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Savina Wells, circa spring 2022. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

If she was still in Coupeville, she’d be two inches off the school record.

Of course, Savina Wells, onetime Wolf supernova, now lives in Florida, where she’s a sophomore at Fernandina Beach High School.

So, while her current accomplishments have no impact on the CHS track and field record board, her high-flying exploits still reverberate with her Whidbey fan club.

Wells cleared the high jump bar at an even five feet Thursday, tying her PR, to win a title at the district meet, and advance to regionals.

The CHS all-time mark for girls, set by Yashmeen Knox in 1999, is 5-02.

Wells has also vied in the long jump and 100 in her first season at Fernandina Beach, after delivering strong volleyball and basketball campaigns.

While growing up in Coupeville, Savina, younger sister of fellow Wolf stars Ulrik and Izzy Wells, was a marquee player in multiple sports.

Volleyball, basketball, softball, track and field, and doing cartwheels across the little league fields at Rhododendron Park — she was the undisputed queen.

And might have been referred to as “The Chosen One” in stories written at 2:00 AM by overly excitable bloggers.

Or at least that’s the rumor.

Carlota Marcos-Cabrillo has fun in the sun. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a clean sweep. Sort of.

The Coupeville High School track and field team won every event at a home meet Wednesday, though that came with a wrinkle.

The Coupeville Classic Invitational was a late addition to the calendar, created to give Wolf coaches a chance to honor their 26 seniors.

It was also an opportunity to get all their athletes back in action after a 10-day break between meets, even if the Wolves were the only team on the oval.

And finally, the event gave CHS coaches and helpers a chance to work out the kinks prior to hosting multiple teams during the district meet in May.

Competing against their teammates under sunny skies, the Wolves seized the opportunity, combining to post 69 PR’s.

That included the team’s first foray into the world of pole vaulting this season.

Carly Burt, Cael Wilson, and Adrian Cunningham made their debuts in the event, with school record holder Jordan Ford helping coach.

“Old school” pole vaulter Jordan Ford imparts wisdom to a new generation.

Coupeville returns to action this Saturday, traveling to Snohomish for the GearUp Eason Invitational.

That meet currently lists 92 schools planning to attend, drawing teams from Washington, Oregon, and British Columbia.

 

Wednesday’s results:

 

GIRLS:

100 — Monroe Myles (1st) 13.31; Issabel Johnson (2nd) 14.34 *PR*; Isabella Gaspio (3rd) 14.62 *PR*; Carlota Marcos-Cabrillo (4th) 15.10; Alysia Burdge (5th) 15.15; Anna Annunziato (6th) 15.46; Frankie Tenore (7th) 17.00 *PR*

200 — Claire Mayne (1st) 28.92 *PR*; Gwen Crowder (2nd) 32.25 *PR*; Noelle Western (3rd) 32.53 *PR*

400 — Lyla Stuurmans (1st) 1:05.00; Aleera Kent (2nd) 1:09.00 *PR*; Ayden Wyman (3rd) 1:12.09 *PR*

800 — Stuurmans (1st) 2:43.69 *PR*; Kent (2nd) 2:53.12

100 Hurdles — Mayne (1st) 17.41 *PR*; Katie Buskala (2nd) 22.47; Tenore (3rd) 23.53 *PR*; Crowder (4th) 26.35 *PR*

300 Hurdles — Mayne (1st) 58.00; Crowder (2nd) 1:07.28

4 x 100 Relay — M. Myles, Ryanne Knoblich, Mayne, Carly Burt (1st) 55.35

4 x 200 Relay — Burt, Knoblich, A. Wyman, Stuurmans (1st) 2:02.39

4 x 400 Relay — Stuurmans, Knoblich, A. Wyman, M. Myles (1st) 4:38.25

Shot Put — Carolyn Lhamon (1st) 33-11.50 *PR*; Katie Marti (2nd) 26-07; Reese Wilkinson (3rd) 24-07.50; Erica McGrath (4th) 22-05.00; Anna Myles (5th) 21-08.75 *PR*; Desi Ramirez (6th) 19-09.75

