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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Coupeville Schools Superintendent Steve King

Return your wallet to your pocket.

With the full support of school board members, Coupeville Schools Superintendent Steve King announced Friday all ASB card and Pay-to-Play fees will be waived for the 2020-2021 school year.

In addition, the district intends to refund fees from the 19-20 spring season, which was cancelled due to COVID shutdowns.

As Coupeville schools chart a way to return to holding athletics and activities during the pandemic, King wanted to offer students and parents a thank you for their patience and perseverance.

The current plan, if our region advances to Phase 2 of Governor Jay Inslee’s latest reopening plan, calls for Northwest 2B/1B League schools to begin spring sports February 22.

A condensed six-week season will run through April 3.

Fall sports will follow from March 29 to May 8, with basketball closing the school year May 3 to June 12.

Along with sports, many activities are planned to return, with plans still being finalized.

If CHS and CMS students get to participate, everything will be free this school year.

“We don’t believe that students and families should have to pay these fees for limited athletic seasons and activity opportunities,” King said. “(Also), many families in our community have faced financial hardship during this pandemic.”

He also pointed to “it being safer to not have families in and out of our schools paying fees,” and that “it is possible that seasons or games may be cancelled due to COVID-19.”

“The district has a cost savings because we have not have athletics or activities since March, 2020, so we are passing this savings back to our families,” King said.

“Our students and families have already sacrificed enough, as they have lost many opportunities to participate in the athletics and activities.”

The schools will contact affected families in the next few weeks to arrange refunds for last spring.

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Morgan Stevens looks for an open teammate. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The young woman you sponsor today could be the first responder who makes a positive impact tomorrow.

Coupeville High School junior Morgan Stevens, a top scholar and athlete, has her heart set on attending fire academy.

“My dream is to become a firefighter to help serve and protect people,” she said.

Morgan, whose mother Kristi is a nurse at WhidbeyHealth, has launched a GoFundMe to help raise the money needed to fulfill the first major step on her path to becoming a first responder.

If you’re interested in helping a smart, talented, hardworking young woman achieve her destiny, pop over to:

Fundraiser by Morgan Stevens : Help Morgan go to firefighters academy (gofundme.com)

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Robert Wood has been named the new head coach for the Coupeville High School boys soccer program. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

He’s a familiar face in a new place.

For anyone who follows soccer on Whidbey Island, Robert Wood has been one of those guys doing a bit of everything, helping the sport boom locally.

Always upbeat, radiating a love for the sport which he tries to pass on even to those heathens such as myself who have a limited appreciation for the beautiful game, he’s a go-getter.

And now, he’s the new boys soccer coach for Coupeville High School, bouncing up from an assistant position to replace Kyle Nelson.

Wood’s former boss is not going anywhere, but decided to focus on coaching just the Wolf girls now that both CHS soccer programs will play during the same season.

Previously, the Coupeville girls played in the fall, with the boys taking the pitch in the spring.

But, with the Wolves moving from 1A to 2B, all soccer will now be played in the fall.

Except during a pandemic…

The current plan for a return to play during COVID-19 is for spring sports to kick things off, with fall sports, including soccer, set to run from March 29 to May 8.

With the adjusted schedule, Wood and other coaches will need to adapt.

Consider the well-organized new head man ready and raring to go.

“The season will be short — six weeks — so player development isn’t going to happen,” he said. “Thus, playing time and teamwork, and enjoyment is the focus.

“Getting the kids to realize what works, what wins, what fails, and the movements/leadership required on the field,” Wood added. “Long term … there’s a noticeable lack of soccer banners in the CHS gym. It’s time to fix that!”

After slamming into state soccer powers such as King’s, Klahowya, and South Whidbey in recent years, the transition to the Northwest 2B/1B League and playing against schools with student bodies much closer to Coupeville’s should be a confidence-booster.

“Now that we’re playing in a proper league we have a great opportunity to develop a winning program and the kids should realize we’re no longer a complete underdog,” Wood said.

“(We) want to develop a long-standing, long-running, successful high school soccer program that is integrated with the community soccer club.”

Wood, a father of three — two of whom have played soccer for CHS — was deeply involved in the Central Whidbey Soccer Club.

Toss in his work as a high school coach (five years with girls and boys), as a select coach (six years with Deception FC), and running the field as a ref, and he comes to his new job with a rock-solid resume.

Soccer has been a big part of his life, from his childhood days — when he also swam, ran, skied, and played lacrosse — to his time with the United States Navy.

Wood continued to patrol the pitch, and was an avid runner, until “my legs gave out,” he said with a laugh.

Now he teaches computer software classes for the Navy, hangs out with wife Jill, the Director for the Washington State Department of Radiation Protection, and gets his soccer thrills coaching and watching his children play.

Wood (right) watches a game with fellow Wolf dad Kelly Keilwitz.

James, currently a freshman at Colorado State University, rattled home six goals across three seasons for the Wolves, while showcasing a powerful kicking leg and a scrappy on-field demeanor.

He lost out on his senior season when the pandemic shut down sports last March, but had already wrapped up a stellar run as a doubles player on the tennis court.

Daughters Eryn (a CHS junior) and Aby (a CMS 8th grader) are both athletes pulling down A’s, keeping their brother’s tradition alive.

Eryn tallied her first varsity soccer goal last season, while Aby currently plays volleyball in the fall as CMS does not have a girls soccer program.

When he’s not coaching, or trying to explain the finer points of the game to us heathens, their dad “loves to cook” and “at one point was a pretty good guitar player … until I started studying soccer.”

Intently preparing for all possibilities on the pitch is part of his game-plan, though he admits sometimes he needs to step back and just take a deep breath or two.

“I am a perfectionist, but I’m continuing to learn that not everyone is, so I can’t expect perfection,” Wood said. “I will make mistakes … oh well, let’s acknowledge that and move forward.”

What he wants from his players is not necessarily perfection, but a desire to strive for that ideal.

“Trust the process! We’re starting a program that I hope will be effective and successful long after we’ve all moved on,” Wood said. “Laying the foundation is a requirement for players in later years.

“Playing a game without your hands and without timeouts is difficult and requires mental thought and a dedication and focus beyond what they’ve given before.

“Dedication to improvement is all I ask; the wins will come as long as we move forward as a team.”

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New Coupeville High School varsity baseball coach Will Thayer. (Submitted photo)

Will Thayer turned a negative into a positive.

Growing up, he dreamed of being a professional baseball player, but his playing days were derailed by a high school knee injury.

Instead of moping around, Thayer moved into coaching, starting when he was 16, and continuing to this day.

Now the 2002 Oak Harbor High School grad will be pulling on a new uniform, after being named as the varsity baseball coach at Coupeville High School.

While he has CHS Athletic Director (and former Wolf baseball guru) Willie Smith’s approval, the final stamp will come when the school board approves his hire.

It’ll be Thayer’s second try at leading a Wolf diamond program, as he was originally hired last spring to helm Coupeville’s JV softball squad.

When COVID-19 shut down sports across the state, he never got a chance to coach a game, however.

If current plans hold, baseball will join other spring sports in being the first to return to play during the pandemic.

Northwest 2B/1B League AD’s have set a tentative time frame of February 22 to April 3 for a shortened, six-week season, though that will depend on the region reaching Phase 2 in Governor Jay Inslee’s latest reopening plan.

After replacing Chris Smith, who moved off-Island after the graduation of his youngest child, Thayer is ready once again to rock and roll.

It’s the logical next step for a man who has been around the game for most of his life.

“Growing up I started when I was eight, playing in North Whidbey Little League, and then played my high school baseball in Oregon until a knee injury stopped my playing days,” Thayer said.

“Growing up I wanted to be a professional baseball player,” he added. “Once I realized high school was as far as I was going to go, I knew I wanted to stay around the game.”

That led to an early entry into the coaching fraternity, and it’s a decision he has embraced.

“Once I started coaching, I realized I got the same joy as I did as a player and decided I was going to work as hard as I needed to coach at the high school level,” Thayer said.

“Being from the area, coaching for Coupeville is my way of giving back to an area I spent a lot of time playing and coaching in for so many years.”

Thayer, who is a Recreation Assistant with the Morale, Welfare, and Recreation Department at NAS Whidbey, preaches that “small wins create large victories.”

He inherits a program left in a good place by Chris Smith, and will look to expand on what his predecessor accomplished.

“I am a family man, who loves sports and coaching them,” Thayer said. “As a coach, I am invested in creating a winning attitude both on and off the field.

“(Our) upcoming season’s on-field goal is to win our league title.

“Long term is to build a program the community is proud of, and looks forward to coming out and supporting every year, and to get people talking about Coupeville baseball starting with the little leaguers to the people in the community.”

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Coupeville alumni Seth Weatherford (right) graduated from the United States Air Force Security Forces Academy. (Photo courtesy Laureen Wilson)

Weatherford streaks home with a run during his junior baseball season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

From Wolf to Defender.

Coupeville High School grad Seth Weatherford joined the ranks of those “on the wall” Wednesday, officially graduating from the United States Air Force Security Forces Academy.

The USAF SF operates as the primary law enforcement within the Air Force, and is now also connected with the new U.S. Space Force.

Weatherford, a 2020 Coupeville High School grad, was an athlete, scholar, and thespian during his time in Cow Town.

He played baseball for the Wolves, appearing in a mix of varsity and JV games for coaches Chris Smith and Mike Etzell.

Unfortunately, Weatherford and teammates lost their senior season when the COVID-19 pandemic brought a hold to sports last spring.

Earlier in his school career he was part of the Coupeville Middle School Theatre Troupe’s production of Stocking Stuffers, under the direction of Peg Tennant.

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