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Ivy Rudat zips through the woods. (Jackie Saia photos)

They are Wolves, hear them roar.

The Coupeville Middle School girls cross country team defended its home turf Wednesday, winning a seven-team meet at Fort Casey State Park.

Elizabeth Bitting’s pack of gung-ho runners held off traditional powerhouses King’s and South Whidbey to claim the team title, placing three harriers in the top 10.

The Wolf boys finished third, with King’s on top of the leaderboard.

Granite Falls, Northshore Christian Academy, Sultan, and Lakewood rounded out the field, with 161 runners hitting the finish line during the 1.5-mile race.

Wednesday’s rumble in the woods was a preview of the season finale, as the same seven teams travel to South Whidbey Tuesday, Oct. 18 for the Cascade League Championships.

Coupeville’s runners wore pink wrist bands to show their support for the fight against breast cancer, and the meet was the first home one for the revived Wolf cross country program.

With Athletic Director Willie Smith off on an annual hunting trip, Bitting got huge help from Aimee Bishop, Barbi Ford, and Bob Martin, among many, and the event was a major success.

“It finally happened!” Bitting said. “The afternoon was beautiful! The sun was out, there was a slight breeze, and the crowds came out to cheer on all runners.

“Each and every one of our runners set a PR for our home course,” she added.

“I am so proud of each and every one of them!!!”

 

Kenneth Jacobsen was the fastest Wolf boy Wednesday afternoon.

 

Wednesday’s results:

 

GIRLS:

Lydia Price (6th) 10:19
Olivia Hall (8th) 10:40
Mikayla Wagner (9th) 10:41
Laken Simpson (12th) 11:16
Tirsit Cannon (14th) 11:31
Ivy Rudat (19th) 11:47
Marin Winger (22nd) 11:55
Allie Powers (25th) 12:27
Sage Stavros (26th) 12:33
Devon Wyman (49th) 14:06
Hailey Goldman (51st) 14:13
Arianna Cunningham (53rd) 14:35
Mary Western (54th) 14:37
Maci Wofford (60th) 15:55
Camilla Wolfe (64th) 17:06
Elizabeth Marshall (65th) 17:08
Emma McFadden (67th) 17:28
Alexandra Lo (73rd) 20:42
Savannah Niewald (74th) 20:56

 

BOYS:

Kenneth Jacobsen (11th) 9:38
Beckett Green (14th) 9:49
Axel Marshall (20th) 10:06
Roger Merino-Martinez (21st) 10:26
Nathan Niewald (24th) 10:36
Cyrus Sparacio (32nd) 10:57
Max Ohme (38th) 11:17
Johnathan Jacobsen (62nd) 13:07
Dylan Robinett (64th) 13:14
Isaiah Allen (70th) 13:45
Zach Blitch (73rd) 13:53
Andre Volanos-Gerber (78th) 15:30
Avery Eelkema (80th) 15:51

Zach Blitch guns for the finish line.

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Haylee Armstrong is just here to deliver spikes and take names. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

First, a word about Olivia Martin and Isabella Bowder.

The current crop of Coupeville Middle School volleyball players, all 15 or so, approach the sport with a mixture of talent and hustle.

Wolf coaches Raven Vick and Cris Matochi have taught them well, and the confidence level grows with each match.

But, as I said, first a word about Martin and Bowder, who are in the sixth and eighth grade, respectively.

The duo may not be giants, but they have hearts which would indicate otherwise.

Watching Martin and Bowder over the course of Coupeville’s first three matches — including Monday’s tilt with visiting King’s — you can’t help but be impressed with how they approach every bit of time they get on the hardwood.

With no disrespect meant to the other Wolves, who are a scrappy, joyous pack, this duo is a titanic tandem.

Martin and Bowder sprint after every last incoming ball — even the ones destined to land far away — fling themselves across the floor, loudly cheer for their teammates, and get well-deserved vocal support back.

Monday, Martin, swinging from the bottom of her shoes to the top of her head, launched her first successful serves against a rival team, the ball zinging across the net and earning points for the Wolves.

Then she did the dance of her people, her face a portrait of pure joy.

It was the same with Bowder, springing across the floor in big bounds, fists pumping after each play.

Izzy and Olivia are such great energy givers,” Vick said, a comment seconded by Matochi.

CMS may have other players who are further along in their volleyball development, but Martin and Bowder are the heart and soul of the program.

It’s players like them — young women who approach every match, every practice, every new skill, with gritty determination and unbounded joy — who make a program a true success.

So they, and their teammates deserve a shout-out from fans, and a “well-done” from their coaches, while knowing their parents go to bed proud of them each night.

With that said, on to Monday’s matches.

Willow Leedy-Bonifas (11) and Olivia Martin (4) await the serve. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

Varsity:

The mystique has cracked.

King’s still has the private school powerhouse brand-name on the jersey, but the Wolves never showed a single flicker of concern as they went toe-to-toe and shot-for-shot with the Knights.

Rallying time and again, CMS almost pulled off the upset before falling 25-23, 20-25, 15-11.

How close was it? In terms of total points, King’s edged the Wolves 60-59.

It’s the kind of thing which makes a coach want a rematch.

“We were never intimidated,” Matochi said. “Ooh, I would love to play them again.”

“We would give them a run!” Vick said, but a check of the schedule reveals just one rumble with King’s on this year’s eight-match schedule.

But, whether it’s next season on the CMS floor, or in high school, the two schools will meet again at some point, and these Wolves know they have nothing to fear.

Coupeville did start off surprisingly slow, falling behind 8-0 in the opening set without King’s doing anything all that special.

It just seemed like the Wolf varsity, now at seven players with the season debut of Myra McDonald, needed a moment or two to find its groove.

Then the spikes started landing, the serves started zipping, and things got much more interesting.

Tenley Stuurmans fired off three straight points on her serve to get CMS on the board, before Capri Anter came around to launch seven winners of her own from the stripe.

Anter’s run was aided by Haylee Armstrong slicing off kneecaps at the net, and Adeline Maynes flicking artfully placed tip winners which fell between Knight players.

Maynes went on her own torrid run at the service line, as CMS, all the way back from its early deficit, claimed its biggest lead at 21-19.

It wasn’t to be, however, as King’s scored the final three points of the set, turning a 23-22 deficit into a 25-23 win.

Coupeville had to fight from behind in the second set as well, though the biggest margin was five points, at 8-3.

Maynes was again on point with her serves, while Armstrong, smacking balls while airborne, pushed the Wolves back out in front.

From there Lexis Drake and Rhylin Price flashed their own brilliance at the stripe, with Drake whaling away on a set-busting five-point run on serve.

With Coupeville playing a third and deciding set for the third time in as many matches this season, the finale was set up to be a barnburner.

And it largely delivered, as Stuurmans lifted the Wolves to a 3-0 lead, before King’s flipped the script and grabbed control.

The final tie came at 7-7, thanks to Anter whacking a service ace off of a Knight player’s shoulder, followed by Armstrong launching a spike which landed in the final millimeter of space in the far right corner of the court.

Coupeville’s final highlight reel play pulled the Wolves back within 13-11.

Drake unleashed a booming serve, the two teams rallied, then Stuurmans, sneaking into position along the sideline, bounded into the air and redirected a tip into no-man’s land.

It wasn’t the last point of the match, maybe, but it was a perfect punctuation mark.

Alyssa McGee, seen here with bis sis Trinity, plays with great joy. (Angie McGee photo)

 

JV:

King’s showed up with both a second and third squad, so Martin, Bowder, and Co. played two matches in one day.

While the Wolves lost both bouts to the Knights, the extra floor time should pay dividends as the season progresses.

Willow Leedy-Bonifas was a rock for CMS, scoring multiple winners on well-placed shots, including one she flipped over her shoulder while her back was to the net.

Also coming up big were Emma Leavitt and Cheyanne Atteberry, who each rifled a nasty serve or two to keep the Knights leaning backwards.

Alexis Hewitt went to her knees to dig a ball off the floor, her return shot catching the net and flopping over for a Wolf point, while KeeArya Brown and Alyssa McGee chipped in with hustle and strong team spirit.

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Olivia Hall (left) and Lydia Price show off their ribbons. (Elizabeth Bitting photo)

The appetizer was a pretty big deal on its own.

The epic two-day Nike Hole in the Wall Cross Country Invitational kicked off Friday at Lakewood High School with the middle school harriers vying for titles and top times.

There were 203 runners on the course during day one, with an astonishing 30 of them coming from lil’ Coupeville.

Olivia Hall and Lydia Price earned ribbons for the Wolves, while Axel Marshall was the fastest CMS boy on the 1.7-mile course.

Coupeville’s girls finished 5th in the team standings, while the boys claimed 7th.

King’s girls and Cascade (Sedro-Woolley)’s boys earned top honors

The Wolves get right back at it next week, but on a much-smaller scale, when they host a league meet at Fort Casey Wednesday, Oct. 12.

 

Friday’s results:

 

GIRLS:

Olivia Hall (13th) 12:08.6
Lydia Price (14th) 12:09.5
Mikayla Wagner (24th) 12:55.6
Marin Winger (37th) 13:54.4
Laken Simpson (39th) 14:02.7
Ivy Rudat (41st) 14:08.5
Allie Powers (42nd) 14:24.6
Sage Stavros (46th) 14:36.7
Devon Wyman (63rd) 16:52.8
Hailey Goldman (72nd) 17:20.7
Arianna Cunningham (73rd) 17:23.8
Mary Western (74th) 17:41.1
Amelia Crowder (75th) 17:43.1
Camilla Wolfe (77th) 18:15.2
Alexandra Lo (83rd) 20:33.1
Savannah Niewald (87th) 24:01.5

 

BOYS:

Axel Marshall (34th) 11:31.0
Roger Merino-Martinez (36th) 11:37.5
Beckett Green (39th) 11:46.8
Kenneth Jacobsen (44th) 11:54.0
Nathan Niewald (61st) 12:34.3
Cyrus Sparacio (67th) 12:53.5
Ossian Merkel (71st) 13:09.7
Max Ohme (84th) 14:05.6
Avery Eelkema (88th) 14:15.7
Isaiah Allen (97th) 14:39.1
Dylan Robinett (100th) 15:15.6
Johnathan Jacobsen (104th) 16:31.5
Zach Blitch (111th) 17:48.9
Andre Volanos-Gerber (116th) 20:54.0

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Tenley Stuurmans and her CMS volleyball teammates are here to rule the gym. (Scott Stuurmans photo)

She’s a terror.

Playing her best at crunch time Wednesday, Coupeville Middle School 7th grader Tenley Stuurmans penned another triumphant chapter in her family’s long, successful sports history.

Sparked by their wild child in the #1 jersey, the Wolf varsity volleyball spikers roared from behind to gut a Sultan squad that thought it was cruising to victory.

Spoiler alert: Coupeville’s first-string, all six players, is better than the 17 Turks piled up on the opposite bench.

The Wolves, especially on this day, were feistier, grittier, and far more cold-blooded when it came time to chop off heads (metaphorically…) and let their opponents bleed out on the hardwood.

Which is why Stuurmans, Lexis Drake, Capri Anter, Rhylin Price, Adeline Maynes, and the queen of the knee-buckling slicers, one Haylee Armstrong, won 14-25, 25-18, 15-10.

Now a pristine 2-0 on the season, with back-to-back three-set thrillers in the win column, the Wolves are on the prowl and ready to square off with King’s next Monday, Oct. 10.

It’ll be the team’s third-straight home match, then CMS hits the open road for treks to Granite Falls, Northshore Christian Academy, and a rematch with Sultan.

That should be a brawl, but one the Wolves are prepared for, knowing they have the ability to yank a win out of the jaws of defeat.

Wednesday’s tilt started as a back-and-forth affair in the first set, before Sultan used a stellar run at the service stripe to stretch a 9-7 lead out to 16-7.

Coupeville fought back, with Armstrong popping off a couple service winners before sliding face-first across the floor to save the ball on a defensive stand.

But it wasn’t quite enough, and the Turks had some strut in their step as the teams went to the bench between sets.

That soon evaporated, however, as CMS fought back, and fought back hard.

Maynes impressed her large fan base with an explosive ace, which dropped suddenly, bit a chunk out of the floor, then skidded away as two Turks swung and missed.

Add in a play where Stuurmans made a sensational save, pulling the ball out of the net with her back to the other team, followed by Price elevating for the put away, and the momentum had shifted.

Drake mashed a pair of winners on her serve, before Stuurmans went on an extended tour of duty at the same stripe, rifling seven straight points to push CMS ahead 18-7.

Coupeville’s biggest lead in the middle set came at 21-9, as a Sultan player slipped just as she went to return a shot.

Her leg went one way, her shoe departed her body and went the other way, screaming “Freedom!”, and the ball ended up somewhere in the rafters.

The play actually seemed to inspire Sultan however, with the Turks going on an 8-1 run after the wayward shoe was retrieved and firmly tied back into place.

The Wolves weren’t having it, though, and the splendid six bore back down, knotting things at a set apiece after Stuurmans froze the entire gym in place on set point, angling a tip one way while all the Turks went in the other direction.

With the match on the line, and Sultan’s fans having gone dead quiet, the ref pulled veteran linesmen Katie Kiel and Nathaniel Leavitt out of the stands for quality control.

Most of their job? Signaling the ball was in, as the Wolf servers dominated in the home stretch.

Stuurmans, twirling the ball and arching an eyebrow ever so slightly, went ballistic at the stripe, racking up seven of her team’s final 15 points on her serve.

An ace down the middle of the court.

A wicked ace which slashed over the net and dove like a submarine fleeing WW2 bombers.

And just for the thrill of it, an ace off the face is the gift which stings all night long.

Maynes and Drake hit winners on their serve, as well, with Maynes also offering up a gorgeous slice return which spun away from Sultan’s defenders and staked Coupeville to a lead it wouldn’t relinquish.

The victory, and the way it was achieved, left CMS coaches Cris Matochi and Raven Vick with satisfied smiles on their faces.

“We worked a lot in practice on moving to the ball, and doing so with commitment,” Matochi said. “Do everything with a purpose and play big girl volleyball.

“I was very pleased with how we’ve improved already in this time.”

That’s something Vick agrees with.

“We’re seeing them apply the technical skills we’ve taught them,” she said. “That is very encouraging.”

 

JV stands tall:

Coupeville’s second unit got progressively stronger as the match went on, fighting for every point in a 25-16, 25-21 loss.

Now 1-1 on the season, the JV unit was as close as 14-13 in the opening set, before Sultan pulled away thanks to some underhanded, lob-heavy precision serving.

Cheyanne Atteberry paced the Wolves in the early going, netting two winners off of well-placed return shots, while Emma Leavitt, Willow Leedy-Bonifas, and KeeArya Brown all came up with big-time plays.

The second set was much like the first, though closer.

Coupeville played from behind most of the time, but never allowed Sultan to dominate, and eventually got within 21-20 late.

Leedy-Bonifas had the hot hand at the stripe this time around, picking up three points on her serve, while Isabella Bowder, Brown, and Leavitt also notched winners.

Alexis Hewitt and Olivia Martin rounded out the active roster, both seeing floor time and injecting an air of electricity with their hustle.

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Emma Leavitt was a terror at the service stripe Monday, peppering Lakewood with a series of aces. (Leann Leavitt photo)

Great coaches and great players make for great wins.

Opening a brand-new season of serves and sets Monday, the Coupeville Middle School volleyball squads swatted visiting Lakewood, rallying to knock off their big school rivals in a pair of three-set thrillers.

The match marked the return of spiker guru Cris Matochi and the coaching debut of Raven Vick, teaching the sport she loves to a new generation of girls in the same gym she once played in herself.

The 2020 Coupeville grad is now one-eighth of the way through her first season on the bench, and she likes the view.

“Overall, I think the girls played really well today,” Vick said. “It’s good experience playing against a much bigger school, and they were strong.”

Raven Vick, ready for her coaching debut. (Maria Reyes photo)

Vick’s sentiment was shared by fellow coach Matochi, especially on a day when the Wolves had 14 active players and faced Lakewood, which lists 54 spikers on its roster.

“Every one of the girls did their part for us,” he said. “They all filled their roles and had an impact. You like to see that.”

How the day played out:

 

Red Team:

Coupeville’s first six players battled back from a set down to win 21-25, 25-22, 15-10 in a barnburner.

The Wolves dug deep at the end, pulling off an 11-4 run to close the match, with Rhylin Price, Adeline Maynes, and Capri Anter coming up huge at the service stripe.

Tenley Stuurmans dropped in a dead-eye spike to kick-start the final run, with teammate Haylee Armstrong punctuating things with a ferocious winner, the ball slicing off a Lakewood kneecap or two as it skidded away from the Cougars.

The final stand brought the Wolves the W, but CMS battled with intensity all match.

The opening set featured eight ties, the final one at 21-21 after Coupeville fought back from five points down.

Armstrong and Price delivered big hits, while Lexis Drake hustled for every shot, but Lakewood managed to slip away at the end, thanks to some pinpoint serving.

The final point was agonizing, with a Lakewood serve slapping into the top of the net, then flopping over the obstacle at the last moment, dropping in for a surprise ace.

With all six Wolves on their heels, they were unable to counter the sudden reversal of fortune and could only watch in frustration as the ball limply smacked into the court.

It could have been a killer, but Coupeville’s six-pack of sluggers brushed the moment away and immediately fired right back up.

The second set was all Wolves, all the time, as Anter went on a torrid run to help spark her team to a 14-6 lead.

The CMS 8th grader blasted aces, one hitting a rival in the head, while also dropping a pair of note-perfect lob shots for winners while playing defense.

She got help from Armstrong, zinging winners, and Maynes, serving nuclear bombs which exploded, covering Lakewood hitters in shrapnel.

The Cougars were a tough team in their own right, however, and came all the way back to claim an 18-17 lead, despite losing one point when they served the volleyball directly into the ref’s crotch.

Faced with a deficit, Anter simply said, “Nope. Not today.”

Another run of points at the service stripe, with Armstrong soaring to flick a tip winner after a back-and-forth rally, and Coupeville headed back to the bench with the match knotted at a set apiece.

That set up the final frame, where the Wolves, drawing support from an enthusiastic crowd, swept the Cougars away.

 

Black Team:

Coupeville used a mix of players in the day’s second match, and again rallied from a set down, this time winning 9-25, 25-23, 15-8.

CMS 6th grader Emma Leavitt opened the match strongly, slamming a pair of aces on her first two serves, reminiscent of how older sister Jaimee once stalked the service stripe.

From there, Lakewood’s second squad, which featured a parade of under-handed servers methodically launching moonballs, got on a hot streak and ran away with the set.

Willow Leedy-Bonifas and Alexis Hewitt nailed drop-shot winners for the Wolves, with Leedy-Bonifas launching hers over her shoulder, but the Cougars were on a roll.

Which largely stopped in the second set, with Coupeville regaining control of the match at the service line.

Leavitt, Anter, Armstrong, Leedy-Bonifas, Maynes, and Stuurmans all collected points on their serves, while Isabella Bowder, Cheyanne Atteberry, Alyssa McGee, KeeArya Brown, and Olivia Martin scrambled on defense and made their coaches proud.

Plus, extra credit to Martin, who assisted the local media by matching jersey numbers up with player names pre-match.

She was the real hero, for me at least.

Trailing 2-1 in the third set, CMS grabbed the lead for good with Stuurmans twirling the ball and peppering Lakewood with aces.

Middle school rules limit servers to five points at the line, but that was enough, as Tenley staked the Wolves to a 6-2 advantage.

Lakewood fought hard, but to the horrified gasps of its fans, the Cougars were soon heading back to the bus with a two-loss day.

Leavitt drove the final stake in, closing the day with four straight aces to end the match.

Two of her service winners ripped off a chunk of the back line, earning a resounding “Yes!” from mom Leann, back in the gym, ready for another tour of duty as a volleyball mom.

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