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Posts Tagged ‘La Conner’

Hunter Downes was in La Conner Friday to see younger brother Logan break his CHS career touchdown passing record. (Angie Downes photo)

Logan Downes made up for lost time.

Returning from a one-game absence due to illness, the Coupeville High School senior quarterback had a record-setting night Friday in La Conner.

Or actually, make that a record-setting first half, as the Wolves blew out to a big lead and CHS coach Bennett Richter rested his gunslinger after halftime during a 43-12 win.

The gridiron guru is likely playing the long game, making sure his QB will be hale, hearty and healthy for the regular-season finale.

That comes in just six days, as a lack of refs in the area has bumped Coupeville’s Senior Night to Thursday, Oct. 26.

The Wolves, now 2-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 2-6 overall, welcome Friday Harbor to Cow Town, with a 4:00 PM kickoff and festivities at halftime.

A revenge victory over the Wolverines (3-0, 4-3) gives Coupeville a share of the league title and forces a tiebreaker to decide which NWL team advances to the state tourney.

To get into that position, CHS needed to take care of business on its trip to La Conner, and, after a brief burp, did just that.

Linemen Zane Oldenstadt (left) and William Davidson bask in the glow of victory. (Michelle Glass photo)

Now, if you only watched the first five minutes or so, you might be thrown off by the final score.

Downes didn’t get to fling a pass on the opening drive, and four rushing attempts only netted eight yards, as Coupeville turned the ball over.

Taking advantage, La Conner churned and burned its way downfield, using a nine-play drive that consisted of one body-slamming run after another to cover 45 yards.

A face mask penalty on the Wolves set the Braves up at the three-yard line, and CJ Edwards promptly plowed into the end zone to make the local Homecoming crowd get briefly giddy.

Briefly.

Coupeville snuffed out a two-point conversion run to keep the deficit at 6-0, then promptly kicked off a run of 43 straight points.

And I do mean promptly.

A strong kickoff return by fleet-footed frosh Davin Houston gave the Wolves the ball at the 50-yard line, followed by Downes connecting with Chase Anderson on a pass play that finished in the end zone.

Up 7-6, Coupeville forced a punt, Downes flung another 45-yard bomb to Anderson, and the Wolves were surging.

A lost fumble very briefly interrupted the flow, but after that the first half was a master class of quarterback play.

Jack Porter dreams of touchdown catches. (Parker Hammons photo)

Downes chucked a 47-yard scoring strike to Jack Porter, added a two-point conversion pass to Hunter Bronec after a La Conner penalty on the PAT attempt, and was just getting started.

The wily senior broke the school career touchdown passing record with his third tally of the night, hooking up with Bronec from 10 yards out.

After that came a second scoring lob to Anderson and a short five-yard TD strike to Aiden O’Neill on the very last play of the half.

Beating the clock and the defense, Downes staked Coupeville to a 36-6 lead and exited stage left with at least a share of all three Wolf TD passing records.

His five scoring strikes Friday matches his own school single-game record, set last season.

The TD pass to O’Neill is his 18th of the current campaign, tying him with Joel Walstad for the school single-season mark, originally set in 2014.

And career-wise?

Logan Downes opened the night with 33 touchdown passes, tied for #2 all-time with current CHS basketball coach Brad Sherman, two behind the record holder, big bro Hunter Downes.

Now the youngest of Ralph and Angie’s three sons sits alone atop the heap with 38 TD passes and counting heading into the clash with Friday Harbor.

Johnny Porter is coming to wreck your night. (Parker Hammons photo)

While the record-setting night gets a lot of the buzz, and deservedly so, there were other Wolves who had big performances against La Conner.

Bronec scored Coupeville’s lone second half touchdown, recovering a fumble and taking it to the house to cap a night in which he scored on both offense and defense.

Then there was big, bad senior Mikey Robinett, who spent much of the night flinging would-be blockers out of his way and making life severely uncomfortable for any La Conner player who dared to touch the football.

Johnny Porter crashed through the line time and again, tearing off rushing yardage, while freshman QB Matthew Gilbert got to play the entire second half in relief of Downes.

Cameron Breaux to Zane Oldenstadt, William Davidson to Malachi Somes and beyond, go up and down the roster and the Wolves got contributions from everyone.

Half of Coupeville’s games have seen the 2B Wolves playing up against quality 1A and 2A schools this season — making their win/loss record a little deceptive.

But now they head home, masters of their own destiny.

Win league, get back to state. It’s still the goal, and it’s what will be on the line next Thursday.

Bow Down to Cow Town. (Parker Hammons photo)

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Nick Guay knocked in a goal Friday to help spark a Senior Night win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a nice change of pace.

Riding an emotional wave on Senior Night, the Coupeville High School soccer squad played its final home game of the season Friday afternoon and exited with a bang.

Blanking visiting La Conner 2-0, the Wolves snapped a three-game skid, giving their five veterans a final victory on the turf at Mickey Clark Field.

Now 3-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 6-5 overall, Coupeville isn’t done, as it still has a road game on Orcas Island Oct. 24.

And while playoff hopes are on life support, they’re not completely dead.

A lot will have to happen over the next couple of days to make that a reality, but, in the words of James Bond, “Never Say Never Again.”

When they took the pitch Friday, the Wolves knew they needed a win to fan the faint embers of their remaining playoff dreams, but they also wanted to win for other reasons.

The sixth win gives this year’s squad the most victories in coach Robert Wood’s four-year run at the helm.

Showing continued growth coming out of a pandemic and a moment where it appeared the program would be shut down for lack of players, the Wolves are going uphill.

They finished 1-5 during a Covid-shortened 2020 season, then 4-10, 5-9, and now sit at 6-5 this time around.

The core of the rebuild has been Coupeville’s seniors, with Andrew Williams and Nick Guay playing all four seasons for Wood.

Hank Milnes and Cole White joined later, with Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim returning to soccer for his senior season after several years away from the game.

Hank Milnes stands tall on defense. (Mia Farris photo)

The furious five-pack, with help from their younger counterparts, have been ranked as high as #4 in the state this season, and have the ability to impress when everything is clicking.

Facing a scrappy, if inconsistent, La Conner squad, the Wolves came hard, attacking the goal all night.

The only problem was the Braves goaltender played like a man channeling legendary Italian netminder Gigi Buffon (thank you, Google…), throwing his body 1,001 different directions while punching balls away in frantic fashion.

On one attack, the Wolves peppered the net with three shots in rapid succession, only to see them all deflected.

But Coupeville kept pressing, and finally broke through right before stoppage time in the first half.

Sophomore scoring sensation Ezra Boilek banged home a penalty kick, the ball finding the top left of the net to finally get a goal on the big board.

It was Boilek’s team-leading eighth score during his first season running the CHS pitch, and Coupeville’s defense made the tally stand up.

Wolf goaltender Hurlee Bronec was a little less flashy than his La Conner counterpart on this day, but ultimately more effective.

Making numerous saves, he refused to let the Braves earn any satisfaction, with some big-time help from his defense, which scrambled, juked, and jostled their way to a shutout.

Hurlee Bronec, keeper of the net. (Jackie Saia photo)

Coupeville’s fans wanted a second goal, to give their team a little breathing room, and White, who “puts in more miles than anyone” according to his coach, came dangerously close, sliding several balls just past the net.

The Wolves finally got the cushion thanks to Guay, who was the right man in the right place.

Wandering past the net, he got his head on a ball and banked it through a wall of defenders to set the final margin at 2-0.

It was Guay’s sixth goal of the season and the 14th of his CHS career.

That breaks a tie with former Wolf ace Aidan Wilson and cements the lanky Wolf senior as the #6 scorer in program history.

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Chloe Marzocca goes airborne to punch a volleyball in the face. (Jackie Saia photos)

They’re headed home for a long stretch.

Fresh off a hard-fought loss at La Conner Tuesday night, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad gets five straight matches at home.

The Wolves, who have been playing with the minimum six players, five of whom are freshmen, return to action Tuesday, Oct. 3 against Friday Harbor.

After that comes tilts with Forks, Concrete, Mount Vernon Christian, and Providence Classical Christian.

Neither the Wolf varsity nor JV spikers have to play away from Coupeville again until Oct. 17.

Freshmen (l to r) Capri Anter, Myra McDonald, Dakota Strong, and Lexis Drake show great promise.

CHS fans who catch the JV squad (0-2 in league play, 1-4 overall) during their homestand will see a scrappy band of ballhawks who continue to fight hard even when giving up the advantage in terms of bodies on the bench.

While the wins may not have come as frequently as in the past, Wolf coach Ashley Menges has her squad on the upswing, teaching them to play with passion and courage.

