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Axel Marshall celebrates a title in the pole vault. (Elizabeth Bitting photo)

Saturday was time for the young guns to shine, even if the weather didn’t cooperate.

Coupeville High School track and field sent its freshmen and sophomores on the road, where they endured “nonstop rain all day” at the Stanwood Invitational.

Regardless of the weather, the Wolves held their own against much-bigger schools, claiming a win and 13 PR’s.

The victory came from CHS frosh Axel Marshall, who sailed above the crowd to claim top honors in the pole vault.

The Wolves also got 2nd place finishes from Lydia Price (3200), Carly Burt (Pole Vault) and a girls 4 x 100 relay team of Aleksia Jump, Lexis Drake, Burt, and Jasmine Castellanos.

Jasmine Castellanos is ready to rock. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Overall, Coupeville’s girls, repping a 2B school, earned 5th in the team standings, while the Wolf boys finished 6th.

Arlington, a 4A school, claimed both team titles.

As she tried to dry off on the trip home, CHS coach Elizabeth Bitting couldn’t contain her enthusiasm.

“These athletes did great, drenched and all,” she said. “We wanted to see what they could do without their junior and senior counterparts and boy did we learn a lot!

“They can run, jump and throw, fast, high and far!”

The meet did give Bitting and her fellow coaches a chance to ponder the future, as well.

“We realized we need to fill in a few areas,” she said. “Maybe some athletes might be courageous and try a new event?

“Regardless of what they compete in, we know they will give it their all and continue to improve, but hopefully Mother Nature will be more cooperative.”

The Wolves get to test out that theory next Thursday, Mar. 28, when the entire team is slated to travel to Mount Vernon for a Northwest 2B/1B League meet.

Aleksia Jump climbs high into the skies. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

Saturday’s results:

 

GIRLS — Freshmen:

200 — Jasmine Castellanos (5th) 31.74; Ivy Rudat (9th) 33.84

400 — I. Rudat (3rd) 1:18.24

1600 — Lydia Price (4th) 7:31.16; Kayla Crane (5th) 7:33.74

3200 — Price (2nd) 16:01.12

100 Hurdles — Myra McDonald (6th) 22.62; Lexis Drake (8th) 22.98

300 Hurdles — Drake (4th) 1:02.68; McDonald (5th) 1:03.63

Long Jump — I. Rudat (9th) 9-08.75

 

GIRLS — Sophomores:

400 — Reagan Callahan (9th) 1:22.22 *PR*; Frankie Tenore (10th) 1:24.90

1600 — Aleksia Jump (6th) 7:12.26 *PR*

100 Hurdles — Tenore (7th) 23.39 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Jump, Drake, Burt, Castellanos (2nd) 1:00.65

4 x 200 Relay — Burt, Drake, Castellanos, McDonald (3rd) 2:08.97

4 x 400 Relay — Jump, Callahan, Price, Crane (3rd) 5:24.49

Pole Vault — Burt (2nd) 7-00; Jump (3rd) 6-00

 

BOYS — Freshmen:

100 — Davin Houston (10th) 13.20

400 — Solomon Rudat (9th) 1:07.56

800 — S. Rudat (3rd) 2:33.07 *PR*; Sam Richards (8th) 2:043.39 *PR*

1600 — Kenneth Jacobsen (4th) 5:38.55; Richards (8th) 6:59.42 *PR*

3200 — Axel Marshall (4th) 13:04.10 *PR*

Shot Put — Jacobsen (12th) 24-03 *PR*

High Jump — Houston (3rd) 5-02

Pole Vault — Marshall (1st) 8-06 *PR*

Long Jump — Houston (7th) 15-02; Marshall (10th) 13-04.75

 

BOYS — Sophomores:

100 — Matthew Kuzma (16th) 14.83

200 — Marquette Cunningham (7th) 26.00; Kuzma (14th) 28.44 *PR*

400 — Blake Burrows (8th) 1:01.51 *PR*

800 — Ezekiel Allen (8th) 2:32.90; George Spear (11th) 2:43.31

1600 — Allen (4th) 5:35.05 *PR*; Spear (6th) 5:42.28

3200 — Spear (8th) 11:53.05

4 x 100 Relay — Cunningham, Burrows, Kuzma, Houston (5th) 50.16

4 x 400 Relay — Jacobsen, Burrows, S. Rudat, Cunningham (4th) 4:08.39

Shot Put — Zachary Saho (10th) 26-08.25 *PR*

Discus — Jacob Schooley (5th) 79-00; Saho (11th) 58-09

Javelin — Saho (12th) 80-09

Long Jump — Burrows (5th) 15-03.50; Kuzma (8th) 13-11

Triple Jump — Cunningham (5th) 32-11.50

Logan Martin flexes on you. (Photo property Central Washington University track and field)

They’ve gone to a higher level but are still making headlines.

