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Former Wolf hoops star Caleb Meyer, seen with dad Frank and big sis McKenzie, came back to town to coach the next generation of Coupeville basketball players. (Photo courtesy Meyer family)

God’s chosen sport is booming in Cow Town.

NBC Camps came to Coupeville in late July, with former Wolf hoops sensation Caleb Meyer among the coaches, drawing close to 40 players to the three-day skills event.

The camp, open to kids 8-12, offered participants 18 hours of training.

The appearance by Meyer, who played a crucial role in the CHS boys winning a league title and advancing to state during his senior season in 2022, was a special treat for the future Wolves.

And for his former coach, Brad Sherman, who was hanging around the gym snapping pics and watching the oldest of his four boys, Brady, fine-tune his own hardwood skills.

Caleb was one of the four coaches on staff at the camp,” said the CHS hoops guru. “That was fun to see.”

Caleb Meyer (in red shorts) works with young Coupeville basketball players. (Brad Sherman photos)

Lined up and ready to rumble.

The gym is alive with the sound of squeaking shoes.

Coupeville grad Mica Shipley (right) is back for a fourth year as an NCAA D-I cheerleader.

Seasoned vets and fresh-faced newbies.

There are at least six Coupeville High School grads set to play college sports this fall, and they run the gamut from freshmen to seniors.

Leading off the Wolf alumni is Mica Shipley, who will be in her fourth year as an NCAA D-I cheerleader at Eastern Washington University.

The high-flying cheer supernova has been a two-season star at EWU since she arrived on campus, helping anchor the Eagle squad through football and basketball season.

Joining her at the D-I level is Sean Toomey-Stout, a junior at the University of Washington.

A two-time member of the Pac-12 Academic Honor Roll, Maya’s twin brother played in six games for the Huskies last fall, including making an appearance in the Alamo Bowl.

“The Torpedo” made his trading card debut and became the first CHS grad to ever record stats for U-Dub football, which kicks off a new season Sept. 2 against Boise State.

Three other Wolves return as well.

Joey Lippo golfs at the University of Maine at Presque Isle, Ben Smith suits up for the football team at Eureka College in Illinois, and Lucy Sandahl gets back in the boat for Seattle Pacific University crew.

UMPI begins play Sept. 5, and Lippo, a senior, is also slated to return to the Owls baseball squad next spring.

Eureka football debuts at home Sept. 2.

There isn’t a public schedule posted yet for SPU crew, but if things stay true to tradition, Sandahl and her teammates will likely compete in a handful of regattas this fall.

The majority of the season unfolds for the Falcons in spring 2024.

Rounding out the Coupeville grads vying for glory this fall — unless I’m missing someone — is freshman Mitchell Hall, on the cross country squad at the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Indiana.

The Fightin’ Engineers kick off their season Sept. 1.

Ryan King, seen here working in Coupeville in 2016, is the new head football coach at Mount Baker Junior High. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Whidbey to Whatcom, and still killin’ it.

Coupeville grad Ryan King, a football captain who came back around to coach multiple sports at his alma mater, is the new head coach for the Mount Baker Junior High gridiron program.

An inductee into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, the burly lineman was a key player for the Wolves football program in the early 2000’s.

King was a captain as a senior in 2006 and helped lead the 2005 CHS squad, the last Cow Town gridiron team to post a winning record until Coupeville finally broke back through to the winning side in 2019.

Once he moved into coaching, the former Wolf worked as an assistant football coach at both the middle school and high school levels between 2011-2017.

He was also a head coach for Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball, where he worked with future high school stars like Chelsea Prescott, Genna Wright, and Mollie Bailey.

King was an assistant football coach in Mount Baker last fall, and now takes the reigns for a junior high program which feeds a high school which is consistently one of the best in a football-mad region.

“Very excited for this opportunity!” said the former Wolf.

There are two state berths available to Issabel Johnson and CHS spikers this season, after years of chasing just a lone ticket to the big dance. (Bailey Thule photo)

It’s a split decision.

Looking ahead at the 2023-2024 school year, with the first game set for September 1, it’ll tentatively be easier for two Coupeville programs to make it to the big dance, but harder for a third.

