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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Willie Smith is watching to make sure you follow all guidelines. Don’t make him come down there. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

No concessions. Limited seating. Masks for all spectators.

As Coupeville High School moves from spring sports to fall sports during the Age of Coronavirus, there will be some fairly strict guidelines for fans attending volleyball, football, or soccer contests.

The ability to follow these rules will dictate whether events remain open to fans.

 

Volleyball at CHS and CMS gyms:

Varsity matches will be played in the CHS gym, JV matches in the CMS gym.

JV spectators must exit through the side doors of the gym, and not back through the main lobby, and must leave the facilities after the match.

Due to limited seating, JV spectators are NOT allowed to also attend the varsity match.

An exception will be made only for parents whose daughters play for both JV and varsity.

“With the regulations in place for six feet of distance between fans/groups, it severely limits the number of spectators allowed in our gyms,” said CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith.

“This is why we have to limit spectator numbers and not allow those fans that watch the JV match to be able to watch the varsity matches.

“It is simply a matter of numbers and seats, and we just don’t have the size to accommodate everyone we’d like to.”

Spectators for varsity matches should enter through the main lobby 20-30 minutes prior to start time, and go directly to the CHS gym.

Senior parents and families will be given first choice of bleacher seats behind the benches in the CHS gym.

Family groups (one household) are allowed to sit together, but must maintain six-foot distance from other spectators/groups.

Blue tape on the bleachers in both gyms will be used to maintain six-foot distances between spectators.

Cones on the bleachers indicate areas where spectators are not allowed to sit.

The “crow’s nest” in the CHS gym is limited to two individuals and is reserved for home and visiting camera operators only.

Bathrooms will be open, but no food is allowed in the facility, and concessions will remain closed.

Masks have to be worn at all times.

 

Football and soccer @ CHS Stadium:

Same as the gym – bathrooms open, no food allowed in, no concessions, and masks are mandatory.

Red tape will be used to divide the bleachers into six-foot sections, with red X’s marking rows where people can not sit.

Spectators are allowed to sit in groups of 10-15 (no more than two households together) but must still maintain six foot distance from other spectators.

Fans can spread out along the outside of the track, but are NOT allowed on the track.

Teams will remain on the field at halftime, with no gym or shed access.

The press box is limited to a maximum of three people — the announcer, the clock operator, and one media person.

Which means, you try and take my seat in there, you probably get tasered.

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Big-hitting sophomore Lucy Tenore is a key part of this year’s CHS volleyball team. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Cory Whitmore has come home, after a fashion.

As he enters his fifth season at the helm of the Coupeville High School volleyball program, the Wolf coach and his players have jumped from 1A to 2B, joining the Northwest 2B/1B League.

For Whitmore, it’s a bit like returning to his own days as a young’un at Ritzville, where he played football, basketball, and track at the 2B level.

“I look forward to the change in classification, particularly our new league,” he said. “This league regularly produces teams that go deep into playoff runs and even some state champions.

“We will need to bring it every night, and our standards and expectations are wherever we hold them to.”

Coupeville has found dramatic success under Whitmore, racking up a 48-18 record over the past four seasons.

The Wolves started with back-to-back 1A Olympic League titles, and a trip to state in 2017, then finished second behind powerhouse King’s the past two seasons in the 1A North Sound Conference.

That last season, which ended way back in the fall of 2019 before the pandemic put the world on pause, CHS went 14-5, tying the program record for wins in a single season.

Now, King’s is gone, but La Conner, the two-time defending 2B state champs, is the big baddie on the block.

Whitmore, ever enthusiastic, is ready for the challenge.

“Entering a new league without much prior experience with any teams in the league, we will enter each game as an opportunity to perform our absolute best and respect every team we face across the net.

“We know that La Conner always puts together very strong teams and has been recent state champions at the 2B classification,” he added. “They will of course put together a wildly strong team, and we will work to do the same.”

That squad, while down eight seniors from the last go-around, has several players with considerable experience.

Seniors (l to r) Kylie Chernikoff, Maddie Vondrak, and Chelsea Prescott will be team leaders.

Senior Chelsea Prescott, who has been a lethal weapon since day one, anchors the team, with a diverse group of players around her.

Chelsea will handle a large load of the offensive weight we will bring this year,” Whitmore said. “She has built a lot of experience at the varsity level over these last few years and has worked hard to be where she is at today.

“She was on the edge of her breakthrough before going down with her ankle injury – she has bounced back tremendously and we are excited to see what she can do.”

Joining Prescott will be big hitters like seniors Maddie Vondrak and Kylie Chernikoff, as well as sophomore sensation Lucy Tenore.

“We will rely on (Maddy and Lucy’s) experience as we race through an abbreviated season that will be one full of adaptations,” Whitmore said.

Kylie saw the varsity court a couple times last season and anchored the offensive attack her junior year on JV,” he added. “She has made the leap to varsity without missing a beat and adds a spark of energy we will need.”

Other players expected to have big impacts at the varsity level include sophomores Maddie Georges, Alita Blouin, and Jill Prince, junior Abby Mulholland, and seniors Jaimee Masters and Heidi Meyers.

Georges replaces the graduated Scout Smith at setter, an especially crucial spot.

Maddie has used the “off-season” — if we can call it that — very productively and is going to jump in to manage the offense at the setting position,” Whitmore said. “She’s ready for the next step.”

Sophomore Maddie Georges will run the offense from the setter position.

Alita, Jaimee, and Heidi have also grown since our last season – they have grown as passers and defenders in the back row, and all three get after the ball in practice, daily raising our competitiveness in the gym.”

While there has been a lot of turnover on the roster, the girls moving up are used to success, with the JV going a crisp 11-3 last season.

“Losing eight strong seniors from our 2019-2020 group has left plenty of question marks that needed to be addressed,” Whitmore said. “But having last season’s strong JV performance has definitely been important to reloading and keeping our expectations and standards as high as possible.

“This newer group had some terrific examples to learn from, and they have taken those lessons and in many ways have applied them already.”

While the Wolves had a chunk of pandemic time where they weren’t allowed to work together as a unit, individual players remained focused on what was ahead.

“The team will definitely look very different, having only four returning players with varsity experience,” Whitmore said. “But so many in this new group have worked hard, stayed engaged throughout the challenges and have earned this chance to compete and get out there to play.

“Growing pains are to be expected, but we also expect this group to grow right through them.”

The pandemic-shortened fall sports season, being played after spring sports this time around, will present unique challenges, with matches compressed into a one-month sprint.

“I know the time will fly by fast in this abbreviated season, but we definitely have some very clear goals that we will be progressing toward,” Whitmore said.

The Wolves want to work on team dynamics and chemistry, from day one to the end of the lightning-fast season, and beyond.

“With so many new faces and some new roles, it will be a shift for many to work with those they haven’t had the opportunity to just yet,” Whitmore said. “Our older members are very welcoming, but will have to also be mindful of the time that it can take for younger members to adapt to new speeds and systems; empathy and patience will go a long way.”

The Wolf coach will also continue to teach his charges, with the belief they can adapt on the fly.

“Another goal for this season will be for our group to take risks in learning newer concepts,” Whitmore said. “Based on new personnel, they will have to be adaptable and ready to make in-game changes and work through the natural level of comfort that comes with that.

“A lot of our success will come from this willingness to learn at an accelerated pace and take risks in order to progress as individual players and as a team and program.”

As always, the CHS spikers are aiming for first-place, no matter what rivals may be lurking in their path.

“We also always shoot to be finishing at the top of the league by the end of the season,” Whitmore said. “This is more so assessed on the basis of whether or not we are “peaking” at the right time as a unit.

“That can be hard to measure, but our mindset is growth, and “success” will naturally follow that growth,” he added. “This group has already demonstrated an impressive willingness to learn. I can’t overstate how important that is, not only for this year but every year.”

To build a program similar to what La Conner, with its five state titles, has achieved, takes talented players, but also a deep commitment from all involved. That’s something Whitmore preaches.

“Each player that we have worked with during our “off-season” months really worked hard on staying diligent to setting and being mindful about goals,” he said. “They regularly ask questions, request feedback and have even been resourceful in attempting to learn the game.”

Abby Mulholland is one of many JV players making the jump to varsity.

Over the course of a 12-match season, the Wolves will strive for wins, but also continued growth, as players and as a program.

“This season will be a great time to push ourselves in our versatility on both offense and defense,” Whitmore said. “We will have to be good at adapting, but this season will afford that as an actual goal of ours.

“We will try out some different defensive schemes and work to see where our offensive attack can be improved by mixing up our areas of threat.”

One key component of the game Whitmore wants his squad to focus on is service return.