Discus — Lhamon (1st) 91-01; Wilkinson (2nd) 89-01 *PR*; Marti (3rd) 86-09 *PR*; McGrath (4th) 83-02 *PR*; Taygin Jump (5th) 80-03 *PR*; Ramirez (6th) 58-03 *PR*; A. Myles (7th) 57-04; Jackie Contreras (8th) 47-09 *PR*

Javelin — Marti (1st) 100-04 *PR*; Jump (2nd) 89-10; Burdge (3rd) 62-09; Contreras (4th) 55-06 *PR*; Wilkinson (5th) 52-03; Crowder (6th) 42-05; Marcos-Cabrillo (7th) 36-06; Lavinia Tomba (8th) 25-01 *PR*; Delanie Lewis (9th) 23-10

High Jump — Knoblich (1st) 4-10; Buskala (2nd) 4-04 *PR*; Burdge (3rd) 3-10 *PR*; Marcos-Cabrillo (4th) 3-08

Pole Vault — Burt (1st) 6-06 *PR*

Long Jump — Burt (1st) 13-09; Buskala (2nd) 13-03 *PR*; Tenore (3rd) 11-03; Lewis (4th) 10-10; Sara Omega (5th) 10-09 *PR*; Valentina Nadela (6th) 10-06; Annunziato (7th) 10-02; Tomba (8th) 9-02 *PR*

 

BOYS:

100 — Dominic Coffman (1st) 11.36 *PR*; Nehemiah Myles (2nd) No time listed; Tim Ursu (3rd) 11.47; Tate Wyman (4th) 12.00 *PR*; Preston Epp (4th) 12.00 *PR*; Hank Milnes (6th) 12.56 *PR*; Matthew Kuzma (7th) 13.69 *PR*

200 — Nick Guay (1st) 24.06; Reiley Araceley (2nd) 24.53; P. Epp (3rd) 25.12; N. Myles (4th) 25.56; Adrian Cunningham (5th) 26.34; Milnes (5th) 26.34 *PR*; Alex Merino-Martinez (7th) 27.16 *PR*; Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim (8th) 27.50 *PR*; Easton Green (9th) 27.78 *PR*; Kris Sturtevant (10th) 28.50

400 — Milnes (1st) 58.09 *PR*; Cunningham (2nd) 1:00.00 *PR*; Anthony Smolen (3rd) 1:00.84; Simpson-Pilgrim (4th) 1:04:00; Kuzma (5th) 1:05.00 *PR*

800 — Ezra Boilek (1st) 2:22.07; Cameron Epp (2nd) 2:25.94; Malachi Somes (3rd) 2:27.05 *PR*; Ezekiel Allen (4th) 2:31.92

1600 — Somes (1st) 5:04.00; George Spear (2nd) 5:49.00; Allen (3rd) 5:52.00 *PR*; Green (4th) 6:02:00 *PR*

3200 — Mitchell Hall (1st) 10:31.00 *PR*; C. Epp (2nd) 11:37.00; Spear (3rd) 12:19.00

110 Hurdles — Araceley (1st) 17.69 *PR*; Aidan Wilson (2nd) 17.94 *PR*; Cael Wilson (3rd) 18.16 *PR*

300 Hurdles — T. Wyman (1st) 45.35

4 x 100 Relay — UrsuT. Wyman, N. GuayCoffman (1st) 45.53; N. Myles, Cunningham, C. WilsonP. Epp (2nd) 51.69

4 x 400 Relay — Boilek, T. Wyman, Araceley, C. Epp (1st) 4:06.66

Shot Put — Kai Wong (1st) 36-04.75 *PR*; Josh Upchurch (2nd) 35-02.75; Zane Oldenstadt (3rd) 34-10.50 *PR*; Zac Tackett (4th) 33-10.25; Josh Guay (5th) 20-11.50; Nick Shelly (6th) 19-10

Discus — Tackett (1st) 120-07; Oldenstadt (2nd) 103-00 *PR*; C. Epp (3rd) 90-10 *PR*; A. Wilson (4th) 90-09 *PR*; Wong (5th) 83-05; Upchurch (6th) 82-01; J. Guay (7th) 76-06 *PR*; Shelly (8th) 68-08 *PR*

