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Kierra Thayer rumbled on both ends of the floor as an 8th grader. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They closed with a vengeance.

Capping a season of huge improvement, the Coupeville Middle School girls basketball teams went basket for basket with their next door neighbors Thursday in Langley.

The Wolf varsity, led by the red-hot long-distance shooting of Haylee Armstrong, pushed the Cougars hard, before being nipped 21-19 in what coaches from both schools termed “their best game so far.”

Haylee hit a couple of big threes, and our defense was nearly flawless, keeping South Whidbey from setting up an offense the majority of the game,” said Coupeville coach Kassie O’Neil.

Haylee Armstrong led all Coupeville Middle School players in scoring this season.

“The girls came out ready to play and kept up the same energy throughout the entire game,” O’Neil said.

“I think both of our teams brought our A-games and it was great to see two similar teams going head-to-head.”

While Armstrong was droppin’ bombs from the parking lot, Kierra Thayer anchored the Wolf defense.

Kierra had a few HUGE stuffs, denying the shooters any time they tried to get a shot up past her,” O’Neil said. “And she was there to rebound on both ends of the court.

“Her hustle during this game was the best I’ve seen from her this season.”

While Coupeville couldn’t quite nab the season-ending victory, O’Neil still came away flushed with pride in her young players.

“It was the best ending for our season. I’m so proud of these girls and the gains they made in such a short amount of time,” she said.

“I think we accomplished our big goals — they gained foundational skills, learned what it means to turn a team into family, and fostered a love for the game.”

A former Coupeville hoops star who was known for knocking down big shots at crunch time, O’Neil was pleased with a lot of what she saw in her first season being in charge.

“If I’m lucky enough to continue coaching Wolves hoops, I’ll be happy to see these girls back on the court for another couple of seasons,” she said. “It’s been a blast to witness their growth and joy, playing the sport I love.”

O’Neil’s fellow coach, Kristina Forbes, had a similar experience in her first go-round with the Wolf JV, which fell 46-11 at Langley.

“We had one main goal and that was to just play better than we did the first we played South Whidbey,” she said. “We accomplished that. These girls played their hearts out and never gave up!”

Willow Leedy-Bonifas is a fireball on the floor.

Forbes gave her whole team props, with a special shout-out for feisty guard Willow Leedy-Bonifas.

“She was not afraid to get in the face of her opponent and try for the steals!” Forbes said with a big smile.

Coupeville’s second squad was almost entirely made up of players who were brand new to competitive basketball, but they held up well against much more experienced teams such as King’s, Sultan, and Langley.

“This season was full of learning to cope with emotions, and to develop skills, bonding with their teammates and learning to trust each other on the court,” Forbes said.

“My girls have come so far from the beginning of the season till the end.

“By last night’s game the nerves seemed to be distant and all that beamed through them was determination.

“Overall, I hope that my girls had a fun season and will plan to come out next year.”

Lucy (red shirt) and Sophie Sandahl, with parents Jeannie and Michael. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Lucy

Sophie

Two sisters, one vibrant sports dynasty.

Sophie and Lucy Sandahl, who were standout athletes and students on Whidbey Island after their family moved west from South Carolina, are once again busy being awesome.

The duo, who currently attend Seattle Pacific University, are both members of the NCAA D-II school’s rowing team and have had a notable impact on the program’s success this season.

Sophie, who started at Coupeville High School, then graduated from Oak Harbor after a stellar swimming career, is a junior studying art history.

Meanwhile, CHS grad Lucy — a key member of Wolf volleyball and track and field teams — is a sophomore pursuing a physiology degree.

The older Sandahl is a rower who often finds herself camped in the bow, while lil’ sis is a coxswain.

The sisters, who are joined on the SPU team by Oak Harbor grad Jessica Vester, have both played key roles for the Falcons as a new season gets up and going.

In the season-opening PLU Invite in Lakewood, Lucy led a varsity eight-woman crew to a two-second win, spurring SPU to a time of eight minutes, 15.3 seconds on a 2000-meter course.

Sophie, rowing with a varsity four-woman unit, also won, in a race in which the Falcons destroyed their closest rival by 12-plus seconds.

Rowing has also taken the sisters to Oklahoma this year, where the duo participated in a meet featuring D-I power Kansas and three-time D-II national champion Central Oklahoma.

The Sandahl siblings return to action Apr. 9, when SPU hosts the Falcon Regatta.

Freshman Ayden Wyman set a PR in the 1600 Thursday at an 11-team track meet in Mount Vernon. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Their time will come.

Facing off with a long-established track and field powerhouse Thursday, the Coupeville High School boys team came within one first-place performance of upending host Mount Vernon Christian.

But while the Wolves came up just short, with the Hurricanes edging them 152-146.5 at an 11-team meet, a statement was made.

Slice a few seconds here, get an inch or two higher there, have an athlete or two nail a PR, and the tables will turn.

Maybe not today, but soon, very soon.

At the league championship meet, at districts, at state, perhaps?

The suspense builds as the Wolves get right back to work.

The strong showing from the CHS boys was the highlight of the day, but a Wolf girls squad which wasn’t quite as deep in numbers also came away looking pretty good, as well.

Coupeville’s girls claimed a pair of individual wins en route to finishing third in the team standings with 88 points, trailing just La Conner (144) and MVC (137).

The meet, held at Mount Vernon High School, featured athletes from four Northwest 2B/1B League schools, with Friday Harbor joining Coupeville, MVC, and La Conner.

Non-league rivals Grace Academy, Lopez Island, Crescent, Shoreline Christian, Fellowship Christian, Cedar Park Christian-Mountlake Terrace, and Lummi Nation rounded out the competitors.

Coupeville finished with 35 PR’s on the day, with Ryanne Knoblich (high jump), Ja’Kenya Hoskins (long jump), and Aidan Wilson (800) finishing atop the trophy stand.

The Wolves have a break in their competition schedule, as they don’t compete again until April 16, when they travel to North Kitsap for the Lil Norway Invitational.

Dominic Coffman finished 2nd in the high jump Thursday as the Wolf boys battled powerhouse Mount Vernon Christian to the very end in the team standings.

 

 

Complete Thursday results:

 

GIRLS:

100 — Ava Mitten (11th) 15.16; Mercedes Kalwies-Anderson (27th) 17.15

400 — Lyla Stuurmans (2nd) 1:07.24

800 — Cristina McGrath (8th) 3:24.94

1600 — Ayden Wyman (5th) 6:45.89 *PR*

100 Hurdles — Ryanne Knoblich (8th) 22.86 *PR*; Claire Mayne (11th) 25.14

300 Hurdles — C. McGrath (8th) 1:13.08

4 x 100 Relay — Mayne, Taygin Jump, Issabel Johnson, Mitten (3rd) 57:50

4 x 200 Relay — A. Wyman, Knoblich, Stuurmans, Ja’Kenya Hoskins (3rd) 2:01.22

4 x 400 Relay — Mitten, Carolyn Lhamon, Hoskins, Mayne (3rd) 5:10.04

Shot Put — Lhamon (3rd) 28-02; Reese Wilkinson (7th) 22-09; Erica McGrath (10th) 19-01 *PR*

Discus — Lhamon (2nd) 74-06; Wilkinson (4th) 69-02.50 *PR*; E. McGrath (11th) 58-02; Aby Wood (15th) 38-05

Javelin — Wood (8th) 55-09 *PR*; E. McGrath (9th) 57-00; Wilkinson (11th) 55-03; Mayne (12th) 54-05 *PR*

High Jump — Knoblich (1st) 4-10

Long Jump — Hoskins (1st) 13-08; Knoblich (4th) 13-04; A. Wyman (7th) 11-09

Triple Jump — Stuurmans (4th) 27-01; C. McGrath (7th) 26-01 *PR*

 

BOYS:

100 — Dominic Coffman (3rd) 12.30; Nehemiah Myles (15th) 13.18 *PR*; Preston Epp (29th) 13.91 *PR*; Alex Bowder (37th) 15.97

200 — Caleb Meyer (2nd) 24.38 *PR*; Nick Guay (6th) 25.38 *PR*; Cael Wilson (18th) 27.92 *PR*; P. Epp (19th) 27.95 *PR*; Myles (21st) 28.29

