Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Ken Stange’

Mary Milnes flicks a return shot. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The work of the high school sports scheduler is never done.

Especially in the spring, when weather and other issues frequently mess with the best laid plans.

Such is the case for the Coupeville girls tennis squad, which once again sees its schedule shifting.

A trip to South Whidbey this coming Monday, Apr. 18 has been bumped nearly a month out due to a conflict with a Falcon league match.

Meanwhile, a previously rained-out tilt with that same South Whidbey team, only with this match in Coupeville, has been rescheduled.

The new remaining schedule, knock on wood:

Monday, Apr. 25 — Friday Harbor (3:30)

Tuesday, May 3 — South Whidbey (3:30) — SENIOR NIGHT

Wednesday, May 11 — @ South Whidbey (3:30)

Read Full Post »

Elizabeth Bitting leads off a look at CHS spring sports coaches. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They are the guiding lights.

As spring sports play out, the men and women who have stepped up to be coaches at Coupeville High School are at the forefront of things.

In the pics above and below, a look at some of the often-unsung superstars who keep Wolf sports humming along.

Read Full Post »

Coupeville High School tennis coach Ken Stange abides. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ken Stange’s fall schedule just got less cluttered.

That’s not necessarily a good thing, however, as the longtime Coupeville High School tennis coach will see a second-straight boys net campaign fall by the wayside.

During the 2020-2021 school year, the Wolves lost out when Friday Harbor, the only other school in the Northwest 2B/1B League to play tennis, cancelled all of its fall sports programs due to Covid concerns.

With NWL schools not playing non-conference games in any sport during the height of the pandemic, that left Coupeville up a creek without a tennis racket.

This time around, things were looking up, with Friday Harbor back in action.

The two NWL schools were set to join South Whidbey this fall in playing Seattle-based private schools from the Emerald Sound Conference.

Unfortunately, things won’t go as planned, as the Wolf tennis program, which is competing against football, cross country, and soccer for male athletes, wasn’t able to draw enough players.

CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith confirmed Monday the season had been cancelled.

Stange, who will return to the courts next spring with the Wolf girl netters, remains deeply-committed to both Coupeville tennis programs.

“We will try again next year,” he said.

Read Full Post »

CHS net guru Ken Stange and his boys tennis squad nabbed their second-straight Best Sportsmanship award from the Emerald City League. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They still like us.

For the second-straight year, the ultra-exclusive, private school-dominated Emerald City League bestowed its Best Sportsmanship award to the Coupeville High School boys tennis team.

The award is a testament to longtime Wolf net guru Ken Stange, and the lessons he has imparted to his players.

CHS competes in the North Sound Conference for every sport except one, and that’s boys tennis, as South Whidbey is the only other school from that six-team league to heft rackets.

So the two Whidbey schools linked up with the ECL, widely considered the toughest 1A tennis league in the state.

The other schools involved include Eastside Prep, Bear Creek, Overlake, The Bush School, Seattle Academy, and University Prep.

Despite being one of only two public schools in the league, and the farthest trip for the Seattle-based private schools, Coupeville has held up well.

The Wolves finished in fourth-place in 2018, and, with a very-thin roster this year, which forced a number of forfeits at #2 singles, still won three league matches.

Read Full Post »

Coupeville High School boys tennis coach Ken Stange needs more company. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

At this rate, bus rides may get a little lonely.

A week into practice for a new season, Coupeville High School boys tennis coach Ken Stange has the smallest roster of his 16-year tenure.

Seven athletes to be exact – five seniors, one junior, and one sophomore – which is troublesome when the Wolves need eight to field a full varsity team.

Coupeville’s netters are set to compete in the Emerald City Conference for a second year, but may have trouble filling out the required matches in league play.

The ECL plays a varsity format of two singles contests and three doubles bouts.

As it stands now, the Wolves would have to forfeit a slot each match, most likely at #2 singles.

Starting down 1-0 every match would make life tougher in an already highly-charged league.

The ECL is considered the best 1A boys tennis league in Washington, with private schools heavyweights like University Prep and Seattle Academy accounting for the majority of state champs in recent years.

Still, the Wolves held their own last year, claiming fourth-place in the eight-team league.

While all of Coupeville’s other sports teams are part of the North Sound Conference, only two of six schools in that league have boys tennis programs.

The other is South Whidbey, and the next-door neighbors both hooked up with the ECL, which is otherwise comprised of Seattle-area private schools.

With school opening Tuesday and Coupeville’s first match set for Sept. 11, Stange is still hopeful at least one more tennis player will surface.

So, put the word out to any CHS male in grades 9-12.

If they have prior experience, great.

If not, Stange, a noted net guru, is ready and willing to teach the game.

When asked what he was looking for in a player at the moment, the CHS coach kept it simple.

“A pulse.”

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »