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Teagan Calkins, seen in 2023, is off to a red-hot start on the hardwood. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“The Red Dragon” roared.

Pouring in a game-high 14 points Friday, Teagan Calkins spurred the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad to its first win of the young season.

Holding host South Whidbey scoreless through the first period, the Wolves jumped out to a convincing lead, then kept adding to the advantage during a 33-18 Island rivalry triumph.

Now 1-1 on the season, the Wolves have a quick bounce back, hosting Clallum Bay Saturday in a game set to tip at 2:15 PM.

The CHS hoops stars should feel pretty good about themselves when they take the floor for that non-conference rumble, coming off a very-convincing win against their next-door neighbors.

The Wolves jumped out to a 12-0 lead after one frame, with Calkins, Lyla Stuurmans, and Mia Farris combining to scorch the net.

From there things were much more even, but Coupeville still came out on top in every quarter.

The lead blossomed to 19-6 at halftime, then went to 27-14 through three, with Calkins swishing a pair of three-balls en route to scoring all eight Wolf points in the third.

Her 14-point performance comes on the heels of dropping 13 in the season opener.

Farris (5), Lyla Stuurmans (4), Madison McMillan (2), Katie Marti (2), Danica Strong (2), Jada Heaton (2), and Tenley Stuurmans (2) also scored for Megan Richter’s squad.

Capri Anter made her varsity hoops debut for the Wolves, as well, while Baylie Kuschnereit and Juliette Wood paced South Whidbey with six points each.

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A day after her 18th birthday, Taylor Brotemarkle sparkled in a season-opening win. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Balanced and brutal.

Getting something from everyone on the floor, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad opened a new season in fine form Tuesday night.

Mashing host South Whidbey 25-16, 25-14, 25-14, the Wolves claimed a key non-conference win and asserted themselves against a school from a bigger classification.

Now Coupeville, a 2B unit, will pivot from its victory against a 1A foe and head off to Yakima for this weekend’s SunDome Volleyball Festival.

That tourney, which plays out at the home of the state championships, will pit CHS against Connell, Stevenson, and White Swan in pool play Friday.

Tuesday’s tilt with the Falcons was a great set-up for the Wolves, who boast a roster deep in seniors looking to write a splendid final chapter to their prep volleyball careers.

“It was a great first road trip, and always good to get a win against our friends to the south,” said Coupeville coach Cory Whitmore.

“We showed up to this rivalry knowing what a win could do for our program, especially to set a tone for our season moving forward,” he added.

“Of course it is great to come out with a win, but the way in which we did it signals some exciting things to come.”

The Wolves spread out the offensive love, with senior setter Katie Marti flicking gorgeous passes to her snipers as they crashed the net.

Overall, Coupeville racked up an impressive .246 hitting percentage, with seven players combining to nail 29 kills.

“We passed well, but Katie calmly made great decisions, really running the offense off serve receive and just as strongly through transition,” Whitmore said. “Very impressed with her play tonight.”

Wolf junior thumper Teagan Calkins, AKA “The Red Dragon,” was particularly efficient, rifling seven winners with no errors off of 17 swings.

“She had kills on the left, in the middle, on the right and even just behind the setter, and so her ability to take care of the ball from so many locations was very impressive,” Whitmore said.

The Wolf coach praised his entire team, pointing to quality work from numerous spikers.

“Another versatile player was Lyla Stuurmans,” Whitmore said. “Not only did she have a number of very strong kills from a variety of locations, she was strong from the back row as well, passing a number of serves to get the ball to Katie.

“Shoutout to all of our passers tonight – Lyla, Mia Farris, Madison McMillan; Taylor Brotemarkle only had five reception errors the entire night, which hits a big goal for our season to be at or less than two per set.

Chloe Marzocca also came in off the bench as a serving specialist and did a great job of getting them out-of-system, and even pulling in three aces to help us out.”

Chloe Marzocca is here to collect all the service aces.

With his players clicking, Whitmore got to step back a bit and enjoy the show.

“Honestly, I just kind of facilitated and let them take it the rest of the way,” he said.

“It was a complete group effort, each player carrying out their role. What excited me most about watching them perform was the calm leadership in which they worked together to get the job done.

