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Freshman Jada Heaton is one of 23 Wolves to play three sports during the 2021-2022 school year. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Dominic Coffman bounced from football to basketball to track.

“Everyone plays, no one quits.”

Coupeville High School has the smallest student body of Whidbey Island’s three high schools, but the Wolves are committed.

Coming out of the darkest days of the pandemic (knock on wood), it’s been interesting to see how prep sports are booming.

Given a chance to take the field or court again, Coupeville’s student/athletes have responded, with what feels like huge numbers this spring.

Baseball and softball have enough players to field JV squads in addition to varsity teams, which is very rare at the 2B level.

The Wolf track and field roster goes deep, and girls tennis?

Longtime net guru Ken Stange has an astonishing 23 girls out there, smacking the crud out of fuzzy yellow balls.

As CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith and his coaches have both kept the spark lit and continued to build their programs, the steel in Coupeville’s spine has been the students who have committed to playing year-round.

If my numbers are correct, there are 23 Wolves — 12 boys and 11 girls — who are wrapping up the school year as three-sport athletes.

That number ties the best single-year mark during the 10-year run of Coupeville Sports and is especially nice to see at a small school where every body in a uniform matters.

The core of the group are freshmen, who account for 11 of the 23 three-sport athletes.

The junior and sophomore classes have five iron men/women apiece, with only two seniors — Audrianna Shaw and Xavier Murdy — on the list.

There are others who might have made the list, but injuries, or jobs, or life, or an unwillingness to play basketball — Coupeville’s lone winter sport — leaves them out of this discussion.

No slander to those who didn’t, or couldn’t, make it all the way to the finish line this school year.

Just respect to those who did.

 

Coupeville’s three-sport athletes for 2021-2022, with grade and sports: 

Edie Bittner – 9 – cross country, basketball, softball
Dominic Coffman — 11 — football, basketball, track
Mia Farris — 9 — volleyball, basketball, softball
Carson Field — 9 — cross country, basketball, track
Nick Guay — 10 — soccer, basketball, track
Gwen Gustafson — 11 — volleyball, basketball, softball
Jada Heaton — 9 — volleyball, basketball, softball
Carolyn Lhamon — 11 — soccer, basketball, track
Katie Marti — 9 — volleyball, basketball, softball
Madison McMillan — 9 — volleyball, basketball, softball
Alex Murdy — 11 — soccer, basketball, baseball
Xavier Murdy — 12 — soccer, basketball, baseball
Zane Oldenstadt — 10 — football, basketball, baseball
Jack Porter — 9 — football, basketball, baseball
Johnny Porter — 9 — football, basketball, baseball
Landon Roberts — 9 — cross country, basketball, baseball
Mikey Robinett — 10 — football, basketball, track
Audrianna Shaw — 12 — soccer, basketball, softball
Lyla Stuurmans — 9 — volleyball, basketball, track
Jonathan Valenzuela — 11 — football, basketball, baseball
Savina Wells — 9 — volleyball, basketball, softball
Cole White — 10 — cross country, basketball, baseball
Reese Wilkinson — 10 — soccer, basketball, track

Laken Simpson played strongly on both ends of the floor Thursday, including scoring for the first time this season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The improvement is real, and it is tangible.

After opening the season at home, the Coupeville Middle School girls basketball teams hit the road for three straight games, finally returning to their own gym Thursday afternoon.

Game #5 was always going to be tough, with King’s Junior High transporting its band of battle-hardened semi-professional hoops stars to Whidbey on a swanky bus which most definitely is not of the yellow variety.

Cushy seats, acres of leg room, probably a personal chef operating the waffle bar in the back as the Knights ramble back to Shoreline.

At least that’s how I assume all swanky private schools roll.

So, safe to say Coupeville’s players, many of whom are in their first season of organized ball — and most assuredly don’t have a waffle bar on their bus — faced a steep challenge as they took the court Thursday afternoon.

To their credit, each and every Wolf girl responded with the kind of roar which warms the heart of old-school hoops fans near and far.

Outside, rain drops plopped on heads, driving tennis players off the courts.

Inside the CMS gym, with preteen girls in the stands screaming at levels not generally heard outside of the front row at a Harry Styles concert, it was a battle royale.

Sure, King’s had superior firepower.

Heck, it had the only player throwing behind-the-back passes — and that was in the JV game, for goodness sake!

But Coupeville’s rooting section, super-charged by way too many middle school kids eating way too much candy and chips, matched King’s note for note in trying to bust the eardrums of anyone over the age of 15.

There is loud, and then there was what Thursday was, and that kind of energy and enthusiasm, centered around the one perfect sport we have in this world, is truly admirable.

Give King’s props. And give Coupeville’s girls even bigger ones.

Cause out there on the floor the Wolves held up well under pressure, facing the best teams they will play this season.

It started in the JV game, with Chelsi Stevens unleashing her full fury on the defensive end of the floor.

Snatching rebounds, knocking balls loose, staring daggers at any rival who dared to enter her personal space, she was a wonder to behold.

That fire on defense carried over to her teammates, with Adeline Maynes and Ava Carpenter pestering the crud out of King’s ballhandlers.

Off the court, the duo seem like really nice young women, bright and personable. On the court, they seem like they might knife a girl.

Which is EXACTLY what I want to see!

Maynes and Carpenter are not dirty, they’re not excessively rough, but they will get down and rumble, which bodes well for their hoops future.

They remind of me another brilliant, exceptionally kind young woman — former CHS four-sport star Breeanna Messner — who constantly shocked hoops opponents with her spine of steel.

Hit her in the eye (for real), and she’d slice you off at the kneecaps (metaphorically, most times…) — nailing a three-ball, then backpedaling without ever breaking eye contact with her on-court abuser.

Yes, that would be the same Breezy who was back in town for a bit and manning the scorebook on this day, all of her positive vibes and killer instinct flowing through her pencil out to a new generation.

Carpenter, in particular, had some Breeanna Messner in her hustle, as she was a freakin’ Tasmanian Devil on the hardwood.

Diving to the floor to wrestle for loose balls, while dropping “The Peoples Elbow” (pro wrestling reference — Wikipedia it), she made even the ref take a step back and say, “Whoa now!”

While smiling at Carpenter’s intensity.

Willow Leedy-Bonifas, Laken Simpson, Rosie Lay, Melanie Wolfe, and Elyse White rounded out the JV roster, each one earning respect with their growth, hustle, and commitment.

Unleash pandemonium, today and tomorrow.

Coupeville’s varsity has more experience than its JV, but their level of playing time still pales in comparison to King’s, which rolled out a roster of players with high basketball IQ’s and multiple ways of attacking the defense.

Not that the Wolves backed down in the slightest, a fact made crystal clear by Haylee Armstrong running down breakaways from behind several times, knocking balls loose and preventing easy layups.

Kierra Thayer was strong on the boards while playing against a team devoted to the rebounding arts, never an easy task.

Toss in Tenley Stuurmans showcasing why she’d be a great back alley rumbler, and Liza Zustiak proving very willing to drop a shoulder, and very unwilling to surrender the ball to her rivals, and you love to see it.

Armstrong netted an impressive pullup jumper, while Thayer slashed the King’s D in half on one play where she rolled hard to the hoop, daring any defender to stop her.

Spoiler: They couldn’t.

Just to keep King’s honest, Stuurmans tiptoed down the baseline several times, stoppin’ and poppin’ a couple of in-close jumpers which made the nets bounce.

And through it all, every Wolf to see the floor — from Capri Anter to Brynn Parker, Ava Lucero, Rhylin Price, Lexis Drake, Avery Williams-Buchanan, Marin Winger, and Valeria de Jesus Merino — stayed upbeat and fiery.

Which is a winning combo.

The positive flow carried over to Inara Maund, who was sidelined for this game, but devoted considerable energy to making sure all of her teammates looked their best as she recorded the game for her coaches.

A talented artist, she used breaks in the action to show off her creative creations, and, if her parents or guardians are out there listening, they should let me publish some of them here on Coupeville Sports.

My email is davidsvien@hotmail.com, and I’m serious.

It’s what this blog is primarily made for — writing about basketball and curating artwork. True story.

Whether they were crafting masterpieces on their tablet, or in living color down on the hardwood, every CMS hoops star in attendance Thursday finished the day strongly.

Heads held high. Lessons learned. Elbows nicely sharpened.

And, you may have noticed, I never did tell you what the scores of Thursday’s games were.

I know King’s won both games. You know King’s won both games.

We don’t need to know the scores, which will be forgotten about in a day, a week, a month.

What will be remembered, hopefully as each of these bright, hard-working Wolf girls go forward and continue playing God’s chosen sport of basketball for many more years, is this:

“If you put your effort and concentration into playing to your potential, to be the best that you can be, I don’t care what the scoreboard says at the end of the game, in my book we’re gonna be winners.”

Yes, yes, that’s lifted from Hoosiers, the greatest sports movie ever made. I never said all my thoughts were originals.

But, if it’s true, it’s true. And it’s true.

This is your time, ladies. Keep working, keep building, keep hustling.

You’re on the right path.

Joey Lippo and mom Connie hang out in Florida.

Time to pack the bags and head home.

Coupeville High School grad Joey Lippo and his college baseball team capped a nine-games-in-five-days run through Florida Thursday, winning their getaway game.

The University of Maine at Presque Isle earned a split on the day, falling 10-5 to Colby-Sawyer College, before rebounding to win the nightcap 13-9.

Lippo and the Owls sit at 2-9 on the season.

The former Wolf three-sport star piled up two hits, two RBI, three walks, and five runs across the Thursday doubleheader.

Through 11 games Lippo leads Presque Isle in batting average (.389), RBI (9), runs (12), and walks (6), and is tied for the team lead in home runs (1).

The CHS grad and twin brother of dance supernova Skyy Lippo is second on the Owls in hits (14), triples (1), on-base percentage (.444), and slugging percentage (.583).

After its southern marathon, Presque Isle is off until Mar. 26, when it takes the field in Massachusetts to face Fisher College.

Coupeville grad Sarah Wright smashed her fourth college home run Thursday in Texas. (Photo property Sewanee softball)

Sarah Wright enjoys hittin’ dingers.

The softball sensation whacked a bunch of round-trippers during her days at Coupeville High School, and nothing has changed during her time in college.

Wright went yard for the second time this season Thursday, as she and her Sewanee: University of the South teammates dueled with Austin College in Texas.

And while the Tigers fell 7-3 and 8-0, the former Wolf keeps adding to her impressive stat totals.

Wright leads Sewanee in home runs (2), RBI (10), and runs scored (8) this season, and is second on the squad in hits (13) and doubles (3).

Thursday’s home run was the fourth of her college career for the Tiger catcher, now in her junior season.

Sewanee, which sits at 2-16 on the season, returns to action Saturday, when it plays another doubleheader, this one at the University of Dallas.

Sophie Martin whacks a tennis ball on a much-drier day. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mother Nature said no, ma’am.

With rain falling all day Thursday, Coupeville High School’s season-opening home girls tennis match against South Whidbey has been postponed.

It will be rescheduled at a later date, said CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith.

For now, the Wolves turn their eyes (and rackets) to Mar. 23, when they’re set to travel to Oak Harbor — weather willing.

Vivian Farris works on her forehand.