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Posts Tagged ‘school records’

   Lindsey Roberts (left), seen with teammate Ashlie Shank, shattered a Coupeville High School record in the 100 hurdles which had stood since 1999. (Roberts photo)

   Wolves (l to r) Danny Conlisk, Lauren Bayne and Mitchell Carroll (he busted a school record from 1994) are all state-bound. (Deb Smith photo)

The Wolves got historic.

Capping an impressive first day at the West Central District III track and field meet in Renton, Coupeville’s Lindsey Roberts and Mitchell Carroll shattered school records which had stood since the ’90s.

Roberts, a sophomore, claimed her third school record, and first as an individual, when she broke Jess Roundy’s mark in the 100 hurdles.

Hitting the tape in 15.97 seconds, she toppled Roundy, who ran a 16.06 in 1999, before Roberts was born.

Carroll went five years better, bringing an end to Virgil Roehl’s 23-year residence on the CHS record board in the triple jump.

The Wolf senior, also not born when the record he busted was set, cleared 43 feet, three inches, beating the long-held standard by three-and-a-half inches.

Needless to say, both Roberts and Carroll punched their tickets to the state meet as well, two of eight Wolves to do so on the first day of the two-day district rumble.

Junior Jacob Smith and sophomore Danny Conlisk, who won the 100 and 400 respectively, are state-bound, as is high jumper Lauren Bayne and the girls 4 x 100 and 4 x 200 squads.

Those relay units, which feature Roberts running with freshmen Maya Toomey-Stout and Mallory Kortuem and senior Lauren Grove, rolled to big wins in both events.

Coupeville returns to Renton Saturday for day two of districts, when it will try to add to the list of those going to Cheney May 26-27 for state.

A top three finish punches an athlete (or relay team’s) ticket to the big dance.

At the mid-point of districts, which brings the five Nisqually League and four Olympic League schools together, the Wolf girls are in second place in the team standings.

They trail Charles Wright Academy 67-55.

The CHS boys sit in sixth place, while Bellevue Christian is halfway to a team title.

Complete district meet (Day 1) results: 

Girls:

100 — Maya Toomey-Stout (4th) 12.96 *PR*

100 Hurdles — Lindsey Roberts (2nd) 15.97 *PR* *SCHOOL RECORD*

4 x 100 Relay — Lauren Grove, Mallory Kortuem, M. Toomey-Stout, Roberts (1st) 51.05

4 x 200 Relay — Grove, Kortuem, M. Toomey-Stout, Roberts (1st) 1:47.67

Shot put — Skyler Lawrence (4th) 30-06.25; Alexxis Otto (5th) 28-00.25 *PR*

High Jump — Lauren Bayne (2nd) 4-08

Long Jump — Roberts (4th) 15-00.50

Boys:

100 — Jacob Smith (1st) 11.29 *PR*

400 — Danny Conlisk (1st) 51.42 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Smith, Mitchell Carroll, Cameron Toomey-Stout, Conlisk (4th) 45.28

Discus — Chris Battaglia (7th) 103-11

Triple Jump — Carroll (3rd) 43-03 *PR* *SCHOOL RECORD*

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Senior Jacob Martin leads Coupeville in rushing and tackles. (John Fisken photo)

   Senior Jacob Martin leads Coupeville in rushing yards and tackles. (John Fisken photo)

This could be a record-breaking season.

With two games left on the schedule, a pair of Coupeville High School football players are making bids to put their names on the program’s all-time record board.

Junior QB Hunter Downes and junior receiver Hunter Smith already tied CHS single-game records for touchdowns thrown and caught in a single game.

That came when Downes riddled Bellevue Christian for four scoring strikes, three of which went to Smith.

Now, Smith sits one snag away from tying Josh Bayne’s season record of 10 touchdown receptions, while also finding himself just 143 yards shy of Chad Gale’s mark (844 yards in 1987) for receiving yards in a single campaign.

When it comes to career marks, Smith sits 225 yards and six touchdowns off of Gale’s records (1,345 yards and 17 TD’s).

Downes is a little further away from his goals, but with a strong finish could make runs at Ian Smith’s single-season mark of 1,848 passing yards and Joel Walstad’s 18 touchdown passes in a year.

The Wolf gunslinger sits at 1,201 yards and 13 touchdowns and Friday’s foe, Chimacum, has the second-worst scoring defense in the Olympic/Nisqually League.

