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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

“He’s printing league standings after two days of competition. No, seriously, that guy right over there…” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

We might be jumping the gun a bit here.

The new high school fall sports season has been active for all of two days, and here we are, running our first look at league standings.

Only one of the five sports Coupeville competes in — football — had a full slate of games Friday, while soccer saw two of the six North Sound Conference teams kick off things Saturday afternoon.

But what the heck.

This is the internet and space is infinite, so it’s not like running a standings article is keeping something else from seeing the light of day.

So, as we prepare for the first full week of activity, here’s a look at how the first couple of games went.

Just in case you’re wondering, Coupeville soccer fell 3-1 to powerhouse Meridian, while the King’s booters were blanked 2-0 by Lakeside in a battle of programs which both advanced to the state tourney last season.

In gridiron action, it went down like this:

Port Townsend 49
Coupeville 16

South Whidbey 7
Friday Harbor 3

Lakewood 42
King’s 14

Sultan 35
Vashon Island 6

Shorewood 42
Granite Falls 14

Cedar Park Christian 62
Concrete 22

 

And our first look at numbers on a board:

 

North Sound Conference volleyball:

School League Overall
Coupeville 0-0 0-0
CPC-Bothell 0-0 0-0
Granite Falls 0-0 0-0
King’s 0-0 0-0
South Whidbey 0-0 0-0
Sultan 0-0 0-0

 

North Sound Conference football:

School League Overall
Coupeville 0-0 0-1
CPC-Bothell 0-0 1-0
Granite Falls 0-0 0-1
King’s 0-0 0-1
South Whidbey 0-0 1-0
Sultan 0-0 1-0

 

North Sound Conference girls soccer:

School League Overall
Coupeville 0-0 0-1
CPC-Bothell 0-0 0-0
Granite Falls 0-0 0-0
King’s 0-0 0-1
South Whidbey 0-0 0-0
Sultan 0-0 0-0


Emerald City League boys tennis:

School League Overall
Bear Creek 0-0 0-0
Bush 0-0 0-0
Coupeville 0-0 0-0
Eastside Prep 0-0 0-0
Overlake 0-0 0-0
Seattle Academy 0-0 0-0
South Whidbey 0-0 0-0
University Prep 0-0 0-0

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Sean Toomey-Stout had kick-off returns of 34 and 63 yards Friday in Coupeville’s first game of the season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Aria Bowen rocks designer specs while Savannah Smith remains a woman of mystery.

Andrew Martin, who led Coupeville’s ground game, churns for yardage.

Volleyball ace Emma Mathusek enjoys a flavor-packed hamburger while trapped in the middle of a sea of humanity.

A gentle prairie breeze ripples the flags on a warm, sunny night.

Gavin Straub (44) and Gavin Knoblich (33) wrap up a RedHawk runner, while Dominic Coffman (45) comes flying in to help.

“Yeah, boy!!!!! That tackle is almost as tasty as my gum!!! Almost…”

Prairie superstars (left to right) Mallory Kortuem, Zoe Trujillo, and Maya Toomey-Stout are ready to get loud in support of their classmates.

Fall sports have sprung, in all their photographic glory.

Coupeville High School’s football team kicked off the 2019-2020 school year Friday, hosting Port Townsend, and the event was big enough to convince John Fisken to drive down from the city to the North.

Cameras at the ready, the wanderin’ paparazzi clicked away through the pre-game action and the first half of play.

The pics above are courtesy him, but are not all that he shot on the night.

To see more, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Football-2019-2020/FB-2019-09-06-vs-Pt-Townsend/

If you purchase any prints while there, a percentage of each sale goes into a fund Fisken uses at the end of the year, when he hands out scholarships to two CHS senior student/athletes.

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Coupeville’s Avalon Renninger launched a gorgeous goal Saturday, the first time the Wolves have scored on powerhouse Meridian in five meetings over the last decade. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The 2019 squad, ready to go on the attack.

One loss hurts more than the other.

The Coupeville High School girls soccer team opened a new season Saturday by hanging tough on its home field with powerhouse Meridian, before falling 3-1 in a game which remained a one-goal contest until the waning moments.

It was a strong performance from the Wolves, and a big step forward, as they scored on the Trojans for the first time in five meetings over the last decade.

But the afterglow was tempered by the loss of junior Genna Wright, the #3 scorer in program history, who went down hard in the first half and exited to the hospital.

Flying in pursuit of a ball, Wright was careening towards the sideline in front of the stands when she was chucked hard from behind by a rival player.

As she sprawled forward, nearly slamming her face into the track oval, her body lurched badly to the side and she didn’t get back up.

Running mate Avalon Renninger was at her side in two seconds, but Wright, clutching her knee, declined any assistance in trying to rise.

Instead, she stayed prone, not hobbling off the field with the help of her dad and coaches until after being thoroughly checked-out.

After a visit to the ER, the early word is a badly-sprained knee, which may keep her out for 1-3 weeks.

While no one wants to see the effervescent, hard-charging Wright sidelined, that would be a better prognosis than first feared.

As they wait to see how long they will be without their primary offensive weapon, the Wolves can look at their season-opening performance and be proud of what they accomplished.

The game was knotted at 1-1 when Wright went down, and, even without her flying down the side, ball on her foot, Coupeville held its own with a program which annually makes deep playoff runs.

Last year, Meridian beat the Wolves 4-0. Before that, the Trojans knocked CHS out of the playoffs by identical 2-0 scores three years running between 2009-2011.

This time around, things were markedly different, as Coupeville struck first.

Working the ball down the left sideline in the game’s 13th minute, Wright dropped a perfect set-up for Renninger, who promptly went and got medieval on the orb.

Cranking a wicked shot off her left foot, the Wolf senior captain lofted the ball into the air, and it curved upwards, steadily rising until the moment it cleared the Meridian goaltender’s shoulder and buried itself in the far right corner of the net.

A psychological boost for the Wolves, it was also just a darn pretty goal, one of the better ones to be seen at Mickey Clark Field in recent years.

For Renninger, it was the seventh score of her prep career, and means she will have tallied at least one goal in all four of her seasons on the CHS pitch.

She’s now tied with Micky LeVine, Alexia Hemphill, and Marisa Etzell on the career scoring chart, one goal off of big sister Sage Renninger for fifth-best among all Wolf girls soccer players.

Riding high on Avalon Renninger’s masterpiece, the Wolves took back-to-back hits five minutes later.

First, Meridian slipped the tying goal in, the ball finding a teeny-tiny opening as Coupeville goaltender Mollie Bailey made a diving attempt at stopping it.

Then came Wright’s injury.

Once action started back up, the Wolf defense, anchored by seniors Mallory Kortuem and Tia Wurzrainer and freshman Nezi Keiper, stood tall.

As did Bailey, a junior who inherited the starting goalie gig after backing up the since-graduated Sarah Wright the past two seasons.

The heir to a prairie legacy, she was strong in the net, making several very-strong saves and blunting frequent charges from an opportunistic Meridian squad.

The Trojans did get the tie-breaker in the game’s 28th minute, on a play in which Bailey’s line of sight was blocked off by an attacker crossing in front of her.

After that, the Wolf goalie was virtually lights-out, though Meridian got an insurance goal late in the second half on another shot which found the smallest of holes.

Without Wright on the field, Coupeville’s offensive chances took a sizable hit, though Renninger continued to crank away, narrowly missing on another long missile which pulled a hair wide right at the last millisecond.

While he always goes in looking for a win, Wolf coach Kyle Nelson emerged from Saturday’s opener with a slight smile gracing his face.

The play of his roster, which also included nice scrappiness from support crew such as Natalie Hollrigel and Carolyn Lhamon, was exactly what he was seeking.

“It’s a good place to start,” Nelson said. “We played a competitive game, and it’s a huge step forward for us, playing against a really good team and coming pretty close to playing them on an even level.”

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Coupeville senior QB Dawson Houston scored a rushing touchdown and a two-point conversion Friday against Port Townsend. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Marcus Carr sat on a bench in a darkening stadium Friday night, pondering the road ahead.

“We showed glimpses of really good play … and a lot of growing pains,” said the Coupeville High School football coach.

“We’re a young, young team with a lot of freshmen, but all those guys played hard all the way. I can’t even be mad when they’re doing it like that.”

The Wolf gridiron program is a work in progress, and the odds were stacked against them on opening night.

