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   Coupeville Middle School track coach Elizabeth Bitting shares results with some of her athletes. (Deb Smith photos)

Ben Smith waits for his moment to shine.

The weather in Port Angeles was a constantly changing affair.

A new season begins.

Packing 20 or so athletes onto the bus, the Coupeville Middle School track and field squad headed to Port Angeles Wednesday, where it clashed in a three-team meet.

While there, the Wolves faced one team (Forks) comparable in size and one (host Stevens) which had 140+ athletes.

And yes, that is supposed to say 140 and not just 40…

While the Wolves had no shot at bringing home team titles in those kind of conditions, they did battle for individual glory, with Jake Mitten (High Jump) and Ja’Kenya Hoskins (60-yard dash) winning their events.

“We had some standout performances,” said CMS coach Elizabeth Bitting. “We were able to get some places.

“We had rain, wind, sun, a little bit of it all.”

Now, as you gaze upon the following results, give me a little leeway, since A) I’m going off of handwritten results and a couple of numbers were tricky to decipher and B) not a single bit of this is appearing in the Whidbey News-Times.

So, here we go, and let’s see how close I got to reality.

Girls (8th grade):

800 — Catherine Lhamon 3:36.20

1600 — Lhamon 6:31.00

High Jump — Emily Fiedler 4-00

Turbo — Fiedler 62-09; Lhamon 43-09

Girls (7th grade):

60 — Ja’Kenya Hoskins 8.75

100 — Kiara Contreras 16.23; Bella Velasco 16.25; Angelina Gebhard 17.07

200 — Hoskins 20.14

800 — Alana Mihill 2:37.00

4 x 100 Relay — Gebhard, Ella Colwell, Noelle Daigneault, Velasco 1:07.52

4 x 200 Relay — Hoskins, Contreras, Gebhard, Velasco 2:13.03

Shot put — Daigneault 20-12.50

Discus — Colwell 50-04

High Jump — Hoskins 3-08

Long Jump — Gebhard 12-00; Contreras 10-10.50; Colwell 7-10

Turbo — Mihill 35-11

Boys (8th grade):

60 — Ben Smith 9.21

100 — Jake Mitten 13.14, Smith 15.02, James Mayne 16.06; Alex Jimenez 16.91; Trystan Ford 17.64

200 — Mitten 23.30

200 Hurdles — Smith 35.99

Shot Put — Ford 20-05; Mayne 16-07.50; Jimenez 14-05.50

Discus — Ford 56-04; Jimenez 50-07.50

High Jump — Mitten 4-08

Turbo — Smith 72-07; Ford 58-08; Jimenez 46-09

Boys (7th grade):

60 — Zach Murtha 9.36

100 — Aiden Burdge 13.95; Murtha 14.98; Logan Martin 15.26; Gabe Shaw 16.07

1600 — Connor Barton 5:56.30; Murtha 6:20.00

200 Hurdles — Barton 34.40

4 x 100 Relay — Burdge, Shaw, Barton, Murtha 1:00.50

Shot Put — Martin 23-11

Discus — Martin 85-05

Long Jump — Barton 14-00; Burdge 12-04

Turbo — Martin 97-00; Shaw 53-02

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Connor Barton, here playing defense in an earlier game, was part of a 7th grade squad that beat four of five league foes this season. (John Fisken photos)

   Connor Barton (20), here playing defense, was part of a 7th grade squad that beat four of five league foes this season. (John Fisken photos)

Aiden Burdge

Aiden Burdge was a scrappy ball-hawk whenever on the floor.

Daniel Olson

Daniel Olson fights for two.

Jake Mitten

Jake Mitten flies the friendly skies.

They were done, then they weren’t done after all, and now they’re really done.

The Coupeville Middle School boys basketball schedule took a series of twists and turns at the end of the season, but it all worked out in the end, with the Wolves getting a 10th game Monday in Port Townsend.

The CMS 7th graders took advantage, drilling Blue Heron 50-34, clinching a winning season at 6-4. The younger Wolves beat four of five teams in their league this season.

Playing with a much-thinner roster (they tipped off Monday with six players and finished with three, thanks to foul trouble) the CMS 8th graders stayed close for a half, but fell 50-35.

The older group finished the season 2-8.

Monday’s 7th grade game was decided in the third quarter, when the Wolves savaged their hosts 18-5.

Clinging to a 20-17 lead coming out of the halftime break, Coupeville immediately jumped on its foes, with balanced scoring from Xavier Murdy (six in the quarter), Hawthorne Wolfe (5) and Caleb Meyer (5).

Wolfe led the attack all night, finishing with a game-high 16, while Murdy tallied a season-best 14 and Meyer pounded home nine.

Logan Martin banked in six, Connor Barton tickled the twines for five and Tony Garcia, Aiden Burdge, Logan Wertz, Jonathan Carroll and Cody Roberts all saw floor time.

The 8th graders stayed within 20-14 in the first half, but the third quarter killed their hopes. Outscored 18-11, they faded down the stretch as, one by one, they lost bodies.

Jake Mitten closed out his middle school career with 14, while Daniel Olson (9), Sage Downes (7) and Dakota Eck (5) also scored.

Ben Smith and Alex Jimenez will join that foursome in making the jump to high school hoops next year.

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Sage Downes (John Fisken photo)

   Sage Downes pumped in 13 Thursday, as the CMS 8th graders rolled to a huge win. (John Fisken photo)

Two gyms, two teams in perfect harmony.

Heading into the holiday break on a huge high, the Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball squads shellacked visiting Chimacum Thursday in games where teamwork was the key word of the day.

The 7th grade Wolves, getting buckets from all 11 players who saw action, strolled to a 55-28 win, while the 8th graders, powered by a season-high 31 from Jake Mitten, crushed the Cowboys 57-29.

The victory was the first of the season for the older CMS team (now 1-4), while the young guns improved to 3-2 and remain a spotless 3-0 in games played in their own gym.

Coupeville won’t return to action until Jan. 5, taking a full three-week sabbatical from games at the halfway point of its 10-game season.

The CMS 7th graders were missing top scorer Caleb Meyer, on a family trip to New Zealand, but everyone (and I mean EVERYONE) stepped up to plug the holes.

The Wolves came out aggressive, flustering the Cowboy ball-handlers behind Connor “Fastest Arms in the West” Barton, repeatedly making off with steals that they turned into breakaway buckets.

In fact, the only thing which kept the score halfway close (for a bit, at least) was CMS got a little too excited and slapped a string of running lay-ins off the glass too hard.

If the Wolves had found their groove just a hair earlier, the first quarter lead wouldn’t have been a modest 11-6.

Barton spiked the game’s opening bucket in 1.2 seconds, sliding through a pair of Cowboys to snatch the opening tip.

Once the orb was on his fingertips, he jammed the gas pedal through the floor, shot to the hoop and slapped home a wicked bank-shot that buckled the Chimacum coach’s knees.

The Cowboy head man didn’t have much better luck after that, as Barton and Hawthorne Wolfe were relentless on D, picking pockets and feeding their teammates for breakaway buckets.

The few times Chimacum was able to scramble back and set up on defense, the Wolves used their tall trees (Logan Martin, Xavier Murdy and Cody Roberts) to score inside.

Roberts tossed in a soft hook in the paint that brought back memories of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (at least to fans older than Roberts), while Martin, channeling the advice dad Bob gave him pre-game, went hard at the hoop on a consistent basis.

His best bucket came midway through the second.

Grady Rickner stripped the ball, spun, fired ahead to rampaging ball o’ fire Aiden Burdge, then pumped his fist in agreement as Burdge dropped a picture-perfect pass into Martin’s hands for a running lay-up.

Murdy and Rickner controlled the third — slender assassin Murdy channeling prime-of-his-career Dennis Rodman on the boards, while his teammate slashed to the hoop for six of his team-high 10.

Chimacum had no quit, hitting a truly spectacular (and pretty dang lucky) three-ball from the parking lot to kick off the fourth, but Coupeville never bent.

With a loose ball bouncing into the back court, Burdge sent older sister Kylie into (restrained) hysterics, winning a 1-on-1 race to the orb.

Grabbing it with one hand, while on the move, he shifted the ball to his other hand in the time it took him to take one extra-large hop, and knocked the runner down, making his siblings’ trip home from college an extra-special one.

Everything was clicking in the game’s final minutes, with Daniel Barajas operating the point while working the ball like a yo-yo and the Wolves continuing to set up almost every bucket with a well-placed pass.

With 10 of his 11 active players in the scoring column, CHS coach Randy King put his arm around Jonathan Carroll while the two stood along the sideline.

Looking down at the young gunner, with the eyes that had lit a fire under so many Wolves in the past 25+ years blazing (at a relatively soft temperature) King nodded his head.

“Go get me a bucket, son,” is what I’m imagining he said.

In reality, the gym was too loud to pick up his words, but the intent was undeniable.

Boom.

Barajas whipped a pass to Carroll, who spun, and promptly melted the minds of all gathered by not only hitting the basket, but knocking down a gorgeous bank-shot from well outside his normal range.

The gym went bonkers, Carroll elevated in the air like older brother Mitchell doing the high jump and King softly arched his eyebrows and nodded — which for him is tantamount to a screaming fit of hysterics.

By the time scorekeeper-to-the-stars McKenzie Bailey was done tallying up all the buckets, Rickner finished as high man with 10.

Hot on his heels was Barton (9), Martin (8), Murdy (6), Wolfe (4), Burdge (4), Barajas (4) and Gabe Shaw (4).

Roberts, Logan Wertz and Carroll rounded out the Wolf attack with a bucket apiece.

Mitten can’t be stopped:

Playing at the same time in the big gym, the 8th graders pounded the ball inside to their big weapon, and the nephew of former CHS hoops legend Jason McFadyen responded with a vengeance.

Hitting from all angles, Mitten scorched the twine for 13 in the first minutes, as the Wolves roared out to a 17-5 margin at the first break.

Coupeville didn’t let up, outscoring the Cowboys 30-8 across the second and third quarter, decisively plowing their foes, who boasted a bench twice the size of CMS.

Mitten’s 31 were the most scored by any Wolf this season, middle or high school, boy or girl, while Sage Downes swished 13 to back him up.

Daniel Olson banked home five, Alex Jimenez knocked in three, Ben Smith and Dakota Eck each swooped in for a bucket and Tian Yu swished a free throw for his first point of the season.

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