That’s because state tournament allocations issued to District 1, where the Wolves play, shift slightly for those three sports.

Odds are better for CHS volleyball and girls’ basketball, but worse for boys’ soccer, while all other sports remain the same from 2022-2023 to 2023-2024.

If, and that’s always a big if, the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association honors what it currently has listed on its website.

To be fair, if the number of schools in a classification playing a given sport radically changes year to year, things may logically shift.

To be unfair, in the very recent past, Coupeville and District 1 were told one thing, only to have the WIAA pull a switcheroo after the fact thanks to administrators from a different district crying.

Volleyball has been brutal, with District 1 and 2 combining to net just one state berth, with four-time defending 2B state champ La Conner sitting right next door.

Things should be more open this fall, with D1/2 getting two tickets to Yakima right after Hall of Fame Braves coach Suzanne Marble retired.

That carries over to girls’ basketball in the winter, with D1/2 also surging from one state berth to two, in the wake of La Conner losing a pack of stellar seniors.

The competition in boys’ soccer gets even more brutal however, as District 1 — which has produced back-to-back state 2B/1B champs — dips from four tickets to three.

The Northwest 2B/1B League, which jumps from seven teams to nine in the sport by picking up four outside schools for boys’ soccer, while Concrete and Darrington don’t play, has actually provided BOTH teams in the championship game the past two seasons.

Friday Harbor knocked off Orcas Island 2-1 last fall to claim its first title, a year after the Vikings upended Providence Classical Christian by the same score.

Hunter Bronec and Co. are seeking a return trip to state. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Cross country, tennis, and track and field operate in their own specialized world, where individuals can advance to state on their own, regardless of how their team does.

With that in mind, here’s the projected outlook for sports where teams advance to state only as teams:

 

Baseball: 

Coupeville was part of a 12-team 2B state tourney bracket this spring, based on 47 schools playing the sport.

District 1 and 2 combine for the postseason, with one state ticket at play.

 

Boys Basketball:

The Wolves narrowly missed out on a return trip to state last winter, falling just short of joining a 16-team tourney winnowed down from 55 schools.

District 1/2 had two tickets last time and has two tickets again in 2024.

 

Boys Soccer:

With 22 schools playing last fall, state had an ultra-exclusive eight-team bracket.

Half that tourney hailed from District 1, but this fall Coupeville’s league nets three tickets.

 

Football:

The Wolves made it to state for the first time since 1990 and are looking to head back.

With 45 teams playing last fall, it was a 12-team field.

One ticket last year, one ticket this year, so Coupeville has to defend its league title while battling Friday Harbor and La Conner.

 

Girls Basketball:

La Conner nabbed the lone District 1/2 berth in last winter’s 16-team field, which was drawn from 54 schools playing God’s chosen sport.

This time around, there’s two berths at play, putting an extra skip in third-year coach Megan Richter’s step.

 

Girls Soccer:

With 42 schools playing, the 2B/1B tourney was a 12-team affair last fall.

District 1 retains the one ticket it had last time, making everyone chase Mount Vernon Christian.

 

Softball:

A 12-team bracket, with 47 schools playing this past spring.

Win the conference crown and Coupeville gets to hit the road for a play-in game against a District 4 squad, making this perhaps the hardest route for a NWL team to earn a trip to state.

 

Volleyball:

There were 54 schools playing last fall, which translated to a 16-team state tourney.

One ticket in recent years, but finally D1/2 gets two invites this time around.

The women who make Wolf athletics hum are (l to r) Barbi Ford, Aimee Bishop, and Jessica Caselden. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This is for every person involved in Coupeville school athletics.

Every athlete. Every coach. Every support staff member. Every parent.

This is us, as a community, stepping up and making a statement.

A loud, clear call to arms — that we value the athletic trainer role, that we will not let budget cuts carve away at the safety of Coupeville’s teens, or their ability to be inspired by the success of one of their own.

Jessica Caselden is a Wolf through and through.

She grew up in the aisles of Videoville and on the ballfields and courts at Coupeville’s schools, part of a tight-knit group of young women.