So, while the scoreboard read 49-16 at the end, with Coupeville coming out on the short end against visiting Port Townsend, the night was not a total loss.

The Wolves, who are taking a one-year hiatus from league action and are playing an independent schedule, started five freshmen in game one.

Four of those ninth graders – Kai Wong, Nick Armstrong, Kynel Hart, and Josh Upchurch – manned the line, while the fifth, the fearless Tim Ursu, a 105-pound fireball who fears no man, went toe-to-toe with Port Townsend’s bruising running back and popped his foe several times.

With Daylon Houston, Dominic Coffman, and Joven Light also seeing action, eight CHS freshman played their first varsity football game with just four days of school under their belt.

Overall, 10 of 25 players listed on the most current Wolf roster are high school newbies, with Scott Hilborn and Kevin Partida in street clothes Friday. Both are expected to be on the field soon.

While the independent schedule is meant to give the rebuilding CHS program a chance to play teams the Wolves should be competitive with, none of the games will be easy.

In the case of Port Townsend, the RedHawks have a fairly deep roster with 37 players on the roster, a dynamic senior quarterback in Noa Apker-Montoya, and a senior running back in Dylan Tracer who enjoys spending a lot of time ramming his way into the end zone.

The visitors didn’t play perfect ball Friday, far from it, but they were effective when they needed to be, and built a comfortable lead.

Despite a rash of penalties, including three separate times when a mangled play brought back a touchdown, the RedHawks scored early and often, blowing out to a 20-0 lead.

Coupeville had opened the game on offense, and looked to be in high gear as senior Sean Toomey-Stout snatched the kickoff and bolted 34 yards with the ball before being gang-tackled.

But even before the buzz could finish echoing through the stadium at Mickey Clark Field, things turned dire, as the Wolves fumbled the ball away on their first offensive snap.

Port Townsend made Coupeville pay, and it took only a few seconds.

Tracer roared through the heart of the defense, busted a would-be tackle or two and was off on a 41-yard jaunt to the end zone, the first of four times he would wind up there on the night.

While the Redhawks missed the extra point kick, their defense bottled Coupeville up in the early going, then tacked on two more scores thanks to Apker-Montoya.

The boyfriend of CHS volleyball star Hannah Davidson twirled in on a 15-yard scoring run of his own midway through the first quarter, then connected with Tanner Woodley on a 24-yard touchdown pass to open the second quarter.

Trailing by three scores, the Wolves needed a spark, and they got one from the most exciting gridiron giant on Whidbey Island, one Mr. Toomey-Stout.

While Port Townsend kicked away from him most of the game, they did go right at “The Torpedo” after their third touchdown, and he almost took the ball to the house.

Apker-Montoya, who doubles as the RedHawk kicker, caught him at the very end of a run which Coupeville PA announcer Willie Smith tallied up as “62 or 63 yards, or maybe 62 and a loooooong half-yard.”

Toomey-Stout’s torrid run put the RedHawk defense back on its heels and that opened things up for Andrew Martin, who promptly crashed in for Coupeville’s first score of the season.

The senior slammer, who played through bloody fingers, bouncing off Port Townsend players and often knocking them back several yards at the point of contact, swept in from 16 yards out.

Despite being bloodied, Wolf running back Andrew Martin had a stellar night on both sides of the ball. (Jonathan Martin photo)

Martin, who busted off runs of 23, 16, 13, and 13, unofficially collected 94 yards on the ground Friday, though a video review may likely push him up over 100.

Wolf quarterback Dawson Houston tacked on a two-point conversion run after Martin’s score, then came back to score his own rushing TD right before the end of the first half.

Several power runs by Martin, including one in which he lowered his shoulder and drilled a RedHawk defender up into the third row of seats, drove Coupeville down the field.

Then, Houston laid a beautiful pass into the far left corner, dropping the ball right onto Gavin Knoblich’s fingertips for 24 yards, and got seven more on a little flicker to Toomey-Stout, before running in for the score.

This time around, Martin picked up the conversion, pulling Coupeville within 27-16 at the half.

Martin ripped off four runs of 13 or more yards, scored a touchdown and a two-point conversion and racked up a ton of tackles. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Still in the game at that point, the Wolves would get no closer, as their battle-tested rivals closed with great efficiency.

