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Scan some saucy standings

Brad Sherman and Aimee Bishop keep an eye on Wolf athletic events. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Keep the busses revved up.

Five of the seven events on the schedule for Coupeville High School’s sports teams next week are slated to go down off of Whidbey.

Volleyball and soccer have split schedules, with one home and one away, while Wolf football and cross country live on the road.

The CHS spikers travel to La Conner Tuesday, then host Darrington Thursday, while the booters motor off to Mount Vernon Christian Tuesday, before welcoming La Conner to Cow Town Friday night.

Meanwhile, the Wolf gridiron team treks to Juanita Saturday for a showdown with Cedar Park Christian-Bothell.

Last but not least the Coupeville harriers run on Orcas Island Wednesday, before ending the week Saturday in Seattle for a meet hosted by King’s.

As they pack their snacks, fluff their pillows, and find their seats on the bouncing bus, a look at where things sit for the various Wolf teams through Sept. 21:

 

Northwest League boys’ soccer:

School League Overall
Coupeville 0-0-0 1-2-1
CPC-Lynnwood 0-0-0 1-1-0
Friday Harbor 0-0-0 1-1-0
Grace Academy 0-0-0 0-1-0
La Conner 0-0-0 0-1-1
Lopez Island 0-0-0 1-0-0
MV Christian 0-0-0 3-0-1
Orcas Island 0-0-0 3-1-0
PC Christian 0-0-0 2-0-2

 

Northwest League football — (11-Man):

School League Overall
Coupeville 0-0 2-1
Friday Harbor 0-0 1-2

 

Northwest League football — (8-Man):

School League Overall
Concrete 0-0 0-3
Darrington 0-0 2-1
La Conner 0-0 1-1

 

Northwest League volleyball:

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

Wilson wows, Wolves win

Cael Wilson brings the lightning and the thunder. (Finn Price photos)

The opening act was a huge success.

Kicking things off Saturday in the first game of a soccer/football doubleheader at Mickey Clark Field, the Coupeville High School co-ed booters romped to their first win of the season.

Controlling the action from first whistle to the last moment of action, the Wolves bounced visiting Grace Academy 3-1 in a game which felt incredibly one-sided.

The non-conference win against a league rival lifts CHS to 1-2-1 on the season.

The teams will meet a second time later this season in Marysville in a tilt which will count in the conference standings.

If Saturday’s game was a taste of what’s to come, it should make Wolf fans quite happy.

Punching in two goals before halftime, Coupeville seized control of the game and never let go.

The first score came courtesy senior Cael Wilson, who got a gift from the Grace Academy goalie.

The visiting netminder lost control of the ball while trying to clear it in front of his net, with the orb bouncing right to the rampaging Wolf.

Wilson slipped past his rival, took a quick step or two, then slapped home the game’s first goal a little over 12 minutes into play.

Sage Arends outduels his rivals.

From there, the Wolves added a second tally, with Sage Arends alertly picking up a loose ball while stuck in a pack of players, before popping a shot into the back of the net.

CHS goalie Hurlee Bronec was lights out while holding Grace Academy scoreless in the first half, then moved out into the field after the break.

Sam Richards replaced him in net and also clamped down on the visitors, though one ball got through (barely) during a wild melee with 17 minutes to play.

Mason Butler preaches loves, while hammering fools on defense.

Coupeville’s defenders stood tall in the waning moments, denying Grace a chance to tie, with Mason Butler and Lillian Ketterling among those blunting incoming attacks.

The insurance goal came in stoppage time after Wolf 8th grader Brian Thompson and the Grace goalie collided in the box.

The young whiz kid stepped aside to let his fellow ginger, Wilson, line up the penalty kick, and the grizzled vet hit paydirt.

Banking in his second goal of the afternoon, he notched his third score of the campaign and ninth of his prep career.

Wilson is now tied with Angel Partida as the team’s top scorer this season.

Short trip, fast times

Brothers Ezekiel (left) and Isaiah Allen prepare to hit the trail. (Shaloma Allen photo)

The weather was nice, and the times even nicer.

Competing at the 45th annual Carl Westling Invitational in Langley Saturday, the Coupeville High School cross country squad showed up and showed out.

“It was a good day!” said CHS coach Elizabeth Bitting.

The Wolves sent 22 runners to the line, spread out across multiple 5,000-meter races, with seven of those who ran in the event last year setting a PR this time around.

Bitting was impressed with her entire roster, repping one of the smallest of the 31 schools in attendance, while offering a little extra praise to some of the harriers.

Mikayla (Wagner), Devon (Wyman), Isaiah (Allen), and Beckett (Green), just a few of our freshmen runners, ran very impressive races,” she said.

“I am looking forward to see what they do over the season.

Aleera (Kent), Kayla (Crane), and Ethan (Walling), all new to cross country, are also runners to keep your eyes on. It was a good day for Cow Town!!!”

Spending their weekend wisely. (Elizabeth Bitting photo)

Coming off the trip down island, Coupeville hits the road twice next week.

First up is a jaunt to Orcas Island for a Northwest 2B/1B League meet Wednesday, then an appearance Saturday in Seattle at a meet hosted by King’s.

