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Almost ready for her closeup. (Jackie Saia photos)

The stands were rockin’.

By the time Friday night’s Coupeville High School football season opener was in its final moments, the noise from the stands had picked up considerably from early in the game.

With the contest between the Wolves and visiting Klahowya taking place four days before the start of school, and with an early kickoff time, it was a gentle buildup, until PA announcer Willie Smith finally broke through with his calls for students to get loud.

As John Denver and AC/DC blared from the speakers during lulls in the game, CHS Yearbook Advisor Jackie Saia worked the stands, capturing the pics seen above and below.

Marcelo Gebhard (54) and Co. brought big energy on opening night, fighting from opening kickoff through the final play of a nailbiter. (Jackie Saia photo)

In the moment, it’s a gut punch.

Down the road, it may turn out to be the start of something big.

A new-look Coupeville High School football team lost its season opener on the final play of the game Friday night, falling 28-25 to visiting Klahowya.

Eagles senior quarterback Jack Kealoha, who tossed three touchdown passes, used his feet to beat the Wolves to the left corner, scooting in on a game-busting two-yard scoring run as time expired.

That capped a wild finish in which both teams scored in the final moments, with Coupeville taking the lead on a 37-yard pass from Logan Downes to Chase Anderson with just 1:39 to play.

Coming on fourth-and-five, the scoring play featured a pinpoint pass through a forest of arms from the senior Wolf gunslinger, with his sophomore receiver making three would-be tacklers miss as he zigged and zagged his way to the end zone.

The Wolves used a 13-play, 87-yard drive to pull ahead, with Downes also converting another fourth down pass, this one zipping 10 yards through the air to land in Hunter Bronec’s hands.

Hunter Bronec slips through the defense. (Bailey Thule photo)

That set up 2B Coupeville for the non-conference win against a 1A foe, but it wasn’t to be.

Klahowya went 70 yards on 10 plays as the clock madly ticked, mixing runs with passes, before Kealoha hit paydirt to end the game.

While the loss hurts, it’s also a major building block for a team which lost a large group of senior leaders.

Those who graduated accounted for 43 of Coupeville’s 52 touchdowns during last season’s run to a league title and trip to the state playoffs.

Playing under sunny skies Friday, four days before the first day of school, the Wolves started multiple sophomores such as Anderson and Aiden O’Neill, as well as freshman lineman Riley Lawless.

Wolf coaches Bennett Richter (left) and Brett Casey discuss strategy. (Jackie Saia photo)

And, while the final result will go in the books as a loss, second year CHS coach Bennett Richter came away largely pleased with what he saw.

“Our young guys fought very hard,” he said. “Every time we started to fall behind, they fought their way back into the game.

“If we have this kind of fight in us in week one, I’m looking forward to what we’ll show as the season progresses.”

The game came down to a play here, a play there — a fumble here, a questionable pass interference call there.

Clean up the small errors, expand on the positives, and the Wolves can make some noise in the games ahead.

“We’ll get back to it, get the guys on track, and learn from tonight,” Richter said.

“We played a really good team, and kudos to them for making plays when they had to, but I don’t think the better team necessarily won.”

Coupeville got on the board first, taking the opening kickoff, then driving nearly the length of the field.

Johnny Porter, O’Neill, and Mikey Robinett carried the rushing load early, slicing ‘n dicing the Eagles defense.

That put Klahowya’s defenders on their heels, and Downes took advantage, with his second pass turning into a 46-yard touchdown.

Scrambling away from pursuit, he popped a pass onto O’Neill’s fingertips, then stepped back and watched as the quicksilver youngster weaved his way through nearly all 11 defenders.

Tack on a PAT from Anderson, and the Wolves had a 7-0 lead which would last into the second quarter.

Senior captain Peyton Caveness picked off a pass to prematurely end Klahowya’s first possession, but the Wolves were unable to tack on any more scores of their own, with two punts and a lost fumble keeping things close.

Peyton Caveness (8) was a force on defense. (Bailey Thule photo)

Coupeville’s defense denied the Eagles, refusing to allow the visitors to score on four plays from the five-yard line, but Klahowya eventually broke through on its third possession of the night.

A 30-yard scoring heave from Kealoha to Nathan West, followed by a conversion run from the rival QB, staked his squad to an 8-7 lead.

It wouldn’t hold, however, as the Wolves rallied late to surge back in front heading into halftime.

Coupeville forced a punt with under two minutes to play, before scoring thanks to a couple of wham-bam plays.

Downes hit Anderson for a 26-yard pass in which the ball hit a Klahowya player’s fingers, popped straight up into the sky, and was snatched away by “The Magic Man” as he tumbled backwards.

Two plays later Coupeville pulled off a double reverse, with O’Neill scampering in from 10 yards out with just eight seconds remaining before the break.

After kicking the PAT the first time, the Wolves opted to go for a two-point conversion, and came up short, a trend repeated on both of their second half touchdowns.

The third quarter was a back-and-forth affair, with Kealoha tossing another 30-yard scoring strike to push Klahowya ahead 15-13, before Downes hit the gas, covering 26 yards on a TD run to reclaim the lead at 19-15.

The Eagles notched their third touchdown pass on the first play of the fourth quarter, to get back in front at 22-19, before both teams came up big on defense.

Klahowya forced and recovered a fumble on the sideline, before Coupeville held strong on a fourth-and-six from the 14-yard line, denying Kealoha on a sprint for the marker.

That set up the frantic finale, with only one team guaranteed to come out truly happy. On this night, it was the visitors.

The Wolves showed big promise in week one. (Bailey Thule photo)

O’Neill’s two touchdowns give him three for his high school career, tying him with Johnny Porter for the lead among active Wolf players.

Meanwhile Logan Downes recorded his 20th and 21st touchdown passes, as he chases older brother Hunter, who owns the CHS career record of 35.

Coming off the last-second loss, Coupeville hits the road the next two weeks, traveling to South Whidbey Sept. 8 for The Bucket game, before visiting Sultan Sept. 15.

The Wolves return home Sept. 22 to face La Conner in the first of four Northwest 2B/1B League games as they aim to win back-to-back conference crowns for the first time in program history.

Mitchell Hall, seen here in his Coupeville days, remains fast. (Photo by Jon Roberts)

From a newbie to a veteran in one day.

Coupeville High School grad Mitchell Hall made his debut as a collegiate cross country runner Friday, finishing in the top half of the field at an event which drew 75 male harriers.

The scene was Terre Haute, Indiana, where the former Wolf and his new teammates at the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology hosted the RHIT Opener at the Lavern Gibson Course.

Hall finished the 5000 meter race in 18 minutes, 56.2 seconds, claiming 36th overall.

Connor Del Carmen, a junior from Earlham College, won the individual crown, while Rose-Hulman came out on top in the team standings, besting four other schools.

Saint Mary-of-the-Woods, Earlham, Webster, and Spalding rounded out the top five, with the Fightin’ Engineers defending their home turf.

Hall, a state meet veteran and Northwest 2B/1B League individual champ during his time at Coupeville, is one of 35 freshmen on the Rose-Hulman roster – the largest recruiting class of any college in the country.

The Fightin’ Engineers are next scheduled to compete Sept. 16 at the John McNichols Invitational.

Bow down to no one!

Alex Murdy went to the mountain top and took Wolf Nation with him. (Sandi Murdy photo)

It begins again.

Nine months of school sports, stretching from the first day of September to the last Saturday in May, starts Friday when Coupeville High School welcomes Klahowya to town for the season-opening football game.

After that, cross country, volleyball, and a newly co-ed soccer team join the fall fun, with basketball, track and field, baseball, softball, and tennis ahead as the 2023-2024 schedule plays out.

The Wolves are coming off one of the most-successful campaigns in school history, with three academic state titles, a state championship in the long jump for Alex Murdy, and numerous big moments at crunch time.

From Jonathan Valenzuela banking in a buzzer-beating three-ball to utterly destroy La Conner’s basketball fans, to CHS girls’ cross country sending its entire team to state for the first time since the ’80s, last year can stand tall.

