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“Where do you think you’re going??” (Julie Wheat photos)

It slipped away.

The Coupeville High School football team carried a lead into the halftime locker room Friday night, but couldn’t quite seal the deal in its home opener.

Up 13-8 on visiting Cascade (Leavenworth), the Wolves, who lost starting quarterback Chase Anderson to a first-half injury, eventually fell 30-19 in the non-conference clash at Mickey Clark Field.

The loss drops Coupeville to 0-2 on the season, with a road trip to Granite Falls up next on the schedule.

The 2B Wolves play 1A schools in five of their first six games this season.

The Wolves chase down a Cascade runner.

After being limited to a single touchdown by week #1 foe Annie Wright, Coupeville hit pay dirt three times on its home turf.

Anderson broke off a massive 70+ yard touchdown run, scampering away from a group of Cascade tacklers, with Liam Blas and Davin Houston also crashing into the end zone for six points apiece.

It was Houston’s second score of the campaign.

With Anderson sidelined, backup quarterback Nathan Coxsey saw his first extended tour of duty under center and the sophomore held up well in the spotlight.

Marquette Cunningham enjoys his job.

Davin Houston looks for running room.

Lexis Drake defends the net in an earlier match. (Julie Wheat photo)

Long day, big benefits.

After traveling to Yakima for the SunDome Volleyball Festival, the Coupeville High School varsity spikers sizzled in the spotlight Friday.

The young Wolves won all three of their matches in pool play, before putting together a valiant effort against two top-flight programs in bracket action.

First-year CHS head coach Scout Smith came away from the trip pleased with how her players handled life on the same courts where the state tourney is held each year.

“A really good experience for a young team,” she said. “They showed some really great fight and determination.

“Lots of winning and lots of learning,” Smith added. “The coaching staff really liked some of the things we saw and were excited to learn areas we can continue to improve.”

The Wolves are on the prowl in Yakima. (Scout Smith photo)

Coupeville opened play by bouncing Granger (25-19, 25-19), Inchelium (25-13, 25-5), and West Valley (26-24, 22-25), advancing to the top bracket in the prestigious tourney.

The Wolves fell 25-10, 25-14 to Cashmere, and 25-15, 25-19 to Northwest Christian in a preview of the kind of teams they would square off with if they earn a trip to the big dance in November.

For now, CHS returns to match play Tuesday, Sept. 16, when it travels to Friday Harbor for the Northwest 2B/1B League opener.

 

Tournament stats:

Capri Anter — 11 digs, 1 assist, 2 aces
Haylee Armstrong — 12 kills, 21 digs, 1 assist, 7 aces
Teagan Calkins — 29 kills, 22 digs, 2 block assists, 5 aces
Ari Cunningham — 5 kills, 13 digs, 1 assist, 1 block assist, 3 aces
Lexis Drake — 9 kills, 9 digs, 3 block assists
Adeline Maynes — 1 dig, 5 aces
Dakota Strong — 10 kills, 1 dig, 1 block assist
Tenley Stuurmans — 4 kills, 10 digs, 56 assists, 1 block assist, 18 aces
Sydney Van Dyke — 1 kill

A group hug before they go wreck some fools. (Scout Smith photo)

Some bum who used to hang around the press box in Cow Town. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s been 44 days since I’ve seen the prairie.

Friday night brings with it the first home football game for Coupeville High School, and it will be the first one I’ve missed out on in at least a decade-and-a-half.

When the Wolves take the field to square off with Cascade (Leavenworth), the ball flying off the kicker’s foot at a few minutes after 6:00 PM, I won’t be in the press box. Instead, I’ll be in steamy, bug-encrusted West Virginia.

This blog started in 2012, and I’ve written about Coupeville athletics off and on since 1990, meaning I’ve spent many a night marinating in mid-50’s weather, one eye scanning the horizon for fog, the other for deer wandering on to the playing field.

My notebook and roster at hand, perhaps a chocolate chip cookie or three within easy reach, thanks to clock operator Joel Norris, as another chapter of small town life plays out.

There have been a handful of good CHS football teams, and a lot of mediocre ones (at least in terms of wins and losses) over the years, and yet the Friday night (or sometimes Saturday night) experience stands alone for most sports writers.

There is a buzz in the air, even during late-season matchups between teams stuck at the bottom of the league standings, as a cross section of Cow Town stuffs itself into the stadium.

Some come to watch the game. Others to see, and be seen.

Football diehards or casual bystanders, overflowing from the stands, with packs of people camped out around the track oval, on the grass, and endlessly wandering around.

Basketball is God’s Chosen Sport. Of this there can be no denial.

Others will speak of obsessions with softball, or track and field, or volleyball, or any sport played by someone wearing the red and black and white of the Wolves.

But it is football, whether it’s a clash between successful teams or struggling squads, which makes the school the most money, puts the most butts in the stands, and is the great unifier.

Arrive early, as I always have in an effort to grab a parking spot when the grabbing is good, and you can watch as things develop.

Sunlight fades — at least when you get deeper into the season — as the stands fill up. Cheerleaders congregate in small groups, then as a team, while the players begin warmups.

Young children emulate the current high schoolers, then grow up to become those high schoolers, with a new group of kids moving into place, as the never-ending circle continues.

