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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Coupeville’s Danny Conlisk signed a letter of intent Friday afternoon to run track for an NCAA D-II school. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Conlisk and his family celebrate his signing day. (Eileen Stone photo)

One of Coupeville’s finest is on his way to a bigger stage.

Danny Conlisk, who has had a meteoric rise, both in the classroom and the athletic arena, signed a college letter of intent Friday to run track for the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology.

The school competes at the NCAA D-II level and its sports programs stretch back to 1895.

Originally known as the Longhairs, its athletic teams now operate as the Hardrockers, paying tribute to the school’s mining background.

Originally an NAIA school, SDSM&T joined the NCAA in 2013 and currently competes in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference.

And, in case you were wondering, the Hardrocker mascot is named Grubby the Miner.

The more you know.

Conlisk, a captain in cross country and track for Coupeville, received an athletic scholarship from SDSM&T, and will also get financial help from the GI Bill.

He will compete just in track in college, both during indoor and outdoor seasons.

During his time at CHS, Conlisk served a term as the student body rep on the school board, and plans to pursue a degree in Mechanical Engineering.

After making huge strides with both the high school track team, and the Kitsap Fliers club running team, the speedy Wolf was tracked by SDSM&T coaches, who made sure he knew they were interested.

After a trip to see the school, it was an easy choice.

“They grabbed his interest and Danny didn’t want to be just a number at a school,” mom Dawnelle said. “He wanted a smaller school that was engineering-focused.”

Currently one of the fastest 1A runners in the state in the 100, 200, and 400, the Coupeville senior is making his final run at prep track glory.

Conlisk already has three state meet medals to his credit, with his best finish 2nd in the 400 as a junior.

He also claimed 5th in the same event as a sophomore, and was part of a 4 x 400 relay unit which took 5th during his junior season.

While running for the Fliers, Conlisk advanced to the USATF Hershey National Junior Olympics Championships in the 400.

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Coupeville second-baseman Heidi Meyers pops up, ready to terminate the hapless runner. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Audrianna Shaw frames the pitch, then wills the ball into her mitt for a strike.

Ivy Leedy rips a base-knock.

If looks could kill, Kylie Van Velkinburgh would be on death row for murder.

Abby Meyers gets low to field a hot chopper.

Shaw goes medieval on the ball, dumping it deep into the outfield for a triple.

No softball shall escape Heidi Meyers. Ever.

Ivy Leedy puts some zing on the pitch.

Lily Leedy gets down with her bad self, beating the throw to third and working on her yoga poses at the same time.

Home-made pizza was waiting at home, but camera clicker extraordinaire John Fisken put in some work first.

The ever-wandering paparazzi didn’t stay for the entire four-hour-plus Coupeville High School JV softball doubleheader Thursday, but he made it well past the halfway point.

That proved to be enough time to snap a ton of snazzy pics, some of which can be seen above.

To peruse everything he shot, and possibly purchase some glossies for the mantle, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Softball-2018-2019/SB-2019-05-02-JV-vs-Burlington-Edison/

And remember, a percentage of all sales goes to fund scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes.

The rest goes for quality pizza toppings, so that’s good, as well.

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Lola Jimenez and the CHS tennis team ended the regular season Thursday at Granite Falls. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They played from dawn to dusk.

Or at least it probably felt that way, as the Coupeville High School girls tennis team wrapped the regular season Thursday with a match-and-a-half in Granite Falls.

First, the two teams finished up a varsity match suspended by rain in mid-April, before playing a complete varsity and JV rumble.

Granite eked out the slimmest of wins in both varsity bouts, claiming 3-2 victories to sweep the doubleheader.

The losses drop Coupeville to 2-6 in North Sound Conference play, 2-7 overall.

The Wolves finish in fourth-place in the team standings, trailing King’s (7-1), South Whidbey (7-1), and Granite (4-4), but staying ahead of Friday Harbor (0-8).

Now, the focus turns to the postseason, and a return trip to Granite May 7-8 for the district tourney.

Each league school will send two singles players and two doubles teams to the modified double-elimination event.

Genna Wright and Jillian Mayne are locked in for singles, while the doubles duo of Tia Wurzrainer and Avalon Renninger enter the tourney as the #2 seed, behind just South Whidbey’s Allison Papritz and Mary Zisette.

