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Jada Heaton powers in for a bucket. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The push for 1,500 is on.

Heading into a four-pack of home games Friday night against La Conner, Coupeville High School basketball players have combined to rattle the rim for 1,461 points this season.

Chase Anderson is the front-runner and has a substantial lead on every other Wolf, but there’s still half a season left to play.

Let the buckets keep coming and the point totals keep climbing.

Through Jan. 9:

 

Varsity – Girls
(11 games)

Teagan Calkins – 72
Katie Marti – 72
Mia Farris – 53
Haylee Armstrong – 43
Danica Strong – 42
Madison McMillan – 37
Lyla Stuurmans – 31
Jada Heaton – 24
Tenley Stuurmans – 15
Capri Anter – 4

 

JV – Girls
(7 games)

Adeline Maynes – 71
Haylee Armstrong – 53
Capri Anter – 26
Ava Lucero – 23
Lexis Drake – 22
Tenley Stuurmans – 20
Sydney Van Dyke – 18
Ari Cunningham – 10
Marin Winger – 7
Chelsi Stevens – 6

 

Varsity – Boys
(11 games)

Chase Anderson – 198
Hurlee Bronec – 86
Jack Porter – 79
Hunter Bronec – 67
Camden Glover – 63
Landon Roberts – 38
Johnny Porter – 18
Malachi Somes – 11
Carson Field – 2
Easton Green – 2

 

JV – Boys
(7 games)

Davin Houston – 58
Riley Lawless – 30
Carson Grove – 29
Liam Blas – 28
Easton Green – 28
Mahkai Myles – 25
Malachi Somes – 22
Sage Arends – 13
Nathan Coxsey – 10
Jayden Little – 2
Kyle McCrimmon – 2
Khanor Jump – 1

Mahkai Myles lets it fly.

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Edmund Kunz tracks the flight of the soccer ball. (Photo by Coupeville High School yearbook staff)

It was a tale of two halves, with a strong finish negated by a slow start.

Despite rallying after halftime Thursday, the Coupeville High School co-ed soccer squad fell 3-1 to visiting Lopez Island in a battle for sole possession of second place in the Northwest 2B/1B League.

The loss drops the Wolves to 3-2 in conference action, 5-6-1 overall, while Lopez gets to 4-1, which leaves the Lobos a game off of frontrunner Orcas Island, which sits at 5-0.

CHS is still very much in the playoff battle, with the top four teams from the nine schools playing boys’ soccer in the NWL making the postseason.

Coupeville returns to the pitch with a home game against Providence Classical Christian Tuesday Oct. 29 on Senior Night.

After that comes a road trip to La Conner Nov. 1 and a home clash with Orcas Nov. 2.

When the Wolves get back into action, the goal will be to replicate the more fired-up attack which helped them hold the advantage in the second half against Lopez.

Trailing 3-0 at the break, without having gotten off a shot on goal across the first 40 minutes, CHS mixed things up and it paid off.

“We came out in the first half really slow, almost asleep,” said Coupeville coach Kimberly Kisch. “Then we adjusted and got much more of the action happening up top.

“I’m very happy with how we played in the second half.”

Ayden Wyman turns the action upfield. (Finn Price photo)

While the Wolves had trouble mounting an offensive charge before the break, they put together one especially strong run right after the break.

Just a hair over two minutes into the second half, Cael Wilson put a pass on Preston Epp’s foot, and his fellow senior bashed a shot which almost beat the Lopez goalie.

While the Lobo netminder managed to punch the ball free, it bounced in the direction of Wolf sniper Sage Arends, who nimbly popped the orb into the back of the net for his third score of the season.

The two teams played a fast ‘n furious second half, with Lopez picking up a yellow card for one play, while getting away with another tussle where a Coupeville player got nailed in the face by a wayward elbow and crashed hard to the pitch.

Coupeville’s defense kept Lopez at bay over the final 40 minutes of play, with goaltender Hurlee Bronec making several strong stops on Lobo shots.

Unfortunately for the Wolves, they were playing from behind for most of the game, after Lopez broke through with an opening goal just 90 seconds into the game.

The visitors added two more scores, one in the 22nd minute and another in the 36th, to get comfortably ahead by the break.

While Coupeville was looking for a win, Kisch came away pleased with how the team responded to adversity.

She praised Wolf 8th grader Brian Thompson for “standout work in maintaining good position,” Ayden Wyman for “solid work in the middle,” and Dane Hadsall for a “couple of great blocks.”

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Cael Wilson brings the lightning and the thunder. (Finn Price photos)

The opening act was a huge success.

Kicking things off Saturday in the first game of a soccer/football doubleheader at Mickey Clark Field, the Coupeville High School co-ed booters romped to their first win of the season.

Controlling the action from first whistle to the last moment of action, the Wolves bounced visiting Grace Academy 3-1 in a game which felt incredibly one-sided.

The non-conference win against a league rival lifts CHS to 1-2-1 on the season.

The teams will meet a second time later this season in Marysville in a tilt which will count in the conference standings.

If Saturday’s game was a taste of what’s to come, it should make Wolf fans quite happy.

Punching in two goals before halftime, Coupeville seized control of the game and never let go.

The first score came courtesy senior Cael Wilson, who got a gift from the Grace Academy goalie.

The visiting netminder lost control of the ball while trying to clear it in front of his net, with the orb bouncing right to the rampaging Wolf.

Wilson slipped past his rival, took a quick step or two, then slapped home the game’s first goal a little over 12 minutes into play.

Sage Arends outduels his rivals.

From there, the Wolves added a second tally, with Sage Arends alertly picking up a loose ball while stuck in a pack of players, before popping a shot into the back of the net.

CHS goalie Hurlee Bronec was lights out while holding Grace Academy scoreless in the first half, then moved out into the field after the break.

Sam Richards replaced him in net and also clamped down on the visitors, though one ball got through (barely) during a wild melee with 17 minutes to play.

Mason Butler preaches loves, while hammering fools on defense.

Coupeville’s defenders stood tall in the waning moments, denying Grace a chance to tie, with Mason Butler and Lillian Ketterling among those blunting incoming attacks.

The insurance goal came in stoppage time after Wolf 8th grader Brian Thompson and the Grace goalie collided in the box.

The young whiz kid stepped aside to let his fellow ginger, Wilson, line up the penalty kick, and the grizzled vet hit paydirt.

Banking in his second goal of the afternoon, he notched his third score of the campaign and ninth of his prep career.

Wilson is now tied with Angel Partida as the team’s top scorer this season.

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Coupeville’s seniors claim control of the soccer pitch. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There’s always something new.

Robert Wood is 48 games into his run as a soccer coach at Coupeville High School, but Saturday’s home opener against Crosspoint provided a different wrinkle.

Playing through a few rain drops spit from an overcast prairie sky, the Wolves rallied in the second half to forge a 1-1 tie with their private school rivals, the first ever stalemate under their pitch guru.

With the contest being a non-conference one, the teams passed on playing overtime or going to a shoot-out to decide things. Instead, a mixed result for both squads.

And while Wood felt his team played better than it had in an earlier road loss to Auburn Adventist Academy, he wasn’t terribly overjoyed with Saturday’s result.

“We beat ourselves,” he said. “Just the very definition of apathetic.

“We didn’t play well enough to keep control of the ball and were tentative a lot of the time. Stuff to work on.”

The Wolves, now 0-1-1 on the season, play at home twice next week, welcoming Northwest 2B/1B League foes Friday Harbor and Grace Academy to Coupeville for non-conference games Tuesday and Saturday, respectively.

That will give the Wolves a chance to work on tightening up their attack and finding the fire in their collective bellies.

It’s not hard to believe it’s there, as there was moments Saturday when things sparked to life.

Trailing 1-0 early in the second half, despite outshooting Crosspoint, Coupeville finally found the counter when Sage Arends knocked in his first varsity goal with 32 minutes left to play.

The Wolves had at least two chances to claim the lead in the late going but came up just short.

Senior Preston Epp sent a penalty kick just barely wide left, the ball coming tantalizingly close to finding the back of the net as Crosspoint’s goaltender watched his life flash before his eyes.

Then, with the game in stoppage time, 8th grader Tamsin Ward, already having an impact in her high school debut, bashed a high arcing shot under pressure.

While the ball needed to be several feet lower to hit paydirt, it was still an impressive wallop from a young gun who shows no fear on the pitch.

Coupeville is playing as a co-ed team for the second straight season, while rebuilding the roster for a girls’ team, with female booters like Ward, Ayden Wyman, Lillian Ketterling, and Taylor Marrs holding their own in male-centric games.

Crosspoint tallied the afternoon’s first score 19 minutes into play, when freshman Caleb Smart slipped a shot through a thicket of players in front of the net.

Other than that shot, on which he was largely blocked from seeing the incoming ball, Wolf goalie Hurlee Bronec was lights out.

At one point the senior netminder deflected a shot at close range, then soared high to punch another ball up and over the goal.

Coupeville’s defensive front made Bronec’s job a lot easier after that, largely keeping Crosspoint at bay across the game’s final 50 minutes or so.

With a strong core of seniors, which includes Cael Wilson, Mason Butler, Dane Hadsall, Epp, Wyman, Bronec, Angel Partida, and Matthew Ward, the Wolves are primed for a successful run.

While Saturday’s tie was a mixed bag, Wood remains focused on the positives.

“We’ll keep working, that’s for sure,” he said as he headed into the night.

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Sage Arends, ready to rock. (Photos courtesy Kim Arends)

Cow Town or Taekwondo Town?

Coupeville is producing its fair share of mat champions, from the Helm sisters (and mom) to Sage Arends.

The Coupeville High School freshman, who lit up the basketball court during the winter, is a recommended black belt taking his other sport by storm.

Saturday, Arends was on the mainland, competing at the Federal Way Mayor’s Cup Taekwondo Championship, where he collected a bevy of awards.

The fab frosh earned first place in sparring, while also nailing down third place finishes in both forms and board breaking.

Preparing to display his skills.

Sharing the spotlight with other rising stars.

A photo op with mom.

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