Port Townsend chewed up the clock in the second half, tacking on two more scores from Tracer and a safety when the Wolves sent a bad snap into the back of the end zone.

Upholding their reputation with being “that team,” and maybe still smarting from a 10-point loss to Coupeville last season, the RedHawks declined to go into victory formation up 42-16 with the clock running down.

Instead, they chose to cover the Vegas spread by letting Jerome Reaux, Jr. (very much not a bench-warmer) sprint in for a touchdown from 11 yards out with a mere 14 ticks on the scoreboard.

Afterwards, upholding his own reputation as a guy who doesn’t complain about or seem to dwell too much on petty irritants, Carr kept his focus strictly on what matters — his own team.

Four of the next five games are on the road, with long trips to Vashon Island, Friday Harbor, Kittitas, and Tenino.

Between now and Oct. 18, the Wolves play only once at home, when they face La Conner Sept. 27.

Which actually kind of makes Carr happy.

“We were a good road team last year; this will be good for us,” he said.

As his young players continue to grow, he’ll look to a handful of veterans, such as Toomey-Stout, Houston, and Martin, to lead the way.

“Our running game looked good; Andy played really well offensively,” Carr said. “We still need to work some on our passing game, but we’ll get there.

“Helps a lot to have a guy like Sean. Couldn’t ask for a better leader.”

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Jazmine Franklin (front) and McKenzie Bailey, during their days as high school tennis aces. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They were awesome together. They were awesome apart.

And now, three-plus years after graduation from Coupeville High School, Jazmine Franklin and McKenzie Bailey continue to grow in their awesomeness.

The former is an accomplished artist who’s a step away from breaking big, while the latter is on her way to being the coolest teacher a new generation of little kids could hope to meet in the classroom.

While both continue to soar on a daily basis as they chase their dreams, today we’re here to primarily talk about what they accomplished as Wolf athletes.

It is a sports blog, after all, and we’re way overdue on inducting the dazzling duo into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

So, let’s rectify that oversight and crack open the door on our digital hall of wonders, sending them into hallowed company as a team.

After this, when you wander up to the top of the blog and peek under the Legends tab, you’ll find Franklin and Bailey exactly where they’ve always deserved to be.

Both did it all, and did it extremely well, during their time in the red and black.

Franklin was an accomplished cheerleader and a class leader, while Bailey bopped her way through volleyball and basketball, while also being at the forefront of everything the Class of 2016 student leaders accomplished.

But, it was when they came together, picking up tennis rackets and laying waste to anyone foolhardy enough to wander into their path, where they sparkled like never before.

“Killer Kenny” attacks.

“Girl’s crazy … but I kind of dig it.”

CHS tennis coach Ken Stange referred to the fun-loving, hard-hitting duo as Salt ‘n Pepa, and they were his go-to whenever he needed a crucial win.

It might have been easy for their play to be overlooked, as their hard-court careers virtually mirrored those of Payton Aparicio and Sage Renninger, who were a #1 doubles team for four straight seasons, culminating in a long run at the state tourney their senior season.

Playing in the #2 slot never dinged their shine, however, as they methodically raked their way through other teams, while helping their teammates raise their own games.

When he looked back at the first 15 years of his career as leader of the Wolf tennis programs, Stange tabbed Franklin and Bailey as one of the best doubles duos he had coached.

He appreciated their ability to blister foes from big and small schools alike, and how they went about accomplishing the feat.

Over the course of their prep careers, the duo went an eye-popping 28-4 when teamed up together.

That’s a brain-melting .875 winning percentage, a number few, if any, Wolf athletes have come remotely close to hitting.

Always game for a photo op…

But deadly efficient on the court. (Ken Stange photo)

Franklin and Bailey were leaders on and off the court, a combined second voice for their coach, and they capped their prep careers by being “excellent team captains.”

Stange has seen (and coached) hundreds of young women and men during his decade-and-a-half-plus at CHS, but Salt ‘n Pepa remain among his favorites, for their skill, their fight, and their attitudes.

“They were about winning and fun, in that order,” he said. “They lived out loud and I loved it!”

 

To see (and possibly purchase) Franklin’s artwork, pop over to:

https://jzmn-originals.myshopify.com/

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