The Falcon duo finished 2nd at state a season ago, falling in the title match.

Coupeville’s second doubles team will be decided Friday, when Emily Fiedler and Eryn Wood face off with Jaimee Masters and Abby Mulholland in a challenge match on the CHS courts.

 

Complete Thursday results:

 

Match #1 (completion from 4/16):

 

Varsity:

1st Singles — Genna Wright lost to Emily Lundberg 6-0, 6-1

2nd Singles — Jillian Mayne lost to Gabbriela Schmiesing 6-2, 6-2

1st Doubles — Tia Wurzrainer/Avalon Renninger beat Hannah White/Sadie Hutchinson 6-1, 6-2

2nd Doubles — Eryn Wood/Emily Fiedler lost to Victoria Rodenbaugh/Olivia Harmon 6-2, 4-6, 10-7

3rd Doubles — Jaimee Masters/Abby Mulholland beat Mackenzy Petit/Cosette Kroeze full score not reported

 

Match #2:

 

Varsity:

1st Singles — Wright lost to Lundberg 6-1, 6-3

2nd Singles — Mayne beat Hannah Yadon 6-3, 5-7, 6-2

1st Doubles — Wurzrainer/Renninger beat White/Hutchinson 6-0, 6-4

2nd Doubles — Wood/Fiedler lost to Harmon/Rodenbaugh 4-6, 7-5, 10-8

3rd Doubles — Masters/Mulholland lost to Schmiesing/Yairet Reyes-Hernandez 5-7, 6-3, 6-2

 

JV:

4th Doubles — Bruna Moratori/Elaira Nicolle lost 8-4

5th Doubles — Katelin McCormick/Noelle Daigneault lost 8-4

6th Doubles — Mary Milnes/Maddy Andrews lost 8-5

7th Doubles — Cassidy Holmes/Cecilia Camarena lost 8-3

8th Doubles — Annika Heller/Lola Jimenez lost 8-3

9th Doubles — McCormick/Daigneault lost 8-4

10th Doubles — Milnes/Andrews won 8-2

11th Doubles — Moratori/Nicolle won 8-2

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Coupeville athletes and coaches celebrate a strong performance at the North Sound Conference Championships Thursday in Granite Falls. (Brian Vick photos)

Thane Peterson gets ready to launch his discus.

Freshman Alana Mihill had plenty to smile about after setting a PR in the 3200.

Wolf coaches dream about their beds after a long day.

Mallory Kortuem shattered her school record in the pole vault, raising her PR by three inches.

Sean Toomey-Stout, who won league titles in the long jump and 4 x 100 relay, gets some love.

They came, they saw, they more than held their own.

The Coupeville High School track and field squad won eight events, set 24 PR’s and established a new school record in the pole vault Thursday while competing in the inaugural North Sound Conference Championships.

Along the way, the Wolves claimed 2nd in the girls team standings and 3rd in the boys.

King’s topped the league’s six schools in the girls battle with 192 points, with Coupeville (102), South Whidbey (98), host Granite Falls (76), Cedar Park Christian (57), and Sultan (9) rounding out the field.

On the boys side, South Whidbey nipped King’s by the thinnest of margins, winning the team title 142.5-142.

Coupeville (109.5), CPC (69), Granite (41), and Sultan (20) filled out the remainder of the stat sheet.

The Wolves were led by senior Danny Conlisk, who captured league titles in the 200 and 400, while also running a leg on the winning 4 x 100 relay team.

He narrowly missed out on a fourth title when CHS teammate Jean Lund-Olsen nipped him by 0.01 in the 100.

Other Wolf league champs included Emma Smith (shot put), Maya Toomey-Stout (long jump), Koa Davison (high jump), and Sean Toomey-Stout (long jump).

While she narrowly missed out on a league title, junior pole vaulter Mallory Kortuem continued to lay waste to her own school record in the event.

The Wolf junior soared eight feet, six inches Thursday, topping her best previous effort by a solid three inches.

Next up for Coupeville is the district meet, which goes down May 9 and 11 at Lynden Christian.

 

Complete Thursday results:

 

GIRLS:

100 — Maya Toomey-Stout (3rd) 13.18; Mikaela Labrador (16th) 15.33 *PR*

200 — Ja’Kenya Hoskins (5th) 29.05

400 — Mallory Kortuem (2nd) 1:01.44

800 — Lucy Sandahl (6th) 2:37.79 *PR*

3200 — Alana Mihill (6th) 13:39.43 *PR*

100 Hurdles — Lindsey Roberts (2nd) 16.17; Ja’Tarya Hoskins (6th) 18.17

300 Hurdles — Ja’Tarya Hoskins (4th) 52.42 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — M. Toomey-Stout, Ja’Tarya Hoskins, Kortuem, Roberts (2nd) 51.74

4 x 200 Relay — Roberts, Ja’Kenya Hoskins, Kortuem, M. Toomey-Stout (2nd) 1:49.69

4 x 400 Relay — Sandahl, M. Labrador, Ja’Tarya Hoskins, Mihill (2nd) 5:05.37

Shot Put — Emma Smith (1st) 31-09.75; Megan Behan (6th) 24-01 *PR*; Raven Vick (9th) 20-09.25; Aurora Cernick (11th) 20-01

Discus — Smith (2nd) 83-03; Willow Vick (5th) 71-01 *PR*; R. Vick (7th) 60-05; Cernick (10th) 55-03; Behan (11th) 54-10; Mihill (21st) 44-01

Javelin — R. Vick (5th) 77-00; Cernick (9th) 61-08; Mihill (11th) 58-09; Behan (13th) 58-05; W. Vick (15th) 51-10; M. Labrador (16th) 49-06

High Jump — Roberts (3rd) 4-10

Pole Vault — Kortuem (2nd) 8-06 *PR* *SCHOOL RECORD*

Long Jump — M. Toomey-Stout (1st) 15-11.75 *PR*; Ja’Kenya Hoskins (12th) 13-03; W. Vick (13th) 11-09.75; M. Labrador (14th) 11-07

 

BOYS:

100 — Jean Lund-Olsen (1st) 11.25 *PR*; Danny Conlisk (2nd) 11.26 *PR*; Sean Toomey-Stout (4th) 11.59 *PR*; Tiger Johnson (12th) 12.28 *PR*; Lucious Halstead (21st) 12.61 *PR*; Chris Ruck (28th) 13.41

200 — Conlisk (1st) 22.75; Lund-Olsen (2nd) 23.06; Halstead (8th) 25.51 *PR*; Kyle Burnett (14th) 27.33; Ruck (15th) 28.46

400 — Conlisk (1st) 51.76

110 Hurdles — Jakobi Baumann (7th) 19.23 *PR*

300 Hurdles — Jak. Baumann (10th) 48.53

4 x 100 Relay — Conlisk, Johnson, S. Toomey-Stout, Lund-Olsen (1st) 44.21

4 x 400 Relay — Halstead, Jak. Baumann, Jaschon Baumann, Johnson (5th) 4:01.03

Shot Put — Ryan Labrador (2nd) 44-10.50 *PR*; Chris Battaglia (4th) 41-00 *PR*; Brian Casey (17th) 31-02.75; Logan Martin (19th) 30-08.25

Discus — Martin (7th) 110-05 *PR*; R. Labrador (8th) 109-10 *PR*; Keahi Sorrows (9th) 106-04; Battaglia (10th) 105-03; Thane Peterson (16th) 94-05; Casey (21st) 78-11 *PR*

Javelin — Battaglia (3rd) 130-09; Halstead (14th) 102-04; Koa Davison (15th) 100-02 *PR*; Jas. Baumann (16th) 92-06 *PR*; Burnett (22nd) 78-03; Casey (26th) 67-4

High Jump — Davison (1st) 5-10; Martin (8th) 5-00 *PR*

Pole Vault — Peterson (6th) 9-00; Burnett (10th) 9-00 *PR*; Johnson (12th) 8-06

Long Jump — S. Toomey-Stout (1st) 20-03.75; Jas. Baumann (13th) 14-09; Ruck (14th) 14-07.25; Liem Solow (16th) 12-10.25

Triple Jump — S. Toomey-Stout (2nd) 38-02.25; Jak. Baumann (6th) 35-06.75

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Marenna Rebischke-Smith walked four times in a doubleheader Thursday, as the Coupeville JV softball team closed its season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a lot … of everything.

