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Posts Tagged ‘1A vs. 2A’

   Andrew Martin, seen here throwing the javelin in an earlier meet, set a PR Thursday in the shot put. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Catherine Lhamon set PR’s in both the 1600 and 3200.

No fear, ever.

Despite repping one of the smallest 1A schools in the state, the Coupeville High School track team more than held its own with the big boys (and girls) Thursday afternoon.

Facing off with three 2A schools at Silverdale Stadium, the Wolves came away with nine wins and 22 PR’s.

In team scoring, the CHS boys beat both Port Angeles (71-68) and Kingston (90-53), while falling to host Olympic (80-60).

Coupeville’s girls, who swept the 4 x 100 and 4 x 200 relays, beat Kingston (94-53), tied Olympic (73-73) and lost to Port Angeles (99-51).

While a host of Wolves had impressive afternoons, junior Lindsey Roberts and sophomore Mallory Kortuem led the way as three-time winners.

The duo combined with Ashlie Shank and Maya Toomey-Stout to win two relays, while also each nabbing first in an individual race.

For Kortuem, it was the 400, while Roberts cruised to a win in the 100 hurdles.

Other Wolf champions included Ryan Labrador (Shot Put), Allison Wenzel (Javelin), Chris Battaglia (Javelin), Jacob Smith (400) and Ariah Bepler (High Jump).

Coupeville spread out its PR’s across a broad range of athletes, with 18 different Wolves setting a personal best in at least one event.

Catherine Lhamon (1600, 3200), Henry Wynn (100, 200), Kylie Chernikoff (Discus, Javelin) and Ethan Clavette (100, Discus) topped CHS with two PR’s apiece.

Complete CHS results:

GIRLS:

100 — Maya Toomey-Stout (5th) 13.76; Ja’Tarya Hoskins (7th) 14.44

200 — Zoe Trujillo (10th) 32.18

400 — Mallory Kortuem (1st) 1:05.66; Natalie Hollrigel (5th) 1:12.11

800 — Lucy Sandahl (5th) 2:47.62; Hollrigel (7th) 3:01.70

1600 — Catherine Lhamon (3rd) 6:06.99 *PR*; Sandahl (5th) 6:11.60

3200 — Lhamon (4th) 12:41.10 *PR*

100 Hurdles — Lindsey Roberts (1st) 16.34

300 Hurdles — Mckenzie Meyer (4th) 58.28; Hoskins (6th) 59.93 *PR*; Lauren Bayne (7th) 1:06.12

4 x 100 Relay — Roberts, Kortuem, Ashlie Shank, M. Toomey-Stout (1st) 53.28

4 x 200 Relay — M. Toomey-Stout, Shank, Kortuem, Roberts (1st) 1:53.63

4 x 400 Relay — Shank, Roberts, M. Toomey-Stout, Hollrigel (2nd) 4:41.77

Shot put — Emma Smith (3rd) 27-08.50; Kylie Chernikoff (8th) 24-01; Shank (9th) 22-11.25 *PR*

Discus — Chernikoff (4th) 79-00 *PR*; Wenzel (5th) 78-01; Hannah Davidson (7th) 72-02; E. Smith (8th) 68-01; Abby Parker (9th) 63-09; Willow Vick (14th) 53-00 *PR*; Raven Vick (16th) 40-07

Javelin — Wenzel (1st) 92-02; Davidson (2nd) 88-07 *PR*; Bayne (3rd) 85-00; Parker (6th) 72-09; Trujillo (8th) 71-01; R. Vick (9th) 68-01; Chernikoff (12th) 60-03 *PR*

High Jump — Bayne (3rd) 4-08; Hoskins (5th) 4-02; Cassidy Moody (6th) 4-02

Pole Vault — Meyer (3rd) 6-06; Kortuem (6th) 6-06 *PR*

Long Jump — Hoskins (8th) 12-04.50; Trujillo (17th) 9-04

Triple Jump — Trujillo (10th) 22-05

BOYS:

100 — Jacob Smith (3rd) 11.68; Henry Wynn (4th) 12.14 *PR*; Ethan Clavette (18th) 13.57 *PR*

200 — Wynn (3rd) 24.13 *PR*; Kyle Burnett (12th) 27.13

400 — J. Smith (1st) 52.37 *PR*; Burnett (6th) 1:01.27 *PR*

800 — Danny Conlisk (2nd) 2:09.45

1600 — Conlisk (2nd) 4:54.15 *PR*

3200 — Jakobi Baumann (4th) 13:11.01

110 Hurdles — Baumann (8th) 21.89

300 Hurdles — Baumann (8th) 51.62

4 x 100 Relay — Wynn, Jean Lund-Olsen, Sean Toomey-Stout, Cameron Toomey-Stout (2nd) 46.20; Ruck, Thane Peterson, Andrew Martin, Clavette (7th) 54.66

4 x 400 Relay — J. Smith, Ariah Bepler, Wynn, Conlisk (2nd) 3:43.66

Shot Put — Ryan Labrador (1st) 40-01.75; Chris Battaglia (2nd) 38-02 *PR*; Keahi Sorrows (4th) 37-06.50 *PR*; Martin (15th) 27-08 *PR*

Discus — Battaglia (3rd) 105-08; Labrador (7th) 87-02; Peterson (10th) 84-05; Sorrows (11th) 81-03; Clavette (20th) 63-01 *PR*; Martin (27th) 51-06

Javelin — Battaglia (1st) 130-04; S. Toomey-Stout (10th) 112-01; Martin (12th) 109-09; Bepler (13th) 108-04; Luke Carlson (14th) 107-07

High Jump — Bepler (1st) 5-08

Pole Vault — Burnett (5th) 7-06; Peterson (5th) 7-06 *PR*

Long Jump — S. Toomey-Stout (2nd) 18-05 *PR*; C. Toomey-Stout (3rd) 18-01; Ruck (21st) 13-04

Triple Jump — Baumann (6th) 33-05.25 *PR*

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   Coupeville sophomore Derek Leyva knocked in his 16th goal of the season Tuesday at Port Angeles. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Game by game, he’s chipping away at a record.

Coupeville High School sophomore Derek Leyva banged home his 16th goal of the season Tuesday, scoring for the eighth time in 10 games.

His tally wasn’t enough to save the Wolves against a very-good 2A school, as Coupeville fell 6-2 at Port Angeles, but it did get him one score closer to toppling his cousin.

Abraham Leyva, who graduated in 2016, owns the Wolf boys single-season (20) and career (45) scoring records, but Derek is making a bid for history in his first year at the school.

He has five regular season games left, and, most likely, at least one playoff contest, as he makes a run at the single-season scoring mark.

Coupeville, which also got a goal from James Wood Tuesday, his second of his sophomore campaign, is off for six days now.

The Wolves, 4-4-2 overall after the loss to Port Angeles, close the regular season with five straight 1A Olympic League contests.

That final stretch starts next Monday, Apr. 16, when CHS (3-1 in league play) travels to Klahowya (4-0) to face the three-time defending league champs.

After that comes back-to-back games against Port Townsend (1-3), a road clash with Chimacum (0-4), then Senior Night Apr. 30 against Klahowya.

The Olympic League has not posted playoff brackets yet for 1A, but, in previous years, the top three teams made the postseason.

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   Dane Lucero rapped a two-run single to kick things off Saturday, as Coupeville rallied to knock off 2A Cedarcrest. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Julian Welling had the last laugh.

The Coupeville High School senior was stung by Cedarcrest Saturday, but quickly rebounded and hit the visitors twice as hard, lifting his squad to a thrilling win in extra innings.

Unable to completely slam the door on the 2A Red Wolves in the late going as a relief pitcher, Welling responded by drilling a walk-off RBI single as Coupeville roared back to win 7-6 in eight innings.

The victory, the fourth straight for the Wolves, lifts them to 7-3 headed into the biggest game of the season.

That comes Wednesday, when Coupeville, 2-0 in Olympic League play, travels to Chimacum (1-0) to face the Cowboys in a game which will give the winner sole possession of first place in conference action.

CHS will arrive for that game on a high, both from its current winning streak, and the flamboyant style in which said streak stayed alive against all odds.

Twice rallying from a run down, with the second time coming in extra innings, Coupeville showed grit and resilience against a large 2A school which was riding high with a 6-3 mark entering Saturday.

The Wolves rep one of the smallest 1A schools in the land, but have acquitted themselves nicely against much-bigger rivals this season, going 2-2 against 2A foes.

