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CHS volleyball will be led by returning letter winners Ashley Menges (14), Emma Smith (13), Scout Smith (2) and Maya Toomey-Stout. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Now it gets interesting.

After crushing Olympic League competition two years running, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad is stepping up several rungs on the ladder.

With the creation of the North Sound Conference, the Wolves, who have gone 24-11 overall, 17-1 in conference action, since Cory Whitmore became head coach, find themselves facing a challenge.

The new six-team league features three schools which played at the state volleyball tourney last season.

One was CHS, which made the trip for the first time in 13 years, while South Whidbey and King’s also qualified while playing out of the old Cascade Conference.

While the private school Knights, who knocked off Cascade (Leavenworth) to win the state title, have the early edge, Whitmore isn’t looking past the Falcons, or Granite Falls, Sultan or Cedar Park Christian, for that matter.

“Being a new league, not having much prior knowledge of each team is both a challenge and a blessing,” he said. “In a very competitive league that we are new to, we will need to step on the court, ready to bring our best game forward.”

From the moment the new league was announced, Coupeville’s spikers were among the quickest of any Wolf athletes to embrace the challenge, often stating on social media that they were in attack, and not retreat, mode.

“I’ve been very proud of this group’s attitude toward the new league,” Whitmore said. “They have high expectation of themselves and a competitive spirit.

“We will bring it each practice preparing to bring it each game, no matter the team across the net.”

Last year’s team, which didn’t drop a set in league play, was led by seven strong seniors including Olympic League MVP Hope Lodell.

While losing that pack to graduation hurts, the cupboard isn’t bare, however.

There are four key returning varsity players, a newcomer who isn’t really a newcomer and talented spikers hankerin’ to move up from a JV team which finished 12-1 under Chris Smith.

Coupeville also continues to build for the future, welcoming another strong group as the Class of 2022 arrives on the high school court.

“Our incoming freshman group is working very hard to learn the systems (offense and defense) as well as the expectations of high school ball,” Whitmore said. “They have already made great strides and with more reps, they will soon learn how to let some natural athleticism take them as far as they are willing to push.”

As they begin their high school journey, the young spikers can look to the team’s veterans for guidance.

The returning letter winners include seniors Emma Smith and Ashley Menges, and juniors Scout Smith and Maya Toomey-Stout.

After playing her sophomore season in California, junior Hannah Davidson also returns to the Wolf program to pick up what she started as a freshman.

Menges and Scout Smith are expected to split time between setter and right-side hitter, while Emma Smith will anchor the team at middle blocker and Toomey-Stout will showcase her electric leaping ability coming in hot from an outside hitting slot.

Ashley and Scout both offer a strong all-around game able to take sets from the back row and block and attack in the front,” Whitmore said. “Emma had a very strong off-season preparing to take on role of middle blocker and has really emerged as a top attacker, calling for the ball and ready to shoulder a large amount of swings.

Maya has really developed her game to be a consistent attacker from any location on the court and we will rely on her knack for the ball defensively.”

Davidson will join Emma Smith in giving Coupeville some height, a nice touch on a team that, overall, doesn’t feature very many tall players this time around.

“We are so happy to have Hannah back with the team,” Whitmore said. “A strong freshman year with the program has allowed her to jump back into the swing of things, not missing a beat and holding down a very important second middle blocking role.”

While a majority of the current Wolves operate, shall we say, low to the ground, there are ways to deal with that.

“A weakness this team may face is our relative lack of height. We knew this headed into the off-season and so it was important for us to focus on our verticals in order to compensate,” Whitmore said. “We will have to be tough defensively in the back row and find ways of slowing the ball down with our front row block.

“Tough serving is another emphasis to pull taller teams off their routes on the net and making up for a lack in height,” he added. “As the season progresses, we will need to strengthen our attack, both in smart hitting locations, as well as overall power.”

Another big help is having a tight-knit group of players who know how each other will react, and Coupeville is blessed in that department.

“One of our strengths that we will rely upon this season will be our ability to communicate,” Whitmore said. “This group is a close group of friends that work very well together and communication is a large part of the game they have worked on, on and off the court.

“Another strength we hope to build upon would be our serving. Every day, this group pushes each other to be stronger servers that have potential to rattle opponents,” he added. “And in facing strong servers in practice, we look to be strong passers with experience against a tough serve.”

