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Ayden Wyman is rapidly climbing the CHS soccer career scoring chart. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Who’s in the mood to shatter some milestones?

Fall sports get going in eight days, with Coupeville High School football kicking off practice Aug. 16, followed by volleyball, soccer, and cross country starting Aug. 21.

The first game on the schedule is a home football contest with Klahowya, set for Sept. 1, and then we’re rolling strong for the next several months.

As we look ahead, here’s what could happen in September and October:

 

Cross Country:

Coupeville sent its entire girls’ team, plus Mitchell Hall and Carson Field to state last season.

From that group of eight, Erica McGrath, Noelle Western, Reagan Callahan, and Field are eligible to return, with eyes set on joining Wolf legends Natasha Bamberger (1985) and Tyler King (2010) as state champs.

 

Boys Soccer:

The booters have made it to state twice, with their last visit in 2010 when former Seattle Sounders star Paul Mendes was coaching.

The opening game of the season will be Robert Wood’s 35th at the helm of the program, and he should have four returning players who all have a shot to become the 11th Wolf boy to reach double digits in scoring.

Senior Nick Guay tops that group, sitting #13 all-time with eight goals, while Preston Epp (5), Cole White (4), and Cael Wilson (4) are a hot streak away from joining the club.

Sustained scoring would be necessary to topple program records, however, with Derek Leyva (24) and Abraham Leyva (45) holding season and career marks.

 

Football:

Coupeville is looking for back-to-back league titles and trips to the state tourney, after going 7-2 in Bennett Richter’s first go-round as coach.

The Wolf gridiron program has gone to the big dance two years in a row once before, in 1986 and 1987, but never won conference crowns in consecutive years.

Get to state, and CHS football aims for its first postseason victory after five losses between 1974-2022.

Win #3 of the season will put Richter in double figures, while his starting QB, Logan Downes, chases program marks for tossing touchdown passes.

The Wolf senior connected on 17 scoring strikes a season ago, including a school single-game record five in a game against La Conner, and has 19 for his career.

The school career record is 35 passing TD’s, set by Logan’s big brother, Hunter, while the single-season mark is 18, held by Joel Walstad.

Logan Downes aims for his big brother’s TD tossin’ record. (Brenn Sugatan photo)

 

Girls Soccer:

Former Wolf player Kim Kisch makes her debut as coach, and she and her squad will be chasing the program’s first-ever trip to state.

There’s a good chance the career scoring chart gets a shakeup, with junior Ayden Wyman opening the season already ranked #5 all-time in putting the ball in the back of the net.

She’s peppered netminders in her first two campaigns, racking up 13 goals, which puts her behind just Mia Littlejohn (35), Kalia Littlejohn (33), Genna Wright (20), and Lindsey Roberts (17).

Wyman torched the net for nine goals as a sophomore.

The last time a CHS girls booter cracked double digits in scoring was back in 2017, when both Wright (15) and Kalia Littlejohn (10) achieved the feat.

 

Volleyball:

The spikers have a streak of seven-straight winning seasons, all under coach Cory Whitmore, longest active streak of any fall Wolf program.

Coupeville has notched double-digit wins in all but one of those seasons, with the pandemic limiting the 2020 season to just nine matches.

Whitmore is 76-36 during his run at CHS, four wins shy of 80 and 13 matches short of 125.

That puts him #2 among active Coupeville coaches, regardless of season, trailing just softball guru Kevin McGranahan (97-44) in terms of victories and contests.

The Wolves have been to state five times, most recently in 2017 under Whitmore.

With two tickets available this year for District 1/2 teams, instead of just one as in recent years, Coupeville has its eyes set on the big dance.

Once there, the Wolves would seek to notch a win for the first time since Toni Crebbin’s squad thunked Zillah in 2004.

Wolf spikers Madison McMillan (14) and Lyla Stuurmans dream of state tourney glory. (Jackie Saia photo)

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Former Wolves Dawson Houston (left) and Kwamane Bowens are part of a semi-pro football team which has won six straight games. (Alia Houston photo)

Once were Wolves, always are winners.

Dawson Houston and Kwamane Bowens don’t rep the black and red anymore, but they’re doing just fine wearing purple and gold for the Everett Royals semi-pro football team.

While the duo is a bit dinged up at the moment, they’re holding out hope of seeing playoff action as their team basks in the glow of a 7-1 record and a conference title.

The Royals closed the regular season Saturday, July 29, holding off the South Lane Buzzards 20-13.

Having clinched the Impact East Division crown, now they’re one of 14 teams advancing to the Gridiron Developmental Football League playoffs.

Everett is slated to play the Spokane Wolfpack (4-4) in the postseason opener, though a date and time are still to be determined.

Win that game and the Royals advance to the quarterfinals to square off with the winner of a game featuring the Inglewood Blackhawks (7-0) and the Arizona Road Runners (4-3).

Houston, a two-year starter at quarterback during his time at Coupeville High School, has completed 16 of 29 passes in his rookie campaign, throwing for 153 yards and two touchdowns.

Bowens, who attended Coupeville Middle School, departed Whidbey for a few years, then came back around.

He was a high school gridiron supernova, played NCAA D-I football on scholarship, and returned to join Marcus Carr’s staff at CHS.

These days, the recently married music star is an assistant coach at Anacortes High School.

While on the field for the Royals, Bowens has racked up 42 tackles, two interceptions, and a fumble recovery.

Overall, Everett has outscored its foes 207-75 on the season.

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Coupeville grad Mica Shipley (right) is back for a fourth year as an NCAA D-I cheerleader.

Seasoned vets and fresh-faced newbies.

There are at least six Coupeville High School grads set to play college sports this fall, and they run the gamut from freshmen to seniors.

Leading off the Wolf alumni is Mica Shipley, who will be in her fourth year as an NCAA D-I cheerleader at Eastern Washington University.

The high-flying cheer supernova has been a two-season star at EWU since she arrived on campus, helping anchor the Eagle squad through football and basketball season.

Joining her at the D-I level is Sean Toomey-Stout, a junior at the University of Washington.

A two-time member of the Pac-12 Academic Honor Roll, Maya’s twin brother played in six games for the Huskies last fall, including making an appearance in the Alamo Bowl.

“The Torpedo” made his trading card debut and became the first CHS grad to ever record stats for U-Dub football, which kicks off a new season Sept. 2 against Boise State.

Three other Wolves return as well.

Joey Lippo golfs at the University of Maine at Presque Isle, Ben Smith suits up for the football team at Eureka College in Illinois, and Lucy Sandahl gets back in the boat for Seattle Pacific University crew.

UMPI begins play Sept. 5, and Lippo, a senior, is also slated to return to the Owls baseball squad next spring.

Eureka football debuts at home Sept. 2.

There isn’t a public schedule posted yet for SPU crew, but if things stay true to tradition, Sandahl and her teammates will likely compete in a handful of regattas this fall.

The majority of the season unfolds for the Falcons in spring 2024.

Rounding out the Coupeville grads vying for glory this fall — unless I’m missing someone — is freshman Mitchell Hall, on the cross country squad at the Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Indiana.

The Fightin’ Engineers kick off their season Sept. 1.

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Ryan King, seen here working in Coupeville in 2016, is the new head football coach at Mount Baker Junior High. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Whidbey to Whatcom, and still killin’ it.

Coupeville grad Ryan King, a football captain who came back around to coach multiple sports at his alma mater, is the new head coach for the Mount Baker Junior High gridiron program.

An inductee into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, the burly lineman was a key player for the Wolves football program in the early 2000’s.

King was a captain as a senior in 2006 and helped lead the 2005 CHS squad, the last Cow Town gridiron team to post a winning record until Coupeville finally broke back through to the winning side in 2019.

Once he moved into coaching, the former Wolf worked as an assistant football coach at both the middle school and high school levels between 2011-2017.

He was also a head coach for Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball, where he worked with future high school stars like Chelsea Prescott, Genna Wright, and Mollie Bailey.

King was an assistant football coach in Mount Baker last fall, and now takes the reigns for a junior high program which feeds a high school which is consistently one of the best in a football-mad region.

“Very excited for this opportunity!” said the former Wolf.

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Wolf QB Logan Downes strides into his senior year. (Nikki Breaux photos)

It’s the work before the work.

Official practices for a new Coupeville High School football season don’t get underway until mid-August, but the Wolves are still getting ready.

A three-day trip to Shelton for a camp, seen in the pics above and below, is a vital part of building team unity and focus.

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