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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Senior quarterback Dawson Houston threw for two touchdowns, and ran for two more Saturday as Coupeville pounded Kittitas 28-0. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ben Smith slashes through the defense. (Deb Smith photos)

Sean Toomey-Stout, off to the races (and the end zone).

Is it too soon to talk about giving Bennett Richter a pay raise?

The Coupeville High School football program had rung up two shutouts across the last five seasons.

Now, after a 28-0 win Saturday at Kittitas, Richter, the team’s Defensive Coordinator, has dialed up that many goose eggs in just eight days.

The non-conference win in the wilds of Eastern Washington, a game in which the Wolves picked off the host Coyotes three times and forced numerous punts, lifts Coupeville to 3-2.

Having won three of its last four, CHS will turn right around and hit the road again in six days, traveling to Tenino to play a Northwest Christian squad which sits at 0-4 on the season.

As Coupeville seeks its first winning campaign since 2005, the current squad, with two shutouts, has already matched the best performance of any Wolf defense in the past 13 seasons.

The 2013 CHS team shutout Bellevue Christian 32-0 in its opener, then blanked Chimacum 54-0 in the season finale.

Frankly, putting positive goose eggs up on the scoreboard has been rare for the Wolves, with only three other shutouts during the 2006-2018 span.

The 2007 Wolves beat Concrete 34-0, the 2017 team blanked South Whidbey 18-0, and the 2018 squad baffled Vashon Island 13-0.

But now, Richter and his wild men, who were led by a tackle-happy Andrew Martin, a brain-busting Sean Toomey-Stout, and a sticky-fingered Dakota Eck, have piled up eight straight scoreless quarters.

First came a 13-0 win at home against La Conner last Friday, and now a complete shutdown of a school the Wolves had never played before.

Kittitas, which is the three-time defending 2B state champs in basketball, has not been as proficient on the gridiron of late, and they entered Saturday’s afternoon game bearing an eight-game losing skid dating back to September 2018.

The Coyotes set the scene well, though, with a beautiful stadium and one of the best sound systems Wolf fans have come into contact with.

Not only did it emit booming, crystal clear vocals, but it was pumping out tunes like Def Leppard’s “Pour Some Sugar on Me” pre-game, which gets them extra credit from every sports blogger who came of age in the ’80s.

Then the game started and Coupeville immediately started pouring something on Kittitas, but, instead of sweet, sweet sugar, it was more like sweet, sweet pain from the heavens above.

Martin ripped the Coyote line in half on the very first play from scrimmage, scooping up the runner and planting him face-first into the grass with a thud which said, in no uncertain terms, “ANDY IS EATIN’ AT KFC TONIGHT!!”

Whether inspired by the chance to earn some tasty chicken products or not, Martin and his defensive comrades kept on coming, dominating at the line, shutting down the running game, and rarely being stung by the air attack.

Coupeville forced Kittitas into back-to-back punts to open the game, then struck on its second possession.

While the Wolves briefly sputtered out the first time they touched the ball, the second time was sweet perfection.

Ben Smith softened the Coyote defense with an eight-yard run to the outside, then bolted around the left for a massive 35-yard pickup on the very next play.

With Kittitas sucked in, the Wolves promptly went to the air, with quarterback Dawson Houston connecting with Toomey-Stout on a 16-yard pass which came a millimeter away from being the game’s first touchdown.

With the ref ruling “The Torpedo” came down just outside the goal line, Coupeville was denied for maybe half a second, then crashed to pay-dirt on the next play, with Houston keeping the ball and following his line into the end zone.

That set the tone for the rest of the game, during which time the Wolves controlled every aspect of play.

Eck, in his second game back after a brutal preseason injury, continued to show why CHS coaches and players were so excited about getting the speedy junior back on the active list.

A week ago he snagged a fumble against La Conner.

Saturday, Eck hauled in three interceptions, tying Toomey-Stout for this year’s best performance, with both falling just one pick shy of Brian Fakkema’s school single-game record from 2002.

The first of his snags came shortly after Houston’s touchdown ramble, and Eck almost turned it into a pick-six.

Knocked out at the one-yard line by a desperation shove, he handed the ball back to his QB and watched Houston once again stroll into the end zone behind a big push from the Wolf line.

Making it a family affair, lil’ brother Daylon Houston, a freshman with a powerhouse of a leg, nailed the PAT.

After hitting on three kicks through the first four games, he went 4-4 Saturday, and got happily pummeled by his big bro after each one.

Up 14-0, the Wolves continued to clamp down on Kittitas, with Kai Wong and Gabe Shaw rattling the teeth of Coyote runners who they stuffed, while Martin and Toomey-Stout hunted down and destroyed everyone in sight.

Coupeville tacked on two more scores to pad the lead, with Dawson Houston connecting with Toomey-Stout on long pass plays.

The first was a 25-yard bomb into the deep left corner with a hair under seven minutes to play in the second quarter.

Kittitas had two men in the area, but “The Torpedo,” poppin’ his biceps all the way, out-wrestled both defenders, coming down to Earth with sole possession of the ball.

The game’s final score came late in the third quarter, with CHS facing a fourth-and-10 from the Kittitas 19.

Houston spun backwards, Toomey-Stout shot across the middle, their eyes met, and the rest was kismet, as QB dropped the ball onto his receiver’s hands, and Wolf fans started their touchdown dances 0.2 seconds later.

While the touchdowns affected the scoreboard the most, the play which got the most buzz came midway through the third quarter, and from a young player whose legend grows with each play.

Freshman Tim Ursu is 105 pounds of fury unleashed, and he spent the Kittitas game crashing around on both offense (where he had several carries) and defense.

On the play in question, Houston lofted a pass towards the right sideline, a pass which looked like it was going way over Ursu’s head.

Instead, the fab frosh never broke stride, turned at the last second, stretched out to his very limit and hauled in the heave, even though he knew a Kittitas player was about to drill him as the ball carried him out of bounds.

Not only did Ursu hold on to the ball and complete the catch, but the ensuing penalty for a late hit gave Coupeville a first down, kept a drive alive, and induced much fist-pumping and yelling from Wolf coaches.

Timmy is working really hard, and making those catches in practice,” said CHS coach Marcus Carr. “I’m really proud of him and how he’s playing.”

Also big was a defensive stand on the game’s final possession, as the Wolves hunkered down to preserve their shutout.

For the first, and only time in the game, Kittitas got inside the Coupeville 10-yard line, and had third-and-goal from the four-yard line with time running out.

A Coyote team which has only scored 12 points in four games this year desperately wanted to punch the ball in, but Toomey-Stout shed a blocker and decked the incoming ball-carrier for a loss.

Then, on the game’s final play, a Kittitas pass into the end zone fell short, as Eck prevented his man from reaching back to grab it.

Cue the happy dance on the far sideline from Richter, the defensive guru with the scheme and the dream.

And cue excited Wolf lineman Isaiah Bittner, back in the lineup, celebrating with CHS assistant coach Kwamane Bowens, both filled with infectious happiness.

While there were still a few too many penalties for his liking, Coupeville’s head coach walked off the Kittitas field with a bit of a bounce in his step.

“We’re coming around,” Carr said. “We ran the ball really well in the first half, and that opened up the passing, and our whole defense played outstanding.”

Unofficially, Houston connected on seven passes for 120 yards, with Toomey-Stout hauling in five of those lobs for 102 yards and his third and fourth scores of the year.

Ben Smith was the workhorse in the rushing game, piling up 68 yards on 16 carries, while Houston’s pair of 1-yard scoring dives accounted for his second and third touchdowns this season.

The one down note coming out of the game was an injury to Smith, who suffered a likely concussion on a run up the middle in the fourth quarter.

He was taken to a local hospital, but was released and was showing signs of improvement on the trip home.

Still, it’s likely he will have to sit out Coupeville’s next game, even as the Wolves expect to get receiver Gavin Knoblich, who has snagged three touchdowns, back from his own concussion.

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Alita Blouin ripped off four service aces Saturday as the Coupeville JV volleyball squad scorched Orcas Island. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One step backward, four steps forward.

After taking its only loss of the season to 2A Anacortes, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad has taken its game to a higher level.

The latest example? Thrashing host Orcas Island Saturday 25-10, 25-8, 25-20 in a non-conference bout.

The fourth-straight win for the Wolf young guns, it lifts them to a sparkling 5-1 on the season.

CHS coach Chris Smith mixed and matched lineups, playing 11 girls Saturday, and all came through with something positive for a streaking team.

Leading the way was freshman setter Maddie Georges, who doled out 17 assists, ripped nine service aces, and still found time to collect two kills and two digs.

Helping her along were big hitter Kylie Chernikoff, who piled up eight kills, and serve-masters Jaimee Masters (five aces) and Alita Blouin (four aces).

Also joining the kill parade were Jill Prince (3), Abby Mulholland (2), Taygin Jump (2), Ryanne Knoblich (1), and Anya Leavell (1).

Heidi Meyers and Jump tossed in two aces apiece, while Knoblich scraped the floor to pick up three digs, and Ivy Leedy chipped in with hustle plays.

The Wolf JV returns to action with a busy week ahead.

Coupeville hosts North Sound Conference rivals King’s Monday and Sultan Wednesday, then travels to Port Townsend Thursday for a non-league tilt.

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Left to right, top to bottom, are CHS coaches Michael Barenburg, BreAnna Boon, Tyson Boon, Kwamane Bowens, Bobby Carr, Marcus Carr, Brett Casey, Kyle Nelson, Krimson Rector, Bennett Richter, Luke Samford, Gabe Shaw, Chris Smith, Ken Stange, Cory Whitmore, and Robert Wood.

CMS coaches (l to r) Erin Locke, Reese Cernick, Jenna Vester, Elizabeth Bitting, Sarah Lyngra.

This doesn’t have to turn into a brawl.

But it probably should.

Twenty-one coaches — 16 from Coupeville High School, and five from our middle school — enter a (digital) room, and 50 hours later, one emerges.

The battle to be named “Top Coach of the Fall” kicks off Saturday, Oct. 5 at 9 AM, and closes Monday, Oct. 7 at 11 AM.

During that time frame, you can vote as many times as your little heart (and voting fingers) desire.

There are no restrictions, and you won’t be blocked in any way.

Or, at least that’s the hope.

Now, as in every poll/rumble of the past here on Coupeville Sports, there’s no real trophy, just a nice warm glow in the chest of the winner.

And the chance for that coach to lord it over every other coach, at least until we launch the “Top Coach of the Winter” a couple of months from now.

To the coaches involved, if you don’t care about the award, just mind your business and let me get as many sweet, sweet page hits as possible.

He said with a smile.

And if you do care? Let the bodies hit the floor!

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Former CHS volleyball guru Toni Crebbin lays down some smack. “You come for the queen, you better not miss!!”

Pump the brakes on the hype train, at least a little bit.

While the 2019 Coupeville High School volleyball squad is off to an impressive 6-0 start, and will look to make it seven straight Saturday at Orcas Island, the current Wolves still have a ways to go to catch the standard bearers.

That’s the 2004 edition, a team which was ranked #1 in the state polls, and a team which reeled off 10 straight wins to open its season.

Those Wolves, led by all-timers like Mindy Horr, Kirsty Croghan, and Taniel Lamb, finished 14-3, rose to the top of the polls by routing the best team in 1A, and narrowly missed out on a state trophy.

Two of those losses came against the team which claimed 2nd at state, La Conner, a team Coupeville also beat twice.

When coach Toni Crebbin and her squad opened the 2004 season, they were in the Northwest A/B League, which had undergone a change from the previous year.

Archbishop Murphy had moved out, while Mount Vernon Christian, Darrington, and Shoreline Christian had moved in, joining Coupeville, Concrete, Friday Harbor, Orcas Island, and the defending league champs, La Conner.

The Wolves started hot, and never really cooled off.

After opening with a four-set win over 2A Lakewood, CHS won the Lopez Island Tournament (which doesn’t count in their win/loss record), stuffing four teams in order.

Coupeville polished off Orcas, Bridgeport, and Lopez, then demolished Liberty Bell in the tourney championship.

After that, the Wolves had a strong showing at the South Whidbey Invite, despite 12 of the 16 teams in attendance being 2A or larger.

That was all preamble to the league season, a time when CHS tore through foe after foe.

Led by seven seniors — Lamb, Horr, Laura Crandall, Heather Davis, Annie Larson, Heather Fakkema, and Kristina Morris — and featuring the explosive hitting of Croghan, those Wolves were, in some ways, a mirror image of the 2019 squad.

This year’s team features eight seniors, and a big hitter in Chelsea Prescott, who, like Croghan, is still an underclassman.

The 2004 team waxed Mount Vernon Christian, Darrington, Friday Harbor, Concrete, and Shoreline Christian to get to 6-0 and enter the state polls at #6.

Two tough matches were right around the corner, but the Wolves showed off their grit by pulling out five-set wins against both Orcas and La Conner, with both bouts decided 16-14 in the final frame.

That pushed Coupeville up to #5 in the polls, before wins over Friday Harbor and Concrete sent CHS all the way out to 10-0 and a #3 state ranking.

In every story a little rain must fall, though, and perfection ended in the very next match.

Facing La Conner with the league title at stake, the Wolves fell just short, losing 3-1.

To which, to a woman, they said, “Ha!” and came roaring right back with some of their best volleyball of the season.

Squaring off with La Conner again less than 24 hours after their loss, Coupeville avenged its honor, bouncing the Braves in a tiebreaker match, earning league and district titles in the process.

That assured the Wolves of a berth in the state tourney, as well, but they weren’t done.

They promptly swept Bellevue Christian 3-0, then whacked top-ranked Bush (and its star player, a U-Dub recruit) 3-1, to exit districts with the top seed.

The state voters noticed, and, for the first time in school history, the Wolf spikers, at 13-1, ascended to the #1 ranking in the 1A polls.

Flush with success, Coupeville rode a roller coaster ride at the state tourney, opening with a 3-1 win over Zillah for its program-record 14th win, before falling 3-1 to its old nemesis, La Conner.

Having taken the season split with the Braves, the Wolves still had a chance to advance to the 4th/7th place game, and seemed like they were well on their way, taking the first two sets in their next match.

Up 25-19, 25-14 on Freeman, things looked sensational … until they didn’t.

The third set, a taut affair, went to the “bad guys” 25-23, then Freeman rolled 25-16 in the fourth to send the match to a fifth, and deciding, frame.

While the final set normally goes to 15, you still have to win by two points, and both teams weren’t ready to leave the court, stretching things out.

Trailing 15-14 and facing match point, Coupeville got a huge kill off the back line from Croghan, before Fakkema dropped a little bump into a gap to push the Wolves in front.

From there, the action went back and forth, before ending 22-20 in favor of Freeman, the match ending on a savage service ace.

While the Wolves fell just short of earning their first state trophy in volleyball, the team racked up big-time stats in their finale.

Horr, in the final match of a career in which she was the best setter the school has seen, before, then, or now, flipped 43 assists to her teammates.

Lamb smacked 17 kills and hit on 17-18 serves, while Crandall, a Videoville/Miriam’s Espresso alumnus (so, bonus points), was 22-23 on serves and thunked 11 kills at the net.

Whether their season ended on a win or a loss, the 2004 spikers remain the gold standard for the program.

The 2017 CHS volleyball squad, the first to return to state since Crebbin’s best squad, won 13 matches under Cory Whitmore, and now this year’s team is making a run at the best start to a season.

The current Wolves are shooting for the stars.

If they get there, the 2004 squad will be there to welcome them to the top of the mountain.

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Despite a loss Thursday, Mallory Kortuem and her CHS girls soccer teammates are still very much alive in the playoff hunt. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The hunt goes on.

Nine games into a 15-game regular season, the Coupeville High School girls soccer team is still looking for its first win.

A 6-2 loss Thursday at Granite Falls drops the Wolves to 0-5 in North Sound Conference action, 0-7-2 overall.

South Whidbey (5-0, 8-0), which knocked off King’s (4-1, 6-3) in other Thursday action, winning 2-0, controls the race for a league crown at the halfway point of the conference schedule.

Cedar Park Christian (3-2, 6-3), Granite Falls (2-3, 4-5), and Sultan (1-4, 1-6-2) would currently claim the other playoff berths, but Coupeville is just a game off of the #5 seed.

The Wolves play three of their final five league games at home, including a huge rumble with Sultan Oct. 15.

Thursday night CHS got both of its goals from Avalon Renninger.

That gives the senior captain five scores on the year and 11 for her career.

Renninger joins Mia Litttlejohn (35), Kalia Littlejohn (33), Lindsey Roberts (17), and Genna Wright (17) as the only Wolf girls to score in double digits during their time on the soccer pitch.

She’s scored in each of her four seasons, raising her yearly goal totals from one to two to three and now five and counting.

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