Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘King’s’

Small in numbers, but fast on their feet. (Elizabeth Bitting photos)

They showed up hungry and left satisfied.

Traveling to Shoreline Saturday, the Coupeville High School cross country squad ran with the big dogs at the 16th annual King’s Roller Coaster Trail Run.

Despite repping one of the smaller schools in attendance, the Wolves had a noticeable impact, tearing their way through a famously hilly course.

“We eat hills!!” said CHS coach Elizabeth Bitting.

“Five boys ran a sub-20 (minute) race at King’s! AT KING’S!! The hilliest course they will run.

“I am so excited for them!”

“Hills? We fear no hills.”

Overall, seven Wolves PR’d on the three-mile course, and two Coupeville runners finished the course even after being stung by pesky bees.

Having survived their jaunt to the big city — and their death battle with wayward insects — the CHS harriers have a busy week ahead of them.

Coupeville hosts a home meet at Fort Casey Wednesday, Sept. 27, then travels to the Cedarcrest Golf Course Sept. 30 for the Twilight Invite.

 

Saturday results:

 

GIRLS:

Varsity:

Noelle Western (42nd) 24:10.78
Ari Armstrong (73rd) 26:32.25
Aleksia Jump (88th) 27:36.70
Reagan Callahan (100th) 29:52.32

 

BOYS:

Varsity:

Carson Field (53rd) 19:03.46
Landon Roberts (62nd) 19:24.48
Kenneth Jacobsen (71st) 19:50.92
Thomas Strelow (72nd) 19:51.51
Ezekiel Allen (74th) 19:52.46
George Spear (81st) 20:13.80

 

JV:

Axel Marshall (62nd) 20:45.66
Santi Ojeda (70th) 21:07.28
Nicholas Wasik (85th) 21:41.21
Preston Howard (86th) 21:41.22
Zach Blitch (191st) 31:48.56
Damy Giacobbe (192nd) 31:48.56

The calm before the Battle of the Bees.

Read Full Post »

Christopher Zenz flies across the course at an earlier meet. (Wendy Wasik photo)

“This team can handle any course they encounter.”

Running guru Jon Gabelein, standing in for Coupeville Middle School coach Amber Wyman while she transported her son to college Saturday, guided the young Wolves to a strong team-wide performance in Shoreline.

CMS competed in the 16th annual King’s Roller Coaster Trail Run, placing five female harriers in the top 10.

That group was led by Lillian Ketterling, who claimed 5th place, while the Wolf boys were topped by Isaiah Allen, who hit the tape in 13th place.

Wolves (l to r) Mary Western, Ava Lucero, and Claire Lachnit burn up the oval. (Jon Gabelein photos)

“They were definitely ready to ride the “roller coaster” today,” Gabelein said. “Running hard at the home meet just two days ago didn’t seem to slow them down.

“Maybe we should have two meets a week more often?”

The coach’s enthusiasm was matched by his athletes, with Mary Western telling Gabelein “It was hilly but fun!” and Elizabeth Marshall commenting “It was a roller coaster of pain, but it felt good when it ended!”

Saturday’s 1.6-mile run marked the mid-point of Coupeville’s six-meet middle school season.

Next up for CMS is a jaunt to Granite Falls Thursday, Sept. 28, for the Granite Gallop.

 

Coupeville’s girls celebrate a strong showing.

 

Saturday results:

 

GIRLS:

Lillian Ketterling (5th) 12:46.66
Mikayla Wagner (6th) 12:50.37
Allie Powers (7th) 13:07.12
Laken Simpson 
(8th) 13:13.33
Anna Powers
(10th) 13:22.85
Marin Winger (14th) 14:01.94
Elizabeth Marshall
(25th) 15:31.50
Claire Lachnit
(30th) 16:12.53
Mary Western
(31st) 16:13.90
Ava Lucero 
(34th) 17:00.73
Amelia Crowder (42nd) 19:00.65

 

BOYS:

Isaiah Allen (13th) 11:46.41
Archer Schwarz (14th) 11:54.94
Cyrus Sparacio (15th) 11:58.46
Johnathan Jacobsen (18th) 12:30.82
Christopher Zenz (27th) 13:51.57
Avery Eelkema (28th) 14:20.04

Johnathan Jacobsen hits the gas.

Read Full Post »

Bennett Richter guides Coupeville’s young hoops stars. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“The kids of Coupeville are very resilient!”

Having endured their annual pilgrimage to Shoreline to face off with richnik-funded sports factory King’s, the Wolves came away with hard-earned lessons.

While all three CMS teams fell by lopsided scores Thursday against a powerhouse program, the players superior effort and attitude earned the approval of Wolf coaches Bennett Richter and Mia Littlejohn.

There were bright moments on the hardwood, such as 7th grader Willow Leedy-Bonifas busting out for a career-best 14 points in the day’s opening loss.

Willow played extremely well,” Richter said.

Willow Leedy-Bonifas, the earlier days. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

But the day’s biggest highlight came in how the young Wolves responded to the losses.

“It wasn’t long before the girls were laughing and singing and eating food,” Richter said.

“Sometimes it’s things like the bus ride home that you remember most,” he added. “And these girls definitely know how to make the best of a long trip!”

Coupeville has four games left on its eight-game schedule, with three of those set to go down in its home gym.

The Wolves host Granite Falls Feb. 27, travel to Lakewood the next day, then welcome Sultan (Mar. 2) and South Whidbey (Mar. 9) to town to bring a wrap to the season.

Read Full Post »

Haylee Armstrong and friends hit the hardwood in the new year. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The gym will be theirs.

Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball kicks off with the first day of practice Jan. 23 and the first game Feb. 9.

The eight-game season plays out over the course of a month, with home and away series against Sultan and South Whidbey highlighting the schedule.

As things stand today:

 

Thurs-Feb. 9 — @South Whidbey (3:30)
Wed-Feb. 15 — Granite Falls (3:15)
Thurs-Feb. 16 — @Sultan (3:30)
Tues-Feb. 21 — Northshore Christian (3:15)
Thurs-Feb. 23 — @King’s (3:30)
Mon-Feb. 28 — @Lakewood (3:15)
Thurs-Mar. 2 — Sultan (3:15)
Thurs-Mar. 9 — South Whidbey (3:15)

 

CMS is also still in the market to hire coaches, with two spots open after hoops gurus Kassie O’Neil and Kristina Forbes moved on to other challenges.

 

To apply, pop over to:

https://www.applitrack.com/coupeville/onlineapp/default.aspx?Category=Athletics%2fActivities

Read Full Post »

Riley Lawless powers through the paint. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

No fear.

King’s has supreme name value in the basketball world, but the Coupeville Middle School boys didn’t back down at all Thursday afternoon.

While the Wolves lost all three games on their home court, they hung tough in two of the bouts, and had flashes of strong play in the other.

How the day played out:

 

Level 1:

Coupeville fought King’s virtually even in the second half, but a couple of first-half breakdowns ultimately doomed the Wolves in a 48-29 loss.

CMS came out with a nice intensity, jumping to a 5-2 lead after a three-point play the hard way from Jayden McManus and a basket in the paint off the fingertips of Riley Lawless.

The Knights responded by employing a full-court press, and flustered the Wolves a bit, however.

With most of its buckets coming on plays in which it was out and running, converting turnovers into breakaways, King’s closed the first quarter on a 13-2 run.

Coupeville responded with a three-ball from Carson Grove to open the second frame, cutting its deficit back to 15-10.

Then, the baskets dried up for a bit, as the Wolves failed to hit another field goal over the final six minutes-plus of the half.

A pair of free throws in the waning moments — one each from Nic Laska and Lawless — broke the cold spell, but CMS found itself down 28-12 at the break.

King’s stretched its lead to 35-14 midway through the third quarter, before the Wolves responded with an 11-0 surge of their own.

Chayse Van Velkinburgh hit a sweet runner in the paint, lobbing the ball high up and over a defender’s outstretched arms, then McManus knocked down three straight buckets to end the third quarter.

One came on a smooth move in the paint, another off of a steal, and the third on an offensive rebound put back up and in under extreme pressure.

Toss in a three-ball from Van Velkinburgh to open the final frame, and things were getting considerably more interesting for Wolf fans.

It wasn’t to be, though, as the Knights proved to be strong closers, capping things with a 13-4 rally which included a trio of three-balls and a couple of put-backs off of rebounds.

While King’s played platoon ball — subbing in a fresh five players at a time — Coupeville got by with just seven warriors, with its starters playing most of the minutes.

McManus, back on the floor after missing a game with illness, paced the Wolves with 13 points, while Lawless (7), Van Velkinburgh (5), Grove (3), and Laska (1) also scored.

Joshua Stockdale gave CMS a burst of energy off the bench, with Davin Houston hitting the boards with savage intensity.

 

Level 2:

The roughest game of the day for the Wolves, as they absorbed a 46-8 loss.

King’s threw down the first 28 points of the contest, before Nathan Niewald broke free for an end-to-end run which resulted in a crowd-pleasing layup.

Coupeville’s remaining points came courtesy of three-balls from sharpshooters Roger Merino-Martinez and Liam Lawson.

Making his season debut, Merino-Martinez was a fireball on both ends of the floor, also picking up a blocked shot on a play in which he chased down a rival shooter who thought he was free to rumble.

Spoiler: he was not.

Dylan Robinett, Hunter Atteberry, Cyrus Sparacio, Jacob Barajas, Kenneth Jacobsen, and Charles Hart rounded out the rotation for the Wolves, who fought hard and remained scrappy until the final buzzer.

 

Level 3:

Take away the first quarter, and this was a brawl.

The visitors used a 10-1 surge in the opening frame, then hung on for a 31-15 victory in a game that got more competitive the further it went.

Coupeville put together its best seven-minute stretch in the third quarter, with Sparacio and Merino-Martinez splashing three-balls on back-to-back trips down the floor.

The Wolves spread out their offense between four players, with Merino-Martinez rattling the rims for five points, while Johnathan Jacobsen (4), Barajas (3), and Sparacio (3) flipped the net.

Khanor Jump, Zach Blitch, Atteberry, Dillin Kastner, Kenneth Jacobsen, and Jacob Meadors also saw floor time for Coupeville, which plays its next two games on the road.

CMS heads to Granite Falls Dec. 5, then visits Northshore Christian Dec. 7.

Zach Blitch keeps a watchful eye on his man in a recent game.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »