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CHS grad Danny Conlisk won the 200 and 400 Saturday at the Nike Xtreme Speed Christal Johnson Memorial track meet in Auburn. (Dawnelle Conlisk photo)

Danny Conlisk may never lose another race. Ever.

A day after graduating from Coupeville High School, the two-time state champion went out and kicked off the summer season by rolling to a pair of wins in Auburn.

Running at the Nike Xtreme Speed Christal Johnson Memorial, Conlisk scored victories in both the 200 and 400.

In the shorter of the two races, he rambled across the line in a crisp 22.38 seconds, edging out Karandeep Dhillon of Xtreme Speed (22.60).

Conlisk, who is in his second year of running for the Kitsap Fliers Track and Field Club, then crushed the field in the 400.

Leaning across in 51.14, he was a full second faster than runner-up Christopher Rogers of Auburn Elite, who clocked in at 52.14.

Conlisk is scheduled to return to action June 15 at the South Puget Sound Track Festival at Mt. Tahoma High School in Tacoma.

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Danny Conlisk hangs out with the parental units Saturday at the 112-team Nike Eason Invitational. (Dawnelle Conlisk photo)

Jean Lund-Olsen, here celebrating a previous win, joined Conlisk in racing against the best in the state. (Brian Vick photo)

After winning two medals, Danny Conlisk hangs out with the track whisperer himself, Randy King. (Dawnelle Conlisk photo)

Small town, big results.

Staring down runners from every state classification at the 112-team Nike Eason Invitational in Snohomish Saturday, a duo of Coupeville runners more than held their own.

CHS senior Danny Conlisk, going toe-to-toe with the best from 4A-1B, claimed two medals, finishing second in the 400 and seventh in the 200.

His teammate, junior Jean Lund-Olsen, didn’t make it out of the prelims in the 100 or 200, yet still set a PR in the first race and ran some of the fastest times any 1A runner has netted in 2019.

Conlisk went straight to the finals in the 400, entering as the #3 seed, then beat the pre-race predictions.

His time of 50.16 seconds was a season-best, narrowly missing his PR of 49.70.

The only foe he couldn’t catch was Ethan Willems of 4A Glacier Peak, a junior who has returned after missing a season with a torn ACL to be the fastest runner in the entire state in the 400.

In the 200, Conlisk busted out a PR (22.55) in the prelims, then ran 23.06 in the final.

He’s ranked #1 in the 200 and #2 (by 0.02 of a second) in the 400 among all 1A runners.

Lund-Olsen just missed the cut in the 100, finishing 12th in a personal-best 11.31 seconds, then claimed 19th in the 200 prelims in 23.18.

He was in the top half of both events, which had 41 and 43 runners in the prelims, respectively.

With one more regular meet before the postseason begins, Lund-Olsen is ranked #3 in 1A in both the 100 and 200.

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Danny Conlisk (Dawnelle Conlisk photos)

   Danny Conlisk gazes out across the Cedarcrest Golf Course. (Dawnelle Conlisk photos)

Conlisk and family, post race.

Conlisk and family, post race.

Danny Conlisk motors for home at his first high school cross country race. (John Fisken photos)

The heir to Kyle and Tyler King. (John Fisken photo)

Coupeville High School sophomore Danny Conlisk has run in three cross country meets in his short prep career, and he’s dropped time every step of the way.

Saturday, running at the 10th annual Nike Twilight XC Invitational in Marysville, he busted his PR by a full minute and 12 seconds, covering 5,000 meters in 18:35.99.

That put him up in the top half of his race, the varsity boys’ 1B-2A heat, as he claimed 93rd in a field of 198 runners.

The event drew thousands of harriers to the Cedarcrest Golf Course, with 12 different races being run — six each for boys and girls.

Conlisk’s race pitted runners from 1B, 2B, 1A and 2A schools against each other, and he was joined by his training and traveling partners from South Whidbey.

Silas Griffith, a senior from 2A Ridgefield who finished 5th at state last year, won the race in 15:37.14.

Coupeville’s only other runner this season, junior Henry Wynn, skipped the race to be at his dad’s 50th birthday party.

The Wolf duo have two more regular season races (Oct. 6 at South Whidbey and Oct. 13 at King’s), then break away from the Falcons for the postseason.

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Zane Bundy, well-dressed booter. (John Fisken photo)

Zane Bundy, well-dressed booter. (John Fisken photo)

Zane Bundy is busy dazzling the college scouts.

The Coupeville High School soccer ace spent the weekend playing in the Nike Crossfire Challenge in Redmond, considered the premier youth tourney in the Pacific Northwest.

With Bundy leading the way as a team captain, he and his Washington Rush teammates swept to first-place in Bracket B of the U19 Gold Group and will play in the semifinals Monday.

The Rush (1-0-2) will face off with Crossfire Oregon 97 Black (3-0-0) at 10 AM. Win and they advance to the championship game at 2:15.

That game would pit them against the winner of the other semifinal match-up, between Tynecastle FC (1-0-2) and Pacific Northwest SC (2-1-0).

Bundy’s squad opened with a 3-2 victory Friday over Highline Premier FC, then held on for a pair of hotly-contested 1-1 draws Saturday and Sunday.

The tournament draws select teams from multiple states (Washington, California, Oregon, Idaho, Colorado, Alaska, Utah and Montana) as well as Canada.

The 2014 tournament boasted more than 500 teams spread out over the various age groups and the games are closely-watched by representatives from multiple colleges.

Bundy, who was named a captain for next year’s Wolf squad (he’ll share duties with fellow senior Tanner Kircher) is just getting back into the flow of the game, having recently recovered from a leg injury that cost him most of his junior season.

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Ann Pettit (left) with partner Christina Parker.

Ann Pettit (left) with partner Christina Parker.

“Everything, and I mean everything in my life is based off of basketball in one way or another. My life has revolved around the ball like the earth does around the sun.”

Ann Pettit is one of the greatest basketball players in Coupeville High School history, a high-scoring sensation who helped lead the Wolf girls to their first-ever appearance at the state tournament.

The team’s Offensive Player of the Year in 1996 and ’97 and MVP in ’98, she excelled on the court and it was where she was the happiest.

“My best memories at CHS was when I played basketball,” Pettit said. “That was the only time I enjoyed myself.

“Our team coached kids, as well as went on tournaments, and camps together during the summers,” she added. “We had a great team, very well coached and organized. As a unit we were amazing.”

Pettit was a huge part of that success, making an impact from the first moment Wolf coach Willie Smith gave her varsity playing time.

Bouncing up from the JV team as a swing player her sophomore season, she didn’t enter her first game as a varsity player until the second half, yet still poured in 18.

“Coach Smith put me in during the third quarter, scared out of my mind for sure,” Pettit said. “I will never forget that game. From then on, I was a starter on varsity.”

Teaming with Zenovia Barron to form a formidable scoring duo, Pettit faced down considerable talent to lead the Wolves to state during her senior season in 1997-1998.

While Lakewood and King’s provided huge obstacles, the biggest might have come in the game that sent the Wolves to the Big Dance.

Facing off with Bellevue Christian — the same school Coupeville plays tonight in a district playoff game — Pettit found herself matched up with Cathrine Kraayeveld, now in her 11th season in the WNBA.

Despite giving up considerable height — Pettit was five-foot-nine and Kraayeveld is listed at 6-3 these days — the feisty Wolf held her own and a photo of her being swept up in a post-game hug by mom Julia anchored the Whidbey News-Times coverage of the game.

It is a moment she holds dear.

“My mom came to watch after work. She was so so proud of me,” Pettit said. “The photographer was there at the perfect moment.”

To get to that moment, and all the times she sparkled on the hardwood, Pettit put in considerable time working on her game.

If she had a chance to play, she seized it. Always.

“I played basketball year round. Sometimes I practiced twice a day,” she said. “I had a lot to learn, and skills to develop. I wanted basketball to take me someplace.

“Coupeville was small, still is, but I wanted to experience the sport at another level.”

It was a dream she lived out, playing ball for Peninsula College for two seasons, followed by a stint with York College in Nebraska while she attended Concordia University for fine arts.

Her time at Concordia, followed by the Art Institute of Portland, where she graduated in Design Visualization, led to her current work as a 3D artist.

No matter where she has been, or what work she’s pursuing, basketball has always been there for her.

After countless 3-on-3 tourneys and rec league action (once playing on three different teams at the same time), she is not playing as often as she approaches 35, but, when she does, she still comes full-tilt.

“I have been able to work hard, in work, in life with my dedications I learned through sports,” Pettit said. “I am a competitor. This world is full of competition, everywhere! It is a competition just to merge onto the freeway.

“Basketball itself made me who I am today.”

She’s also seen the game from the other side, coaching a JV girls’ basketball team for two years and handing down the lessons she learned to young players on her rec league teams.

“I want to coach again in the future. My heart will always be with the sport of basketball,” Pettit said.

“I always give the best advice I can while I play and when I coach,” she added. “I feel like now, I coach still with the younger 20’s ladies I play with.”

One of her favorite players, all-time hoops great Sheryl Swoopes, was featured in a Nike ad with the quote “Basketball is basketball, athletes are athletes.”

It is a quote Pettit believes deeply in.

“I always told my girls that. It is easy to get intimidated, and it is easy to intimidate,” Pettit said. “Believe me, there are girls who want to do just that. Always remember it’s basketball.

“She is an athlete just like you. No matter how tall, how fast. Next, the offensive player always has the advantage, and know it,” she added. “Finally, cherish every game like it is your last.

“High school seems like an eternity, but man, basketball was awesome then, love the game.”

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