The Wolf girls form a potent pack. (Photo courtesy Elizabeth Bitting)

 

Saturday results:

 

GIRLS:

Varsity:

Aleera Kent (31st) 24:10.16
Mikayla Wagner (39th) 24:42.87
Kayla Crane (43rd) 24:50.87
Noelle Western (55th) 25:42.70
Aleksia Jump (61st) 26:22.46
Ivy Rudat (64th) 27:04.23

 

JV:

Devon Wyman (35th) 26:18.87
Reagan Callahan (78th) 29:46.48
Dahlia Miller (98th) 31:18.27
Ava Lucero (100th) 31:32.74
Lili Newberg (118th) 36:55.88
Mary Western (119th) 36:56.88

 

BOYS:

Varsity:

Carson Field (45th) 19:12.59
Ezekiel Allen (47th) 19:16.85
Kenneth Jacobsen (52nd) 19:29.06
George Spear (54th) 19:36.35
Thomas Strelow (84th) 20:57.05
Isaiah Allen (91st) 21:24.50
Ethan Walling (95th) 21:34.34

 

JV (sub-22:00):

Beckett Green (98th) 22:29.55

 

JV (22:00+):

Will Tierney (46th) 23:22.14
Johnathan Jacobsen (49th) 23:29.96

It’s all about the shorts. (Elizabeth Bitting photo)

Coupeville High School yearbook whiz kids Ember Light (left) and Bailey Thule take a brief break from their own photographic duties. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The spikes were hitting, and the cameras were clicking.

Thursday’s home opener for Coupeville High School volleyball brought out a large assortment of fans, some of whom can be seen in these pics from John Fisken.

To see his action shots from the on-court battles between the Wolves and Mount Vernon Christian, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Volleyball-2024-2025/VB-2024-09-19-vs-MVC

 

Wolf seniors (l to r) Lyla Stuurmans, Jada Heaton, and Taylor Brotemarkle are off to a great start. (Jennifer Heaton photo)

The gym was different, the result the same.

Playing at home for the first time this season Thursday, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad kept its perfect streak going.

Sweeping visiting Mount Vernon Christian 25-17, 25-15, 25-7 on Madison McMillan’s cake day, the Wolves get to 2-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 3-0 overall.

They haven’t dropped a set in regular season play, and certainly weren’t about to start against the Hurricanes.

Other than brief burps at the start of the first two sets, CHS led start to finish, with spry setter Katie Marti flying around, feeding a variety of big hitters who hammered winners upon winners.

MVC did lead 3-2 in the opening set, but then the Wolves promptly roared to life.

Bounding all around the court, Lyla Stuurmans and Teagan Calkins took turns delivering crisp winners which sliced off kneecaps and left the Hurricanes to wonder if their life insurance policies were paid up.

When the duo wasn’t banging away, they also delivered savage barbs with a poke here, a tip there, always keeping the ball just out of range of their rival hitters.

Add in some titanic mashes exploding off of the deadly fingers of Mia Farris as she swooped in from the side, and Jada Heaton up on her toes, ready to dominate at the net, and Coupeville was in full-on kill mode.

The ever-calm (even on her birthday) McMillan and the indispensable Taylor Brotemarkle dug deep to pull balls off the floor, with Marti cavorting from side to side, taking their setups and lofting the ball to her snipers.

Birthday girl Madison McMillan contemplates how hard she would have to hit the volleyball to make it explode. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Flush from the success of the first set, the second frame went down much the same.

Coupeville dominated, the Hurricanes fought back with a never-say-die spirit, and then the Wolves beat the air right out of the ball.

Farris, in full-on Mia the Magnificent mode, lashed a huge spike that tore off a chunk of the floor.

To which Stuurmans responded, “I can do that too,” as she bounded skyward and sent a missile screaming past a Hurricane defender who wisely decided that no, she didn’t really want to try and return that one.

Enter “The Red Dragon,” AKA Teagan Calkins, who, perhaps channeling Austin Powers, stated that she too liked to live dangerously.

And by live dangerously, she meant “hit the volleyball so hard it goes blind.”

Teagan Calkins drops a winner. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

If MVC thought the explosion at the power factory was done after the second set, it was sadly mistaken, since set three was nothing but non-stop bicep-poppin’, big-hittin’ fun for the Wolves.

McMillan punctuated her day of birth by firing a bullet which caught the corner of the court for a point, and a look at this reporter’s notebook reveals the following from set #3:

Lyla bomb.”

Mia laser.”

Lyla mash.”

Mia freakin’ massacred the ball.”

At the end of the fireworks show, the night’s final point was maybe the most impressive, while featuring artistry over pure firepower.

Scrambling madly towards the CHS bench (with a 24-7 lead), Marti stretched out to her full length and caught an out-of-control ball before it could get away.

Spinning it back over her head, she (somehow) sent it on a dime to Stuurmans, who sliced the ball across the top of the net.

Startled that the ball was coming back in her direction after the play seemed all but dead, a Hurricane hitter punched at the ball and sent it sailing far away into the night, ending things and sending the Wolves into a celebration.

In a match in which 10 girls hit the floor — Tenley Stuurmans, Aby Wood, and Dakota Strong also got floor time late — Coupeville got the nod of approval from coach Cory Whitmore.

“It was good to work through a couple of things,” he said. “We looked pretty sharp and controlled the first ball pretty well.

“What’s exciting about this group is they find the hitter with the hot hand, even if that changes from set to set and night to night.”

 

Milestone moments:

Both Calkins and Marti hit round numbers recently, Whitmore said.

Marti, a senior, nailed her 100th career ace at the service stripe during last weekend’s SunDome Volleyball Festival, and sits at 105 and counting.

Meanwhile, Calkins, a junior, reached 100 career kills during the last regular season match against Friday Harbor. With six more Thursday against MVC, she’s up to 112 for her prep career.

 

Thursday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 6 digs
Teagan Calkins — 6 kills, 4 digs, 3 aces
Mia Farris — 4 kills, 9 digs, 2 aces
Jada Heaton— 1 kill, 1 dig
Katie Marti — 2 kills, 8 digs, 19 assists, 1 block assist, 2 aces
Madison McMillan — 4 kills, 12 digs, 2 aces
Lyla Stuurmans — 10 kills, 7 digs, 1 solo block, 1 block assist, 1 ace
Tenley Stuurmans — 1 ace