As that group wanders into their (very early) 30’s, they have sunk their roots even deeper into the prairie from which they hailed.

Some have come home, like Jessica. Others were always here.

Together, they celebrate each other’s birthdays, their marriages, their achievements, with their children forming the next generation of Wolves.

One pack, forever united.

A lifelong bond. (Photo courtesy Kassie O’Neil)

Jessica graduated from CHS, went off into the world to gain knowledge and experience, then returned to Cow Town to become a teacher and athletic trainer at her alma mater.

She bought her childhood home, got married this summer, is in it for the long run.

Her impact has been immeasurable, even in a short time.

Having an athletic trainer on the sideline at games, one trained to respond quickly and calmly, should be a requirement at all schools.

The state requires an ambulance sitting by at prep football games, and yet, some of the scariest situations I have witnessed have come at seemingly “safe” sports such as basketball and softball.

When Coupeville administrators hired Jessica to fill the athletic trainer role before the start of the 2022-2023 school year, it was a smart decision in every way.

It was money well used, something she proved time and again as the seasons played out.

I have been covering sports on Whidbey, off and on, since 1990, and this past school year was the first I can remember in which CHS football didn’t lose a player to a season-ending injury.

Part of that is luck, certainly, and a share of the credit goes to a staff led by Bennett Richter, a group of new-age coaches who realize putting a premium on safety doesn’t have to derail your chance to win.

But do not discount Jessica’s contributions, from dealing immediately with on-field injuries, to working with players at practices, to always being available to answer questions and offer reassurances to parents.

Having an athletic trainer cuts down on injuries, prevents small setbacks from becoming major ones, and gives young athletes the same protections routinely provided to those playing at the college and professional levels.

Beyond that, Jessica is incredibly accessible, providing instruction and inspiration to the same athletes whose owie’s and boo-boo’s she tends to on a daily basis.

She is a caregiver and a role model, at a time of life when Wolf athletes need both.

And while she interacts with both teen boys and girls with a quiet grace, a friendly demeanor, and a welcoming aura, we need to acknowledge her special impact on the young women wearing CHS uniforms.

Coupeville, like most Washington state schools, didn’t offer many athletic outlets for its female students until Title IX forced changes in the ’70s.

Since then, Wolf girls have combined to win more league titles than their male counterparts, but they have done so with only a handful of women in positions of power.

Phyllis Textor and Lori Stolee worked as CHS athletic directors, and there have been a sprinkling of female coaches, from Toni Crebbin to Breanne Smedley, from Amy King to Ashley Menges and others.

Having a strong female presence on the sideline, in practice, in the classroom, is invaluable.

It reinforces the truth — any girl in Coupeville can be a success, a leader, an inspiration — whether they travel the world chasing professional basketball dreams or return to embrace their destiny on the prairie.

Prairie powerhouses. (Photo courtesy Mandi Black)

When budget cuts claimed the athletic trainer position, among the most outspoken were the Wolf softball players, who wrote letters to the school board and Coupeville administrators.

I understand we are in a financial bind, a place almost every school district finds itself in coming out of the pandemic, and that cuts have to be made.

This is not the position to slash, however.

It’s too important.

It goes right to the core of everything Coupeville wants to accomplish with its strategic plan.

“Connect with family and community.”

“Promote student and staff well-being.”

“Empower students.”

While the 2023-2024 budget, passed last Thursday, does not fund the athletic trainer position, we, as a community have a chance to change that.

The cost would be $8,600.

Coupeville Schools Superintendent Steve King confirmed in an email the district will accept a scholarship donation from an outside source, with the district retaining control over staffing the position.

CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith, who is the athletic trainer’s direct supervisor, confirmed the school wishes to retain Jessica in the position.

We, as a community, as Wolf Nation, can save this position, while making a clear statement to administrators they need to reevaluate the importance of an athletic trainer before embarking on the next budget battle.

The district needs to be all in, just like Jessica.

Our donations give administrators the time to find a way to make this work in the future, while protecting student/athletes in the present.

I call that a win-win.

 

To join the movement to save the Athletic Trainer position, pop over to:

https://www.gofundme.com/f/protect-inspire-wolf-athletes