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Wolf throwers Katie Marti (left) and Alysia Burdge share a moment in the spotlight. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It wasn’t perfect, but it’ll do.

Coming off a string of first-place team performances, the Coupeville High School track and field squad coasted into spring break with a decent, if not spectacular outing Thursday afternoon.

Competing against 10 other teams in Mount Vernon, the Wolves claimed five wins and 40 PRs en route to finishing second in the boys’ team battle, and third in the girl’s rumble.

Host Mount Vernon Christian claimed both titles, edging the CHS boys 139-133.5 and romping past La Conner 156-105.5 on the girl’s side.

The Wolf female crew finished with 93 points.

Coupeville did sweep the pole vault trophies during one of the “colder, wetter meets” veteran CHS coach Bob Martin has experienced.

Getting warmer the higher in the air they sailed, Carly Burt and Cael Wilson soared over the bar in style.

Other wins came from Nick Guay (High Jump), Carson Field (1600) and the boys 4 x 100 relay unit.

That foursome was comprised of Marquette Cunningham, Wilson, Preston Epp, and Guay.

Surviving and thriving in the less-than-stellar weather, the Wolves held up well.

“Despite facing adverse conditions, they did amazing!” Martin said. “Their resilience and adaptability are commendable.

“We saw a lot of great performances today with many athletes setting new PR’s and selflessly participating in events outside of their comfort zone.”

Coupeville, which reached the halfway point of the regular season Thursday, is now off until April 13, when it travels to Forks for the Lions Club Invitational.

Myra McDonald glides over the hurdles.

 

Thursday’s results:

 

GIRLS:

100 — Issabel Johnson (15th) 15.2

200 — Jasmine Castellanos (8th) 30.9 *PR*; Ivy Rudat (21st) 33.5

400 — Aleera Kent (8th) 1:13.6; Reagan Callahan (9th) 1:19.7 *PR*

800 — Kent (2nd) 2:54.1; Kayla Crane (7th) 3:01.2

1600 — Crane (8th) 7:07.6; Lydia Price (9th) 7:30.0; Aleksia Jump (10th) 7:42.4; Ayden Wyman (11th) 7:49.6

3200 — Price (3rd) 15:59.6; Katie Marti (5th) 17:44.9 *PR*; Callahan (6th) 17:55.8 *PR*

100 Hurdles — Lyla Stuurmans (3rd) 21.1 *PR*; Lexis Drake (10th) 22.4 *PR*; Myra McDonald (11th) 22.8; Frankie Tenore (12th) 23.6

300 Hurdles — Drake (9th) 1:00.3; McDonald (12th) 1:03.9

4 x 100 Relay — Jump, Carly Burt, Johnson, Castellanos (4th) 59.02

4 x 200 Relay — Jump, Wyman, I. Rudat, Castellanos (7th) 2:15.9

4 x 400 Relay — Burt, I. Rudat, CastellanosStuurmans (2nd) 5:02.1

Shot Put — Reese Wilkinson (2nd) 30-07 *PR*; Marti (3rd) 29-03; Erica McGrath (7th) 23-00; Alysia Burdge (11th) 19-10

Discus — Wilkinson (2nd) 86-10; Marti (3rd) 79-08; McGrath (5th) 75-11; Burdge (16th) 54-03; Emma Garcia (16th) 54-03 *PR*; Callahan (21st) 37-05 *PR*

Javelin — Marti (3rd) 86-00; Burdge (10th) 61-11; Stuurmans (13th) 56-06 *PR*; Wilkinson (17th) 49-07; McGrath (18th) 48-10; Garcia (25th) 41-00 *PR*

Pole Vault — Burt (1st) 6-01

High Jump — Burt (7th) 4-00

 

Zane Oldenstadt unleashes the discus.

