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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Issabel Johnson (left) and Taylor Brotemarkle share a moment at the state volleyball tourney. (Michelle Johnson photo)

“I just thought it was so sweet.”

Wolf Mom Kim Brotemarkle is a frequent presence at games, as a coach, parent, and fan.

The photo above, which she sent my way from the state volleyball tourney in Yakima, captures her daughter Taylor and Wolf senior Issabel Johnson, who both won sportsmanship awards for the way they conducted themselves on the big stage.

Wins and losses come and go.

This is the kind of connection remembered years down the road when these two have daughters of their own playing the sport.

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Coupeville spikers (left to right) Lyla Stuurmans, Mia Farris, and Jada Heaton can all return next year to make another run at state tourney glory. (Jennifer Heaton photo)

The competition was fierce.

Thanks to a shocking first round upset by a #13 seed, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad ended up playing two of the top five teams in 2B Wednesday at the state tournament in Yakima.

And while the Wolves weren’t quite able to pull off their own upsets, they did send a strong message with their play, and the promise of more to come.

After starting the season 1-4, Coupeville finishes 12-7, while ending La Conner’s 12+ year unbeaten run in the Northwest 2B/1B League, and can return eight of 10 varsity spikers next season.

And those Braves, who had won four straight state titles?

Losses to Toutle Lake and Walla Walla Valley Academy — a lower-ranked team — knocked La Conner out of this tourney while the Wolves were still on the floor.

Even with the tentative start, the 12 wins were the most for a Wolf varsity squad since 2019, and just two off the program record for a single season.

CHS has recorded double-digit win totals in seven of eight years under coach Cory Whitmore, with the pandemic-shortened 2020 campaign limited to just nine matches.

Now that the current crew has tasted life in the SunDome, with multiple courts hosting matches at the same time, the lure to return will burn brightly.

“We’ll be back next year!” said one Wolf Dad, and it’s easy to believe.

Getting ready for the bright lights. (Jennifer Marzocca photo)

 

How this go-around turned out:

 

Lind-Ritzville-Sprague:

Coupeville, seeded #12, clashed with #5 Lind-Ritzville-Sprague — whose alumni include Coupeville’s head coach — to open the tourney.

Or, at least they eventually did, as a five-set match ahead of them delayed their bout by more than a half hour.

Once on the floor, the Wolves proved scrappy, pushing their foes all the way in a 25-19, 25-20, 25-20 loss.

Coupeville never led in the opening set, but did hang tough, remaining within two points as late as 21-19.

Katie Marti had a nice run at the service stripe midway through the frame, while fellow junior Lyla Stuurmans came crashing in from the side to rattle teeth with a collection of kills.

The second set was fairly similar, in least in terms of scoring, with the Wolves trailing almost the entire way, but never letting L-R-S pull too far away.

Mia Farris, Teagan Calkins, and Grey Peabody crunched big hits, with Calkins, a mere sophomore, ambling across the court, cool and calm, before raining down hot death from above.

Marti had the magic fingers, rifling a service ace off the backline, then coming back around to freeze the world before flipping a winner into a narrow crack in the defense.

Madison McMillan has been a steady presence for the Wolves all season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

An ace from Madison McMillan, which smacked into the would-be returner, crawled up her body, softly thunked her in the bottom of the chin, then shot away screaming “Freedom!” was huge, and the Wolves fought off several set points.

But L-R-S is a regular at the big dance, and the Broncos did just enough to hold off Coupeville every time it threatened to really surge.

Farris spent most of the third set sniping, whacking the ball where her foes couldn’t catch up to the rapidly descending orb, while Stuurmans got fancy on a winner of her own.

Her spike caught the top of the net, hung in midair, all but sticking its tongue out at the Broncos, then suddenly crashed to the floor before any of them could even get a full swing at it.

While L-R-S eventually made off with the win, advancing to the winner side of the brackets, Coupeville departed the floor with its players holding their heads high.

 

Goldendale:

This wasn’t supposed to be the opponent.

But #13 Liberty (Spangle), ignoring the fact #4 Goldendale was 19-1 entering the tourney, wiped the floor with the favorites, sweeping them in straight sets.

That set the Timberwolves tumbling into a loser-out rumble with Coupeville, and the two squads battled it out across four hotly contested sets.

This time around, the Wolves led for almost the entirety of the first frame, lost the advantage late, but rallied to take the third set in an eventual 25-22, 25-13, 19-25, 25-13 loss.

CHS came out primed for battle, hurtling to a 6-1 lead after Farris went on a rampage at the service stripe, then held off Goldendale for much of the next half hour.

Key kills from Peabody and Farris kept the Wolves in front, while Stuurmans chopped off a rival’s arm with a brutal putaway to push her squad in front at 21-20.

Unfortunately, that was when Goldendale finally clicked in, closing the set on a 5-1 run to flip the match on its head.

With their belief in themselves restored, the Timberwolves kept up the heated attack in the second frame, swarming Coupeville during the one set of the day where the Wolves seemed to come unstuck for a bit.

Calkins popped a gorgeous service ace, which came in hot and dove between the legs of a Goldendale player, but you could feel things slipping away from CHS for much of the set.

But then, as they so often did this season, the Wolves bounced right back from a low point to once again soar high.

Grey Peabody, ready to crush it. (Jackie Saia photo)

With the third set knotted at 10-10, Peabody made her first appearance at the service line, and immediately paid dividends.

The senior captain ran off five points, notching an ace, while getting crucial support from Farris and her deadly right hand, which was locked ‘n loaded and looking to spray kills.

Goldendale crept back to within 18-17, but wham-bam-wham, three straight kills, two from Peabody and one on which Stuurmans rose to the rafters before unleashing bedlam, sent the Timberwolves back down.

