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Grey Rische (John Fisken photo)

   Grey Rische rolled to a straight-sets win at #3 singles Monday, helping spark Coupeville to a 4-1 win over North Mason. (John Fisken photo)

Back on track.

With its next four matches league affairs, the Coupeville High School boys’ tennis squad primed the well Monday by smacking a non-conference rival silly.

The Wolves rolled to a 4-1 drubbing of 2A North Mason during a rare appearance at home.

The victory lifted Coupeville, which has played five of eight matches against bigger schools, to 2-6.

More importantly, the Wolves are 1-0 in 1A Olympic League play as they attempt to defend their title.

The next step on that path comes Wednesday, when CHS hops the ferry and travels to Chimacum (0-1 in league).

Five of the seven matches remaining on the schedule are against either Chimacum or Klahowya (1-1) and will determine who wears the crown in 2016.

Monday marked an unusual occurrence, as the Wolves passed over the halfway mark of the fall tennis season without having a single match affected by weather.

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st singlesNick Etzell lost to Tanner Hall 6-3, 6-3

2nd singlesJimmy Myers beat Gus Sardquist 6-2, 6-2

3rd singlesGrey Rische beat Jacob Stark 7-5, 6-1

1st doublesJohn McClarin/Joseph Wedekind beat Blake Martin/Steven Settlemier 6-0, 6-0

2nd doubles — Joey Lippo/William Nelson beat Jaron Stone/Jeff Smithers 6-0, 6-0

JV:

4th singles Jakobi Baumann won 8-0

3rd doubles — Coupeville won by forfeit

4th doubles — Coupeville won by forfeit

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Mason Grove

   Wolf frosh Mason Grove teamed with Nile Lockwood Thursday to put up a strong fight in a doubles rumble. (John Fisken photo)

Well, it didn’t rain, so that was a positive.

Keeping alive an unprecedented run for fall tennis, the Coupeville boys net squad completed its sixth straight match without interruption Thursday.

That was about the end of the good news for the Wolves however, as they took a 4-1 beating at the hands of host South Whidbey in a non-conference bout.

The loss dropped Coupeville to 1-5 heading into another out-of-league road tilt Friday, this time against 2A North Kitsap.

Facing off with the Falcons, who are generally the cream of the crop when it comes to Whidbey tennis, the Wolves lone win was a three-set affair at second doubles.

William Nelson and Joey Lippo rallied in the third set to wax their rivals 6-1, making up for dropping the second set.

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st singlesNick Etzell lost to Kody Newman 6-1, 6-0

2nd singlesJakobi Baumann lost to Ari Rohan 6-1, 6-2

1st doublesJoseph Wedekind/John McClarin lost to Hank Papritz/Ryan Wentz 7-5, 6-1

2nd doublesJoey Lippo/William Nelson beat Levi Buck/Larson Christensen 6-3, 2-6, 6-1

3rd doublesJimmy Myers/Grey Rische lost to Aengus Dubendorf/Austin Sterba 6-0, 6-4

JV:

4th doublesMason Grove/Nile Lockwood lost 8-4

5th doubles Aiden Crimmins/Elliot Johnson lost 8-6

6th doublesJaschon Baumann/Tiger Johnson lost 8-6

7th doublesZachary Ginnings/Koby Schreiber lost 8-3

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Mia Littlejohn cracked home four goals Tuesday, propelling Coupeville to an 8-0 win and sole possession of first-place in the 1A Olympic League. (John Fisken photo)

   Mia Littlejohn cranked home four goals Tuesday, propelling Coupeville to an 8-0 win and sole possession of first-place in the 1A Olympic League. (John Fisken photo)

“When you have a combination of red hot Wolves and a bunch of young Cowboys you are gonna get some thunder and lightning!!!”

By the time the goals were done raining down Tuesday, all Coupeville High School girls’ soccer coach Troy Cowan could do was smile.

And sing his team’s praises.

Powered by Mia Littlejohn, who netted a hat trick then went one better, the Wolves obliterated visiting Chimacum 8-0 to claim sole possession of first-place in the 1A Olympic League.

