Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Scott Hilborn scored four touchdowns Friday, all on plays of 48+ yards, as Coupeville demolished La Conner. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

These are dark days in La Conner.

A football program which has been the pride of the Northwest 2B/1B League for decades is seemingly in shambles after being blasted in back-to-back weeks.

First Friday Harbor slammed the Braves 63-0, then Friday night it was Coupeville’s turn, as the Wolves defended their home turf with a blistering 51-0 triumph.

The convincing win, in which five different players scored a touchdown, lifts CHS to 1-0 in league play, 1-2 overall.

It also sets up a showdown next Friday, Oct. 1, when Coupeville travels to Friday Harbor to face a Wolverines team which is 1-0 in league, 2-2 overall.

CHS, chasing its first football league title since 1990, has a rematch with La Conner Oct. 15, and closes the regular season at home Oct. 28 against Friday Harbor.

Mixed in there is Homecoming Oct. 22, with non-league foe Cascade (Leavenworth) the featured foe.

Friday night’s one-sided showdown with La Conner featured a lot of penalties from both sides — Coupeville twice had touchdowns waved off thanks to flags — but it wasn’t enough to derail the Wolves.

CHS scored six touchdowns in its season opener, coming within one play of upending Klahowya.

Week two brought a matchup with next door neighbor South Whidbey which was tied until a fateful series of errors right before halftime.

After getting an unexpected bye week last Friday when a storm prevented them from making it to Port Townsend, a well-rested Coupeville squad finally put it all all together against La Conner.

There were stars everywhere, with sophomore quarterback Logan Downes passing for a touchdown, running for another, and picking off two passes while playing defense.

Or take a gander at Daylon Houston, who took a pick-six in for a touchdown and still found time to kick three PAT’s which sailed far into the inky blackness of the night.

Or youngsters like Mikey Robinett and Johnny Porter, making names for themselves, or grizzled veterans like Brian Casey, William Davidson, and Jonathan Valenzuela, delivering ear-ringing licks on defense.

William Davidson delivers big hits, and big life messages. (Submitted photo)

All worthy of praise, and all deserving to celebrate their win as some of their classmates sprinted by, waving flags and poppin’ bottles.

But on this night, on this patch of turf, one young man towered above them all.

Scott Hilborn is a successful baseball and football player, a guy, who like older brother Matt, is the kind of low-key, rock-solid dude every coach appreciates.

The younger of the brothers is a lot like mom Wendi, as both are hard workers who get the job done day in and day out, quietly going about their business without feeling a need to break their hand patting themselves on the back.

Friday night, Scott was about as good as any Wolf gridiron star has been on a given night since back in the days when Ian Barron made rival players soil their pants trying to tackle him.

Six times Hilborn plunged into the end zone, and four of them were upheld by the refs, with penalties by other Wolves erasing scores twice in a three-play span.

What should have been a pick-six became just a pick, then two plays later an 18-yard ramble to the end zone was also wiped out by an unwelcome flash of yellow.

If he was frustrated by the occasional confusion around him, Hilborn never showed it, remaining content to score four times — with each of those touchdowns covering about half the field.

He busted out a 48-yard run off a pitch in the first quarter, took a punt back 51 yards in the second frame, then tacked on two more scores in the third.

First Hilborn reeled in a pass from Downes before shredding multiple defenders while covering a solid 48 yards to the end zone.

Then he capped his night with a 50-yard scoring run in which he simply pivoted left, before imitating an 18-wheeler turning everything in its path into roadkill.

In between the Scott Show, Coupeville got a short touchdown run from Downes, stretching a 6-0 first quarter lead to 18-0 at the half, then 32-0 through three quarters.

After Wolf fans serenaded assistant coach Bennet Richter with an off-key, but enthusiastic rendition of “Happy Birthday,” Coupeville made sure La Conner felt the full sting.

Dominic Coffman, who handed out bruises all night long, crashed in for a 12-yard TD run, before Robinett’s power running pushed the ball right on top of the goal line.

Making his varsity debut along with twin brother Jack, freshman Johnny Porter covered the final two yards on the drive for a touchdown which caused dad Jeff to pop every last button on his shirt.

Johnny Porter acts like he’s been there before after scoring his first high school touchdown. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Houston delivered the final dagger, grabbing Coupeville’s fourth interception of the night — Robinett also recovered a fumble — and zipping in for a crowd-approved pick-six.

Even playing without leading rusher Tim Ursu, who is recovering from an injury, Coupeville dominated on the ground all night long.

Whether it was Hilborn, Coffman, Downes, Valenzuela, or the young guns, everyone in a Wolf uniform who took a handoff got the job done.

“We’re trying to be more explosive, and everyone ran hard tonight,” Coupeville coach Marcus Carr said.

Already counting the hours until next week’s clash with Friday Harbor, the Wolf gridiron guru had a determined gleam in his eye.

Or maybe that was whatever he was sprayed with by the celebrating CHS students.

“Friday Harbor runs the ball well,” Carr said. “We’ll need to be physical with them. We’re looking forward to it.”

Read Full Post »

Coupeville freshman Edie Bittner made her high school cross country debut Friday afternoon. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Closer and closer.

Mount Vernon Christian’s boys cross country team is still the gold standard in the Northwest 2B/1B League.

But Coupeville is coming up fast in the rearview mirror.

Three days after coming within 11 points of catching the Hurricanes in the team standings at a multi-team meet, the Wolves shaved their deficit down to nine while running Friday at Fort Casey State Park.

MVC had the first three runners across the line, led by Alexander Hoksbergen, but Coupeville slotted in at 4-5-6-7, then added 10-11-12 to stay close.

The final margin of victory for the Hurricanes this time around was 23-32, after winning 25-36 at Orcas three days earlier.

Concrete didn’t have enough runners to score as a team in the boys race, while MVC and Coupeville each had four female runners, not enough to form full teams.

Hurricane junior Maddy Nielsen outdueled Wolf Helen Strelow to claim the girls individual title.

Coupeville gets right back into action Saturday, with a trip to Shoreline for the King’s Roller Coaster Trail Run.

 

Complete Friday results (3.1 miles):

 

GIRLS:

Helen Strelow (2nd) 26:30
Bryley Gilbert (4th) 29:11
Erica McGrath (7th) 33:31
Edie Bittner (8th) 43:36

 

BOYS:

Mitchell Hall (4th) 19:52
Cole White (5th) 20:32
Carson Field (6th) 20:43
Landon Roberts (7th) 20:43.50
Thomas Strelow (10th) 21:53
Hank Milnes (11th) 22:01
Tate Wyman (12th) 22:53
Reiley Araceley (15th) 23:52
Alex Clark (21st) 29:13

Read Full Post »

Xavier Murdy and the CHS boys soccer squad played hard Friday on the road, but fell short in a 2-0 game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Friday Harbor played keep-away.

Thoroughly controlling the action on their home turf Friday, the Wolverines bounced the Coupeville High School boys soccer team 2-0.

The loss drops the Whidbey pitch kings to 1-3 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, with two more games on the road before they get another chance to play in front of their home fans.

Coming off of a huge win over Grace Academy, Coupeville was hoping to build on its momentum, but it wasn’t to be.

“They handled us all night,” CHS coach Robert Wood said. “Probably 85% possession for them; 20+ shots.”

The Wolves did scramble hard on defense, allowing only two goals to find the back of the net.

Unfortunately, Coupeville wasn’t as efficient on offense.

“We had a couple or four good chances that just never panned out,” Wood said. “The team didn’t hold their positions and Friday Harbor capitalized time and again.”

The Wolves head out on the road again next week, playing at La Conner Tuesday, Sept. 28, followed by a Friday Nights Light rematch Oct. 1 with Grace Academy.

Coupeville’s next home contest is Oct. 5, and that kicks off a stretch where five of the next seven games will be at Mickey Clark Field.

Read Full Post »

The warmup music featured “Get’cha Head In The Game” from High School Musical. Audrianna Shaw listened. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The stadium was rockin’ loud enough you couldn’t hear the camera clickin’.

Ever-thirsty photographer to the stars John Fisken worked his way around Mickey Clark Field Thursday night, capturing images both on, and off, the soccer pitch.

To see everything he shot, and possibly buy some glossies for great aunt Myrtle Jean, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-soccer-2020-2021/GS-2021-09-23-vs-Granite-Falls/

 

Coupeville’s male athletes support their athletic sisters from other misters.

Parting is such sweet sorry, but Coupeville netminder Anna Myles has lost that lovin’ feeling for the soccer ball.

The ball needed to get out of town, fast, so Carolyn Lhamon punched its ticket on the evening express.

“Stay hydrated, folks! Now you know, and knowing is half the battle.”

Wolf goalie Maylin Steele comforts the ball after it got kicked in the face … repeatedly.

If Cindy Lou Who was a ninja, she’d be Katelin McCormick.

Wolf volleyball spikers offer respect to their pitch counterparts.

Read Full Post »

Lily Leedy’s first goal put Coupeville soccer ahead to stay Thursday night. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Revenge is a dish best served cold.

Backed by a raucous student section Thursday, the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad scorched visiting Granite Falls 4-2.

The non-conference win was a nice bounce-back for the Wolves after a rough game Tuesday, and also nice payback for games in recent years when very-physical Tiger teams left CHS players bruised, battered, and concussed.

This time out, the former North Sound Conference rivals played an exciting, evenly-matched game in which a few players hit the pitch, but without malice lingering in any of the hits.

Now 2-2 on the season, Coupeville hits the road for three straight games, not playing at Mickey Clark Field again until Oct. 7.

The Wolves took advantage of playing in front of their home fans, drawing energy from their fellow students, who were on top of their chanting ‘n cheering game.

Coupeville struck early, thanks to Audrianna Shaw.

Given a free kick, the Wolf senior crunched a shot which moved left to right, found an opening, and disappeared into the corner of the net less than four minutes into the game.

“Just call her Audri ‘Airbender’ Shaw!”, said jubilant Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith as he watched the goal curve to pay-dirt.

Granite Falls would net an equalizer in the 11th minute, when Evelynn Fuller beat Wolf goalie Anna Myles, but after that Myles went into lock-down mode.

With a big boost from rough ‘n ready defenders like Nezi Keiper, Mary Milnes, and Carolyn Lhamon, the Wolves clamped down on the Tigers, blunting their best efforts.

Then Lily Leedy struck.

Set up by a pass from Eryn Wood, the senior midfielder broke free down the left side and slapped home the first goal of her varsity soccer career, handing Coupeville a lead it would never lose.

Up 2-1 heading into the second half, the Wolves pushed hard, rattling shots at the harried Granite goalie.

The Tiger netminder made one exceptional kick save, and another pretty-good deflection where she punched at the ball, while Coupeville gunner Sophie Martin just missed on a big boomer to the right side of the net.

But Martin kept coming, and was not to be denied.

She bounced a goal off the cross bar early in the second half, with the ball dropping and crossing the line, before flinging itself back out onto the field.

It was in the net long enough to count, however, which was all that mattered, stretching Coupeville’s margin to 3-1.

Granite Falls slipped a shot past Wolf goalie Maylin Steele with 12 minutes to play, cutting things back to a one-goal affair, but Steele, like Myles before her, was solid 99.2% of the way.

Denying the visitors several times, with a couple of really-sweet saves dropped in to fire up her fellow students, Steele held the line.

Then Martin delivered the final exclamation point, deflecting a rebound off of a Shaw shot back into the net with a little over two minutes to go.

Her bold shoes flashing under the stadium lights, she pumped her fists and ran into history.

No mere goaltender can stop Sophie Martin.

With two goals Thursday, Martin has three on the season and eight in her CHS career, moving her into a tie with Sage Renninger for #6 on the all-time Wolf girls scoring chart.

Martin passes Mallory Kortuem, Marisa Etzell, Alexia Hemphill, and Micky LeVine, and now sits four goals behind #5 all-time scorer Avalon Renninger.

Shaw’s game-opening goal was her third of the season, and fourth of her career.

Beyond the goals, Coupeville was solid in all aspects of the game, with role players such as Katelin McCormick, Ava Mitten, and Reese Wilkinson all bringing top effort.

And then there was Noelle “Bring it on!” Daigneault, basking in the glow of her teammates appreciation of her yellow card, and Sophia Milasich earning the undying respect of the media by handing out post-game brownies.

With Coupeville’s next two games against Northwest 2B/1B League rivals Friday Harbor and La Conner, Coupeville wanted to be back in stride before hitting the road.

Consider it mission accomplished.

“We needed to turn the ship around, and did,” said CHS coach Kyle Nelson. “A good game, and a good win.”

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »