Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Class of 2023’

Karyme Castro Sotelo was tabbed by the Lions Club as a Student of the Year. (Photo courtesy Maricela Sotelo)

It’s a mad swirl of awards and scholarships being handed out in the days leading up to graduation.

The busiest time of the school year creates a madhouse atmosphere for teachers, admins, and front office personnel as everyone tries to stick the landing.

Coupeville High School held its awards night this past Monday, and, while I wrote about the athletic honors that night — this is an athletics-based blog, after all — here’s some more of what was handed out.

Ryanne Knoblich, who was the school’s Female Athlete of the Year, also brought home the Senior Service Award.

To be considered, a Wolf needs to make the top 10 in a vote by their fellow students, then win a faculty vote.

Criteria for the award includes “good citizenship, exemplary sportsmanship, being helpful to others, unselfishness, (while being) eager to assist faculty, administration, and the betterment of the entire school.”

Fellow seniors Mercedes Kalwies-Anderson and Milo Socha earned the Legacy Award, handed to students who “leave a positive legacy, and are a role model.”

Meanwhile, the Coupeville Lions Club, which honors two Wolves each quarter during the school year, tapped Karyme Castro Sotelo and Josh Guay as their Students of the Year.

Castro Sotelo played tennis and was a cheerleader as a senior, while Guay capped a four-year run as a Wolf track and field athlete.

Plus, he let me use some of his photos here on Coupeville Sports, so, extra credit.

Read Full Post »

Young gun David Somes bids farewell to his elders during one of many Senior Night events during the school year. (Chloe Marzocca photo)

Remember when Coupeville High School graduated about 35-40 students every year?

Pepperidge Farm does.

Well, tell that to my typing fingers, which are working a lot harder this time around, as 88(!!) Wolves are slated to receive diplomas Saturday afternoon.

That’s up from 54 a year ago, which seemed, at the time, like quite a few future Cow Town alumni.

This year’s epic event starts at 1:00 PM at Mickey Clark Field — right behind the elementary school on S. Main St. — and tickets are not required.

The bumper crop of CHS grads this year includes three students from Open Den and seven foreign exchange students.

Alphabetically, they are:

 

Cecilia Acevedo
William Allen
Aiden Anderson
Anna Annunziato
Reiley Araceley
Wynter Arndt
Connor Bachmann
Kelyn Bailey
Piotr Bieda
Alita Blouin
Adrian Burrows
Katie Buskala
Jessenia Camarena
Karyme Castro Sotelo
Emma Cermak
Monica Clark
Dominic Coffman
Jermiah Copeland
Lynn Cosner
Lucy Crouch
Gwen Crowder
Abram Dodge
Cameron Epp
Nathan Farnworth
Vivian Farris
Hayley Fiedler
Cameron Gates
Maddie Georges
Josh Guay
Gwen Gustafson
Mitchell Hall
Ty Hamilton
Alana Hayden
Scott Hilborn
Daylon Houston
Kira Jorgenson
Taygin Jump
Mercedes Kalwies-Anderson
Coen Killian
Ryanne Knoblich
Jaymes Lanske
Carolyn Lhamon
Joven Light
Benjamin Lindenstein
Allie Lucero
Maya Lucero
Jacob Mathusek
Claire Mayne
Gracie McFarlin
Cristina McGrath
Emma Morano
Jasmin Mostafavinassab
Alex Murdy
Anna Myles
Valentina Nadela
Melanie Navarro
Henry Ohme
Sara Omega
Kevin Partida-Flores
Mason Peabody
Sofia Peters
Jill Prince
Djina Radenovic
Abigail Ramirez
Marie Roberts
Jordyn Rogers
Eric Schmanski
Brenna Silveira
Hope Sinclair
Matthew Smith
Anthony Smolen
Milo Socha
Britnee Sorrows
Maylin Steele
Grant Steller
Helen Strelow
Brenn Sugatan
Lucy Tenore
Lavinia Tomba
Nathaniel Truex
Josh Upchurch
Tim Ursu
Jonathan Valenzuela
Alex Wasik
Thomas Wilkins
Kai Wong
Tate Wyman
Nezi Yaxpak-Keiper

Read Full Post »

The rumor is, they’re pretty smart. (Photo courtesy Geoff Kappes)

Like cream, they rose to the top.

When Coupeville High School’s Class of 2023 graduates Saturday, six girls and four boys will comprise the inner circle.

Led by Valedictorians Helen Strelow and Abigail Ramirez, plus Salutatorian Carolyn Lhamon, those Wolves exit with the best cumulative GPA’s in a class of 88 grads.

The remainder of the top 10, in alphabetical order:

Alita Blouin
Nathan Farnworth
Mitchell Hall
Scott Hilborn
Cristina McGrath
Jill Prince
Brenn Sugatan

Read Full Post »

It’s the big walk, before the final walk.

A day before they graduate, Coupeville High School Class of 2023 members will wind their way down S. Main St., traveling from the high school commons to the town’s elementary school.

