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With the travel ball season done, Teagan Calkins (center) will return to repping Coupeville’s red and black. (Photo courtesy Shawn Calkins)

They finished the summer season with a bang.

Crunching the ball at the plate, and playing inspired defense, the Whidbey Island Thunder 18U softball squad wrapped its campaign with a second-straight second-place performance at a weekend tourney.

Even without lineup stalwarts Taylor Brotemarkle and Loto Tupu, the all-star team bashed 30 hits across five games, including three home runs from longball lover EmmaJoy Wise.

The Thunder made huge strides this summer, jumping from a 15-25 record last year to 18-14-2 this time around.

That includes back-to-back second-place trophies on top of a 5th place finish at Cascade Nationals and an 8th place finish in the Canada Cup.

One final award, one final team pic. (Photo courtesy Shawn Calkins)

The finale — the Game Day Last Pitch tourney in Kent — started with a brief stumble for the Thunder, but they recovered quickly.

After dropping the opener 6-1, Whidbey rebounded to take the next two games by 11-1 and 10-3 margins.

“The girls came out first game of the pool play, and I think we left our bats back on the Island,” said Thunder coach Matt Suto.

“It happens.

“That didn’t stop us, that just made us mad and fired up our bats,” he added. “We came back the next game and just hit right off the bat and never took a foot off the gas pedal.”

Heading into bracket play Sunday, the Thunder got a measure of revenge, smacking the team they lost to in the opener.

This time out, Whidbey won 9-1, propelling them into the championship bout.

The offense hit a downturn in the final game, however, with a double off the bat of Layla Suto about the only spark.

While he would have liked to end things with a title, Matt Suto came away from the game, the tourney, and the season, very pleased with what he saw.

“I cannot express how proud I am of every single one of these girls,” he said.

The tournament not only brought an end to the season but was also the swan song for the current lineup.

EmmaJoy Wise and flamethrower Grace Swenson will be playing at the collegiate level next year, while several other players are moving on to other teams.

But while the lineup may be revamped next summer, Matt Suto has high hopes.

“I am incredibly honored to be able to be a part of every single one of these girls’ softball journey,” he said.

“Thank you, players and families, for an amazing summer; every single girl contributed in some way, and I am proud of every one of them.

“I cannot thank the families for their support every weekend in allowing myself, Shelly Ryder, and Lance Lopez to coach these wonderful athletes.

“The Thunder squad is still strong; we will just have to find the fit for the girls that we are losing, and I believe we will come back even stronger next year ready to take on any challenge.”

 

Weekend stats:

Zoe Abbott — Two walks
Kylee Baize — Two singles
Jivanna Bird — One double
Teagan Calkins — Five singles, two doubles
Hayden Davies — Four singles, one walk
Anna Friedrichs — One double, three walks
Madison McMillan — One double, five walks
Ramona Ryder — Three singles, one double
Layla Suto — One singles, two doubles, two walks
Grace Swenson — Two singles, one walk
EmmaJoy Wise — Two singles, three home runs, one walk

That’s a wrap. (Photo courtesy Matt Suto)

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Olivia Hall (front) and Laken Simpson zip by. (Ana Mc Fetridge photos)

There is an ending to everything.

The 2023-2024 prep sports year hit the tape Wednesday, with the Coupeville Middle School track and field team wrapping up the two-day Cascade League Championships.

After a season of less-than-stellar weather and outstanding performances, Wolf coach Amber Wyman was ready for a nap, but also had some thoughts about all that transpired.

Her exit interview:

 

I am so proud of these athletes!

They worked hard and really strived to accomplish their goals! 

A few notables: Zariyah Allen has been practicing the discus at home and asked for a discus for her birthday and the effort paid off today with a 15-foot PR!

Tamsin Ward did amazing and came away with two first place medals and two second place.

A big shout out to my daughter Devon and Mikayla Wagner who started their track training 12 weeks early to get in shape for the season and it really paid off!

They would get together after school and run so that they would PR early in our short season.

Henry Bailey came out to try track for the first time and did amazing.

I have now declared him a ‘track and cross-country kid’ so let’s hope he listens. 🙂

We loved watching so many other amazing and wonderful athletes (that are too numerous to name) that came out nearly every day to do better and be better. 

And sadly, Hyley Farrell will be leaving us for Texas, so this was her last Coupeville sport she will play. We will miss her! 

Congrats to all of our athletes on a successful middle school season, whether first, second or last!

Amber

Isa Mc Fetridge and friends soared all season. 

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Cameron (1) and Sydney Van Dyke (13) share a moment with a rival basketball player who is a softball teammate. (Grant Van Dyke photo)

It began with the unmistakable sound of squeaking shoes and basketballs thunking rhythmically off the hardwood and ended with hugs and shared popsicles.

All accompanied by much high-pitched screaming, a little giggling, and some dramatically swung elbows.

The Coupeville Middle School gym was a place both of the moment, and out of time, Wednesday afternoon as one season swung to a close and another stepped forward to claim our attention.

Next week brings the first “spring sports” games to the prairie, and we, the few, the brave, the foolhardy, will be buffeted by wind, rain, dust storms, and possibly snow.

Hunched over, trying to track the flight of softballs through the clouds, hear the crack of baseballs popping into catcher’s mitts, or focus on tennis balls thwapping against wet rackets, we will curse the sports gods.

Loudly and often.

As coaches check to see if our school’s track and field athletes are just resting, or forever frozen in place, we will remember a time when we were warm.

When we sat in a gym, where, no matter how hard the bleachers might be, we were witness to God’s Chosen Sport.

Basketball was here to bewitch us, for a glorious moment or two, and we were fulfilled.

And then the doors slammed, and we were sent onto the frozen tundra, possibly to see Jodie Foster stumble by, still trying to piece together the mysteries left unanswered by True Detective: Night Country.

Or, at least it will feel that way, as one by one, our limbs go into hibernation.

But Wednesday, for two hours, all was well in the universe.

Brooklyn Pope was fighting Finley Helm for rebounds, Kaleigha Millison rampaged from end to end, pouring in buckets, and Claire Lachnit and Hazel Goldman unleashed their inner Wolf, playing defense the only way they know.

Full tilt and ready to rip your knees off, bless their fiery hearts.

Some will tell you the game didn’t ultimately matter in the grand scheme of things.

It wasn’t against another school but was an intra-squad scrimmage between Coupeville Middle School’s #3 and #4 teams.

The win or loss doesn’t go on anyone’s record, the points tallied (by me at least, since there was no official scorekeeper) don’t count in the season totals.

To which I say, if you feel that way, you’re a freakin’ moron and your mom should have done a better job raising you.

Basketball ALWAYS matters. ALWAYS.

It is the one pure sport, and Wednesday was our final moment in the cathedral.

From here on out, we’ll watch other sports, which all have their good points, and we’ll suffer immensely while following those which are playing far too early in the calendar year.

But we will be like Adam and Eve, post-apple, thrown out of paradise and left to wander, at least until basketball returns next winter.

So those who were there Wednesday — the handful of parents and fellow students, the trash-talking babies (“play some dang defense and get me a bottle!!”), the high school players doubling as the year’s best ref crew, the gym rats and lifers — we marinated in every second as it ticked off the clock.

When he’s not fighting fires, Jerry Helm builds basketball players. Is this the path to sainthood?? (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Wolves on the floor were the present and the future wrapped in one, young women bursting with potential.

Some will stay with the chosen sport (yay!), others will fall from the pure religion (boo!) as they wind their way through middle and high school.

Always, the questions linger.

Will one of these girls shoot up to six-foot-five, develop a killer post move, and bring Cow Town its first state title?

Or settle for being 5-4, but mature into the kind of defensive dynamo who looks like she’ll chop your knees off with a rusty machete?

Which might fulfill my dream of seeing the Detroit Piston Bad Boys reborn as braid-rockin’ prairie powerhouses.

Especially if Coupeville adopts my other dream of having its players enter the gym under the cover of darkness, a spotlight picking up each enforcer as Welcome to the Jungle wails on the soundtrack.

“You’re gonna dieeeeeeeeeee!!!!!”

Sweet dreams are made of this…

I’m saying, I look at these Wolves, and I believe they can be the kind of young women who help granny cross the street and get straight A’s, then go out and (metaphorically) slash some tires and burn the gym down.

Will Cameron Van Dyke and Selah Rivera be those Valkyries? Perhaps Priya Powell and Ava Alford.

Could be, or could be any from the group on the floor, be it an Emma (Cushman or Green) an Anna (Annaliese Powers or Annabelle Cundiff) or a Zayne (Roos) or Zariyah (Allen).

Toss in Marina Flood, Addison Jacobson, Isley Garcia Fernandez, and Cassandra Powers and CMS coaches Bennett Richter and Jerry Helm had plenty of scrappers to turn wild Wednesday.

It’s why the two squads fought through four ties, the final one coming midway through the third quarter, before Team #3, which got twice the practice time of Team #4 this season, pulled away late for a 24-13 win.

Ten of 19 girls scored, with Millison rattling the rim for a game-high 10 points (at least according to my books), while Roos banked in six.

Ultimately, though, it wasn’t the score which mattered most.

It was getting to be in the gym one more time, feeling the ball lift off their fingertips, hearing their teammates, including the ones operating the scoreboard, scream in support.

It was a last afternoon in the cathedral, the sun peeking through the windows on the door, two teams running wild with refs who let the action play out.

It was basketball, and it was beautiful.

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Coupeville Middle School hardcourt assassins? Great today, even better in the future! (Ana Mc Fetridge photo)

A reversal of fortune, in just one month.

Jump back to the opening rumble on Feb. 8, and the Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball squads were swept in three games by next door neighbor South Whidbey.

Now go forward to Tuesday, with the Wolves down in Langley for their season finale, and it was a different story, with CMS taking two of three.

That caps a campaign in which two of three Coupeville squads finish with a winning record.

Well, almost caps a campaign, as Team 3 will get one more game Wednesday, when it will face off at home with Team 4, the “shadow squad.”

Other Cascade League schools only field three teams, or sometimes two, so Coupeville’s fourth unit has spent most of the season working on its own.

But they’ll get a share of the spotlight Wednesday, in a tilt set to tip at 3:15 PM.

 

How things played out in the “official” finale Tuesday:

 

Level 1:

Toss out the first quarter and Coupeville wins.

Unfortunately for the Wolves, a slow start left them in a 10-1 hole en route to a narrow 32-24 loss.

CMS finishes 1-7, though the record is a bit deceptive, as they were rarely run off the floor this season.

“Team One was a fight to the finish (Tuesday),” said CMS coach Brooke Crowder. “They never let up.”

In a major bright spot, the Wolves, after struggling at the free throw line all season, suddenly found their groove in the finale.

Adie Maynes and Lillian Ketterling led the charity stripe parade, combining to ripple the nets on seven successful shots.

Maynes, who has been a busy bee, bouncing from high school basketball to middle school hardcourt action, all while getting ready for high school softball, paced the Wolves with a game-high 12 points in Langley.

Tenley Stuurmans and Sydney Van Dyke chipped in with four apiece, while Ketterling and Tamsin Ward rounded out the attack, each scoring two points.

Taylor Marrs, Ari Cunningham, Olivia Hall, Laken Simpson, Chelsi Stevens, and Ava Lucero also saw floor time, fighting to the finish on both ends of the floor.

Brooke Crowder is closing out a successful debut season with Coupeville basketball. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

Level 2:

Tense for a half, then all Coupeville.

Up 5-4 at the break, the Wolves closed the game on a 14-4 tear across the final 14 minutes to collect the 19-8 win.

The victory, Coupeville’s third-straight, lifts them to an impressive 6-2.

The hottest hand belonged to Willow Leedy-Bonifas, who scored in every quarter on her way to a game-best 11 points.

Kennedy O’Neill, who finished as Coupeville’s #1 scorer across all teams, backed her up with four points, while Allison Powers and Isa Mc Fetridge banked in a bucket apiece.

Amaiya Curry, Sage Stavros, Elizabeth Marshall, Amelia Crowder, and Sophia Batterman rounded out the roster, helping power a team flush with promise.

 

None of his players scored on their own basket this year. Bennett Richter is pleased. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Level 3:

No Pope, no problem.

Leading scorer Brooklyn Pope wasn’t on the floor Tuesday, but her teammates used stingy defense and opportunistic shot making to “steal” a 16-13 win on the road.

The victory lifts Coupeville to 4-2, with the only thing slowing the Wolves down at times was other schools not being able to play.

Northshore Christian Academy doesn’t have a third team, and the first of two matchups with Sultan featured the Turks dealing with wide-spread illness.

But give them a chance to stalk the hardwood, and these Wolves take no prisoners, as they showed Tuesday.

“They worked their butts off on defense and were able to pick off passes and sink shots in the last three minutes to seal the deal,” Crowder said.

South Whidbey jumped out to a 10-4 lead after one quarter, then went scoreless over the next two frames.

That allowed CMS to pull within 10-8 at the half, then claim the lead at 12-10 heading into the final seven-minute stretch.

Cassandra Powers, who paced the Wolves with six points, scored four of those in the fourth quarter, allowing her squad to hold off their hosts.

Kaleigha Millison (4), Annaliese Powers (4), and Selah Rivera (2) also scored, while Cameron Van Dyke, Emma Cushman, Claire Lachnit, Zayne Roos, and Zariyah Allen played with a cold fury on the defensive end of the floor.

 

Final season scoring stats:

Kennedy O’Neill – 63
Willow Leedy-Bonifas – 47
Adie Maynes – 45
Brooklyn Pope – 34
Lillian Ketterling – 28
Tenley Stuurmans – 28
Kaleigha Millison – 22
Cassandra Powers – 18
Sydney Van Dyke – 17
Amelia Crowder – 14
Sophia Batterman – 12
Ari Cunningham – 11
Emma Cushman – 11
Allison Powers – 10
Tamsin Ward – 10
Annaliese Powers – 9
Rhylin Price – 8
Isa Mc Fetridge – 6
Zayne Roos – 6
Cameron Van Dyke – 6
Ava Lucero – 5
Amaiya Curry – 4
Olivia Hall – 4
Elizabeth Marshall – 4
Selah Rivera – 4
Chelsi Stevens – 4
Sage Stavros – 3
Taylor Marrs – 2
Laken Simpson – 2

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Lyla Stuurmans would appreciate it if you would get out of her face. (Jackie Saia photo)

The building blocks are in place.

The Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball team narrowly missed the playoffs this time around, stung by a couple of losses in which the offense dried up at inopportune times.

But there were a whole ton of moments when everything clicked into place for the Wolves, promising a bright future.

And that future could come to bloom next season, with nine of 12 players, including all five starters, slated to return for CHS coach Megan Richter.

The top seven scorers on a team which finished 2-6 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 7-13 overall (but could have easily been 13-7 with a tweak here and there) are all underclassmen.

Starters Mia Farris, Jada Heaton, Madison McMillan, Lyla Stuurmans, and Katie Marti are juniors, while Teagan Calkins is a sophomore and Haylee Armstrong a freshman.

Give them some time to fine-tune their offensive skill set, let them grow and mature in the heat of softball, track, and volleyball seasons, and plop them back on the hardwood next year, and things could get dynamic.

All five of Coupeville’s starters this season can return next year. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

La Conner, who they closed with, shares a lot of similarities with the Wolves — young players bursting with potential, finding their way to achieving the kind of success their predecessors enjoyed.

For this season, at least, the Braves proved to be just a hair further along the path.

Using its team-wide speed to its advantage, La Conner jumped out to a 14-6 lead after one quarter of play Tuesday night.

McMillan kept the Braves honest by knocking down a couple of early buckets, while Farris chased down a rival and rejected her shot to the delight of her teammates.

Coupeville came out strongly in the second quarter, chopping its deficit back to 16-11, but then was stung by one of those infamous offensive dry spells.

La Conner closed the frame on a 7-2 run, with just a roller from Stuurmans slowing the bleeding, then rippled the nets for the first six points of the third quarter.

That staked the Braves to their biggest lead of the night, at 29-13, and put a bit of panic in the heart of Wolf fans around the world.

To which Stuurmans said, “Calm down, Skippy, I got this.”

The ever springy one, bounding around on both ends of the floor, tossed in five points to key a 7-0 Wolf run, cutting things back to 29-20 heading into the fourth.

Now in her fourth season of CHS basketball, having first repped the red and black as a precocious 8th grader, Stuurmans capped the mini run with a pull-up jumper so pretty it made the basketball gods smile.

Unfortunately for the Wolves, that was as close as they would get to catching La Conner, with both teams going into an offensive slow-down in the final quarter.

McMillan banked in a bucket off of a long lob by Marti, but it was Maeve McCormick who delivered the dagger.

The Brave gunner scrambled to the sideline to save a ball seemingly intent on escaping into the inky darkness of the great outdoors, looped back to the top of the arc, and calmly flicked home a three-ball to deliver the punctuation point.

For Coupeville, McMillan and Stuurmans collected eight and seven points, respectively, while  Marti (4), Heaton (2), and Calkins (2) also scored.

 

Final season scoring stats:

Katie Marti – 152
Mia Farris – 104
Madison McMillan – 104
Lyla Stuurmans – 62
Teagan Calkins – 59
Jada Heaton – 50
Haylee Armstrong – 21
Skylar Parker – 19
Kayla Arnold – 5
Reese Wilkinson – 4
Bryley Gilbert – 2
Brynn Parker – 2

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