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Logan Martin lets it fly. (Photo courtesy Bob Martin)

All around the world, the Wolves were howling.

Four different Coupeville High School grads were in action at the next level this weekend, with action going down in three sports and on two continents.

What was happening:

 

Logan Martin:

Now a sophomore track and field star at Central Washington University, he claimed a pair of top-three finishes at the PLU Open in Tacoma.

Martin finished second in the hammer throw Friday, tossing the implement 176 feet, nine inches, then came back around Saturday to earn third in the shot put with a throw of 42-8.75.

 

Dominic Coffman:

The 2023 CHS grad is playing semi-pro football in Spain, and he rushed for 150 yards and a pair of touchdowns Saturday as the Las Rozas Black Demons won 44-13.

That gives the former Wolf four scores across the past two games for a gridiron squad which is now 6-0 on the season.

 

Tate Wyman:

The Oregon Tech freshman ran in two track events Saturday at the Pacific Northwest Invite in Corvallis.

Wyman placed seventh in the 110 hurdles in 19.13 seconds, and 17th in the 200, where he set a PR with a time of 24.42.

 

Caleb Meyer:

The former Wolf saw his basketball career at Skagit Valley College end Saturday, with the Cardinals falling 79-77 to Tacoma in an overtime thriller in the semifinals of the Northwest Athletic Conference tourney.

SVC finished 26-6 as Meyer saw court time in 20 games during his sophomore campaign.

Logan Downes drills the bottom out of the net. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Even in a game featuring a murderer’s row of basketball players, Logan Downes made his presence felt.

There weren’t a ton of available shots Saturday at the All-State game, with a stacked roster of #1 options letting fly almost every time they touched the ball.

But Downes, the leading male scorer in Coupeville High School hoops history, did a lot of the small things.

A rebound here, a steal there, an assist to set up a temporary teammate for a bucket.

And when the ball did momentarily land on his fingertips, the Wolf senior rained down one of the prettiest three-balls of the afternoon.

Downes finished with five points, as the 2B all-stars routed the best from 1B to a 120-82 tune.

Adna’s Luke Salme and Brewster’s Brady Wulf topped all scorers with 19 apiece, while Lincoln Foland of Liberty (Spangle) banked in 18.

The 2B vs 1B showdown was one of four games played Saturday.

The other two all-senior games went to the lower classification, with 3A toppling 4A 141-106 and 1A slipping past 2A 99-90.

Things started off with a Futures game, featuring the best non-seniors in the state.

Anacortes junior Davis Fogle, who played against Coupeville as an 8th grader when he suited up for Mount Vernon Christian, poured in 39 points in that contest.

Before each game, the Washington Interscholastic Basketball Coaches Association handed out its awards for state player and coaches of the year.

At the 2B level, those went to Colfax coach Reece Jenkins and Napavine gunner James Grose.

Brynn Parker made her debut at #1 varsity singles Friday afternoon. (Photo courtesy Corinn Parker)

They’re making do with a limited roster.

The Coupeville High School girls’ tennis team only has eight players this season, and through the first two matches, the Wolves have yet to field a full lineup.

Friday afternoon brought the CHS road warriors to Friday Harbor, where they were without Skylar Parker and Kaitlyn Leavell, who played first and second singles in the season’s opening match.

Moving people around, and welcoming the debut of Tenley Stuurmans, Delanie Lewis, and Sofia Phay, Coupeville put up a spirited fight in a 4-0 loss.

The defeat drops the Wolves to 0-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 0-2 overall.

CHS, which is playing all 10 of its matches away from home this season as new tennis courts are built, returns to action Mar. 22 with a trek to the wilds of Granite Falls.

 

Friday’s results:

1st Singles — Brynn Parker lost to Georgia Keune 6-0, 6-2

2nd Singles — Tenley Stuurmans lost to Ava Martin 6-2, 6-4

1st Doubles — Delanie Lewis/Rafaela Silva De Campos Conceicao lost to Norah Leighton/Ava Gamez 6-2, 6-1

2nd Doubles — Kaurie Hamilton/Sofia Phay lost to Charisse Ho/Josephine Lane 6-3

Juniors Jada Heaton (second from left), Mia Farris (second from right), and Madison McMillan (far right) anchor a young but talented CHS softball squad. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Heaton)

They may be young, but they’re not going to wait around to win.

Starting two 8th graders and two freshmen Friday, the Coupeville High School softball squad opened the season with a bang, mashing host South Whidbey 20-9.

The Wolves led from start to finish, cranked out 13 hits and drew 10 walks, and got big contributions from all nine starters.

Top things off with a pinpoint pitching performance from fab frosh Haylee Armstrong — already a grizzled vet in her second season of high school ball — and it made for a fun trip down Island.

“We had our chances to panic but the team rallied and would not let that happen,” said Wolf coach Kevin McGranahan. “Great first game win!”

It was the 98th victory at CHS for the diamond guru, keeping him ahead of volleyball sage Cory Whitmore (88) and boys’ basketball head man Brad Sherman (70) as the winningest active coach at the school.

Meanwhile it was win #1 for middle school aces Sydney Van Dyke and Ava Lucero, as the former whacked two hits and picked up four RBI, and the latter walked three times.

Sydney had two clutch singles driving in runs, and that’s huge for an 8th grader,” McGranahan said.

Armstrong, who played in the outfield for the Wolves during her own 8th grade season, moved to the pitcher’s circle Friday, where she was lights out for a good deal of the game.

Racking up 12 strikeouts, she kept the Falcon hitters on their heels, and already looks like an ace.

Haylee pitched seven great innings,” McGranahan said. “It was her varsity debut as a freshman pitcher and she more than rose to the occasion.”

Armstrong helped herself, lacing a leadoff single in the top of the first to kick-start a three-run rally.

The “old folks” helped out, as well, with juniors Taylor Brotemarkle and Madison McMillan ripping singles and sophomore Teagan Calkins crunching an RBI groundout.

The Wolves continued to chip away, pushing runs across in each of the first five innings as they built a 13-3 lead.

Van Dyke delivered a key two-run single, Armstrong blasted a triple, and Coupeville mixed and matched hits with walks, while alertly running the bases.

South Whidbey proved to be chippy, however, getting back in the game with four runs of its own in the bottom of the fifth, and another two in the sixth.

The top of the sixth was the only frame in which Coupeville went down 1-2-3, briefly allowing the hosts to cut the deficit back to 13-9.

But never fear, as the Wolves bounced right back with seven runs in the seventh, before blanking South Whidbey in its final at-bats.

Van Dyke, making one of the great debuts in CHS softball history, laced a second two-run single, while Armstrong and Mia Farris smacked back-to-back run-scoring base-knocks to blow things wide open.

Coupeville, which has no seniors on its roster, spread the offensive love from the top of the order to the bottom.

Armstrong led the way with three hits, including her three-bagger, while McMillan, Van Dyke, and Calkins each collected a pair.

Farris, Brotemarkle, Jada Heaton, and Capri Anter also stroked singles, with Lucero and Heaton walking three times apiece.

Ever the busy bee, McMillan eked out a pair of free passes to go with her hits, while Farris and Calkins picked up the other walks.

Coupeville’s young sluggers come home next Tuesday, Mar. 19 for a showdown with Northwest 2B/1B League archrival Friday Harbor, then hit the road again for three straight rumbles.

The Wolves travel to Blaine, Orcas Island, and Concrete, before welcoming Onalaska to Cow Town Mar. 30 for a doubleheader.

Tom Fallon and South Whidbey won round one Friday, but Coupeville baseball gets a rematch in Cow Town Mar. 30. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

First batter, great.

After that, not so great.

Coupeville High School senior catcher Peyton Caveness led off his team’s road game at South Whidbey Friday with a double to center field.

But then the Wolves lost their groove offensively, and couldn’t find it defensively either, falling 11-1 to the Falcons in a game mercy-ruled after five innings.

The non-conference loss drops CHS to 0-2 on the still-young season, with another tilt in less than 24 hours.

Coupeville returns home Saturday to face North Mason (1-2) in a game set to begin at 1:00 P.M.

Friday’s Island rumble with their next-door neighbors was a fairly rough one for the scrappy Wolves, who were outhit 11-2. Overall CHS only put four runners aboard.

The mitts weren’t cooperating either for Coupeville, which committed six errors, allowing the Falcons to keep rallies alive.

One positive was the Wolves only walked three South Whidbey hitters, after surrendering 20+ free passes in their season opener.

Lanky lefty Landon Roberts got the start on the mound for Coupeville, and almost got out of the first relatively unscathed.

Unfortunately, a dropped third strike on what would have been the third out kept the frame alive, and the hometown mashers promptly responded with back-to-back RBI singles to make it 3-0.

South Whidbey tacked on a run in the second, helped by two Wolf errors, then pushed the lead out to 6-0 through three innings.

CHS, which had nine straight hitters go down after Caveness’s two-bagger, finally cracked the seal in the top of the fourth with Yohannon Sandles reaching on an error.

But then it was right back to it, as the Falcons erased the next three hitters to make it 12 of 13.

Roberts kept South Whidbey at bay in the bottom of the fourth, stranding a runner at second, and Coupeville notched its lone run of the day in the fifth.

Cole White eked out his squad’s only walk, then came around to tap home plate on a pinch-hit RBI single from Wolf sophomore Steven Gonzalez.

That would be it for the Coupeville offense, however, and South Whidbey ended the game early with a five-run surge in the bottom half of the inning.

Roberts struck out four across four frames, with Camden Glover coming on in relief for the Wolves.