Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Dalton Martin’

Dalton Martin (John Fisken photo)

Dalton Martin, ready to do damage with his weapon of choice. (John Fisken photo)

Dalton Martin is heading down the path Hunter Hammer blazed.

The Coupeville High School senior, who finished 5th in the discus at the 1A state track and field meet last year, signed a letter of intent Friday to Everett Community College.

Martin chose the school because it has a strong EMT program and it offered him the chance to throw on scholarship, said dad Bob.

EVCC competes in the Northwest Athletic Conference and added field events to its track team in 2011.

Hammer, a former CHS basketball and track star, was the school’s first big-time thrower.

After two years with the Trojans, he moved on to become an All-American at Trinity Lutheran.

Martin, who has played football, basketball, tennis and track during his time as a Wolf, competed in the shot put, discus and 4 x 100 as a junior.

He finished 3rd at districts in the shot put, while winning league, sub-district and district titles in the discus.

At the state meet in Cheney last spring, Martin unleashed a PR of 147 feet (nearly eight feet better than his previous best) to bring home a fifth-place medal.

Read Full Post »

The Mouse has left the house, as Wolf sophomore Lauren Rose and her teammates hit the softball diamond. (John Fisken photos)

   The Mouse has left the house, as sophomore third baseman Lauren Rose and her teammates hit the softball diamond. (John Fisken photos)

Aiden Crimmins debates whether to steal a base, or wait for his hamstrings to warm up first.

   Aiden Crimmins debates whether to steal a base, or wait for his hamstrings to warm up first.

Zane Bundy

Soccer sensation Zane Bundy, scorin’ goals and rockin’ stylish head gear.

Lauren Grove

   Mere moments ago Lauren Grove was flying around a basketball court. Now she’s taken her mad hops outdoors.

CJ Smith

CJ Smith, setting the style standard on the diamond.

softball

   South Whidbey’s loss is Coupeville’s gain, as Mikayla Elfrank brings her skill set to Wolf Nation. 

Dalton Martin

   Dalton Martin, who finished 5th at state in the discus last year, works on fine-tuning his throwing motion.

Emma Smith

  Freshman phenom Emma Smith puts her whole body and soul into launching the shot put.

The weather is fluctuating (as usual) but the enthusiasm is not being dampened.

Coupeville High School athletes officially slid into a new season Monday, with the first day of practice for spring sports.

Basketballs are put away (for the most part) and the focus is now on tennis, soccer, baseball, track and softball, with the Wolves plowing through the beginning of two weeks of prep work before they start playing games that count again.

Wandering around outside Thursday, travelin’ photo man John Fisken snapped pics of four of those sports in action for us, and we’ll try and catch up to tennis as soon as possible.

For now, marinate in your first glimpses of spring, in all its athletic glory.

Read Full Post »

Ally Roberts (John Fisken photos)

Ally Roberts always knows where the camera is. Always. (John Fisken photos)

Brenden Gilbert is ready to settle down.

Brenden Gilbert is ready to settle down.

middle school

   The 8th graders have moved in. “One day, soon, this gym is gonna be ours and they’re gonna run out of places to hang championship banners by the time we’re done!!”

pic

Boot or no boot, Luke Merriman always has skills.

Katie Kiel

   Former Wolf hoops star Katie Kiel, best nanny in the biz, hangs out with her favorite guy.

Hope

   It’s a volleyball reunion, as spikers (l to r) Payton Aparicio, Hope Lodell and Kayla Rose enjoy the view from the bleachers.

Sage

   Sage Renninger (middle), with the best reaction ever to McKenzie “Photo Bomb Queen” Bailey suddenly appearing in frame.

Ethan Spark

A selfie inside a regular photo. It’s like freakin’ Inception around here.

Dalton Martin

Dalton Martin’s stylish headgear draws an appreciative audience.

See and be seen.

For fans at Coupeville High School sports events, it works both ways.

They’re there to watch the action, watch each other, and, sometimes, be watched by the ever-rovin’ camera of John Fisken, who provides us with the pics above.

Read Full Post »

Sebastian Davis didn't quite make my Top 20, but he did star in one of the year's best photos. (John Fisken photo)

   The thrill of the goal, as Wolf booter Sebastian Davis celebrates in one of the year’s best pics. (John Fisken photos)

The fastest 4 x 200 relay team in school history

   The fastest 4 x 200 relay team in school history (and they’re pretty good at taking photos, too). L to r, Lauren Grove, Marisa Etzell, Sylvia Hurlburt and Makana Stone.

