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Former Coupeville star Sarah Wright made her college softball debut this weekend. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

She’s entered a whole new world.

Coupeville grad Sarah Wright became the latest in a string of Wolves to take their game to the next level when she made her collegiate softball debut this weekend.

Wright, now a freshman at Sewanee: the University of the South, played four games in two days in two states, as the Tigers softball team kicked off their 40-game season with back-to-back doubleheaders.

While Sewanee came out on the short end of the score, being swept 8-0 and 10-0 by Judson (Ala), and 3-0 and 6-3 by Fort Valley State (GA), Coupeville’s progeny was a bright spot.

Wright collected two hits, a walk, and her team’s only RBI, which came on a bases-loaded free pass.

While the season is just 10% played, the former Wolf star is tied for the team lead in OBP (on base percentage) and hits.

Sewanee returns to action next weekend, when it hits the road again, playing a doubleheader February 15 against Johnson (TN).

The Tigers play their first 15 games away from their home field in Tennessee, not making their home debut until Mar. 7.

Wright’s season stretches from Feb. to late April.

During her time at CHS, the ever-ebullient one was a four-year star for the softball team, helping carry the Wolves to the state tourney during her senior season, where they beat Dear Park and came within a play of upending Cle Elum.

Wright also had strong stints as a basketball, volleyball, and soccer player, was the class valedictorian, and may have threatened to eat a worm of two to amuse her softball teammates.

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Ally Roberts collects all the ribbons. (Photo courtesy Jennifer Roberts)

They don’t call her “Rally Ally” for nothing.

Former Coupeville High School volleyball ace Ally Roberts is also an accomplished equestrian, and she saved her biggest performance for her last time in the saddle.

Roberts, who is on her way to graduating from Western Washington University, won a regional championship in Advanced Western Horsemanship Saturday, and will stretch out her farewell tour a bit farther.

While Saturday’s meet at Evergreen State Equestrian Park was the final one of the regular season, the WWU captain now advances on to the post-season.

As regional champ, Roberts is off to West Virginia in late March to compete in the national semifinals.

A top-two finish there would send her to the national championships.

For Roberts, this is the perfect cap on her collegiate sports experience.

“It was such an awesome way to finish out our regular season!,” she said. “It’s been a long time coming and it all finally happened.

“This is an accomplishment I’ve been trying to achieve for the past three years!”

Roberts opened the meet by nabbing first in her class, which allowed her to “point out,” earning her enough points over the course of the season to qualify for regional competition.

Once there, she faced off with riders from Central Washington University, the University of Washington, the University of Oregon, Washington State University, and Oregon State University.

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Jacobi Pilgrim was a key part of a very-deep group of CHS senior basketball players. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hawthorne Wolfe will return.

He and fellow sophomore Xavier Murdy were the only non-seniors on this year’s Coupeville High School boys basketball team, unless we also count brief cameos from Daniel Olson and Grady Rickner.

But it’s Hawk and X who will be looked to as the leaders when the Wolf hoops program moves into a new era, and a new league, next season.

So it’s a true positive that, as he exited the gym Saturday after Coupeville fell 69-48 to visiting Mount Baker in a loser-out playoff game, Wolfe only had one thing on his mind.

“I just want to say how much these seniors, all of them, mean to me,” he said.

Saturday’s loss ended Coupeville’s season, a win shy of making it to the double-elimination round of the district tourney, while Baker moves on to play King’s next week.

While the Wolves finished 6-13, they were just a few plays away from wins in half their losses, and never failed to sell out every time on the floor.

That traces back to the work put in by the Class of 2020, said CHS coach Brad Sherman.

“They’re a really cool group of kids, and I’m very proud of them,” he said. “Of how hard they always played, and how they played with a lot of class.”

Sherman also pointed to the positive impact the Wolf seniors had on helping CHS basketball coaches rebuild the youth program aimed at bringing elementary school children into the sport.

With sessions held on Saturday mornings, the Coupeville players often had to pull themselves back out of bed after Friday night games, but they always did.

And right at the forefront, each time, coaching, reffing, teaching and inspiring, were the 12th graders.

“A lot of people are getting excited about Coupeville basketball again,” Sherman said. “The seniors have put in so much work the last couple of years, and are such a huge part of what we’re doing.

“We’ve grown the youth program from 20-30 kids to 80, and a lot of it is because of that senior group,” he added.

“We told them, they should be proud of all of that, win, lose, or otherwise. There is nothing to hang our heads about.”

Six seniors made their final appearance on the CHS floor Saturday — Mason Grove, Koa Davison, Jacobi Pilgrim, Ulrik Wells, Gavin Knoblich, and Jered Brown, who was the lone Wolf to play on the varsity all four seasons.

Coupeville loses 11 seniors total, with Tucker Hall, Chris Ruck, Jean Lund-Olsen, Chris Cernick, and Sean Toomey-Stout also departing.

Toomey-Stout, a one-man wrecking crew who has used his springy legs, tenacious attitude, and hands o’ steel to top the Wolves in most stat categories the past two years, was out of state for a family funeral.

With “The Torpedo” not in action, that left Coupeville at a disadvantage on the boards, something which was compounded when Davison was injured shortly after scoring his team’s first bucket of the night.

The lanky big man hobbled back on the floor to play in the fourth quarter, but his absence for 2.5 quarters hurt on a night when Coupeville had a short bench.

Mount Baker entered the playoffs at just 5-15, but comes out of the ultra-competitive 1A/2A/3A Northwest Conference, which skews records.

The Mountaineers, while they didn’t have a ton of height, were quick, efficient, aggressive, and deadly shooters.

None more so than junior Braedan Hart, who tagged Coupeville for 31 points, hitting seven shots from behind the three-point arc.

The Wolves never led, falling behind 10-2 to start the first quarter, but fought back and kept the game close until a third quarter letdown.

Murdy rippled the nets for a three-ball of his own to stop Baker’s initial run, then Wolfe collected Coupeville’s final six points of the opening quarter, slashing hard to the hoop for buckets against a ferocious defense.

Down 18-11 at the first break, Coupeville put together a 7-0 run midway through the second quarter to cut the lead to five, and had the deficit back to four with seconds to play in the half.

Hart delivered a dagger, however, burying a three-ball right before the break to stake the Mountaineers to a 32-25 advantage.

Grove opened the second half with a trey which sweetly dropped through the net, then Wells rolled into the paint and hit a soft jumper and we had a game at 34-30.

But then the offense vanished.

Coupeville shots which were dropping started clanging instead, and a scrambling Baker defense forced several key turnovers, fueling a 15-3 surge which put the Wolves on their heels.

The only positive in the stretch was a three-ball from the top of the arc by Knoblich, but that wasn’t enough to stem the tide, and the deficit soared from four to 16 as the end of the quarter neared.

The Wolves never got closer than 14 after that, and Hart banged away for 11 of his 31 in the final frame, helping make the final score seem more lopsided than it really was for much of the night.

Coupeville’s sophomore duo paced the team in scoring, with Wolfe banking in 13 points, and Murdy adding 10.

Grove went off for all nine of his points in the second half, and his final made shot, a fourth-quarter three-ball, gave him the season scoring crown in the closest race the CHS boys hoops program has seen in 103 seasons.

The man who will launch from anywhere finished his final campaign with 254 points, narrowly edging Wolfe, who tossed in 252 this season.

The two-point differential is the smallest ever between Coupeville’s #1 and #2 varsity scorers, after three previous teams saw a three-point difference.

In 1993-1994, Brad Miller edged Gabe McMurray 238-235, in 1990-1991 Jason McFadyen held off Sean Dillon 261-258, and way back in 1939-1940, Banky Fisher topped Gaylord Stidham 44-41.

And yes, that really is supposed to say just 44-41. It was a way different game back then.

Grove, who was a swing player as a sophomore, then a full-time varsity gunner the past two seasons, departs having scored 414 points, which puts him #54 on the CHS boys career scoring chart.

Wolfe, with two seasons ahead of him, has 410 points (the most scored by a Coupeville boy through their sophomore season) and is #55 all-time.

CHS got scoring from almost everyone on the floor Saturday, with Wells (8), Knoblich (3), Davison (2), Pilgrim (2), and Brown (1) also tallying points.

The lone Wolf not to score was sophomore Grady Rickner, a JV star who got to make a late-game appearance, a herald of positive things to come.

 

Final (unofficial) season scoring stats:

Mason Grove – 254
Hawthorne Wolfe
– 252
Sean Toomey-Stout
– 113
Xavier Murdy
– 95
Koa Davison
– 83
Ulrik Wells
– 74
Jacobi Pilgrim
– 67
Jered Brown
– 56
Gavin Knoblich
– 56
Jean Lund-Olsen
– 10
Tucker Hall
– 6
Daniel Olson
– 2

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Makana Stone and Whitman clinched a playoff berth with a win Saturday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mission accomplished.

Sparked by a 12-point, 12-rebound performance from Coupeville’s Makana Stone, the Whitman College women’s basketball team swatted host Lewis & Clark College Saturday, setting up the biggest weekend of the season.

Rolling to a 73-58 victory in Portland, the Blues held on to first-place in the Northwest Conference at 11-1, while improving to 19-2 overall.

With the win, their seventh-straight, they clinch a playoff berth and can finish no lower than third in the nine-team league.

The top four teams square off in the conference postseason tourney, with #1 hosting #4 and #2 hosting #3, then the winners meeting in a game which decides the league’s automatic bid to the NCAA tournament.

Stone and Whitman have made it to the Northwest Conference tourney all four seasons she’s been on campus, but never as the #1 seed.

With their hearts set on a league title, the Blues control their own fate going forward, however.

Two games up on George Fox University (9-3, 17-4) and three ahead of freefalling Pacific University (8-4, 14-7), with four to play, Whitman faces those exact teams next weekend.

Both games will be at home in Walla Walla, where the Blues are 7-0, and go down Friday and Saturday, Feb. 14-15.

The second of those matchups is also Senior Night, where Stone, Mady Burdett, Lily Gustafson, Katie Stahl, and Natalie Whitesel will be honored.

Saturday could have been a trap game, with Lewis & Clark (now 1-11, 2-18) sitting in dead last-place in the Northwest Conference.

And it was for a half at least, as the Pioneers took advantage of a Whitman team that was unexpectedly ice-cold from the field.

Normally one of the best-shooting squads in the country, the Blues hit just 9-34 from the floor in the first half.

While Whitman still managed to scrape out a 14-12 lead after one quarter of play, the shooting woes intensified in the second frame, allowing Lewis & Clark to seize its first lead at 17-16.

From there, the Pioneers stretched the margin out to five, though the Blues cut it back to 27-24 on a nice play right before the end of the half.

Stone, directing traffic from the top of the arc, whipped a note-perfect pass over the top, finding teammate Kaylie McCracken for a layup and a brief burst of happiness for the visitors.

Things took a huge change after the break, as Whitman started to nail all of its shots, especially from the outside.

Tickling the twines for five three-balls in the third quarter — with Taylor Chambers and Kaelan Shamseldin nailing two apiece — the Blues erupted on a game-busting 27-10 run.

Stone gave Whitman a lead it wouldn’t lose with a pair of buckets in the paint, then made off with a steal that triggered a fast-break which ended with a Shamseldin trey.

Lewis & Clark, scrappy but painfully young, never got closer than 12 after that, with the Blues stretching the lead out as far as 20 near the end of the game.

McCracken came off the bench to score a team-high 15 points, while Stone added two assists, a steal, and a blocked shot to her 12 and 12 double-double.

On the season, the former Wolf has 332 points, 175 rebounds, 30 assists, 23 steals, and 18 blocks.

Stone is shooting 136-253 (53.8%) from the floor and 57-74 (77%) at the free throw line.

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A two-time state champ for Coupeville, Danny Conlisk is currently running indoor track for an NCAA D-II school. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

He’s passed the halfway point.

Coupeville’s Danny Conlisk competed in his fifth collegiate track meet Saturday, running at the Ted Nelson Classic in Mankato, Minnesota.

The former Wolf star, now a freshman at the South Dakota School of Mines & Technology, has an eight-meet schedule for the indoor part of the season.

Then, after a month-long break (from competition, not training) Conlisk and the rest of the Hardrockers head outside, where it’s hopefully warmed up a bit.

Saturday, the CHS grad competed in two events, running the 400 and carrying the baton as part of the 4 x 4 crew.

Conlisk and his relay squad claimed 3rd, combining to run the event in three minutes, 28.13 seconds.

The Hardrocker freshman also finished 20th (out of 42 competitors) in the 400, hitting the line in 52.80 seconds, just off his college PR of 52.40.

He was second in his heat.

SDSM&T returns to action next weekend, when the ‘Rockers head to Brookings, South Dakota for the SDSU Indoor Classic, which runs February 14-15.

After that, Conlisk and Co. have the Stinger Open Feb. 22 at Black Hills State University, then the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference Indoor Championships Feb. 28-29 in Colorado Springs.

The first outdoor meet is Mar. 27.

During his time at Coupeville High School, Conlisk set school records in the 100, 200, and 400, while winning state titles in the last two events.

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