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Coupeville students (l to r) Hunter Bronec, Hurlee Bronec, Landon Roberts, and Ayden Wyman share Homecoming royalty honors. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

There are two parts to the Homecoming game experience.

Half of the focus is on the gridiron action, while the other half is on the royalty reveal at halftime.

Coupeville High School honored 14 students Friday during its 18-5 rout of Friday Harbor, with a pack of seniors leading the way.

The 2024 royalty was:

 

Seniors:

Hunter Bronec
Hurlee Bronec
Preston Epp
Mia Farris
Jada Heaton
Ember Light
Landon Roberts
Ayden Wyman

 

Juniors:

George Spear
Noelle Western

 

Sophomores:

Evangelina Shelly
Gabe Smith

 

Freshmen:

Beckett Green
Sydney Van Dyke

George Spear and Noelle Western

Evangelina Shelly and Gabe Smith

Sydney Van Dyke and Beckett Green

The Bronecs are joined by fellow seniors (l to r) Jada Heaton, Mia Farris, Roberts, Wyman, Preston Epp, and Ember Light.

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Ayden Wyman patrols the pitch once more. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

A Saturday afternoon matinee will always bring them in.

The Coupeville High School co-ed soccer team made its home debut Saturday, fighting to a 1-1 tie with Crosspoint, and several cameras could be heard clicking away.

One of those belonged to John Fisken, who provides us with the pics seen above and below.

To see everything he snapped, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Soccer-2024-2025/Soccer-2024-09-14-vs-Crosspoint

 

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Wolf junior Ayden Wyman, in only her third day as a high jumper, won the event Saturday in Forks. (Amber Wyman photo)

They came, they saw, they competed really well in the time they had.

The Coupeville High School track and field team put in five hours Saturday at the Forks Lion Club Invitational, then had to hightail it so as not to miss the ferry.

That kept the Wolves from vying in several events, with things such as the 200 and 4 x 400 relay falling by the wayside.

Still, even with their premature departure, the Wolves, who were in action for the first time since March 28, held up well in the team standings.

The CHS girls, repping a 2B school, claimed third, trailing just 1A Klahowya and 2A Olympic, while Coupeville’s boys earned fifth among eight teams.

Port Angeles, a 2A school, won the boys’ team title.

Overall, the Wolves claimed first-place in four events and set 48 PR’s, putting smiles on the faces of their tired coaches.

“Despite having to leave early, it was a good post-spring break meet,” said Bob Martin.

“Hard to believe we’re only 18 days away from our league championship!!!”

CHS returns to action next Wednesday, April 17, when it hosts the Coupeville Classic Invite. This time, no Wolf is going home early.

Marquette Cunningham flies the friendly skies. (Parker Hammons photo)

 

Saturday’s results:

 

GIRLS:

100 — Issabel Johnson (8th) 14.28 *PR*; Tirsit Cannon (13th) 14.62

400 — Devin Neveu (4th) 1:09.80 *PR*; Ivy Rudat (9th) 1:15.82 *PR*; Reagan Callahan (13th) 1:20.46; Ayden Wyman (17th) 1:22.66; Frankie Tenore (18th) 1:27.78

800 — Kayla Crane (8th) 2:55.33

1600 — Aleera Kent (7th) 6:12.24 *PR*; Crane (9th) 6:41.95

3200 — Aleksia Jump (4th) 15:54.94; Lydia Price (5th) 16:19.46

100 Hurdles — Myra McDonald (7th) 21.52 *PR*; Lexis Drake (11th) 23.19; Tenore (12th) 23.96

300 Hurdles — Drake (3rd) 1:01.22; McDonald (6th) 1:04.06

4 x 100 Relay — Jump, Carly Burt, Johnson, Jasmine Castellanos (1st) 57.68

4 x 200 Relay — Stuurmans, Castellanos, Johnson, Burt (3rd) 1:59.54

Shot Put — Reese Wilkinson (2nd) 29-07.50; Katie Marti (7th) 26-06; Erica McGrath (17th) 21-05.50; Alysia Burdge (21st) 20-03.50

Discus — Wilkinson (1st) 88-11; McGrath (5th) 78-00; Marti (6th) 75-10; Burdge (20th) 45-07; Callahan (22nd) 44-04 *PR*

Javelin — Marti (3rd) 88-02; Burdge (13th) 54-05; Wilkinson (15th) 52-04; McGrath (16th) 50-06

High Jump — Wyman (1st) 4-04 *PR*; McDonald (2nd) 4-02 *PR*; Drake (6th) 4-00 *PR*

Long Jump — Stuurmans (3rd) 14-04 *PR*; Burt (12th) 12-04.50; Cannon (13th) 11-11 *PR*; I. Rudat (14th) 11-09.50 *PR*

 

BOYS:

100 — Preston Epp (9th) 12.19 *PR*; Marquette Cunningham (14th) 12.24 *PR*; Davin Houston (14th) 12.47 *PR*; Dayvon Donavon (20th) 12:52; Alex Merino-Martinez (32nd) 13.03; Marcelo Gebhard (35th) 13.19; Matthew Ward (39th) 13.35; Matthew Kuzma (43rd) 13.43 *PR*; Timothy Nitta (44th) 13.54 *PR*

400 — Epp (5th) 54.99; Nehemiah Myles (12th) 57.68 *PR*; Dane Hadsall (23rd) 1:01.25 *PR*; Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim (27th) 1:02.53; Kuzma (32nd) 1:04.17 *PR*; Hank Milnes (33rd) 1:04.40; Solomon Rudat (35th) 1:05.64; Captain Teuscher (38th) 1:09.75 *PR*

800 — Carson Field (7th) 2:22.92; Cael Wilson (13th) 2:27.41 *PR*; Kenneth Jacobsen (14th) 2:28.39 *PR*; Ezekiel Allen (17th) 2:35.83; Thomas Strelow (18th) 2:35.88; Santiago Ojeda Fernandez (22nd) 2:43.02; S. Rudat (23rd) 2:43.18; Preston Howard (28th) 2:49.48; George Spear (29th) 2:53.26

1600 — Field (3rd) 5:05.24; Malachi Somes (8th) 5:17.94; Spear (10th) 5:22.75; Jacobsen (11th) 5:23.59 *PR*; Strelow (16th) 5:35.14; Allen (17th) 5:35.38 *PR*; Howard (27th) 6:21.38; Sam Richards (30th) 6:46.55 *PR*; Damiano Giacobbe 7:05.99 *PR*

110 Hurdles — Axel Marshall (7th) 21.65 *PR*; Mikey Robinett (9th) 23.17 *PR*

300 Hurdles — Robinett (8th) 52.08

4 x 100 Relay — CunninghamWilsonEpp, Nick Guay (4th) 47.58; Houston, Kuzma, Hadsall, Ward (8th) 50.81

Shot Put — Zane Oldenstadt (13th) 33-11.50; Robinett (14th) 33-02.50; Guay (16th) 31-10.75 *PR*; Gebhard (23rd) 28-08.50; Mason Butler (32nd) 26-00; Jacob Schooley (33rd) 25-05 *PR*; Jacobsen (34th) 25-03; Nick Shelly (36th) 22-03.25 *PR*; Giacobbe (38th) 18-08.50; Zach Blitch (40th) 17-01.50 *PR*

Discus — Oldenstadt (3rd) 103-10; Schooley (10th) 87-02 *PR*; Butler (16th) 74-11; Nicholas Wasik (24th) 68-10 *PR*; Shelly (25th) 67-08; Teuscher (28th) 62-04 *PR*; Blitch (34th) 53-04 *PR*; Giacobbe (35th) 52-09; Peerapong Prombut (36th) 51-04

Javelin — Gebhard (14th) 98-09; Somes (18th) 97-03; Robinett (20th) 94-08; Hadsall (26th) 80-06 *PR*; Wilson (27th) 80-02 *PR*; Ward (29th) 79-11; Nitta (31st) 78-07 *PR*; Schooley (32nd) 77-10; Butler (37th) 71-01; Shelly (38th) 68-03; Wasik (41st) 58-10 *PR*; Ojeda Fernandez (42nd) 58-01; Prombut (44th) 50-04 *PR*; Giacobbe (46th) 47-02 *PR*

High Jump — Guay (1st) 6-00; Houston (4th) 5-02; Marshall (4th) 5-02 *PR*; Simpson-Pilgrim (6th) 5-00; Wilson (6th) 5-00

Long Jump — Myles (10th) 16-10.50; Field (19th) 14-11.50; Marshall (20th) 14-08.50; Teuscher (21st) 14-06 *PR*; Howard (22nd) 14-05 *PR*; S. Rudat (27th) 13-05.50; Strelow (32nd) 12-07.50 *PR*; Merino-Martinez (33rd) 11-11; Richards (34th) 10-11 *PR*

Triple Jump — Cunningham (5th) 35-11; Marshall (7th) 35-00

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Cael Wilson and Co. are battling for a playoff berth. (Lyla Stuurmans photo)

This one stings.

The Coupeville High School varsity boys’ soccer team entered Thursday ranked #4 in the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association RPI rankings.

They won’t be in the same spot tomorrow.

After only losing to teams ranked ahead of them — #1 Friday Harbor and #3 Mount Vernon Christian — the Wolves fell 4-0 at Bothell to host Providence Classical Christian, which was ranked #9.

It’s the first time the CHS varsity has been shut out this season, with the loss coming to a team it beat 2-0 a month ago in a game classified as a non-conference affair.

The defeat drops Coupeville to 2-3 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 5-4 overall, with three conference rumbles left on the regular-season schedule.

Currently sitting 5th in the nine-team NWL, the Wolves close with a road trip to Lopez Island (Oct. 18), a home tilt with La Conner (Oct. 20), and a trek to Orcas Island (Oct. 24).

CHS trails Friday Harbor (4-0), MVC (3-1), Orcas (3-1), and PCC (3-1) in the conference standings.

Meanwhile, Lopez (1-2), Grace Academy (1-3), La Conner (1-4), and Cedar Park Christian-Lynnwood (0-3) are battling in the basement.

As they headed home from Bothell, Wolf coaches Robert Wood and Kimberly Kisch preferred to make the trip mostly in quiet contemplation.

“Man, it was a rough game,” Kisch said, and, with that, we’ll leave the loss in the rear-view mirror and move on to potentially better days.

 

JV has tilt on tap:

Coupeville’s second squad returns to action before the varsity does, travelling to Mount Vernon Christian Tuesday, Oct. 16 for a game.

The Wolf JV sits at 0-2-1 on the season.

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Ayden Wyman and the Coupeville co-ed soccer squad nailed down its first win Friday night. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was Friday Night Lights, but with a European twist.

The “working media” in the press box were thrilled with their complimentary hot dog and Coke, the student section was loud ‘n proud, and everyone in Wolf Nation went home happy.

Riding goals from Cole White and Ezra Boilek, plus standout defensive work from goaltender Hurlee Bronec and his back line, the Coupeville High School booters romped to a 2-0 win while playing in prime time.

The victory, a non-conference triumph over conference foe Providence Classical Christian, lifts the Wolves to 1-1 on the still-young season.

It’s also the first varsity win for any CHS squad this school year, as Cow Town teams have opened with tough schedules featuring mostly larger schools.

With Wolf football on the road in Sultan, soccer got a chance to be front and center Friday, with plenty of other Coupeville athletes leaning over the grandstand railing, screaming their approval.

Spikers Katie Marti, Madison McMillan, and Co. had their cheer game on point, and the crowd support sent a charge through the team playing down below.

“Thanks to EVERYONE who came,” said Wolf coach Robert Wood. “Coupeville’s 12th Man showed up and it was wonderful!”

Wolf coaches Robert Wood and Kimberly Kisch keep an eye on the action.

Whether it was Ayden Wyman aggressively hip checking a male rival, or Wolf defenders like birthday boy Preston Epp, Hank Milnes, and Andrew Williams refusing to bend or break, the hometown pitch warriors were on point.

Maybe none more so than Bronec, playing in just his second game in goal after bouncing over from the gridiron.

Unleashing both fists, the lanky netminder batted away several shots, including two on one play as he danced in the pale moonlight with an unlucky PCC sharpshooter.

Bronec got even more electric as the game unfolded, saving some of his best highlight reel plays for the closing moments.

Preserving his shutout, he went to the ground to snuff out shots, while also climbing an invisible staircase to knock away a vicious free kick which came in screaming and went back out with a whimper.

He got plenty of help, as Bronec’s bruisers crashed the back line hard all night, with Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, Dane Hadsall, Bryley Gilbert, and Matthew Ward keeping PCC bottled up.

Cael Wilson, his spirit as fiery as his hair, was everywhere, sprinting up one side of the pitch and down the other, tracking down any visitor who tried to make a break for freedom.

On the offensive side, Coupeville peppered the PCC goalie, breaking through about 10 minutes before halftime, when White popped a penalty kick into the left corner of the net for his fifth career goal.

The freebie was a nice makeup for earlier, when Wolf scoring ace Nick Guay got plastered from behind, landing face first in the soft green grass while the refs stared at the pretty sunset and swallowed their whistles.

It didn’t matter however, as Coupeville punched in a second goal less than three minutes into the second half — Boilek slamming a shot from deep on the right side for his first-ever Wolf score — to effectively seal the deal.

That set off the student section, which rocked the rail and hollered long into the night, not finishing until after the Wolf booters came over, post-game, to hail their classmates.

As they departed, CHS coaches Wood and Kimberly Kisch were marinating in the moment while already looking ahead.

The Wolves hit the road next Tuesday to play Grace Academy, before returning to Coupeville for four of their next five games.

“Still working out formations and positions,” Wood said. “But tonight shows, one, what they are capable of, and two, what happens when you play for each other.

“Very pleased … but it’s in the past and we are focused now on building tonight’s success for Tuesday.”

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