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Marquette Cunningham is one of 18 Wolf track stars headed to the state championships. (Parker Hammons photo)

Welcome to our track. Now prepare to bow to us.

Throwing down under sunny skies Saturday on the prairie, the Coupeville High School track and field team dominated at the District 1/2 meet.

The Wolves swept both team titles on the 2B side of things, while racking up 13 wins and 22 PRs.

“Good day all around,” said CHS coach Bob Martin. “Coupeville athletes putting in the work.”

Along with their wins and PRs, the Wolves qualified 18 athletes for the state championships, which go down May 23-25 in Yakima.

Of those Wolves, three — Preston Epp, Carson Field, and Nick Guay — punched their tickets in three events.

Meanwhile, Lyla Stuurmans, Cael Wilson, Katie Marti, Reese Wilkinson, and Marquette Cunningham advance in two categories apiece.

The number of Wolves headed to Eisenhower High School for the big dance could actually go higher than 18.

To qualify for state, you had to finish in the top two Saturday, so third-place finishers are alternates, just waiting for a top-two rival to have to decline their bid.

For now, the Wolves will bask in the glow of a magnificent Saturday in the spotlight, then get back to practice as they prep for the year’s biggest meet.

Bow before our magnificence. (Dina Guay photo)

 

Saturday’s results:

 

GIRLS:

100 — Issabel Johnson (3rd) 13.91 *PR*

200 — Jasmine Castellanos (3rd) 30.60 *PR*; Ivy Rudat (6th) 31.35 *PR*

400 — Lyla Stuurmans (2nd) 1:03.88 *STATE QUALIFIER*; Rudat (4th) 1:13.42 *PR*

800 — Stuurmans (1st) 2:35.81 *SQ*; Kayla Crane (3rd) 2:44.45 *PR*; Aleera Kent (5th) 2:56.23

1600 — Crane (1st) 6:07.70 *PR*/*SQ*; Kent (3rd) 6:15.64

3200 — Kent (1st) 13:17.15 *PR*/*SQ*; Lydia Price (4th) 15:14.92

100 Hurdles — Myra McDonald (4th) 20.58 *PR*; Lexis Drake (5th) 21.97; Frankie Tenore (7th) 23.88

300 Hurdles — Drake (3rd) 1:00.09; McDonald (4th) 1:00.39

4 x 100 Relay — Carly Burt, Drake, Johnson, Castellanos (3rd) 55.81

4 x 200 Relay — Stuurmans, Burt, Johnson, Castellanos (3rd) 1:54.75

4 x 400 Relay — Burt, Drake, Rudat, Crane (3rd) 4:45.75

Shot Put — Reese Wilkinson (1st) 29-06.25 *SQ*; Marti (2nd) 29-06 *SQ*; Erica McGrath (4th) 23-01.75

Discus — Wilkinson (2nd) 106-08 *SQ*; McGrath (3rd) 83-04; Marti (4th) 74-05

Javelin — Marti (2nd) 96-04 *SQ*; Alysia Burdge (7th) 61-02

High Jump — Ayden Wyman (3rd) 4-06 *PR*; Tenore (4th) 4-04; McDonald (5th) 4-00

Pole Vault — Burt (1st) 8-06 *PR*/*SQ*; Aleksia Jump (2nd) 6-06 *SQ*

Long Jump — Stuurmans (3rd) 14-10

Carly Burt is Yakima-bound in the pole vault. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

BOYS:

100 — Marquette Cunningham (3rd) 11.84; Davin Houston (5th) 12.31 *PR*

200 — Cunningham (2nd) 24.26 *PR*/*SQ*; Blake Burrows (3rd) 24.94 *PR*

400 — Preston Epp (1st) 53.75 *PR*/*SQ*; Cael Wilson (3rd) 57.30

800 — Carson Field (1st) 2:09.93 *SQ*; Kenneth Jacobsen (3rd) 2:14.07 *PR*; Thomas Strelow (5th) 2:23.46

1600 — Field (1st) 4:52.45 *SQ*; Malachi Somes (3rd) 4:59.61

3200 — Field (2nd) 11:15.71 *PR*/*SQ*; George Spear (3rd) 11:49.81; Strelow (4th) 12:15.73

110 Hurdles — Axel Marshall (3rd) 19.46 *PR*; Mikey Robinett (4th) 21.80 *PR*; Spear (5th) 25.18

300 Hurdles — Robinett (3rd) 50.86; Spear (5th) 53.77 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Cunningham, HoustonEpp, Nick Guay (1st) 45.61 *SQ*

4 x 400 Relay — Epp, Burrows, Wilson, Guay (1st) 3:43.57 *SQ*

Shot Put — Zane Oldenstadt (2nd) 39-03.75 *PR*/*SQ*; Zac Tackett (4th) 36-11.75; Robinett (5th) 36-09

Discus — Tackett (1st) 126-00 *SQ*; Oldenstadt (3rd) 109-09; Mason Butler (5th) 94-09

Javelin — Marcelo Gebhard (4th) 117-07; Somes (5th) 114-05

High Jump — Guay (1st) 5-10 *SQ*; Wilson (3rd) 5-06; Houston (4th) 5-02

Pole Vault — Wilson (1st) 10-06 *SQ*; Marshall (2nd) 9-00 *PR*/*SQ*

Long Jump — Somes (4th) 15-07

Triple Jump — Matthew Ward (2nd) 36-05.50 *PR*/*SQ*; Cunningham (3rd) 35-09

Logan Martin, part of the wrecking crew. (Photo courtesy Abbie Martin)

Season two is in the books, and it was a success.

Coupeville grad Logan Martin, now a sophomore at Central Washington University, capped his campaign Saturday with an explosive performance at the Great Northwest Athletic Conference Outdoor Championships in Ellensburg.

The former Wolf claimed sixth place in the hammer throw, out of a field of 16 competitors, earning three points for the Wildcats.

Martin’s best throw on the day went 161 feet, seven inches.

That followed on the heels of another sixth-place finish in the discus Friday, as he scored in both of his events.

Central’s men finished second to Western Washington University in the team standings.

While competition is over until the arrival of indoor track in the fall, Martin will continue to work in the offseason as he chases the big numbers.

Johnny Porter and friends are headed to the state tourney for the second-straight season. (Parker Hammons photo)

As a head coach, Steve Hilborn only knows how to do one thing — take his team to the state tourney.

The Coupeville High School diamond guru made it two-for-two Saturday, guiding the Wolf baseball squad to a Bi-District title and a return trip to the big dance.

Last year, in Hilborn’s first year as head coach, CHS played two games at state, including capturing the program’s first win at the tourney since 1987.

This time around, fresh off a 12-2 drubbing of Friday Harbor at Lakewood High School, the Wolves will carry a seven-game winning streak with them when they hit the road.

It’s the first time CHS baseball has gone to state in back-to-back years since 1990-1991.

Loser-out first round games in the 12-team 2B state tourney go down this coming Tuesday, May 14.

Coupeville, now 11-8 on the season, will find out its foe and the location and start time Sunday when the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association seeds the field.

Run the win streak to eight and the Wolves advance to the state quarterfinals May 18.

Coupeville High School baseball coach Steve Hilborn (grey hoodie, far right) has taken the Wolves to state in both of his first two seasons. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

For the moment, however, the Wolves can bask in the glow of adding another plaque to the Wall of Fame in the CHS gym.

Saturday’s District 1/2 tourney was a three-team affair, with Friday Harbor, the #3 seed, eliminating #2 seed Northwest Christian (Lacey) 9-2 in the opener.

That sent the Wolverines into a winner-take-all affair with their Northwest 2B/1B League rivals, and, for a hot second, Coupeville got set back on its heels.

Friday Harbor scratched out a run in the top of the first, and another in the second, staking itself to a 2-0 lead.

CHS put two runners aboard in the bottom of the first, thanks to a Peyton Caveness single and Coop Cooper getting plunked by a pitch, but neither runner could make it home.

