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Dahlia Miller launches an ace. (Julie Wheat photos)

Decent weather, bright future.

A new season of Coupeville High School girls’ tennis kicked off Monday under partially sunny prairie skies, with not a drop of rain to be found in the vicinity.

That allowed the Wolves, who will boast an expanded roster of 20+ netters when everyone is eligible, to square off with East Jefferson across eight pro set matches while still allowing the visiting Rivals to catch the early ferry back home.

Coupeville’s foe, which is a mashup of players from two schools — Chimacum and Port Townsend — made off with a razor-thin 3-2 victory in the varsity part of the competition, while the Wolves won two of three JV rumbles.

The afternoon’s most tense tussle came at first varsity doubles, where new partners Dahlia Miller and Aleksia Jump teamed up to pull out a victory in a tiebreak in a match which went back-and-forth.

The Wolves were rolling in the early going, East Jefferson rallied late to force the tiebreaker, then the CHS duo excelled in the white-hot spotlight as players from both teams crowded around the fence.

Miller, a superb singles player last season, sprayed several impressive winners into the alleyways, while Jump, who moved to tennis from track and field, sealed the win with an emphatic put away at the net on match point.

Coupeville won three doubles matches on the day, while #1 singles player Tenley Stuurmans methodically picked apart her foe, mixing artful drop shots with overpowering deep hits, keeping her counterpart flustered for much of the match.

If the road weather matches the home weather, the Wolves will get right back at it Tuesday, with a planned trip to Granite Falls for another non-conference tilt.

On her way to deliver another winner.

 

Monday’s results:

 

Varsity:

1st Singles — Tenley Stuurmans beat Gracie W. 8-2

2nd Singles — Savannah Coxsey lost to Autumn C. 8-0

1st Doubles — Dahlia Miller/Aleksia Jump beat Lucia F./Halsey E. 9-8(10-8)

2nd Doubles — Kauri Hamilton/Jovanah Villagomez lost to Zinnia B./Ursula S. 8-3

3rd Doubles — Rowan Stoner/Jade Peabody lost to Fern F./Livia L. 7-3

 

JV:

4th Doubles — Hailey Goldman/Hazel Goldman lost to Freya D./Elan N. 7-3

5th Doubles — Lakshmi Erickson/Kauri Hamilton beat Margot M./Zadie C. 5-1

6th Doubles — Miles Gerber/Savannah Coxsey beat Amelia H./Aubrie T. 8-0

For the second time in as many years, the Coupeville School District has placed a high-ranking administrator on paid leave pending an investigation or review.

Dan Berard, who has been the high school principal and Career and Technical Education Director since April 2025, announced in February he was stepping down from those positions at the end of the school year.

At the time, he said he would be transitioning to a different, as yet to be named, position within the district.

Monday, Coupeville Schools Superintendent Shannon Leatherwood released the following statement:

Berard replaced Geoff Kappes, who resigned as high school and middle school principal in April 2025.

He was placed on “non-disciplinary leave pending an investigation” by Leatherwood in Dec. 2024.

Wicked weather, happy fans, as CHS spring sports teams are off to a 3-0 start. (Julie Wheat photo)

Nothing but wins.

While we’re only a week into “spring” sports action and still waiting for our first beam of sunlight on the cold, windswept prairie, the weather hasn’t slowed down Coupeville High School teams.

Wolf softball and baseball have combined to go 3-0 so far, with track and girls’ tennis slated to kick off their campaigns this coming week.

The netters are first up (weather permitting), with matches against East Jefferson and Granite Falls set for this coming Monday and Tuesday.

The first is as home, the second on the road.

Track travels to La Conner Wednesday for a Northwest 2B/1B League meet, before trekking further down the road Saturday for the Rainier Icebreaker meet.

And those winning diamond squads?

Both return to action Saturday with a trip to Bellingham to square off with Meridian.

We still have a long way to go, but here’s where things sit through Mar. 14:

 

Northwest League baseball:

School League Overall
Concrete 0-0 0-0
Coupeville 0-0 1-0
Darrington 0-0 0-0
Friday Harbor 0-0 1-0
La Conner 0-0 0-1
MV Christian 0-0 0-0
Orcas Island 0-0 1-0

 

Northwest League girls’ tennis:

School League Overall
Coupeville 0-0 0-0
Friday Harbor 0-0 0-0

 

Northwest League softball:

School League Overall
Concrete 0-0 0-0
Coupeville 0-0 2-0
Darrington 0-0 0-0
Friday Harbor 0-0 1-0
La Conner 0-0 0-0
Orcas Island 0-0 0-0

Emma Green locks down on defense. (Julie Wheat photos)

Growth and commitment.

That was what Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball coaches Brooke Crowder and Kassie O’Neil wanted to see this season from their young players.

So, while the win/loss record might not have been flawless for two of three Wolf squads, much was accomplished over the past eight games.

Ending its season on the road Thursday in Granite Falls, land of the blind referee, Coupeville finished with a roar.

“Last night showcased strong effort across all three teams, with several players stepping up in key moments,” Crowder said.

How the finale played out:

 

Level 1:

Coupeville hung tough through the first 14 minutes, before a torrid third quarter performance from Granite lifted the host team to a 38-20 win.

The Wolves, who finished 1-7 on the season, trailed just 4-3 through one quarter of play, and 12-6 at the half.

All of Coupeville’s first half scoring came via the three-ball, with Kaleigha Millison and Aubrey Flowers both knocking down a trey from long range.

Granite came out on fire in the third, however, going off on a game-busting 17-6 tear to claim victory.

Flowers paced the Wolves with six points, earning some praise from her coach for a well-rounded game.

Aubrey delivered one of her strongest performances of the season,” Brooke Crowder said. “She attacked the rim with confidence, took outside shots when the defense gave space, and anchored the paint defensively by holding position under the basket and disrupting plays.

“It was a complete game on both ends of the floor.”

Millison banked in five in support of Flowers, with Anna Powers (5) and Emma Green (2) rounding out the scoring.

Well almost, as Coupeville also picked up a bucket thanks to a Granite player accidentally scoring on her own basket.

Claire Lachnit, Laurel Crowder, Finley Helm, Zayne Roos, and Bella Sandlin also saw floor time for a plucky Wolf squad which never backed down from a challenge this season.

“Last night was a tough way for Team 1 to close the season,” Brooke Crowder said. “The game was emotional, and at times it felt like things simply weren’t going our way. Anyone who was there understands the frustration our players felt in that moment.

“But what matters most is how these girls competed.

“They played with heart, they kept fighting, and they left everything they had on the floor.

“I’m incredibly proud of this group not just for how they played, but for who they are as teammates and competitors.”

Bella Sandlin shreds the defense.

 

Level 2:

A bucket here, a bucket there, and CMS wins.

In the end, however, Granite held on for a razor-thin 21-18 win, dropping the Wolves to 1-7 for the campaign.

The game was a tight one, with the Tigers up 6-2 after one, 9-5 at the half, then 13-11 through three quarters, before clamping down on defense late to ice things.

Ava Alford pumped in a season-high seven points for Coupeville, with Juniper Dotson and Annabelle Cundiff each knocking down four, while Addison Jacobson (2) and Halle Black (1) rounded out the attack.

Daisy Leedy-Bonifas, Ruby Folkestad, and Reagan Green all played strongly on the defensive end of the floor for the Wolves.

Ava recorded her highest scoring game of the season by consistently putting herself in the right spots,” Brooke Crowder said. “Battling for rebounds, winning loose balls under the basket, creating steals, and pushing the ball up the floor in transition.”

And she wasn’t the only Wolf to shine in the finale.

Halle demonstrated excellent court awareness, finding teammates in scoring positions and executing effectively on baseline out-of-bounds plays,” Crowder said.

Juniper brought relentless energy throughout the game, playing aggressive defense and running the floor hard from start to finish without letting up.

Annabelle also made a strong impact with her energy and defensive effort, helping keep the team competitive while showing great vision and composure moving the ball and finding teammates in transition.”

 

Millie Somes celebrates the moment.

Team 3:

Coupeville’s buzz saw of a team sliced ‘n diced another opponent, with the Wolves winning 17-14 to claim their third-straight win.

They didn’t always get a chance to play as a unit when other schools came up short on players, but when they did, they clicked, finishing 4-1.

Squaring off with Granite Falls, the Wolves bolted to a 9-4 lead at the first break, before slightly stretching the advantage out to 13-6 by the half.

While Coupeville only scored four points in the second half, with buckets from Nikolette Dunham and Millie Somes, its defense was on point, holding the Tigers scoreless in the third frame.

Abby Hunt finished with a team-best six points, with Dunham (4), Ellie Callahan (2), Arianna Vinson (2) Somes (2), and Danielle Halsing (1) keeping the stat keeper busy.

Leah Hernandez, Amira Anunciado, and Daisy Leedy-Bonifas filled out the rotation for a squad which ended things on a huge high note.

Abby set the tone with hustle and persistence, maintaining constant pressure on the court,” Brooke Crowder said.

“Defensively, Ellie and Arianna worked effectively together in help defense, shutting down attempts around the basket and protecting the paint. Amira added another strong performance with tough rebounding, powerful runs up the court, and confident ball movement that helped keep the offense flowing.

“Across all three teams, the effort, hustle, and teamwork on display reflected the growth and determination of the program.”

 

Final season scoring stats:

Laurel Crowder – 35
Daisy Leedy-Bonifas – 30
Halle Black – 28
Annabelle Cundiff – 27
Kaleigha Millison – 23
Emma Green – 22
Juniper Dotson – 21
Anna Powers – 21
Abby Hunt – 17
Cami Van Dyke – 14
Aubrey Flowers – 13
Finley Helm – 13
Nikolette Dunham – 12
Ava Alford – 11
Zayne Roos – 10
Addison Jacobson – 9
Ellie Callahan – 8
Danielle Halsing – 7
Bella Sandlin – 6
Millie Somes – 6
Claire Lachnit – 5
Sophia Burley – 4
Ruby Folkestad – 4
Reagan Green – 4
Emily Rains – 4
Arianna Vinson – 3
Amira Anunciado – 1

Adeline Maynes and friends are off to a 2-0 start on the softball season. (Julie Wheat photos)

Patience and power.

Playing on the cold, rain-splattered turf at Lakewood Thursday, the Coupeville High School softball squad mixed a ton of walks with some timely hits to make it two wins against big school rivals.

A day after storming from behind on their home prairie to knock out 3A Oak Harbor in extra innings, the Wolves unloaded on the 2A Cougars, ending things early in a 21-3 game called after five innings due to the mercy rule.

Now 2-0 on the young season, Aaron Lucero’s squad, which reps a 2B-sized school, is off until a road trip Mar. 21 to Bellingham to square off with 1A Meridian.

That’ll give the young Wolves time to fine-tune things and defrost, in some order.

“The game was getting rough, players turning into popsicles and we wanted to get done,” Lucero said.

“Proud of the team for fighting through horrendous conditions, maintaining composure, and getting the job done.”

A day after facing a flame thrower in Oak Harbor ace Reese Wasinger, Coupeville had to adjust to slower speeds from a group of Lakewood pitchers who struggled with chucking a slick ball which was looking to shoot off in random directions.

The Wolves happily accepted all 22 walks offered up by their rivals.

But they also connected on 10 base hits, keeping the runners churning around the basepaths until Lucero took his foot off the gas pedal late, giving up some free outs by having players leave base early.

The tone of the game was set early, as CHS sent 11 batters to the plate in the top of the first, scoring six of them.

Haylee Armstrong started things off with a sharply hit single, Sydney Van Dyke scampered to first on a dropped third strike, and Teagan Calkins walked, priming the well for cleanup hitter Chelsi Stevens, who immediately smacked a two-run double to left field.

Chelsi Stevens, master of the bunt, or the thunderous base hit.

Tack on a sac fly from Adeline Maynes and a two-run single to right from 8th grader Cami Van Dyke, and the floodgates were open.

Coupeville kept delivering rib shots to the Lakewood pitchers, or, in the case of Haylee “The Ankle Breaker” Armstrong, just whacked low, wicked liners which tore chunks of flesh off the leg of any Cougar hurler unable to dodge in 0.3 seconds.

It was one of two painful moments for the hosts, as later a batter in pursuit of a hit took a spectacular fall midway down the line to first, then kissed sweet, sweet wet turf as Wolf first baseman Ava Lucero calmly tracked down the wayward ball and recorded the out.

There was a moment when it looked like the Lakewood player might have to be taken out behind the barn and put out of her misery, “Of Mice and Men”-style (read a book!), but her body survived — if her dignity maybe didn’t.

The Wolves pushed eight more runs across in the second inning, with Stevens and Armstrong spraying RBI-rich hits — the latter cleared the bases with a long single — before getting five consecutive walks to end the frame.

The third inning was the one bright spot for Lakewood, with Coupeville held scoreless (the horror! the horror!), while the Cougars eked out their only runs of the afternoon.

But once the teams rolled into the fourth, things clicked back into place, with CHS tacking on seven more runs across the final two innings, while its outfielders twice threw out Lakewood runners trying to pick up an extra base.

Ava Lucero, defensive dynamo.

Coupeville’s final four runs came courtesy of a two-run single off the bat of Capri Anter and a two-run double from Ava Lucero, one of the few players with pep to spare as the cold and rain sapped the will of everyone involved.

Still joyfully bouncing around and whipping balls back to Wolf hurler Adeline Maynes with undisguised glee, the coach’s daughter put a punctuation mark on the win with a display of defensive prowess in the bottom of the fifth.

First, she backpedaled through the raindrops to snare a high pop fly, before stepping forward and calmly snagging a liner to mark the game’s final out.

Along with beating a big school rival, Coupeville did it by getting something from everyone on the active roster.

Aaron Lucero was able to play all 13 players in uniform, with 11 Wolves getting aboard thanks to a hit or walk.

Seven different sluggers recorded an RBI as well, with Stevens, Armstrong, and Anter leading the way with four apiece.

The game featured the season debut of Emma Leavitt and the CHS softball debut for Zariyah Allen and Marina Jadwin, who are both new to the sport.

Plus, the Lakewood coach provided pizza for the Wolves. So, winner, winner, pepperoni dinner.

 

Thursday stats:

Zariyah Allen — One walk
Capri Anter — One single, three walks
Haylee Armstrong — Three singles, one walk
Teagan Calkins — Five walks
Emma Cushman — Two walks
Ava Lucero — One double, one walk
Adeline Maynes — One single, three walks
Olivia Martin — One walk
Chelsi Stevens — One single, one double, three walks
Cami Van Dyke — One single
Sydney Van Dyke — One single, two walks

Hot-hitting cousins Capri Anter (left) and Haylee Armstrong dress for success. (Photo courtesy Michelle Armstrong)