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Coupeville senior Landon Roberts, ready to make a dash for home. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They represented.

Coupeville High School landed three All-Conference honorees when Northwest 2B/1B League baseball coaches tabbed the best players of the spring.

Wolf senior Landon Roberts and junior Camden Glover were picked as First-Team All-League selections, with junior Coop Cooper earning Second-Team status.

The veteran trio were leaders on a very-young CHS hardball squad which went 6-13 overall, 5-7 in league play.

All three pitched for the Wolves, while also manning other positions when they weren’t on the mound.

Roberts and Glover both did stints at catcher for a program which only had 11 players this season, as well as playing in the infield.

When Cooper wasn’t chucking strikes, he was also an active infielder, with all three standing tall at the plate, providing an offensive spark for Steve Hilborn’s squad.

Glover led CHS with a .380 batting average, 18 RBI, and six doubles, while Roberts hit .356 with a team-high 21 base hits.

On the mound, Glover (66), Cooper (61), and Roberts (54) paced the Wolves in strikeouts, with Cooper leading the team in starts.

Camden Glover (17) and Coop Cooper helped anchor a CHS baseball team which was short on players this season.

The proposed new backstop. (Photo property Coupeville School District)

The agenda for Thursday’s Coupeville School Board meeting includes a chance for the directors to approve the district beginning work on a project to build a much-larger backstop on the school’s softball field.

If approved, the $150,000 project on Terry Road would be financed through a previously passed levy which has already paid for new tennis courts to be built next to the CHS gym.

With the board considering the request, a family with longtime roots on the prairie has sent the following letter to directors, which they have agreed to let be shared here in full:

 

We are softball and baseball parents. We love to see the success and support in the community that the softball program has had, and we support the opportunity for them to have improved fields.

Our parents and grandparents were active supporters of Coupeville sports and showed this by attending games, supporting teams and providing the land that the baseball and softball fields are now located on.

They were also supporters of the vision of the Reserve to keep this specific land free of permanent structures that detract from the historic view — to keep it as it was.

This commitment cost them convenience and monetary expense over the years.

The understanding they always had was that the school district shared a commitment to this vision.

The promise from (former Superintendent) Suzanne Bond was that the sports complex would be built across the street from the Reserve.

We understand those promises may not have been binding — that leadership and priorities change.

We understand that putting this 28-foot backstop on the current location is understandably easier and less expensive than the original plan our family understood.

We also understand that this seems to have passed all the formal steps and that the Historical Preservation Committee didn’t see this as a violation of the historic vision.

We disagree and we are disappointed.

Unfortunately, at the time of the meeting last year where this was discussed, our dad was very sick, and we could not attend.

We grew up hearing about the historic preservation of the prairie and our grandparents were so proud that their grandchildren would see the prairie as their great grandparents did. This is not the case now.

The seventh generation of Coupeville residents will see an altered prairie viewshed.

We wish Coupeville schools the best, but we ask that you share this with the board and reconsider this course of action.

Go Wolves!

David Engle’s daughters

Wolf diamond men (left to right) Camden Glover, Carson Grove, Landon Roberts, and Jesus Madrigal enjoy a win. (Stevie Glover photo)

Landon Roberts exited with a bang.

The Coupeville High School senior collected three of his team’s seven awards Wednesday when Wolf baseball capped its season with a banquet.

Roberts was tabbed as the Defensive Player of the Year and the Swiss Army Knife Award winner, while also being honored for playing hardball all four years of his high school run.

Joining him as award winners were Camden Glover (Offensive Player of the Year), Aiden O’Neill (Wolf Pack Leader), Riley Lawless (Most Improved) and Leo Rodriguez (Future Prospect).

Riley Lawless waits for the throw. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Baseball, which is the first CHS spring sports team to hold a banquet, finished 6-13 overall, 5-7 in Northwest 2B/1B League play.

The highlight of the season for the Wolves was a point where they reeled off six wins in an eight-game span at midseason.

 

Varsity letter winners:

Coop Cooper
Camden Glover
Carson Grove
Riley Lawless
Jayden Little
Jesus Madrigal
Aiden O’Neill
Phin Rhodes
Landon Roberts
Leo Rodriguez
Trent Thule
Chris Zenz

Capri Anter gets the full-on pre-game braid work from teammates (l to r) Sydney Van Dyke, Ava Lucero, and Haylee Armstrong. (Jackie Saia photos)

The bats and gloves are put away for now, but the memories will live on.

Coupeville High School softball enjoyed one of the best seasons in program history this spring, going 20-3 and splitting four games at state.

The Wolves eliminated big-timers Colfax and Raymond-South Bend at the tourney, playing until a moment or two before midnight on the first of two days in Yakima.

While the players and their support crew are back at home in Coupeville now, Wolf Nation is still abuzz.

The following letter comes to us from Sean Anter, owner of Front Street Grill, and Grandpa to sophomore sensation Capri Anter:

 

As I sat back in the bleachers during the final state game of 2025, I am thinking about the season that brought them here. 

Quite honestly, it wasn’t even the wins and losses. It was the relationships and bonds these girls have with each other.

I really haven’t seen anything like it.

How much they root for each other. How much they show up and play for each other. Share in each other’s successes and failures.

How much they simply just love each other.

I really only know Taylor (Brotemarkle) personally, as she works with me at Front Street Grill, as well as Capri, who is my granddaughter.

But even the emotion of Senior Night got to this guy. 

I felt the love they all have for one another in such a profound way.

Watching these girls all season through state I couldn’t be more proud of them.

The hearts these girls have for the game and for each other was absolutely amazing to witness.

Even though the end was not what they hoped for, they have come away with something way more longer lasting.

They won the hearts of each other, family, friends, and the Coupeville community.

Go Wolves!

Wolf senior Katie Marti, who’s going to state in three events, ranks #5 in the shot put. (Photo courtesy Christi Messner)

They’re coming down to the wire.

The state track and field championships play out in Yakima this Thursday-Saturday, with 13 Wolves having qualified to compete in the season’s biggest showdown.

With all the various district, and bi-district, and quad-district lead-ins now finished, CHS athletes can measure themselves against the best of the best in their events and classification.

Where Coupeville stars show up through May 26 on the statewide list for top 2B performances:

 

GIRLS:

Shot Put — Katie Marti (5th) 34-08

 

BOYS:

800 — Carson Field (6th) 2:02.03

4 x 100 Relay — Marquette Cunningham, Davin Houston, Preston Epp, Chase Anderson (9th) 44.41

High Jump — Cael Wilson (4th) 6-01; Wyatt Fitch-Marron (6th-tie) 5-10

Pole Vault — Wilson (3rd-tie) 12-06