Calkins matched Peabody with a five-point run on serve to push Coupeville to the cusp of a set win, before her older teammate crushed a winner right down the middle of the floor on set point.

The fourth set was close, until it wasn’t.

The last tie came at 7-7, and Coupeville was still hanging tough, down just 12-10 after Farris lashed a crosscourt kill.

But that was when Goldendale mounted its final surge, ripping off eight straight points to all but ice the win.

The Wolves never stepped back, holding off two match points, but the margin eventually proved to be too much to overcome, bringing an end to a season of success.

The loss marked the end of the run for seniors Peabody and Issabel Johnson, but with seven juniors and a sophomore filling out the rest of the roster, the future is bright.

Stellar team, stellar season. (Photo courtesy Cory Whitmore)

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Carson Field (1802) and Thomas Strelow streak for the finish line. (Wendi Wasik photos)

The future is bright.

Year six of the rebirth of Coupeville High School cross country featured eight runners advancing to state, with the Wolf boys claiming 10th place in the team standings — their best showing since the late ’70s.

Every harrier who made the trip to Pasco, and 15 of 18 on the roster, can return next season, when CHS coach Elizabeth Bitting will also get an influx of promising new freshmen.

But before looking ahead to what fall 2024 might bring, the Wolves joined the awards banquet scene Tuesday, putting a wrap on this go-round.

Sophomore Noelle Western and junior Carson Field, both now two-time state qualifiers, earned Most Valuable Runner status to headline the shindig.

Noelle Western heads off to state. (Kerry Western photo)

 

Other awards:

 

Captain:

Erica McGrath
Landon Roberts

 

Character Award:

Landon Roberts

 

Most Inspirational:

Damy Giacobbe

 

Most Improved:

Ezekiel Allen

 

Newcomer of the Year:

Santi Ojeda

 

Almost Perfect Attendance:

Reagan Callahan
Carson Field
Thomas Strelow

 

Four-Year Award:

Erica McGrath

 

Tri-District meet certificate:

Ezekiel Allen
Ari Armstrong
Reagan Callahan
Carson Field
Kenneth Jacobsen
Aleksia Jump
Axel Marshall
Erica McGrath
Landon Roberts
George Spear
Thomas Strelow
Noelle Western

 

State meet certificate:

Ezekiel Allen
Carson Field
Kenneth Jacobsen
Axel Marshall
Landon Roberts
George Spear
Thomas Strelow
Noelle Western

 

Varsity letter winners:

Ezekiel Allen
Ari Armstrong
Reagan Callahan
Carson Field
Preston Howard
Kenneth Jacobsen
Aleksia Jump
Axel Marshall
Erica McGrath
Landon Roberts
George Spear
Thomas Strelow
Nicholas Wasik
Noelle Western

 

Participation certificates:

Zach Blitch
Jasmine Castellanos
Damy Giacobbe
Santi Ojeda

 

Jasmine Castellanos flies up the trail.

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Coupeville volleyball aces Jada Heaton (left) and Mia Farris, off to the bright lights of Yakima. (Jennifer Heaton photo)

Next stop, the wilds of Eastern Washington.

The Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad is off to the state tourney for the first time since 2017, with the bus departing Cow Town Tuesday afternoon.

The Wolves open play in the 16-team double-elimination royal rumble Wednesday at 9:45 AM in the SunDome against Lind-Ritzville-Sprague.

Win or lose, CHS is back on the floor later in the day, with hopes of advancing to day #2, which goes down Thursday.

As they departed, the spikers were sent off by fellow students, teachers, administrators, parents, and fans, as you can see in the pics above and below.

Chloe Marzocca is ready for the long trip. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Marzocca)

Ten talented young women, one exquisite dream of kickin’ fanny and takin’ names. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Heaton)

JV spikers (l to r) Capri Anter, Haylee Armstrong, and Lexis Drake root for their varsity counterparts. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

Jada Heaton lets mom snag a forever memory. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Heaton)

Wolf coach Cory Whitmore works the reception line. (Coupeville Schools photo)

“When are we stopping for coffee???” (Photo courtesy Jennifer Marzocca)

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Adeline Richter informs dad Bennett his football players should be running stairs right now, even if it is the offseason. (Photos courtesy Megan Richter)

There’s a new coach on the sidelines.

Adeline Joy Richter, the cutest baby to appear on Coupeville Sports today, arrived Nov. 2, uniting two sports empires.

Mom is Megan (Smith) Richter, three-time CHS Athlete of the Year turned Wolf varsity girls’ basketball coach.

Dad is Bennett Richter, state football champ (back in his Oak Harbor days) and the man who ended Coupeville football’s three-decade dry spell, bringing a gridiron league title back to Cow Town in 2022.

Grandpa is CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith, the first coach to lead a Wolf girls’ team to a state tourney win in ANY sport.

Grandma is Cherie Smith, the true power behind the throne, a hoops whisperer of great renown for both her husband and daughter.

And we haven’t even spoken of Uncles James and Ian Smith, legendary three-sport Wolf athletes who made South Whidbey sports teams cry more than once, which is just plain sweet.

Plus, Aunt Ashley Smith, who will be her fiercest protector, and countless cousins and other family members on both sides.

Why, Adeline, who popped into the world at 5 pounds, 15 ounces, and 19 inches long, might almost be called … “The Chosen One.”

Just don’t tell Grandpa I said that.

“How you doin’?”

“Mom, we can’t tell dad this, but … basketball is God’s chosen sport.”

“Yowza, is it just me or is there a draft in here?”

Hangin’ with the grandparentals.

“I’m snug as a bug in a rug.”

“I already signed a NIL deal? Sweet!”

“Hit the gas, Skippy! Big Ten hoops on Peacock in 10 minutes and rumors of a bottle waiting for me!”

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