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The Wolves celebrate Lillian Ketterling’s top 10 finish. (Wendy Wasik photos)

It begins.

A new season of Coupeville Middle School cross country officially kicked off Saturday, with the Wolves travelling to Langley for the 44th annual Carl Westling Invite.

While there, 19 Wolves hit the trail, with 8th graders Lillian Ketterling and Beckett Green zipping across the 3000-meter course to claim top 10 finishes.

Injuries and family obligations reduced Coupeville’s roster a bit, but Wolf coach Amber Wyman came away pleased with the performance of those who were available.

“The athletes that were able showed up to run!” she said. “They all did a great job, pushed themselves hard and it showed.

“I’m very excited to see what this season is going to bring!”

Cyrus Sparacio heads for the finish line.

The Wolves have a busy week ahead of them, with two meets in three days.

Coupeville hosts a four-team Cascade League meet at Ft. Casey next Thursday, Sept. 21, then travels to Shoreline Sept. 23 for the King’s Roller Coaster Run.

 

Saturday results:

 

GIRLS:

Lillian Ketterling (10th) 14:51.87
Allie Powers (11th) 14:53.49
Laken Simpson
(13th) 15:10.09
Hazel Goldman
(19th) 16:32.39
Elizabeth Marshall
(33rd) 18:25.96
Devon Wyman
(35th) 18:28.43
Mary Western
(36th) 18:30.90
Ava Lucero
(48th) 20:44.15
Hailey Goldman
(51st) 21:29.72
Amelia Crowder
(52nd) 21:31.88

 

BOYS:

Beckett Green (10th) 13:01.22
Isaiah Allen (12th) 13:31.55
Cyrus Sparacio (22nd) 14:22.91
Johnathan Jacobsen (27th) 14:59.88
Archer Schwarz (28th) 15:00.27
Ossian Merkel (32nd) 15:23.55
River Simpson (34th) 15:29.53
Christopher Zenz (43rd) 16:03.04
Avery Eelkema (55th) 20:23.41

Landon Roberts is feeling strong as one of Coupeville High School’s cross country captains. (Sherry Bonacci photo)

Whidbey Island was alive with the sound of footsteps Saturday.

The 44th annual Carl Westling Invite in Langley brought out cross country runners, attracting the attention of 29 high schools, including the only one we really care about — Coupeville.

The Wolves had runners in four different races, with harriers pounding across the 3.1-mile course.

“The Westling Invite is always a good one,” said CHS coach Elizabeth Bitting. “It is on island and so many family members and friends are able to attend.”

Several of Coupeville’s runners were making their high school debuts, while virtually everyone nailed PR’s on a sunny, but not too hot day.

On the girl’s side of things, Noelle Western had the best finish, slicing almost two minutes off her time from last year.

Wolf runners (left to right) Aleksia Jump, Erica McGrath, Jasmine Castellanos, Reagan Callahan, Noelle Western, and Ari Armstrong are ready to go. (Elizabeth Bitting photo)

Meanwhile, Coupeville’s top boys — Carson Field, Landon Roberts, and George Spear — all broke 20 minutes and were separated by less than two seconds.

Seeing her runners move as a pack, pushing and supporting each other, warms Bitting’s heart.

“I know it’s still very early on in the season, but I am so proud and excited for each and every athlete that ran today,” she said.

“They are working hard during practice, they are putting in the miles, working in the weight room and their hard work is paying off,” Bitting added.

“Now to keep them healthy!”

Coupeville returns to action next Saturday, Sept. 23 when it travels to Shoreline for the King’s Roller Coaster Trail Run.

The Wolves were supposed to also compete midweek, but a three-team meet on Orcas Island was cancelled “due to an unavoidable event.”

 

Saturday results:

 

GIRLS:

Varsity:

Noelle Western (46th) 24:55.47
Ari Armstrong (72nd) 28:29.04
Aleksia Jump (75th) 29:01.89
Reagan Callahan (78th) 31:31.49
Erica McGrath (79th) 32:48.97

 

BOYS:

Varsity:

Carson Field (61st) 19:53.11
Landon Roberts (62nd) 19:54.21
George Spear (63rd) 19:54.76
Ezekiel Allen (71st) 20:33.41
Thomas Strelow (79th) 21:14.84
Kenneth Jacobsen (82nd) 21:21.15
Nicholas Wasik (91st) 22:26.79

 

JV – Level 1

Preston Howard (144th) 22:46.65
Axel Marshall (146th) 22:52.79

 

JV – Level 2

Zach Blitch (198th) 33:04.22

Hall still haulin’

Mitchell Hall pounds the trail during his senior season in Coupeville. (Jackie Saia photo)

Another day, another milestone.

Coupeville grad Mitchell Hall, now a freshman at the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Indiana, competed in his second collegiate cross country race early Saturday morning.

After covering 5,000 meters in his debut, the former Wolf ran an 8K as he and the Fightin’ Engineers vied at the 23-team John McNichols Invitational in Terra Haute.

Hall hit the tape in 29 minutes, 10.2 seconds, while Purdue’s Nathan Walker won the race, sparking his squad to a team title as well.

The invitational featured 15 NCAA D-I teams, including Indiana, Kansas State, and Belmont, while Rose-Hulman is a D-III school.

The Fightin’ Engineers return to action in two weeks, hosting the Nike Cross Country Town Twilight meet Sept. 29 as part of Rose-Hulman’s Homecoming weekend.

During his time in Coupeville, Hall was a standout cross country and track runner who advanced to the state championships twice, a top student, and a fast-rising employee at Prairie Center.

