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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Jenny Porter’s sons, Jack and Johnny, are key players on a first-place football team. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

We’re in the thick of things now.

As we move into week #2 of October, fall sports are going fast and furious, with the intensity ramped up by consistent conference play.

Coupeville High School football and volleyball sit atop the Northwest 2B/1B League standings, and things will be hoppin’ in the week ahead.

The gridiron squad hosts South Whidbey Friday in a non-conference game, with ownership of The Bucket at stake.

Meanwhile, the Wolf spikers host Friday Harbor on Tuesday, before traveling East for the weekend.

CHS plays Okanogan Friday night at Liberty High School in Spokane, then takes part in a tourney at the same site the next day.

Volleyball super fan Danica Strong is ready for the coming robot apocalypse.

Coupeville co-ed soccer return to action after a 10-day layoff with a road game Friday at Cedar Park Christian-Lynnwood, while Wolf cross country hits the road twice.

The harriers travel to Friday Harbor on Wednesday, before riding the bus to Granite Falls Saturday for the Mountain Loop Invitational.

As we ramp up for another week of prep action, a look at where things sit through Oct. 6:

 

Northwest League boys’ soccer:

School League Overall
Coupeville 0-0-0 2-4-1
CPC-Lynnwood 0-0-0 3-3-0
Friday Harbor 0-0-0 3-2-0
Grace Academy 0-0-0 1-4-0
La Conner 0-0-0 0-5-1
Lopez Island 0-0-0 4-0-0
MV Christian 0-0-0 5-1-1
Orcas Island 0-0-0 6-1-0
PC Christian 0-0-0 5-1-2

 

Northwest League football — (11-Man):

School League Overall
Coupeville 1-0 4-1
Friday Harbor 0-1 2-3

 

Northwest League football — (8-Man):

School League Overall
Concrete 0-0 2-3
Darrington 0-0 3-2
La Conner 0-0 1-3

 

Northwest League volleyball:

School League Overall
Coupeville 5-0 6-0
La Conner 3-1 4-3
Darrington 2-1 7-2
MV Christian 2-2 5-3
Orcas Island 2-2 4-4
Concrete 0-4 4-6
Friday Harbor 0-4 1-7

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Coupeville senior Marcelo Gebhard was a rampaging beast on defense Friday in a Homecoming win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“I don’t know what to say, I’m just happy!!”

Bouncing between a steady string of well-wishers, from lil’ kids to Wolf cheerleaders, Coupeville High School football coach Bennett Richter beamed under the fading Friday Night Lights at Mickey Clark Field.

His squad had just outmuscled a Friday Harbor gridiron program which prides itself on toughness, capturing an 18-5 Homecoming victory in a game marked by big hits and stellar defense.

Now 1-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 4-1 overall, the Wolves control their playoff destiny.

They will travel to Friday Harbor Nov. 1 for the regular-season finale, and a sweep of the Wolverines (0-1, 2-3) will hand Coupeville football a conference crown and a chance to vie for a state playoff berth.

But that game is still a month away, with non-conference tilts against South Whidbey, Adna, and Winlock left to play between now and then.

For the moment, Richter was content to bask in the thrill of a well-crafted win.

“Make my boys dance tomorrow night,” he told the CHS cheerleaders with a big laugh. “Any wallflowers, tell them they’ll run at practice next week.”

There were no wallflowers during the game, as the Wolves, to a man, lowered their shoulders and drilled their rivals.

Whether gutting out a couple of extra yards on offense or making sure Friday Harbor would be denied a touchdown, even to the last second of the game, Coupeville’s crew came with a fury.

“You can’t win against your rival without everyone contributing,” Richter said. “And that’s what happened.

“We matched their physicality, the offense did enough, and the defense did a lot. They were dialed in and knew what to do.”

For one play, the Wolves looked to be in (mild) disarray, then turned things around with a vengeance.

Taking the opening kickoff, Coupeville tried to pull off a trick play, with multiple players converging, and then one shooting out of the pack with the ball.

Unfortunately, the ball popped loose in the melee, and while CHS recovered it, Friday Harbor brought the ball carrier down for a game-opening safety.

Trailing 2-0 and forced to boot the ball right back to the Wolverines, the hometown squad never flinched, however.

Coupeville forced a punt on Friday Harbor’s first drive, thanks to big-time tackles from Marcelo Gebhard, Davin Houston, and Riley Lawless, who shed blockers and wrestled their foes to the turf.

The visitors proved to be a defensive-minded bunch, as well, keeping the game at 2-0 throughout a very fast-moving first quarter.

But an explosion was on the horizon.

Three plays into the second quarter, Wolf quarterback Chase Anderson scrambled for an eternity, moving from one sideline to the other as would-be tackler after would-be tackler tried, and failed, to bring down the elusive junior.

That gave Jack Porter time to work the sideline, and he hauled in a long pass fired by Anderson, who had finally tired of his cross-country run.

Bang-boom, 81 yards later, the Wolves were on the board with the game’s first touchdown, though a missed PAT left things at 6-2.

