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Coupeville High School cheer coach BreAnna Boon, here with Mica Shipley (left) and Ashleigh Battaglia, is moving on to conquer new worlds. (Photo courtesy Boon)

Elizabeth Bitting (left), here with Catherine Lhamon, is stepping back as CHS cross country coach to focus on her middle school runners. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There are four coaching jobs newly available at Coupeville schools.

The district has posted openings for three high school positions — girls basketball, cheer, and cross country — as well as a middle school girls hoops gig.

Scott Fox previously stepped down as CHS girls basketball coach as he prepares for back surgery and an extended recovery time.

To read about that decision, pop over to:

Fox leaves the hardwood | Coupeville Sports

In the world of cross country, Elizabeth Bitting was doing double duty for a year, coaching high school and middle school harriers, but now returns to CMS as previously planned.

“My heart is with the middle schoolers,” she said. “(Athletic Director) Willie (Smith) knew this was going to be our one-hit wonder.”

Her year with the CHS program sparked huge dividends, as the Wolves held their first home meets in decades, and senior Catherine Lhamon went undefeated across four races in a pandemic-altered season.

Better still, the continued growth of numbers for a CHS/CMS harrier program revived three years ago has been astounding.

“The (high school) team’s potential is phenomenal,” Bitting said. “Whoever takes over better be up for continuing to push them and get the best out of them.”

The Wolf running guru is working with several dads to set up a weekly Kettles Trail run for the team, and will continue to help out at every level.

“I’m still pushing them to improve themselves,” Bitting said. “I may not be coaching them but I’m not far!

“I also have 15 soon to be 6th graders interested in cross country when we return! Gotta get them young!!!”

The pandemic shut the CHS cheer program down for a year, and when it returns this fall, coach BreAnna Boon finds herself in a different place in life than before.

“Unfortunately I now work in Mount Vernon and I don’t get home until 6:30,” she said. “Plus now I have two little ones in sports that makes it impossible to keep up with as well.”

During her two years on the Coupeville sidelines, Boon led the Wolves to a 3rd place finish at state, and a trip to nationals.

“Coaching at CHS has honestly been one of the best experiences of my coaching career,” she said. “The community support, the school district, and the athletes I was blessed to work with have changed my life forever.

“I know the kids cannot wait to move away and get into the big world, but if there is anything I want them to take away from growing up in Coupeville, it is be proud of your hometown,” Boon added. “It’s a big part of who you are.

“The love and support the Coupeville community has is something that is so rare.”

While leaving the Wolf cheer program is bittersweet, the chance to be actively involved with her own children’s growth is priority one.

“As sad as I am to be leaving CHS, I am excited to now watch both of my own children succeed in sports,” Boon said. “My son plays football, basketball, and baseball, and my daughter is in softball, and gymnastics.

“Life is crazy busy with two kids in sports, but we will always find time to sit in the stands under the Friday night lights cheering on the CHS football boys!,” she added.

“Whoever gets to be the next coach for this cheer program, is going to be amazingly blessed to have the backing of the Coupeville community. I know I was.”

 

To see the job openings, and possibly apply, pop over to:

Coupeville School District – Frontline Recruitment (applitrack.com)

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Daniel Olson fires off a jumper. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

We’re done.

The basketball season, and the school athletic year, came to a close Tuesday, with the La Conner girls and Mount Vernon Christian boys clinching Northwest 2B/1B League hoops titles.

Coupeville finished 4th on the girls side and 3rd in boys action, though the latter was by a razor-thin margin.

The Wolf boys (8-4) tied with MVC (8-3) for the most wins — and beat the Hurricanes twice — but finished a half-game back after MVC declined to host Orcas Island after that school requested no fans at its road games during the pandemic.

Friday Harbor, at 7-3, with a pair of one-point wins over Coupeville, edges the Wolves for second-place by having a slightly better winning percentage.

Final league standings for the pandemic-altered 2021 hoops campaign:

 

Northwest League boys basketball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 8-3 8-5
Friday Harbor 7-3 7-3
Coupeville 8-4 8-4
Orcas Island 5-3 5-4
La Conner 6-5 6-7
Darrington 2-6 2-6
Concrete 0-12 0-12

 

Northwest League girls basketball:

School League Overall
La Conner 9-0 13-1
MV Christian 9-2 11-2
Orcas Island 5-3 5-4
Coupeville 5-7 5-7
Concrete 4-8 5-8
Friday Harbor 3-7 3-7
Darrington 0-8 0-8

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Nick Guay splits the defense. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The end is nigh.