A lot happened in 2015.

Not all of it was awesome, but, for now, we’re going to ignore death, arrests and controversies and focus on the positives with a list of sports moments which will live large in the collective memory of Wolf Nation.

It’s not a definitive list, by any means (as soon as I print this, someone will bring up something big I overlooked) but it’s a good jumping-off point.

With that being said, the semi-official Coupeville Sports Top 20 Moments of 2015:

20) CHS boys’ basketball beats Concrete 66-60 Dec. 18 as four Wolves (Wiley Hesselgrave, Jordan Ford, Gabe Wynn and Hunter Smith) go for double figures.

The team’s third straight win, it lifts them to 4-3, the first time Coupeville has been over .500 in Anthony Smith’s five seasons as head coach.

19) The future is now, as CMS 8th grader Jake Mitten torches Chimacum for 28 points in a win Dec. 17. It’s the most points scored this year by any Wolf hoops player, high school or middle school.

18) Freshman Kalia Littlejohn bursts on the scene, racking up a Wolf girls’ soccer record 10 goals in her debut. Her reward? A First-Team All-Conference nod along with big sis Mia.

17) CHS junior Clay Reilly wasn’t even the punter when the season started, but once he takes over the job, he goes bonkers.

With almost 1,200 yards, he earns All-Conference honors. With one epic 70-yard boot against Port Townsend in October, he becomes a legend.

16) Still the BMOCs. Six CHS grads (Jordan Schisel, Gavin Keohane, Scott Stuurmans, Michael Vaughan, Pete Petrov and Greg White) and one young gun from Marysville (Dom Kiblinger) roll to a title at last weekend’s 8th annual Tom Roehl Roundball Classic.

It’s the fourth title in five years for the core of the squad.

15) Abraham Leyva has tallied 25 goals in two years of running the pitch for the Wolf boys’ soccer squad, including a program-record 14 this past spring.

His best day? A four goal, four assist gem against Chimacum in mid-April.

14) When freshman CHS quarterback Gabe Eck stepped on to the field for his first-ever start in the season’s third game Sept. 18, he had four completions to his name — all coming in mop-up duty.

By the time the game was over that night, he had torched host Chimacum for 403 yards and three touchdowns on 19-34 passing.

How big was that performance?

Eck’s predecessor, Joel Walstad, threw for 1,600 yards as a senior, but never topped 400 in a game. For that matter, neither did Brad Sherman, who holds the school’s career passing mark, regardless of what the record board might say.

13) Wolf sophomore Hunter Smith was a two-way terror on the gridiron, but he makes this list for hauling down seven interceptions from his defensive back position, a new school single-season record.

12) Three-sport star Aaron Curtin caps a stellar career by jumping back into tennis only a few moments after ending his final baseball season.

Fighting off private school prodigies and Eastern Washington heat, he claims an 8th place medal at the 1A tourney, the best finish by a Wolf boy in memory.

11) It was a good year overall for CHS tennis coach Ken Stange, who won league titles with both the girls’ and boys’ squads. Unlike in the past, when the school was fond of overlooking the netters, this time they will have the banners to back their boasts.

10) Makana Stone, the gold standard for CHS track athletes, won 13 races in two seasons at the middle school level. Last spring, CMS 8th grader Lindsey Roberts won 20 in ONE season.

Roberts was 18-0 when she ran the 200, 1600 and hurdles, and she and her teammates split the 4 x 100 relays they ran in, with two firsts and two seconds (both by less than a second.)

9) Saving his best heave for last, Wolf junior Dalton Martin grabs fifth-place at the state meet in the discus.

With his final throw, he beat his PR by an astonishing eight feet, setting himself up for a final run for glory (and possible college scholarships) in ’16.

8) Hailey Hammer, the young woman who never played a second of JV, garnering 12 letters across volleyball, basketball and softball, goes out on top.

Final game of the regular season, bottom of the seventh, bases juiced, two outs, Wolves down 4-2 to La Conner.

And Hammer Time gets the Hollywood ending, absolutely crushing a game-winning, walk-off three-run double on the final swing she would ever unleash on her home softball field. Goose bumps.