 

BOYS:

100 — Dayvon Donavon (9th) 12.7; Alex Merino-Martinez (13th) 12.9; Marcelo Gebhard (17th) 13.1; Matthew Ward (22nd) 13.2; Davin Houston (25th) 13.3; Ethan Walling (28th) 13.4 *PR*; Matthew Kuzma (31st) 13.5; Timothy Nitta (34th) 13.6; Dane Hadsall (38th) 13.9

200 — Nick Guay (3rd) 24.7; Marquette Cunningham (4th) 24.8; Merino-Martinez (12th) 26.9 *PR*; Ward (12th) 26.9 *PR*; Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim (15th) 27.0 *PR*; Hadsall (18th) 27.9 *PR*, Kuzma (18th) 27.9 *PR*; Nitta (23rd) 28.6 *PR*

400 — Preston Epp (4th) 55.2; Blake Burrows (10th) 59.5 *PR*; Simpson-Pilgrim (14th) 1:00.9 *PR*; Kuzma (20th) 1:04.6 *PR*; Devin Neveu (23rd) 1:12.7 *PR*

800 — Carson Field (4th) 2:21.3; George Spear (8th) 2:30.4 *PR*; Ezekiel Allen (10th) 2:31.1; Thomas Strelow (11th) 2:32.7; Solomon Rudat (12th) 2:38.2; Preston Howard (16th) 2:45.5; Neveu (20th) 2:59.6

1600 — Field (1st) 4:58.0 *PR*; Spear (7th) 5:30.9; Strelow (9th) 5:33.8; Allen (12th) 5:376; Howard (17th) 5:51.4 *PR*; Sam Richards (22nd) 7:39.3

3200 — Spear (3rd) 12:24.5; Nicholas Wasik (4th) 13:06.0

110 Hurdles — Cael Wilson (5th) 20.3

300 Hurdles — Mikey Robinett (3rd) 52.8

4 x 100 Relay — CunninghamWilsonEppGuay (1st) 48.1; Houston, Hadsall, Gebhard, Ward (6th) 50.2

4 x 400 Relay — Epp, Cunningham, Simpson-Pilgrim, Guay (2nd) 3:56.2; Kenneth Jacobsen, Strelow, Burrows, Allen (3rd) 4:07.7

Shot Put — Zac Tackett (3rd) 38-02.50 *PR*; Zane Oldenstadt (7th) 35-00 *PR*; Robinett (10th) 33-10 *PR*; Gebhard (19th) 28-11.50; Jacobsen (23rd) 26-06 *PR*; Mason Butler (25th) 26-03 *PR*; Zach Blitch (37th) 16-00 *PR*

Discus — Tackett (2nd) 118-01; Oldenstadt (5th) 106-05; Butler (12th) 83-04 *PR*; Jacob Schooley (20th) 77-02; Captain Teuscher (30th) 60-05 *PR*; Wasik (35th) 55-04 *PR*; Peerapong Prombut (38th) 49-07; Blitch (40th) 44-04 *PR*

Javelin — Robinett (8th) 102-07 *PR*; Gebhard (12th) 99-09; Schooley (20th) 78-07; Ward (24th) 74-05; Butler (29th) 67-05; Hadsall (32nd) 65-11; Nitta (36th) 59-04 *PR*; Wasik (44th) 50-03 *PR*; Prombut (50th) 43-03

Pole Vault — Wilson (1st) 9-00; Axel Marshall (4th) 7-06

High Jump — Guay (1st) 5-08; Houston (6th) 5-00; Wilson (9th) 4-10; Simpson-Pilgrim (9th) 4-10; Marshall (10th) 4-08

Long Jump — Robinett (12th) 14-09; Field (14th) 14-08; Houston (20th) 14-01; Marshall (21st) 14-00; Merino-Martinez (22nd) 13-11; Kuzma (24th) 13-08; Howard (30th) 12-07 *PR*; Teuscher (30th) 12-07 *PR*; S. Rudat (33rd) 12-05

Triple Jump — Cunningham (4th) 32-11

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Johnny Porter collected one of Coupeville’s four hits on Orcas Island. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

This is not the direction they want to head in.

A game after pulling off an impressive rally to claim a league win in extra innings, the Coupeville High School varsity baseball team didn’t even get the chance to play a full seven frames.

Too many walks and too many errors dinged the Wolves on Orcas Island Tuesday, as a 1-0 lead slipped away en route to a 14-1 loss called after five innings thanks to the mercy rule.

The defeat drops Coupeville to 1-2 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 2-4 overall and kicks off a super-busy week.

If Mother Nature agrees, the Wolves host Sequim Wednesday, travel to Concrete Friday, then host South Whidbey Saturday.

The first and third of those games are non-conference affairs, with the middle one a league rumble.

Coupeville’s seniors will be back in action Wednesday at home.

The opening salvo in the calendar crush started halfway in favor of CHS.

Starting pitcher Landon Roberts escaped a bases-loaded jam in the bottom of the first, forcing a ground ball back to the mound for out #3.

Using that little bit of derring-do as a spark, the Wolves scraped together what would turn out to be their only run in the top of the second.

Johnny Porter ripped a one-out single to right, followed by twin terror Jack eking out a walk, and the table was set.

Senior slugger Aidyn McDermott then feasted on a fastball two batters later, lashing a two-out RBI single to left to put Coupeville on top for a hot moment.

Unfortunately, that moment was fleeting.

Five walks, two errors, and one well-placed single blew things up in the bottom half of the frame, as Orcas surged ahead 6-1.

From there, things were fairly rough for the visitors.

Coupeville had a shot at plating a run in the third, with Cole White and Yohannon Sandles spanking back-to-back two-out singles.

But White was cut down at home while trying to score, and the Wolves only picked up one hit batter across the final two innings, leaving little chance for a rally.

Orcas pushed two more runs across in the third, before putting the game away with another six-run burst in the fourth.

The Vikings racked up seven hits on the afternoon, but also greatly benefited from 11 walks and five Coupeville errors.

Roberts struck out four in his time on the mound, with Peyton Caveness coming on in relief to pick up a fifth K to end the final Orcas rally.

Coupeville’s four hits came from White, Sandles, Johnny Porter, and McDermott, with Caveness being plunked and Jack Porter getting a less-painful walk to round out the offense.

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Adeline Maynes charges into battle. (Jackie Saia photo)

We’re back in charge.

Last season a pair of one-run losses to Friday Harbor denied the Coupeville High School varsity softball team a Northwest 2B/1B League title.

If the first meeting between the schools this spring is any indication, the Wolves are solidly back as the #1 team in the conference.

Paced by an electrifying debut pitching performance from 8th grader Adeline Maynes, and sizzling bats from everyone in the lineup, CHS demolished Friday Harbor 13-0 Tuesday afternoon.

With the action going down under, dare I say it, mid-summer Whidbey weather, the win lifts Coupeville to a pristine 2-0 on the season, 1-0 in conference action.

Now, the young Wolves, who had three 8th graders and two freshmen in the starting lineup for their home opener, are off on a road trip.

Treks to Blaine, Orcas Island, and Concrete will test Coupeville, with their return to the prairie set for Mar. 30, when they host a doubleheader with Onalaska.

But while there’s still a ton of games left to play, along with many twists and turns likely to come, right now, in this moment, this looks like a really good softball squad.

Maynes, following on the heels of fab frosh Haylee Armstrong, who slung fastballs in a season-opening rout of South Whidbey, looked like a veteran from the first pitch to the last.

Recalling former wise-beyond-their-years hurlers like Katrina McGranahan and Izzy Wells, “Adeline the Annihilator” was calm, composed, and artful with her pitches.

She struck out seven across her five innings of work — the game was mercy-ruled with CHS up by 10+ runs — while surrendering just a single hit.

Maynes also showed composure under duress, ending the second inning with a snappy defensive play.

A Friday Harbor slugger lashed a liner off of the Wolf pitcher’s body, but instead of falling to the ground and wailing, she alertly whirled, tracked down the ball, and pegged it to Armstrong at first.

It was the kind of play which would garner applause for a senior, which Coupeville has none of on this roster, but especially noteworthy for a young woman who isn’t actually even in high school yet.

Maynes got some help from her older teammates, with shortstop Taylor Brotemarkle and third baseman Madison McMillan makin’ with the highlight reel-worthy plays.

Brotemarkle snagged a one-hopper and launched a deadeye throw which broke the sound barrier, while McMillan, crashing hard on a bunt, ripped the ball off the dirt and launched a laser in one fluid move.

Both throws landed with happy little sighs in Armstrong’s waiting glove, as the incoming runners silently screamed in agony as their dreams died two steps short of paydirt.

Teagan Calkins makes the ball go far, far away. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

But while defense and pitching wins titles, chicks dig the long ball — especially if they’re the ones cranking the home runs.

Enter Teagan Calkins and Mia Farris, and exit the ball, though Coupeville’s low-rent fence denied the latter from “officially” recording a roundtripper.

There was no doubt with the former, as the Wolf catcher launched a three-run moon ball to left field, then outsprinted any potential throw as she careened around the basepaths.

For Farris, what should have been her own three-run tater became an RBI ground rule double when the ball, which had cleared the center fielder’s head by a sizable margin, squirted under the fence.

CHS softball sluggers have been (very patiently) waiting for a more-permanent enclosure to arrive.

With it in place, the mammoth blast would have hit the more-solid wall and skidded away while Farris twirled from bag to bag.

Instead, the ball skittered under the bottom of the current flimsy fence, giving Friday Harbor a temporary reprieve.

Not that it mattered, as “Mia the Magnificent” torched the Wolverines, collecting three of Coupeville’s 12 hits on the day and earning big praise from CHS coach Kevin McGranahan, who collected his 99th win at the school.

Farris and her comrades scored early and often, pushing three runs across in the first inning, then tacking on five more in both the second and third.

Armstrong eked out a walk to start things, followed by run-scoring hits from Farris, McMillan, and Calkins.

The only thing (briefly) saving Friday Harbor was a superb defensive play in which an infielder snagged a ball over her shoulder while flying backwards, denying Sydney Van Dyke a hit.

Coupeville kept the pressure on in the second inning, as Capri Anter crunched a double, then just kept running, forcing an error and a wild throw back in as she slid under the tag at third.

Nailing Friday Harbor with the ol’ cousin one-two punch, Armstrong laced an RBI single to left to plate her relative, and the rout was on.

Another base-knock from Farris and Calkins monster mash made it 8-0, before Coupeville got crafty in the third inning.

Right after Farris delivered her could-have-been, should-have-been home run, Brotemarkle chopped a little squibber into the infield dirt and all havoc broke loose.

Anter, coming down from third, got trapped in a pickle, but bobbed and weaved her way to success, causing the Friday Harbor catcher to panic and airmail a throw past third base.

Farris then promptly danced home on a wild pitch, before McMillan and Van Dyke closed out things with RBI singles.

That run-scoring hit gives Van Dyke five RBI across her first two high school varsity games.

Sydney Van Dyke is one of three 8th graders already starting for an undefeated high school team. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The base-knocks came from everywhere Tuesday, with Calkins and Farris each ripping three and Anter recording two.

Armstrong, Van Dyke, Brotemarkle, and McMillan also recorded hits, while Joltin’ Jada Heaton and 8th grader Ava Lucero rounded out the red-hot Wolf roster.

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Aiden O’Neill tracks a fly ball. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The silence was deafening.

Held without a hit Tuesday afternoon, the Coupeville High School varsity baseball squad absorbed a 6-2 loss to visiting Friday Harbor in the conference opener for both teams.

Despite strong work on the mound from Landon Roberts and Camden Glover, the Wolves tumble to 1-3 on the season heading into another Northwest 2B/1B League tilt Friday afternoon.

That bout will be against Mount Vernon Christian, with the first pitch set for 4:00 PM.

The hope is to have the bats humming again, after a lack of solid contact killed Coupeville’s chances against Friday Harbor.

Held to just five baserunners — four reaching on walks and one via an error — the Wolves went down 1-2-3 in five of seven innings.

That gave the visitors, who had been outscored 47-0 across two non-conference losses prior to Tuesday’s game, a chance to capitalize on their own semi-limited opportunities.

Which Friday Harbor did.

The Wolverines, bouncing back after being whacked by Meridian (33-0) and Nooksack Valley (14-0), scraped out a run in the top of the first, and another in the second.

Both runners tapped home with two outs.

Heading into the third, Coupeville had just a single walk, with senior Cole White eking out the free pass, and then Friday Harbor stretched its lead to 5-0.

A couple of walks set the table, with an RBI double the big blow before a wild pitch and a fielder’s choice plated two more runs.

Any hopes of a quick comeback were blunted by the Wolves failing to get a runner aboard in their half of the third, or the fourth, with Johnny Porter finally breaking through after getting plunked in the fifth.

Roberts also reached base thanks to a dropped third strike, with an error and a wild pitch allowing CHS to finally put some runs on the scoreboard.

Friday Harbor responded by tacking on one final run in the top of the sixth, while the Wolves were set down boom-boom-boom in the final two frames.

Camden Glover fires a fastball. (Morgan White photo)

Glover and Peyton Caveness provided a final hurrah for CHS, with the hurler picking up two late strikeouts before his catcher nailed a runner trying to steal second.

“Not on my watch, skippy!” was the response as the senior sprang up firing and lobbed a perfect strike right onto the waiting mitt to erase the straying Wolverine.

Caveness was one of the four Coupeville hitters to earn a walk, joined by Aiden O’Neill, White, and Johnny Porter.

While the bats were cold, the defense was solid, as the Wolves played error-free ball.

Roberts whiffed eight batters across 5.2 innings of work, joining with Glover to give Coupeville 10 K’s on the afternoon.

Friday Harbor freshman hurler Jackson Feliz, who threw a complete game no-hitter, struck out 13.

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Taylor Brotemarkle is excited for a new season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

We’re in the thick of things now.

Spring sports are fully up and going, and the week ahead presents Coupeville High School fans with many viewing options.

Wolf baseball is at home twice, hosting Friday Harbor Tuesday, then welcoming Mount Vernon Christian to town Friday.

Meanwhile CHS softball has a split schedule.

The diamond women host Friday Harbor Tuesday, then travel to Blaine for the first of three-straight games on the road.

Track and field have a similar setup, hosting a Northwest 2B/1B League meet Wednesday, before venturing off to Stanwood Saturday for a freshman/sophomore invitational.

And Wolf girls’ tennis?

The netters are on the road all season, as they wait for new tennis courts to be finished.

Next week sees Coupeville’s hardcourt warriors visiting Granite Falls Friday.

As things really begin to heat up, a look at where early win/loss records sit through Mar. 17:

 

Northwest League baseball:

School League Overall
Concrete 0-0 0-0
Coupeville 0-0 1-2
Darrington 0-0 0-0
Friday Harbor 0-0 0-2
La Conner 0-0 2-0
MV Christian 0-0 1-2
Orcas Island 0-0 2-1

 

Northwest League girls’ tennis:

School League Overall
Friday Harbor 1-0 1-0
Coupeville 0-1 0-2

 

Northwest League softball:

School League Overall
Concrete 0-0 0-1
Coupeville 0-0 1-0
Darrington 0-0 0-1
Friday Harbor 0-0 0-3
La Conner 0-0 0-2
Orcas Island 0-0 0-2

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