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Tori Wellman was one of 50 CHS students to play soccer in 2013-2014. (John Fisken photos)

  Tori Wellman was one of 50 CHS students to play soccer in 2013-2014. (John Fisken photos)

The Wolf cheer squad, which included Robin Cedillo

  Cheer drew in 51 girls over two seasons, including Robin Cedillo, who would also go on to play softball for the Wolves.

Soccer was the most popular sport at Coupeville High School during the 2013-2014 school year.

At least in terms of how many students played the sport, and, if we don’t consider cheer a sport — which school officials don’t.

If cheer was given a little more respect, the 51 girls who participated over the course of the fall and winter seasons would top the list.

But, since cheer is considered an activity, soccer, with 50 players (30 boys, 20 girls), rules the roost.

The numbers for the eight sports CHS offers:

Soccer (50) — 30 boys, 20 girls
Tennis (45) — 29 boys, 16 girls
Basketball (44) — 21 boys, 23 girls
Track (40) — 22 boys, 18 girls
Football (39)
Volleyball (21)
Baseball (19)
Softball (13)

Coupeville also had one golfer, junior Christine Fields, who finished 5th at the 1A state tourney. CHS doesn’t offer golf, but Fields trains and travels with South Whidbey while competing as a Wolf.

At the middle school level, Coupeville offers four sports, with hoops drawing the most participants.

CMS sports numbers:

Basketball (45) — 23 boys, 22 girls
Track (42) — 24 boys, 18 girls
Volleyball (33)
Football (15) — 14 boys, 1 girl

Among non-sports activities, drama was one of the biggest draws.

CHS:

Cheer (51)
National Honor Society (43) — 18 boys, 25 girls
Drama (38) — 10 boys, 28 girls
Science Olympiad (14) — 11 boys, 3 girls
ASB Executive Board (8) — 3 boys, 5 girls
History Day (4) — 3 boys, 1 girl
Jazz Band (3) — 3 boys

CMS:

Drama (65) — 18 boys, 47 girls
Natural Helpers (33) — 13 boys, 20 girls
History Day (6) — 2 boys, 4 girls
Jazz Band (5) — 4 boys, 1 girl

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Sage Renniger tears up the 400. (John Fisken photo)

Sage Renniger tears up the 400. (John Fisken photo)

Lindsey Roberts cleared her final hurdle.

The Coupeville Middle School 7th grader capped an auspicious first season by winning the 75 meter hurdles at the Cascade Conference Championships Monday, smashing her personal record in the event along the way.

Her win, along with a victory by the 7th grade boys’ 4 x 200 relay unit of Chris Battaglia, Ty Eck, Gabe Eck and Uriah Kastner provided the highlights for the Wolves as they wrapped their season.

After Day 1 of the two-day season finale played out May 28 with mostly prelims, Day 2 was all finals, all day.

Complete Day 2 results:

GIRLS:

200 (7th) — Lindsey Roberts (5th) 31.68; Ashlie Shank (8th) 32.42

200 (8th) — Mckenzie Meyer (5th) 31.57; Payton Aparicio (8th) 32.71

400 (8th) — Sage Renniger (4th) 1:09.54

1600 (7th) — Reed Richards (4th) 6:17.47; Roberts (5th) 6:24.45

1600 (8th) — Lauren Bayne (4th) 6:16.11; Aparicio (6th) 6:30.65

75 Hurdles (7th) — Roberts (1st) 13.76; Kalia Littlejohn (4th) 15.02

75 Hurdles (8th) — Bayne (8th) 14.71

4 x 100 Relay (7th) — Richards, Littlejohn, Shank, Roberts (4th) 1:00.60

4 x 100 Relay (8th) — Bayne, Abby Parker, Allison Wenzel, Aparicio (7th) 1:03.02

4 x 200 Relay (7th) — Maddy Hilkey, Julia Beumer, Emma Smith, Allison Jungmann (2nd) 2:15.70

4 x 200 Relay (8th) — Renniger, Meyer, Kyla Briscoe, Aparicio (3rd) 2:05.81

Discus (7th) — Hilkey (9th) 55-03; E. Smith (12th) 48-09; Moira Reed (22nd) 32-10

Discus (8th) — Ashley Smith (14th) 50-09

Long Jump (8th) — Parker (7th) 13-02.75; Meyer (10th) 12-11.50; Maggie Crimmins (27th) 10-08.75

BOYS:

100 (7th) — Gabe Eck (3rd) 13.49

200 (8th) — Jacob Smith (6th) 27.22

400 (8th) — J. Smith (3rd) 59.45

110 Hurdles (7th) — Ty Eck (4th) 19.91

110 Hurdles (8th) — Cameron Toomey-Stout (3rd) 18.73; Jesse Hester (7th) 19.51

4 x 100 Relay (7th) — Danny Conlisk, Teo Keilwitz, G. Eck, Uriah Kastner (4th) 58.49

4 x 100 Relay (8th) — Lawrence Boado, Henry Wynn, Noah Allison, Coleby Fleming (5th) 54.14

4 x 200 Relay (7th) — Chris Battaglia, T. Eck, G. Eck, Kastner (1st) 1:57.25

4 x 200 Relay (8th) — Boado, Hunter Downes, Wynn, J. Smith (4th) 1:59.51

Shot Put (8th) — Luke Carlson (17th) 26-10.25

High Jump (7th) — Battaglia (3rd) 4-10; Kastner (9th) 4-04; T. Eck (11th) 4-02

High Jump (8th) — Luke Merriman (9th) 4-06; J. Smith (13th) 4-04; Toomey-Stout (18th) 4-02

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The next great Wolf superstar, Katrina McGranahan. (John Fisken photos)

The next great Wolf superstar, Katrina McGranahan. (John Fisken photos)

De-FENSE!!

De-FENSE!!

Whoops. Do not try to score on Central Whidbey catcher Sarah Wright. Ever!

Whoops. Do not try to score on Central Whidbey catcher Sarah Wright. Ever!

McGranahan brings the heat.

McGranahan brings the heat.

Lauren Rose (left) offers some tips, while McGranahan shoots her best stink-eye at the batter.

   Lauren Rose (left) offers some tips, while McGranahan shoots her best stink-eye at the batter.

Coach (and dad) Kevin McGranahan is smiling inside.

Coach (and dad) Kevin McGranahan is smiling inside.

Rose makes the snappy snag.

Rose makes the snappy snag.

"I told you NOT TO RUN!!!"

“I told you NOT TO RUN!!!”

They are coming, and they are kickin’ fanny on the way.

The next two years will see a serious influx of talent to the Coupeville High School softball team, as the current 7th and 8th graders make the jump to the big school.

Names like Katrina McGranahan, Sarah Wright and Lauren Rose will likely become familiar ones for Wolf fans. That trio, along with their current teammates in the Central Whidbey Little League fastpitch program, are destroying rivals at an impressive rate.

The pics above, courtesy travelin’ photo man John Fisken, are a taste of what’s to come.

If you like what you see, pop over to the link below to peruse more.

And remember, a percentage of all purchases goes to help fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes.

http://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf352d21a52f

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Lindsey Roberts

Lindsey Roberts cruises in an earlier-season race. (John Fisken photo)

Reed Richards (far left), shown with her relay teammates (l t r) Roberts, Kalia Littlejohn and Ashlie Shank.

Reed Richards (far right), with relay teammates (l t r) Roberts, Kalia Littlejohn and Ashlie Shank. (Sherry Roberts photo)

The Reed and Lindsey Show rolls on.

Coupeville Middle School seventh graders Reed Richards and Lindsey Roberts continued their torrid track seasons Wednesday, winning events at Day 1 of the Cascade Conference Championships in Shoreline.

Richards went nuclear, dropping 11 seconds off of her personal record to out-duel Mary Carbajal of Sultan and win the finals of the 800 by nearly a second. Third place was a whopping 17 seconds off of Richards‘ pace.

Roberts claimed first in the prelims for the 75 meter hurdles, also setting a PR.

The two-day event wraps up Monday, June 2.

Day 1 was a mix of finals in some throwing and jumping events and a handful of distance races, while the sprints were prelims. Day 2 will include the relays and the remainder of the finals for all events.

