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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Davin Houston is among the best high jumpers in 2B. (Jackie Saia photo)

Everything continues to move.

As we say farewell to the regular season and look towards the postseason run of league, districts, and state, there are five Coupeville High School track and field stars who land in the top 10 among all 2B athletes statewide.

That’s up from four a week ago, as freshman distance runner Cyrus Sparacio moves back among the leaders in the 3200.

Meanwhile, Wolf sophomore pole vaulter Lillian Ketterling, who broke her PR by three inches, moves up a slot, while freshman shot putter Tamsin Ward slips a spot.

With the Northwest 2B/1B League meet on the schedule for this Thursday, here’s where things sit statewide through May 4:

 

GIRLS:

Shot Put — Tamsin Ward (9th) 31-07

Pole Vault — Lillian Ketterling (7th-tie) 8-06

 

BOYS:

3200 — Cyrus Sparacio (9th) 10:16.99

High Jump — Wyatt Fitch-Marron (3rd) 6-02; Davin Houston (8th-tie) 5-10

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Wolf thrower Lillian Ketterling does her best John Cena imitation. “You can’t see me!” (Ana Paula Oliveira photo)

It was prime time to tune up for the postseason.

Competing Saturday at the 21-team Bellevue Christian Track and Field Invitational, a pack of Coupeville High School athletes brought the regular season to an end with a bang.

After this all eyes turn to the Northwest 2B/1B League Championships May 7 in Mount Vernon, followed by districts and state.

Saturday’s royal rumble, which went down at Sammamish High School, drew a wide range of schools from across multiple classifications, providing a stern test for the Wolves.

Bellevue Christian won the girls’ team title, with Lynden Christian and East Jefferson hot on its heels, while Sammamish carried the day in the boys’ competition, with Nooksack Valley and BC rounding out the top three.

Coupeville’s boys claimed 13th, while its girls finished 18th.

Edmund Kunz goes up, up, and away in the pole vault. (Jackie Saia photo)

 

Saturday’s results:

 

GIRLS:

200 — Isa Mc Fetridge (10th) 28.19 *PR*

400 — Taylor Marrs (12th) 1:14.15

800 — Laken Simpson (17th) 2:51.37; Mikayla Wagner (27th) 3:10.09

1600 — Devon Wyman (15th) 6:34.41 *PR*

3200 — Wyman (10th) 14:02.77 *PR*

300 Hurdles — Wyman (17th) 1:04.96

4 x 400 Relay — Olivia Hall, Marrs, Lillian Ketterling, Simpson (4th) 4:44.92

Discus — Ketterling (10th) 78-01; Marrs (33rd) 58-02

Pole Vault — Ketterling (5th) 8-06 *PR*

Triple Jump — Willow Leedy-Bonifas (11th) 28-05.75 *PR*

Mikayla Wagner piles up the laps. (Aiden O’Neill photo)

 

BOYS:

100 — Marquette Cunningham (23rd) 11.99; Liam Blas (38th) 12.48; Beckett Green (44th) 12.63; Sage Arends (54th) 13.01 *PR*

200 — Green (25th) 25.51; Richmond Bandong (40th) 26.60 *PR*; Shilo Sandlin (48th) 27.61

400 — Brian Thompson (23rd) 58.94; Will Tierney (29th) 59.78

800 — Cyrus Sparacio (8th) 2:13.77; Ossian Merkel (30th) 2:30.65; Johnathan Jacobsen (33rd) 2:32.99; Hunter Atteberry (37th) 2:41.99; Nolan Hunt (45th) 3:15.03 *PR*

1600 — Sparacio (7th) 4:49.41; Merkel (24th) 5:29.90; Kenneth Jacobsen (28th) 5:32.73; Atteberry (37th) 5:47.78 *PR*; Hunt (47th) 6:51.57 *PR*

3200 — Sparacio (6th) 10:16.99 *PR*; K. Jacobsen (14th) 11:09.23 *PR*; Edmund Kunz (18th) 11:47.41 *PR*

300 Hurdles — Edmund Wilson (7th) 47.73 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Cunningham, Blas, Wyatt Fitch-Marron, Davin Houston (5th) 46.29

4 x 100 Relay (Throwers) — Blas, J. Jacobsen, Bandong, Sandlin (2nd) 50.89

4 x 400 Relay — Tierney, Wilson, Fitch-Marron, Green (4th) 4:08.29

Shot Put — Zachary Saho (8th) 40-07.75; Khanor Jump (24th) 33-04.50; Zach Blitch (42nd) 23-03 *PR*

Discus — Blas (8th) 110-08; Jump (11th) 107-11; Saho (27th) 85-08; Sandlin (39th) 61-10 *PR*; Blitch (44th) 58-00

Javelin — Bandong (14th) 107-04; K. Jacobsen (25th) 98-05 *PR*; Sandlin (33rd) 94-05 *PR*

High Jump — Fitch-Marron (4th) 5-10; J. Jacobsen (14th) 5-04

Pole Vault — Kunz (15th) 8-00; Russell Miller (17th) 6-00

Long Jump — Arends (7th) 17-09; Thompson (13th) 16-08.50; Wilson (14th) 16-05

Triple Jump — Cunningham (14th) 31-09

Marquette Cunningham approaches splashdown. (Aiden O’Neill)

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Taygin Jump

She’s a one-woman wrecking crew.

Coupeville grad Taygin Jump, now a junior at Plattsburgh State, scored four of her team’s five points Friday during day one of the State University of New York Athletic Conference Outdoor Track and Field Championships.

The two-day event, held in Cortland, New York, brings together 13 schools to vie for oval excellence.

Jump, competing in the javelin and hammer throw, finished 5th and 10th respectively in fields of 15 and 22 competitors.

She chucked the javelin 88 feet, six inches, earning her four points for the Cardinals, while airmailing the hammer 138-08, setting a PR in the event.

The former Wolf ace, who competed in volleyball and track and field during her Cow Town days, is balancing athletic life with classroom work.

Jump, whose younger siblings Aleksia and Khanor are following in her footsteps at CHS, has been named to several All-Academic teams while studying Environmental Planning and Management.

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Hardcourt ace Miles Gerber saunters into action on the Coupeville High School tennis courts. (Photos by Presley Phillips and Melanie Wolfe)

They served up a successful Senior Night.

The Coupeville High School girls’ tennis squad hailed their veterans — Miles Gerber, Aleksia Jump, and Dahlia Miller — before playing Wednesday afternoon against Friday Harbor.

The trio shone brightly under rare blue skies on the prairie, hardcourt aces one and all.

Aleksia Jump

Dahlia Miller

Miles Gerber

The terrific trio enjoy their moment in the spotlight.

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The Coupeville Education Association and the Coupeville Educational Support Association recently compiled a 77-page climate survey, which showed disapproval for the jobs being done by Superintendent Shannon Leatherwood, school administrators, and the school board.

Coupeville Elementary School Principal Erica McColl was the exception, receiving high praise.

The following letter to the editor is written by School Board Vice President Nancy Conard:

Nancy Conard

 

I have lived in Coupeville for 70 years.

I am a proud K-12 alumni of Coupeville Schools.

I worked for the Coupeville Schools for 30 years, primarily as business manager.

I have been very actively involved in the Coupeville community my entire life, including 20 years as mayor of the Town.

I joined the school board five years ago, in part because my granddaughter, who we raised, was a student in the school, and in part because I was interested in supporting the school district.

Frankly, I was initially disappointed to learn that the financial management of the district was weak at that time, and there were a lot of opportunities for improvement throughout the district.

The school board and administration have worked through many of the financial issues, although there is still more work to do.

We adopted a new Strategic Plan which has guided some of the administrative priorities.

We are also working with the superintendent to support management and administrative changes … as we have faced some challenges in the last few years.

I appreciate and support her efforts to improve Coupeville Schools.

I have read the survey conducted by the labor unions and appreciate the input they received from staff. I support their right to conduct a survey and am looking forward to learning more about their issues.

I am disappointed that the unions chose such a public method of expressing their concerns.

Union leaders met with the superintendent, the board president, Morgan (White), and me, the board vice president, last Thursday to deliver the survey results and it was distributed to the staff and media on Friday.

The school board meets twice a month, once in workshop session and once is a formal meeting.

There is opportunity for public input at these meetings, and I think that would have been a good time to bring issues to the board. It didn’t happen.

In addition, all five of the board members are accessible to the staff and the community and will meet when asked.

There are also communication meetings with the administration and union, where these issues could also have been discussed.

Coupeville is a special community, and we work together, in good times and in bad, to support our folks.

I would urge our staff and our community to work with us to strengthen our school community and to hold back on the reaction to the negativity expressed in the survey.

Let’s use our energy in a positive way!

As your elected school board representative, you can reach me at nancyconard@aol.com or 360-969-0023.

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