Cascade Christian, Coupeville’s final rival Nov. 4, is #1 in every defensive stat, however.

While the Hunter to Hunter passing attack is making a run at history, they are not the only Wolves putting up strong stats this season.

Here’s a look at where the whole CHS roster stands through week #8 on offense and defense, according to numbers posted on MaxPreps by Wolf coaches.

Complete kicking/kick-returning stats aren’t available at the moment, but are expected to be back in the mix by the end of the season, said CHS coach Jon Atkins.

Offense:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 55-126 for 1201 yards (#2 in league, #5 in 1A) with 13 TD and 10 INTs
Hunter Smith 1-1 for 67 yards
Shane Losey 1-1 for 5 yards

Receiving:

Smith 30 receptions for 701 yards (#2 in league, #3 in 1A, #16 in all divisions)
Cameron Toomey-Stout 15-317 (#6 in league, #13 in 1A)
Jacob Martin 5-137
Clay Reilly 3-64
Sean Toomey-Stout 1-32
Jake Hoagland 2-17
Taylor Consford 1-5

Rushing:

J. Martin 74 carries for 488 yards
Reilly 59-224
Smith 26-103
Chris Battaglia 24-61
S. Toomey-Stout 8-45
Matt Hilborn 15-20
Teo Keilwitz 1-12
Andrew Martin 3-7
C. Toomey-Stout 2-1
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim 1-(-4)
Losey 2-(-10)
Downes 37-(-80)

All-Purpose yards (Rush/Rec/KR/PR/IR):

Smith 1040
J. Martin 625
Reilly 404
C. Toomey-Stout 395
S. Toomey-Stout 87
Hilborn 65
Battaglia 61
Hoagland 17
Keilwitz 12
A. Martin 7
Consford 5

Total yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes 1121 (#3 in league, #6 in 1A)
Smith 871 (#8 in league, #13 in 1A)
J. Martin 625
C. Toomey-Stout 318
Reilly 288
S. Toomey-Stout 77
Battaglia 61
Hilborn 20
Hoagland 17
Keilwitz 12
A. Martin 7
Consford 5

Touchdowns:

Smith 12
J. Martin 5
C. Toomey-Stout 4
Downes 2
Battaglia 1
Keilwitz 1
Ryan Labrador 1
Reilly 1

PATs:

Reilly 20 (#2 in league, #6 in 1A)

Points:

Smith 72
J. Martin 30
Reilly 26
C. Toomey-Stout 24
Downes 12
Battaglia 6
Keilwitz 6
Labrador 6

Defense:

Tackles:

J. Martin 62
Uriel Liquidano 46
Reilly 44
Smith 38
Hilborn 27
S. Toomey-Stout 27
Battaglia 24
C. Toomey-Stout 24
Julian Welling 24
Keilwitz 14
Labrador 12
Dane Lucero 12
Jacob Zettle 11
Axel Partida 10
Jake Pease 5
James Vidoni 4
Matt Stevens 3
Hoagland 2
Downes 1
Losey 1
A. Martin 1
Pacquette-Pilgrim 1

Sacks:

Liquidano 5.5 (#2 in league, #4 in 1A, #18 in all divisions)
Vidoni 2
Zettle 1.5
J. Martin 1
Welling 1

Fumble recoveries:

Battaglia 1
Hilborn 1
Labrador 1
Lucero 1

Interceptions:

Reilly 2
Smith 2
C. Toomey-Stout 2
S. Toomey-Stout 1

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Jacob Smith, seen here during an earlier meet, won three times Thursday in Langley. (John Fisken photo)

   Jacob Smith, seen here during an earlier meet, won three times Thursday in Langley. (John Fisken photo)

It was an unexpected beat-down.

Sparked by two school records, seven wins and 29 PRs, the Coupeville High School boys’ track and field squad stunned three of its former Cascade Conference rivals Thursday afternoon in Langley.

On the day Wolf seniors Dalton Martin (discus) and Jordan Ford (pole vault) put their names up on the big board in the gym, CHS won its first team meet title in a very long time.

Individual excellence has not been an issue in recent years, but team depth has for Coupeville.

Not so Thursday, as the Wolves rang up 84 points to South Whidbey’s 63.

Sultan (57) and Granite Falls (50) rounded out the team battle on the boys side.

The Wolf girls swept both relay events, but fell prey to the depth issue and finished fourth with 34 points, trailing Granite Falls (82), South Whidbey (82) and Sultan (75).

While Makana Stone and her teammates on the relay squads (Sylvia Hurlburt, Lauren Grove and Lindsey Roberts) tend to get a lot of buzz, and quite fairly with all their accomplishments, Thursday belonged to the boys.

Martin, making his first appearance of the season, shattered the CHS discus mark by eight feet, while Ford broke the pole vault record by three inches.

It was just his second try at the event since moving to Coupeville, and he went 15 inches higher in a week’s time.

Sophomore Jacob Smith was a three-time winner, zipping to titles in the 100 and 200 before joining Ford, Jacob Martin and Gabe Eck to win the 4 x 100.

Dalton Martin won both the shot put and discus, while Lathom Kelley ran the fastest time in 1A this year in the 300 hurdles and Ryan Griggs triumphed in the high jump.

“A great meet for the Wolves!,” said an understandably giddy Coupeville track coach Randy King.

Complete CHS results:

GIRLS:

100 — Madison Rixe (9th) 14.63 *PR*; Mckenzie Meyer (12th) 15.12 *PR*; Ashlie Shank (13th) 15.13 *PR*; Julia Jones (19th) 18.49 *PR*

200 — Lauren Grove (4th) 28.07 *PR*; Lindsey Roberts (6th) 28.95; Rixe (7th) 30.22 *PR*; Shank (10th) 31.27 *PR*

800 — Makana Stone (2nd) 2:27.42 *PR*

100 Hurdles — Roberts (4th) 18.02

300 Hurdles — Meyer (4th) 56.92 *PR*; Lauren Bayne (5th) 1:00.67

4 x100 — Grove, Sylvia Hurlburt, Roberts, Stone (1st) 51.37; Jovanah Foote, Meyer, Abby Parker, Shank (4th) 1:01.05

4 x 200 — Grove, Hurlburt, Roberts, Stone (1st) 1:49.32

Shot put — Skyler Lawrence (4th) 29-09.75; Alexxis Otto (7th) 25-00; Naika Hallam (9th) 20-05.75; Emma Smith (11th) 20-00; Estefanny Liquidano (13th) 15-07.50

Discus — Lawrence (3rd) 84-03; Otto (7th) 73-10; Parker (10th) 64-03; E. Smith (11th) 63-04 *PR*; Allison Wenzel (12th) 63-00; Liquidano (15th) 43-00 *PR*; Foote (16th) 42-03

Javelin — Bayne (5th) 80-11 *PR*; Parker (7th) 74-01 *PR*; Lawrence (8th) 74-00; Hallam (9th) 72-08; Wenzel (10th) 70-02; Otto (15th) 59-04 *PR*; Foote (17th) 46-04

High Jump — Bayne (4th) 4-04

Triple Jump — Grove (3rd) 29-09 *PR*

BOYS:

100 — Jacob Smith (1st) 11.90, Lathom Kelley (2nd) 11.99; Jordan Ford (6th) 12.29 *PR*; Jared Helmstadter (7th) 12.31; Gabe Eck (11th) 12.54; Kyle Burnett (15th) 13.54; Hunter Downes (17th) 14.15

200 — J. Smith (1st) 24.03 *PR*; Danny Conlisk (5th) 25.83; Henry Wynn (7th) 26.25 *PR*; Burnett (9th) 29.24

400 — Helmstadter (2nd) 55.88; Conlisk (3rd) 56.57 *PR*; Wynn (5th) 59.35 *PR*; Nile Lockwood (6th) 1:06.07 *PR*

1600 — Conlisk (3rd) 5:03.82 *PR*; Wynn (6th) 5:10.27 *PR*; Jakobi Baumann (14th) 6:31.51

3200 — Baumann (4th) 14:16.37

300 Hurdles — Kelley (1st) 41.48 *PR*

4×100 — J. Smith, Eck, Jacob Martin, Ford (1st) 46.09; Downes, Grey Rische, Burnett, Connor Thompson (4th) 51.90

Shot Put — Dalton Martin (1st) 44-04 *PR*; Chris Battaglia (7th) 32-02 *PR*; Thompson (8th) 31-10.50; Mitchell Carroll (9th) 31-06 *PR*; Rische (14th) 28-02.25 *PR*; Keahi Sorrows (15th) 28-02; Luke Carlson (17th) 24-02 *PR*

Discus — D. Martin (1st) 158-05 *PR*; Battaglia (5th) 104-09 *PR*; Sorrows (13th) 72-10

Javelin — Rische (5th) 121-05; Ariah Bepler (13th) 92-11 *PR*; Lockwood (16th) 71-09; Carlson (17th) 71-00 *PR*; Sorrows (19th) 64-00 *PR*

Pole Vault — Ford (2nd) 11-09 *PR*

High Jump — Ryan Griggs (1st) 5-06; Battaglia (2nd) 5-04 *PR*; Ford (3rd) 5-02

Long Jump — Carroll (4th) 17-10.50 *PR*; Eck (4th) 17-10.50 *PR*; Battaglia (6th) 17-04.50 *PR*; Bepler (7th) 15-07.50 *PR*; Downes (8th) 14-11 *PR*; Lockwood (11th) 14-08.50 *PR*; Baumann (13th) 10-10 *PR*

Triple Jump — Carroll (2nd) 37-04.50 *PR*; Griggs (3rd) 35-10; Thompson (5th) 35-02

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Sylvia Hurlburt

Sylvia Hurlburt poses with the new school records she helped set last year as a freshman.

The young guns, fleet-footed freshmen (l to r) Lauren Grove, Mattea Miller, Carlie Rosenkrance and Valen Trujillo.

The young guns, fleet-footed freshmen (l to r) Lauren Grove, Mattea Miller, Carlie Rosenkrance and Valen Trujillo (who has jumped to tennis as a high schooler).

Randy King is on the hunt.

The veteran Coupeville High School track coach had 41 athletes turn out for the first day of practice Monday, but he’d always like to add some more depth.

“There are still a few capable athletes out there in the halls of Coupeville not doing other sports and we are still actively looking, hoping, and trying to persuade more girls to come on out!,” King said.

The 17 girls he already has include three returning state meet veterans in sophomores Makana Stone and Sylvia Hurlburt and junior Marisa Etzell.

That trio was part of a unit that smashed school records, tore up the Cascade Conference and claimed fifth place in the 4 x 200 at the 1A state meet. The Wolf girls finished 26th out of 47 teams in Cheney.

Stone also won the first 32 races of her high school career — best debut ever, by far, for a Wolf — and broke or helped break four school records (200, 4 x 100, 4 x 200, 4 x 400). Etzell and Hurlburt each ran on two of the record relay teams.

“They really enjoyed their experience in the relays and are looking forward to some new sprint relay team members,” King said.

The loss to graduation of sprinters Jai’Lysa Hoskins and Madison Tisa McPhee is huge, but a strong young group led by freshmen Lauren Grove and Carlie Rosenkrance is ready to step in.

First-timers Nene Maxie Stokes and Amanda Foley will also vie for spots on the sprint teams.

Junior Erin Rosenkranz returns to anchor the distance runners, while freshman Mattea Miller will join her.

Veteran throwers Heni Barnes and Briess Potter will be joined by a pack of newcomers, as CHS has a deeper-than-normal group of female athletes picking up the shot put and discus. Sophia Jebrail, Joye Jackson, Ashlyn Miller and Skyler Lawrence are also in the mix.

On the boys side, there are deeper numbers, with 11 of the 24 being returning athletes.

Senior thrower Nick Streubel and sprinter/jumper Josiah Campbell, who missed qualifying for state by one place in the 100 as a junior, anchor the squad.

Sophomore sprinters Jared Helmstadter and Lathom Kelley, junior distance runner Matthew Hampton and senior hurdler/sprinter Brandon Kelley provide depth.

When he wasn’t doing cartwheels off the gym walls, the irrepressible Lathom Kelley, also a gridiron standout, was working hard on building his body into a force of nature.

Lathom’s speed, which was on display during football season, has taken an explosive jump due to his hard work in the weight room and he may jump to the front of this group,” King said. “Jared loves track, just came off a successful basketball season and is going to be one of our fastest as well.”

And who knows what gems may be lurking in the newcomers?

“We have quite a large group of boys out for the first time and they are enthusiastic and in some cases pretty talented,” King said. “It’s going to be a great year.”

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