Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Elizabeth Bitting kicks off a series of track-related pics. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s the first close-ups from a new season.

Spring sports have arrived on the prairie — no matter what Mother Nature might have to say on that matter.

The initial batch of coaches to be captured on film hail from Coupeville High School track and field and come our way courtesy John Fisken.

Bob Martin

Josh Guay

Doug McVey

Neil Rixe

Jaylen Nitta

Read Full Post »

Logan Downes prepares to burn the joint down. (Jackie Saia photo)

Dominant on the floor, dominant in the voting.

The Coupeville High School boys’ basketball team, which shared a league title, claimed a Bi-District crown, and advanced to state, got noticed.

When Northwest 2B/1B League coaches voted this week, they tabbed four Wolves, and head coach Brad Sherman, for honors.

Senior Logan Downes, who became his program’s all-time leading scorer, was a slam dunk choice as league MVP.

Also honored were sophomore Chase Anderson and seniors Cole White and Ryan Blouin.

Brad Sherman can still make the net jump. (Bailey Thule photo)

Sherman, who has taken Coupeville to the state tourney twice in the past three seasons, was tabbed as Coach of the Year, while Concrete received the Best Sportsmanship Award.

 

First-Team All-League:

Chase Anderson – Sophomore – Coupeville
Ivory Damien – Senior – La Conner
Lucas Millenaar – Junior – Mount Vernon Christian
Brayden Pedroza – Junior – La Conner
Joe Stephens – Sophomore – Orcas Island

The difference between a First Team and Second Team All-Conference pick? Chase Anderson made the shot, and Chris Gustafson just missed on the block. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

Second-Team All-League:

Lucas Bieghler – Senior – MVC
Adam Culver – Senior – Concrete
Chris Gustafson – Senior – Friday Harbor
Remy Lago – Junior – Orcas Island
Cole White – Senior – Coupeville

Cole White tickles the twines. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

Honorable Mention:

Ryan Blouin – Senior – Coupeville
CJ Edwards – Junior – La Conner
Corran Eisen – Junior – La Conner

Ryan Blouin sends the net some love. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Read Full Post »

Katie Marti makes it rain. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A little rough and tumble, a little polite.

Coupeville High School nabbed two awards when Northwest 2B/1B League coaches voted for All-Conference honors this week.

Junior point guard Katie Marti, who rampaged from end to end while leading the Wolves in scoring, was tabbed as a Second-Team All-League player.

Meanwhile Megan Richter’s entire squad was hailed with the Best Sportsmanship award.

Brynn Parker is here to thump you. Politely. (Bailey Thule photo)

Mount Vernon Christian senior Allie Heino, who led the Hurricanes to second place at the 1B state tourney, was league MVP.

Her boss, Jeff Droog, shared Coach of the Year honors with Sue Grenfell of Friday Harbor.

 

First-Team All-League:

Sofia Mahoney-Jauregui – Sophomore – Orcas Island
Maeve McCormick – Sophomore – La Conner
Ruthie Rozema – Junior – MVC
Vera Schoultz – Freshman – Friday Harbor
Claire Wright – Junior – Darrington

 

Second-Team All-League:

Alexa Brown – Sophomore – MVC
Shaniquah Casey – Sophomore – La Conner
McKenna Clark – Senior – Friday Harbor
Katie Marti – Junior – Coupeville
Kylie Selin – Freshman – Concrete

 

Honorable Mention:

Allie Cochran – Senior – Darrington
Nora McCormick – 8th grade – La Conner
Kayla VanHofwegen – Junior – MVC

Read Full Post »

Cameron (1) and Sydney Van Dyke (13) share a moment with a rival basketball player who is a softball teammate. (Grant Van Dyke photo)

It began with the unmistakable sound of squeaking shoes and basketballs thunking rhythmically off the hardwood and ended with hugs and shared popsicles.

All accompanied by much high-pitched screaming, a little giggling, and some dramatically swung elbows.

The Coupeville Middle School gym was a place both of the moment, and out of time, Wednesday afternoon as one season swung to a close and another stepped forward to claim our attention.

Next week brings the first “spring sports” games to the prairie, and we, the few, the brave, the foolhardy, will be buffeted by wind, rain, dust storms, and possibly snow.

Hunched over, trying to track the flight of softballs through the clouds, hear the crack of baseballs popping into catcher’s mitts, or focus on tennis balls thwapping against wet rackets, we will curse the sports gods.

Loudly and often.

As coaches check to see if our school’s track and field athletes are just resting, or forever frozen in place, we will remember a time when we were warm.

When we sat in a gym, where, no matter how hard the bleachers might be, we were witness to God’s Chosen Sport.

Basketball was here to bewitch us, for a glorious moment or two, and we were fulfilled.

And then the doors slammed, and we were sent onto the frozen tundra, possibly to see Jodie Foster stumble by, still trying to piece together the mysteries left unanswered by True Detective: Night Country.

Or, at least it will feel that way, as one by one, our limbs go into hibernation.

But Wednesday, for two hours, all was well in the universe.