The Wolves, who open the regular season Thursday, Sept. 6 with a non-conference home match against Friday Harbor, enter year three of the Whitmore Era intent on attacking each new day.

Never back down, never give in.

“Our goals for this season would be to finish toward the top of this new, competitive league,” Whitmore said. “Like each season, we want to be playing our best volleyball at the end and push deep into the playoffs, making it to state.

“It will take more than a starting group of six players – we will rely upon everyone bringing their best every day in practice, helping to prepare for big games.”

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Sean Toomey-Stout led Coupeville football in rushing, and was among state leaders in tackles when an injury prematurely ended his sophomore season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s a whole new world.

Quite a lot is radically different for Coupeville High School football, as the Wolves enter the 2018 season with a new coaching staff, a new league and new leaders on both sides of the ball.

Record busters like Hunter Smith and Hunter Downes have graduated, Marcus Carr has replaced Jon Atkins as head coach, and CHS is reuniting with former foes in the brand-new North Sound Conference.

After four years of life in the Olympic League, and two seasons of a joint venture with the Nisqually League for football, the Wolves will line up against “new” foes in King’s, Sultan, South Whidbey, Granite Falls and Cedar Park Christian.

The last one of those schools really is a new rival, as CPC joined the Cascade Conference as Coupeville’s replacement when the Wolves bolted in 2014.

The Eagles football program is run by Butch Goncharoff, who built Bellevue into a 3A powerhouse before being run out of town in the aftermath of WIAA troubles.

Carr, who takes over Coupeville’s gridiron team after two very successful seasons in Concrete, points to CPC as one of two schools who will carry the biggest rep into the new league.

“I think all the teams in our league will be tough,” he said. “But I would have to say King’s, just for the amount of bodies they can sub in and out to keep players fresh, and Cedar Park Christian, because of their head coach.

“Despite the off-the-field things, he has won 11 state championships on the field.”

Not that Coupeville’s new head man is willing to concede anything.

“No matter what, we will be ready to play and beat them all!,” Carr said. “GO WOLVES!!”

Carr, who is joined by five assistants who are new to CHS — Nathan BellamyTyson Boon, Kwamane Bowens, Robert Carr and Bennett Richter — is putting a laser-focus on his new players “becoming tougher, mentally and physically.”

The line, which includes returning players such as seniors Dane Lucero, Jake Pease and Ryan Labrador and junior Gavin Knoblich, is bolstered by the addition of senior Alex Turner.

A transfer from South Whidbey, Turner, who played for Coupeville in middle school, was a First-Team All-Conference pick by Cascade Conference coaches as a sophomore.

The Falcons played an independent schedule last season, preventing a repeat of league honors, but Turner showed a knack for catching TD passes from the tight end position.

Coupeville will have a new quarterback throwing those passes, with Downes, the school career leader in scoring strikes, having graduated.

After an injury ended his sophomore year early, he returned to lead the Wolf offense the past two seasons, firing passes primarily to Hunter Smith and Cameron Toomey-Stout, both also now departed.

Replacing Downes under center will likely be either junior Dawson Houston or senior Shane Losey, though Lucero is also in the mix in the early days of practice.

That trio has combined to throw three varsity passes entering 2018.

While Coupeville’s passing game will be new-look, its running game retains almost every contributor from last season, one reason Carr hails it as a key strength.

Junior Sean Toomey-Stout is healthy again after a devastating injury ended his breakout sophomore campaign at the halfway point, and “The Torpedo” is primed to slice through defenses.

When he went down during week #5 at Vashon, it changed the direction of the season.

Toomey-Stout was Coupeville’s top rusher and among the state leaders in tackles from his defensive back position, before taking a blow to his leg as he headed out-of-bounds.

While the Wolves hung on to beat the Pirates, improving to 3-2, CHS dropped its final five games.

Injuries tore through Coupeville’s roster in 2017, and by the season finale against Cascade Christian, almost every major offensive contributor was on the sideline in street clothes.

Seniors Matt Hilborn and Chris Battaglia (both coming off of injuries) and junior Andrew Martin also ran strong a year ago and could help Toomey-Stout.

Battaglia’s status for the season is a question mark, though, as he continues to recuperate.

As the Wolves plow through the first days of practice (the season opener, a non-conference game at Port Townsend, is Aug. 31), the lineup will shift and change.

Whomever ends up lined up for that first kickoff will carry the weight of the past, and the hope of the future, with them.

Coupeville hasn’t posted a winning record on the gridiron since 2005, but bolstered by “an ability to run the ball on offense and a swarming, ball-hawking defense,” the Wolves are ready to surprise people.

The mission? To live up to the mantra preached by their new head coach.

“Our goal is always to win league and make the playoffs,” Carr said. “Always.”

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   Cedar Park Christian, one of Coupeville’s rivals in the new North Sound Conference, has a great logo, and a little football-related angina. (Logo property of CPC)

Shenanigans! Sorta.

Cedar Park Christian, which will soon be one of Coupeville’s rivals in the new 1A North Sound Conference, is in the news, and school officials probably aren’t too thrilled.

The Eagles football program is being (very lightly) rapped on the knuckles, and faces a “one-year probation” after schools in its former league, the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, raised a mini-ruckus over how the CPC junior football program was marketed.

Why the quote marks around that probation? Because, as Cameron Van Til reported Tuesday in the Everett Herald, there will be “no impact on practices, games or postseason.”

Which leaves unclear what exactly the punishment might be.

Perhaps an assistant coach has to go sit in the corner for a few hours? Someone is getting a “Wet Willie?”

Color me confused.

Anyways, the violation in question was raised by Cascade Conference Athletic Directors at a meeting in late May, and CPC self-reported itself the next day.

From the outside, it seems like a fairly minor matter, though anything involving CPC football is quick to draw attention since the Eagles hired former Bellevue coach Butch Goncharoff before the 2017 season.

He won 11 class 3A state football titles at his former school, but was bounced from his position in 2016 after Bellevue was hit with charges of multiple violations of state rules.

Goncharoff went 4-6 in his first season at CPC.

So, what set off rival AD’s?

Marketing materials for the CPC junior football program, which is open to athletes from inside and outside the school, pushed the idea of it being a “K-12 program” in brochures, fliers and videos.

The brochures also included a photo of Goncharoff, while a video featured a middle school or high school-aged player.

The junior football program and the high school football program both fall under the guidance of the Cedar Park Church, but the two programs are supposed to operate separately.

Since CPC is a private school, it, like fellow league mate King’s, can accept athletes from outside its boundaries, something public schools Coupeville, Granite Falls, South Whidbey and Sultan can not.

The ability to recruit, or “offer scholarships,” or however private schools want to sugar-coat it, is a particular sticking point in the ongoing back-and-forth that keeps Washington state high school coaches, athletes and fans arguing.

And it could all be solved by splitting things up, with separate state championships for public and private schools, since they operate under separate guidelines.

Boom, you’re welcome.

Anyways…

There’s a very valid worry among many that private schools use youth programs to bring in athletes, then recruit them to stay with the school once they reach high school.

While CPC officials blame the marketing snafu on “new leadership in the junior football program” who were “gung-ho to build the program,” other AD’s preach caution.

“You’ve got to make sure that there’s a clear line (between the high school and junior programs),” Sultan AD/North Sound Conference President Scott Sifferman was quoted saying in the Herald.

“And the way that it was marketed, it really emphasized (it being) one program,” he added. “When you’re a private school and your boundaries extend beyond normal school districts, you can understand that there’s going to be concerns if something like that comes to light.”

CPC officials told the Herald the junior program has altered its marketing, and all future promotional material will be run past the high school’s athletic department before it hits the streets.

While the other four schools in the North Sound Conference are old-school rivals for Coupeville, the Wolves have never faced CPC.

The Eagles replaced Coupeville in the Cascade Conference in 2014, when CHS bounced to the Olympic League.

The two schools face off on the gridiron for the first time Oct. 19 at Juanita High School.

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Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith giggles as he pulls off yet another schedule change. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The countdown has begun.

Yes, we’re still knee-deep in summer, which you can tell by the frequent rain storms. But, out there on the horizon, you can see the faintest rumors of the approaching fall sports season.

The first game — a non-conference road football clash Aug. 31 with Port Townsend — is 59 days away.

After that comes the first league battle (boys tennis Sept. 5) and the first home games (volleyball and girls soccer Sept. 6).

The new school year will bring a new league, as Coupeville has bolted from the 1A Olympic League after four years to get in on the ground floor of the new 1A North Sound Conference.

That means Klahowya is long gone, while Chimacum and Port Townsend remain only as the occasional non-conference entry on the schedule.

CHS will square off with South Whidbey, King’s, Cedar Park Christian-Bothell, Sultan and Granite Falls in the new league, though boys tennis will face a slightly different road than their fellow athletes.

The Wolf netters, along with South Whidbey, the only other North Sound Conference school to play boys tennis, will compete in the Emerald City League.

That pits the two Island schools against private school powerhouses like two-time defending state champs University Prep.

The league change also affects Coupeville’s middle school teams, as they get away from ginormous Stevens and Sequim, which fed 2A high schools, as well as leaving Forks, Chimacum and Blue Heron behind.

Sultan, Granite Falls, King’s and Langley form the core of the new foes, with Northshore Christian Academy also in the mix for some sports.

With some trepidation, I offer the schedules below, which cover five high school and three middle school programs.

While I’d like to believe these are the final, set-in-stone, schedules, I know that’s wishful thinking.

So, as we move forward, keep an eye on both the school and league sites, because things can, and will, change.

School calendarhttp://coupeville.tandem.co/

League web site — http://www.nscathletics.com/index.php?pid=0.60.0.0.200

 

High School (* = league game):

 

BOYS TENNIS (Varsity & JV):

Sept. 5 – @ South Whidbey (3:30) *
Sept. 7 – Eastside Prep (3:30) *
Sept. 11 – University Prep (3:30) *
Sept. 14 – Bush (3:30) *
Sept. 15 – @ Chimacum (3:00)
Sept. 17 – @ Overlake (3:30) *
Sept. 19 – Bear Creek (3:30) *
Sept. 21 – @ Seattle Academy (3:30) *
Sept. 24 – South Whidbey (3:30) *
Sept. 26 – @ Eastside Prep (3:30) *
Sept. 28 – @ University Prep (3:30) *
Oct. 3 – @ Bush (3:30) *
Oct. 5 – Overlake (3:30) *
Oct. 10 – @ Bear Creek (3:30) *
Oct. 15 – Seattle Academy (3:30) * SENIOR NIGHT

 

CROSS COUNTRY (Varsity & JV):

Sept. 5 – @ Granite Falls (4:00) *
Sept. 8 – @ Sehome Invitational (9:30 AM)
Sept. 15 – @ Carl Westling Invitational (South Whidbey) (TBA)
Sept. 22 – @ King’s Roller Coaster Trail Run (Shoreline) (TBA)
Oct. 4 – @ South Whidbey (4:00) *
Oct. 6 – @ Nike Hole in the Wall XC Invitational (Lakewood) (9:00 AM)
Oct. 11 @ King’s (4:00) *
Oct. 20 – @ North Sound Conference Championships (TBA)
Oct. 27 – @ Districts (TBA)
Nov. 3 – @ State (TBA)

 

FOOTBALL (Varsity):

Aug. 31 – @ Port Townsend (7:00)
Sept. 7 – Vashon Island (6:00)
Sept. 14 – Friday Harbor (TBA)
Sept. 21 – @ La Conner (7:00)
Sept. 28 – King’s (7:00) *
Oct. 5 – Sultan (7:00) * HOMECOMING
Oct. 12 – @ South Whidbey (7:00) *
Oct. 19 – @ Cedar Park Christian-Bothell (7:00) *
Oct. 26 – Granite Falls (7:00) * SENIOR NIGHT

 

FOOTBALL (JV):

Oct. 1 – @ King’s (5:30) *
Oct. 8 – @ Sultan (5:30) *
Oct. 15 – South Whidbey (5:30) *
Oct. 22 – Cedar Park Christian-Bothell (5:30) *
Oct. 29 – @ Granite Falls (5:30) *

 

GIRLS SOCCER (Varsity):

Sept. 4 – @ Meridian (4:00)
Sept. 6 – Friday Harbor (4:30)
Sept. 11 – King’s (6:45) *
Sept. 13 – Sultan (6:45) *
Sept. 15 – @ Chimacum (3:00)
Sept. 18 – @ Cedar Park Christian-Bothell (6:00) *
Sept. 22 – @ Mount Vernon Christian (12:00)
Sept. 25 – @ South Whidbey (6:00) *
Sept. 27 – Granite Falls (6:45) *
Oct. 2 –  @ King’s (6:00) *
Oct. 4 – Port Townsend (6:15)
Oct. 9 – @ Sultan (7:00) *
Oct. 11 – Cedar Park Christian-Bothell (6:45) *
Oct. 15 – South Whidbey (6:45) * SENIOR NIGHT
Oct. 17 – @ Granite Falls (6:00) *

 

GIRLS SOCCER (JV):

Sept. 11 – King’s (4:00) *
Sept. 13 – Sultan (4:00) *
Sept. 18 – @ Cedar Park Christian-Bothell (4:00) *
Sept. 25 – @ South Whidbey (4:00) *
Sept. 27 – Granite Falls (4:00) *
Oct. 2 – @ King’s (4:00) *
Oct. 9 – @ Sultan (5:00) *
Oct. 11 – Cedar Park Christian-Bothell (4:00) *
Oct. 15 – South Whidbey (4:00) *
Oct. 17 – @ Granite Falls (4:00) *

 

VOLLEYBALL (Varsity):

Sept. 1 – @ Oak Harbor Jamboree (9:00 AM)
Sept. 6 – Friday Harbor (4:30)
Sept. 8 – @ South Whidbey Invitational (9:00 AM)
Sept. 18 – @ Cedar Park Christian-Bothell (7:00) *
Sept. 25 – @ South Whidbey (7:00) *
Sept. 27 – Granite Falls (7:00) *
Oct. 2 – @ King’s (7:00) *
Oct. 4 – Port Townsend (6:15)
Oct. 9 – @ Sultan (7:00) *
Oct. 11 – Cedar Park Christian-Bothell (7:00) *
Oct. 13 – @ Wenatchee Invite (8:00 AM)
Oct. 15 – South Whidbey (7:00) *
Oct. 17 – @ Granite Falls (7:00) *
Oct. 23 – King’s (7:00) *
Oct. 25 – Sultan (7:00) * SENIOR NIGHT

 

VOLLEYBALL (JV):

Sept. 1 – @ Oak Harbor Jamboree (9:00 AM)
Sept. 6 – Friday Harbor (6:15)
Sept. 8 – @ South Whidbey Invitational (9:00 AM)
Sept. 18 – @ Cedar Park Christian-Bothell (5:15) *
Sept. 25 – @ South Whidbey (5:15) *
Sept. 27 – Granite Falls (5:15) *
Oct. 2 – @ King’s (5:15) *
Oct. 4 – Port Townsend (4:15)
Oct. 9 – @ Sultan (5:15) *
Oct. 11 – Cedar Park Christian-Bothell (5:15) *
Oct. 15 – South Whidbey (5:15) *
Oct. 17 – @ Granite Falls (5:15) *
Oct. 23 – King’s (5:15) *
Oct. 25 – Sultan (5:15) *

 

Middle School:

 

CROSS COUNTRY:

Sept. 15 @ Westling Invitational (South Whidbey) (TBA)
Sept. 20 @ Lakewood (3:30)
Sept. 22 @ King’s XC Invite (TBA)
Oct. 2 @ Granite Falls (3:30)
Oct. 6 @ Nike Hole in the Wall Invitational (Lakewood) (9:00 AM)
Oct. 9 @ Sultan (3:30)
Oct. 17 @ League Championships (TBA)

 

FOOTBALL:

Sept. 13 – @ King’s (3:30)
Sept. 19 – Sultan (3:45)
Sept. 26 – @ Langley (3:30)
Oct. 4 – @ Sultan (3:30)
Oct. 10 – King’s (3:45)
Oct. 17 – Langley (3:45)

 

VOLLEYBALL:

Sept. 18 – Sultan (3:00)
Sept. 20 – Lakewood (3:00)
Sept. 25 – @ Northshore Christian (3:15)
Sept. 27 – @ Granite Falls (3:00)
Oct. 2 – @ King’s (3:15)
Oct. 3 – Langley (3:00)
Oct. 9 – @ Sultan (3:15)
Oct. 11 – Northshore Christian (3:00)
Oct. 16 – @ Langley (3:30)
Oct. 18 – Granite Falls (3:00)

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Gaze upon the logo for Coupeville’s new league. (Photo courtesy Scott Sifferman)

We’re going home again. In a way.

After four years in the 1A Olympic League, Coupeville High School is reuniting with four old rivals (and one new one) to launch the 1A North Sound Conference when the 2018-2019 school year begins this fall.

The new league is comprised of refugees from the imploded 1A/2A Cascade Conference, where the Wolves spent eight years from 2006-2007 to 2013-2014.

Gone are the 2A schools (Archbishop Thomas Murphy, Lakewood and Cedarcrest), so on with the (slightly) more-balanced party.

Coupeville reunites with South Whidbey, King’s, Sultan and Granite Falls, while coming face-to-face with the school which replaced it in the Cascade Conference, Cedar Park Christian-Bothell.

But, since no current Wolf athlete ever played in a Cascade Conference game, it might be a good idea to offer a refresher on just who Coupeville’s new league mates will be.

The new league:

http://www.nscathletics.com/index.php?pid=0.60.0.0.200

 

Cedar Park Christian-Bothell

Location: Um … Bothell

Public or private: Private

Student body count (2016 WIAA counts): 249.38

Established: 1982

Mascot: Eagles

Colors: Blue and gold, purple, yellow

Team state titles: Girls Soccer – 2001, 2002, 2003; Softball – 2003

Fast facts: The main campus for a private Christian school (preschool-12th grade) which also has sites in Everett, Mountlake Terrace, Lynnwood and Mill Creek; affiliated with the Assembly of God church; one-year tuition for high school student – $9,992; hired former Bellevue football coach Butch Goncharoff, who won 11 state titles before a Seattle Times investigation forced WIAA to (very briefly) punish Bellevue for numerous alleged improprieties.

 

King’s:

Location: Shoreline

Public or private: Private

Student body count (2016 WIAA counts): 354.38

Established: 1950

Mascot: Knights

Colors: White, red

Team state titles: 51 spread across multiple sports. I’m not listing them all.

Fast facts: Before turning to education, site housed a tuberculosis sanitarium; rumors abound that “some of the damp tunnels connecting buildings are still haunted by the ghosts of TB victims;” was known as King’s Garden until ’79; one-year tuition for high school student – $15,950; 98% of its students go on to higher education, while other 2% are no longer welcome home for Thanksgiving.

 

Granite Falls:

Location: Um … Granite Falls

Public or private: Public

Student body count (2018 WIAA appeal): 367.25

Established: 1896

Mascot: Tigers

Colors: Black, orange

Team state titles: Baseball – 2006

Fast facts: Known as “The Gateway to the Mountain Loop;” originally used by Native Americans to portage their canoes between fishing grounds; had a gold rush in 1889; had runs as both a mining and logging town; celebrates Railroad Days first Saturday in Oct.; former Coupeville assistant Alex Heilig coached GF football for one season in 2015, went 1-9.

 

South Whidbey:

Location: Langley

Public or private: Public

Student body count (2016 WIAA counts): 358.38

Established: 1981 (*previously Langley High School)

Mascot: Falcons

Colors: Blue and white

Team state titles: Boys Cross Country – 2000; Girls Golf – 2016

Fast facts: Has lost four of last six football games to Coupeville, with one former Falcon coach (a two-time loser) purposefully denting The Bucket, the trophy which is held by the winner; the snarky chant “Drive home safely,” directed at rival fans after South Whidbey wins, is both kind of annoying and kind of funny; the part of the Island where all the weird murders happen (seriously, go do a Google search); admittedly, a pretty nice school, with several athletes and coaches who have been very generous to me — Maia Sparkman, Oliana Stange, Kody and Hayley Newman, Tom Fallon, Mark Hodson, Mary Zisette and Lewis Pope to name a few.

 

Sultan:

Location: Um … Sultan

Public or private: Public

Student body count (2016 WIAA counts): 347.13

Established: 1888

Mascot: Turks

Colors: Navy, white, Columbia blue

Team state titles: Girls Soccer – 2002

Fast facts: Town named (sorta) for Snohomish Indian chief Tseultd, whose name was changed to Sultan John by white settlers; hosted the Sky River Rock Fest and Lighter Than Air Fair in 1968, which brought Richard Pryor, The Grateful Dead, Santana and “20,000-plus hippies” to town; former Turk basketball player Cooper Beucherie, he of the white boy dreadlocks, once kicked a chair into about the 12th row of the stands after being ejected from a basketball game at Coupeville. I miss the dude – he was entertaining.

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