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Run fast, run with joy

Ivy Rudat zips through the woods. (Jackie Saia photos)

They are Wolves, hear them roar.

The Coupeville Middle School girls cross country team defended its home turf Wednesday, winning a seven-team meet at Fort Casey State Park.

Elizabeth Bitting’s pack of gung-ho runners held off traditional powerhouses King’s and South Whidbey to claim the team title, placing three harriers in the top 10.

The Wolf boys finished third, with King’s on top of the leaderboard.

Granite Falls, Northshore Christian Academy, Sultan, and Lakewood rounded out the field, with 161 runners hitting the finish line during the 1.5-mile race.

Wednesday’s rumble in the woods was a preview of the season finale, as the same seven teams travel to South Whidbey Tuesday, Oct. 18 for the Cascade League Championships.

Coupeville’s runners wore pink wrist bands to show their support for the fight against breast cancer, and the meet was the first home one for the revived Wolf cross country program.

With Athletic Director Willie Smith off on an annual hunting trip, Bitting got huge help from Aimee Bishop, Barbi Ford, and Bob Martin, among many, and the event was a major success.

“It finally happened!” Bitting said. “The afternoon was beautiful! The sun was out, there was a slight breeze, and the crowds came out to cheer on all runners.

“Each and every one of our runners set a PR for our home course,” she added.

“I am so proud of each and every one of them!!!”

 

Kenneth Jacobsen was the fastest Wolf boy Wednesday afternoon.

 

Wednesday’s results:

 

GIRLS:

Lydia Price (6th) 10:19
Olivia Hall (8th) 10:40
Mikayla Wagner (9th) 10:41
Laken Simpson (12th) 11:16
Tirsit Cannon (14th) 11:31
Ivy Rudat (19th) 11:47
Marin Winger (22nd) 11:55
Allie Powers (25th) 12:27
Sage Stavros (26th) 12:33
Devon Wyman (49th) 14:06
Hailey Goldman (51st) 14:13
Arianna Cunningham (53rd) 14:35
Mary Western (54th) 14:37
Maci Wofford (60th) 15:55
Camilla Wolfe (64th) 17:06
Elizabeth Marshall (65th) 17:08
Emma McFadden (67th) 17:28
Alexandra Lo (73rd) 20:42
Savannah Niewald (74th) 20:56

 

BOYS:

Kenneth Jacobsen (11th) 9:38
Beckett Green (14th) 9:49
Axel Marshall (20th) 10:06
Roger Merino-Martinez (21st) 10:26
Nathan Niewald (24th) 10:36
Cyrus Sparacio (32nd) 10:57
Max Ohme (38th) 11:17
Johnathan Jacobsen (62nd) 13:07
Dylan Robinett (64th) 13:14
Isaiah Allen (70th) 13:45
Zach Blitch (73rd) 13:53
Andre Volanos-Gerber (78th) 15:30
Avery Eelkema (80th) 15:51

Zach Blitch guns for the finish line.

Caleb Meyer rumbles during his high school days. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hawthorne Wolfe smacks a base-hit.

Add two more to the list.

Coupeville High School Class of 2022 grads Caleb Meyer and Hawthorne Wolfe are joining the ranks of former Wolves playing college sports.

Meyer, a six-foot-two guard and the last heir to the Videoville legacy, is one of 15 players listed on the 2022-2023 men’s basketball roster at Skagit Valley College in Mount Vernon.

The Cardinals tip off Nov. 18 at the North/West Classic at Everett, with their season running through March.

A star athlete during his early days in Coupeville, Meyer attended Jackson High School from grades 9-11, before returning to his hometown for his senior year.

He was a crucial part of the most-successful Wolf boys basketball squad in decades, before advancing to the state meet in track and field.

Meyer keeps alive a Whidbey-to-Skagit tradition, with South Whidbey gunner Kody Newman the most recent alumni of The Rock to have played hoops for the Cardinals.

Wolfe, the floppy-haired Pistol Pete of Cow Town, was a four-year starter for Coupeville’s hoops squad who rained down 800 career points, even while Covid threw two of those seasons into turmoil.

But it’s baseball, where he was the Northwest 2B/1B League MVP last spring, which is drawing his early interest.

After tryouts, Wolfe made the roster for the club baseball team at Western Washington University, which plays in the spring.

The Vikings, who play at historic Joe Martin Field in Bellingham, compete in the National Club Baseball Association.

Western went all the way to the NCBA World Series in 2013, a season when one of their key players was Coupeville grad Jordan Wilcox.

The dynamic duo knocks it out of the park at graduation. (Morgan White photo)

With Meyer and Wolfe taking the next step, Coupeville currently has 13 active college athletes.

The other 11:

 

Ja’Tarya Hoskins 
Saint Martin’s University
Track and Field

 

Joey Lippo
University of Maine at Presque Isle
Baseball/Golf

 

Logan Martin
Central Washington University
Track and Field

 

Lucy and Sophie Sandahl
Seattle Pacific University
Crew

 

Mica Shipley
Eastern Washington University
Cheer

 

Ben Smith
Eureka College
Football

 

Emma Smith
University of Washington
Club Volleyball

 

Sean Toomey-Stout
University of Washington
Football

 

James Wood
Colorado State University
Club Co-Ed Soccer

 

Sarah Wright
Sewanee: University of the South
Softball

Pics you can dig

William “The Show Pony” Davidson stands tall while rockin’ pink jammies. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolf Nation represented.

Tuesday night the Coupeville High School volleyball teams put on a Dig Pink Night to raise money and awareness in the fight against breast cancer, and it was a success on all fronts.

The Wolves raised $940 for the Whidbey Health Foundation, thanks to ticket sales for raffle items.

Plus, both CHS spiker squads romped to straight-sets victories over visiting Concrete, with a raucous student section and the Wolf cheer squad combining to raise the roof.

Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Famers Aimee Bishop (left) and Toni Crebbin, eternally awesome.

Coupeville’s JV spikers are a spiffy 8-1 this season.

Wolf cheerleaders bring the spirit.

Photo ace Jackie Saia heads to work.

The Wolf varsity sits atop the Northwest 2B/1B League standings.

Stylish spikers Maddie Georges (left) and Lyla Stuurmans turn photographer John Fisken’s silver locks pink, in memory of his mother and sister.

“It’s about to get loud.”

Big bucks, big spikes

Senior setter Maddie Georges doled out 20 assists Tuesday as Coupeville rolled past Concrete. (Jackie Saia photo)

It was a win-win night.

The Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad thrashed visiting Concrete in straight sets Tuesday, while also raising nearly $1,000 for the fight against breast cancer.

Playing on Dig Pink Night, the Wolves cruised past the Lions 25-10, 25-6, 25-7 to remain undefeated in Northwest 2B/1B League play.

Coupeville is 5-0 in conference action, 6-3 overall heading into a showdown Thursday at Mount Vernon Christian (6-1, 10-1).

Still ahead for the Wolves are two matches against three-time defending 2B state champs La Conner (5-0, 7-1).

But all of that is for another day.

Tuesday night was about getting on the court and picking apart the conference cellar-dweller, and the Wolves were efficient.

Everyone played, and everyone contributed, allowing CHS coach Cory Whitmore a chance to tinker with his lineup and see what certain players could deliver in sometimes unfamiliar roles.

Key to the assault on Concrete was the service game, where Coupeville dominated.

“We served very well, and were clean at the line,” Whitmore said.

That was apparent from the very start, as Maddie Georges, Ryanne Knoblich, Alita Blouin, Taygin Jump, and Katie Marti all racked up points on their serve in the opening set.

By contrast, Concrete didn’t generate a point on offense until it was already trailing 20-6.

When the Lions did get Coupeville’s serves back in play, the Wolf big hitters went to work endings things quickly.

Lyla Stuurmans and Grey Peabody beat the stuffing out of the volleyball on big spike winners, though it was Blouin who had the loudest, nastiest hit in the first frame.

It came on a serve, which zipped low and hard across the net before pegging a Concrete player right in the face, the Lion player’s shoulder only absorbing about 3% of the blow.

The ever-mysterious Blouin, showing only the slightest smile at the corners of her mouth, simply walked away like a gunfighter, leaving the bodies where they dropped.

But it wasn’t all power for the Wolves, as Mia Farris bounded to the skies to drop in a tip winner on set point, essentially ending the match after one lopsided set.

No volleyball gets away from Madison McMillan (14), Taygin Jump (center), and Alita Blouin. (Jackie Saia photo)

The teams played two more frames, but only one squad stood a chance, as Coupeville put on a clinic.

Georges, who recorded her 200th assist of the season Tuesday, flicked winners at the service line, with a little help from Knoblich, who was deadly and dangerous while guarding the net.

Fellow Wolf senior Jill Prince chipped in with a graceful tip winner to stall a brief Concrete rally, then it was back to the gun show.

Stuurmans and fellow sophomore Madison McMillan showcased their ability to deliver nuclear-style blasts which tore off the corner of the court while staying just inbounds.

Not to be outdone, Peabody climbed an invisible stairway to heaven, then rained down unholy Hell on the Lions waiting below, her spikes bending time and space.

Or at least it felt that way sometimes, as Concrete’s players, while scrappy, had little chance of offsetting Coupeville’s missiles.

Mia Farris delivered the final punctuation, cracking open the court with a ferocious spike while dad Fred did his best imitation of a neutral observer while filling the role of impartial linesman.

Though, if you looked closely, he, like the rest of the Wolf fans, had plenty to smile about.

 

Tuesday stats:

Alita Blouin — 9 digs, 2 aces
Mia Farris — 4 kills, 4 aces
Maddie Georges — 20 assists, 8 aces
Taygin Jump — 1 kill, 2 digs, 7 aces
Ryanne Knoblich — 3 kills, 6 digs, 3 aces
Madison McMillan — 3 kills, 2 digs, 4 aces
Grey Peabody — 6 kills
Jill Prince — 3 kills
Lyla Stuurmans — 4 kills

 

Wolves raise bucks, awareness:

Dig Pink Night was a huge success, as the Wolves generated major moola by selling raffle tickets for gift baskets, with the proceeds going to the Whidbey Health Foundation.

Alerted by Wolf moms that the spikers had brought in nearly $1,000, Whitmore beamed, his smile filling the gym.

“It was phenomenal,” he said.

“I’m so proud of this program – the kids, the parents, the fans – everyone who was involved in making it a success.”

Money for a good cause. (Photos courtesy Jennifer Heaton)

Wolf moms (l to r) Susan Farris, Kim Brotemarkle, and Jennifer Heaton are fundraiser aces.

Wolf senior Wynter Arndt scored her first high school goal Tuesday as Coupeville shredded La Conner. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ayden Wyman got historical, and the Wolves got dangerous.

Raining down goals on host La Conner Tuesday, the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad romped to a 6-0 win.

The victory lifts CHS to 1-3 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 2-7 overall and pulls it out of the conference basement.

Coupeville sits in third place among the four NWL schools to play girls soccer, a half-game up on La Conner (0-3, 0-10).

Mount Vernon Christian (4-0, 7-4), who the Wolves play Thursday, have clinched the league title, while Friday Harbor (3-2, 6-5-1) is in second.

Coupeville’s goal explosion Tuesday — which produced its largest single-game scoring total of the season — came from three players.

Wynter Arndt notched her first high school goal, joining graduated older sister Knight on the CHS soccer all-time scoring list, while fellow senior Carolyn Lhamon punched in two scores.

That gives Lhamon three tallies on the season, six for her prep career.

But the biggest contribution belonged to sophomore sensation Ayden Wyman, who continues to baffle rival goaltenders.

With three more goals Tuesday, she has a team-best seven for her second high school campaign, and 11 for her career.

Wyman is the sixth Wolf girl to break double digits, trailing just Mia Littlejohn (35 goals), Kalia Littlejohn (33), Genna Wright (20), Lindsey Roberts (17), and Avalon Renninger (12).

Coupeville’s goals Tuesday were set up by solid teamwork, with Gwen Crowder, Anna Myles, and Arndt picking up assists.

“Nice to get a solid win,” said Coupeville coach Kyle Nelson as he marinated in the moment.