“The girls were very clean tonight, committing a very limited number of unforced errors and if we keep that consistent in the games to follow, we can build both our offense and defense to be even more versatile.”

 

Stats:

Teagan Calkins — 7 kills, 1 block assist
Mia Farris — 8 kills, 3 digs, 5 aces
Jada Heaton — 3 kills
Katie Marti — 1 kill, 3 digs, 26 assists, 3 aces
Chloe Marzocca — 3 aces
Madison McMillan — 1 kill, 2 digs, 1 ace
Lyla Stuurmans — 8 kills, 1 dig, 2 assists, 1 block assist, 2 aces
Aby Wood — 1 kill, 2 digs

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Tenley Stuurmans and her Wolf JV teammates won an island rivalry match on opening night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“It was a great night and a great start to the season.”

The match was moved because of a flood that devastated the South Whidbey High School gym in August, but no matter the location, the Coupeville JV volleyball squad was on point in its season opener Tuesday night.

Playing at the local community center in Langley, the Wolves fired up coach Ashley Menges, fighting back to win in three intense sets.

The 25-14, 22-25, 25-8 victory launches a new season, and showcased strong work from the CHS veterans.

“My sophomores did a really great job with leading the court tonight,” Menges said. “Capri (Anter) had a great night.”

Anter paced the Wolves with a team-best nine kills, while seven of her teammates also picked up at least one winner.

“Consistency and aggression were great out the gate and lots of players had really great moments,” Menges said.

“We do of course have much more to work on, one being focus throughout the set,” she added. “But it was really fun to watch and saw a lot of really great things.”

 

Stats:

Capri Anter — 9 kills, 5 digs, 4 aces
Haylee Armstrong — 1 kill, 4 digs, 3 assists, 4 aces
Ari Cunningham — 5 kills, 3 digs, 1 assist
Lexis Drake — 2 kills, 3 digs, 3 aces
Adeline Maynes — 1 kill, 2 digs, 11 assists, 7 aces
Dakota Strong — 1 kill
Tenley Stuurmans — 3 kills, 5 digs, 7 assists, 1 ace
Sydney Van Dyke — 2 kills

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Haylee Armstrong prepares to open a can of whup-ass. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

As rivalries go, this one is incredibly one-sided at the moment.

Fueled by a fantastic pitching job from 8th grade ace Adeline Maynes, strong defense, and even stronger bats, the Coupeville High School softball squad crushed visiting South Whidbey Friday in the regular season finale.

Running the Falcons off the prairie to a 15-0 tune in a game mercy-ruled in the fourth inning, the Wolves get to 14-4 on the season.

Now, they’ve got eight days to get ready for their biggest game of the campaign.

That arrives Saturday, May 18, when CHS travels to Centralia to play a winner-to-state, loser-out game against a yet-to-be-named school from District 4.

While the playoffs are on the horizon, Friday was all about putting a punctuation mark on the regular season.

And how.

The very-young Wolves, who have no seniors and started two 8th graders and two freshmen Friday, were in control from the first pitch to the last swing.

Enjoying the only truly warm game day the prairie has had this spring, Coupeville fans jammed the stands, with a fair number of little league diamond stars in attendance to watch their idols.

The current Wolf stars more than lived up to the hype.

Maynes, playing catch with Teagan Calkins, held the Falcons to one lonely hit on the day, while whiffing five.

That included a wham-bam-bigger bam second inning, when the Wolf hurler struck out all three batters she faced, the ball whistling past bats with a merry lil’ hum before smacking into her catcher’s mitt.

When South Whidbey did get the ball back into play, Coupeville’s defense was lights out.

Shortstop Taylor Brotemarkle speared a pair of liners in the hole, elevating off the dirt to snag one, while fellow infielders Madison McMillan and Sydney Van Dyke vacuumed up everything that came their way.

Not to be outdone, Mia Farris hauled in a long fly ball to deep center, reaching over her shoulder to pluck the ball from the air while on the move.

Teagan Calkins, born to be awesome.

And then there was “The Red Dragon” sacrificing her body and sending a jolt through the throng of fans on the very first play of the game.

Roaring up from behind the plate, Calkins charged forward, went airborne, stretched her arm to its maximum length, and somehow pulled in a botched bunt as it spun towards the CHS dugout.

Ball hit mitt, player hit ground, ball stayed in glove, crowd and teammates went wild, and the sophomore backstop calmly gazed at her fans and whispered, “Oh, there’s more where that came from.”

Calkins proved it, using her bat and feet to help CHS jump out to a 4-0 lead in the bottom of the first.

The frame began with Haylee Armstrong punching a hole in the sky with a towering shot that dropped in between defenders, with Farris and McMillan slapping singles around a sac fly off the lethal bat of Brotemarkle.

Things really got wild however after Calkins crunched a hit over the third baseman’s head.

With the Wolves running aggressively on the basepaths, it spooked South Whidbey’s catcher into skipping a throw into left field, with two runners careening home to score on the botched play.

With Maynes throwing heat, and the Falcons having little chance to do anything with it, Coupeville blew the game open with an eight-run surge in the second inning.

Three consecutive walks to open the frame juiced the bags, before McMillan, Calkins, Danica Strong, Capri Anter, and Farris delivered run-scoring base knocks.

If South Whidbey thought the pain parade was done at that point, it was wrong.

While the Wolves coasted in for the win, they did so by pounding the stuffing out of the ball.

McMillan, flexing in the sunshine, drove a frozen rope to center field, then hit the jets and outran the throw for an inside the park home run to open the third.

Two batters later, Jada Heaton sliced a shot to right field, then showed off her own set of wheels as she rambled in with a triple.

An RBI single from Maynes pushed the lead to 14-0, with the game-ending run pushed across moments into the start of the fourth.

Armstrong walked, skittered down to second on a passed ball, moved to third on a Farris bunt which was so perfect it could get its own SportsCenter highlight, then tapped home when Brotemarkle mashed a hot shot.

Taylor Brotemarkle sends the ball flying far, far away.

The win gives the 2B Wolves a season sweep of their 1A next-door neighbors — they won 20-9 back in the season opener — and sends them to the playoffs on a high note.

And they’re not done yet.

 

Friday stats:

Capri Anter — One single
Haylee Armstrong — One single, two walks
Taylor Brotemarkle — One single, one walk
Teagan Calkins — Two singles
Mia Farris — One double, two singles, one walk
Jada Heaton — One triple
Madison McMillan — One home run, one double, one single
Danica Strong — One single
Sydney Van Dyke — Two walks

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Camden Glover is Mr. RBI. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It took less than 48 hours to get some sweet, sweet revenge.

Playing for the second time in three days, the Coupeville High School baseball team toppled visiting South Whidbey 8-4 Wednesday, earning a season split in JV games between the next-door neighbors.

It was a nice bounce back for the Wolves after they fell 6-3 Monday to the Falcons.

CHS doesn’t have a complete nine-man JV roster, so a couple of different younger varsity players saw action in each rumble, and one of them was the big star Wednesday afternoon.

Sophomore slugger Camden Glover, who didn’t play Monday, reached base four times, drove home four runs, and was a holy terror every time he had a bat in his hand or was let loose on the basepaths.

Toss in strong work on the mound by the duo of Landon Roberts and Jack Farrell, who combined for nine strikeouts, and South Whidbey spent much of the day in a hole.

The Falcons actually led, briefly, at 1-0, thanks to a walk and a Wolf error, but then Coupeville surged ahead for good.

The Wolves knotted the score at 1-1 thanks to an RBI single from Glover, then tacked on three runs in the bottom of the third to snatch the lead for good.

Roberts bashed a single to get things going, with Carson Grove walking, before Glover (who else?) smoked a two-run double to left field.

The Falcons hung tough, slicing the lead down to 4-3, but the Wolves had a solid response at every turn.

Glover unleashed his third base knock of the game in the bottom of the fifth, plating two more runs, then came in to score on an error.

Coupeville’s final run featured Easton Green singling, scooting to second on a Falcon error, stealing third, then sprinting home on an RBI groundout off of the bat of Dylan Robinett.

Seven of the 11 Wolves to see action Wednesday reached base, while Aidyn McDermott, Nathan Niewald, Jayden Little, and Farrell put together solid at-bats as well.

 

Wednesday stats:

Camden Glover — One double, two singles
Easton Green — One single, one walk
Carson Grove — One walk
Jack Porter — One single
Johnny Porter — One single
Landon Roberts — One single
Dylan Robinett — One walk

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