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Backed by the Coupeville Booster Club, Wolf athletes are soaring. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“We need to keep this great organization healthy and vibrant.”

The Coupeville Booster Club has been at the forefront of Wolf athletics in recent years, providing financial support to high school and middle school coaches and athletes.

Particularly with budget cuts looming in the school district, the need for a group which can supplement what Coupeville schools provides for sports is huge.

The booster club, led by a group of parents and grandparents, many of whom are close to finishing their runs with the organization, has given the Wolves true bang for their buck.

The CBC annually awards eight $1,000 scholarships to graduating seniors, while also providing a yearly stipend of $1,900 per CHS team and $800 per CMS program.

The club has helped provide roses for Senior Night festivities, varsity letters for Wolf athletes, meal money and goodie bags for road trips, and numerous team improvement items.

These have ranged from literature and DVD’s to tarps, weight room equipment, batting cages, upgrades to school athletic fields and facilities, and t-shirts for cancer awareness nights.

The Wall of Fame in the CHS gym, which documents accomplishments from 100+ years of Coupeville athletics?

It wouldn’t exist without the support of the boosters, who provided the biggest financial contribution to its development, and continue to handle updates.

This spring alone, Wolf baseball, girls’ tennis, and track and field earned new plaques, for success in league, bi-district, tri-district, and state championships competition.

When school is back in session this September, current, former, and future CHS athletes will be able to look up and see Alex Murdy’s state title in the long jump commemorated, as well as a whole stack of new team titles.

That wall honors the past, drives current athletes to strive for their own success, and inspires future generations.

And it wouldn’t exist without the booster club.

Which is why it’s so important to keep the organization chugging along in high gear.

The club set its board for the 2023-2024 school year Thursday, with Gordon McMillan (President), Bob Martin (Vice President), Jon Roberts (Treasurer), and Mariah Madsen (Secretary) winning election.

All four are among the hardest-working volunteers in Wolf Nation and should be hailed for their commitment.

But, looking ahead, all four have announced the coming school year will be their last as leaders of the booster club.

Which is why new people have to step up.

A well-run booster club is too important to the continued success of Wolf athletics.

If others, particularly those whose children will be active athletes for years to come, make a commitment now, the future could be assured.

What does that commitment entail? That’s up to you.

The club would love to find people interested in being future board members, ones looking to follow McMillan, Martin, and Co. the way that group has followed those before them, like Wendi Hilborn, Fawn Gustafson, and Pam Pease.

Express an interest now, and you can shadow current leaders, learning how the sausage is made before you step into the role.

But maybe you don’t have the time or desire to be an inner circle member. Not a problem.

Volunteers of every size, shape, and calendar availability are needed.

Help with one project or all of them.

Be on the frontlines or behind the scenes as the club pulls together its annual auction dinner, which is returning from a pandemic hiatus.

Or be part of the booster club contingent at Mussel Fest, help with the appreciation dinner for Wolf athletes, sell swag at CHS games, or be the go-to person for those Senior Night roses.

You can do a little or a lot, be part of the public face of the organization, or be the invisible but deeply appreciated behind the scenes crew.

Every person, whether in for an hour or in for 24-7-365, helps the booster club soar.

And, when the boosters soar, the athletes soar. A real circle of life type of thing, fueled by all of us.

“I trust that we all recognize that the booster club is a vital part of the school community,” Gordon McMillan said. “To the athletic department, the athletes, and the school district in general.

“It would be a shame to have the CBC shrink, much less go away.”

 

To get involved, contact the booster club today at coupevillebc@gmail.com.

Aiden O’Neill came up huge in the final moments Wednesday in a summer ball win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

God’s chosen sport was in full bloom Wednesday night.

Basketball, of the early summer variety, was on the schedule, and Coupeville High School’s boys’ hoops squads were in action on their home hardwood.

Hosting Island rivals Oak Harbor and South Whidbey, the Wolves won two of three, pulling out a thriller in the JV game and splitting a pair of varsity tilts.

Ultimately, summer ball, with each game boasting two 20-minute halves with a running clock until the final 120 seconds, is more about improvement and growth than wins and losses.

“The boys are playing well together,” said CHS varsity coach Brad Sherman.

“And it’s summer, so we’re getting to see new groups play together and try some new stuff. It’s fun!”

The Wolves, who return most of their roster from this past winter, are scheduled to play in a variety of scrimmages and tourneys this summer, as well as attend a team camp at Gonzaga University.

 

How Wednesday’s games played out:

 

JV:

Coupeville scored the final six points to pull out a 37-36 win in a game with Oak Harbor where it led by eight early, then trailed by five late.

Down 36-31 with the clock running out, the Wolves had no room for error.

So, they played to perfection.

Jack Porter rolled down the baseline to knock down a bucket, before CHS clamped down on defense.

Oak Harbor was called for a crucial offensive foul with 36 ticks remaining — a Wildcat bowling over a Wolf defender with a resounding crunch — and Coupeville responded.

Aiden O’Neill buried a three-ball to knot the game at 36-36, his second trey in the game’s final moments, then came back around to knife the Wildcats with a game-icing free throw with six seconds on the clock.

The furious finale capped a game of extremes, as Coupeville rolled early, only to see Oak Harbor crawl back into the game behind a hail of three-balls.

Hunter and Hurlee Bronec had the hot touch early, combining for seven points as the Wolves built a 9-1 lead.

The Wildcats didn’t break however, closing the half on a 13-4 run, with a pullup jumper right before halftime pushing them out in front 16-15.

Coupeville trailed for much of the second half, briefly knotting things at 26-26 before Oak Harbor once again threatened to pull away for good.

O’Neill’s late heroics, which also included a note-perfect pass to set up Hunter Bronec for a key layup, kept the Wolves alive, with everything going exactly to script in the waning moments.

Jack Porter paced CHS with a game-high 14 points, with Hunter Bronec (8), O’Neill (7), Hurlee Bronec (4), Landon Roberts (2), and Mikey Robinett (2) also scoring.

Yohannon Sandles, Johnny Porter, and Timothy Nitta also saw floor time for the Wolves.

 

Varsity Game #1:

Blowout city, as Coupeville came out hot and never cooled off, thumping South Whidbey 47-23.

The Falcons actually scored the first bucket of the game, before the Wolves unleashed hardwood hell on their neighbors.

Logan Downes poured in 13 of his game-high 18 points during a game-busting 26-7 run, which also featured a couple of sweet buckets off the fingertips of Cole White and a beautiful hustle play by William Davidson.

The cerebral big man slid between a pair of Falcons to snatch away a rebound, before pivoting and firing a gorgeous outlet pass to Chase Anderson, who was so far ahead of the defense South Whidbey needed binoculars to watch the ensuing layup.

William Davidson, eyeballing the cameraman, is an invaluable role player. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Up 26-13 at the half, the Wolves went deep into their bench, while continuing to push their advantage.

Downes singed the nets on a corner three-ball, after pulling off a shimmy-and-go move which left his defender parked six rows up into the bleachers.

After that, he left the scoring up to the young guns fighting for roster spots, with Jack Porter and Hunter Bronec spilling sweat while dominating in the paint.

White finished with eight to back up Downes and his 18, while Anderson dropped in six points.

Nick Guay (4), Porter (4), Bronec (4), Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim (2), and Davidson (1) rounded out the scoring, while Zane Oldenstadt and Ryan Blouin were aggressive on defense.

 

Varsity Game #2:

Coupeville’s top squad returned to the floor mere moments after wiping out South Whidbey, while Oak Harbor’s main crew was fresh and playing for the first time.

Ultimately, that proved to be the difference, as the Wildcats held on for a 55-48 win.

The visitors don’t have much height, but they are quick, and threatened to bust the game open early.

Trailing 24-12 and scrabbling a bit, Coupeville rediscovered its mojo, closing the first half on a 10-0 tear.

Downes and White combined to provide the offensive fireworks, while Davidson generated the loudest audience reaction of the night after drawing a charge down low.

Coupeville actually knotted the game up at 24-24, only to have its final bucket waved off for being a fraction too late.

Instead, the Wolves came out of the very-short halftime break down two and hung tough even as they begin to exhibit tired legs down the stretch.

The biggest killer in the second half was an inability to string together buckets, as CHS only notched back-to-back baskets once in the final 20 minutes.

That gave the Wildcats a bit of breathing room, and time and again, Oak Harbor hit shots when it needed them most, holding off its scrappy small-school rivals.

Blouin peppered the net for a pair of three-balls late, while White and Downes each made the twine jump on a long shot of their own.

Unfortunately, for Downes, his three-ball, coming on the game’s final play, was waved off like Davidson’s buzzer beater in the first half, falling victim to being .000001 of a second too late.

The Wolf senior-to-be still finished with a team-high 21 points, while White banked in 11 and Blouin knocked down eight.

Guay and Anderson rattled the rims for four apiece to finish off the attack.

Hayli Marley and the Class of 2030 is headed to middle school. (Photo courtesy Sarah Marley)

They’re movin’ on and movin’ up.

Coupeville Elementary School Principal David Ebersole sent 85(!!) fifth graders on to their next destination Wednesday afternoon.

The Class of 2030 made the transition in their new home, during a ceremony in the high school’s PAC.

With the festivities complete, the young Wolves exited as sixth graders, set to start a three-year run as middle school students.

In the class are race car champs (Finley Helm), horse show champs (Abbie Moss) and the granddaughter (Hayli Marley) of my first-ever Videoville customer back in the day, Kathy Marley.

Which one will do something remarkable in the athletic world and make me consider, for a hot moment or two, of referring to them as “The Chosen One,” before common sense (and Willie Smith) makes me think twice?

Only time will tell.

 

The CHS Class of 2030:

Krystina Adams
Ava Alford
Vincent Alguire
Zariyah Allen
Rosemary Allred
Zayne Atkinson
Serena Balder
Xander Beaman
Braxton Beshear
Sophie Booten
Melody Boyd
Malachi Chapa
Astoria Coles
Adrianna Collins-Diaz
Annabelle Cundiff
Tristan Dearmond
Payton Dugger
Domonic Durbin
Diesel Eck
Clarence Famiglietti
Samuel Ferguson
Aubrey Flowers
Mila Gesing
Hazel Goldman
Andrea Gonzalez
Emma Green
Sophia Greene
Viktoria Grieves
Toby Hamm
Finley Helm
Paige Hill
Samantha Howard
Rhylee Inman
Addison Jacobson
Marina Jadwin
Isidora Jimenez Campos
Rocky Jorgensen
Sabrina Judnich
Calvin Kappes
Claire Lachnit
Peyton Larocque
Ariella Lee-Spaulding
Maverick-Chase Light
Jacob Lujan
Isaac Marchese
Hayli Marley
Mario Martinez
Sarah McCune
Joseph McGraw
Maxwell Meyer
Caiden Micolichek
Kaleigha Millison
Kaylee Moore
Abigail Moss
Maddex Myles
Braden Oswald
Brenna Phay
Pria Powell
Annaliese Powers
Henry Purdue
Vicky Quiroga Rivera
Emily Rains
Kamden Ratcliff
Javen Register
Sadie Rich
Joshua Richards
Zayne Roos
Sawyer Rudat
Ceiba Rusch
Jack Schofield
Archer Schwarz
River Simpson
Scarlett Spencer
Treyshawn Stewart
Kale Swarm
Brooklynne Thompson
Joseph Tuff
Cameron Van Dyke
Josue Vicente
Arianna Vinson
Lincoln Wagner
Maverick Walling
Ethan Walsh
Aiden Wheat
Farrin Workman

Coupeville High School coaches Bennett and Megan Richter await the arrival of the progeny. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Maybe this one I really will get to call “The Chosen One.”

When Coupeville High School girls’ basketball coach (and three-time CHS Female Athlete of the Year) Megan Smith wed Wolf football guru Bennett Richter, two empires united.

And now, unto to CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith, AKA “Pops,” shall be born another grandchild who will one day be a standout Coupeville athlete.

So it is written.

For those following along, news of an impending baby swept through Cow Town, and now, the answer to the question proffered by every Wolf athlete.

Shall it be a boy or shall it be a girl?

To the delight of most of the CHS girls’ basketball team, it shall be a girl.

 

Teacher extraordinaire Christi Messner hands out hugs on a sunny day. (Phoenix Da Costa-Ford photo)

It’s the first of many milestones, school-wise.

Coupeville’s kindergartners got their walking papers Wednesday, and now head off to 1st grade in the fall.

But before they went, the future leaders of our town snagged awards, hugs, and a chance to get page hits for their local sports blogger.

That’s a win-win in my book.

One of the grandsons of the legendary Bob Fasolo rolls on to new adventures. (Photo courtesy Alexa Glover)

“I’m outta here!!” (Photo courtesy Sandi Murdy)

“Why yes, we would like our photo taken.” (Phoenix Da Costa-Ford photo)