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No raining on their parade. (Amber Wyman photos)

“Muddy trails and fishy smells, but no rain in Sultan! We call that a success!”

Having survived its final regular season meet Wednesday, the Coupeville Middle School cross country team headed back home, accompanied by a happy coach in Amber Wyman.

The Wolves ran strongly at the seven-team meet at Sultan’s Osprey Park, with the girls claiming 2nd place and the CMS boys earning 4th place.

South Whidbey swept both team titles.

Reed Atwood of South Whidbey and Isaac Girma of King’s won individual titles as the assembled runners navigated the 1.7-mile course.

The end of the season approaches for the Wolf harriers, with just one event left on the schedule.

That’s the Cascade League Championships, which go down Wednesday, Oct. 18 in Langley.

Coupeville’s male runners mentally prepare for the adventure ahead.

 

Wednesday results:

 

GIRLS:

Mikayla Wagner (7th) 12:47.40
Lillian Ketterling (8th) 13:00.94
Laken Simpson (11th) 13:21.89
Allie Powers 
(12th) 13:23.40
Marin Winger
(28th) 14:46.84
Anna Powers (29th) 14:49.12
Hazel Goldman (31st) 14:58.63
Claire Lachnit
(51st) 16:14.03
Mary Western
(58th) 16:53.54
Elizabeth Marshall
(60th) 17:29.48
Devon Wyman
(61st) 17:38.11
Ava Lucero (63rd) 17:49.22
Hailey Goldman (68th) 18:35.43

 

BOYS:

Beckett Green (16th) 12:00.10
Henry Purdue (20th) 12:34.84
Edmund Kunz (25th) 12:42.15
Isaiah Allen (28th) 12:59.39
Ossian Merkel (41st) 13:40.47
River Simpson (45th) 13:48.32
Archer Schwarz (46th) 13:48.75
Johnathan Jacobsen (50th) 14:27.02
Avery Eelkema (56th) 15:51.32

Making the most out of ferry life.

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CMS 8th grader Tenley Stuurmans is on her way to rock your world with knee-quaking spikes. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sweet revenge and big growth.

Monday was a rock-solid day for the Coupeville Middle School volleyball program, as it defended its home gym, going toe-to-toe with always-tough Sultan.

How the day played out:

 

Varsity:

Coupeville’s top squad garnered payback for a season-opening loss to the Turks, thrashing them in straight sets this time around.

The Wolves came out on top 25-19, 25-22, 15-8, bringing a smile to coach Cris Matochi’s face, even on a day when power-mad refs tried to slow his own personal roll.

“The varsity team had the best match so far this season,” Matochi said. “After a tough loss during the first game of the season, the girls decided to bring it all to the floor today.

“We made a statement to Sultan today and we showed that we were there to take care of business.”

Coupeville’s goals were to be “calm, focused and form-oriented,” followed up by adapting quickly and maintaining chemistry when the lineup was altered later in the match.

Give the Wolves three thumbs up.

“The girls did an incredible job being able to stay aggressive while being in control throughout the entire match,” Matochi said.

“What worked really well for us today, was the team being able to recover really quickly, while keeping the ball in play.”

Amidst the spikes and sets, Matochi, among the most exuberant of Wolf coaches, was dinged by the refs, handed a yellow card for “being too close to the court.”

In a CMS gym with very narrow sidelines…

The coach and his players shrugged it right off, however, and went back to the business in hand.

“That is the Brazilian in me,” Matochi said with a chuckle.

“I grew up playing volleyball with my coaches right on my ear and I find it quite impossible to sit and not be right there, close to them during the battle.

“What was nice, is that my players did not let it affect the game. They laughed it off, keep their heads up and used it as momentum for the match.”

At this point, Matochi is used to American middle school refs frequently acting like 100-year-old nuns wielding rulers.

“I just don’t understand why they are watching me like a hawk, and not the match, but I know that they are just doing their job,” he said.

“I don’t think I ever had a season without a yellow card so I will not let this one hurt my feelings,” Matochi added with another laugh.

“We Brazilians are passionate people … sometimes too passionate!”

When the refs let the players actually, you know, play, the Wolves were on point.

“I did a lot of substitutions today and I was so proud to see the players that are usually in the starting lineup leading and helping all players that were coming in,” Matochi said.

“They had an incredible chemistry throughout the entire match and that really made a difference.”

Five matches into an eight-match season, Coupeville’s varsity players, many of whom will move up to high school volleyball next fall, are showing great growth.

“We are at a point in the season where our game is changing and evolving and in order to keep up performing well, the players need to keep adapting and improving,” Matochi said.

“The game is getting faster, and the players are getting stronger, so it is really nice to see our hard work paying off.”