The trek is set to go down at 9 AM Friday, June 9 and CHS Principal Geoff Kappes welcomes the idea of the community coming out in support of its graduates.

“We are thrilled to extend a heartfelt invitation to each and every one of you to join us,” he said.

“The Senior Walk promises to be a vibrant and joyous occasion, filled with pride and admiration for the remarkable Class of ’23.”

Soon-to-be grads will be rockin’ their caps and gowns, as many of them return to the school where it all started for them.

“At Coupeville Elementary, our extraordinary graduates will walk through the cherished halls where their educational journey began, symbolizing the growth and success they have achieved throughout the years,” Kappes said.

“This is a remarkable opportunity to share in the pride and joy radiating from each of them.”

 

Read Full Post »

Coupeville seniors (l to r) Sofia Peters, Maya Lucero, Allie Lucero, and Melanie Navarro exit as winners. (Photo courtesy Paula Peters)

The season ended as it began, with the Wolves thumping their next-door neighbors.

Returning to the diamond after an eight-day break, the Coupeville High School varsity softball squad swamped host South Whidbey 23-0 Friday in a game mercy-ruled after five innings.

The victory, fueled by a ferocious tsunami of hits, gives the 2B Wolves a sweep of their two-game season series with the 1A Falcons and leaves Coupeville’s final record at a sweet 14-6.

While there won’t be any playoffs for CHS softball this season, its five-pack of splendid seniors — Allie Lucero, Melanie Navarro, Sofia Peters, Maya Lucero, and Gwen Gustafson — finish their prep careers with a 42-9 record.

Not bad for a group which lost a season-and-a-half to pandemic restrictions but stayed together and finished strongly.

Gwen Gustafson tossed five scoreless innings and smacked three hits during her final high school softball game. (Photo courtesy Irene Gustafson)

Coupeville’s seniors, and their younger teammates, overwhelmed South Whidbey in the finale, crunching extra-base hits at the plate and playing precision defense in the field.

Wolf catcher Teagan Calkins, much spryer after a week-plus to rest an injured ankle, popped out of her crouch and gunned down a runner straying off the bag at first base.

The ball smacked into Allie Lucero’s glove before the wanderin’ Falcon knew what was what, and happened so quickly it almost seemed to catch the ump off guard as well.

He recovered, however, punching out the runner with an emphatic yell, which was quickly overwhelmed by the roar from the Coupeville bench.

Equally applause-worthy was a double play which could have been a triple play pulled off by sophomore shortstop Madison McMillan.

Spearing a liner out of midair for out #1, she whirled, slapped the tag on a runner going by for out #2, then whipped a laser to first in a bid to also catch that Falcon straying.

And she would have, except South Whidbey already had an out before the play happened, and you can’t get four outs in the same inning most days.

“We only need two, Maddie,” Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan said with a chuckle as he headed for the dugout. “But I like your thinking.”

Coupeville actually only scraped out a single run in the top of the first, as South Whidbey clamped down, for a moment, on defense.

Taylor Brotemarkle smoked an RBI single back up the middle to make it 1-0, and while CHS failed to get more at the moment, it soon made up for it.

The Wolves, swinging from their heels and spraying the ball all over the field, tacked on five more runs in both the second and third innings, then closed with six more tallies in both the fourth and fifth.

Everyone in the lineup was hitting, from top to bottom, as all 11 Wolves who picked up a bat Friday collected at least one base knock.

Mia Farris mashed a three-run triple to straight away centerfield to bust the game open, while Calkins, Allie Lucero, and Brotemarkle all zinged RBI doubles to deep and dark parts of the park.

Not to be outdone, Farris came back around, and flexing her biceps in true “sun’s out, guns out” fashion, thumped a pair of doubles to go with her three-bagger, having herself a day.

And then, with the end of the season just a whisper away, Maya Lucero erupted, launching a cannon shot which cleared the fence in left field for a titanic tater that’s never, ever coming back.

Her final high school at-bat and her first out-of-the-park dinger, in one compact swing. Kismet.

Maya “The Mad Masher” Lucero. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

While Coupeville loses its five seniors, and foreign exchange student Layla Heo, 10 of the 16 players on the roster can return next season.

And they’ll be around for a while, as Chloe Marzocca, Jada Heaton, Bailey Thule, McMillan, Farris, and Brotemarkle are currently sophomores, while Calkins is a freshman.

Haylee Armstrong, who started most of the season, Capri Anter, and Melanie Wolfe are just 8th graders.

 

Friday stats:

Haylee Armstrong — One single
Taylor Brotemarkle — One single, one double
Teagan Calkins — Two singles, one double, two walks
Mia Farris — Two doubles, one triple, one walk
Gwen Gustafson — Two singles, one double, one walk
Jada Heaton — One single
Allie Lucero — Two singles, one double
Maya Lucero — One single, one home run
Madison McMillan — One single, one double, one triple, one walk
Melanie Navarro — One single, two doubles
Sofia Peters — One single, one walk

Coupeville’s young sluggers carry big bats and know what to do with them. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »