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Rhylin Price and CMS volleyball finally got to play at home Monday, in their third try. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Third time’s the charm.

Nearly three weeks after their first scheduled home match, the Coupeville Middle School volleyball team finally got to play in their own gym against another school.

The original season opener came up empty when Langley never showed, then a second home match — this time against Granite Falls — was bumped due to bus driver issues.

But Monday everything worked, and Northshore Christian Academy arrived ready to rumble with the Wolves.

And while the visitors won both matches, there were still plenty of highlights for Coupeville fans to enjoy.

The biggest came in the final set of the day, when the Wolves top team rode some big serves to a 15-10 win.

Jordaya Dowell got CMS started, smacking several lasers from the line, while Tenley Stuurmans, Haylee Armstrong, and Teagan Calkins also came up big on their serve.

Stuurmans and Dowell also had big hustle plays in the set, with the former diving to the floor and lifting a rapidly-falling ball back up and over the net for a point.

Her teammate delivered the back-breaker to NSA, as Dowell came flying in from the side to drop a perfectly-placed bump between two defenders to stake Coupeville to a lead it wouldn’t lose.

While Coupeville’s Level 1 squad dropped the first two sets, it was competitive with the visitors, who featured a couple of heavy hitters.

Northshore also got a lot of points off of underhand “pooch” serves, while the Wolves, to a player, went overhand each time out, better preparing themselves now for playing at the high school level.

Armstrong, Stuurmans, Dowell, and Heidi Lysene all launched aces on their serve, with Armstrong also connecting on a thunderous spike for a winner.

Calkins, who was lauded by CMS coach Cris Matochi for “really being good at bringing leadership today” also climbed an invisible ladder to the sky before delivering a graceful tip winner.

In the opener, Coupeville’s Level 2 team got strong work from several players.

Capri Anter let fly with a ferocious serve or two, while Willow Leedy-Bonifas bopped a pair of returns which hopped over the net and hit pay-dirt for Wolf points.

The best play in the opening match may have come courtesy the tandem of Stuurmans and Rhylin Price, who teamed up for a beauty.

Successfully holding off match point, Stuurmans went low to make a flawless set, while Price finished off the play with a nicely-angled shot.

For Matochi and fellow CMS volleyball guru Katie Kiel, seeing growth and ever-increasing confidence from their young players trumps the score on the board hanging above the floor.

“The whole team played really well today,” Matochi said. “We saw a lot of improvement, and they are understanding they can win.

“That’s what we want, is for them to show good volleyball skills, to play with solid fundamentals, and have good spirit. And that’s what we saw!”

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Nick Guay delivered a stellar defensive performance Friday while playing in a ferocious wind storm. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was an experience.

Friday’s boys soccer clash between Coupeville High School and visiting Orcas Island was less about the final score, and more about the various feats of strength pulled off by Mother Nature.

Yes, the Vikings left Cow Town with a 3-0 win, scoring all of their goals with the wind at their back in the second half.

And yes, the loss to the defending Northwest 2B/1B League champs drops the Wolves to 0-2 on the still-young season.

But long after the game results fade from memory, everyone will still be talking about the weather, which was rough even by Whidbey standards.

Catching the brunt of a passing storm, Coupeville’s Mickey Clark Field endured 200 MPH winds all game, though not a drop of rain.

What? You say it wasn’t really 200 MPH?

OK, we’ll split the difference and settle on 197 MPH.

Cause that’s how it felt while watching the flag pole at the stadium nearly bend in half as I walked past it on the way to my truck.

It was the kind of day when it was good the game started at 4 PM, and not 6 PM, as the power went out midway through the first half, while the press box creaked like it was about to go airborne and hurtle Wizard of Oz-style across the prairie.

Down on the pitch, players from both teams spent most of the game bent over, while the refs clung to their flags for dear life.

A bird, flying low and lean, stuck his tongue out at the folks in the stands, then regretted it when a wall of wind sent him cartwheeling back towards the far end of the field.

Off in the distance, the entire infield at the CHS baseball diamond lifted up and departed for a road trip, a wall of dirt moving like a bat out of Hell.

Closer to the action, a wayward plastic bag — acting like the scene-stealer from American Beauty — danced the dance of its people, whirling and twirling a different direction with each gust.

Up in that creaking press box, the one of us who spent most Friday nights back in 1999 renting VHS tapes slowly realized no current CHS student was alive when that angsty flick won Oscars — making my shout-out to it probably pointless.

But, anyway…

The game itself, held in the middle of a cyclone gettin’ it on in a raunchy three-way with a tornado and a hurricane, was a scoreless battle for the first 40 minutes.

Coupeville opened with the wind at its back, which meant the Wolves had a much-easier time pushing the pace of play.

Unfortunately for the Wolves, while they had several decent looks at the net, nothing got past the Orcas goaltender.

The Vikings didn’t do much on offense, what with the wind straight-up brutalizing them, but the visitors did mount one fairly intense charge late in the half.

The Orcas shooter came crashing hard against Wolf goalie Aidan Wilson, but Nick Guay, hustlin’ his buns off, slid in at the last moment and used a toe to deflect the ball away and out of bounds.

Coming out of halftime, the teams switched sides, and that was enough to give Orcas a boost.

Cadence Kraayeveld got the only goal which truly mattered, on a ball which narrowly got past Coupeville goalie Alex Murdy, then the wind assisted scores #2 and #3.

With his teammates unable to get the ball past midfield more than once or twice while going against the wind, Murdy was a busy man and played much-better than the score might indicate.

“Big props to Alex on playing both attack and goal,” said CHS coach Robert Wood. “Obviously, his athleticism is going to be a huge bonus to our team no matter where he plays.

“Tough to get him not to be frustrated though … he’s a perfectionist and did not like being scored on.

“However, I’ll say it again — I don’t care about goals. I care about what you do after.”

Coupeville opened its season with games against what are likely the two best teams in the NWL, and while the resulting growing pains hurt, they will hopefully pay off down the road.

“The team played well, but it’s obvious what needs work … space, timing, shape,” Wood said.

“Shape deteriorated quickly — which kills the spacing everyone expected — which kills the timing needed to be a cohesive, functional unit.

“A frustrating loss,” he added. “We played way better than the scoreboard shows, and hopefully next game will display our abilities more directly.”

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Coupeville High School soccer coach Robert Wood remains resolute in the face of a shifting schedule. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville High School boys soccer fans will have to wait an additional week to see their team play at home.

After opening on the road against Mount Vernon Christian Sept. 7, the Wolves were slated to have three-straight tilts at Mickey Clark Field.

The first one of those — a Friday night rumble under the lights Sept. 10 — has been cancelled, however, as Cedar Park Christian-Lynnwood has “a shortage of eligible players/number of players.”

Coupeville’s first home game is now the following Friday, Sept. 17, against defending Northwest 2B/1B League champ Orcas Island.

CPC has not cancelled its season, and Coupeville’s second matchup with the private school, set for Oct. 21 in Lynnwood, remains on the schedule for now.

As for that first game, the schools are “looking into the possibility of a re-schedule later in the season,” said CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith.

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Coupeville’s Makana Stone, here with mom Eileen, is now the #7 scorer in Whitman College women’s basketball history. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

First they honored her, then she impressed them some more.

Coupeville’s Makana Stone was hailed Friday for becoming just the ninth player in Whitman College women’s basketball history to top 1,000 career points, then went out and tossed 12 more onto the stat sheet.

Paced by their senior star, who added 11 rebounds to post another double-double, the Blues blitzed the University of Maine at Fort Kent 84-49, kicking off the 2019 Kim Evanger Raney Classic, and their home schedule.

With the non-conference win, Whitman improves to 7-1 headed into a Saturday match-up with Buena Vista University, which sits at 1-8 on the season.

After that game, Stone and the Blues will be off for nearly three weeks, not playing again until Jan. 3, when they begin Northwest Conference play against the University of Puget Sound.

Whitman began the season with a seven-game road trip, so Friday night was the first chance for its fans to fill the Sherwood Athletic Center.

Those in attendance got to see Stone, who cracked 1,000 points in a win over Whittier College, continue to move up the career scoring chart.

Friday night she passed Mary Kincaid, who scored 1,056 between 1982-1986.

Now #7 all-time with 1,057, the former Wolf ace is hot on the heels of #6 Casey Poe (1,145), who she played alongside during her first two seasons at Whitman.

Katie Rubenser, a star from 1990-1994, is #1 with 1,693 points, and was in attendance Friday for Stone’s ceremony.

Bouncing back from its only loss of the year, which came last week to highly-ranked Mary Hardin-Baylor, Whitman took control early Friday and never let go of the lead.

Up 25-12 after one quarter of play, the Blues surged to a 52-25 lead at the half, then took their feet off the gas pedal a bit and coasted home for the win.

Stone played a tidy 21 minutes, adding two blocked shots and an assist to her 12 points and 11 boards.

Four different Whitman players scored in double figures, led by Kaelan Shamseldin, who tallied a team-high 14 points.

On the season, Stone has 129 points, 61 rebounds, 12 assists, 11 steals, and 10 blocks.

She’s shooting 52-89 (58.4%) from the floor and 23-28 (82.1%) at the free throw line.

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Sophomore Hawthorne Wolfe singed the nets for 33 points in a win Saturday, a game after netting 34. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hawk was hot, but he had plenty of help.

Sophomore Hawthorne Wolfe knocked down 33 points Saturday, while numerous teammates, most prominently senior Koa Davison, came up huge as the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball team led from start to finish while capturing its first win of the season.

The Wolves, who came within a point of having four players reach double-figure scoring, ran away from visiting Orcas Island to capture a 77-58 win in Coupeville’s home opener.

The non-conference victory, coming just days after CHS almost toppled 3A Oak Harbor in overtime, lifts the Wolves to 1-2.

Both of their losses have been super-close, but Saturday’s win was one in which the Wolves dominated for long stretches.

After torching Oak Harbor for 34, then equaling Larry Bird’s jersey number Saturday, Wolfe is the first Coupeville player in at least a decade-plus to record back-to-back 30+ point games at the varsity level.

While he came out sizzling against the Wildcats, going on a 12-0 run by himself on his way to scoring 15 in the first quarter, Wolfe came with a different flow against Orcas.

He had “just” 14 at the half Saturday, then went bonkers in the third quarter, throwing down 16 of Coupeville’s first 18 points in the frame.

But as dangerous as he was, slashing hard to the hoop, baffling the Vikings with tricky foot work, then popping outside for the occasional three-ball, Wolfe, as we mentioned, had plenty of help.

Davison, who has taken a huge step forward between his junior and senior season, scraped the boards clean all night, while also throwing down a career-high 15 points which included his own miracle shot.

It came as time ran down at the end of the third quarter, with Coupeville whipping the ball from player to player, looking for an opening before the clock hit all zeroes.

The ball came to rest, for a split second at least, in the hands of Davison, and he thrilled the weekend crowd by elevating and knocking down a three-ball which banked off the glass and hit pay-dirt a half of a second before the buzzer sounded.

The Wolves spent much of the night pulling off similarly-electrifying plays, as they controlled the action from the very first offensive set.

That ended with Mason Grove splashing home one of his three treys on the night, a ball which arced high in the air, then barely rippled the net as it hustled through on its way back to the floor.

Davison and Wolfe followed the three-ball with buckets on which they carved up the Orcas defense while crashing aggressively to the hoop, and, up 7-0, CHS was in sync and on fire.

Five different Coupeville players scored in the opening quarter, allowing the Wolves to head to the bench with a 15-6 lead and a nod of approval from head coach Brad Sherman.

While the visitors found their shooting touch in the second quarter, the home team matched them bucket for bucket (almost literally), with the two squads battling through an intense 21-21 frame.

Again the Wolves spread the offensive love out, but Sean Toomey-Stout, playing in front of siblings Cameron and Maya, was the king of the highlight reel.

Twisting in mid-air, tearing down rebounds, then muscling his way back up though the defense, the ever-springy one known as “The Torpedo” had a ferocity no Viking could match.

Down 36-27 at the half, Orcas got as close as 45-40 midway through the third, thanks to back-to-back three-balls, but Wolfe and Co. were having none of it.

The sweet-shootin’ sophomore could not miss in the third, and every bucket came on a different move guaranteed to give his fan club the vapors.

Wolfe started his 16-point run in the third with a three-ball, then got creative, mixing little runners with quick slashes to the hoop, taking the blows and never cracking as he used both hands to slap home bucket after bucket.

The Orcas defense couldn’t stop him, and the few moments in which they slowed him down, he smartly gave the ball up and let someone else be The Man, whether it was Ulrik Wells pounding away inside, or Grove firing rainbows from outside.

Up 16 at the end of three quarters, the Wolves traded three-balls to start the fourth, with Wolfe notching his final points on a play set up by a Tucker Hall rebound.

After that, it was the “Koa Being Big Time” Hour, as Davison went off for eight of his 15 with four impressive plays in the paint.

One was set up by an entry pass from Wolfe, the other on a kick-out from Toomey-Stout, but on all four the lanky senior had to finish while being pounded on by the Vikings.

Each time, Davison came up big, showcasing a ton of heart under duress.

Koa played big tonight, but he’s played like that consistently over all three games,” Sherman said. “He’s working hard on the boards for us, and I’m very happy to see it.”

The Wolf head man praised his entire team, especially for the way they bounced back after being nipped in overtime by Oak Harbor.

“I’m extra proud of the way we came out tonight, and immediately took control,” Sherman said. “I liked the way we got to the basket, and the fact we came out so strongly in the third, which is something we had a bit of a problem with in the past.”

With his 33 point explosion, Wolfe continues to fly upwards on the CHS boys career scoring chart.

He passed another 13 former players Saturday, including quality guys such as Joel Walstad, Jordan Ford, and Tim Quenzer, and now sits at #119 all-time just three games into his sophomore campaign.

Coupeville is playing its 103rd season of boys basketball, and yet the precocious Wolfe, with 231 points and counting, is just 47 points from cracking the top 100.

Davison finished with 15 Saturday, while Toomey-Stout banked in 12, Grove knocked down nine, Jered Brown rattled the rim for six, and Wells capped things with a bucket.

Gavin Knoblich, Hall, Jacobi Pilgrim, and Jean Lund-Olsen also saw floor time for the Wolves, who have a busy week coming up, with games against Friday Harbor, Concrete, and The Bush School.

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