Complete Day 1 results:

GIRLS:

100 (7th) — Julia Beumer (15th) 16.05; Allison Jungmann (18th) 16.30

100 (8th) — Allison Wenzel (10th) 15.58; Maggie Crimmins (21st) 16.60

200 (7th) — Lindsey Roberts (5th) 31.42; Ashlie Shank (7th) 32.23; Beumer (16th) 33.97; Jungmann (23rd) 35.94

200 (8th) — Mckenzie Meyer (4th) 31.03; Payton Aparicio (8th) 32.50

400 (7th) — Kalia Littlejohn (9th) 1:14.78

400 (8th) — Sage Renninger (5th) 1:09.90

800 (7th) *FINAL* — Reed Richards (1st) 2:45.30

800 (8th) *FINAL* — Abby Parker (4th) 2:43.63

75 Hurdles (7th) — Roberts (1st) 13.95; Littlejohn (6th) 15.18; Richards (12th) 15.87

75 Hurdles (8th) — Lauren Bayne (8th) 14.46; Wenzel (13th) 15.24; Ashley Smith (19th) 16.08

Shot Put (7th) *FINAL* — Maddy Hilkey (4th) 20-06.50; Emma Smith (12th) 19-02.25; Moira Reed (21st) 16-10.50

Shot Put (8th) *FINAL* — A. Smith (12th) 20-04.50

High Jump (7th) *FINAL* — Littlejohn (8th) 3-08

High Jump (8th) *FINAL* — Bayne (7th) 3-10

 

BOYS:

100 (7th) — Gabe Eck (5th) 13.77; Teo Keilwitz (14th) 14.92; Seth David (20th) 16.02; Ethan Kedrowski (25th) 17.79

100 (8th) — Kenny Johnson (11th) 14.19; Luke Merriman (15th) 14.90

200 (8th) — Jacob Smith (6th) 27.50; Lawrence Boado (12th) 28.23

400 (8th) — Smith (4th) 1:00.88; Noah Allison (11th) 1:04.47; Jesse Hester (15th) 1:08.26

1600 (7th) *FINAL* — Chris Battaglia (3rd) 5:34.45

1600 (8th) *FINAL* — Boado (6th) 5:34.91; Allison (8th) 5:37.30

110 Hurdles (7th) — Ty Eck (5th) 20.57

110 Hurdles (8th) — Hester (3rd) 19.05; Cameron Toomey-Stout (5th) 19.10; Allison (9th) 20.26

Discus (7th) *FINAL* — Keilwitz (16th) 54-10; Dawson Sorrows (25th) 40-07

Discus (8th) *FINAL* — Luke Carlson (17th) 68-02

Long Jump (7th) *FINAL* — T. Eck (4th) 15-01; G. Eck (7th) 14-05.50; Uriah Kastner (19th) 12-06.25; David (24th) 11-10

Long Jump (8th) *FINAL* — Toomey-Stout (8th) 14-07; Merriman (14th) 13-06.50; Hunter Downes (21st) 12-02.50; Johnson (28th) 10-10

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Joey Lippo, future Wolf baseball star.

Joey Lippo, future Wolf baseball star.

Contributed by Joe Lippo

Although pitcher Hunter Smith only allowed a few hits Thursday, the Sedro-Woolley squad was able to exact revenge on the Oak Harbor Babe Ruth team, squeaking out a one-run victory on its home turf.

The game was very close all the way through.

In the second inning, the ‘Cats brought walked batter James Besaw home with a sac bunt by Thomas Anderson and an RBI single from Joey Lippo.

Improved pitching from the Sedro squad stranded Anderson and Lippo.

Smith sat the Sedro batters down in the second and the ‘Cats came back to the plate and managed to generate two more runs on a combination of passed balls and trickery.

On a walk to Cory Roberts, Mackenzie Nuanez (who occupied third) took a huge step towards home while Roberts rounded first at full speed.

On the ensuing toss to second base, Nuanez ran home. Both runners safe.

That would be the end of the scoring for the ‘Cats, and the Sedro squad posted two more in the fifth, making the score 4-3, and that is how the game ended as both pitchers put on a strikeout clinic in the closing innings.

Only 10 hits were spread across both teams in the pitcher’s duel, with Smith (who was robbed, again, of a base hit by a diving Sedro Wolley shortstop) pitching a complete game allowing only six hits.

“We had some mental errors on the base paths and the lack of hitting didn’t help, either,” said Oak Harboe manager Pete Richter. “Something to work on next practice.”

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