Three Coupeville High School grads pulled on college athletic uniforms Saturday, continuing to provide an inspiration to current Wolves.

From track meets to rowing regattas, here’s what they were up to:

 

Logan Martin:

Now a sophomore at Central Washington University, he was busy throwing things far away at the Oregon Preview in Eugene.

Martin opened with a strong sixth place finish in the hammer throw (out of 15 competitors) Friday.

His throw landed 173 feet, one inch away from where he let it go.

Saturday, Martin was back at it, launching the shot put 42-01.25 to claim 12th place.

 

Lucy Sandahl, international superstar. (Photo property Seattle Pacific University rowing)

Lucy Sandahl:

The former Wolf celebrated Senior Day with four fellow Seattle Pacific University rowing teammates at the Falcon Regatta.

Facing off with the University of Washington and the top two NCAA D-II teams — the University of Central Oklahoma and Cal Poly Humboldt — on the L.W. Ship Canal, the Falcons more than held their own.

Sandahl was the coxswain in two boats, guiding her 4+ boat to a win and her 8+ boat to a second-place finish.

 

Tate Wyman catches up with the family. (Photo courtesy Amber Wyman)

Tate Wyman:

Now a freshman at Oregon Tech, he participated in his school’s first home meet in 12 years.

The event went down in Klamath Falls on a “spring” day that was a test of everyone’s soul.

Enduring wind, rain, hail, and cold temps, Wyman ran in both the 110 hurdles and on a 4 x 100 relay team.

Coupeville diamond guru Kevin McGranahan knows sometimes you get the win, and sometimes the rain gets you. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’ll have to wait at least one more game for a milestone.

The softball sluggers, who would have been playing for coach Kevin McGranahan’s 100th win Saturday, instead were the first Coupeville High School sports team to be rained out this spring.

The Wolves, who sit at a pristine 2-0, were slated to travel to Blaine for a battle of undefeated teams.

Mother Nature permitting, Coupeville will get back at it next week, with trips to Orcas Island Tuesday, Mar. 26 and to Concrete Friday, Mar. 29.

The Wolve then host Onalaska for a doubleheader Saturday, Mar. 30.

McGranahan, who is 99-44 in his time coaching at CHS, could see the rainout coming.

“We would have needed snorkels to play today,” he said with a laugh.

Pete Gebhard, seen with daughter Gabriella, is the lead custodian for the Coupeville School District.

The lead custodian for the Coupeville School District is calling on the school board to address a year-long shortage in staff.

Pete Gebhard has sent a letter to the directors, which is included with the agenda for their March 28 meeting.

In it, he states the maintenance department have not been able to “replace the full-time custodian at the middle school.”

“We are now coming up on one year since Dan Burns resigned,” Gebhard writes. “I have expressed my concerns about this decision to both (Superintendent) Steve King and (Business Manager) Brian Gianello via email or in person conversations.

“As of yet, I have not been given a solution to this issue. I have been told that we would discuss seeking a remedy to the shortage at a later time once the budget situation changes.”

Gebhard states the current crew has had to flex schedules “to accommodate for this significant loss of work hours.”

This has increased the workload for remaining workers, while “many other cleaning tasks are being left undone due to lack of time.”

“In the 20 plus years that I have been a custodian of the Coupeville School District, there has never been a school year where there was no middle school custodian,” Gebhard writes.

“We have never been asked to find a way to cover the middle school building by stretching out our work hours and cutting back our cleaning services, in addition to our regular areas of responsibility.

“I’m not entirely sure as to why our district has decided that the current situation is sufficient or that we just have to work our way through this shortage of funding, but I find it deeply concerning that we would sacrifice cleaning/sanitizing/disinfecting and stretch our current custodial crew out in this manner.”

Gebhard also expresses the concern the new superintendent, when hired later this year, may decide to keep staffing at current levels.

“At our current custodial staffing level, we are holding ground on basic cleaning, with no time for deep cleaning or classroom sanitizing,” he writes.

“If we were to lose more custodial hours in the form of a RIF, we would be forced to move our custodial staffing hours again and quite frankly this would likely require the elementary school to be placed on an every other day cleaning schedule.

“It’s really hard for me to say this, but our buildings will continue to not receive the cleaning they need, and this will result in unsanitary conditions for our students.”

In the letter he calls for the situation to be addressed.

“It is my honest feeling that if we are told that we must lose another custodian for the upcoming school year, the impact to our custodial staff and buildings will be tremendous,” Gebhard writes.

“Our custodians will be overtaxed with larger areas to clean, and our buildings will suffer and degrade at a quicker rate.

“We really need to strongly consider what our cleaning goals should be for our district before implementing any further changes to our custodial staff. I can’t emphasize the importance of this enough.”