400 — Meyer (2nd) 54.49; Hank Milnes (5th) 1:03.81 *PR*

800 — Aidan Wilson (1st) 2:15.95; Alex Merino-Martinez (6th)

1600 — Mitchell Hall (3rd) 5:14.80; Thomas Strelow (6th) 5:38.48 *PR*; Merino-Martinez (8th) 5:54.26 *PR*; Tate Wyman (12th) 6:36.36

3200 — Cameron Epp (2nd) 12:35.32 *PR*; Mikey Robinett (4th) 13:24.54 *PR*; Nick Shelly (9th) 13:52.10 *PR*; Bowder (11th) 15:38.39 *PR*

110 Hurdles — Reiley Araceley (4th) 19.11 *PR*; C. Wilson (7th) 20.58

300 Hurdles — T. Wyman (11th) 55.22 *PR*; Milnes (12th) 58.52 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Araceley, Meyer, A. Wilson, Coffman (2nd) 46.55; Myles, P. Epp, N. Guay, Robinett (4th) 49.99

4 x 400 Relay — Hall, C. Epp, Araceley, A. Wilson (3rd) 4:07.33

Shot Put — Logan Martin (3rd) 34-08; Zac Tackett (10th) 30-05; Josh Guay (19th) 18-11 *PR*

Discus — Tackett (3rd) 108-01.50 *PR*; C. Epp (12th) 72-09 *PR*; J. Guay (15th) 62-04 *PR*; Shelly (17th) 61-01 *PR*

Javelin — Hall (3rd) 110-04 *PR*; Tackett (6th) 100-05 *PR*; C. Epp (10th) 88-07; Shelly (16th) 72-09 *PR*; J. Guay (24th) 54-09 *PR*

High Jump — Coffman (2nd) 5-08; N. Guay (3rd) 5-04; Meyer (3rd) 5-04; C. Wilson (6th) 5-00 *PR*

Long Jump — Coffman (2nd) 16-11.50; A. Wilson (5th) 16-06.50; Robinett (10th) 15-09.50 *PR*; Araceley (11th) 15-05.50; Milnes (17th) 14-06; Bowder (28th) 8-07; Merino-Martinez (29th) 7-11

Triple Jump — Milnes (7th) 30-07.50; Hall (11th) 28-04.50 *PR*

Savina Wells perfectly frames a strike. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The bats were boomin’, the catcher’s mitt was poppin’, and the Wolves couldn’t be stopped.

As the Coupeville High School varsity softball squad shredded visiting Darrington Wednesday, wanderin’ photo snapper John Fisken did what he does.

The pics above and below are courtesy him, but there’s more where that came from.

To see everything Fisken shot, and ponder the possibility of buying some glossies for Aunt Josephine in Jakarta, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Softball-/SB-2022-03-30-vs-Darrington/

 

Madison McMillan swoops in to deny a rival hitter.

Gwen Gustafson gets a successful bunt down.

You can see Izzy Wells’ pitches, you just can’t hit ’em.

Allie Lucero stretches to her full height.

Audrianna Shaw brings the thunder.

Taylor Brotemarkle stretches out to haul in a throw.

“Score, score, and score some more. It’s what we do!”

Who wants to be #28?

The Wolf Pup Volleyball program for Coupeville Elementary School students in grades 3-5 kicks back into action in mid-April, with 27 kids already signed up.

The program, run by high school coaches and players, is held every Tuesday and Thursday between April 12 and May 26.

Held at the CHS gym from 4-6 PM, the program offers a fun introduction to volleyball, with an emphasis on building skills.

“I could not be more excited to build connections with the future of the volleyball program and teach our community youth a love of the sport!” said CHS coach Cory Whitmore.

“The more the merrier, so we are happy to have more sign up if interested.”

Cost is $60, covering 14 sessions, and is due on the first day of practice.

The program is very flexible, however, so if students want to attend some sessions, but not all, no worries.

“If there is conflict in scheduling, families are welcome to adapt as needed,” Whitmore said. “This is a low-stress introduction to volleyball, and we know that spring is a very busy time.”

 

To sign up, pop over to:

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSefc8-leFu_mOwWw4qCZRFwjnApo-2DfAv44auLjC2rKV37Sw/viewform