Saturday’s game was a tense, back-and-forth affair, with the teams changing leads multiple times, but neither squad able to pull away.

Coupeville’s biggest lead came at 2-0 when it plated a pair of runners in the bottom of the first inning.

Matt Hilborn and Joey Lippo were aboard on a walk and a bunt single and busy tormenting the Cedarcrest hurler when he slipped up and delivered a juicy one to Dane Lucero.

Taking full advantage, the Wolf junior ripped a two-run single to open the scoring and raise the tantalizing possibility of a blowout on the horizon.

It wasn’t to be, however.

Instead, Cedarcrest knotted things at 2-2 in the second, then, after CHS scraped out a run in the bottom half of the inning on a Nick Etzell double followed by a Hilborn single, the two teams traded goose eggs until the fifth.

Coupeville had a magnificent opportunity in the third, loading the bags with no outs, only to have three consecutive hitters promptly punched out on strikes.

When Cedarcrest slipped two runs across in the fifth to retake the lead at 4-3, that third-inning kerfuffle looked even worse, but hope would not die on this day.

The Wolves packaged doubles from Hilborn and Hunter Smith around a free pass to Lippo in the sixth to snatch the lead right back, sending themselves charging out for the top of the seventh up 5-4.

The simple route would have been to retire the visitors 1-2-3 and head in with the win, beating the rain and getting out of the wind.

Welling likes to court danger, though, and Cedarcrest seized a glimmer of hope, using three extra-base hits and an error to plate one in the seventh to tie and one in the eighth to take the lead.

It was a moment fit for a lesser team, and a lesser player, to crumble.

Not on this day, and not this player and team.

Welling, like all good-hearted people, is a fervent fan of the Pittsburgh Steelers, and knows deep in his soul what it takes to be a champion.

Toss in his teammates, even those who … ugh … root for the SeaSlugs, and you have a band of warriors who have been tested in the fires and have launched Coupeville baseball to its best start in a decade by refusing to go down easy.

Inspired by a few quiet words of wisdom from the hardball whisperer, AKA coach Chris Smith, the Wolves stepped to the plate in the bottom of the eighth looking not for a mere tie, but an outright win.

Hilborn played patient, eking out a walk to get a man aboard with one out, then Lippo got dramatic.

Swinging on a full count, he lashed a laser, and came within a step of winning the game on one swing.

While Hilborn cruised home with the tying run, Lippo was held to a triple, and not a game-winning two-run home-run, only because his tootsies outran his head.

When his helmet came off and stayed behind as his body continued on, high school rules dictated he had to stop at the last base he hit, planting him firmly at third while he waited for his wayward head-protection to be returned to his noggin.

That small stickler of a rule gave Cedarcrest one last gasp of air, but, two batters later, it was payback time.

Strutting to the plate, waggling his bat like a rampaging Viking heading off the boat and looking for a new English village to conquer, Welling was a feel-good ending come to life for Wolf Nation.

And forget about a little blooper or a shallow single.

This was winning time and Welling blew the cover off the ball, giving Lippo enough time to stroll home, both hands holding his helmet firmly on his head, if he had wished.

In a different situation it would have been a two-bagger, but all that was needed was a quick step on first for the single, and cue the celebration among the cold, wind-lashed Wolf faithful.

For those who stayed for the entire game, they saw Coupeville spread out 10 hits among eight batters.

Lippo (1B, 3B) and Hilborn (1B, 2B) led the way, while Etzell and Hunter Smith had doubles.

Welling, Lucero, Jake Hoagland and Kyle Rockwell added singles.

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   Zara Bradley teamed with Jillian Mayne to pull out a three-set win Tuesday, lifting CHS tennis to its first team victory of the season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a day for surprises.

After non-stop rain soaked the prairie the last couple of days, Tuesday didn’t see a single drop, allowing the Coupeville High School girls tennis team a somewhat unexpected chance to play.

Then, once they took the court, the Wolf netters swept all four doubles matches, winning the final one in a third-set tiebreaker, to stun previously undefeated Granite Falls 4-3.

The non-conference victory, coming against a 2A school, lifts Coupeville to 1-4 on the season.

Their record doesn’t tell the whole tale for the Wolves, as a team repping one of the smallest 1A student bodies in the state has played 80% of it matches so far against 2A schools.

Learning under fire against schools with deep rosters is teaching the CHS netters to persevere, and it paid off handsomely against Granite.

Coupeville’s top two doubles duos swept to quick victories, its #3 unit pulled out a somewhat-tougher battle, and then the #4 tandem won the day.

With the match tied at 3-3, Zara Bradley and Jillian Mayne split the opening two sets of their match with their Tiger foes, then found some magic buried deep within.

The deciding third-set tiebreaker was over quickly, as the Wolf duo scorched Granite Falls 10-1.

With the win, Coupeville heads into its longest break of the season.

The Wolves aren’t scheduled to play again until Apr. 9, when they host another 2A school, North Kitsap.

That kicks off (weather permitting) an epic run of seven matches in nine days, including Coupeville’s first three Olympic League matches (two against Klahowya, one against Chimacum).

Complete Tuesday results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Claire Mietus lost to Rosie Bradwisch 6-0, 6-1

2nd Singles — Genna Wright lost to Taylor Middleton 6-1, 6-2

3rd Singles — Heather Nastali lost to Brooklyn Lee 7-5, 6-2

1st Doubles — Payton Aparicio/Sage Renninger beat Hanah White/Sadie Hutchinson 6-1, 6-1

2nd Doubles — Avalon Renninger/Tia Wurzrainer beat Hanna Rossnagle/Miranda Russo 6-0, 6-2

3rd Doubles — Kameryn St Onge/Maggie Crimmins beat Jenasea Hott/Hannah Vadom 6-3, 6-4

4th Doubles — Jillian Mayne/Zara Bradley beat Emily Lundberg/Mackenzy Petit 6-3, 2-6, 10-1

JV:

5th Doubles — Nanci Melendrez/Megan Behan won 8-6

6th Doubles — Jaimee Masters/Emily Fiedler won 6-4

7th doubles — Elaira Nicolle/Claire Mietus lost 6-1

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   Emma Mathusek smacked a single and scored twice Friday as Coupeville rolled to its second-straight win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Production from the top of the order to the bottom.

That’s what Coupeville High School softball coach Kevin McGranahan is looking for, and his wish came true Friday afternoon.

Ignoring the iffy weather, the Wolves got a big-time spark from their #8 and #9 hitters, then rolled to a 7-3 win over visiting North Mason.

The non-conference victory, coming against a big 2A school, lifts CHS to 2-0 on the season.

The Wolves make an immediate turnaround, heading out Saturday morning for the long trip to Vashon Island.

They’ll do so still beaming over the play of freshman Coral Caveness and sophomore Emma Mathusek.

Mired in a scoreless game heading into the bottom of the third inning, Coupeville needed something.

A spark, as it were.

It came courtesy Caveness, who reached on an error while leading off, and Mathusek, who followed her by eking out a crucial walk.

With runners finally on board, Lauren “The Mighty Munchkin” Rose came up loaded for bear and promptly lashed a two-run double to get things really rockin’ and rollin’.

Rose scooted around to score herself on an RBI single off of the bat of Sarah Wright, and suddenly Wolf hurler Katrina McGranahan had a lead to play around with.

“We kept scrapping and getting runs here and there,” Kevin McGranahan said. “And, as usual, we played as a team and never panicked.”

That came in crucial when North Mason took advantage of a rare defensive lapse from the Wolves to plate two runners of their own in the top of the fifth, pulling back within 3-2.

Showing not a moment of panic, the Wolves tossed another three runs on the scoreboard in the bottom half of the inning, with Mathusek, Scout Smith and Katrina McGranahan all collecting base-knocks.

The cherry on top came from Hope Lodell, as “The Surgeon” sliced ‘n diced North Mason’s defense for a sixth-inning double, then popped home on an RBI single from the red-hot Caveness.

Coupeville finished with eight hits spread out over seven batters, with Katrina McGranahan leading the way with two singles.

That matched what she gave up in the pitcher’s circle.

With help from Wright, her catcher, who “did a great job of keeping her (Kat) down in the zone for a very picky umpire,” Coupeville’s ace was on point all afternoon.

Katrina McGranahan has surrendered just three hits in the first 13 innings of the season.

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