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Shiloh Sandlin leads the charge. (Julie Wheat photo)

Growth and improvement, yes. A win, not on this day.

Facing off Wednesday afternoon with Friday Harbor, which has been a powerhouse in boys’ soccer in recent years, Coupeville’s young booters continued to jell as a team, but were unable to topple the high-powered Wolverines.

Still, the 5-1 home loss was a step forward from the season opener, when CHS was blanked 8-0 by the same foe.

“Much better than our first game of the season,” said Coupeville coach Jim Kunz. “Our Wolves made them work for it. We worked as a team.”

Kunz adjusted his normal defensive setup, with Wyatt Fitch-Marron, Shiloh Sandlin, Sage Arends, and Brian Thompson anchoring the back line in support of goaltender Sam Richards.

“They shut them down,” Kunz said. “A few small mistakes resulted in goals, but we definitely had the ability to win, which is very exciting.”

Coupeville’s goal came off the foot of Arends, who notched his team-high sixth score of the season.

The tally pushes the Wolf junior to nine goals for his prep pitch career, right on the cusp of becoming the 14th Wolf boy to reach double-digits in career scoring.

With the loss, CHS drops to 2-3 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 4-7 overall, and sits in fifth place in the nine-team conference with three games left to play.

The Wolves hit the road for their next two, playing Providence Classical Christian Oct. 24 and Lopez Island Oct. 28, before wrapping the regular season with a home clash against La Conner Oct. 30.

The top five teams from District 1 advance to the playoffs, which start Nov. 4.

Defending state champ Orcas Island (6-0), Mount Vernon Christian (6-1), Friday Harbor (4-2), Lopez (3-3), and Coupeville (2-3) currently hold down those slots, with Cedar Park Christian-Lynnwood, Grace Academy, La Conner, and Providence all on the outside looking in at 1-4.

Anna Powers finished in first or second place in five of seven races this season. (Julie Wheat photo)

“This really was an amazing season.”

Wednesday marked the end of the road for the Coupeville Middle School cross country squad, creating mixed feelings for coach Amber Wyman.

“I couldn’t be more proud of this team!” she said.

“I’m sad that I won’t see these amazing athletes daily. They worked so hard and so many of them got PRs!”

Coupeville’s boys, ready to rumble. (Amber Wyman photo)

The Wolf harriers closed their campaign by competing in the seven-team Cascade League Championships in Langley, earning four top 10 finishes in the individual standings.

Anna Powers hit the tape in second place, while running mates Sarai Dangerfield and Henry Purdue both claimed fourth place.

Lincoln Wagner rounded out the top times with a seventh-place performance.

The CMS boys placed second in the team standings, while their female counterparts were fourth.

South Whidbey swept both team titles while competing on a 3,000-meter course.

Stars today, even bigger stars in the years to come. (Amber Wyman photo)

 

Wednesday results:

 

GIRLS:

Anna Powers (2nd) 12:26.55
Sarai Dangerfield (4th) 13:05.54
Claire Lachnit (28th) 15:35.34
Ava Clark (33rd) 15:46.29
Abby Hunt (41st) 16:29.23
Liberty Perez (44th) 17:05.15
Seraphina Williams (49th) 18:51.43

 

BOYS:

Henry Purdue (4th) 11:16.40
Lincoln Wagner (7th) 11:28.35
Colton Ashby (13th) 12:03.34
Archer Schwarz (16th) 12:03.34
Jesse Kehoe (22nd) 12:38.72
Nicholas Strong (23rd) 12:46.49
Cole Van Dyke (47th) 13:54.00
Mica McCloskey (49th) 14:01.51
Miles Abram (59th) 14:37.19
Elijah Williams (60th) 14:37.83
Johnathyn Driscoll (61st) 14:39.51
Les Queen (62nd) 14:42.39
Oliver Miller (64th) 14:44.57
Hayden Maynes (77th) 15:46.26

The Wolves celebrate with ice cream. (Amber Wyman photo)

Judy Marti

Coupeville lost a wonderful woman earlier this month.

Judy Marti, the matriarch of one of our town’s largest, and most successful, sports families, left the prairie Oct. 5, after spending 50+ years here.

Her sons and daughters, and grandchildren, have formed the backbone of Wolf athletics since I started writing about sports on Whidbey in 1990, and well before that.

I also came into contact with Mrs. Marti many times at Videoville and Miriam’s Espresso during my golden years, and always found her a kind, gracious woman.

She will be remembered fondly.

 

From the Marti family:

It is with profound sadness that we announce the passing of a legend, our loving mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother, Judith “Judy” Bernice Marti, who passed away peacefully in her home on October 5, 2025, at the age of 85.

Born in 1940 in Seattle to the late Lester and Opal Roberts, Judy was a force of nature. A lively child who climbed trees and wore mismatched socks and didn’t care what you thought about it.

In 1960 she met the love of her life, Roy John Marti II, and they married the following year.

Together they built a beautiful bustling family with ten children.

After raising the first five in the city, they moved to the countryside to sow the land and grow the rest of their brood and have called Coupeville home for the last 50 years.

Judy used life experiences to become one of the most valuable teachers’ aids ever to grace the school district.

Her ability to relate and connect impacted everyone she met, from the student struggling in math, to the stranger sitting next to her on the bus.

She was spiritual and an avid reader, from mysteries to the Bible; her favorite picture was Jesus laughing; she herself enjoyed humor and was often described as the funniest person in the room.

A talented wit who showed compassion for all.

It’s hard to measure the breadth of impact she had on us all, but it would look similar to the deepest view of the universe ever captured by the James Webb telescope.

She is survived by her sister Mary, as well as her children Chris, Rick, Rose, Mike, Frank, Bill, Jim, and Tony.

She is proceeded in death by her husband Roy, their son Roy John III, and daughter Judith Catherine, as well as her siblings Bette, James, and Daniel.

She leaves behind 15 adoring grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren, all of whom will carry on her legacy of love, strength, and humor.

A memorial will be held at the Coupeville Recreation Hall on Saturday, Nov. 1 at 3:00 PM.

Refreshments will be served. Parking is limited, overflow available behind the library. 

Tamsin Ward (left) and Lillian Ketterling sparked Coupeville to an 8-1 win Tuesday on Orcas. (Jandellyn Ward photo)

The Wolf booters have a great relationship with the back of the net.

Peppering the Orcas Island goalie all afternoon Tuesday, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad thrashed its hosts, capturing a resounding 8-1 road win.

The victory, which gives the Wolves a season sweep of the Vikings, lifts CHS to 3-7-1 on the campaign heading into the regular-season finale.

After sitting 10 days between Tuesday’s tilt and their last game — a hard-fought home tie with big school rival Sultan way back on Oct. 11 — Jasmine Ader’s pitch warriors go back to waiting.

Thanks to a rescheduled game, that finale, a road trip to Bothell to face Providence Classical Christian, is now slated for Oct. 30.

The break between games didn’t seem to slow down the Wolves, who ran their season scoring total to 28 goals.

Freshman Tamsin Ward had the hot foot, sliding four scores into the net to push her total to 14.

That’s the third-best single-season performance by a Wolf girl in the 20-year history of the program, trailing just Kalia Littlejohn (15 in 2017) and Mia Littlejohn (27 in 2016).

Ward passed Avalon Renninger (12) and Ayden Wyman (13) on the career scoring chart as well, and sits #5 all-time, with Lindsey Roberts (17) her next target.

“Where you going?” “To thrash teams and take names!” (Jandellyn Ward photo)

For her part, Ward is most excited about team accomplishment over individual glory.

“I think we played well tonight,” she said. “Our hard work is starting to result in positive outcomes on the field.

“I’m excited to grow with this group of girls.”

Other CHS goals Tuesday came from 8th grade phenom Lyla Grose, who has six on the year, and sophomore Lillian Ketterling, who notched her second and third scores.

As the second-oldest player on the team (behind just senior Frankie Tenore), Ketterling is embracing her role in helping her young squad grow.

“I feel that we’re really starting to game execute the things we practice,” Ketterling said.

“We have one goal, to bring a state championship to Coupeville; I am so excited about our trajectory.”

The Wolves bask in the glow of victory. (Jerry Helm photo)

Now technically, one of Ketterling’s goals could be counted as an “own score” for Orcas, since her shot hit a Viking player, who accidentally knocked it past her own goaltender in the resulting pandemonium.

But then you stop and consider that no, the lethal Wolf sharpshooter is probably just that talented that she can curve a ball off a rival player’s leg, before using Jedi mind tricks to get her rival to do the dirty work for her.

So yep, two-goal night for Ketterling. End of (a very brief) discussion.

Moving on, another one of Coupeville’s eight 8th graders rounded out the offensive explosion, as Hazel Goldman dropped a bomb for her first high school goal.

Seven different Wolves, all underclassmen, have scored this season, with five 8th graders combining to account for 11 of those goals.

The future? Bright.

“Each game we’re putting players on the field in different positions, roles, and responsibilities,” said CHS coach Jasmine Ader.

“These players have been willing to adapt. That shows we’re doing exactly what we’re supposed to be doing, developing players.”

Whether playing games or working hard behind the scenes, the Wolves, rebuilding their program after a two-year shutdown, are on the rise.

“Within the last two weeks we’ve added weightlifting, and plyometric training to improve our speed and agility,” Ader said.

“If you don’t know who they are now, you soon will.”

Andrea Gonzalez (22) is part of a talented group of booters helping revive CHS girls’ soccer. (Julie Wheat photo)

Haylee Armstrong flexes on the world. (Danica Strong photo)

The stats speak for themselves.

While Coupeville High School volleyball players wait for Thursday’s home finale, we offer up-to-the-moment numbers for varsity and JV, allowing fans to measure where the Wolves sit 80% of the way through the regular season.

Now, we could write more words here, but didn’t someone say something about letting the stats do the talking?

 

Through Oct. 20:

 

Varsity
(12 matches):

 

Kills:

Teagan Calkins – 137
Haylee Armstrong – 69
Dakota Strong – 36
Tenley Stuurmans – 29
Ari Cunningham – 26
Lexis Drake – 12
Capri Anter – 2
Adeline Maynes – 2

 

Digs:

Calkins – 126
Armstrong – 103
Stuurmans – 71
Anter – 38
Drake – 36
Cunningham – 25
Maynes – 24
Strong – 5
Sydney Van Dyke – 4

 

Assists:

Stuurmans – 233
Maynes – 23
Armstrong – 12
Cunningham – 9
Calkins – 7
Drake – 6
Strong – 3
Kennedy O’Neill – 1

 

Solo Blocks:

Stuurmans – 4
Drake – 2
Cunningham – 1

 

Block Assists:

Cunningham – 6
Drake – 5
Armstrong – 3
Calkins – 3
Strong – 2
Stuurmans – 2
Maynes – 1

 

Service Aces:

Stuurmans – 54
Calkins – 31
Armstrong – 16
Cunningham – 14
Drake – 14
Maynes – 8
Anter – 7
O’Neill – 2
Van Dyke – 2
Strong – 1

 

JV
(10 matches):

 

Kills:

Sydney Van Dyke – 35
Kennedy O’Neill – 25
Isa Mc Fetridge – 22
Chelsi Stevens – 19
Cassandra Powers – 10
Emma Leavitt – 8
Adeline Maynes – 4
Olivia Martin – 3
Hailey Grijalva – 2
Willow Leedy-Bonifas – 2

 

Digs:

Mc Fetridge – 34
O’Neill – 34
Leedy-Bonifas – 31
Stevens – 15
Maynes – 11
Van Dyke – 11
Martin – 6
Powers – 5
Grijalva – 4
Leavitt – 2
Kee’Arya Brown – 1
Mary Western – 1

 

Assists:

Maynes – 50
Leavitt – 26
Powers – 11
Van Dyke – 8
Grijalva – 4
Stevens – 3
Mc Fetridge – 2
O’Neill – 2
Leedy-Bonifas – 1

 

Solo Blocks:

Leedy-Bonifas – 1
Van Dyke – 1

 

Service Aces:

Van Dyke – 25
Powers – 19
Leavitt – 18
Mc Fetridge – 17
O’Neill – 16
Stevens – 16
Maynes – 14
Leedy-Bonifas – 5
Martin – 4
Grijalva – 3