While there’s still a long ways to go for Coupeville to upend two-time defending league champ Klahowya, for this day, at least, the Wolves (1-0-1 overall, 1-0 in league play) are top dogs.

Three of Mia Littlejohn’s four goals came in the first half, all unassisted.

She added a final score off a “stunning header” in the second half, set up by a “ferocious crossing pass” from senior captain Bree Daigneault.

With five goals in the first two games of the season, Mia Littlejohn is already halfway to little sister Kalia’s school single-season scoring record.

Mia was a one-woman wrecking crew, she was totally unstoppable and in the zone,” Cowan said. “She had to be butter tonight because she was on a roll.”

Kalia Littlejohn doesn’t intend to let the scoring title slip away easily, popping her first two scores of the year into the back of the net.

Kalia struggled mightily with her shot early in the match, but I kept telling her shooters shoot, so keep on ripping them in,” Cowan said. “Her perseverance finally paid off late in the match.”

Daigneault and freshman Avalon Renninger rounded out the scoring attack, each tallying their first goal of the season.

Bree played a career match; she was fantastic tonight, really her most complete match,” Cowan said. “Her biggest contributions came from her tenacity and on the field leadership!

“She just refused to be rattled and kept her team on point and focused; very proud of this amazing young woman.”

Avalon Renninger’s first high school goal, fittingly, was set up by older sister Sage.

Avalon is just such an unselfish player and wants to share too much sometimes,” Cowan said. “I told her tonight before the match started she would score her first career goal if she listened and followed my directions.

“She has so much potential because she has been prepared for this moment and having a left foot like a sledge hammer helps too,” he added. “Avalon and Sage work so well together and you can actually see the chemistry on the pitch.

“It’s really a thing of beauty when they are working in tandem, almost like synchronized swimmers!!!”

Coupeville dominated the game so completely senior goalie Lauren Grove failed to touch the ball in play once.

That led Cowan to gush over his defenders, who were clicking on all cylinders.

From Lindsey Roberts (“Her drive, commitment and just overall sense of responsibility to her team, school and community are off the charts”) to Lauren Bayne (“She is such an unbelievable athlete that can do so many different things on the field it’s scary”) to his freshman starters, praise was offered all.

Tia (Wurzrainer) and Mallory (Kortuem) are really the Wonder Twins from the super heroes,” Cowan said. “These two are peanut butter and jelly, ham and cheese or whatever combination you like.

“They just complement each other so well, the fact they are freshman is what is really exciting,” he added. “The ceiling with these two is epic, I mean cathedral level.”

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Dale Sherman, still basking in the glow of Coupeville's 1963 beat-down of La Conner on the gridiron. (Sherry Roberts photo)

   Dale Sherman, still basking in the glow of Coupeville’s 57-7 beat-down of La Conner in 1963. (Sherry Roberts photo)

Play like it’s 1963.

As the Coupeville High School football team heads to La Conner tonight (7 PM kickoff) to meet one of its most storied rivals, the stakes are relatively high for this early in the season.

While it’s a non-conference game, win and the Wolves open at 2-0 for the first time since 2009.

Plus, anytime you take down the Braves, who have a truly rich athletic history, it’s a cause for major celebration.

Which takes us back to Sept. 27, 1963 and the beat-down heard across the state.

That day a scrappy Coupeville squad found itself in a hole just one play into the game.

La Conner, having won the coin flip, took the opening kick-off to the house, returning it 80+ yards for a touchdown.

With barely a few seconds ticked off on the game clock, the Wolves were trailing, they were disorientated and they were desperate.

Or were they?

53 years down the road, the exact mood of the moment is probably hard to remember.

But this much is true, it shifted quickly.

Coupeville promptly threw down 57 unanswered points — eight touchdowns and a game-capping safety — and thrashed the bejeebers out of the Braves 57-7.

By the time they were done the Wolves would rack up a 386-23 advantage in yards, one of the most lopsided statistical games in CHS history.

Bob Rea, the strikeout king on the baseball diamond, got things going when he chucked a 46-yard bomb to receiver Denny Clark for a game-tying touchdown.

After that, it was boom, boom, boom, as the scores kept coming, one after another.

Rea connected with Clark for a second score, then the Wolves went to the ground with a relentless attack.

Denny Keith and Eddie Brown each rumbled into the end zone twice, while Dale Sherman and Gary Crandall both chipped in with their own stroll to pay dirt.

Crandall’s was a bit of a surprise, as he wasn’t even a running back.

With the score getting lopsided, Coupeville’s coaching staff moved Crandall, normally a lineman, into the backfield to give him a reward for his hard work.

Given the chance to inherit a skills position, he promptly rose to the occasion, shedding tacklers as he surged right up the middle to the promised land.

Not finished there, Crandall capped the scoring when, back at his normal position, he plastered a La Conner ball-carrier, riding him down in the end zone for a safety that brought a merciful end to the scoring onslaught.

The game remains one of the true high points in Coupeville football history, not only for the score, but for the level of the opponent toppled, as well.

It was truly a perfect storm.

And, it could and should be inspiration for the 2016 Wolves.

Go out there tonight and play like the ’63ers and 50+ years from now someone (maybe even me) will be telling your tale of triumph.

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Mikayla Elfrank (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf sophomore Mikayla Elfrank had two hits and four stolen bases Friday in a 16-3 win. (John Fisken photos)

Hannah Benway

Hannah Benway comes out firing.

It was made to order.

The Coupeville High School softball squad has been going through a rough patch of late, so the arrival of Port Townsend in town Friday was the perfect cure for all that ails the Wolves.

Facing a team which hasn’t won since April 28, 2014, Coupeville did its best to win decisively while not making things worse than they had to be, strolling to a 16-3 victory.

The victory lifts CHS to 3-4 in the 1A Olympic League, 8-7 overall.

It also pulls the Wolves back within a game of Klahowya (3-2, 8-6) in the battle for second-place, while clinching a playoff berth.

Defending league champ Chimacum (6-0, 10-4), which nipped Klahowya 6-4 Friday, is sitting pretty right now, needing just one more win, or an Eagles loss, to clinch another title.

While Coupeville can’t win the title this year, a very young squad that is comprised almost entirely of freshmen and sophomores, with just a sprinkling of juniors and not a single senior, has the program’s best record in years.

Facing a RedHawks team that entered play Friday with a 32-game losing streak, the Wolves put the gas pedal down early, then tried to hit the brakes as much as possible and coast home.

While the Wolves stole 14 bases, they piled those up early while building their lead, then switched over to a far more conservative style of play.

Their bats were smoking all game long, though, as they pounded out 10 hits to go with the 12 walks they earned.

Sarah Wright led the way with a three-hit day, while Mikayla Elfrank notched a pair of base knocks.

Lauren Rose, Tamika Nastali, Hope Lodell, Jae LeVine and Kailey Kellner each collected a hit, while Katrina McGranahan turned all three of her walks into runs.

The knockout punches came courtesy of Wright and Kellner, who both thumped triples.

When she wasn’t going ballistic at the plate, Wright, normally Coupeville’s catcher, stepped into the pitcher’s circle and gave McGranahan a day off.

Going the distance, the freshman whiffed 11 RedHawks and scattered the three runs evenly, only surrendering one per inning, with a scoreless second and fifth.

After dropping a quick five-spot in the first inning, Coupeville broke things open for good with seven in the second before tacking on a final four in the fourth.

While he’s always happy to get a win, especially one which moves his squad back over .500, CHS coach Kevin McGranahan primarily looked at Friday’s game as a teaching tool and confidence builder.

“As usual, it was a fight to keep the game reasonable, but we somehow managed to get some new players some valuable experience and also rest Katrina for the stretch run,” he said. “Nicole (Lester) and Hannah (Benway) both started and played valuable live game innings and at-bats.

“The experience will pay off in the future as they are both very excited about their future as Lady Wolves.”

Coupeville closes the regular season with two more league games (May 2 at Chimacum and May 4 at home against Klahowya), then non-conference tilts at Bellevue Christian May 10 and La Conner May 16.

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