High school basketball wraps a pandemic-altered season Tuesday, but we have more photos to share before we get to the finale.

The pics above and below come to us from John Fisken.

To see other images from his busy spring, pop over to:

John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

Izzy Wells works her magic in the paint.

William Davidson rumbles.

Desi Ramirez drills a jumper.

Alex Murdy gets electric.

Audrianna Shaw fires up a free throw.

Madison McMillan goes up strong.

Xavier Murdy looks for two.

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Sage Downes battles in the paint. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One night, two titles on the line.

Tuesday marks the end of the transplanted 2021 basketball season, and both Northwest 2B/1B League titles will be decided on the floor in Mount Vernon.

First up, the La Conner girls will try and finish out an undefeated league campaign, while Mount Vernon Christian will vie for the upset.

The first time these squads faced off, the Braves bounced the Hurricanes 58-33, giving MVC its only loss of the season.

La Conner has impressive non-conference wins against 1A Kings and 2A Lynden, with its lone setback coming to 2A Burlington-Edison.

The math is simple — Tuesday’s winner is league champ.

In the boys contest, MVC will be playing for a title, while La Conner will try and fill the role of spoiler.

Hurricanes win, they top an extremely-close race partially determined by only two of seven NWL schools — Coupeville and Concrete — playing a full 12-game league schedule.

If La Conner triumphs, however, Friday Harbor comes out on top for the boys title.

With their own win Tuesday over visiting Darrington, Coupeville can finish with victories in two-thirds of its games, but it can’t win a league title.

A one-point loss in overtime to Friday Harbor denied the Wolves that fate, but a win against Concrete in their next game did clinch the program’s first winning season since 2010.

Where things stand through June 13:

 

Northwest League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Friday Harbor 7-3 7-3
MV Christian 7-3 7-5
Coupeville 7-4 7-4
Orcas Island 5-3 5-4
La Conner 6-4 6-5
Darrington 2-5 2-5
Concrete 0-12 0-12

 

Northwest League girls basketball:

School League Overall
La Conner 8-0 11-1
MV Christian 9-1 11-1
Orcas Island 5-3 5-4
Coupeville 4-7 4-7
Concrete 4-8 5-8
Friday Harbor 3-7 3-7
Darrington 0-7 0-7

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Cole White, seconds away from burying a jumper. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The basket keeps jumping, the totals on the scoreboard keep advancing.

With two varsity games left to play — Tuesday at home against Darrington — the four Coupeville High School basketball squads have combined to score 1,502 points during this pandemic-altered season.

Three guys have cracked the 100-point barrier, with another one having a chance to do so in the finale.

What does it all mean?

That scoring is the easiest stat to track in basketball, and it makes for good chatter when you compare numbers.

Buckets equals page views. Simple as that.

Scoring totals through June 13:

 

Varsity girls
(11 games):

Audrianna Shaw 76
Izzy Wells 56
Savina Wells 53
Maddie Georges 30
Carolyn Lhamon 29
Anya Leavell 23
Ja’Kenya Hoskins 19
Gwen Gustafson 15
Ryanne Knoblich 15
Kylie Van Velkinburgh 14
Lyla Stuurmans 13

 

Varsity boys
(11 games):

Hawthorne Wolfe 240
Xavier Murdy 115
Grady Rickner 87
Sage Downes 50
Daniel Olson 49
Logan Downes 43
Alex Murdy 39
Logan Martin 31
TJ Rickner 15
Jonathan Valenzuela 15
Cody Roberts 8
Miles Davidson 4
Cole White 2

 

JV girls
(5 games):

Lyla Stuurmans – 51
Madison McMillan – 33
Jessenia Camarena – 20
Katie Marti – 9
Skylar Parker – 4
Morgan Stevens – 4
Desi Ramirez – 2
Kassidy Upchurch – 2
Reese Wilkinson – 1

 

JV boys
(8 games):

Jonathan Valenzuela – 105
Cole White – 56
Dominic Coffman – 51
Logan Downes – 46
Nick Guay – 32
Zane Oldenstadt – 16
William Davidson – 13
Ryan Blouin – 7
Mikey Robinett – 7
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim – 2

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