The Coupeville High School JV softball team capped its season Thursday with a home doubleheader against 2A Burlington-Edison, and you would have gotten a lot for your money, if you had been made to purchase a ticket.

By the time the teams were done, four hours and three minutes had passed, with the first pitch coming at 3:56 PM in partial sunshine, and the ump finally calling things a tick or two before 8 PM.

Along the way, the teams played to an 18-18 tie in game one, before Burlington pulled out a 15-12 win in the nightcap, though only three innings were played, so it’s your call if you want to consider it official.

And a tie?!? This ain’t soccer.

Anyways, if we take it as a tie and a loss, Coupeville’s JV closes its season at 3-7-1.

The wins came against 3A Oak Harbor, 2A Lakewood, and Concrete’s varsity team.

But back to the numbers from Thursday for a second, where 24 hitters combined for 63 runs, with 21 hits and … 61(!!) walks.

The only thing keeping us from still being out there on the prairie, flashlights pointed at the field?

The five runs per inning rule used at the JV level, which was reached in 11 of the 16 frames played.

 

Game 1:

Mckenna Somes had the hottest bat of any Wolf, rapping out five of her team’s 12 base-knocks on the day, and three of those came in the opener as she blasted a double and a pair of singles.

Coupeville pitcher Kylie Van Velkinburgh added two singles, while catcher Audrianna Shaw played the long-ball game, belting both a double and a triple.

The Wolves used 11 batters and 10 of them eked out at least one walk, with Lily Leedy, Amanda Thomas, and Morgan Stevens leading the way with three free passes apiece.

After a bit of a slow start — CHS found itself down 12-3 at the game’s halfway point — the Wolves got clicking, throwing down five runs in each of the third, fourth, and fifth innings.

In the third, it was a merry mix of walks, steals, wild pitches, and passed balls, while in the fourth Coupeville mixed in some timely hits.

Somes scampered to first on an artfully-dropped bunt single, Shaw unloaded on a long three-bagger, and Van Velkinburgh punched an RBI single, before coming around to slide under the tag and score on a bang-bang play at the plate on a passed ball.

Still trailing 17-13 with an inning left in a game scheduled for five frames, the Wolf defense clamped down in the top of the fifth.

Coupeville gave up just one run, and that one came on a disputed play, where Wolf shortstop Abby Meyers appeared to make the tag on a runner scooting by, only to have the game’s lone ump rule against her.

Undaunted, the Wolves made their final stand a memorable one, scoring the maximum five runs in the bottom half of the fifth to knot things at 18-18.

Chloe Wheeler plated a run with an RBI ground-out, Somes absolutely smoked an RBI double down the third-base line, and then our old friends – walks, passed balls, and wild pitches – helped out.

Burlington had a chance to hold on to the win, and was just an out away, but Shaw took off from third on a passed ball and beat the throw back to the pitcher by a razor-thin margin.

It was a great comeback, though the decision not to play extra innings put a slight damper on things.

But, we were already pushing the two-and-a-half-hour-mark, and there was a second game on the docket, so, it is what it is.

 

Game 2:

After a brief break, the teams went back to their walk-fest, with Burlington scoring five runs in each of their three innings.

Coupeville matched the visitors in the second and third, but a two-run first inning proved to be fatal when everyone ran out of a reasonable amount of daylight.

Somes was right back at it, spanking another pair of singles, while Ivy Leedy, Stevens, and Lily Leedy all added base-knocks, with the last of that trio clubbing a resounding double.

Heidi Meyers opened the nightcap by making a sensational running snag on a quickly dropping ball right in front of second base, matching an equally eye-popping catch made by lil’ sister Abby in the opening game.

With almost all of Coupeville’s runs coming via passed balls or wild pitches, the biggest offensive highlights in game two were a couple of well-executed slides into home.

Ivy Leedy and Marenna Rebischke-Smith had the best, at least in terms of style points, but the entire Wolf lineup hit the dirt in solid style throughout the afternoon.

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