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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Coupeville High School football players listen to their coaches at an early practice. (Megan Richter photo)

The first tackles of a new season are on the horizon.

The Coupeville High School football squad travels to Sultan this Saturday, Aug. 31 for the Rumble in the Valley jamboree.

The Wolves, led by third-year head coach Bennett Richter, will square off with the host Turks and Cascade (Leavenworth) in an event scheduled to run from 11:00 AM-2:00 PM.

The jamboree is free for fans, but a Pug Dogs food truck will be on site to sell hotdogs and drinks, with a portion of the proceeds benefitting Sultan’s football program.

For those travelling to the jamboree, Sultan High School is located at 1000 Turk Drive.

Coupeville then opens the regular season the next Friday, Sept. 6, when it hosts non-conference foe Annie Wright in a 7:00 PM game.

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Thomas Strelow (left) and Landon Roberts are back to make another run at state. (Elizabeth Bitting photo)

Depth is no longer an issue.

After returning from a two-decade layoff in 2017, the Coupeville High School cross country program has steadily built up its numbers.

Now, with a new campaign officially launching with the first day of practice Monday, Wolf coach Elizabeth Bitting has 24 runners on her roster, with the hope of a few more harriers joining the cause in the coming days.

That depth means CHS won’t be leaving any points on the table, as it often did in the first couple of seasons of the rebirth. Every meet, there will be a full lineup ready to run together and score together.

“One of our key strengths this year is our team size,” Bitting said. “This depth, combined with the talent and enthusiasm of our runners, is a major asset for us.”

Among those 24 runners, Coupeville returns eight state meet veterans.

The entire seven-man crew which competed in Pasco last fall, finishing 10th in the boys’ team standings, is back, as well as Noelle Western, who vied at state last year as an individual.

She and Carson Field have qualified for state twice in their prep career, while Landon Roberts, Ezekiel Allen, George Spear, Thomas Strelow, Kenneth Jacobsen, and Axel Marshall are also aiming for a return trip to the big dance.

Toss in a strong pack of other runners, some with prior varsity experience, and some new to the scene, and Bitting has ample reason to be sky high.

“This year, we’re fortunate to have the majority of our core team back, having only lost two seniors,” she said. “Both the boys varsity and girls’ varsity teams are returning with strong, experienced rosters.

“It’s an exciting time with seven freshmen joining us this year,” she added.

“From what I’ve seen, five of these newcomers have shown a remarkable work ethic and potential.

“Additionally, we have 10th grader Ethan Walling, who has already demonstrated his determination and commitment through his hard work and athleticism.”

Coupeville runners (l to r) Aleksia Jump, Noelle Western, and Reagan Callahan help anchor a deep Wolf team. (Elizabeth Bitting photo)

Coupeville’s main Northwest 2B/1B League rival, as always, will be Mount Vernon Christian, which moves from 1B up to 2B this season after new classification counts.

“Mount Vernon Christian has consistently been a strong competitor, and I expect this year to be no different,” Bitting said.

“They always push us to perform at our best, just as we strive to challenge them. It’s a competitive dynamic that keeps both teams sharp and motivated.”

While the Hurricanes provide the Wolves with strong competition, cross country often comes down to each runner battling with themselves, trying to shave time and set new bests.

“My primary goal for this season is to match or surpass our performance from last year, while expanding our roster and bringing more athletes along with us,” Bitting said.

“I’m aiming for a repeat of last year’s success and to build on it with an even stronger team.”

To get there, Bitting is focusing on two areas — increasing the overall mileage her athletes run and enhancing their finishing strength.

“I want to see our athletes push their mileage further and refine their already strong finishes,” she said. “There’s always room for growth and improvement.”

George Spear flies for the finish line. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

Coupeville’s opening day roster:

Ezekiel Allen
Isaiah Allen
Zachary Blitch
Reagan Callahan
Kayla Crane
Carson Field
Beckett Green
Johnathan Jacobsen
Kenneth Jacobsen
Aleksia Jump
Aleera Kent
Axel Marshall
Lili Newberg
Jeann Nitta (Team Manager)
Lydia Price
Landon Roberts
Ivy Rudat
George Spear
Thomas Strelow
Will Tierney
Mikayla Wagner
Ethan Walling
Mary Western
Noelle Western
Devon Wyman

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Senior Kassidy Upchurch is the captain for CHS cheer’s fall season. (Jackie Saia photos)

“I think it is safe to say that the Pack is Back!!!”

As a new school year approaches, Coupeville High School cheer coach Jenne Morrell is sky high as she surveys her roster.

In four years, she’s built the program from eight athletes to 22 who plan to work the sidelines at Wolf football games this fall.

Under Morrell’s leadership, Coupeville cheerleaders comprise a competition squad as well, with that core group aiming for a return to the state championships.

Balancing sideline work with mat work takes deep commitment, something the Wolves embrace. And it all begins with family, said their coach.

“Our team’s strengths are that we work really hard to foster a sense of family on our squad,” Morrell said.

“They did an amazing job polishing their leadership skills at UCA camp this summer and spent nearly 300 hours volunteering in their community.

“The squad does an amazing job of supporting each other in all areas and creates lifelong friendships.”

Pamela Morrell, like her mom, is a cheer lifer.

Morrell and her assistants, Tara Crouch and Anthony Ford, provide the structure, but it’s the cheerleaders themselves who often are front and center.

Having a strong core of veterans helps.

“Our seniors are really stepping up and sharing their leadership, knowledge, and skills as they work with our incoming freshmen,” Morrell said.

“One of the most inspiring things that has happened over the last few years is seeing students from every social group work together closely to accomplish their goals.”

The CHS cheerleaders, from well-seasoned seniors to freshmen making their debut, will also get a chance to work with the next generation.

Coupeville’s Junior Cheer performance is set for Oct. 11, when the Wolves host South Whidbey in The Bucket Game, and the current cheerleaders will be hard at work preparing their younger counterparts.

It’ll be a busy season all around, but one that Morrell and her squad are ready to start.

“We will be working on adding complexity and more challenging stunt sequences to our performances,” Morrell said.

“We hope to see continued growth of our program and our individual skills as we tackle this fall season.

“We would love to get the student section more involved at games to fill the stands with Wolfpack spirit and on the competition side, we’re looking to qualify for state and bring home some new hardware for our trophy case!”

 

The CHS fall cheer squad:

Cheyanne Atteberry
Garrett Bevill (Mascot)
Abbigail Bond
Alysia Burdge
Miles Gerber
Olivia Hall (Co-Captain)
Makenna Jonker-Chambers (Co-Captain)
Denali Kalwies
Bella Karr
Ember Light
Mila Light
Elizabeth Lo (Manager)
Kayla Moch
Pamela Morrell
Jacob Schooley
Lina Shelly
Nick Shelly
Laken Simpson
Hailey Smith
Kassidy Upchurch (Captain)
Avery Williams-Buchanan (Co-Captain)
Marin Winger

Alysia Burdge, the third Wolf cheerleader in her family, keeps tradition alive.

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Rain didn’t dampen the mood of Coupeville cross country runners. (Photos courtesy Elizabeth Bitting)

Bad weather never bothered them anyway.

Dodging steady rain Saturday, Coupeville cross country runners put up strong performances at the Lake Padden Relays.

The event, hosted by the Greater Bellingham Running Club, consists of relays in which four runners zip around the lake, covering 2.59 miles apiece.

While the calendar said August, the weather looked like October.

“The rain didn’t stop until the last runner crossed the line,” said CHS cross country guru Elizabeth Bitting.

“Mother Nature preparing us for a possibly wet and cold cross country season???”

Coupeville sent out two middle school squads, which finished second and third in their age divisions, as well as three high school quartets and a pack of coaches/parents.

The program leaders claimed fourth, while the high school boys earned a second-place finish.

The Wolf high school girls nabbed a second and third, with Aleera Kent and Mikayla Wagner doing double duty, running a leg with both squads.

“They were IMPRESSIVE!” said Bitting, who, even as she warms up from the late-summer freeze-fest, is more than ready for the start of the school season this coming Monday.

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One basket of balls for each season of high school tennis I played back in the day at Tumwater. Who wants to relaunch the sport in Cow Town? (Starla Seal photo)

There are brand new tennis courts next to the Coupeville High School gym, but it remains questionable when they will be used by a Wolf team.

The CHS girls, who played an all road-trip season this past spring while the courts were built, will be ready to claim the area in 2025.

But Coupeville boys could go first this fall … if they can get some players.

There is currently one player signed up with the start of fall sports practices set for Monday, and the program needs more like a minimum of six to be viable.

CMS 8th graders are eligible to play for the high school team, which could help if middle schoolers seize the chance to play.

Be brave and get rewarded! You’re not going to be sitting on the bench, that’s for sure.

The CHS boys’ tennis program has been AWOL since 2019, when Coupeville and South Whidbey competed in the Emerald City League against a bunch of ultra-rich Seattle private schools.

After that, the netters got shut down by the pandemic, then hurt by the school’s reclassification from 1A to 2B.

Boys’ soccer, which is played in the spring in 1A, competes in the fall in 2B, creating a logjam with football, tennis, and cross country also competing for male athletes.

Coupeville was the only school in its current home — the seven-team Northwest 2B/1B League — to try and field four male sports programs in the same season.

Someone was going to lose the numbers battle, and so far, it’s been tennis.

While the program has been shuttered through the past four seasons, new CHS tennis coaches Tim Stelling and Starla Seal, who made their debut with the girls in the spring, still have hopes of relaunching things.

Now, it’s just a question of whether potential players show up starting Monday.

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