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   Shielding her eyes from some unexpected sun, Kiara Burdge gets ready to launch her javelin Thursday at the Island Jamboree. (John Fisken photo)

The smallest school held its own.

Facing off with their Whidbey rivals Thursday at the Island Jamboree, the Coupeville High School track and field team won eight events and set 39 PRs.

South Whidbey, a fellow 1A school, also won eight events, while host Oak Harbor, a 3A institution, captured 12 titles.

Coupeville was led by Jacob Smith, who roared to victories in the 100 and 200.

Joining him at the top of the hill were Skyler Lawrence (shot put), Jacob Martin (long jump), Lindsey Roberts (100 hurdles), Cassidy Moody (high jump), Mitchell Carroll (triple jump) and Allison Wenzel (javelin).

Martin and Wenzel set PRs in their wins, while Moody, a freshman, was participating in her first official high school track meet.

It was a record-setting day all around, as 25 Wolves notched at least one career best, with 14 nailing two PRs during the meet.

Complete CHS results: 

Girls:

100 — Mallory Kortuem (4th) 14.10 *PR*; Maya Toomey-Stout (9th) 14.22 *PR*; Ashlie Shank (20th) 15.16; Natalie Hollrigel (24th) 15.52 *PR*

200 — Lindsey Roberts (2nd) 28.63 *PR*; Hollrigel (8th) 30.03 *PR*; Kortuem (13th) 30.59 *PR*; Shank (17th) 31.35

800 — Lucy Sandahl (3rd) 2:58.48 *PR*; Lauren Bayne (4th) 2:58.90; Abby Parker (6th) 3:09.61

1600 — Sandahl (6th) 6:30.19 *PR*

100 Hurdles — Roberts (1st) 16.55

Shot put — Skyler Lawrence (1st) 29-06.50; Emma Smith (5th) 25-08.75 *PR*; Charlotte Langille (6th) 24-10.25 *PR*; Naika Hallam (8th) 23-10.25 *PR*; Ema Smith (10th) 22-06.25 *PR*

Discus — Lawrence (3rd) 77-10; Allison Wenzel (4th) 74-04; Langille (5th) 63-02 *PR*; Emma Smith (7th) 60-07; Tomi Herrera (13th) 43-07 *PR*

Javelin — Wenzel (1st) 91-02 *PR*; Bayne (3rd) 90-06; Hallam (4th) 88-02; Parker (8th) 78-06; Herrera (11th) 45-10 *PR*; Jasmine Nastali (13th) 40-05 *PR*; Kiara Burdge (15th) 39-06 *PR*

Long Jump — Toomey-Stout (2nd) 14-08 *PR*; Lauren Grove (4th) 13-11.50; Nastali (10th) 11-09.50 *PR*

High Jump — Cassidy Moody (1st) 4-04 *PR*

Boys:

100 — Jacob Smith (1st) 12.10, Jean Lund-Olsen (8th) 12.50 *PR*; Kyle Burnett (26th) 13.35 *PR*; Greg Villareal (30th) 13.96 *PR*

200 — J. Smith (1st) 23.70; Villareal (13th) 28.83 *PR*

800 — Danny Conlisk (3rd) 2:19.54

1600 — Conlisk (2nd) 5:07.77

Shot Put — Ryan Labrador (4th) 34-04.50; Grey Rische (7th) 31-01.25 *PR*; Connor Thompson (8th) 30-11.75; Keahi Sorrows (9th) 30-10.75 *PR*

Discus — Sorrows (5th) 93-03 *PR*; Thane Peterson (7th) 85-10 *PR*; Labrador (9th) 81-04

Javelin — Jacob Martin (2nd) 124-05 *PR*; Rische (3rd) 123-08 *PR*; Chris Battaglia (6th) 117-03; Ariah Bepler (8th) 115-05 *PR*; Andrew Martin (19th) 83-03 *PR*; Peterson (26th) 46-10 *PR*

Long Jump — J. Martin (1st) 20-07 *PR*; Mitchell Carroll (4th) 19-04 *PR*; Cameron Toomey-Stout (9th) 17-04.50 *PR*; Lund-Olsen (15th) 15-08 *PR*; Burnett (16th) 15-01.50 *PR*

High Jump — Battaglia (3rd) 5-02

Triple Jump — Carroll (1st) 39-11

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   Relay mates Lauren Grove (left) and Lindsey Roberts reunite, as Emma Smith pops in to join the fun. (Sherry Roberts photo)

The Wolves get ready to test out the new CHS track oval. (Deb Smith photo)

   Wolf legend Kyra Ilyankoff braves the breeze to watch a new generation try and measure up to her epic javelin throws. (Ilyankoff photo)

   Roberts joins Craig Pedlar, who had a distinguished coaching career at Coupeville and Oak Harbor and 5-time state champ Natasha Bamberger. (S. Roberts photo)

   Former state meet qualifier Jared Helmstadter returns to his alma mater, joined by super-fan Kristin Hurlburt. (Smith photo)

   Remember, she has access to javelins, and knows how to use them, if you fail to heed her sign. (Ilyankoff photo)

   It’s like what, 17 degrees? That’s almost summer-like on the prairie. (Smith photo)

   Coach P and two of his most successful running stars, Kerry (McCormick) Rosenkranz and Bamberger. (Rosenkranz photo)

The Wolves won every event.

Of course, that’s bound to happen when no other schools are in attendance, but that was of minor importance Saturday afternoon.

What did loom huge was Coupeville High School, for the first time in many years, hosted a home track and field meet, showing off the new, voter-funded oval and facilities.

After years of dealing with an old track that had broken down too far to be usable for anything other than practice, the Wolves are primed to host multiple high school and middle school home meets this spring.

To get ready for those multi-team shindigs, and give the largest track team in school history a taste of competition, CHS threw itself an intra-squad meet.

While current Wolf runners and throwers arrived to start a new season, quite a few former athletes and coaches took advantage of the event, reuniting as they helped chart times and distances.

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Jacob Smith

   Jacob Smith and Mckenzie Meyer are back to chase new track records. (Deb Smith photo)

Randy King

   Randy King and fleet-footed (l to r) Lauren Bayne, Lauren Grove and Abby Parker will help debut a new CHS track facility this season. (John Fisken photo)

Practice is packed.

The lure of a brand-new track facility has attracted a whopping 52 Coupeville High School athletes to the early days of practice.

With 27 girls and 25 boys, it’s the largest team longtime Wolf track coach Randy King has had, so it’s also great his support crew is as deep as it’s ever been.

“We’ve brought aboard an excellent coaching staff that is knowledgeable,” King said. “Our event coaching coverage has the potential to be vastly improved.”

After working as a lone Wolf in some years, this time around King can call on Chad Felgar (sprinters/hurdlers), Bob Martin (shot put/discus), Lincoln Kelley (javelin), Jordan Ford (pole vault) and the duo of Neil Rixe and Brad Sherman (distance runners/jumps).

The coaching staff will be working with a team deep in returning veterans with state meet experience.

Eight athletes who competed at Cheney last spring will help debut the new track facility, led by sophomore sensation Lindsey Roberts and senior standout Lauren Grove.

The duo were part of award-winning, school-record-setting relay units with the graduated Sylvia Hurlburt and Makana Stone, while also excelling in solo events.

Roberts was the first female in the 116-year history of CHS to win three medals at the same state track meet, edging out Stone by a half hour for that honor.

She finished fourth in the 100 hurdles, while joining her teammates to capture 6th in the 4 x 100 and 3rd in the 4 x 200.

Grove, who also ran in the 200 at state as a junior, has four state meet medals all-time, having picked up a 2nd and 3rd as a relay runner during her sophomore campaign.

They are joined by junior Jacob Smith, the school record holder in the 200 (he was 4th at state), who advanced to Cheney in three (100, 4 x 400) events.

Add in sophomores Danny Conlisk (800, 4 x 400) and Chris Battaglia (high jump), junior Henry Wynn (4 x 400) and seniors Skyler Lawrence (shot put) and Mitchell Carroll (triple jump), and it’s a deep squad.

Beyond the state vets, the Wolves boast a bevy of talent.

Returning standouts like Lauren Bayne, Alexxis Otto, Grey Rische, Allison Wenzel, Jacob Martin, Abby Parker, Mckenzie Meyer and Connor Thompson will mesh with fleet-footed freshmen such as Maya and Sean Toomey-Stout, Cassidy Moody, Ja’Tarya Hoskins and Mallory Kortuem.

Two newcomers, senior Charlotte Langille and junior Cameron Toomey-Stout, are expected to make a big splash as well.

Langille claimed 5th in the shot put at the Vermont Indoor State Championships during her junior season.

The elder Toomey-Stout, who caught King’s eye “jumping out of the gym in basketball this winter” transfers over from baseball and will compete in jumps and sprints.

While he’s just begun to work with this year’s squad, King already likes what he sees.

“We have a large group of competitors who made great strides last year and with another year of experience are primed to be major contributors,” he said. “In addition to all this we have a deep and talented frosh contingent who are going to be instant contributors of points in our meets.”

When they’re not working (“it has been a joy to get to train on such a modern classy facility”), the Wolves are staying busy fundraising to pay for new equipment.

Having led Coupeville through numerous seasons, guiding his athletes to a mix of PRs, school records and state titles, King remains wedded to his low-key, effective coaching style.

“On the track and in the field we are working together to learn the technical aspects of our events, be safe, stay healthy, have fun, and make our best performances during championship season in May.”

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Lindsey Roberts

   Lindsey Roberts, here passing out of trouble in an earlier game, had a team-high 11 points and four boards Thursday in Sequim. (John Fisken photo)

Almost every path to success has a few bumps along the way.

For the high-flying Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball team, nothing has been able to stop them from adding wins to the ledger the past seven weeks.

Not illness, or injury, or a schedule that had them playing a school-record eight consecutive road games at one point.

10 straight wins, 47 days without a loss.

Until Thursday, when the offense dried up spectacularly in the second half and the Wolves watched host Sequim steal away a non-conference game from out of their clutches.

Up 12-8 at the break on their 2A rivals — who they scorched Monday on Whidbey — Coupeville got hammered 17-4 in the third quarter and fell 31-19.

The loss, the first for the Wolves since way back on Dec. 16 against powerhouse Bellevue Christian, puts CHS at 14-4 heading into their regular season finale Saturday.

Coupeville hosts Port Townsend for Senior Night (3:30 JV/5:00 varsity) and is looking to wrap up a third consecutive 9-0 season in 1A Olympic League play.

Thursday’s game played out, at least in the early going, much like Monday’s match-up — low-scoring and with Coupeville on top.

With Sequim controlling the pace of the game, keeping things sluggish while the Wolves wanted to get out and run, CHS still built a 9-6 lead after one quarter.

Mia Littlejohn opened the scoring with a three-ball, followed by a bucket from little sister Kalia and two from Lindsey Roberts, but the pace of the game was already draining, even with a lead.

“Tonight wasn’t our night. We knew what Sequim wanted to do offensively and that it would be another battle like Monday’s game,” CHS coach David King said. “Even though we scored nine in the quarter it was a struggle on both ends of the court.”

The second quarter “felt like we were watching paint dry,” as the two teams combined for a grand total of five points.

Roberts knocked down her third three-ball of the season to stake the Wolves to a 12-8 lead at the break, but few of the Coupeville players were thrilled with their early performance.

“At halftime, the players weren’t happy with our play,” King said. “We felt like we could turn it up defensively and get our offense going. But Sequim and our play said differently.”

Monday it was Coupeville who took charge in the third and on into the fourth with a brutally efficient defensive stand.

Thursday, it was Sequim senior Adrienne Haggerty, who used her six-foot frame to control play in the paint, then popped outside to drain three-balls as well.

She had just four points at the break, but went off for 12 in the third quarter, five more than Coupeville would score as a team in the entire second half.

While Coupeville has been known for staging late-game rallies this season, the spark wasn’t there on this night.

“In the past we found another gear and made comebacks. There was no late game heroics or a push to get us within striking distance,” King said. “The effort was there, but what the mind was telling the players didn’t translate to the court.

“We played tired, didn’t have our best defensive game,” he added. “And our offense didn’t show up. We did get some open shots throughout the game. Nothing seemed to fall.”

Roberts paced the Wolves with 11 points and four rebounds, while Mia Littlejohn (3), Lauren Grove (2), Kalia Littlejohn (2) and Sarah Wright (1) rounded out the scoring.

Kailey Kellner hauled in four boards, Mikayla Elfrank had two steals and the Wolves got strong supporting play from Allison Wenzel, Tiffany Briscoe, Lauren Rose and Ema Smith.

While he would have preferred to keep the winning streak alive, King has a great appreciation for how this team has rallied around each other and adopted a true “refuse to lose” attitude.

“Despite the loss, I’m pleased with the attitudes of the players. They aren’t happy with the loss and know we still have things to correct,” he said. “Me, who is ultra-competitive and hates to lose, I’ve had to explain that it’s OK to enjoy and win even if we didn’t play up to our own expectations.

“After some games this year the players aren’t happy with our play. How often does one hear that! That is a winning culture and players who expect great things from themselves and the team.”

Now, the focus switches to Saturday, when the Wolves will honor Kellner, Briscoe, Grove and Skyler Lawrence, before setting out to emphatically stretch the league’s longest active winning streak, in any sport, to 27-0.

“Tomorrow is another day. All is not lost. It’s one loss and we prepare for Port Townsend,” King said. “I’m expecting a spirited practice tomorrow and we will be better for it.”

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Kalia Littlejohn (John Fisken photo)

   Sophomore Kalia Littlejohn has heated up on the offensive end in recent games, moving up to #4 on her team in scoring. (John Fisken photos)

Ethan Spark

   A deadly three-point shooter, junior Ethan Spark also occupies the #4 scoring slot.

A fight and a runaway.

That’s what we’re facing as the chase for Olympic League championship banners plays out in the basketball world.

On the boys side, Port Townsend sits literally one win away from clinching a title and knocking off two-time defending champ Chimacum.

Take care of the Cowboys Tuesday, and the RedHawks will have swept the three-game season series from their arch-rivals.

A win would put them three up on Chimacum with three to play, while owning the tie-breaker.

It would also be Port Townsend’s sixth league victory in a season where neither Coupeville or Klahowya could possibly win more than five.

While the RedHawks don’t want to celebrate early — they did blow a two-game lead to the Cowboys last season — it’s hard to picture the change at the top not happening.

On the girls side, Coupeville, as it has from day one of the league in 2014, controls its own destiny.

The Wolves are 4-0 in league this season (with three of those wins by double digits) and 22-0 all-time, but Port Townsend is hanging around.

PTHS, which fell 39-29 to Coupeville in the two school’s first meeting, is just a half game back of the Wolves after pulling out last-second wins against Chimacum and Klahowya.

The Wolves head to Port Townsend this Friday for a first-place showdown, then host the RedHawks in the regular season finale Feb. 4.

Where things sit through Monday morning:

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 4-0 9-3
Port Townsend 4-1 8-4
Chimacum 1-4 7-7
Klahowya 0-4 3-9

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 5-0 10-3
Chimacum 3-2 3-9
COUPEVILLE 1-4 1-12
Klahowya 1-4 2-11

And scoring stats for Coupeville’s varsity players:

Girls:

Kailey Kellner – 99
Mia Littlejohn
– 74
Mikayla Elfrank
– 67
Kalia Littlejohn
– 41
Lindsey Roberts
– 36
Lauren Rose
– 30
Lauren Grove
– 27
Tiffany Briscoe
– 23
Sarah Wright
– 13
Kyla Briscoe
– 7
Charlotte Langille
– 2
Allison Wenzel
– 2

Boys:

Hunter Smith – 185
Gabe Wynn
– 131
Brian Shank
– 84
Ethan Spark
– 74
Hunter Downes
– 36
Joey Lippo
– 16
Cameron Toomey-Stout
– 16
Steven Cope
– 9
Ariah Bepler
– 5
Jered Brown
– 5

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