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   Coupeville’s Danny Conlisk will seek a second trip to the state cross country meet this fall, but this time he’ll be running out of his own school. (Dawnelle Conlisk photo)

“I want to see tennis shoes in front of me.”

When Coupeville High School/Middle School Athletic Director Willie Smith proposed re-launching an in-house Wolf cross country program two decades after it was shut down, he needed proof there would be a strong enough turnout to warrant the change.

“It’s easy for people to put their name on a paper and say, yeah, I might do it,” Smith added. “I wanted to know for sure we’d see those same kids when it was time to run.”

He got the assurance he was seeking, and Monday night the Coupeville School Board made it official — harriers will once again reside full-time at CHS and CMS.

In a nice twist, the motion to approve was made by the board’s student rep, junior Danny Conlisk, who should be front and center on the new Wolf team.

The track standout has traveled and trained with South Whidbey’s cross country team the past two seasons, while competing in a Coupeville uniform alongside Henry Wynn.

The duo became a trio this past fall when freshman Sam Wynn joined their treks to Langley.

Conlisk advanced to the state meet as a junior, the first Wolf harrier to do so since Tyler King won a state title in 2010.

Now, with Coupeville jumping from the Olympic League to join the new six-team North Sound Conference in the fall, the Wolves will run their own program.

Both the middle and high school track programs boast 40+ athletes on their current rosters, and Smith saw a groundswell of interest in running which hadn’t existed in previous years.

The original plan was to re-start a middle school program, adding on a high school team when those runners moved from CMS to CHS.

After penciling out the numbers for travel and coaches, however, Smith, CHS Principal Duane Baumann and Coupeville Schools Superintendent Dr. Jim Shank decided to add both programs at once.

The addition of cross country gives CHS five fall sports (it joins football, volleyball, girls soccer and boys tennis) and CMS three (volleyball, football).

Cross country has a rich history at CHS, boasting state champs in Natasha Bamberger (1985) and King, who won his title while training and traveling with Oak Harbor.

All told, harriers have put 10 plaques, covering league, district and state meet accomplishments, up on the Wall of Fame in the CHS gym.

This despite the fact cross country hasn’t had an active program for more than two decades.

Smith arrived in Coupeville from Sequim in 1994, and cross country had been brought to an end right before he accepted his first teaching/coaching job with the school.

Now, the current AD is moving forward on finalizing a schedule and will launch a hunt for coaches.

The plan is to hire two, one for the high school team and one for the middle school program, and the jobs are expected to be posted later this week.

“We’re excited about this,” Smith said. “Going to be fun.”

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   Lindsey Roberts gives a thumbs-up Saturday after breaking her own school record in the 100 hurdles. (Dawnelle Conlisk photo)

A tenth of a second here, a tenth of a second there.

As the high school track and field season plays out, the Top 10 charts ebb and flow from meet to meet.

Day to day, hour to hour, they change, most heavily right after Thursday and Saturday, when most meets are held.

By the time you finish reading this paragraph, another top time or two may have suddenly appeared seemingly out of thin air.

That’s just life on the athletic.net boards.

But, at this exact moment, 10:57 AM, Sunday, Apr. 15, here’s how Coupeville’s best currently stack up against all other 1A athletes in the state.

Girls:

100 Hurdles — Lindsey Roberts (6th) 15.82 *Same position on charts as before*

4 x 200 Relay — Ashlie Shank, Mallory Kortuem, Roberts, Maya Toomey-Stout (6th) 1:52.13 *Debut on charts*

Boys:

100 — Jacob Smith (5th) 11.32 *Up five slots*

200 — Smith (5th) 23.26 *Down two slots*

400 — Danny Conlisk (5th) 57.97 *Returns to charts*

4 x 100 — Cameron Toomey-Stout, Jean Lund-Olsen, Sean Toomey-Stout, Jacob Smith (8th) 45.45 *Down one slot*

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   Coupeville senior Jacob Smith (center) is among the fastest 1A runners in both the 100 and 200. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A trio will lead them.

As it preps for its first home meet of the season (2:45 PM Wednesday), the Coupeville High School track and field team currently has three athletes vying for the top of the leader-board.

With two meets under their belts, Wolf senior Jacob Smith and juniors Lindsey Roberts and Danny Conlisk have all posted times which place them among the top 10 performances by a 1A athlete this spring.

Smith is a two-timer, currently sitting 3rd in the 200, with a time of 23.27 seconds, and sixth in the 100 at 11.57.

Roberts is sixth in the 100 hurdles (16.17) and Conlisk is 10th in the 400 (53.53).

There are six more regular-season meets after Wednesday’s home bout, where CHS welcomes Chimacum, Port Townsend, Klahowya and Mount Vernon Christian to town.

So, plenty of time for the Wolf trio (and others) to make even more of an impact on the state-wide standings as the season develops.

Smith finished 3rd and 4th at the state meet in the 200 the past two seasons, while Conlisk was 5th in the 400 a year ago.

Roberts claimed 4th in the hurdles in 2016, and made it back to Cheney as a sophomore, but was tripped up (literally) in the finals, finishing out of the medal count in the event.

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   Danny Conlisk won the 400 Wednesday at a four-team meet in North Mason, though it took organizers several days to release the news. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Our long national nightmare is over.

Well, one of them, at least.

It took longer than normal, but results have finally surfaced from Wednesday’s four-team track meet at North Mason, and the word was good for athletes wearing the red and black of Coupeville High School.

Despite facing a pair of large 2A schools (Olympic and the meet hosts), along with 1A rival Port Townsend, the Wolves claimed second-place in the girls team standings.

Finishing with 59 points, the CHS women finished hot on the heels of Olympic (61), while North Mason (36) and PT (25) brought up the rear.

On the boys side Olympic (59) ran away with the win, followed by North Mason (53), Coupeville (30) and PT (18).

The Wolves captured nine individual wins on the day, with Lauren Bayne (high jump), Catherine Lhamon (1600), Lindsey Roberts (200), and Mallory Kortuem (400) winning varsity contests for the girls.

Ja’Tarya Hoskins also claimed a win in the 200 JV race.

On the boys side, Chris Battaglia (javelin), Danny Conlisk (400), Ryan Labrador (shot put) and Jacob Smith (200) climbed to the top of the varsity podium.

Complete CHS results (all events varsity unless indicated otherwise):

GIRLS:

100 — Maya Toomey-Stout (4th) 13.70; Mallory Kortuem (5th) 13.70

200 — Lindsey Roberts (1st) 28.26 *PR*; M. Toomey-Stout (2nd) 28.34; Kortuem (3rd) 28.93 *PR*

200 (JV) — Ja’Tarya Hoskins (1st) 30.64 *PR*; Ashlie Shank (2nd) 30.72; Zoe Trujillo (4th) 31.72; Lauren Bayne (5th) 32.06 *PR*; Mckenzie Meyer (6th) 32.13 *PR*

400 — Kortuem (1st) 1:05.82; Shank (3rd) 1:10.17 *PR*; Natalie Hollrigel (5th) 1:13.25; Hoskins (6th) 1:18.21 *PR*

800 — Hollrigel (4th) 3:01.67 *PR*

1600 — Catherine Lhamon (1st) 6:30.86; Lucy Sandahl (2nd) 6:32.12

3200 — Lhamon (3rd) 13:33.92 *PR*; Sandahl (4th) 13:55.02

100 Hurdles — Roberts (2nd) 16.29; Hoskins (4th) 19.59 *PR*

4 x 400 Relay — Hollrigel, Shank, Roberts, M. Toomey-Stout (2nd) 4:46.22

Shot put — Emma Smith (2nd) 29-00.75; Kylie Chernikoff (5th) 25-01.00 *PR*

Discus — Allison Wenzel (3rd) 79-07; E. Smith (4th) 72-08.50; Hannah Davidson (6th) 68-03.50; Chernikoff (10th) 59-07.50; Raven Vick (11th) 54-02 *PR*; Abby Parker (12th) 51-02.50

Javelin — Bayne (3rd) 97-09; Wenzel (4th) 97-00; Davidson (6th) 82-06; Parker (8th) 78-01; Vick (10th) 74-11; Trujillo (11th) 72-07

High Jump — Bayne (1st) 4-06; Cassidy Moody (2nd) 4-04

Pole Vault — Meyer (3rd) 5-06

Long Jump — Roberts (2nd) 15-00.50

BOYS:

100 — Jean Lund-Olsen (6th) 12.08; Cameron Toomey-Stout (8th) 12.22 *PR*; Sean Toomey-Stout (10th) 12.38 *PR*

100 (JV) — Kyle Burnett (10th) 13.14 *PR*; Ethan Clavette (20th) 14.06 *PR*; Chris Ruck (22nd) 14.17

200 — Jacob Smith (1st) 23.27; C. Toomey-Stout (7th) 25.72 *PR*; Luke Carlson (8th) 26.48 *PR*

200 (JV) — Burnett (7th) 26.80; Thane Peterson (9th) 27.84; Clavette (10th) 29.51

400 — Danny Conlisk (1st) 53.53

800 — Conlisk (3rd) 2:15.27

110 Hurdles — Jakobi Baumann (6th) 21.59 *PR*

300 Hurdles — Baumann (6th) 50.20 *PR*

4 x 400 Relay — Conlisk, C. Toomey-Stout, J. Lund-Olsen, J. Smith (2nd) 3:52.16

Shot Put — Ryan Labrador (1st) 41-03 *PR*; Chris Battaglia (5th) 34-08.75; Keahi Sorrows (6th) 33-08.50

Discus — Sorrows (5th) 88-00.50; Battaglia (6th) 87-11; Peterson (8th) 86-05; Labrador (10th) 81-07.50; Clavette (22nd) 44-11.50

Javelin — Battaglia (1st) 131-01 *PR*; Carlson (6th) 111-01 *PR*

Pole Vault — Burnett (2nd) 8-00 *PR*

Long Jump — Lund-Olsen (3rd) 18-09.75; C. Toomey-Stout (5th) 18-00

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   Coupeville junior Danny Conlisk (left) hangs out with Wolf legend Kyle King. (Dawnelle Conlisk photo)

It was the “home meet” before the home meet.

While Coupeville High School will host a real, honest-to-goodness track meet at its facility Mar. 28, the Wolves tested out timing equipment and such Friday during a practice meet.

While most of the races featured CHS athletes competing against each other, there was one ringer in the bunch.

Former Wolf supernova Kyle King, a man who won five state track and field titles during his heyday, was there to help out dad Randy, the CHS coach.

The younger King, who went on to run at Eastern Washington University and the University of Oklahoma after his high school days, went toe-to-toe with current Wolves like Danny Conlisk, passing on knowledge and encourgement.

Then he went out and beat them in a race, just to make sure they still knew who the Alpha Wolf was.

Having a rare opportunity to work with one of the most accomplished athletes in school history was a major score for the current generation of track stars.

“So thankful,” said Wolf mom Dawnelle Conlisk. “Danny walked away with priceless knowledge.”

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