As with any new year, the future is wide open. Anything can happen, and often does.

The community beat back two budget-related cuts which would have been hugely negative — convincing district officials to retain Willie Smith as Athletic Director, while funding another year of Jessica Caselden as Athletic Trainer.

Wolf Nation turned bad choices by the number crunchers into positives, rallying behind two leaders who help make sports so successful in Cow Town.

We should be justifiably proud that we stood up, as a community, and insisted athletics be a priority.

Not the only priority — education is why we build schools in the first place — but something which should be appreciated for the positive impact it has on students, coaches, fans, and the community itself.

The power of sports in the lives of Coupeville’s youth is something which can be concretely proven.

Athletics keep kids in school.

And once their butt is in that chair, it gives them a reason to keep working — to stay eligible, to get to play on a Friday night (or Tuesday afternoon).

Years later, at reunions or in chance encounters, it’s rare that two alumni share memories of a chemistry test or a driver’s lesson.

Both prepared them for the world and have undeniable value.

But an overwhelming number of the memories which truly endure are sports related.

From the varsity star to the last kid on the JV bench, it’s the games, the highs and lows, the memories from practices, bus rides, and ferry trips, which remain.

I was a middle of the road tennis player at Tumwater High School, but three decades later I can still smell the gas coming off of the courts in Aberdeen, the fuzzy yellow balls turning gritty and poofy thanks to local morons and their midnight shenanigans.

Or the time I beat a particularly obnoxious foreign exchange student at the home of one of our rich-school rivals, a group of my teammates hanging on the fence, screaming objectionable words while our coach stayed at the other end of the courts, pretending not to notice.

High school tennis players weren’t as polite in the ’80s as they are today…

But anyway, it’s why I hate to see some athletes sit out a season, or drop a sport, because they feel they need to start real life too soon.

You will likely have a job for a very long time. You’re gonna drive that car and be stuck in traffic jams, for a very long time.

But the chance to play sports is briefer than you may realize.

You’re gonna be a freshman, then look back up a moment later to realize you’re holding a rose to give to your mom on Senior Night.

Enjoy the ride while you’re on it. You have 12 high school seasons – use them wisely.

And do not apologize to any whiners who try and tell you athletics are overblown, or that I should write more about chess and quantum physics on a blog called … Coupeville Sports.

Now, with all due respect, the chances any of the current Wolves getting paid to play sports as an adult is beyond remote. I’ve seen it happen once in 30+ years.

This isn’t Texas football, or Indiana basketball, or California anything.

It’s not even Tumwater football, which was, and still is, its own minor religion.

Sports in Cow Town are small-town, small-school, is-that-deer-going-to-run-on-the-field-again events, both largely inconsequential in the grand scheme of things and epically important at the same time.

It is what you make of it. So make it big and make the moment last.

Be proud to wear a Wolf uniform. Be proud to cheer.

Don’t let anyone tell you it’s not important. Because it is, for a lot of people.

Whether you’re a player, a coach, a parent, a fan, a writer or photographer, or just someone who pauses for a moment to watch a few plays over the back fence, remembering your own childhood, you are part of something bigger than just yourself.

Crank up AC/DC doing Back in Black or Thunderstruck or Jump Around when House of Pain lets loose.

You are part of Wolf Nation, and you bow down to no one!

Coupeville freshmen (left to right) Myra McDonald, Dakota Strong, Haylee Armstrong, and Lexis Drake are ready for their debut. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The spikes are incoming.

Coupeville High School volleyball, which has racked up seven-straight winning seasons at the varsity level, is ready to kick off a new campaign.

The Wolves head to Oak Harbor Saturday for a jamboree, before hosting non-conference rival South Whidbey Sept. 6.

CHS, which has three consecutive second-place finishes since rejoining the Northwest 2B/1B League (trailing just four-time defending state champ La Conner) is at home for seven of its first nine matches.

Coupeville’s varsity squad is gunning for a league title.

The future is bright for the JV spikers.

Success breeds success.