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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Chelsi Stevens dreams of big hits. (Aleksia Jump photo)

It was a little taste of their own medicine.

A Coupeville High School softball squad which has inflicted the 10-run mercy rule on 13 of its first 17 opponents had the tables flipped by Klahowya Tuesday afternoon.

In a rematch of former Olympic League rivals, the red-hot Wolves were largely stifled by Eagles hurler Bailey O’Brien, falling 12-2 in five innings while playing in Silverdale.

The non-conference loss snaps a five-game winning streak for The Smash Sisters, dropping them to 16-2 on the season.

Coupeville will have one more tune-up before heading to the district tourney, travelling to Port Townsend Friday to play East Jefferson, a team it routed 21-3 during the first week of April.

There was supposed to also be a trip to Langley Wednesday to play South Whidbey, but the Falcons bailed at the last second, perhaps still in shock after being routed 17-1 by the Wolves a week-and-a-half ago.

While he wasn’t thrilled with his team’s performance, CHS coach Aaron Lucero had scheduled the game with Klahowya, a 1A school whose 9-11 record is a bit deceiving, intent on getting a challenge.

And like with Forks, the only other team to knock off the Wolves, and 3A Oak Harbor, which gave Coupeville an early-season extra-inning battle, mission accomplished.

“I think this is good for them in the long run to face a quality team,” Lucero said. “I have been telling them for a couple of weeks that Klahowya’s record does not tell the story.

“They are playing some very tough teams and getting very close. And talking with their coaches, that’s exactly how their season’s been.”

Tuesday’s tilt started as a nailbiter and remained close for 92% of the game.

Coupeville pushed a run across in the top of the first thanks to back-to-back base knocks from Teagan Calkins and Chelsi Stevens, before Klahowya answered back with a tally of its own in the bottom of the frame.

The game started to change in the second, however, when Eagle slugger Shyanne Kilmer bashed a two-run home run to right — the first of two taters for her on the afternoon — pushing the host team ahead 3-1.

CHS sliced the deficit to 3-2 on an RBI double off of Calkin’s always-electric bat in the third, but left runners stranded at second and third, unable to open their customary can of whup-ass.

Coupeville is deadly down its lineup from one through nine, but O’Brien whiffed 11 and walked just one Tuesday, and Klahowya never trailed again.

A run in the third made it 4-2, two more in the fourth stretched it to 6-2, and then a six-run rally in the fifth turned a close game into a romp.

For his part Lucero is already ready to get back at it, first with a couple of days of practice, then the regular season finale.

“We did not play the ball we are capable of,” he said. “We didn’t get the timely hits, and we did not play well defensively to back up our pitcher.

“I think this was a good gut check game for the team and definitely needed. Soooo, time to dig deep, get our minds right, and get ready to play the next game.”

 

Tuesday stats:

Haylee Armstrong — Two singles
Teagan Calkins — One single, one double
Chelsi Stevens — One single
Cami Van Dyke — One walk

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Malachi Somes (left), Camden Glover, and crew are still in the playoff hunt, but the margin of error has tightened. (Jackie Saia photo)

The ball slipped through their hands, and now the playoffs may as well.

Committing a season-high 10 errors Tuesday, the Coupeville High School baseball squad fell 14-1 to visiting Mount Vernon Christian in a mercy-ruled game which complicates the Wolves pursuit of a postseason berth.

Now 7-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 9-8 overall after absorbing its fourth straight loss, CHS sits in a tie with Friday Harbor (7-4) and Orcas Island (7-4) in the battle for the #2 and #3 tickets to the district tourney.

MVC, at 11-0, will be the top seed and face the winner of that #2 vs. #3 loser-out game May 14 in the District 1/2 championship game at Skagit Valley College.

Both teams in the finale advance to state.

But first Friday Harbor faces La Conner (3-7) Wednesday, while Orcas clashes with Darrington (2-8) Thursday to close out regular season league play.

Coupeville will have a more difficult task, travelling to Mount Vernon Thursday for a rematch with the Hurricanes.

Steve Hilborn’s diamond men will need a short memory heading into that game, as there is probably little they want to dwell on from Tuesday’s home swan song.

MVC jumped on the Wolves for two runs in the top of the first, before capitalizing on a rash of CHS errors to push seven more across in the second.

Coupeville garnered its lone run in the bottom of the third, after trailing 13-0, as Chase Anderson thumped a double, stole third, then scooted home on one of two errors committed by the ‘Canes.

That was largely it for offense, though, as the Wolves only had a handful of runners, stranding two in the first, and leaving lone runners short of home in three of the other four innings.

CHS used four pitchers, with Anderson, Camden Glover, Coop Cooper, and Trent Thule combining to whiff five batters across five innings of work.

Thule, the lone non-senior in that group, had the most success, recording a 1-2-3 inning in the fourth.

 

Tuesday stats:

Chase Anderson — One single, one double
Camden Glover — One walk
Riley Lawless — One walk
Aiden O’Neill — One single

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Kick off June with a round of spikes and sets.

The Coupeville High School volleyball coaching staff, led by Scout Smith, is hosting a development camp June 1-4 in the CHS gym.

Each night will run from 6:00-7:30 PM, and cost is $50 per athlete for the camp, with each participant receiving a t-shirt to mark the occasion.

The camp is open to girls who will be in grades 8-12 this fall, with limited space available for experienced incoming 7th graders.

The goal is to give Wolf players a view of what they can expect when a new season rolls around.

“This camp provides a great opportunity to develop skills, compete, and gain exposure to the expectations and style of the Coupeville volleyball program in a structured, high-repetition environment,” Smith said.

Registration closes May 15, and can be done by popping over to:

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSd-Dx4gFMdC5gXMy16c4Lw556SlmrnyY5au0IZcaeTw-tgeTA/viewform

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Taygin Jump

She’s in the inner circle.

Coupeville grad Taygin Jump, now a track and field star in her junior year at Plattsburgh State in New York, was inducted into Chi Alpha Sigma Monday at her university’s Student-Athlete Recognition and Awards Ceremony.

Chi Alpha Sigma is a national honor society which recognizes collegiate student-athletes who “excel academically and athletically.”

Requirements include being a varsity athlete who has lettered at a four-year college or university, being a junior or senior, maintaining a cumulative GPA of 3.5 or higher and receiving an endorsement from their head coach “confirming good moral character.”

Established in 1996 by Nick Mourouzis of DePauw University in Indiana, Chi Alpha Sigma has grown to include 470 chapters across the country.

Jump, who is studying Environmental Planning and Management, is a thrower for the Cardinals.

She’s coming off a strong performance at the State University of New York Athletic Conference Outdoor Track and Field Championships, where she finished 5th in the javelin and set a PR in the hammer throw.

During her CHS days, Jump competed in volleyball and track and field for the Wolves.

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Tate Wyman

His balance between classwork and oval achievement remains impeccable.

Coupeville grad Tate Wyman, now a junior track and field star at Oregon Tech, was one of 41 Owls across six sports honored April 30 as a 2026 NAIA Scholar-Athlete.

This is the second time the former Wolf, who is studying embedded systems engineering technology, has been tabbed for the achievement, after he also received it as a sophomore — the first year a student/athlete is eligible.

To earn the honor, you have to maintain a 3.50 GPA or higher.

Wyman was one of eight male track and field athletes to qualify, with Oregon Tech students from softball, baseball, women’s track and field, and men’s and women’s golf also honored.

Earlier in April, Ayden and Devon’s older brother was also named to the U.S. Bank Academic All-Cascade Collegiate Conference team, which requires a 3.2 GPA.

Putting books aside for a moment or two, Tate will compete in the league championship meet May 8-9 in La Grande, Oregon.

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