Brooklyn Pope was fighting Finley Helm for rebounds, Kaleigha Millison rampaged from end to end, pouring in buckets, and Claire Lachnit and Hazel Goldman unleashed their inner Wolf, playing defense the only way they know.

Full tilt and ready to rip your knees off, bless their fiery hearts.

Some will tell you the game didn’t ultimately matter in the grand scheme of things.

It wasn’t against another school but was an intra-squad scrimmage between Coupeville Middle School’s #3 and #4 teams.

The win or loss doesn’t go on anyone’s record, the points tallied (by me at least, since there was no official scorekeeper) don’t count in the season totals.

To which I say, if you feel that way, you’re a freakin’ moron and your mom should have done a better job raising you.

Basketball ALWAYS matters. ALWAYS.

It is the one pure sport, and Wednesday was our final moment in the cathedral.

From here on out, we’ll watch other sports, which all have their good points, and we’ll suffer immensely while following those which are playing far too early in the calendar year.

But we will be like Adam and Eve, post-apple, thrown out of paradise and left to wander, at least until basketball returns next winter.

So those who were there Wednesday — the handful of parents and fellow students, the trash-talking babies (“play some dang defense and get me a bottle!!”), the high school players doubling as the year’s best ref crew, the gym rats and lifers — we marinated in every second as it ticked off the clock.

When he’s not fighting fires, Jerry Helm builds basketball players. Is this the path to sainthood?? (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Wolves on the floor were the present and the future wrapped in one, young women bursting with potential.

Some will stay with the chosen sport (yay!), others will fall from the pure religion (boo!) as they wind their way through middle and high school.

Always, the questions linger.

Will one of these girls shoot up to six-foot-five, develop a killer post move, and bring Cow Town its first state title?

Or settle for being 5-4, but mature into the kind of defensive dynamo who looks like she’ll chop your knees off with a rusty machete?

Which might fulfill my dream of seeing the Detroit Piston Bad Boys reborn as braid-rockin’ prairie powerhouses.

Especially if Coupeville adopts my other dream of having its players enter the gym under the cover of darkness, a spotlight picking up each enforcer as Welcome to the Jungle wails on the soundtrack.

“You’re gonna dieeeeeeeeeee!!!!!”

Sweet dreams are made of this…

I’m saying, I look at these Wolves, and I believe they can be the kind of young women who help granny cross the street and get straight A’s, then go out and (metaphorically) slash some tires and burn the gym down.

Will Cameron Van Dyke and Selah Rivera be those Valkyries? Perhaps Priya Powell and Ava Alford.

Could be, or could be any from the group on the floor, be it an Emma (Cushman or Green) an Anna (Annaliese Powers or Annabelle Cundiff) or a Zayne (Roos) or Zariyah (Allen).

Toss in Marina Flood, Addison Jacobson, Isley Garcia Fernandez, and Cassandra Powers and CMS coaches Bennett Richter and Jerry Helm had plenty of scrappers to turn wild Wednesday.

It’s why the two squads fought through four ties, the final one coming midway through the third quarter, before Team #3, which got twice the practice time of Team #4 this season, pulled away late for a 24-13 win.

Ten of 19 girls scored, with Millison rattling the rim for a game-high 10 points (at least according to my books), while Roos banked in six.

Ultimately, though, it wasn’t the score which mattered most.

It was getting to be in the gym one more time, feeling the ball lift off their fingertips, hearing their teammates, including the ones operating the scoreboard, scream in support.

It was a last afternoon in the cathedral, the sun peeking through the windows on the door, two teams running wild with refs who let the action play out.

It was basketball, and it was beautiful.

Read Full Post »

Seven of these nine are seniors and could be eligible for scholarships funded by an endowment launched by fellow former Coupeville hoops star Richard Cook. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Athletes helping athletes, generation after generation.

Coupeville High School grads, led by Class of 1978 alumni Richard Cook, have launched a “Future Generations Endowment” which will help send current Wolves to college.

The fund is being set up with the help of the Whidbey Community Foundation, and the Community Foundation for Coupeville Public Schools.

To be eligible, a CHS student must play at least one sport in high school and be accepted to a two or four-year college or university.

They do NOT need to play sports at the next level.

Cook played multiple sports at CHS before suiting up for Western Washington University’s football program, where he was a starter at defensive back.

Now he’s giving back to his alma mater, with the creation of an endowed scholarship, where funds raised are invested, with the earnings used to fund the scholarships.

That allows the scholarship to be funded into perpetuity, without the principal being touched.

The more people or organizations who chip in, the larger the pot of money, and the more return on investment, allowing for more scholarships.

“I wanted to start this endowment as a way to pay forward the people, school and community that helped me to be successful in business and in life,” Cook said.

He has been in contact with friends and colleagues, and the group is kicking things off with six donations of $1,000.

The goal is to get to $50,000 in 2024, with the first scholarships being awarded this June.

After that, there’s no ceiling on how high things can go.

“It’s exciting to be a part of a legacy scholarship that will never go away,” Cook said.  “Maybe we will see it get to $1 million in our lifetime, which would be amazing!”

For much more info on the fund, how it will be operated, and how scholarships will be awarded, pop over to:

Coupeville High School Future Generations Fund

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »