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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Scout Smith, seen with Lyla (left) and Tenley Stuurmans, is the new Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball coach. (Sarah Stuurmans photo)

She was born for this.

The daughter of two coaches, and sister of two more, Scout Smith was always among the most cerebral of athletes during her playing days at Coupeville High School.

Now, the former three-sport star, who was a CHS Athlete of the Year winner as a senior, is joining the coaching fraternity herself.

Well, Scout has already been working with the school’s volleyball program as a volunteer assistant, but Tuesday she was tabbed as the new JV girls’ head basketball coach.

She replaces Kassie O’Neil, who left due to a family move, and her hire will be official once approved by the school board.

Scout played volleyball, basketball, and softball during her Wolf days, before moving on to earn degrees from the University of Washington and Gonzaga with an eye on becoming a teacher.

Dad Chris Smith coached through all three seasons for several years at CHS, working with volleyball, boys’ basketball, and baseball, while mom Charlotte Young was an accomplished little league guru.

Scout’s brothers, CJ and Hunter, have also coached at their alma mater in the past, with the former calling the shots for JV baseball, and the latter leading the JV boys’ hoops program.

Like having another coach on the floor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

While Scout, a 2020 CHS grad, is the youngest of Charlotte’s three-pack, she quickly made a name for herself.

In her first athletic event as a high school student back in 2016, she reeled off 27 points on her serve, including 18 straight at one point, in a straight-sets volleyball win over Mount Vernon Christian.

The final serve almost broke the Hurricane receiver’s elbow in half, and Scoutasouras Rex was born.

By the time she wrapped up her CHS sports career, she had helped lead both volleyball and softball to state tourney success.

A team captain in all of her sports, she often played positions (setter, point guard, pitcher) which put her in leadership roles, something she always accepted and lived up to.

Scout racked up stats, brought home All-Conference and team honors, and earned respect from fellow players, coaches, and rivals by being one of the hardest-working, smartest athletes to ever pull on a Wolf uniform.

Across a span of six years (two middle school, four high school) she was a rock for Coupeville sports teams, as dependable as any athlete this blog has ever covered.

Scout with the parental figures. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It wasn’t just that Scout could make the play, but that she was so deeply ingrained in her knowledge, that she always knew what the right play was — even during a few times when everyone else was (incorrectly) screaming at her to do something differently.

She played through pain — refusing to come off the court even after turning half her face into a giant bruise after slamming into the floor during a playoff volleyball match — and she handled good times and bad with style and grace.

Scout lost her senior softball season, and a chance to make back-to-back state tourney runs, when the pandemic wiped out all spring sports.

That stung badly, and I have no doubt she would return to the field today in a heartbeat if given a replay, but she has moved on to find new milestones to make.

She’s taught two of my three nephews as a substitute PE teacher this fall, and the CHS volleyball players have benefited greatly from her presence.

Every coaching change comes with unknowns.

Falling back on sports cliches, some hires become home runs, while a rare few are closer to strikeouts.

This one? Bringing Scout into a leadership position where she can continue the family tradition of coaching excellence?

That feels like destiny coming true.

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Coupeville is 3-0 when junior quarterback Chase Anderson has played this season. (Courtney Sollars photo)

They’re well acquainted with the end zone.

Through four games, Coupeville High School football players have racked up 131 points, averaging out at 32.75 a week.

That has carried the Wolves to a 3-1 start across non-conference play, with the 2B gridiron warriors having played only 1A foes so far.

This week is Homecoming and brings with it a clash against Northwest 2B/1B League rival Friday Harbor, while the next week will feature the Battle for the Bucket against South Whidbey, also at home.

As CHS preps for back-to-back games at Mickey Clark Field, a look at season-to-date scoring stats:

 

Touchdowns:

Chase Anderson – 8
Davin Houston – 3
Marquette Cunningham – 2
Jack Porter – 2
Johnny Porter – 2
Liam Blas – 1
Hunter Bronec – 1

 

Conversions:

Anderson — 2
Blas — 1
Cunningham – 1
Houston – 1

 

PATs:

Anderson — 7

 

Points:

Anderson — 59
Houston – 20
Cunningham — 14
Ja. Porter — 12
Jo. Porter – 12
Blas — 8
Bronec – 6

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The Wolves bask in the glow of a stunning come-from-behind win. (Jeff Porter photo)

“It was unreal, they never quit battling and did not give up. It was crazy!”

Proud pops Jeff Porter was over the moon Saturday, after the Coupeville High School football team pulled off one of the most stunning wins in program history.

Trailing Cedar Park Christian-Bothell 49-28, the Wolves stormed back to score the game’s final 27 points to claim an improbable, and very satisfying, 55-49 non-conference victory.

And those final six points to decide things and lift CHS to 3-1 on the season?

They came when Wolf senior Johnny Porter blocked a field goal attempt on the game’s final play, followed by sophomore Davin Houston plucking the ball out of the air and taking the recovery 70+ yards for a walk-off touchdown.

Or run-off touchdown, if you will.

Coupeville, which has opened with four straight games against 1A schools, finally gets a chance to square off with a fellow 2B squad next week.

That will come Friday, Oct. 4, when the Wolves host Friday Harbor (2-2) for Homecoming.

Kickoff is 6:00 PM and the rumble will be the first of two meetings this season between the only Northwest 2B/1B League teams to currently be playing 11-man football.

While that tussle will have major playoff implications, the Wolves will come in on a major high.

Coupeville got back several players who weren’t available for their loss to Granite Falls a week ago, and the returning stars meshed perfectly with their teammates.

Back under center after a week of pacing the sidelines in street clothes, starting quarterback Chase Anderson both ran and threw for multiple touchdowns.

The junior gunslinger connected with Jack Porter, Hunter Bronec, and Houston on scoring strikes, with his hookup with Houston going for 60+ yards.

Jack Porter heads out to be awesome. (David Somes photo)

And yet, at least in the early going, Cedar Park seemed to have an answer for everything Coupeville threw at it, responding with its own offensive explosions.

Wolf fab frosh Liam Blas picked off an Eagle pass and returned it for a touchdown to knot things up at 14-14, but CPC rebounded to lead 21-14 at the half.

The Anderson to Houston pass play forced another tie early in the second half, but then Cedar Park started to pull away with three straight touchdowns to go up 42-21.

The teams exchanged scoring drives, but that still left things at 49-28 in favor of the private school gridiron warriors.

Things looked bleak, at least on the scoreboard, but CHS coach Bennett Richter and his team made Journey proud by living up to the mantra of “don’t stop believin’.”

Hunter Bronec hauled in his first touchdown pass of the season to make it 49-35, and the Wolves recovered an onside kick and drove for a rushing touchdown from Anderson to tighten things up.

A missed PAT left CHS trailing 49-41, however, forcing the Wolves to find some major mojo in the waning moments.

Cue the Steve Perry.

Not only did Coupeville punch in another touchdown, but the Wolves also pulled off a two-point conversion pass from Anderson to Houston to get all the way back at 49-49.

Davin Houston came up huge and can now go brag to his older brothers Dawson and Daylon, who both starred for the Wolves. (David Somes photo)

That set up the frantic final moments, with CPC getting in position to escape with a win in front of its home fans, only to have Coupeville play spoiler in epic fashion.

Which left Richter, like his players and their parents, sky high as the group headed back to Whidbey.

“Our boys showed extreme resilience today and never quit!!” Richter said.

“I tell them every week that we have everything we need in this locker room! And every week they believe in that more and more!

“Today is a testament to that hard work and belief!”

With the spotlight at its hottest, and the action at its most tense, the Wolves rose to the moment.

“We had big games from everyone today,” Richter said. “Chase was outstanding late.

“Every time we really needed a big play someone stepped up! Couldn’t be more of a team win and I’m so proud of these young men!!”

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Landon Roberts (459) and Ezekiel Allen stand tall on the awards podium. (Photos courtesy Elizabeth Bitting)

Speedy, on or off Whidbey Island.

Coupeville High School cross country runners invaded the heart of Seattle Saturday and put together a stellar showing.

Competing at the 17th annual King’s Roller Coaster Trail Run, the Wolves earned second place in both the boys’ and girls’ team standings.

Traversing “three hilly miles of trails and some track, with no concrete” according to the brochure, Coupeville put four runners in the top 10.

Senior Landon Roberts was the fastest Wolf on the day, claiming seventh place in his race.

Coming off their big city jaunt, the CHS harriers return home this coming week.

The Wolves will host their lone home meet of the season Wednesday, Oct. 2 at Fort Casey State Park.

Mikayla Wagner, speed demon.

 

Saturday results:

 

GIRLS-Varsity:

Mikayla Wagner (9th) 23:34.34
Aleera Kent (10th) 23:38.12
Noelle Western (11th) 23:46.67
Devon Wyman (12th) 24:23.13
Ivy Rudat (15th) 24:43.22
Aleksia Jump (17th) 25:10.61
Ari Armstrong (23rd) 26:35.88
Reagan Callahan (27th) 27:05.45
Dahlia Miller (29th) 29:15.16
Ava Lucero (30th) 29:33.74
Mary Western (39th) 35:16.76

 

Elizabeth Bitting and her fleet foursome.

 

BOYS-Varsity:

Landon Roberts (7th) 18:07.72
Ezekiel Allen (9th) 18:18.77
Kenneth Jacobsen (13th) 18:43.52
Thomas Strelow (16th) 18:57.64
George Spear (17th) 18:58.16
Isaiah Allen (30th) 21:01.78
Ethan Walling (31st) 21:01.95

 

BOYS-JV:

Beckett Green (15th) 21:04.04
Johnathan Jacobsen
(17th) 21:18.11
Will Tierney (39th) 24:01.90
Zach Blitch
(59th) 31:13.42

Aleera Kent is ready to run a second race if necessary.

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Coupeville students like these volleyball stars are hard at work on a school fundraiser. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’ve set big goals.

Coupeville Middle and High School students are participating in a fundraiser which will raise money for student enrichment activities while honoring military veterans.

The fundraiser runs from Sept. 26-Oct. 10, with the goal for each student to sell four Honor-a-Vet or Sign-of-Support poster boards.

The more each student sells, the higher on the prize chart they go.

Overall, the school is aiming at bringing in $25,000.

The Honor-A-Vet poster boards will be displayed on the CMHS lawn the week of Veteran’s Day.

Meanwhile, the Sign-Of-Support, featuring a picture of your choosing, will be displayed throughout the hallways of the school all year long.

If you’d like to throw your support behind the fundraiser, there are several ways.

Students will be tracking down everyone they know, or you can also jump over to:

https://igiv.org/support/coupe24/get-started/

On that site, you can plug in a student’s name, so they get credit for your donation, or skip that step and participate simply as a community member.

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