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Posts Tagged ‘Friday Harbor’

Davin Houston (2) slows down a rival, as his teammates swoop in to finish him off. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Trick or treat, smell my feet, give me something good to … tackle.

The regular season football finale, which will see Coupeville High School travel to Friday Harbor, has been bumped up a day.

Originally set for Friday, Nov. 1, it will now go down on Halloween — Thursday, Oct. 31.

Kickoff is still slated for 6:30 PM.

The move is being made to accommodate the possibility the two teams will need to play a tiebreaker to decide which Northwest 2B/1B League school advances to face a team from District 4 for a berth in the state tourney.

Coupeville won the first of two meetings with Friday Harbor this past Friday, squishing the Wolverines 18-5 on Whidbey.

Win the regular season finale, and CHS is the league champ and earns the playoff slot outright.

If Friday Harbor should rebound and earn a split, however, then it would force that tiebreaker.

Between now and Halloween, Coupeville, which sits at 4-1 overall, has non-conference games left to play against South Whidbey, Adna, and Winlock the next three Fridays.

The first and third of those are at home.

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Coupeville senior Marcelo Gebhard was a rampaging beast on defense Friday in a Homecoming win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“I don’t know what to say, I’m just happy!!”

Bouncing between a steady string of well-wishers, from lil’ kids to Wolf cheerleaders, Coupeville High School football coach Bennett Richter beamed under the fading Friday Night Lights at Mickey Clark Field.

His squad had just outmuscled a Friday Harbor gridiron program which prides itself on toughness, capturing an 18-5 Homecoming victory in a game marked by big hits and stellar defense.

Now 1-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 4-1 overall, the Wolves control their playoff destiny.

They will travel to Friday Harbor Nov. 1 for the regular-season finale, and a sweep of the Wolverines (0-1, 2-3) will hand Coupeville football a conference crown and a chance to vie for a state playoff berth.

But that game is still a month away, with non-conference tilts against South Whidbey, Adna, and Winlock left to play between now and then.

For the moment, Richter was content to bask in the thrill of a well-crafted win.

“Make my boys dance tomorrow night,” he told the CHS cheerleaders with a big laugh. “Any wallflowers, tell them they’ll run at practice next week.”

There were no wallflowers during the game, as the Wolves, to a man, lowered their shoulders and drilled their rivals.

Whether gutting out a couple of extra yards on offense or making sure Friday Harbor would be denied a touchdown, even to the last second of the game, Coupeville’s crew came with a fury.

“You can’t win against your rival without everyone contributing,” Richter said. “And that’s what happened.

“We matched their physicality, the offense did enough, and the defense did a lot. They were dialed in and knew what to do.”

For one play, the Wolves looked to be in (mild) disarray, then turned things around with a vengeance.

Taking the opening kickoff, Coupeville tried to pull off a trick play, with multiple players converging, and then one shooting out of the pack with the ball.

Unfortunately, the ball popped loose in the melee, and while CHS recovered it, Friday Harbor brought the ball carrier down for a game-opening safety.

Trailing 2-0 and forced to boot the ball right back to the Wolverines, the hometown squad never flinched, however.

Coupeville forced a punt on Friday Harbor’s first drive, thanks to big-time tackles from Marcelo Gebhard, Davin Houston, and Riley Lawless, who shed blockers and wrestled their foes to the turf.

The visitors proved to be a defensive-minded bunch, as well, keeping the game at 2-0 throughout a very fast-moving first quarter.

But an explosion was on the horizon.

Three plays into the second quarter, Wolf quarterback Chase Anderson scrambled for an eternity, moving from one sideline to the other as would-be tackler after would-be tackler tried, and failed, to bring down the elusive junior.

That gave Jack Porter time to work the sideline, and he hauled in a long pass fired by Anderson, who had finally tired of his cross-country run.

Bang-boom, 81 yards later, the Wolves were on the board with the game’s first touchdown, though a missed PAT left things at 6-2.

Hunter Bronec will be a benevolent ruler. (Brittney Spolar photo)

After forcing another punt, Coupeville had a chance to drop the hammer, driving 63 yards in six plays, with Jack Porter and Hunter Bronec both breaking tackles on 20+ yard catches.

But the Wolves needed 65 to score, with the ball coming loose and being recovered on the two-yard line as CHS tried to ram it into the end zone on a running play.

If Friday Harbor thought it had reclaimed the momentum, it was sadly disappointed, as Anderson almost immediately picked off a pass while falling backward through the air.

That set up an exhilarating, and somewhat bizarre, final minute of the first half.

Clinging to a 6-2 lead and facing fourth-and-25 from the 50-yard line, Anderson spun a gorgeous 33-yard air strike to Jack Porter, who cradled the ball to his chest as he crashed out of bounds.

With the clock running down to 0:09, Anderson (and his big leg) blasted a 41-yard field goal through the uprights to stretch the lead to 9-2.

Time for Friday Harbor to kneel down and head into the locker room and … here we go.

The Wolverines instead chucked their own dangerous pass, which was snagged under great pressure, while Coupeville was whistled for roughing the passer.

Granted one play with no time left on the clock, after a big yardage gain, Friday Harbor called on their own placekicker, Victor Valasquez.

The long-range wizard, who has dinged Coupeville before, launched his own 45-yard field goal attempt high into the prairie night, and it split the uprights with plenty of room to spare.

Which meant the visitors scored on the very first, and very last, play of the first half, yet still trailed 9-5 at the break.

So there.

If the first half was two teams standing in the middle of the boxing ring swinging, the second half was a complete KO for Coupeville.

Friday Harbor had the ball four times over the final 24 minutes, and turned it over on downs twice, punted (badly) once, and was stuffed while trying to score a meaningless touchdown on the game’s final play.

Jack Porter, Gebhard, and Anderson had big-buzz tackles, but everyone on defense, from Camden Glover to Johnny Porter to Liam Blas and beyond, had the whuppin’ sticks out.

On offense, Anderson tacked on a 31-yard field goal midway through the third quarter to make it 12-5, then listened to a plea from above.

Back operating the scoreboard after a game off for a family trip, and bringing cookies with him, Joel “The Ice Cream Man” Norris leaned forward with three minutes to play in the frame and mouthed the words.

“They need a touchdown, now.”

Make it so.

Mere seconds later, Anderson spun a ball to the heavens, Houston cut back to bring the pass in while making a defensive back fall down, and Coupeville had a game-busting 43-yard touchdown heave-and-catch.

It was Houston’s fourth score of the season and put the cherry on the sundae.

From there, Coupeville was content to run clock, with Johnny Porter abusing Friday Harbor by rushing right over them, while Anderson and Marquette Cunningham added in some fancy cuts while carrying the ball.

Up next, The Battle for the Bucket against South Whidbey. (Jeff Porter photo)

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Adeline Maynes flips a pass skyward. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Only the siren call of the ferry could slow them down.

Playing second Tuesday, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad destroyed host Friday Harbor 25-7 in the opening set of their match.

Then the Wolves had to skedaddle, as the clock was running down, the Washington State ferry system was unreliable, and no one wanted to stay on a strange chunk of rock an extra night.

While the match was shorter than anticipated, the win lifts Coupeville’s second unit to 2-0 overall, 1-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play.

Next up is a home match Thursday against Mount Vernon Christian, with the promise that ferries won’t matter, and the entire rumble will go down before anyone has to call it quits.

Coupeville coach Ashley Menges would have liked to have seen her squad stay on the floor longer but was philosophical about things.

“It was good, we got to get a lot of players in, and we were just lucky we got to play at all,” she said.

 

Tuesday stats:

Capri Anter — 1 kill, 2 digs, 2 aces
Haylee Armstrong — 3 aces
Ari Cunningham — 1 kill
Lexis Drake — 2 kills, 1 ace
Willow Leedy-Bonifas — 2 aces
Adeline Maynes — 4 assists, 4 aces
Chelsi Stevens — 1 kill
Sydney Van Dyke — 1 kill

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Lyla Stuurmans pounds the ball. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Another day, another sweep.

Surviving a trip to the outer islands Tuesday, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad rolled to a win in its conference opener.

Polishing off host Friday Harbor 25-19, 25-12, 25-11, the Wolves get to 2-0 overall, 1-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play.

The CHS spikers also hand their coach a milestone, as the victory is the 90th for Cory Whitmore during his time with the Wolf volleyball program.

Coupeville, coming off a strong showing at the SunDome Volleyball Festival, hasn’t dropped a set in its first two regular season matches.

And while Friday Harbor gave the Wolves a little bit of a battle in the opener, after that Whitmore’s assassins went methodically to work.

“We cleaned it up after a bit of a sloppy first set and took care of business in the second and third,” he said.

Key to the win was Coupeville’s ability to respond strongly on first ball contacts, with senior setter Katie Marti running a fairly clean offense.

Twin terrors Lyla Stuurmans and Teagan Calkins rained down 11 kills apiece, with both big-ball hitters racking up a torrid hitting percentage.

Next up is Coupeville’s home debut Thursday, with the Wolves taking the court against visiting Mount Vernon Christian in another league tilt.

Between then and now, the Wolves will look to fine-tune things, while keeping their eyes firmly focused on the prize.

“We are going to be working on cleaning up our serve for the situations we often face,” Whitmore said.

“But I was happy to see them rally themselves to a higher standard.”

 

Tuesday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 2 digs
Teagan Calkins
— 11 kills
Mia Farris
— 5 kills, 3 digs, 1 solo block, 3 aces
Jada Heaton
— 4 kills
Katie Marti
— 3 kills, 5 digs, 25 assists, 2 aces
Madison McMillan
— 1 kill, 7 digs, 8 aces
Lyla Stuurmans
— 11 kills, 4 digs, 1 solo block, 6 aces
Tenley Stuurmans
— 1 kill, 1 dig, 3 aces

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Matthew Ward pushes the attack. (Finn Price photo)

Friday Harbor has been to the mountain top, while Coupeville is still trying to learn all the tricks of the ascent.

A Wolverines boys’ soccer program which has a state title in its resume showed calmness under pressure Tuesday, turning a one-goal game into a runaway win on the road.

Unable to hold on to an early lead, the CHS co-ed booters eventually fell 8-3 in a game in which the final score was a bit deceptive.

The non-conference loss to a conference team (just go with it) drops the Wolves to 0-2-1 on the still-young season.

While Coupeville coach Robert Wood was understandably frustrated afterward — “The captains and coaches are talking how and what needs to change to ensure we can hold a one-goal lead indefinitely” — the game was close for 50+ minutes.

Trailing just 4-3, the Wolves were looking to knot the score in the second half, only to watch Friday Harbor suddenly slip away.

Two goals in a 90-second span widened the margin to 6-3, before the Wolverines tacked on another pair of scores in the waning minutes.

Coupeville goaltender Hurlee Bronec had several strong saves in the second half, including one where he snuffed out a shot at point-blank range, but he was also under fire almost constantly.

Wolf goaltender Hurlee Bronec punishes the soccer ball. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A pair of yellow cards assessed to the Wolves also seemed to put a hitch in their get-up-and-go, and a late rally never materialized.

The loss came despite a strong offensive effort in the first half from Coupeville.

Playing their second-straight home game at Mickey Clark Field, the Wolves broke through first when Angel Partida bashed home a goal less than four minutes into play.

Netting his team-best third score of the season, he gave CHS an advantage which it didn’t hold for long.

Amid much confusion, Friday Harbor broke the plane of the goal (or did it?) to knot the game at 1-1, though it took the ref an eternity to signal the score as actually having happened.

The other five goals in the first half were far more convincing, starting with Wolf senior Preston Epp pulling off a sweet move after the opposing goalie tried, and failed, to clear the ball out in front of his net.

Instead of snatching the bouncing orb up, the Friday Harbor netminder poked at it with his leg but sent it right to Epp by accident.

Not willing to look a gift horse in the mouth, the Wolf sharpshooter promptly spanked the ball into the back of the net for his first goal of the year, and eighth of his prep career.

Unfortunately for Coupeville, their foes then gave a preview of their lightning-fast ability to score, banking in three scores in a span of four minutes to reclaim the lead.

Trailing 4-2, the Wolves scored right before the end of the half, beating the clock and the odds when a long, booming shot by Cael Wilson took an advantageous bounce and nicked off of a defender.

Cael Wilson surveys the defense. (Finn Price photo)

Whether he knew it or not at the moment, Wilson, a current senior who has been a varsity player since 8th grade, became the first player in CHS soccer history to score in five separate seasons.

Known for his scrappy defense, he has also tallied seven goals, giving his family 20, when you add in the 13 scored by now-graduated older brother Aidan.

A third brother, freshman Edmund Wilson, also saw some varsity field time, then came back around to anchor the Wolf JV as they played a 30-minute “friendly” in their season debut as a team.

“It was really great to see the JV game,” Robert Wood said.

“The kids did well; many learning points, and honestly, they did really, really good for that being the first time they saw a live opponent.”

His fellow Wolf coach, Kimberly Kisch, agreed.

“Good to see some of the kids who aren’t especially experienced get out there and begin to put things together,” she said.

Brynn Parker and Josh Lujan, both returning from injury, drew praise for their play while 8th grader Brian Thompson set up Frankie Tenore, who drilled in a buzzer-beating goal on her final run of the day.

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