Neighbor sees neighbor. Gossip flows. Candy is eaten (at least in the press box).

Down below, photos are snapped, as high school yearbook students make their move, or parents angle for a shot, or, sometimes, semi-pro snappers try to adjust to the shadows beginning to be cast by the stadium lights.

Mickey Clark Field is seven days short of its 50th anniversary — the first game played there came on Sept. 19, 1975 and featured a visit from Chimacum.

The Wolves will be in Granite Falls next week, but play at home tonight and home the following Friday (Sept. 26) against Cedar Park Christian-Bothell.

If I had stayed on the prairie, and not reduced my worldly belongings to what could be fit inside a duffel bag and gone to visit the nephews 2,800 miles away in late July, I would have pushed hard for the anniversary to be celebrated in some way.

Following on the footsteps of the 101-year and 50-year celebrations for CHS boys’ and girls’ basketball, respectively, it would have made for a fitting tribute to all that football and cheer have brought to the community.

Especially since 2025 also marks the 35-year anniversary of the 1990 Wolf football squad, which went 9-0 in the regular season and hosted a memorable state playoff game on a particularly blustery prairie afternoon.

Without me there to encourage (chafe) those in charge, I haven’t heard word one about the moment being publicly noted. Which is a shame.

Over the course of this blog, I’ve written 12,000+ stories, while entertaining some readers and irritating others.

It’s a legacy. Might not be a perfect legacy, but it’s my legacy.

During my time in West Virginia, I’ve come to appreciate the state. It’s a perfectly fine place, if a little too warm and buggy when seen through the eyes of someone who’s put in 54 years in Washington state.

But it’s not the prairie.

Sometimes you have to go away to fully realize what you had. That seems to be the case for me.

I miss 50 degrees and overcast. I miss the breeze off of Penn Cove.

I miss having the library, the post office, the gas station, the grocery store, my bank, and the schools all sitting about half a mile from the duplex I called home for 20 years.

I miss — or will miss later today — being one of the first ones to walk behind the elementary school, then take the steps up to the press box at Coupeville’s football stadium, everything coming alive around me.

Guns ‘n Roses mixing with the Backstreet Boys on the pre-game soundtrack, if we’re lucky.

With House of Pain’s “Jump Around” on tap to make the stands shudder late in the game and Neal Diamond forever lurking, primed to deliver the opening lines of “Sweet Caroline” as teens everywhere anticipate their moment to carry the tune home.

The air beginning to crackle, with anticipation, with a sense of community, with a town gathering, a new set of tales to be told and recorded.

Me? Tonight? I’ll be 2,800 miles away.

I can tell you the final score afterwards, maybe even tick off a few scoring plays gathered from those in attendance.

Certainly not going to pay for NFHS and its crappy streaming service for a game which will end sometime around midnight, West Virginia time.

What I won’t be able to do tomorrow is to take you inside the stadium with me, to give life to the story, from things seen and heard in person. To transport you to the prairie.

And I will miss that.

Awesome in 2022, still awesome in 2025. Mia Farris (second from left) and Lyla Stuurmans (far right) always light up the court. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Heaton)

They were born to spike.

Former Coupeville High School supernovas Mia Farris and Lyla Stuurmans are off in college now, but they continue to fill up the stat sheet every time they step on a volleyball court.

Farris, a freshman at Whatcom College, has played in all eight of her team’s matches, racking up 25 kills, six assists, 75 digs, one solo block, six block assists, and nine service aces.

She leads the Orcas in digs, and is tied for top honors in most sets played, having graced the floor in 26 frames.

Meanwhile, fellow CHS Class of 2025 grad Stuurmans is firing off bombs as part of the volleyball squad at Skagit Valley College.

The former Northwest 2B/1B League MVP has played in 11 of 13 matches for SVC, with 66 kills, 29 digs, two solo blocks, 24 block assists, and 11 aces.

Tamsin Ward (18) celebrates a goal. (Julie Wheat photos)

The building blocks are in place.

Having revived the girls’ soccer program at Coupeville High School after a two-year absence, the young Wolves are busy learning under fire.

Lesson #2 came Wednesday afternoon on the prairie, as visiting Lopez Island sent Coupeville tumbling to a 7-1 loss.

While the defeat dropped the pitch warriors to 0-2 on the very young season, the final score was a bit deceptive.

“Our efforts did not depict our play,” said CHS coach Jasmine Ader. “Overall, I’m happy with our first two performances.

“We are moving the ball well and we are able to be dynamic in the final third.”

Paige Hill kicks it into overdrive.

Coupeville sent a fair amount of balls at the Lobos goal, raining down 28 shots on frame, but were denied by a stellar defensive effort from Lopez.

Freshman Tamsin Ward did break through, rattling home her fourth goal of the campaign off of an assist from senior captain Frankie Tenore.

With a road trip to La Conner on the books for Friday, Ader and her young squad — more than half the roster is comprised of 8th graders — will continue to strive for excellence.

“Once the Wolves have a healthy 15-person roster, success is endless,” Ader said. “The efforts that this team is putting in will have great rewards.

“Each day the Wolves are getting better individually and meshing together as a team.”

Andrea Gonzalez fights for position.