Hunter Bronec will be a benevolent ruler. (Brittney Spolar photo)

After forcing another punt, Coupeville had a chance to drop the hammer, driving 63 yards in six plays, with Jack Porter and Hunter Bronec both breaking tackles on 20+ yard catches.

But the Wolves needed 65 to score, with the ball coming loose and being recovered on the two-yard line as CHS tried to ram it into the end zone on a running play.

If Friday Harbor thought it had reclaimed the momentum, it was sadly disappointed, as Anderson almost immediately picked off a pass while falling backward through the air.

That set up an exhilarating, and somewhat bizarre, final minute of the first half.

Clinging to a 6-2 lead and facing fourth-and-25 from the 50-yard line, Anderson spun a gorgeous 33-yard air strike to Jack Porter, who cradled the ball to his chest as he crashed out of bounds.

With the clock running down to 0:09, Anderson (and his big leg) blasted a 41-yard field goal through the uprights to stretch the lead to 9-2.

Time for Friday Harbor to kneel down and head into the locker room and … here we go.

The Wolverines instead chucked their own dangerous pass, which was snagged under great pressure, while Coupeville was whistled for roughing the passer.

Granted one play with no time left on the clock, after a big yardage gain, Friday Harbor called on their own placekicker, Victor Valasquez.

The long-range wizard, who has dinged Coupeville before, launched his own 45-yard field goal attempt high into the prairie night, and it split the uprights with plenty of room to spare.

Which meant the visitors scored on the very first, and very last, play of the first half, yet still trailed 9-5 at the break.

So there.

If the first half was two teams standing in the middle of the boxing ring swinging, the second half was a complete KO for Coupeville.

Friday Harbor had the ball four times over the final 24 minutes, and turned it over on downs twice, punted (badly) once, and was stuffed while trying to score a meaningless touchdown on the game’s final play.

Jack Porter, Gebhard, and Anderson had big-buzz tackles, but everyone on defense, from Camden Glover to Johnny Porter to Liam Blas and beyond, had the whuppin’ sticks out.

On offense, Anderson tacked on a 31-yard field goal midway through the third quarter to make it 12-5, then listened to a plea from above.

Back operating the scoreboard after a game off for a family trip, and bringing cookies with him, Joel “The Ice Cream Man” Norris leaned forward with three minutes to play in the frame and mouthed the words.

“They need a touchdown, now.”

Make it so.

Mere seconds later, Anderson spun a ball to the heavens, Houston cut back to bring the pass in while making a defensive back fall down, and Coupeville had a game-busting 43-yard touchdown heave-and-catch.

It was Houston’s fourth score of the season and put the cherry on the sundae.

From there, Coupeville was content to run clock, with Johnny Porter abusing Friday Harbor by rushing right over them, while Anderson and Marquette Cunningham added in some fancy cuts while carrying the ball.

Up next, The Battle for the Bucket against South Whidbey. (Jeff Porter photo)

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Wolf seniors Taylor Brotemarkle (2) and Chloe Marzocca celebrate their teammate’s success. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Check another thing off the to-do list.

The Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad is methodically garnering achievements as the season plays out.

The Wolves beat the Evil Empire (La Conner).

Won a battle of undefeated teams with Darrington.

And now have upended Orcas Island, the defending Northwest 2B/1B League champs, sweeping the visiting Vikings in straight sets Thursday.

The Homecoming week win lifts Coupeville to 5-0 in conference action, 6-0 overall, and Cory Whitmore’s squad has yet to lose a set this go-round.

Dominating from start to finish against Orcas, the Wolves claimed a 25-8, 25-13, 25-15 triumph, giving the CHS spike program its best start since the 2019 team won its first seven matches.

Coupeville is also one of just three 2B schools still undefeated this season, with Adna (7-0) and Freeman (8-0) the others.

About the only thing which slowed the Wolves down Thursday was the perils of inter-island transportation, which had Orcas arriving a half hour late for an afternoon tilt.

Once the teams were on the floor and warmed up, the CHS net crew was locked-in and in full-on destruction mode.

A tip winner from Mia Farris kicked off the match, and Coupeville rode hot streaks at the service line from Tenley Stuurmans and Teagan Calkins to blow things wide open.

Calkins, who was honored as an Athlete of the Week winner by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association earlier in the day, dropped a nasty ace on the Vikings, the ball skidding away to stake her squad to a 19-4 lead.

While Orcas briefly (very briefly) rallied, the Wolves closed out the opening frame with a flurry of kills off the scorching fingertips of Farris, Madison McMillan, and Lyla Stuurmans.

The second set was almost a mirror image of the first, with the Wolves peppering the Vikings with brutal serves, popping note-perfect passes to each other, and crushing kills in all directions.

CHS setter Katie Marti, running from one side of the floor to the other, even went renegade at one point, using her leg to keep a ball alive with a soccer-style kick.

The perfectly legal, yet rarely used, play rocked the Orcas defense, or maybe they were just in run-and-hide mode because Marti’s kick was followed 0.02 seconds later by Farris peeling paint off the back line with a juicy kill.

Everyone was getting in on the action, with Jada Heaton walloping a winner at the net, before sophomore Dakota Strong delivered her first-ever varsity kill.

