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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Ayden Wyman is the first Coupeville High School girl to letter while playing with the boys’ soccer program. (Jackie Saia photo)

A season of success ended with awards raining down.

The Coupeville High School soccer squad, a co-ed unit which was ranked as high as #4 in the state before finishing 6-6, kicked off awards banquet season Monday night.

Coaches Robert Wood and Kimberly Kisch honored senior Cole White with the Ballon d’Or, which goes to the top player.

Sophomore Ezra Boilek snagged Golden Boot honors after leading the team in scoring with eight goals, while seniors Nick Guay and Andrew Williams received four-year awards for playing every season.

Ezra Boilek dreams of scoring goals. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

The night’s other honorees:

 

Freshman MVP:

Solomon Rudat

 

Sophomore MVP:

Ezra Boilek

 

Junior MVP:

Hurlee Bronec

 

Senior MVP:

Cole White

Cole White works on his skills. (Jackie Saia photo)

 

Varsity captains:

Hank Milnes
Andrew Williams

 

JV captains:

Josh Lujan
Lydia Price

 

Most Improved:

Frankie Tenore

 

Player Voted Starting Lineup:

Ezra Boilek
Hurlee Bronec
Preston Epp
Nick Guay
Hank Milnes
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim
Matthew Ward
Cole White
Andrew Williams
Cael Wilson
Ayden Wyman

 

Scholar Athletes (3.5 or better GPA):

Ezra Boilek
Hurlee Bronec
Mason Butler
Preston Epp
Nick Guay
Joshua Lujan
Hank Milnes (4.0 – Running Start)
Lydia Price (4.0)
Solomon Rudat
Cole White (4.0)
Andrew Williams (4.0)
Ayden Wyman (4.0)

 

Varsity letter winners:

Ezra Boilek
Hurlee Bronec

Preston Epp
Nick Guay
Dane Hadsall
Hank Milnes
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim
Matthew Ward
Cole White
Andrew Williams
Cael Wilson
Ayden Wyman

 

Participation certificate:

Sage Arends
Mason Butler
Bryley Gilbert
Olivia Hall
Joshua Lujan
Brynn Parker
Angel Partida
Lydia Price
Sam Richards
Solomon Rudat
Frankie Tenore

A frequent sight this season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Jada Heaton (left) and Lyla Stuurmans open state tourney play Wednesday morning in Yakima. (Jackie Saia photo)

The path is set.

The Coupeville High School volleyball team, headed back to the state tournament for the first time since 2017, now knows its opening round foe.

The Washington Interscholastic Activities Association released the official bracket Sunday morning, having seeded the 16 qualifiers for the Nov. 8-9 royal rumble.

The Wolves?

Sitting at 12-5, having won 11 of their last 12 matches, they’re #12, and begin their adventure at the Yakima SunDome against #5 Lind-Ritzville-Sprague.

Oh, and by the way, Coupeville spiker coach Cory Whitmore is a Ritzville grad (Class of 2009) who was a standout three-sport athlete there in his younger days.

His dad Greg, now superintendent in Entiat, was also a longtime coach, teacher, and athletic director at the school, so ties still run deep.

Cory Whitmore, Ritzville legend, now rockin’ Coupeville colors. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“Looking forward to matching up with my alma mater, see some familiar faces in the crowd,” Cory Whitmore said.

“They’re a strong team and I recognize a good number of the names.

Cari Galbreth’s (head coach) kid is their setter and I definitely remember Zoe splashing around the city pool I lifeguarded at each summer.

“Gotta love the small-town connections. Go Wolves!”

PS — If you’re wondering about that pool, the internet remembers forever:

https://www.ritzvillejournal.com/story/2012/06/21/news/pool-managers-prepare-for-swim-season/2724.html

Coupeville and Lind-Ritzville-Sprague, which is 17-2 on the season, play at 9:45 AM on Court #5.

You can see the bracket here:

http://www.wpanetwork.com/wiaa/brackets/tournament.php?act=view&tournament_id=4082&school_year=2023-24&district=-1&sport=10&class=2B

Win or lose that opening match, Coupeville returns to the courts later in the day as the tourney is a double-elimination event.

#4 Goldendale (19-1) and #13 Liberty of Spangle (12-5) are opposite the Wolves and Broncos.

Right now, the losers from those two matches are slated to clash at 3:30, with the winners vying at 7:15, but time flows at its own pace once a state tourney begins.

Overall, four teams will go two and out Wednesday, while four more will be sliced early Thursday, with the final eight guaranteed to bring home a trophy.

Coupeville’s Northwest 2B/1B League rival La Conner, which is the four-time defending state champs, have their lowest ranking in years.

The Braves (12-7), who edged the Wolves for the bi-district crown after CHS ended La Conner’s 12+ year conference win streak, are seeded #11 and open against #6 Toutle Lake (14-6).

Top-seeded Adna (18-0) and #2 Manson (20-0) are the last unbeaten teams standing, while #15 Kalama (11-11) is the only school to reach state without posting a winning record.

Wolf spikers Lyla Stuurmans (4), Madison McMillan (11), and Mia Farris (3), ready to write their own tale. (Bailey Thule photo)

This is Coupeville’s sixth trip to the state volleyball tourney, and its first as a 2B school.

The previous five appearances all came at the 1A level.

Whitmore, now in his eighth season at CHS, led the Wolves to the royal rumble in 2017, where they fell to Castle Rock and Lakeside (Nine Mile Falls).

Prior to that, Kim Meche and Toni Crebbin guided Coupeville as it qualified four straight seasons between 2001-2004.

The Wolf spikers went 4-8 at state in that span, collecting a win each time around.

Coupeville KO’d King’s (2-0), Freeman (2-0), Toutle Lake (3-2) and Zillah (3-1) in successive years, but came up just short of bringing home a trophy.

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Lucy Sandahl (left) rocks the Crocs when not in the water. (Photos courtesy Jeannie Sandahl)

Lucy Sandahl was right at the heart of the action Sunday morning.

The Coupeville High School grad, now a senior at Seattle Pacific University, participated with her crew in Head of the Lake, the “largest fall rowing regatta on the West Coast.”

Sandahl was the coxswain for an SPU team which finished 5th in the women’s championship 8+ collegiate race, covering the course in 18 minutes, 25.43 seconds.

Head of the Lake, which starts on Lake Union and finishes at the University of Washington Shellhouse, has become an annual tradition since it debuted back in 1979.

What started as a small group of athletes from the Lake Washington Rowing Club getting together has blossomed into a major event which draws collegiate crews from seven states and Canada.

Master rowers often pop in from far-flung locales as well, with past participants hailing from places like Alaska, Colorado, and Maryland.

Fall colors and fast boats, with Lucy Sandahl (far left) barkin’ orders to her crew.

Sandahl, a 2020 CHS grad, played volleyball and competed in track and field during her time in Cow Town.

She and older sister Sophie were both part of the successful Seattle Pacific rowing program, until Sophie graduated from SPU after last season.

Lucy is a senior majoring in Physiology.

With Head of the Lake bringing an end to the fall crew competitions, she and her SPU teammates now head into winter training.

They will reemerge in the spring, ready for regatta season.

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Makana Stone, scorin’ buckets and takin’ names in Norway. (Photo property of Erik Berglund)

The American Assassin filled up the stat sheet.

But while Coupeville grad Makana Stone was electric Sunday in Norway, her teammates struggled through a rough day en route to a loss.

Swamped early by undefeated Ullern, the early front-runner in the six-team Kvinneligaen, Ammerud fell 66-40.

The loss drops the Queens to 2-2 on the still-young season, while Ullern sits at 4-0.

Stone was the lone Ammerud player to hit double-digits in scoring, dropping in a team-high 15 points.

The former Wolf ace added nine rebounds, five assists, three steals, and two blocked shots.

It wasn’t enough to stop Ullern, however, as the league’s top team jumped out to a 17-5 lead by the end of the first quarter.

The powerhouse unit, which had three players score between 12 and 16 points, pushed the margin to 37-13 at the half, then 54-25 through three frames.

Ammerud has a chance to get back into the winning rhythm next Saturday, Nov. 11, when it faces off with Baerum (2-4), who it has already thumped once this year.

Stone, playing in her third season of professional basketball, tops the Queens with 70 points, 47 rebounds, 17 assists, nine steals, and five blocked shots.

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Coupeville sophomore Noelle Western has qualified for state in back-to-back seasons. (Photo courtesy Elizabeth Bitting)

Start of a new dynasty?

The Coupeville High School cross country squad sent eight runners to the line Saturday at the 1B/2B state meet in Pasco, and every one of them is eligible to return next season.

The Wolf boys qualified as a complete team for the first time since the late ’70s, while sophomore Noelle Western made it two-for-two in her short, but productive, running career.

With no seniors among the state participants, Coupeville is primed for even more success in the future.

And while none of the current crop of Wolves joined alumni Natasha Bamberger and Tyler King in bringing home individual state crowns Saturday, Elizabeth Bitting’s runners held up well on the 5,000-meter course at the Sun Willows Golf Course.

The CHS boys finished 10th in the team standings, with their top five runners stretched just one minute and 11 seconds apart.

That’s the fourth-best performance by a boys’ team Saturday.

“These boys!! Amazing!!!,” Bitting said. “After 46 years of missing state to finish 10th!

“They ALL ran so hard and pushed themselves to their limits!” she added.

“The look on all their faces running down the homestretch, it was obvious they left it all on the course.”

This marks the fourth time the Wolf boys have finished in the top 10 as a team at state, and the first since they went 9th, 5th, and 5th between 1975-1977.

The Wolf boys, back at the big dance. (Photo courtesy Elizabeth Bitting)

Coupeville’s girls, who claimed 8th place as a team last year, also have an 8th in 1981 and a program-best 4th in 1982.

While the Wolf girls just missed on sending a complete team to state this time around, Western made her second trip to Pasco, joining Carson Field in being a repeat qualifier.

Both veterans bettered their performance from last season, even with Western fighting off a cold.

“It was a wet and slick course,” Bitting said. “But she pushed herself and finished strong.”

Pope John Paul II, led by state champ Ruby Henry, claimed the girls’ team title, holding off Garfield-Palouse 45-51.

Henry, just a freshman, nipped Leki Albright of Liberty Bell by three seconds to hit the tape first.

In the boys’ race, it was more of a blowout, with Liberty Bell junior Dexter Delaney finishing 41 seconds ahead of the field.

Valley Christian, a private school out of Spokane, held off Pope John Paul II for the team title, while Coupeville came within a fraction of finishing as high as 8th.

Covenant was one point ahead of Adna, which was two points in front of CHS once everything was totaled up.

Coupeville’s Northwest 2B/1B League rival, Mount Vernon Christian, finished 14th in the team standings, as the Wolves beat them at both tri-districts and state after the Hurricanes narrowly won the league title.

After being so strong in the ’70s and ’80s, the CHS cross country program was shut down in the ’90s and sat dormant for nearly two decades.

Individual runners such as Tyler King and Danny Conlisk trained and traveled with Oak Harbor or South Whidbey during the “lost years.”

But the Wolves didn’t fully reenter the harrier world until Athletic Director Willie Smith relaunched things in 2018.

Working alongside fellow coaches Natasha Bamberger, Luke Samford, and Paige Spangler, Bitting has been deeply involved since the rebirth.

Whether coaching at the middle or high school level, the running guru has been instrumental in helping the Wolves build back, step by step.

Team captain Landon Roberts (hoodie) and teammates will be back. (Sherry Bonacci photo)

Looking ahead to season seven of this new era, Bitting can return every athlete who ran in Pasco, and 15 of the 18 who were on the roster this season.

Erica McGrath is the lone senior, while two foreign exchange students ran with the boys’ team.

There are also a number of standout 8th graders ready to make the jump after working with CMS coach Amber Wyman.

Even as one season ends, Bitting is ready to go again.

“I hope this instills in them that their hard work truly does pay off,” she said. “From the very beginning of the season they stuck with the pack mentality and only pushed themselves harder!

“This truly has been an amazing experience and I thank my lucky stars that everything just lined up this season.

“They, both girls’ and boys’ team, were ready for the challenge, bought into what I was preaching, their times dropped and look how they finished! That says it all!”

 

State meet results:

 

GIRLS:

Noelle Western (46th) 23:28.30

 

BOYS:

Carson Field (44th) 18:23.40
Landon Roberts (63rd) 18:38.10
Ezekiel Allen (83rd) 19:08.40
George Spear (93rd) 19:24.90
Thomas Strelow (106th) 19:34.90
Kenneth Jacobsen (110th) 19:40.60
Axel Marshall (157th) 21:54.60

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