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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Wolf JV players wait for a chance to thump someone. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’re going to miss out on the hum of bus tires on asphalt.

The schedule for the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad took a hit Tuesday, with both Orcas Island and Darrington cancelling the remainder of their seasons due to a “lack of players.”

The change, which does not affect varsity action, eliminates two road trips for Kassie O’Neil’s team of young hoops hotshots.

Coupeville’s JV girls will now miss a trek to the wilds of Darrington this Friday, Jan. 5, and an island-hopping escapade Jan. 12.

Sitting at 2-4 coming into 2024, the Wolf JV has actually already played Orcas once, in a non-league game in which the Vikings poached CHS stars Haylee Armstrong and Bryley Gilbert to have enough players to field a full five-player unit.

As the schedule sits today, O’Neil’s crew has seven games remaining, with five at home.

First up is Auburn Adventist Academy, which travels to Cow Town Jan. 8.

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If the league standings adjust even an inch, Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith knows about it. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

We’re starting to come out of hibernation.

After almost two weeks of no games, the Coupeville High School basketball teams return to action next Friday, Jan. 5 with a trip to the wilds of Darrington.

While the Wolves have been on ice, several other Northwest 2B/1B League squads continued to play over the holidays, facing non-conference foes.

Where win/loss records sit on Dec. 31:

 

Northwest League boys’ basketball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 3-0 3-8
Coupeville 1-0 7-2
Orcas Island 2-1 5-6
Concrete 1-2 4-5
La Conner 0-0 6-4
Friday Harbor 0-1 4-4
Darrington 0-3 3-5

 

Northwest League girls’ basketball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 3-0 9-3
Friday Harbor 1-0 3-7
Darrington 2-1 4-4
Concrete 1-2 6-4
La Conner 0-0 6-3
Coupeville 0-1 3-6
Orcas Island 0-3 1-8

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Caleb Meyer, rockin’ the beard and bellowing at the heavens. (Photo property Jon Brennan)

Second-best win streak of his hoops career.

Coupeville High School grad Caleb Meyer, who played a huge role in the Wolves hardwood squad ripping off 16 straight victories during his senior season, is back at it.

McKenzie’s “lil” bro, currently a sophomore at Skagit Valley College, is now part of a Cardinals crew which heads into the new year boasting a 14-0 mark.

SVC got there by shredding Wenatchee Valley College 103-67 Saturday afternoon, and now is off until Jan. 5 when it travels to play Columbia Bible College in Abbotsford, British Columbia.

The Cardinals have 15 games remaining on their regular season schedule, then hopefully a long playoff run.

Meyer has played in 12 games this season, racking up nine points, four rebounds, four assists, four steals, and 10 tooth-rattling fouls.

During his time in Coupeville, he helped lead Wolf boys’ basketball to its best season in three decades-plus during the 2021-2022 campaign.

CHS, a 2B school, went undefeated during the regular season, stunned 3A Oak Harbor to rule Whidbey, captured league and district crowns, then pushed state powers Kalama and Lake Roosevelt to the final moments at the big dance.

The last heir to Videoville also earned a 2nd place medal at the state track championships for his work on the 4 x 100 relay squad.

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2023 – here’s looking at you. (Parker Hammons photo)

Stuff happened. A lot of stuff.

And, while there are still three days left in 2023, we’re pausing to look back at what drew the headlines over the previous 362 or so days.

In no particular order and drawn from 1000+ stories here on the blog (seriously), what people were talking about in Coupeville.

 

Best of the best:

Grey Peabody (volleyball), Dominic Coffman (football), and Maddie Georges (basketball) played in All-State games, while Scott Hilborn and Jonathan Valenzuela (baseball) participated in the All-State feeder games.

League MVP honors went to Hilborn and Coffman in football, then Hilborn in baseball.

May brought the CHS Athlete of the Year awards, which went to Ryanne Knoblich, Hilborn, and Tim Ursu.

 

Budget battles:

Money is the root of all evil, and also the cause of a lot of hurt feelings.

Everyone has their opinion, and their explanation, but the facts are simple — school district officials initially called for cutting the jobs of Willie Smith (Athletic Director), Jessica Caselden (Athletic Trainer), and Tom Black (Dean of Students).

The decision to hand Smith’s AD duties to Assistant Principal Leonard Edlund, whose own hours were being cut, was reversed long before the school board voted on a budget.

But not before ADs from every other school in Coupeville’s league, and many others, made a public defense for a veteran leader who was in the midst of delivering a record-setting year, athletically and academically.

Caselden’s job was slashed in the final budget, despite a large public outcry, but then the community rallied to do what the district would not — save a valuable resource by funding the position for a year.

A GoFundMe and a car wash — the latter driven by the children of Caselden’s childhood friends — brought in $8,000 and gave school district officials a year to reassess their priorities.

Black was also cut, despite impassioned letters and speeches detailing his impact on the lives of countless Wolf students.

He was brought back on a part-time basis, however, after Edlund took a medical leave at the start of the school year.

As we head into 2024, Black has returned to full-time, for now, with the news the Assistant Principal is unable to return to his duties this school year.

Things remain unsettled, as four CHS secretaries sent letters to the superintendent and school board in December detailing the pressure they are under as the school tries to operate under the current budget.

 

Jonathan Valenzuela only needs one eye to beat La Conner. (Morgan White photo)

Buzzer beaters:

Valenzuela, down to one good eye after taking an elbow to the face earlier in the game, banked in a three-point bomb at the horn on La Conner’s floor, lifting Wolf boys’ basketball to a 57-56 win in February.

Jump forward 11 months, and it was Mia Farris driving the length of the floor in Coupeville, sliding between two defenders, and slapping home a game-winning layup as the Wolf girls held off Orcas Island 42-40.

 

Cheertastic spirit leaders:

CHS cheer balanced a sideline squad with a return to the competitive mats, with a high point being a 2nd place performance at the Blue Fusion Cheer Competition in Puyallup.

Other highlights included participating in Spirit Day at the U-Dub, and pulling off two hugely successful junior cheer performances, one of which drew 103 kids.

 

Coaching changes:

Brett Casey (CHS football), Hunter Smith (CHS boys’ basketball), and the dean of Wolf coaches, 20-year vet Ken Stange (CHS tennis) left the arena.

Meanwhile Bennett Richter added on a CMS girls’ basketball coaching gig to his high school football duties, while RayLynn Ratcliff, Alex Evans, and Jaylen Nitta took over the CMS boys’ hoops program.

Also new: Kimberly Kisch (CHS girls’ soccer), Amber Wyman (CMS cross country), Kristina Hooks (CMS volleyball), and (for a season) Mia Littlejohn (CMS girls’ basketball), while Craig Anderson and Jon Roberts bounced from middle school basketball to high school.

 

Carolyn Lhamon, different school, still awesome. (Photo courtesy Helene Lhamon)

College and beyond:

Multiple former Wolves suited up for college athletic teams this year, including Carolyn Lhamon, Lucy and Sophie Sandahl, Mitchell Hall, Ben Smith, Mica Shipley, Taygin Jump, Logan Martin, Joey Lippo, Caleb Meyer, and Hawthorne Wolfe.

Shipley reached the end of a four-year run as a D-I cheerleader at Eastern Washington University, while Martin earned All-West Region honors in the hammer throw for Central Washington University.

The Sandahl sisters (crew-Seattle Pacific) and Lhamon (soccer-Colorado School of Mines) participated in national championship events, while Sean Toomey-Stout, the first Coupeville grad to pile up stats for the University of Washington football team, took a medical retirement.

Then there were former Wolves playing at a higher level, with Dawson Houston and Kwamane Bowens suiting up for the Everett Royals semi-pro football team and Makana Stone entering her third year of overseas professional basketball.

 

Future phenoms:

Tamsin Ward kicked off her middle school track career by winning 11 times, including taking a league title in the high jump.

The only CMS athletes to top the 6th grader during the years I can … track?

Future high school legends Lindsey Roberts and Alex Murdy, who won 18 and 12 times, respectively, as 8th graders.

Meanwhile, the softball field was once again ground zero for future stars, as the Central Whidbey Little League Majors squad went 15-2, won a district title, and made a strong run at the state tourney.

 

Hit the road:

CHS graduated 88 seniors in early spring, with Helen Strelow and Abigail Ramirez sharing Valedictorian honors.

 

It’s a party:

CHS celebrated the 50th anniversary of girls’ basketball, bringing in a considerable crowd on a night when the current Wolves beat South Whidbey handily in two games.

The top 15 career scorers, led by Brianne King, and the 1999-2000 team — the first Wolf girls’ team to win at state in any sport — were honored, while former coach Phyllis Textor was among those garnering an epic response in their return to the gym of their younger days.

Earlier in the year, Coupeville celebrated Homecoming by anointing Skylar Parker and William Davidson as Queen and King.

 

“Pardon me ladies, I need to go win this game!” (Jackie Saia photo)

 

League leaders:

Multiple Wolves claimed All-Conference honors.

The first teamers included Cole White for soccer, Farris and Peabody for volleyball, Logan Downes for basketball, and Hilborn, Jack Porter, and Valenzuela for baseball.

Not to mention Farris, Madison McMillan, and Teagan Calkins for softball and (deep breath) Chase Anderson (on both sides of the ball), Downes, Hunter Bronec, Zane Oldenstadt, Davidson, Marcelo Gebhard, Mikey Robinett, and Jaje Drake in football.

 

Record setters:

Downes blitzed the books, establishing new CHS football records for touchdown passes thrown in a game (5), season (20), and career (40).

As the new year looms, he’s back at it, gunning for the #1 spot on the boys’ basketball career scoring chart.

Downes has 989 points and counting, with 10 games left on the regular season schedule, and then hopefully a long playoff run.

That puts him just 149 points from breaking the record of 1,137, jointly held by Jeff Stone and Mike Bagby.

During the spring Knoblich capped her track career by soaring five feet, two inches in the high jump at the state meet, tying a school record set in 1999 by Yashmeen Knox.

This fall, Wolf booter Ezra Boilek banged in five goals against Grace Academy, while playing just the first half, shattering the school’s single-game soccer scoring mark of four, jointly held by cousins Abraham and Derek Leyva.

 

Soccer shuffle:

A lack of players forced CHS to cancel its girls’ soccer season, but most of the players and coach Kimberly Kisch made the jump to team up with their male counterparts as the school went co-ed on the pitch for a season.

The varsity team, which featured Ayden Wyman and Bryley Gilbert, was ranked as high as #4 in the state at one point, while the JV squad, with close to a 50/50 mix, was competitive every time out.

Will the programs split next fall, or remain together? Only time will tell.

 

Madison McMillan (left) and Mia Farris celebrate long into the night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

State success:

CHS volleyball returned to the big dance for the first time since 2017, holding its own with big-timers Lind-Ritzville and Goldendale.

Wolf baseball beat Toledo 3-0, capturing the program’s first state win since 1987, then scored off of projected Major League Baseball first-round pick Zach Swanson of Toutle Lake in a quarterfinal loss.

Strelow, who also advanced to state in cross country during her Coupeville days, finished her tennis career by playing three matches at the year’s premier event.

Both baseball and tennis captured Bi-District titles, adding to the school’s Wall of Fame.

Cross country sent its boys’ team to Pasco, where the Wolves claimed 10th place in the team results, the best showing since the mid-’70s, while Noelle Western made a return trip as the lone CHS girl in the field.

 

Titanic track:

Alex Murdy became the 10th state champ in CHS history, soaring in the long jump, while the Wolf girls finished 3rd in the team standings, best in program history.

With the CHS boys finishing 5th in their own team battle, that put the cherry on top in a season in which Bob Martin and Elizabeth Bitting also guided their squads to Bi-District titles.

 

Water (and wrasslin’) wizards:

Finn Price is a one-man Wolf wrecking crew in the pool, training and traveling with Kamiak since CHS doesn’t have a pool program of its own.

As a freshman, he competed at districts in two events. Now, barely into his sophomore season, he’s already punched his postseason ticket in four events.

Coupeville senior Jaje Drake is following a similar path, training with South Whidbey while pursuing a season on the wrestling mats.

When the postseason arrives, the Wolf big man will go his own way, with CHS football coach Bennett Richter accompanying him.

 

Jae (left) and Heidi LeVine step into a new world. (Photo courtesy Sean LeVine)

Wedded bliss:

Among Coupeville athletic stars to tie the knot (and give the blog plenty of page hits) were Sylvia Hurlburt, Jae LeVine, CJ Smith, Payton Aparicio, Zoe Trujillo, and Hunter Smith.

 

What a win:

CHS boys’ soccer stunned state powerhouse Orcas Island 4-3 in the rain at Mickey Clark Field.

The middle school boys’ basketball teams won five of six games against archrival South Whidbey, a year after the CMS program failed to win a single contest.

Melanie Navarro cranked two homers on the same day, as CHS softball dismantled South Whidbey 20-2.

But no victory was bigger than the night CHS volleyball slew the beast.

Celebrating Senior Night, the Wolves thrashed La Conner in four sets, snapping a 12+ year streak of league wins for the Braves and signaling the beginning of the end for their four-year run of capturing state crowns.

 

WIAA recognition:

The bigwigs in the big city noticed Cow Town from time to time in 2023.

Lyla Stuurmans, Downes, and Landon Roberts earned Athlete of the Week honors, while CHS track copped Team of the Month for April.

Also, Wolf girls’ tennis and boys’ track teams earned Academic state titles in 2023, and CHS, as a whole, finished 4th among 2B schools in the yearly Scholastic Cup competition, an all-time best for the school.

 

And some odds and ends:

Former CMS football coach Michael Golden was charged with wire fraud in Alabama and faces up to 20 years in prison.

CHS grad Brian Roberts was honored by paramedics for helping to save a man trapped after a car accident.

The building commonly known as “The Engle Farm,” long owned by the state, burnt down.

The Coupeville Boys and Girls Club opened a snazzy new joint and will no longer have to share an old fire house.

Wolf basketball players gathered 250+ toys for children at Christmas.

Alison Perera was re-elected to the school board, while Charles Merwine was also added by voters.

Race the Reserve attracted 277 runners to the biggest fundraiser for CHS seniors.

The rock outside of CHS was vandalized by pro-Palestinian spray painters, but security camera footage revealed the perps to be outsiders, squashing conspiracy theories that local teachers were radicalizing students.

And the true “Chosen One,” Adeline Richter, was born.

“Bring me your finest meats and cheeses, my loyal subjects!”

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Scott Hilborn, ready to inflict some damage. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Give him the ball and let him go to work.

Scott Hilborn, like his brother Matt before him, was remarkably self-contained, or at least seemed that way to those watching his exploits from the cheap seats.

Steve and Wendi’s youngest son wasn’t one for hollering or screaming, for drawing unnecessary attention to himself.

Eyeballs may have followed Scott’s every athletic achievement, but it was earned.

At the heart of it, he seemed cut from a different generation — the one which used to go work on prairie farms before and after games.

Old school in a new school world, Scott wasn’t overly fancy, and I mean that in the best way possible.

He clocked in, and then clocked you out.

Whether separating a runner from his mouth guard with a lethal, yet legal hit, or slicing through the defense on one of his own torrid runs, Scott played football like every play mattered.

No awkward post-sack dances or elaborately choreographed end zone celebrations.

Do your job, get up and be ready for the next rumble, every movement designed for maximum impact.

On offense, he was a weapon of mass destruction, able to chew up yardage (and score frequent touchdowns) off of pass receptions, runs, and kick returns.

Outrunning the setting sun. (Bailey Thule photo)

Scott never seemed all that fast until the moment when he turned the corner and was suddenly gone, streaking across the grass as the setting sun attempted (and failed) to catch up to his lethal movements.

In that, he was a whole lot like Jake Tumblin or Josh Bayne, two of the best to ever lace up their shoes and pull on a Wolf helmet.

Joining up with fellow seniors Dominic Coffman and Tim Ursu, Scott formed a triple threat which annihilated rival defenses in 2022 as Wolf football reached heights not seen in three decades.

A league title. A ticket to the state tourney, with a home game (in Oak Harbor) to boot.

That success was built on the effort of players like Scott — in the weight room, on the practice field, and in play after play under Friday Nights Lights.

He was a leader in a way the men who wore the same uniform in the ’50s and ’60s would have appreciated.

Parts of the game have certainly changed — rule tweaks, equipment improvements, and the like — but one thing remains consistent.

The young man who hits the hardest, then gets back up and ignores the pain, the sweat, and the bright lights to do it again, and again, and again, is the one we remember.

And few swung the hammer like Scott did.

It was a trait which carried over to the baseball diamond, where he finished his CHS run playing for his father.

The man, the myth, the ready-for-a-museum-wall legend. (Wendi Hilborn photo)

An ace pitcher, a slick-fielding (and power-hitting) shortstop, sometimes even a rock-solid catcher, Scott could play any position on the field and dominate.

Plug him into any hole, slap him on any rung in the batting order, and he was the most-dangerous dude on the diamond.

Most days he hit leadoff, reaching base at an often-uncanny rate via hits, walks, and wearing pitches while acting like the rival hurler was throwing mush balls.

We heard the crack of ball hitting muscle in those moments, but Scott didn’t flinch in public, merely ambling down to first, before promptly stealing second and third before his dad had time to inquire as to how his incoming bruise might be feeling.

Teams tried to pitch around him at times, but he always seemed to find a way to counteract their best efforts.

And groove a pitch to him, or at least offer up a ball remotely close to his strike zone?

Start running, because the horsehide was about to be deposited into the deepest, darkest corners of the field.

Scott might not have been the hardest thrower to ever prowl the mound at CHS, but he was consistent in a way which recalled greats who came before him — young men like CJ Smith, who also led his squad to a league title.

If you’re noticing a trend here, when comparing what the younger Hilborn brought to the game, gridiron or diamond, the names popping up are all guys who left behind a sizable impact on Coupeville sports history.

He can stand with those greats, and yet carved his own remarkable story — a testament to why Scott, like those others, will hear his name invoked for years to come when old men ramble on about how they don’t make ’em like they used to.

Tearing up the diamond alongside Jonathan Valenzuela. (Morgan White photo)

As he closed his prep career in the spring of 2023, he gave mom Wendi (his most faithful, fervent fan) one more chance to beam from the stands.

Facing down Toledo, a huge favorite, he tossed a complete game shutout in a 3-0 Wolf win, guiding Coupeville to its first victory at the state baseball tourney since 1987.

While accounting for two of those three runs, coming around to score after getting aboard on an error and a walk.

Scott followed that up by smashing an RBI single off of future Major League Baseball draftee Zach Swanson of Toutle Lake in a season-ending loss in the quarterfinals.

He reached base four times during Coupeville’s day at the state tourney — the best showing of any Wolf hitter.

Which was hardly a surprise, as Scott led his team in 16 of 21 stat categories during his senior campaign.

Before he graduated, he racked up league MVP honors in both of his sports, earned an invite to the All-State baseball feeder game, and shared Coupeville’s Male Athlete of the Year award with Tim Ursu, the other hardest-working man in Cow Town.

Today, Scott joins an impressive list of Wolf overachievers in cementing their status as one of the best to ever do it on the prairie.

The doors to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame swing open, and Matt’s lil’ bro, a star in his own right, earns his rightful induction into the club.

After this, you’ll find the Hilborn brothers two places.

In real life, they’re probably out working (and outworking) everyone in sight, while in our digital fever dream, they’ll be camped out at the top of the blog, up under the Legends tab.

In either place, one thing is certain — they’ll be making mom super proud.

Time to go to work. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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