7) Capping a phenomenal junior campaign, Makana Stone is tabbed as 1A Olympic League MVP for girls’ basketball. The easiest vote in the history of easy votes.

6) Senior duffer Christine Fields caps her career with a sixth-place finish at state, after sweeping the league and district titles. The master of consistency, she finished in the top 15 at state all four years, breaking the top 10 three times.

5) By the time she’s done, the record will be way out of reach. The queen of the floor burn, perpetual motion machine Valen Trujillo, shatters the CHS career record for digs, helping propel her volleyball squad to the playoffs.

4) The Man exits, as the King of the Golden Quote, Willie Smith, resigns after 19 years as CHS head baseball coach. Journalists everywhere are still crying.

3) Makana Stone, Marisa Etzell, Sylvia Hurlburt and Lauren Grove shatter the school record in the 4 x 200 relay (for the 72nd time), running a 1:46.64 to claim third at the state meet.

2) A year after winning just one match, the Wolf spikers finish second in league play and not only earn a rare home playoff game, they win it, downing Seattle Christian in front of a rockin’ crowd.

Losing only two seniors, they look like long-term contenders.

1) Breaking a school-wide dry spell, the CHS girls’ basketball squad romps to a league title, hanging the first new championship banner in the gym in 13 years.

Along the way, the Wolves go 9-0 (a mark matched by the JV), winning every league game by 15+ points.

Read Full Post »

Birthday whiz kids (clockwise from left) Skyler Lawrence, Grey Rische and Dalton Martin. (John Fisken photos)

   Birthday whiz kids (clockwise from left) Skyler Lawrence, Grey Rische and Dalton Martin. (John Fisken photos)

Heroes are made in October.

That used to be a Major League Baseball tradition, at least until they stretched the season out so far that the World Series started ending in November.

But it’s a mantra that stretches across the sports world, and one which resonates here in Wolf Nation.

As we kick off a new month, we do so by taking a moment to pay tribute to three bright, shining stars who all popped into the world on Oct. 1.

Dalton Martin, Skyler Lawrence and Grey Rische share a cake day, at least one sport (track) and the awesomeness gene.

Dalton is the oldest (by a slim year) and the CHS senior has been at the forefront of Wolf athletics since the day he arrived on campus.

Football, basketball, track, tennis, he’s starred in them all, while also embracing the chance to be a photo star, which endears me to him even more.

Now sure, I may have accidentally referred to him as Dalton Engle once or twice while writing late at night, but he’s a forgiving sort, a laid-back dude off the court and an intense warrior on it.

So, basically, an exact replica of his dad, Bob, CMS football coach extraordinaire, while also capturing a lot of mom Abbie’s innate sunniness.

The two youngsters, Skyler and Grey, are CHS juniors who have both brightened up the campus with their own brand of sunniness.

Grey is a smile machine and an extremely nice guy who can still crack some backs on the basketball court, track oval, or, currently, the tennis court, where he and older brother Jared Helmstadter have become a formidable doubles duo.

Not content to rule just one world, Mr. Rische is also a madman behind an instrument, a key part of the CHS band that often rules the bleachers at Wolf home games.

And then we come to Skyler, who is the very definition of a radiant, super-friendly young woman off the court who will beat the crud out of you once the whistle sounds.

A state meet veteran as a track thrower, she is a rebounding machine during basketball season.

In four years of watching her play (two in middle school, two in high school), I have NEVER seen Skyler lose a rebound that she had a hand on.

If her fingers are starting to curl around the basketball, there’s nothing for the other team to do but cry silent tears of regret.

What’s even more impressive, and has been since the first 7th grade game I saw her in, is Skyler’s motor.

Girl does not stop, and unlike most rebounders, gets out and hauls rear down the court, often leading the play she kick-started.

Not once, or twice. Every play she’s on the floor, Miss Lawrence is deeply, deeply committed to the cause, and it is a joy to behold.

All three of our birthday whiz kids share a lot of the same traits — a love of hard work, dedication to their team through wins or losses, and a serene spirit away from the arena.

They are, as individuals and a group, the best of what Coupeville has to offer the world, and, on their mutual birthday, let’s all take a moment to applaud them for all they do, and all they are.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »