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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Tamsin Ward, who played co-ed soccer as an 8th grader, will help lead the CHS girls’ program in its revival. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Tuesday, Oct. 25, 2022 was a busy day in the world.

Rishi Sunak became the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, a position he would hold for two years.

Dietrich Mateschitz, one of the co-founders of the Red Bull empire, passed away at age 78. No word on whether he drank his own beverage, or whether it gave him wings.

There was also a partial eclipse, disgraced Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein was in court, and, oh yes, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer team beat visiting La Conner 4-0 in the season finale.

Sophomore Ayden Wyman punched in two goals for the Wolves, giving her 13 for her career at that point, and it was the last game for retiring coach Kyle Nelson, who ambled away after one last postgame interview with me.

After debuting in 2004, the CHS booters left the field that day in 2022 already thinking ahead to the program’s landmark 20th season.

Who knew it would take more than 1,000 days to get there, however?

The CHS girls played through a pandemic, but a crash in roster size sidelined the program the past two seasons.

Kimberly Kisch, a former Wolf player hired to lead her alma mater’s squad, ended up working with boys coach Robert Wood in 2023 and 2024, with a scrappy band of female pitch warriors joining up with Coupeville’s boys to form a co-ed team.

That squad was very competitive in an expanded-for-soccer nine-team Northwest 2B/1B League which has collected the majority of the state tourney trophies handed out in recent years.

Wyman, while denied a chance to chase the CHS girls scoring record, held her own against the boys, and was joined by other scrappers such as Lillian Ketterling, Taylor Marrs, and Frankie Tenore.

But this Monday, Sept. 8, that 20th season finally gets its moment.

Kisch, who decided to move back to coaching youth soccer, kept the flame alive, and new CHS pitch guru Jasmine Ader has capitalized, pulling together enough girls to have a full roster.

That means the Wolves will defend their turf at Mickey Clark Field against visiting East Jefferson this Monday (kickoff is 4:00 PM), a mere 1,050 days after the 2022 squad celebrated KO’ing La Conner.

If you can’t be there for the opener (I myself am 2,800 miles away in West Virginia these days…), Coupeville’s girls are slated to play seven of their first eight at home.

There’s no charge to watch soccer, so cram the stands in support of the Wolf girls being back in (red) and black.

 

CHS girls soccer schedule:

Mon-Sept. 8 — East Jefferson (4:00)
Wed-Sept. 10 — Lopez Island (4:00)
Fri-Sept. 12 — @ La Conner (4:00)
Tue-Sept. 16 — Orcas Island (4:00)
Fri-Sept. 19 — Mount Vernon Christian (4:00)
Thur-Sept. 25 — Friday Harbor (4:00)
Thur-Oct. 2 — Granite Falls (6:00)
Mon-Oct. 6 — Providence Classical Christian (6:00)
Thur-Oct. 9 — @ Lopez Island (4:00)
Sat-Oct. 11 — Sultan (6:00)
Tue-Oct. 21 — @ Orcas Island (4:00)
Fri-Oct. 24 — @ Providence Classical Christian (3:30)

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“Breathe the bug spray in, Beavis. Go to your happy place…”

The blast of the train whistle hangs in the muggy West Virginia afternoon air, a stark reminder I no longer camp along the placid shores of Penn Cove.

Strafed by bugs of all sizes and shapes, which rise in waves off the well-manicured lawns rain or shine — at least when I’m around, it seems —  it makes for a far different life.

I was born in Washington state, and between the last day of April, 1971 and late July of 2025, I was perfectly content with it being like 45 degrees, mildly misty, and gently breezy nearly every day.

And now, 37 days into taking up space at my sister’s house 2,800 miles away from Cow Town, it’s not just the weather.

Back at “home” on the prairie, Coupeville High School sports teams start playing games for real Friday night.

Volleyball is first up, with a home clash against archival South Whidbey, followed by Wolf football and cross country teams hitting the road Saturday for brief off-island journeys.

But I won’t be there for any of that, like I wasn’t there for the recent football jamboree or volleyball alumni clashes.

And that’s taking some getting used to.

This blog started in 2012, and has been a focal point of my life for a decade-plus.

Add in the countless freelance stories I banged out for the Coupeville Examiner, and, before that, my early ’90s stint as Sports Editor at the Whidbey News-Times, and I’ve arguably written more about Wolf athletics than just about anyone out there, past or present.

As a new season comes screaming into view — the final ride for CHS seniors Teagan Calkins, Camden Glover, and associates, or the start of a whole new chapter for freshmen like Tamsin Ward and Brian Thompson — there is an inescapable feeling I should be there documenting it.

I’m not, and that’s weird. It just is.

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Miles Gerber is one of five Wolf senior cheerleaders. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The roster is deep.

Coupeville High School cheer coach Jennifer Morrell has 23 Wolves at her beck and call as the fall season approaches.

Veterans Jacob Schooley and Bella Karr lead the squad as captains, while the team breaks down to three freshmen, 12 sophomores, three juniors, and five seniors.

