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Posts Tagged ‘Mia Farris’

Madison McMillan crushes a home run. Again. (Jackie Saia photo)

They’re ready for one last run.

Coupeville’s senior softball players have compiled a 44-14 mark across their first three seasons and are looking to go out with a bang.

Third-baseman Madison McMillan, shortstop Taylor Brotemarkle, and outfielders Jada Heaton and Mia Farris top a Wolf team which returns every starter from a year ago, when they went 14-5 and came up just short of a trip to state.

Now, with former assistant coach Aaron Lucero moving up to replace the departed Kevin McGranahan, the focus remains the same.

Win, work hard, have fun, and win some more.

“We want to always be competitive in every game and make it to state,” Lucero said. “We want to be in control of our own future.

“While we can’t control whether we have to compete in a single play-in game in District 4 or get a direct bid by winning our own league, we can control our effort, attitude, preparation, and intensity.”

The Wolves will focus on core values like “team before me” and “do the little things” while looking to maintain their hold on the top spot in the Northwest 2B/1B League.

Coupeville has won three conference crowns in four seasons since moving from 1A to 2B, but the one thing missing is a return to the big dance, with the program’s last trip to state coming in 2019.

The pandemic erased spring sports in 2020 and prevented any playoffs in 2021, with the last three seasons ending just shy of a final-week bus ride to Eastern Washington.

The 2025 edition of the Wolves looks rock-solid, with the senior veterans topping a roster of experienced pros.

Teagan Calkins (center) is a bright, shining star. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Junior catcher Teagan Calkins has “been tasked with more responsibility as the field general to our pitching staff and catchers,” and “The Red Dragon” has been a star since day one.

“I’m glad she plays for us instead of against us!” said Lucero.

Calkins will be working with a pitching staff, which while young in age, has on-field experience to spare.

Staff ace Adeline Maynes is just a freshman but threw the Wolves to within a whisker of a trip to state as an 8th grader, while sophomores Haylee Armstrong and Capri Anter both saw frequent time in the pitcher’s circle a season ago.

Freshmen Sydney Van Dyke, Ava Lucero, and Chelsi Stevens also got a jump on launching their varsity careers as 8th graders, and this time around, there’s another group ready to make the same move.

“I’ve been impressed with our 8th graders who joined us this week with several more joining after middle school basketball ends,” Aaron Lucero said.

While the Wolves are counting on having a five-pack of middle schoolers on the roster, it’s not too late for others to join.

“Any who want to play softball are welcome!” Aaron Lucero said. “I really want and need a robust JV program!”

Seniors Jada Heaton (left) and Taylor Brotemarkle have been winners since day one. (Jennifer Heaton photo)

With an experienced team which boasts a mix of longball power, speed on the basepaths, and fire in its throwing arms, the Wolves kick off their schedule Thursday with a home game against 2A Lakewood.

Coupeville’s non-conference slate includes six games against 1A, 2A, or 3A schools, plus a home doubleheader with 2B powerhouse Forks.

“We won’t take a single team lightly and will prepare accordingly,” Aaron Lucero said.

“We will give every team respect and come out with the mentality that every game is the most important.

“I added some bigger schools with good softball programs to our schedule to push us.”

Whether it’s league rivals like Darrington or Friday Harbor, or bigger schools such as Oak Harbor and Meridian, success will ultimately come down to how the Wolves prepare.

“I’m never satisfied or complacent. The team is never satisfied or complacent,” Aaron Lucero said.

“We always have work to do to improve.  Everything about softball is designed to make the player fail, so we will continue to work on every phase of the game.

“Mental toughness is a must for our style of play.”

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Jada Heaton brings joy to the court. (Bailey Thule photos)

I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again.

Bailey Thule is my favorite photographer working the sidelines at Coupeville High School.

The Wolf senior has repeatedly demonstrated that she has a stellar eye for capturing pics which get past staged shots and truly showcase the personalities of her classmates.

She puts her subjects at ease and draws out something special, as seen in this latest batch of photos.

I don’t know what Bailey’s plans are for after high school.

But wherever she goes, and whatever she does down the road, I hope she keeps a camera nearby.

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Christi Messner is the president and CEO of the Katie Marti Fan Club. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“We have played sports together for many years and our friendships made every moment on the court memorable.”

Coupeville High School girls’ basketball honored its five veterans Friday, the last time the tight-knit group will likely have a joint Senior Night.

Based on history, spring will take Lyla Stuurmans and Katie Marti to track, while Jada Heaton, Mia Farris, and Madison McMillan will head off to the softball field.

But the five-pack remained united as they put a wrap on the regular season as hoops players, as Heaton acknowledged in the quote above.

They may still not know what “Iowa! Iowa!” means, but they’ve had a stellar run, and they’re not quite done, as the playoffs kick off in the week ahead.

Madison McMillan

Jada Heaton

Lyla Stuurmans

Mia Farris

Katie Marti

Managers Kauri Hamilton (left) and Melanie Wolfe rep the seniors.

CHS coach Megan Richter and her hardcourt assassins.

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Wolf cheerleaders love the spotlight. (Mia Farris photo)

The spirit is strong in them.

Coupeville High School cheerleaders continue to shake the rafters game after game this winter, providing the background to Wolf basketball games.

Whether performing at halftime or verbally supporting their hoops-playing classmates during the heat of action, the Wolf spirit squad remains the best in the biz.

Olivia Hall (and her teammates) light up the gym. (Bailey Thule photo)

Alysia Burdge and David Somes keep their eye(s) on the ball. (CHS Yearbook photo)

Bella Karr is fired up. (Mia Farris photo)

Coupeville seniors present a united front. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Bringing down the house at halftime. (Mia Farris photo)

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Mia Farris stops ‘n pops. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The action came in waves Tuesday night.

Ultimately that made for a tricky ride, however, as the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball team soared like seasoned surfers at times, only to be swept under by a brutal undertow at other moments.

From the giddiness of hitting five of their first six shots, to the despair of being on the wrong end of a 21-0 run later, the Wolves experienced all the colors of the rainbow.

By the time the clock ticked to 0:00, CHS was on the losing end of a 61-39 clash with visiting Mount Vernon Christian, dropping the home heroes to 4-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 7-9 overall.

MVC is a pristine 7-0 in conference action and is built to make a run at a state title, so the loss was not unexpected.

How we got there was, however, just that – a bit unexpected.

The Wolves hit the floor radiating intensity and started dropping daggers and getting their fans hyped up.

Teagan Calkins swished a three-ball from the right side of the floor moments into play, then came back around to bang home a bucket off a lob from Danica Stong.

Add two points for Strong herself — set up by a sweet dish off the fingertips of Lyla Stuurmans, and Coupeville was sitting pretty up 7-0.

Mount Vernon never panicked, though, hitting the first three of its ten three-balls, and slowly fought back to a 14-14 tie by the end of the quarter.

Calkins remained at her furious best, channeling her “Red Dragon” persona as she banged away for 10 points in the opening frame.

Most of her buckets were set up by precision passes from her teammates, with Mia Farris and Katie Marti picking up assists as well, and the Wolves offense was clicking.

Until it wasn’t.

MVC closed the first quarter with back-to-back treys, then peppered the net for the first 15 points in the second.

Lyla Stuurmans finally broke the drought, nailing a jumper off a pass from Haylee Armstrong, but the Hurricanes slapped home two more baskets to carry a 33-16 lead into the halftime break.

And yet, there was real hope.

Coupeville cut the lead down to 10 early in the third, saw the deficit swell back up to 17, then stormed back within eight at 40-32.

Calkins continued to singe the net from all angles, while Tenley Stuurmans tickled the twine on several free throw attempts to keep things interesting.

The ‘Canes offense was too much to totally shut down, though, as the visitors knocked down three-balls #8-10 in the final quarter to make the game seem like more of a runaway than it really was.

Right before the final buzzer Calkins slipped a free throw through the net for her 19th, and final, point of the night.

That gives the Wolf junior an even 200 for her varsity career, as she becomes the 65th CHS girl to crack the club between 1974-2025.

Strong popped for seven points in support, with Tenley Stuurmans (5), Farris (4), and Lyla Stuurmans (4) also scoring.

With those four points, Lyla Stuurmans moves to 238 for her career, slipping past Wolf legend Breeanna Messner (235) to become the #50 all-time scorer in program history.

Armstrong, Marti, Madison McMillan, and Jada Heaton rounded out the rotation for Coupeville, which returns to action this Friday, Jan. 31, when it travels to La Conner.

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