar, focusing on NCAA rules and timelines to give players and their families a realistic view of the process.

“I think it’s invaluable to be able to start this early and know what to expect going forward, as a parent as well as the athlete,” said mom Jandellyn Ward.

“Hearing the coaches talk, being able to ask questions and also introducing themselves to them. Those were the best parts.”

The day also gave the Whidbey pitch queens a chance to step up their games, playing alongside other high-grade athletes.

“The girls got to scrimmage with obviously players they had never seen before,” Jandellyn Ward said. “So it was nice for them to be outside their comfort zone for a little while.”

While the high school season is done, club soccer continues for the fearsome foursome.

Up ahead on the schedule are tournaments in Tukwila in January and February, which will give the booters more chances to be seen by college recruiters.

Grace Roberts (right) is a three-time state champ. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Roberts)

Grace Roberts is part of history.

The former Coupeville student — who still has a large chunk of relatives living in Cow Town — was on the floor this weekend at the Yakima SunDome as Chelan won an unprecedented sixth-straight 1A volleyball state title.

Roberts, a junior middle blocker, and the top-seeded Goats swept #7 Meridian in straight sets in the finale, winning 25-15, 25-12, 25-17 to cap an undefeated 23-0 season.

That followed on the heels of wins over The Bear Creek School, Kalama, and Cashmere.

The six straight crowns, with Roberts a part of the last three, are the most by any Washington state spiker team at any classification, breaking a tie with 4A Mead, which won five in a row between 2003-2007.

Grace, daughter of CHS grads Jay and Jennifer (Eelkema) Roberts, and granddaughter of Wolf alumni Sandy Roberts, also has two big sisters (Madeline and Ally) and numerous aunts, uncles, and cousins who played for Coupeville.

She and her parents moved to Chelan right before she began high school.

The thrill of victory, or a well-placed kill. (Julie Wheat photo)

They spiked awards season.

The Coupeville High School volleyball squads brought their season to a close Friday night with an awards banquet, bestowing honors on multiple players.

Teagan Calkins, the lone senior playing for the Wolves, took home The Hammer Award for leading the program in kills and “being someone who always puts the ball away.”

“The Red Dragon” also nabbed a Four-Year award from CHS coach Scout Smith for playing the sport all the way through high school.

 

Others receiving awards included:

 

Varsity:

Tenley Stuurmans – The Commander Award for “running the offense, leading with assists.”

Haylee Armstrong – The Zen Master Award for being “calm under pressure.”

Sydney Van Dyke – The Phoenix Award for being “able to be put in anywhere off the bench.”

Isa Mc Fetridge fires off a serve. (Julie Wheat photo)

 

JV:

Kennedy O’Neill – The Commander Award for being team MVP

Chelsi Stevens – The Ascendent Award for being Most Improved

Isa Mc Fetridge – The Zen Master Award

Olivia Martin – The Phoenix Award

Sydney Van Dyke – The Shield Award for Best Team Player

Darcee Dickson – The Spark Award for Rookie of the Year

 

Varsity letter winners:

Capri Anter
Haylee Armstrong
Teagan Calkins
Ari Cunningham
Lexis Drake
Adeline Maynes
Dakota Strong
Tenley Stuurmans
Sydney Van Dyke

Lexis Drake put together a strong season in her varsity debut. (Jackie Saia photo)

 

Participation certificates:

KeeAyra Brown
Darcee Dickson
Hailey Grijalva
Ali Habeck
Emma Leavitt
Willow Leedy-Bonifas
Olivia Martin
Isa Mc Fetridge
Kennedy O’Neill
Cassandra Powers
Hannah Roberts
Chelsi Stevens
Mary Western

Lillian Ketterling (11) and Tamsin Ward dance the day away. (Julie Wheat photo)

They’re back, and they’re award-worthy.

Returning to action after a two-year absence, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer program scored on and off the pitch this season, and put an exclamation point on things Friday night with a season-ending banquet.

Sophomore sensation Lillian Ketterling was tabbed as the team’s Most Valuable Player, while freshman Tamsin Ward was given the Golden Boot for leading the team with 15 goals.

Also garnering honors were senior Frankie Tenore (Leadership Award) and frosh Bettie Woolworth (Most Improved).

Bettie Woolworth gets fueled up for a busy day of kickin’ fanny on the soccer pitch. (Jackie Saia photo)

First-year CHS coach Jasmine Ader awarded varsity letters to 15 girls, 14 of whom can return next season to keep the rebirth rockin’.

 

Varsity letter winners:

Emma Cushman
Hailey Goldman
Hazel Goldman
Andrea Gonzalez
Sophia Greene
Lyla Grose
Finley Helm
Paige Hill
Lillian Ketterling
Ariella Lee-Spaulding
Elizabeth Marshall
Victoria Quiroga Rivera
Frankie Tenore
Tamsin Ward
Bettie Woolworth

Lyla Grose, on the attack. (Julie Wheat photo)

La Conner sniper Maeve McCormick (2) battles at the net with Coupeville defenders Dakota Strong (9) and Lexis Drake. (Julie Wheat photo)

It was a little rougher this time around.

Last year, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad remained undefeated until the final day of the season and brought home a program-best 4th place trophy from the 2B state tourney.

While a rebuilding Wolves squad didn’t make it back to the big dance this fall, the Northwest 2B/1B League sent four squads to state, but none could match what CHS did last year.

All three 2B schools in action — Mount Vernon Christian, La Conner, and Orcas Island — went two-and-out at the Yakima SunDome.

MVC had the best showing of the trio, falling 3-1 to both Onalaska and River View, while Orcas lost 3-1 to Rainier and 3-0 to Tri-Cities Prep.

La Conner failed to win a set, being swept 3-0 by both Manson and Toledo.

In a fairly huge upset, #8 seed Northwest Christian (Colbert) won the state title, bouncing Freeman in the finale.

Overall, only three of the eight 2B schools which claimed a trophy last year earned more hardware this time around.

Freeman jumped from 3rd to 2nd, Manson tumbled from 1st to 4th, and Davenport finished 7th once again.

2025 trophy teams Adna, Coupeville, Rainier, Liberty (Spangle), and Colfax were replaced by Northwest Christian, Lind-Ritzville-Sprague, Toutle Lake, Tonasket, and River View.

Meanwhile, in the 1B state tourney, Darrington went 1-2 and got knocked out one match shy of playing for a trophy.

The Loggers, who were NWL champs this season with an 8-0 record in league play, opened state with a 3-1 loss to Almira-Coulee-Hartline, rebounded to beat Valley Christian 3-1, then were eliminated 3-1 by Taholah.

In another upset, #3 Garfield-Palouse won the 1B crown, while top-ranked Oakesdale didn’t make it to the championship tilt.