“Serve receive is one of the hardest skills to perform in volleyball, but will always remain as one of the most important to determining the results of a set/match,” he said. “Serve receive takes a diligent attention to detail, but also just a ton of reps in order to gain experience that applies to the court on game days.”

As the season plays out, Whitmore and his staff, which includes Cris Matochi and former Wolf player Ashley Menges, will work on building leaders, for the short term and long term.

“It’s crucial to foster a strong leadership dynamic on the team,” Whitmore said. “With a large number of younger players filling large roles, it will be critical to their development this year and in potential future seasons/teams that they start to shift their attention to the intangibles, such as leadership qualities and skills.

“It’s a huge component and sometimes overlooked aspect of successful programs and so we hope to work on training leadership through active discussion and facilitation.”

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Tate Wyman set a PR in the 300 hurdles Wednesday. (Deb Smith photos)

Hurry up and wait – the life of a track star.

Dakota Eck becomes one with his shot put.

Abigail Ramirez flies by in the 4 x 100 relay.

With this pandemic-shortened spring sports season in its final days, Coupeville High School track and field athletes only have a few more moments to showcase their skills.

The Wolves are finishing strongly, however, as evidenced by their performance at a four-team meet Wednesday in La Conner.

Led by two-event champs Logan Martin, Sam Wynn, and Aidan Wilson, Coupeville claimed eight titles and 25 PR’s.

Host La Conner edged Mount Vernon Christian to claim both team titles, with Coupeville grabbing solid third-place performances, and Concrete bringing up the rear.

CHS and its rivals close the season Saturday on Whidbey Island, with the Wolves hosting the Northwest 2B/1B League Championships.

The first event kicks off at 11 AM.

Wednesday, Martin dominated in the shot put and discus, while Ryanne Knoblich (high jump), Carolyn Lhamon (shot put), Wynn (400), Wilson (long jump), Catherine Lhamon (3200), and the boys 4 x 100 relay unit also won events.

The relay team included Wynn, Wilson, Reiley Araceley, and Dominic Coffman.

 

Complete Wednesday results:

 

GIRLS:

100 — Ryanne Knoblich (6th) 15.03 *PR*; Abigail Ramirez (8th) 16.12 *PR*; Maylin Steele (9th) 16.49 *PR*; Camryn Clark (11th) 18.57

200 — Ja’Kenya Hoskins (2nd) 29.70; Knoblich (5th) 31.65 *PR*; Cristina McGrath (7th) 33.57 *PR*; Ramirez (8th) 34.21 *PR*; Steele (9th) 35.16 *PR*; Clark (10th) 37.69 *PR*

3200 — Catherine Lhamon (1st) 13:48.03

4 x 100 Relay — Ava Mitten, Ramirez, Hoskins, Carolyn Lhamon (3rd) 58.44

4 x 200 Relay — Mitten, Car. Lhamon, C. McGrath, Hoskins (3rd) 2:06.22

Shot Put — Car. Lhamon (1st) 30-10.50 *PR*

Discus — Aurora Cernick (5th) 65-11; Erica McGrath (7th) 49-08.50

Javelin — Cernick (5th) 62-01; E. McGrath (6th) 61-05 *PR*

High Jump — Knoblich (1st) 4-08

Long Jump — C. McGrath (5th) 11-00.25 *PR*; E. McGrath (7th) 9-00.50 *PR*

 

BOYS:

100 — Ben Smith (3rd) 12.48; Dominic Coffman (5th) 12.57; Reiley Araceley (7th) 12.62 *PR*; Dakota Eck (10th) 13.04 *PR*

200 — Smith (2nd) 25.96 *PR*

400 — Sam Wynn (1st) 59.39 *PR*

800 — Hank Milnes (5th) 2:37.39 *PR*

1600 — Mitchell Hall (4th) 5:12.29; Milnes (5th) 5:52.71 *PR*; Tate Wyman (8th) 6:49.37

300 Hurdles — Wyman (3rd) 58.52 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Wynn, Araceley, Coffman, Aidan Wilson (1st) 48.32

4 x 400 Relay — Wynn, Hall, Araceley, Wilson (3rd) 3:54.63

Shot Put — Logan Martin (1st) 39-06; Eck (5th) 32-07 *PR*; Josh Guay (9th) 17-07

Discus — Martin (1st) 146-11; Guay (10th) 51-09 *PR*

Javelin — Martin (5th) 107-08; Hall (8th) 76-08; Eck (10th) 71-07

High Jump — Coffman (3rd) 5-02

Long Jump — Wilson (1st) 18-07 *PR*; Coffman (5th) 16-00.50 *PR*; Araceley (9th) 15-01 *PR*; Eck (13th) 14-07.25; Hall (14th) 14-01 *PR*

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Daniel Olson brought the heat on the mound and at the plate Tuesday in a 13-3 Senior Night win. (Morgan White photos)

First they got lucky. Then they got good.

Playing at home for the first time in 18 days, the Coupeville High School baseball squad took advantage of some early miscues Tuesday by visiting Mount Vernon Christian to keep their game close.

Then, once the bats were properly warmed up, the Wolves dropped the hammer, eventually strolling away with a 13-3 win on Senior Night.

With the victory, CHS improves to 6-2 during this pandemic-shortened season, while keeping alive its hopes of winning a Northwest 2B/1B League title.

Coupeville trails Friday Harbor (8-0) — the only team it’s lost to this season — by two games with three to play.

The league’s top two squads tangle Friday afternoon at Friday Harbor, playing a doubleheader with everything on the line.

If the Wolverines sweep or get a split, they clinch the title.

But, if Coupeville earns the sweep, both teams would sit at 8-2, having split their four games, with just one contest left on the schedule.

CHS closes at La Conner (0-7) Saturday, while Friday Harbor hosts Orcas Island (2-5) that day.

However the weekend plays out, the Wolves sent their home fans back to the parking lot with a light skip in their steps.

The win over MVC offered a nice tribute to Daniel Olson, the team’s lone senior, while also providing a superb preview of the damage which could be done by the rest of a very-young roster.

Coupeville coach Will Thayer got something from pretty much everyone, with 10 of 11 hitters reaching base, and freshmen accounting for six of the team’s nine RBI.

The game actually started with a brief burp, as MVC scraped out two runs in the top of the first, thanks to an infield single, two walks, and a brutal collision at home plate.

With the bases loaded and no one out, the Hurricane cleanup hitter bounced a ball up the middle, sending the runner at third barreling home.

As Wolf catcher Xavier Murdy went to pull in the incoming throw, bodies collided awkwardly and the ball squirted free, allowing a second MVC runner to sneak home in the confusion.

The violent entanglement sent a brief chill through any CHS basketball fans in the stands, but X-Man walked off any lingering aftereffects, restoring hope once again on the prairie.

From that point on, the rest of the game went pretty much the way Wolf faithful would have scripted things.

It began with the lanky Olson making a pretty spectacular pickoff move.

Whirling and firing a laser into shortstop Scott Hilborn’s glove, he removed a Hurricane runner who made the mistake of leaning slightly in the wrong direction.

Proving it wasn’t a fluke, the Wolf pitcher later pulled off the same successful pickoff play several innings later, after which time all MVC runners stayed bolted to the base.

Olson and his parents celebrate Senior Night.

The first time through the lineup, Coupeville was scraping a bit, yet generated just enough offense to keep things close.

The Wolves netted a run in the bottom of the first thanks to a couple of MVC mistakes.

Looking a little tentative, the Hurricanes booted a grounder by Sage Sharp, then lost control of a third strike two batters later, letting him scamper home.

Coupeville continued to get lucky, knotting things up 2-2 in the second thanks to the MVC pitcher airmailing a throw over first base on a two-out Sharp bunt.

The Hurricane hurler had time to make the play, but perhaps ruffled by the sound of Murdy blasting by, heading from third to home, his arm refused to work in sync with his brain on the play.

The visitors entertained brief hopes of going on a rampage themselves, edging back ahead 3-2 in the top of the third, before juicing the bags with three straight singles.

The base-knocks went to right, left, and center, at which point Olson tugged on his cap, righted himself, and effectively slammed the door on any upset bids.

Pumping strikes past the flailing Hurricanes, he struck out the next two sluggers to stem the tide, then rolled through the fourth and fifth innings in his final home pitching performance.

Coupeville got back to 3-3 on an RBI single by freshman Peyton Caveness, scoring Olson, who golfed his own hit into left to lead off the bottom of the third.

The game finally broke solidly for CHS in the fourth, however.

It started with Hawthorne Wolfe putting on a one-man show which would be hard to duplicate.

The speed demon leadoff hitter blasted a ball back, back, back, almost to the wall in right field, and was thinking of a triple, while possibly daydreaming of an inside-the-park home run.

