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Posts Tagged ‘Cael Wilson’

Liam Blas (left) and Bennett Richter rejoice in Coupeville reclaiming ownership of The Bucket. (Kevin Blas photo)

Stuff happened.

Just sayin’…

The Year of our Lord 2025 is heading towards the exit, but a scan back through the headlines reveals quite a bit went down here in Cow Town.

Here’s some of what transpired, broken down into 15 pretty random bullet points.

Why 15? Why ask why?

Cory Whitmore guided CHS volleyball to state three times. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

1 — People left and people came.

Among those exiting jobs were CHS volleyball coaches Cory Whitmore and Ashley Menges, and soccer gurus Kimberly Kisch and Robert Wood.

Plus, CMS basketball coaches Makana Stone and RayLynn Ratcliff, CMS volleyball coaches Kristina Hooks and Cris Matochi, as well as CHS/CMS Athletic Director Brad Sherman, though he remains as CHS boys’ basketball coach.

Also no longer in their previous job?

CHS/CMS Principal Geoff Kappes and Vice Principal Allyson Cundiff, plus music teacher Jamar Jenkins, Business Manager Brian Gianello, and janitorial legend Dan Verduzco, whose post-basketball game playlists rocked the prairie well into the night.

New additions include CHS Principal Dan Berard, CMS Principal/Athletic Director Becky Cays, Athletic Secretary Amber Waldner, CHS soccer coaches Jasmine Ader and Jim Kunz, CHS volleyball leaders Scout Smith and Tianna Carlson, and CMS spiker coaches Shaloma Allen and Katie Rohrbach.

Smith is also working as the CHS girls’ basketball varsity head coach this winter, with Megan Richter taking a season off for the birth of her second child.

Finn Price, water wizard. (Katie Marti photo)

2 — Folks went to state.

Lone Wolf swimmer Finn Price made his second trip to the big splash in early 2025 and is back in late 2025 to begin the chase for a third, and final, journey to the year’s biggest meet. After that, he’ll head to Whitman College to pursue aquatic excellence at the next level.

Also punching state tickets were CHS track stars and the Wolf softball team in the spring, then both boys’ and girls’ cross country in the fall.

Thirteen Wolves made it to state for their efforts around the oval, with nine earning medals in Eastern Washington.

Leading the way was senior Cael Wilson, who collected three medals — 2nd in the high jump, 5th in the 4 x 400 relay, and 6th in the pole vault — while also tying a school record in the high jump which had stood untouched for 25 years.

His final launch of six feet, four inches matched Rich Wilson (no relation), who had held the mark alone since the spring of 2000.

While track was running wild, Wolf softball was putting together the second-best performance in program history.

Aaron Lucero’s sluggers finished 20-3 while splitting four games at the 2B state tourney, beating both Colfax and Raymond-South Bend in loser-out games and capping a run in which seniors Mia Farris, Madison McMillan, Chloe Marzocca, Jada Heaton, and Taylor Brotemarkle combined to spark CHS to 64 wins across four seasons.

Finally, this fall, Elizabeth Bitting’s harriers sent 12 runners to the state cross country meet, the first time since the program was reborn eight years ago that the Wolves had two complete teams advance to the season’s final run.

Bow Down to Cow Town. (Megan Rickner photo)

3 — Coupeville reclaims The Bucket.

Senior quarterback Chase Anderson ran for three touchdowns and threw for another as the Wolves destroyed host South Whidbey 35-6 in the year’s biggest football game.

That snapped a seven-year dry spell for CHS in the Island rivalry clash in which the Falcons won six straight while the 2020 game was cancelled by the pandemic.

This time around, the Wolves exploded for 28 points in the second half, while senior Aiden O’Neill picked off a pair of South Whidbey passes to seal the deal.

Lillian Ketterling ponders your destruction. (Jackie Saia photo)

4 — Girls’ soccer returns to the pitch.

There were 1,050 days between games, but the CHS female booters revived their program after a two-year shutdown due to a lack of players.

With a roster rich in 8th and 9th graders, and led by their lone senior, Frankie Tenore, the young Wolves not only returned, but prospered, closing the season on a 3-1-1 run while peppering rival goaltenders from every direction.

Kauri Hamilton slaps a winner while playing at home. (Jackie Saia photo)

5 — Girls’ tennis players get off the bus.

It took a little longer than planned, but new tennis courts were finally finished at CHS, allowing the Wolf netters to once again host home matches after playing exclusively on the road for far too long.

A program led by young guns Tenley Stuurmans and Dahlia Miller is on the upswing, and now fans don’t have to travel way down the road to witness the serve and volley action.

That’s a win-win.

Teagan Calkins? Kind of a legend. (David Somes photo)

6 — Wolves honored by rival coaches.

The year brought a number of awards for CHS athletes, with Northwest 2B/1B League coaches tabbing multiple Wolves as First-Team All-Conference selections.

That included:

Boys Basketball — Chase Anderson

Baseball — Landon Roberts, Camden Glover

Softball — Mia Farris, Madison McMillan, Teagan Calkins, Adeline Maynes 

Football — Chase Anderson, Camden Glover, Riley Lawless, Davin Houston, Malachi Somes

Girls Soccer — Tamsin Ward

Volleyball — Teagan Calkins

Kyle King, still a whiz kid.

7 — Kyle King is still fast.

The 2008 CHS grad, a five-time state track and field champ as a Wolf, won the huge Marine Corps Marathon for the third time, besting a field of 35,000 runners.

That follows on the heels of wins in 2022 and 2024.

Makana Stone, hittin’ jumpers and cashin’ checks. (Photo property of Erik Berglund)

8 — Makana Stone gets a new gig.

The Wolf legend, having retired after a successful professional overseas basketball career, was hired to lead the Walla Walla University women’s basketball program.

That decision is what sports experts call a slam dunk.

Landon Roberts can compare awards with pops. (Photo courtesy Jon Roberts)

9 — Trio share Athlete of the Year honors.

Three Wolf seniors received their school’s highest athletic honor at the end of the 2024-2025 school year.

On the girls’ side of things, seniors Lyla Stuurmans and Mia Farris were announced as co-winners, with Farris being honored for a second-straight year, while Landon Roberts kept family tradition alive by earning the male award.

He follows in the footsteps of dad Jon, mom Sherry, and big sis Lindsey, who all received Athlete of the Year distinction during their own school days.

Mickey Clark Field is timeless. (David Stern photo)

10 — Five decades for the field.

Mickey Clark Field hit the big 5-0 while I was off-Island in West Virginia — a moment that should have gotten some fanfare from the school.

Chimacum was the first visitor on Sept. 19, 1975, for a football clash, and five decades later, the grass has many stories to tell.

 

Bout dang time. (David Svien photo)

11 — No more balls hitting cars driving by.

It’s been a long time coming, but finally, a backstop built for the reality of fastpitch softball has risen on the prairie.

Built during the offseason, it’ll make its debut this coming spring, as we all adjust to not watching teenage girls sprint into oncoming traffic in pursuit of fouled-off balls.

Bryan Sherman

12 — The school board keeps on cruisin’.

Directors Nancy Conard, Morgan White, and Bryan Sherman swept to re-election victories, with none of the three drawing an opponent.

The lack of registered rivals was not due to apathy, but a resounding stamp of approval to a board of professionals who approach their jobs with calm reasoning and deep commitment. Unlike some other boards in the region…

Orson Christensen gets his props.

13 — The ol’ ball coach is honored.

Former CHS football coach Orson Christensen, one of the true giants in the industry, was inducted into the Hall of Fame at Nebraska Wesleyan University for his work as a coach and athletic director.

Couldn’t happen to a better guy.

Anna Powers flies to the finish line. (Julie Wheat photo)

14 — The future is now, and it’s fast.

During the spring, Tamsin Ward and Diesel Eck, then in 8th and 7th grade, respectively, delivered landmark middle school track and field seasons.

Eck captured 13 wins as a thrower and runner, the best single-season performance by a CMS boy in the time period I can verify (2008-2025), while Ward won 16 events, second only to Lindsey Roberts 19-win performance back in the day.

Ward, who would go on to score a team-high 15 goals on the soccer pitch as a CHS freshman this fall, finished her middle school days with a school-record 39 victories.

Then, this fall, CMS 8th grader Anna Powers finished 1st or 2nd in five of seven cross country races.

Haylee Armstrong, being hugged by Tenley Stuurmans after hitting a buzzer-beater, is back to tear up the hardwood. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

15 — Basketball begins once more.

God’s Chosen Sport” is back at the forefront of the prep sports world as 2025 prepares to fade into 2026, with Chase Anderson having cracked the 700-point career scoring club in his last game.

Plus, putting a cap on a very-successful middle school boys’ hoops season, previously unheralded 7th grader Henry Tierney shot the prettiest pair of free throws I have ever witnessed in a Coupeville gym.

In a world of countless three-balls missing the rim entirely and sailing off into the wild blue yonder, fundamentals still exist.

There is hope as we sail into 2026.

Marin Winger is ready to lead the cheers for a new year. (Jackie Saia photo)

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Isa Mc Fetridge (front) and Ari Cunningham team up in a relay. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Every event, every meet, the points piled up.

As the high school track and field season played out, Coupeville coaches kept a running tally of how their stars performed, and now you can see a breakdown.

Overall, 48 Wolves — 30 boys and 18 girls — racked up points, with five cracking triple-digits.

Topping the list? Seniors Katie Marti and Cael Wilson, who both advanced to the state meet in multiple events.

 

GIRLS:

Katie Marti — 172
Lyla Stuurmans — 111
Aleksia Jump — 70
Lillian Ketterling — 66
Mikayla Wagner — 45
Olivia Hall — 33.25
Ivy Rudat — 23.50
Frankie Tenore — 23
Ayden Wyman — 19
Devon Wyman — 18
Laken Simpson — 15.75
Willow Leedy-Bonifas — 13.25
Isa Mc Fetridge — 10.75
Myra McDonald — 10
Marin Winger — 10
Lexis Drake — 9.50
Noelle Western — 9
Ari Cunningham — 3

Marquette Cunningham delivers the baton to Davin Houston.

 

BOYS:

Cael Wilson — 151.50
Carson Field — 132
Chase Anderson — 107.25
Matthew Ward — 84.50
Axel Marshall — 76
George Spear — 76
Marquette Cunningham — 67.50
Preston Epp — 67.25
Davin Houston — 53
Liam Blas — 44.50
Marcelo Gebhard — 40.75
Blake Burrows — 32.50
Zac Tackett — 30
Malachi Somes — 28.25
Joshua Stockdale — 28.25
Kenneth Jacobsen — 20.25
Solomon Rudat — 16.25
Ethan Walling — 14
Edmund Kunz — 11
Mason Butler — 9
Wyatt Fitch-Marron — 8
Khanor Jump — 8
Dane Hadsall — 7.75
Beckett Green — 5.50
Nathan Coxsey — 2.50
Easton Green — 2.50
Jonah Weyl — 2.50
Richmond Bandong — 1.50
Will Tierney — 0.25
Edmund Wilson — 0.25

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Cael Wilson tied the CHS record in the high jump Friday at the state meet. (Photo courtesy Bob Martin)

It took them a quarter-century, but they finally caught him.

Coupeville High School senior Cael Wilson soared through the Yakima heat Friday at the 2B state track and field championships, tying a school record in the high jump which has lasted 25 years.

The mark of six feet, four inches was set in 2000 by Rich Wilson (no relation), and it’s remained on the Wolf record board untouched since that point.

