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The Coupeville Booster Club supports Wolf athletes like these mud-soaked football players. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s the circle of (athletic) life, and you can play a major part.

The Coupeville Booster Club, which provides invaluable support to Wolf athletes, is having a membership drive, and would love for you to join the party.

The club is holding a meeting this Thursday, Nov. 18 at 6:00 PM in the health room in the CHS gym.

Walk in the front door of the gym, like you’re heading in to watch basketball or volleyball, and boom, that’s the room on your immediate left.

The booster club is at the forefront of funding Wolf athletes and coaches, and offers participants multiple ways of helping out.

From supplying athletic letters, to making sure athletes have snacks on road trips, to helping CHS coaches purchase new equipment, to maintaining the Wall of Fame in the gym, it’s the motor which drives Wolf Nation.

 

If you want to get a jump start before Thursday’s meeting, pop over to:

https://www.memberplanet.com/s/coupevilleboosterclub/membership-2021-2022/?fbclid=IwAR3H5-y8iUEskuXvG6DKSrSKMvIHlWDKLSWNDBG-hgLUYQJgCeUsuIhJtpg

 

Or, get fancy by scanning this:

A winter storm slams into Whidbey Monday afternoon. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mother Nature is still in charge.

Dropping a mid-November storm on Whidbey Island Monday, she reminded us all of her power.

A semi-truck almost got blown off of Deception Pass Bridge, I lost power for 16.5 hours (the horror, the horror…), and John Fisken waded out into the blusteriness to get the pics seen above and below.

To see everything he shot, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Events/Windstorm-pics-2021-11-15/

 

Oh, Hell no…

Monday’s wind storm sent a truck tottering over the edge of Deception Pass Bridge. (Sarah Kirkconnell photos)

This is why you always pack a fresh pair of underwear in the glove compartment…

Monday’s violent wind storm made life difficult for many, but the driver of this truck got an unexpected “thrill.”

The ensuing backup made the trip from the shrimp shack to Deception Pass Bridge a two-hour crawl.

Cars heading back onto Whidbey ease past the obstruction.

The backup heading off the Island was six miles long.

Happy Basketball Eve!

“Basketball is back!!” (Jackie Saia photo)

We’re hours away.

The sport which matters the most, to me at least, begins anew Monday afternoon.

We’re not supposed to play favorites, but, face it, basketball should always be the king (and queen) when it comes to high school athletics.

No disrespect to all the spikers, and booters, and harriers, and duffers, and athletes who patrol gridirons and diamonds.

You work hard, you play hard, and you often produce thrilling games, magnificent moments, and lasting memories.

But, you’re just not basketball.

And you’re talking to a guy who spent a chunk of his childhood dunking on my bedroom net while listening to radio broadcasts as the Portland Trailblazers meandered through the Billy Ray Bates and Peter Verhoeven years.

Radio? It was a thing. Go look it up on Wikipedia, you punks!

Anyways.

Basketball is dunks (maybe not all that often at Wolf games, but still…), behind the back passes, and three-balls tumblin’ through the nets after being fired up from the parking lot.

It’s Makana Stone grabbing a rebound with one hand, firing a full-court outlet pass, then sprinting to the other end to snatch an offensive rebound and slap home the bucket — all on the same play.

It’s Kacie Kiel burying a trey from the corner on the final play to make Sequim (yes, the whole town) cry salty tears.

It’s Maddie Strasburg banking home consecutive half-court shots at the third-quarter buzzer from the same exact spot on the floor, with the games played 17 days apart.

It’s Ethan Spark pursuing a loose ball and blowing up his bench with a gleeful grin, teammates and water containers bouncing off the walls.

It’s Wiley Hesselgrave staring a hole through his rival’s souls.

It’s Julia Myers unleashing her Elbows o’ Death, daring private school whiners to wander through her paint at their own peril.

And it’s Julia Felici scoring her only high school bucket … on an absolutely-flawless hook shot which would have made Kareem smile in approval.

Monday afternoon, a whole new season begins.

Covid restrictions still linger, but, unlike last year, the schedules are full, and playoff action is once again a possibility.

Hawthorne Wolfe, my own next gen, small town version of Pete Maravich, is gunning for the big boys on the CHS scoring chart, while Brad Sherman’s squad has realistic dreams of competing for a league title.

On the girls side of things, Megan Smith, whose nickname could have been “Buckets” during her own days in a Wolf uniform, moves into the head coaching position with a team which features a solid collection of talented young stars on the rise.

The presents are under the trees, ready to be unwrapped.

A three-ball to win a game and make Wolf fans storm the floor?

History, of the personal or team variety?

Or merely the beauty of a pick set perfectly by a hustling role player, a small moment of sublime excellence in the grand flow of life on the hardwood?

We shall see.

Because no matter how it plays out, we’re headed into the best time of the year.

Pearl McFadyen and dad Jason.

Family tradition of excellence? Upheld.

Pearl McFadyen, whose father and grandfather are both in the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, is headed to the big dance.

The Anacortes High School sophomore and her teammates are bound for the Yakima SunDome, and the 2A state volleyball tournament, after finishing third at districts.

The Seahawks earned their golden ticket thanks to 3-0 wins Saturday over Sedro-Woolley and Archbishop Thomas Murphy.

Anacortes (14-5), which entered districts with the #4 seed, beat its ranking, toppling an ATM squad which was ranked #2 in the draw.

Top-seeded Burlington-Edison held off #3 Lynden in the title match, with both teams now joining Anacortes in making the trip to Eastern Washington.

Pearl McFadyen, whose cousin Ava Mitten is a soccer and track star at Coupeville High School, hails from hardy Wolf stock.

Dad Jason was a three-sport star (football, basketball, baseball) at CHS, aunt Aleshia (McFadyen) Mitten was an accomplished athlete in her own right, and grandparents Jack and Carmen McFadyen remain legendary in the history of Wolf boosters.

Pearl, one of three sophomores on the Anacortes roster, has built herself a nice body of work.

The Seahawks have stats posted on MaxPreps through Nov. 7, with McFadyen playing 30 sets, and compiling nine kills, 24 digs, nine block assists, seven service aces, one assist, and 31 points of offense.