Javelin — Somes (1st) 108-10 *PR*; Upchurch (2nd) 103-07 *PR*; Wong (3rd) 98-08 *PR*; Shelly (4th) 93-10 *PR*; Boilek (5th) 88-07; J. Guay (6th) 54-06

High Jump — Coffman (1st) 5-10; N. Guay (1st) 5-10; C. Wilson (3rd) 5-06 *PR*; Simpson-Pilgrim (4th) 5-00; Spear (5th) 4-06 *PR*

Pole Vault — C. Wilson (1st) 8-03 *PR*; Cunningham (2nd) 7-00 *PR*

Long Jump — A. Wilson (1st) 19-07 *PR*; Alex Murdy (2nd) 18-10; N. Myles (3rd) 17-06 *PR*; Merino-Martinez (4th) 16-05; Green (5th) 15-07 *PR*; Sturtevant (6th) 14-06 *PR*; Allen (7th) 12-08

Triple Jump — A. Wilson (1st) 42-00 *PR*; Cunningham (2nd) 35-01 *PR*; Milnes (3rd) 34-11.75; Araceley (4th) 34-11.50

The largest CHS track team in recent memory.

Chase Anderson deals. (Morgan White photo)

Hit and run like the wind, through the wind.

Overcoming another brutal bout of prairie weather Thursday, the Coupeville High School varsity baseball squad used booming bats, fleet feet, and nimble work on defense to stagger the top team in the Northwest 2B/1B League.

Riding inside-the-park home runs from seniors Jonathan Valenzuela and Scott Hilborn, and a dandy pitching performance from fab frosh Chase Anderson, the Wolves bounced visiting Mount Vernon Christian 5-1.

The victory, Coupeville’s sixth in its last seven games, nets Steve Hilborn’s team a season split with the Hurricanes and pulls the defending NWL champs a half-game back of MVC.

The Wolves, who have already clinched the #1 playoff seed among the league’s 2B teams, are 8-1 in conference action, 10-4 overall heading into a road trip Saturday to Orcas Island.

Mount Vernon Christian falls to 9-1 in league, 9-3 overall.

The first time the Hurricanes and Wolves clashed, back on March 30, MVC made off with a 12-7 win.

This time around, with a bone-chilling prairie wind swirling, howling, and slapping splatters of rain into the faces of fans, it was a different tale.

Coupeville grabbed the lead early, led from start to finish, and got big contributions from nearly everyone in uniform.

Anderson went the distance on the bump, scattering three hits while whiffing seven Hurricanes.

The young hurler, already in his second season as a varsity regular after debuting last season as an 8th grader, is made for the spotlight, even on a cloudy day.

Twice he faced bases loaded jams, and both times he calmly backhanded the Hurricanes and strolled back to the dugout, a smile on his face.

The first dance with the devil came in the top of the first inning, with Anderson jamming the hitter and forcing a weak grounder to shortstop Cole White, who flipped the ball to Valenzuela at second for out #3.

After buzzing through the Hurricanes 1-2-3 in three of the next four innings, and giving up a single, solitary run in the fourth, “The Magic Man” found himself briefly in danger in the top of the sixth.

A couple of walks and an error loaded the bags, but Anderson wasn’t having it.

The bags were juiced, the count was full, and the MVC batter was looking to carve away at Coupeville’s 4-1 lead.

Instead, all the Hurricane saw was a blur, as he swung from the heels and connected with nothing but the prairie breeze, Anderson’s pitch smacking into Scott Hilborn’s glove as the umpire punched him out.

After that, the seventh inning was sweet and short, with MVC hitting three consecutive groundouts to end the game.

One was a comebacker to Anderson, another a short chopper which freshman third-baseman Camden Glover plucked off the grass, firing a BB to Peyton Caveness, stretching out at first.

The final bouncer went to Caveness, who waved off two of his teammates as he easily beat the incoming Hurricane to the bag to seal the deal.

Coupeville got on the board quickly, sending two runners across the plate in the bottom of the first.

Scott Hilborn led off with a single, one of three hits he had on the day, Anderson dropped a beautiful sacrifice bunt, and then Valenzuela and Glover whacked back-to-back RBI base hits.

Valenzuela, never breaking stride, motored into third with the first of his three extra-base hits, while Glover scorched a run-scoring single to left to make it 2-0.

The Wolves had a chance to add more, loading the bases after Caveness was plunked with a wayward pitch and Coop Cooper swatted a single to left.

But it wasn’t to be, as a wild pitch came off the backstop faster than the Wolves expected, allowing the MVC catcher to snag the ball and sprint to tag Glover as he rumbled home.

Jonathan Valenzuela, pitching in an earlier game, belted two triples and a home run Thursday, while playing lights-out defense at second base. (Morgan White photo)

Coupeville stretched the lead to 3-0 in the third, with Valenzuela, still swattin’ lasers and running wild, cracking a leadoff inside-the-park home run.

The ball splashed down to Earth in the farthest corner of right field, and the throw back in arrived long after the Wolf senior was already getting high-fives from his bench.

Not content to do it just once, CHS got another longball in the fifth inning, with Hilborn cranking a shot to center field and motoring around the bags while all the MVC coach could do was scream in despair, his words swept away by the never-ending breeze.

With Anderson in control, and his defense playing inspired ball — Valenzuela had a gold glove day at second — the Wolves didn’t need any more runs, but they got one anyway.

Caveness reached on an error to lead off the sixth, before Johnny Porter smoked a pinch-hit RBI single to right field to cap the 5-1 win.

Johnny Porter waits for his pitch. (Morgan White photo)

 

Thursday stats:

Peyton Caveness — One walk
Coop Cooper — One single
Camden Glover — One single
Scott Hilborn — Two singles, one home run
Johnny Porter — One single
Jonathan Valenzuela — Two triples, one home run

CHS senior Mitchell Hall checks out his college letter of intent. (Willie Smith photos)

Hall signs autographs for his teammates.

Wolf coaches and athletes came out in support of their college-bound teammate.

Mitchell Hall will be a Fightin’ Engineer.

The Coupeville High School senior signed a letter of intent Thursday to run cross country next fall for the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.

The NCAA D-III school, located in Terra Haute, Indiana, is a member of the Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference.

Rose-Hulman kicks off a new cross country season with a home meet Sept. 1 on the LaVern Gibson Championship Course.

Hall signed his letter of intent a day after he and his CHS track and field teammates celebrated Senior Night.

He entered the week ranked in the Top 10 in two events among all 2B athletes.

Hall is currently the 5th fastest male runner in the 1600 and is part of a 4 x 400 Wolf relay squad ranked #9 in its classification.

A four-year cross country runner for CHS, he advanced to the state championships as both a junior and senior.

In addition, Hall won the boys individual title at the Northwest 2B/1B League meet in his final go-round.

At Rose-Hulman, the speedy Wolf will join a program which claimed the league title in 2022 and boasted 32 runners on its roster last fall.

The Fightin’ Engineers rep rose and white colors, with Rosie the Elephant holding the spotlight as school mascot.

RHIT was started in 1874 and boasts a curriculum focusing “on both career preparation and undergraduate-driven research in STEM-fields.”

Founder Chauncey Rose launched the school “to provide technical training after encountering difficulties in local engineer availability during construction of his railroads.”

Noted alumni include Barzilla W. Clark, the former Governor of Idaho, Art Nehf, who pitched 15 seasons in Major League Baseball, and Abe Silverstein, who was “responsible for the conception, design, and construction of America’s first supersonic propulsion wind tunnels.”

Sara Omega (left) and Anna Annunziatio lead off a collection of seniors. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They could fill up a stadium.

Coupeville High School track and field honored 26 seniors Wednesday — 13 girls and 13 boys.

Photo-wise we did pretty well, with pics of 24 of 26 being sent my way.

So, a quick shoutout to Mercedes Kalwies-Anderson and Jermiah Copeland, who are not pictured, but were also part of what is likely the biggest group of seniors to ever come through a Wolf sports program.

Claire Mayne

Taygin Jump

Cristina McGrath (center)

Lavinia Tomba (center)

Gwen Crowder

Anna Myles

Katie Buskala

Carolyn Lhamon (second from left)

Ryanne Knoblich

Valentina Nadela (second from left)