 

To read Gebhard’s letter in full, pop over to:

Click to access P%20Gebhard%20Letter%20to%20the%20Board%20.pdf

 

UPDATE 3/25 — The letter is no longer available to read, as it was removed from BoardDocs at the request of its author.

Yohannon Sandles was raking Friday, in more ways than one. (Sherry Bonacci photo)

“BE BIG!!”

Wish granted.

Rallying from four runs down late Friday, the Coupeville High School varsity baseball squad survived nail-shredding tension and pulled out a stunning come-from-behind win in extra innings, sending its fans home happy, one step ahead of the encroaching darkness.

To get there, shanking visiting Mount Vernon Christian 5-4 in nine gut-wrenching frames, the Wolves dodged disaster, found a new groove, and listened to their fans constant plea to seize the moment.

And thanks to career-defining performances from players as diverse as Yohannon Sandles and Camden Glover, CHS evens its Northwest 2B/1B League record at 1-1, moves to 2-3 overall, and, hopefully, turns a corner while the season is still young.

A game after being no-hit in a loss to Friday Harbor, the Wolves came up with clutch base-knocks against MVC, while shutting down the Hurricane hitters when it mattered most.

Camden Glover, seen in sunnier times, was lights out Friday, a day before he turns 16. (Photo courtesy Stevie Glover)

Trailing 4-0 heading into the bottom of the sixth, Coupeville was hanging tough thanks to a huge pitching performance from Glover.

Coming on in relief of Peyton Caveness — who was fairly sharp himself but had been dinged by a play here, a play there — Glover was lights out.

The burly sophomore, who celebrates his 16th birthday Saturday, went 5.2 innings, striking out 10 while not giving up a single hit.

But with just six outs left to play with, the Wolves needed something to start clicking offensively.

They found their mojo thanks to some pain, some hustle, and some precision hitting.

Aiden O’Neill led off the bottom of the sixth by wearing a pitch, the ball whacking off his body with a dull thud.

Not one to grimace or show any discomfort, the speedy sophomore instead bounded down to first, then promptly shot down to second on a steal.

He came around to score Coupeville’s first run on a hard-hit grounder off the bat of Sandles, and CHS seemed to be in business.

Until the Wolves briefly stalled out, stranding runners at second and third to end the inning.

Not a problem, however, as Glover mowed down the side in the seventh, and then his teammates rose to the moment in their “final” at-bats.

Pinch hitter Aidyn McDermott led off with a single that chewed up the glove of the MVC third baseman, before Caveness thumped an RBI double.

The Hurricanes looked like they were going to escape, however, striking out the next batter and putting themselves an out away from scampering back to the vans, a visit to McDonalds possibly in their early evening plans.

To which the Wolves said, stow those burgers and fries, buccos, with Cole White and Sandles knocking in runs with back-to-back perfectly placed blasts.

Sandles gets dynamic. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Suddenly it was 4-4, we were headed to extra innings, and the overflow crowd of MVC fans were beginning to kvetch.

Just the way Cow Town likes it.

Glover survived a tense moment in the top of the eighth, plunking two batters before getting a ‘Cane slugger to weakly launch a foul ball right to first baseman Caveness with the bags juiced.

Coupeville put two runners aboard in the bottom half of the frame thanks to MVC errors, and the visitors reloaded the bases in the top of the ninth thanks to walks, but neither team could break through.

With already black skies getting darker and the game pushing three hours, that set up a fab finale in the bottom of the ninth.

White rapped a one-out single, then moved his lanky body down the line at a rapid rate on a steal, before Sandles wrote the final best-selling chapter.

Hitting cleanup, the Wolf junior, famous for his crowd-pleasing photos on the Coupeville Barstool Instagram account, capped his best day as a CHS diamond dynamo.

With his fan club hootin’ and hollerin’ on every pitch, Sandles dug his cleats into the prairie dirt, swung from his heels, and launched a gorgeous laser into faraway left field.

Ball hit grass, White’s toes tapped home plate, and the rush was on, as the Wolves poured out of the dugout to envelop their stellar second baseman.

Peyton Caveness and Co. swung big in key moments. (Morgan White photo)

Sandles finished with three hits (according to the official book), though some might argue he actually had four depending on how you viewed one base knock which was recorded as an error.

Joining him in the hit parade were White, who rapped two, Caveness — who whacked a two-bagger — Landon Roberts, and McDermott as CHS outhit MVC 8-2.

O’Neill, Caveness, Glover, and Jack Porter walked to round out the offense.

With the wild win in hand, the Wolves prep for a super-busy week, if weather permits.

Coupeville is slated to travel to Orcas Island next Tuesday, host Sequim Wednesday, trek to Concrete Friday, and host South Whidbey Saturday.

Oh, and the Wolf JV will play in Oak Harbor Monday, leaving very few open dates on the schedule.