Instead, Wolfe came flying around first doing 767.269148 miles per hour (the speed of sound, if you’re curious), then … stepped on something.

He either caught the edge of the first-base bag, or put one of his own feet on top of the other one while going full-tilt, and promptly face-planted, displacing dirt from Oak Harbor to Clinton.

And yet, Wolfe still had the presence of mind to get back up, moving sort of like Rocky Balboa after being hit in the face on 23 consecutive punches, and stagger down to second base before the ball arrived back in the infield.

The should-have-been-a-triple, could-have-been-a-homer, turned-out-to-be-the-year’s-most-entertaining-double got the joint rockin’, and the CHS bats boomin’.

Wolfe finally made it home when MVC booted a fly ball off the bat of Jonathan Valenzuela, then Cody Roberts used a super-sharp eye to earn a bases-loaded walk.

But it was the fab frosh with the big hit.

Caveness sent a low, screaming liner to left to bring two runners home, part of a four-RBI day for Coral’s younger brother.

Xavier Murdy, here to drop thunder and lightning with every swing.

Murdy tantalized the non-paying customers, coming up just inches short of becoming the first Wolf since Josh Bayne to bash a ball over the fence in deepest, darkest left field.

The CHS junior settled for a dramatically-long RBI sac fly, which made it 8-3, then quietly went and strapped his catcher’s gear back on, a pro acting like a pro.

Olson topped off his Senior Night festivities with that second pickoff we discussed earlier, then handed the ball to Valenzuela, who promptly struck out the side in the sixth.

Jonathan Valenzuela, King of K’s.

An RBI single from Olson in the fifth stretched the margin to 9-3, before Coupeville ended things (slightly) early with four more runs in the sixth.

Caveness returned with another RBI base-knock, before the game ended on a truly-gorgeous hit from another fab frosh.

Zane Oldenstadt, pinch-hitting for Coen Killian, proved to be deadly from the left side of the plate, lashing a two-run single which soared over third base, curled in the air, then bit grass on the good side of the left-field line.

It was a bold punctuation mark, especially for a team which has found considerable success, even with six freshmen — Caveness and Cole White started Tuesday — and three sophomores on a 15-man roster.

Add in a strong group of middle school players ready to make the jump to high school ball next spring, and both the present and future of Wolf baseball looks bright.

“We could be dangerous the next few years,” Thayer said with a big smile.

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Sarah Wright

Break time is over.

Bouncing back from a three-week-plus break, Coupeville grad Sarah Wright went right back to tearing up the softball diamond Tuesday in Tennessee.

The former Wolf, who is now a sophomore at Sewanee: The University of the South, hadn’t played since March 6, thanks to the difficulty in scheduling games during a pandemic.

Wright and the Tigers are only playing home contests this spring, as well, as school administrators decided to restrict travel by their sports programs.

Tuesday, however, Fort Valley State University made the trip over from Georgia to start a four-game series, with a second doubleheader set for Wednesday.

The Wildcats, who attend a school where alumni include former NFL players Greg Lloyd of the Steelers and Ricardo Lockette of the Seahawks, won the opener 13-3, but Sewanee rebounded to win the nightcap 8-7 on a walk-off RBI single.

With the split, the Tigers are 2-4 on the season.

Wright had a productive day both behind and at the plate.

In the opener, the Tiger catcher walked, and smashed a pair of hits, including an RBI double to open the scoring.

Wright then came around to tap home herself, thanks to a two-bagger from teammate Peri Prestwood.

Sewanee led 3-2 headed to the fourth, only to have Fort Valley State suddenly find its mojo and start raining down runs.

Surrendering five-run bursts in the top of the fourth and seventh made life tough for the Tigers.

In the nightcap, Wright punched a pair of singles, with the first one driving home a run as Sewanee worked its way back from an early 3-0 deficit.

The Tigers reclaimed the lead at 6-4 heading into the seventh, and final, inning, before things got wild.

Fort Valley State tossed three runs on the scoreboard in the top half of the frame to go up 7-6, and were one out away from completing a doubleheader sweep.

With a runner at first and two outs, however, Sewanee found some magic.

Four straight Tiger hitters reached base, with RBI singles from Kendell Goodrum and Summer Vo tying, then winning, the game.

Through six games, Wright is first on the team in RBI, walks, batting average, and on-base percentage, while sitting second in hits and slugging percentage.

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