Until Friday.

Now, after Cael Wilson earned second place in the event, edged out by Trenton Sandburn of Freeman, there will be two Wilsons sharing the CHS record.

It was a dynamic performance by the current Wolf ace, who was joined by Coupeville freshman Wyatt Fitch-Marron, who also medaled, placing 7th in the event.

Ultimately though, no one was catching Sandburn, who hit 6-07 but couldn’t get over the bar in his attempt to break the 2B state record of 6-09, set by Bob Swannack of St. John-Endicott in 1989.

After strong work in the prelims, Chase Anderson (left) and Preston Epp will run in two relay finals. (Jackie Saia photo)

It was a two-medal day for Cael Wilson and will be a three-medal meet by the time he’s done.

He followed up the high jump performance by claiming 6th in the pole vault and also ran a leg on a 4 x 400 relay squad which clinched a medal by advancing to Saturday’s eight-team final.

Barring a plot twist which keeps him from participating in the relay, Cael Wilson will finish his CHS career with five state meet medals, tying older brother Aidan.

He will be the ninth Wolf boy, and 13th Coupeville track star overall since 1963 to collect five or more medals.

Saturday’s finale will feature Coupeville athletes competing in six events, with medals guaranteed in three.

The Wolves have top-eight slots locked down in the boys 800, as well as both boys relay races.

Katie Marti is also slated to vie in the shot put and javelin, while Carson Field and Kenneth Jacobsen will run in the 3200, with all three of those events featuring full 16-athlete fields.

Coupeville’s boys, with four medals in the bag through two days, sit in third place in the 2B team standings with six of 17 events scored.

Onalaska leads the way with 28 points, followed by Saint George’s (19), the Wolves (16.50), Reardan (16), and Northwest Christian (Colbert) rounding out the top five with 15 points.

 

Friday’s results:

 

GIRLS:

800 (Prelims) — Lyla Stuurmans (14th) 2:34.03

Discus (Finals) — Katie Marti (13th) 93-09

Katie Marti (left) and Lyla Stuurmans flank Matthew Ward, who earned a medal in the triple jump Thursday. (Jackie Saia photo)

 

BOYS:

400 (Prelims) — Preston Epp (11th) 52.15 *PR*

800 (Prelims) — Carson Field (5th) 2:02.46

4 x 100 Relay (Prelims) — Marquette Cunningham, Davin Houston, Epp, Chase Anderson (7th) 44.43

4 x 400 Relay (Prelims) — Anderson, Blake Burrows, Cael Wilson, Epp (5th) 3:31.53

High Jump (Finals) — Wilson (2nd) 6-04 *PR* *SCHOOL RECORD*; Wyatt Fitch-Marron (7th) 5-10

Pole Vault (Finals) — Wilson (6th) 11-06

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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

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Wyatt Fitch-Marron makes a bold entrance. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’re moving back up the charts.

After a strong team-wide performance Saturday at the District 1 Track and Field Championships, Coupeville High School athletes have increased their presence among the state’s best.

The Wolves will send 13 on to the state meet in two weeks, and a look at the top 10 performance list for 2B athletes contains more CHS names than it did a week ago.

Based on their work at districts, senior Carson Field (3200), freshman Wyatt Fitch-Marron (High Jump), and the boys 4 x 400 relay team now appear among the best of the best.

With just 12 days left in the season, where Coupeville athletes show up through May 19 on the statewide list for top 2B performances:

 

GIRLS:

Shot Put — Katie Marti (5th) 34-08

 

BOYS:

800 — Carson Field (4th) 2:02.03

3200 — Field (9th) 10:27.36

4 x 100 Relay — Marquette Cunningham, Davin Houston, Preston Epp, Chase Anderson (8th) 44.41

4 x 400 Relay — Anderson, Blake Burrows, Cael Wilson, Epp (9th) 3:35.55

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

Pole Vault — Wilson (3rd-tie) 12-06

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