That problem got fixed in the second frame, when the Wolves made their move.

Jack Porter belted a one-out triple to center — the first of a pair of three-baggers on the day — before Wolf pitcher Seth Woollet rapped an RBI single to cut the deficit to 2-1.

Easton Green pinch-ran for his pitcher and promptly stole second, keeping the defense jittery.

Add in a walk to Landon Roberts, and then Coupeville struck, tying the game on a Chase Anderson RBI double to left, before taking the lead for good thanks to a sac fly from Cole White.

Friday Harbor escaped the inning before serious damage could be done, but the game was essentially over at that point.

Seth Woollet, scoring in an earlier game, came up big with his bat and arm Saturday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Woollet had found his groove on the mound, retiring 11 of the last 12 hitters he faced, and once the Coupeville bats were awake, they got good and loud.

The Wolves busted the game open with an 11-batter, seven-run third inning, pushing the lead all the way out to 10-2 thanks to four hits, two walks, and a pair of Friday Harbor errors.

At one point six straight CHS batters reached base, with Camden Glover and Jack Porter connecting on back-to-back extra-base hits to fuel the fire.

Glover doubled, while Porter tripled, with balls erupting off of bats and sailing off into the wild blue yonder, coming back down to Earth way out in centerfield.

Another sac fly from the precision-minded White made life even sweeter, while two runs came flying in when Friday Harbor botched a ball hit by Cooper.

Coupeville took a brief hiatus from scoring in the fourth, before ending the game early with two more runs in the fifth, invoking the 10-run mercy rule.

Four batters, four hits, with Anderson, White, Caveness, and Cooper rapping base knocks, and the deed was done.

Now, it’s time to wait for the WIAA to decide Coupeville’s next foe, and then a team which has stormed back from a 4-8 start to the season will play on, chasing that state glory.

 

Saturday stats:

Chase Anderson — One double, one single, one walk
Peyton Caveness — Two singles
Coop Cooper — One single, one walk
Camden Glover — One double
Jack Porter — Two triples
Johnny Porter — One single
Landon Roberts — Two walks
Cole White — One single
Seth Woollet — Two singles, one walk

Your District 1/2 champs. (Photo courtesy Jeff Porter)

Coupeville mad bomber Mia Farris waits for South Whidbey to figure out a way to stop her. Spoiler: They couldn’t. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville and South Whidbey clashed on the softball diamond Friday, with the Wolves crushing their rivals 15-0 under blue skies.

Working along the edges of the field, wandering paparazzi John Fisken captured the pics seen above and below.

To see everything he shot, and maybe buy some glossies for the grandparentals, pop over to:

 

Coupeville:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Softball-2024/SB-2024-05-10-vs-South-Whidbey

 

South Whidbey:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/South-Whidbey-HS/SB-2024-05-10-at-Coupeville

 

“Let me at ’em!!” CHS football coach Bennett Richter is ready to play now, but he’ll have to wait until September. (Jackie Saia photo)

It’s a brave new world.

Coupeville High School has released its football schedule for next fall, and it features matchups with several teams who the Wolves haven’t traditionally faced.

Annie Wright, Adna, and Winlock pop up, while La Conner is gone, as the Braves try and rebuild their program by dropping down to play eight-man football.

That means there are only two Northwest 2B/1B League clashes on the schedule, as Coupeville and Friday Harbor vie for the conference’s lone 2B playoff bid.

Overall, the Wolves get five home games, with The Bucket game against South Whidbey coming mid-season.

Where things sit as of now:

Fri-Sept. 6 — Annie Wright
Fri-Sept. 13 — @ Klahowya
Fri-Sept. 20 — Granite Falls
Sat-Sept. 28 — @ Cedar Park Christian
Fri-Oct. 4 — South Whidbey
Fri-Oct 11 — Friday Harbor
Fri-Oct. 18 — @ Adna
Fri-Oct. 25 — Winlock
Fri-Nov. 1 — @ Friday Harbor