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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

It’s their time in the spotlight.

Registration is open for Coupeville Elementary School students who want to be part of this year’s Junior Cheer program.

Run by the Spirit of Cheer Booster Club, the event brings together the next generation of Wolves with current CHS cheerleaders.

Practice days are held on four straight Thursdays (Sept. 19 and 26, and Oct. 3 and 10), with the group performance during Coupeville’s Oct. 11 home football game against South Whidbey.

Cost is $70 per child, with each participant receiving new pre-fluffed metallic poms and a sweatshirt.

Online registration closes Sept. 16 at 7:00 PM, or when they hit the limit of 100 junior cheerleaders.

For more info and to register, pop over to:

https://coupevillesoc.com/?theme=pub/livrou0026hide_banners=true

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Sophomores (l to r) Capri Anter, Haylee Armstrong, Lexis Drake, and Dakota Strong, ready to rock the gym during the lip sync contest. (Photos courtesy Cory Whitmore)

We are family.

Like the Pittsburgh Pirates back in the ’70s, when they won a World Series while rockin’ out to the sounds of Sister Sledge, the Coupeville High School volleyball program is preaching togetherness.

The pics above and below come from the Wolves recent Unity Camp, a mix of sets, spikes, and team bonding experiences.

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Landon Roberts lays a fresh coat of paint on his new parking spot. (Sherry Bonacci photos)

They’re claiming their territory.

With the first day of school fast approaching, some Coupeville seniors were out and about Thursday night, painting their parking spots in the CHS lot.

An annual tradition, the application of a roller brush to school asphalt is the surest sign fall is around the corner.

A tale as old as time, yet as fresh as a new coat of paint.

Ember Light gets creative.

Wolf coaches Craig Anderson (left) and Jon Roberts “monitor” the situation.

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“I’m Katie Marti, fool. I will wreck your pitcher and laugh all the way to Disneyland.” (Photos by Jackie Saia, JohnsPhotos.net, and assorted parents)

The final run begins.

With the start of fall sports practices this week, athletes from the Coupeville High School Class of 2025 begin their senior seasons.

And yet, in a shameless bid to make Wolf Moms cry (happy) tears, we present evidence that these upperclassmen were just lil’ kids a moment ago.

Pamela Morrell (left) dreams of the moment when she will be a high school senior cheerleader. That day? It’s today.

“I’m gonna set this court on fire!”

The eye healed, but his love for the sport continued to blossom.

“I am a one-woman tornado of terror on the diamond, and I’m coming for all your titles!!”

The wrecking crew.

Birth of a flamethrower.

A young Jada Heaton, making catches that shocked even her hat.

Ember Light and Hunter Bronec were freshmen royalty. Can they snag a repeat as seniors?

“Oh, they’re gonna need a first aid kit when I’m done with them!!”

“This is our court now, ya old farts!!”

“Me? I crank homeruns and take names all day, baby.”

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Willie Smith, having handed over athletic director duties to Brad Sherman, prepares to scamper away.

Old office, new boss.

With the start of a new fall sports season arriving Monday, the change at the top of Coupeville school athletics became official-official.

Wolf grad Brad Sherman, who doubles as the CHS boys’ basketball coach, is now firmly entrenched as the high school/middle school athletic director.

And the former boss, Willie Smith, who is doing one more year as a teacher before fully hitting the road, is free to run wild in the waning days of summer, with nary a single schedule change to contemplate.

The times, they are a ‘changing.

But the focus remains the same.

“I would like to carry forward what Willie and Ron (Bagby) have done over the years,” Sherman said of his former coaches, men who were also his predecessors in the AD chair.

“Their commitment to our kids and the culture they helped build are very important,” he added. “I would like to help lead all of our programs to a very high level.”

Sherman’s grandfather on his mother’s side, Ernie Dire, was a longtime AD for Everett schools, and his service is commemorated in the office where his grandson is now beginning to write his own story.

On the wall of the office Sherman inherited from Smith, there is a display linking athletic letters from Everett and Coupeville schools, a daily reminder for the new man in charge.

As a true man of the prairie, having grown up in Coupeville as part of a farming family, Brad Sherman has been a vital part of Wolf athletics at every level – athlete, coach, and now administrator.

With his own four boys, wife Abbey, and a vast sprawling network of family in place to support him, the new AD was built for this job.

“There is no place I’d rather be than here,” Sherman said, as he deftly juggled scheduling changes, coach and parent interactions, and pesky reporters, before later capping his day with an appearance at the booster club meeting.

“I love the quote – make the big time where you are,” he added.

“It’s not just about wins and losses, it’s about building a strong culture, to benefit these kids in whatever they do in their lives. That’s the goal.”

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