Loud crowd, louder win

Ayden Wyman and the Coupeville co-ed soccer squad nailed down its first win Friday night. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was Friday Night Lights, but with a European twist.

The “working media” in the press box were thrilled with their complimentary hot dog and Coke, the student section was loud ‘n proud, and everyone in Wolf Nation went home happy.

Riding goals from Cole White and Ezra Boilek, plus standout defensive work from goaltender Hurlee Bronec and his back line, the Coupeville High School booters romped to a 2-0 win while playing in prime time.

The victory, a non-conference triumph over conference foe Providence Classical Christian, lifts the Wolves to 1-1 on the still-young season.

It’s also the first varsity win for any CHS squad this school year, as Cow Town teams have opened with tough schedules featuring mostly larger schools.

With Wolf football on the road in Sultan, soccer got a chance to be front and center Friday, with plenty of other Coupeville athletes leaning over the grandstand railing, screaming their approval.

Spikers Katie Marti, Madison McMillan, and Co. had their cheer game on point, and the crowd support sent a charge through the team playing down below.

“Thanks to EVERYONE who came,” said Wolf coach Robert Wood. “Coupeville’s 12th Man showed up and it was wonderful!”

Wolf coaches Robert Wood and Kimberly Kisch keep an eye on the action.

Whether it was Ayden Wyman aggressively hip checking a male rival, or Wolf defenders like birthday boy Preston Epp, Hank Milnes, and Andrew Williams refusing to bend or break, the hometown pitch warriors were on point.

Maybe none more so than Bronec, playing in just his second game in goal after bouncing over from the gridiron.

Unleashing both fists, the lanky netminder batted away several shots, including two on one play as he danced in the pale moonlight with an unlucky PCC sharpshooter.

Bronec got even more electric as the game unfolded, saving some of his best highlight reel plays for the closing moments.

Preserving his shutout, he went to the ground to snuff out shots, while also climbing an invisible staircase to knock away a vicious free kick which came in screaming and went back out with a whimper.

He got plenty of help, as Bronec’s bruisers crashed the back line hard all night, with Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, Dane Hadsall, Bryley Gilbert, and Matthew Ward keeping PCC bottled up.

Cael Wilson, his spirit as fiery as his hair, was everywhere, sprinting up one side of the pitch and down the other, tracking down any visitor who tried to make a break for freedom.

On the offensive side, Coupeville peppered the PCC goalie, breaking through about 10 minutes before halftime, when White popped a penalty kick into the left corner of the net for his fifth career goal.

The freebie was a nice makeup for earlier, when Wolf scoring ace Nick Guay got plastered from behind, landing face first in the soft green grass while the refs stared at the pretty sunset and swallowed their whistles.

It didn’t matter however, as Coupeville punched in a second goal less than three minutes into the second half — Boilek slamming a shot from deep on the right side for his first-ever Wolf score — to effectively seal the deal.

That set off the student section, which rocked the rail and hollered long into the night, not finishing until after the Wolf booters came over, post-game, to hail their classmates.

As they departed, CHS coaches Wood and Kimberly Kisch were marinating in the moment while already looking ahead.

The Wolves hit the road next Tuesday to play Grace Academy, before returning to Coupeville for four of their next five games.

“Still working out formations and positions,” Wood said. “But tonight shows, one, what they are capable of, and two, what happens when you play for each other.

“Very pleased … but it’s in the past and we are focused now on building tonight’s success for Tuesday.”

Bad score, good fight

Bennett Richter’s Wolves have shown considerable fight while playing larger schools. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s been a gauntlet.

Coming off its first state tournament appearance in three decades-plus, a new-look Coupeville High School football team has opened its season with three straight games against bigger schools.

And not just bigger schools, but ones playing top-level ball, as seen in their combined 8-1 record.

Friday night brought another loss for the Wolves, as they fell 46-13 at Sultan in a game which was just 20-13 at halftime.

That leaves Coupeville, a 2B school, at 0-3 after playing three 1A schools, with two of those games on the road.

The Wolves get a chance to turn things around starting next Friday, Sept. 22, when they host Northwest 2B/1B League rival La Conner (0-2) in their first conference clash.

Five of Coupeville’s final six regular-season games are against fellow 2B schools, with two bouts apiece against La Conner and Friday Harbor controlling everyone’s playoff destiny.

For the second week in a row, the Wolves came out and claimed the early lead, before being overpowered by a deep, run-happy squad.

CHS senior quarterback Logan Downes tossed a pair of first-half touchdowns, both landing in the arms of sophomore speed demon Aiden O’Neill, as the air attack slashed the Turk defense.

The scoring lobs give Downes eight passing TD’s through the first three games, and 27 for his career.

O’Neill has broken into the end zone a team-high four times this season, with three of his scores coming off of pass receptions.

The touchdowns were the first given up by Sultan this season, which outscored its first two opponents by a combined score of 88-3.

The undefeated Turks, who scored on an 85-yard run early, methodically went to work, scoring twice in the second quarter to reclaim the lead at 20-13.

After that, the second half largely belonged to Sultan, which tacked on two more scores in the third, and another two in the fourth.

The host team did pass on a chance to tie their season high in points, however, taking a knee instead of kicking a PAT or going for a two-point conversion after its final touchdown.

Davin Houston (The Man in Black) busted off a big play Friday at Sultan. (Nikki Breaux photo)

Even trailing big, Coupeville’s players showed fire in their soul, with senior Mikey Robinett crashing through the line again and again on rushing attempts and freshman Davin Houston ripping off a long kickoff return.

Fellow frosh Matthew Gilbert replaced Downes at QB for the game’s final drive, with Adrian Cunningham and Dylan Robinett both picking up their first rushing attempts of the season.