The 2025 CHS fall cheer squad is:

Cheyanne Atteberry
Garrett Bevill
Abbigail Bond
Niella Bryan
Savannah Coxsey
Cora Fix
Miles Gerber
Olivia Hall
Denali Kalwies
Bella Karr
Milana Light
Taylor Marrs
Alyssa McGee
Kayla Moch
Elle Peterson
Jacob Schooley
Lina Shelley
Laken Simpson
Hailey Smith
Hayden Smith
Caroline Summers
Avery Williams-Buchanan
Marin Winger

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The tennis court calls you. (Ken Stange photo)

It’s a golden opportunity.

When I played tennis at Tumwater High School in the late ’80s, I was fighting for playing time with about 30 other netters.

Jump forward to 2025 and if you attend Coupeville schools, the court can belong to you.

The Wolves are attempting to resurrect their boys’ tennis squad this fall, and they need six players to accomplish the goal.

Through the first two days of practice, they have two.

Which means, if you’re in grades 8-12 and have any desire to play the sport of Roger Federer, CHS coaches Tim Stelling and Starla Seal want to meet you — regardless of whether you’re a seasoned court ace or want to make your first bid to rep the red and black.

If interested, practices are set for 3:00-5:00 PM at the CHS courts, Monday-Friday. Those swanky courts can be found just down from the high school gym.

Don’t throw away your shot.

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Only fools challenge Taylor Brotemarkle’s arm. And they only do it once. (Jackie Saia photo)

There is a rock, in the middle of the water, and on that rock, in the middle of an island, is a prairie.

It sits in a place called Cow Town — by some of the locals, at least — and in the middle of the joint, there’s a softball diamond.

You’ll find it just down the street from the high school and the grocery store, across from the trailer park where wayward foul balls often ding off the roofs.

At least until they get the modern backstop put up, which they’ve been talking about for two decades.

For most of the spring, even on the sunny days, the breeze comes gusting across the outfield grass, then shoots in and slaps the infielders in the back of the head before ending its run by dumping sand in the eyes of Wolf fans.

Washington state always starts spring sports too early, so players, coaches, fans, even wandering writers wearing shorts in 42-degree weather, endure the rain, the wind, the spine-tingling cold, just to be part of one of the most successful sports programs in Coupeville High School history.

It takes tough young women, committed young women, to prosper in these conditions.

But to truly be a star?

To seize every day with a smile stretching from one side of the field to the other?

To bound with glee every time the Wolves charge onto the diamond, regardless of score or Mother Nature’s fickle moods?

To hit like you’re trying to rip the hide off the ball?

To run with wild abandon, but also cunning and precision?

To launch lasers from deep in the hole at shortstop, each throw erasing would-be hits and sending your foes trudging back to the dugout muttering under their breath?

Then to do it again, and again, and even again, for four years, your voice rising above the roar of the wind, exhorting your teammates to believe, to dig deep, to play as if every moment was precious?

That takes something special.

Maybe it’s something you’re born with. Maybe it’s something you learn over time.

But whatever the magic mojo is, whatever the secret spark may be, it lives and it burns brightly in Taylor Brotemarkle.

She is that something special, that someone special.

The kids love her. (Kim Brotemarkle photo)

There has been a splendid run of shortstops in Coupeville, all-time greats such as Katrina McGranahan, Madeline Roberts, McKayla Bailey, and Chelsea Prescott, and many more.

Taylor, who was also a fireball on the volleyball court before graduating from CHS this past spring, may be the most purely-entertaining to ever hold down the position for the Wolves, however.

Her love for softball, her joy at being on center stage, her burning desire to be a crowd pleaser, a rock-solid teammate, and a game-changer, was infectious.

Skill carries you to a certain level. Hard work takes you to another.

But to reach the pinnacle, to leave behind a memory which will last long after your body has left the diamond and moved on to new adventures, you have to own a unique spark.

“I would pay to watch her play the game,” you think, even though you know CHS doesn’t charge for spring sports.

So you amend it to “Well, then, I would endure Mother Nature and all her shenanigans to watch her play the game,” and, in a lot of ways, that ultimately means more.

“I win, son, I win.” (Bailey Thule photo)

Taylor’s playing days, at least at the high school level, are done now. And what a run.

She and her fellow seniors won 64 varsity softball games across four seasons, including two at the 2B state tournament this spring.

Every win matters. Every win is a milestone and a building block, a reward for those in uniform now and an inspiration to those who will play in years to come.

But it’s how those wins were claimed — with fire and passion, with a killer mindset, and, above all, with a genuine joy — which will be the true legacy of Taylor and her fellow Class of 2025 mates.

She gave her heart and soul to the game. (David Somes photo)

I’ve seen a lot of players come and go on the prairie. I’ve seen talent. I’ve seen hustle.

Rarely have I witnessed the kind of joy Taylor brought each day to the diamond.

It is easy to induct her into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, which is what I am doing today. After this, you’ll find her hanging out at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

My hope for Taylor? That she never loses that boundless joy.

Wherever she goes in life, whatever she accomplishes after this, I hope she always carries great memories of her time repping the red and black.

And that comes from all of her fans. Even Mother Nature.

Legends live forever. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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