 

Thursday stats:

Capri Anter — 2 kills, 7 digs, 8 aces
Haylee Armstrong — 3 kills, 1 dig, 2 assists, 2 aces
Lexis Drake — 3 kills, 1 ace
Chloe Marzocca — 9 digs, 2 assists, 4 aces
Myra McDonald — 2 digs, 1 assist
Dakota Strong — 1 kill, 4 digs

Haylee Armstrong and Co. play at home for the next three weeks.

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Madison McMillan filled up the stat sheet, again, in a five-set thriller Tuesday night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The dynasty is dying in front of our eyes.

La Conner, four-time defending state 2B volleyball champs, and a program which hasn’t lost a Northwest 2B/1B League match in more than a decade, is no longer untouchable.

The Braves are struggling through non-conference play, sitting at 2-4 overall, and have been dinged heavily in tournament action.

Saturday, La Conner lost to both Coupeville and Mount Vernon Christian at the South Whidbey Invite, with the Wolves going undefeated to win the tourney title.

Tuesday night, back in the comfy confines of their home gym, the Braves blew a two-set lead and trailed 12-11 in the fifth, before rallying to edge CHS and (barely) keep their streak alive.

For a moment, at least.

The Wolves, and other teams like Orcas Island and Darrington, are already inside the house, and there are increasingly less places to hide for the Braves.

Ellie Marble isn’t coming to rescue you this time, is all I’m saying.

The final score Tuesday came out in favor of La Conner, to the tune of 25-23, 25-14, 23-25, 20-25, 15-12, but after watching the Braves bash the brains out of foes in previous seasons, it’s safe to say times have changed.

Coupeville may be 0-2 in league play, 1-4 overall, but that record is highly deceptive.

The Wolves, who led at some point in all five sets Tuesday, have lost in five sets three times, with their other defeat coming to undefeated Neah Bay.

The La Conner loss, while it still stings, should also hit differently for Coupeville.

Unlike the other five-set losses, where the Wolves let the lead slip away, this time they were the ones charging from behind.

A shot here, a shot there, and Tuesday’s tilt ends with the visitors screaming in joy all the way back to Whidbey Island.

Circle Oct. 24 on your calendar.

That’s Senior Night for Coupeville, and the rematch with La Conner, possibly with major playoff implications on the line.

Play like they did Tuesday, and clean a few small things up, and the Wolves could make The Rock shake.

Mia Farris cranks out another winner. (Jackia Saia photo)

Coupeville came out strongly, building a 14-9 lead in the first set thanks to strong play from Mia Farris, who fired missiles from the service stripe, while getting a hand on numerous winners while covering the entire floor.

She got plenty of help, with big hitters Lyla Stuurmans, Grey Peabody, and Teagan Calkins peppering the Braves with a mix of snappy spikes and artful tips.

La Conner fought back, however, using a 15-5 run to surge ahead 24-19.

Their backs to the wall, the Wolves fought off four set points — with three different players lashing winners — before the Braves caught a break when a long rally ended with a CHS shot which just barely missed the back line.

Not missing a beat, Coupeville bounced back to take a 6-1 advantage in set two behind a strong run at the service stripe from Stuurmans.

A disputed call kept the Wolves from pushing the margin to 7-1, while once again raising the question of why volleyball is the only high school sport to leave a significant amount of its linework in the hands of hometown parents, and not the refs.

The call, in which a ball hit out of bounds by La Conner was ruled to have grazed the fingertips of a Wolf, seemed to throw Coupeville off a bit.

The Braves took advantage, closing the set on a 23-8 surge, even as Stuurmans continued to rise up and smash the holy heck out of the ball.

In seasons past, a two-set lead for La Conner allowed Hall of Fame Coach Suzanne Marble the opportunity to light up a victory cigar.

For her successor, Pam Keller, that’s not happening as often in her first season at the helm of a new-look Braves squad.

A couple of early winners from Madison McMillan (one on a nasty slicer) and Stuurmans (delivering straight smoke) were sweet, but La Conner built a five-point lead and led as late as 20-17 in set three.

Enter a fired-up Peabody, who delighted in smashing balls off her rivals, and Calkins, who popped serve winners, as the Wolves rallied to keep their night alive.

Katie Marti will rock you. (Bailey Thule photo)

Katie Marti, who spent a considerable chunk of time flicking high, arcing sets to her hitters, delivered the final punctuation note herself, mashing a winner which left a welt on the Brave who tried, foolishly, to stop the ball.

Set four firmly belonged to the Wolves, who, riding a wave of emotion, snatched the lead at 9-8 and never gave it back.

Coupeville stretched the margin to as many as seven points, let La Conner sneak back in for a moment, then closed things out with Peabody and Stuurmans once again doing the dance o’ death at the net, strafing La Conner’s defense with laser shots.

That set up a furious finale, with the teams combining for five ties in the fifth set.

The last came at 11-11, as Stuurmans jumped to the ceiling for a tip winner, with a La Conner error on the next play staking the Wolves to a 12-11 lead.

The miracle finish wasn’t to be, though, with the Braves holding on to win after Coupeville missed their final run of shots by a combined 1.3 inches.

As he reflected on the match afterwards, Coupeville coach Cory Whitmore praised the grit shown by his team.

“Hard fight tonight and I’m proud of how the team bounced back from down 0-2 to push into a 5th,” he said.

Mia was incredible with her back row defense and covered sideline to sideline in addition to being our go-to on occasion. Grey came up with some big blocks.

“But we struggled to close when we had a chance and it cost us the fifth set.”

 

Tuesday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 11 digs
Teagan Calkins — 1 kill, 3 digs, 3 aces
Mia Farris — 15 kills, 22 digs, 2 aces
Jada Heaton — 2 kills, 1 assist
Issabel Johnson — 1 ace
Katie Marti — 2 kills, 15 digs, 34 assists, 6 aces, 1 block assist
Madison McMillan — 1 kill, 17 digs, 1 assist, 1 ace
Grey Peabody — 12 kills, 1 dig, 4 block assists, 2 solo blocks
Lyla Stuurmans — 21 kills, 10 digs, 1 assist, 3 aces, 1 block assist

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That moment when you beat the Evil Empire. (Jackie Saia photo)

The narrative changed, and it changed fast.

A day-and-a-half after letting a five-set match slip away for the second time this season, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball spikers fully found their mojo.

With all nine girls putting up numbers on the stat sheet Saturday, the Wolves went to Langley and whacked some folks.

Sweeping all four of its matches at the South Whidbey Invite — including KO’ing four-time defending 2B state champs La Conner for the first time since rejoining the Northwest 2B/1B League in 2020 — Coupeville returns to Cow Town as tourney champs.

“It was a fun day,” said CHS coach Cory Whitmore. “I’m very encouraged with what we accomplished today.”

Coming off that Thursday loss to Orcas Island, the Wolves got after it at practice Friday, and it paid immediate dividends.

“Practice was challenging and focused, and they persevered through it,” Whitmore said.

“So, we started today with me telling them that today would be a success no matter what if they took ownership over the energy, the execution and game-management.

“They did exactly that, and I’m very proud of them, but I hope more importantly, they are proud of them.”

Nine spikers playing as one. (Christi Messner photo)

Coupeville won 10 of 12 sets Saturday and finished with an impressive 278-192 advantage in points.

The Wolves swept Klahowya (25-11, 25-17, 25-17) and Bremerton (25-9, 25-2, 25-14), while holding off Mount Vernon Christian and La Conner 2-1.

MVC fell 25-14, 22-25, 23-22, while the Braves, who have dominated the region for years, came up on the short end of a 25-23, 15-25, 18-12 match.

Coupeville and La Conner meet again Tuesday, when Whitmore and Co. head off-Island for the first of two regular-season matches against the champs.

For the moment, however, the remainder of the weekend is for rest and basking in the afterglow of a day of near perfection.

 

Saturday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 9 digs, 1 assist
Teagan Calkins — 15 kills, 2 digs, 5 aces, 1 solo block
Mia Farris — 22 kills, 27 digs, 7 aces, 3 block assists
Jada Heaton — 8 kills, 7 digs, 2 block assists
Issabel Johnson — 1 assist
Katie Marti — 5 kills, 18 digs, 101 assists, 22 aces, 3 block assists
Madison McMillan — 46 digs, 4 assists, 6 aces
Grey Peabody — 24 kills, 5 block assists
Lyla Stuurmans — 44 kills, 20 digs, 19 aces, 2 solo blocks, 1 block assist

Did I mention they beat the Evil Empire? (Bailey Thule photo)

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