 

JV – A:

A nailbiter until the end, with Coupeville falling just short.

Sultan escaped with a 25-21, 17-25, 15-13 “victory,” though the Wolves actually won more points at 59-57.

“We were so close!” Matochi said. “Even though the game did not end up how we wanted, it was still such a great game and the players played really well.”

First-year coach Kristina Hooks brings passion and excitement to her job. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“Coach Kristina (Hooks) has been working so hard with the JV teams and the players improvement has been so noticeable,” Matochi added.

“We saw some really nice plays today and the players are moving so much better and developing their skills so nicely. It is a jog, not a sprint.”

 

JV – B:

It’s the age-old quandary for middle school volleyball coaches – short-term success or long-term skill-building?

While a lot of teams like Sultan are content to rack up points now by using underhand serves, Coupeville’s coaches prefer their players learn how to compete at the next level.

That means having the young Wolves develop overhand serves, making the transition easier as they climb the rungs in the program.

Monday, the young CMS spikers may have lost the match, but they continued to prepare themselves for next year, and the years after that.

“The team had a great energy on the court,” Matochi said. “We are always focusing on the big picture, of where they need to be when they go to play for their high school team.

“No good deed goes unpunished because when we play other teams where the kids do not know how to serve overhand, the coaches had taught the players to serve underhand, so they get a lot of points on us.

“However, it is a short-term fix because if the players do not learn the proper form at young age, it can really come back to haunt them when they play at a higher level.”

While Monday’s scoreboard might not have reflected it, the steady growth shown by the spikers bodes well for the future – both as individual players, and as members of the Wolf program.

“The most important thing is to remember that a lot of these kids are playing volleyball for the first time,” Matochi said.

“So, although winning is nice, our focus is to learn volleyball properly and develop their skills while having a good experience with volleyball.”

 

Up next:

Back-to-back Island rivalry matches with South Whidbey.

The Wolves travel to Langley Oct. 11, then return home Oct. 17 for their final matches in their own gym.

After that comes the season finale Oct. 23 at Lakewood.

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Laken Simpson guns for the finish line in an early-season meet. (Wendy Wasik photo)

Big meet, big results.

Running at the Nike Hole in the Wall Cross Country Invitational in Arlington Friday, Coupeville Middle School athletes made their presence felt.

The Wolf girls finished 5th out of 12 teams, while their male counterparts claimed 9th in a field of 16 squads.

McMurray Middle School, from Vashon Island, earned both team titles.

The race, which is followed Saturday by a high school competition, sent 256 runners scampering across a 1.7-mile course.

“We had some great showings in a big group of runners!” said CMS coach Amber Wyman.

“Coupeville did a great job with some big schools! I am so proud of them!”

The Wolves get right back at it next week, traveling to Sultan Wednesday, Oct. 11 for a seven-team meet.

After that, Coupeville wraps its season with an appearance at the Cascade League Championships, which goes down in Langley Oct. 18.

The Wolf girls plot their strategy. (Photo courtesy Amber Wyman)

 

Friday results:

 

GIRLS:

Mikayla Wagner (14th) 12:22.0
Lillian Ketterling (19th) 12:54.0
Laken Simpson (26th) 13:06.9
Allie Powers 
(28th) 13:09.6
Anna Powers 
(37th) 13:50.2
Hazel Goldman (44th) 14:11.2
Mary Western
(82nd) 16:37.0
Claire Lachnit
(83rd) 16:38.3
Devon Wyman
(86th) 16:56.7
Elizabeth Marshall
(94th) 17:41.0
Ava Lucero (97th) 17:42.4
Amelia Crowder (104th) 18:17.9
Hailey Goldman (107th) 19:09.6

 

BOYS:

Beckett Green (44th) 11:22.2
Isaiah Allen (49th) 11:46.4
Henry Purdue (52nd) 11:51.4
Cyrus Sparacio (67th) 12:15.1
Archer Schwarz (72nd) 12:21.7
Ossian Merkel (99th) 13:38.6
Edmund Kunz (104th) 13:53.2
River Simpson (105th) 13:54.2
Johnathan Jacobsen (106th) 13:56.8
Avery Eelkema (108th) 14:09.7
Christopher Zenz (111th) 14:48.9

Sunny day, talented runners. (Photo courtesy Amber Wyman)

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Kristina Hooks and other Coupeville sports leaders are being honored on National Coaches Day. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

All across the USA, sports leaders are being honored today.

It’s National Coaches Day, continuing a tradition began in 1972.

President Richard Nixon, he of the infamous helicopter ride into oblivion, can count the creation of the event as one of his wins.

Tricky Dick believed “a coach can help build that moral fiber on which our future as a Nation depends.”

Therefore, it was “appropriate that our Nation join in according them the recognition and honor which they so richly deserve, for they represent the finest elements in the American character.”

The pics above and below capture a small sub-section of the men and women currently living up to those words while directing Coupeville teams.

Bobby Carr

Jennifer Morrell

Elizabeth Bitting

Cris Matochi

John Lo and Amber Wyman

Ashley Menges

Cory Whitmore

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Volleyball guru Cris Matochi keeps a watchful eye on his 8th grade spikers. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There was a middle-of-the-week feel to things.

Head to the Coupeville Middle School gym for Wednesday’s volleyball match, and you were met with a variety of issues.

The bleachers were still packed away.

A new ref, who later had to consult the rules book more than once, didn’t like the way the net was hanging, and insisted on several adjustments.

And Coupeville’s opponent, Northshore Christian Academy? Nowhere to be seen, presumably lost in traffic during its commute from Everett.

But things have a way of working out, and, eventually, everything was properly unfurled and tightened up, and the private school spikers arrived in the lil’ gym on the prairie.

After all that, fans got two fairly exciting tilts.

While Coupeville lost both the JV and varsity matches, the prime-time bout wasn’t decided until the final moments, while the second squad showed great hustle and grit.

How the day played out:

 

JV:

Coupeville normally has two JV squads, but Northshore only has one, so several Wolves became enthusiastic fans in the stands.

The young women on the floor put up a solid fight for coach Kristina Hooks, fighting valiantly in a 25-12, 25-6, 15-7 loss.

CMS 7th graders Brooklyn Pope and Kennedy O’Neill both had strong runs at the service line, while Olivia Martin wins an unofficial “most spirit of the day” award.

The younger sister of former Wolf volleyball ace Emma Mathusek — who announced her engagement on Instagram earlier in the day — Martin vibrated with excitement every second she was on the floor.

Rocking back and forth before firing off a successful serve, or yelping “We’re having fun!” she remains a delight — the sort of indispensable team-first player every program needs.

Coupeville fell behind early in set one, but rallied, cutting the margin to 14-12 at one point.

Viktoria Grieves bumped a winner into open space, while Zoe Winstead and Pope both cracked off well-hit serves to keep the Wolves close.

Northshore ultimately pulled away, however, reeling off the final 11 points of the set, riding its own impressive service game.

Set two was rough for quite a while, with the Wolves falling behind 15-1 before O’Neill stopped the skid.

With parents Sean and Ashley watching from the front row, the lethal lass pounded out four straight winners on her serve, with two missiles skimming the top of the net, then diving hard for unhittable aces.

While CMS was unable to keep the momentum going, O’Neill’s fiery display bodes well for the future of her, and the Wolves.

Set three was for practice, with Northshore already having clinched the victory, but Coupeville put up a strong fight.

Pope, O’Neill, and Martin all peppered the visitors with their serves, with Pope zinging one beautifully nasty offering.

 

Varsity:

Dead even through two sets, with Coupeville taking the opening frame 25-23, before Northshore matched them by the same score the next time on the floor.

That sent the match to a third and deciding set, one in which the Wolves led at 2-0 and 3-2 after Adeline Maynes led off with a couple crisp service winners.

But it wasn’t to be, as Northshore used a 12-2 run to bust things open.

The Wolves still fought off two match points, with Tenley Stuurmans following up a tip winner with an ace at the service stripe.

The deficit was too large however, and the visitors held on to triumph 15-7, heading back to the bus with a collective skip to their steps.

That capped a heavyweight fight, as the two teams stood in the middle of the court and exchanged knockout punches all afternoon.

The opening set featured eight ties, with the final one at 21-21.

Willow Leedy-Bonifas provided the final burst of energy to shove the Wolves over the finish line, taking advantage of the ref overturning her own call and putting the ball back in the hands of CMS.

Winners from Stuurmans, Ari Cunningham, and Rhylin Price got Coupeville into position to claim the set, with Maynes slamming the door shut on a play where she flicked the ball over her head, letting it splash down into a small open space between defenders.

That set off an on-court celebration … which might have been a bit premature.

Coupeville actually led for much of the second set, before Northshore surged back to make it a nailbiter.

The Wolves played with wild abandon, such as on plays where Maynes lost her shoe, kicked it away, and still found a way to spark her team to winning a tense back-and-forth rally.

After being up by as many as four points thanks to a hail of winners springing from the electric fingers of Stuurmans, Coupeville lost the lead, however.

There were 10 ties down the stretch, the last at 22-22, but the Wolves just missed on several smashes which almost caught the back line.

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