It came on set point and unleashed a tidal wave of joy from the Wolf bench, which mobbed her.

It wasn’t the last time that scene would play out, either, as another sophomore, Lexis Drake, matched Strong by closing out set #3, and the match, with HER first-ever varsity kill.

That winner capped a crush of big hits, with the Wolves taking turns seeing who could spin the nastiest kill against an Orcas squad which lost its All-League masher to graduation after winning last year’s crown.

Madison McMillan launches the attack.

Whitmore, who notched his 94th win with the CHS volleyball program, was pleased to have a low stress win during one of the most frantic weeks on the school calendar.

Now the Wolf spikers can go participate in Homecoming-related events the next two days content in the knowledge they’ll carry a spotless record into the new week.

“We played very, very clean for the first two sets,” Whitmore said. “I think we missed like only two serves in that time.

“We stayed very in system, even when they tried to move us around,” he added.

“There were some errors later, but the girls recognized what was happening, took control, and fixed things on their own. I like to see that.”

 

Thursday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 7 digs
Teagan Calkins — 9 kills, 8 digs, 1 assist, 1 block assist, 4 aces
Lexis Drake — 1 kill
Mia Farris — 9 kills, 13 digs, 1 assist
Jada Heaton — 1 kill
Katie Marti — 3 kills, 7 digs, 27 assists, 2 aces
Madison McMillan — 8 kills, 7 digs, 1 ace
Dakota Strong — 1 kill
Lyla Stuurmans — 4 kills, 5 digs, 2 solo blocks, one block assist
Tenley Stuurmans — 1 kill, 1 dig, 1 ace

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Tenley Stuurmans chases down a wayward volleyball. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They beat the clock and beat the Vikings.

Playing second Thursday night, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad knew that visiting Orcas Island would have to sprint back to the ferry at a certain time, regardless of the score.

So, the Wolves made quick work of their foes, rolling to a 25-15, 25-18, 13-15 win which left their foes plenty of time to amble back to the boat.

The victory lifts Coupeville’s JV to 4-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 5-1 overall, with another home game — this one against Friday Harbor — next up on the schedule.

That one won’t be until Oct. 8, however, so the Wolves have time to bask in the afterglow of Thursday’s methodical dismembering of the Vikings.

Getting floor time for all 12 girls on her roster, JV coach Ashley Menges spread out the love, and her spikers responded.

Freshman Tenley Stuurmans sprayed kills in the first set, while Adeline Maynes provided a game-busting run of excellence at the service stripe.

The Wolves rebounded from an 11-9 deficit, finishing the frame on a 14-6 tear to claim supremacy.

Lexis Drake and Dakota Strong, who both nailed their first-ever varsity kill in the night’s opening match, closed out the first set with winners, and the rout was on.

Point, Coupeville.

Coupeville led from start to finish in frame #2, with Sydney Van Dyke punching a pair of service aces to put the Vikings back on their heels.

Isa Mc Fetridge and Maynes also came up big on their serve, while the play of the night came late in the set.

Waxing the floor with her uniform, Haylee Armstrong went face-first to the hardwood, somehow getting her fingers barely under a ball preparing to kick away for an Orcas point.

Instead, the sensational sophomore flicked the orb skyward at the very last moment, then two hits later, Maynes froze the defense with a tip for a winner to drive a stake through the heart of Viking Nation.

While Orcas did eke out a win in a shortened third set, it was just for practice, with the match already decided in favor of Cow Town.

Willow Leedy-Bonifas and Armstrong dominated at the service line in the late going for the Wolves.

 

Thursday stats:

Capri Anter — 2 digs
Haylee Armstrong — 3 digs, 1 assist, 3 aces
Lexis Drake — 6 kills, 1 ace
Willow Leedy-Bonifas — 1 assist, 1 ace
Adeline Maynes — 1 kill, 1 dig, 9 assists, 6 aces
Isa Mc Fetridge — 2 aces
Chelsi Stevens — 1 kill
Dakota Strong — 6 kills
Tenley Stuurmans — 6 kills, 3 assists, 1 ace
Sydney Van Dyke — 1 kill, 1 dig, 2 aces

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Teagan Calkins cranks up the heat. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Respect for “The Red Dragon.”

Coupeville High School junior volleyball sensation Teagan Calkins was honored Thursday by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association, picked as an Athlete of the Week winner.

Each week during the school year, the WIAA honors one girl and boy from each classification (1B-4A).

Athletes can be honored once and receive a letter of recognition, a certificate of achievement, a gift card, and “statewide bragging rights.”

Calkins was picked for her performance Thursday, Sept. 26, when she cranked a career-high 19 kills and collected six digs in a straight-sets home win against Darrington.

The victory, coming against a previously unbeaten Logger squad, lifted Coupeville to 5-0 overall, 4-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play.

The Wolves have yet to drop a set, reeling off a 15-0 start in regular season play heading into Thursday’s home tilt with Orcas Island.

Calkins, who also plays basketball and softball, is a stellar student, and helps out with the middle school volleyball program, leads the CHS spikers in kills this season while playing on the right side of the floor.

To see who joins her in being honored this week, pop over to:

Athlete of the Week

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