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Posts Tagged ‘SWHS Falcons’

Liam Blas (left) and Bennett Richter are part of a pack of Wolves bringing The Bucket back to Coupeville. (Kevin Blas photo)

How sweet it is.

Delivering a ferocious second-half beatdown to their archrivals Friday night, the Coupeville High School football squad turned frustration into elation.

When the Wolves exited Waterman Field in Langley, after serenading sticky-fingered receiving ace Malachi Somes on his 18th birthday, they carried with them several things.

First, a 35-6 win over host South Whidbey, fueled by a 28-point explosion after halftime.

And with that victory, their first in six games this season, the Wolves reclaim ownership of The Bucket, that slightly dented trophy which has only grown in stature over the past 16 years.

Win, and win convincingly, as Coupeville did while senior quarterback Chase Anderson ran for three touchdowns and tossed another, and you also earn the right to talk all sorts of smack for a full year.

365 days. Gird your loins, Falcon faithful.

It’s likely to be a painful year down South, where the Falcons fall to 0-4 after absorbing the non-conference loss and losing what may have seemed like an iron grip on ye olde trophy.

For Coupeville, and a jubilant coach Bennett Richter, gone is the frustration of a seven-year dry spell, a period in which the Falcons won six straight Island rivalry clashes (and the 2020 game was cancelled thanks to a pandemic).

“This is why we do this!! This is why I coach!!” the Wolf head man bellowed, before promptly being swept up into a never-ending series of back slaps, hugs, photo ops with the hardware, and, maybe, possibly, even a few well-earned tears of joy.

“Yeah, baby!!” (Jennifer Morrell photo)

There was a time when CHS won the Bucket game four times in six years, with former coaches Tony Maggio and Jon Atkins each leading two squads to the promised land.

But recent history had not been quite so kind to the Wolves, as Falcon gunslingers like Kody Newman and Parker Collins made their names leading the blue and white gridiron warriors to a string of victories.

South Whidbey celebrated Homecoming Friday, but on the field, the good times ended for the locals as, for once, the hottest QB playing was wearing red and black.

Anderson did get picked off once in his final gridiron battle with the next-door neighbors, but other than that, he was at the top of his game, mixing big runs with dynamic passes as he shredded the Falcons time and again.

Especially in the second half.

The game began as a fairly tense affair, with a fast-moving, almost penalty-free first quarter featuring only two drives and no points.

South Whidbey took the opening kickoff and marched 63 yards down the field — as my new pen from the $1.25 store literally exploded in my hand — only to be shut down at the most crucial moment by a fired-up Wolf defense.

I always have a back-up writing utensil, however, and, apparently, the Wolves also have some heavy hitters willing to rattle a few noggins.

Somes and Riley Lawless came up with big stops along the way, but it was Josh Stockdale who pulled down the South Whidbey ballcarrier short of the sticks on fourth down to force a turnover.

Chase Anderson dreams about beating South Whidbey. (Parker Hammons photo)

With the ball in its possession for the first time, Coupeville stayed on the ground, with Anderson, Davin Houston, and Liam Blas churning up yardage and keeping the clock running.

The Wolves actually waited until the first play of the second quarter to end the drive, as Anderson bolted around the left side on a 15-yard dash to the end zone to slap the first six points on the board.

The teams exchanged punts on the next two possessions, before things got wild in the waning moments of the half.

Coupeville recovered a fumble off of a bad Falcon snap and was ready to blow things open, only to be stuffed several times inside the 10-yard line. Compounding matters, the Wolves pushed a field goal try wide left, and what could have been 14-0 or 10-0 remained stuck at 7-0.

If Richter already didn’t have angina at the moment, all he could do was watch in horror as South Whidbey, racing the clock, drove 91 yards in 45 seconds, connecting on a 30-yard scoring strike as the clock flipped over to 0:00.

The Falcons promptly muffed the PAT, however, thanks to an awkward snap, and the extra-long halftime show roared into view with the game sitting at 7-6 in favor of Cow Town.

If you were expecting more of the same in the second half, plot twist. Only one team came back out of the locker room ready to unleash total freakin’ destruction.

That would be the men in red and black, as Coupeville brought out the whoopin’ stick and methodically spanked its hosts over the game’s final 24 minutes.

Anderson bolted for another score, on a six-yard slash, but only after Houston spun everyone out of their shoes on a 12-yard reverse and Anderson, bobbing and weaving like Muhammad Ali in his poetry-spouting prime, zipped a 19-yard pass to Somes on fourth-and-10.

With Wolf defensive dynamos like Jackson Sollars and Camden Glover hitting from every angle and thoroughly shutting down the Falcons, the CHS offense methodically went to work, making the scoreboard numbers pop.

Houston brought the fans to their feet on a kickoff return where he muffed the ball, snagged the runaway pigskin on the run, and still managed to pick up 20+ yards. Followed by his own 22-yard touchdown sprint two plays later.

“My legal name is Davin Houston. But you can call me The Dazzler.” (Parker Hammons photo)

Up 21-6 heading into the fourth, Coupeville got a 21-yard touchdown pass from Anderson to Aiden O’Neill and an 11-yard scoring run from its QB to set the final score, but that wasn’t all the highlights.

O’Neill, back after missing most of his junior season with an injury, picked off two Falcon passes in the final frame, helping ensure no late-game heroics.

Fresh off the win, the Wolves get their next two games at home, with Adna set to visit Mickey Clark Field Saturday, Oct. 18, before Friday Harbor comes to Whidbey Oct. 24 for the regular-season finale.

That game will be Senior Night for O’Neill, Glover, Anderson, Marquette Cunningham, Somes, and Jayme Carranza.

Malachi Somes (holding The Bucket) celebrates a birthday win with his teammates. (Megan Rickner photo)

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South Whidbey High School varsity volleyball seems to be turning a corner, with back-to-back wins after opening the season with a string of losses.

But an incident at Tuesday’s home win over league rival The Northwest School threatens to overshadow the Falcons upwards trajectory.

The matter was addressed in an email sent out to students, family, and staff, which you can read in full in the photo below.

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Wolves, incoming. (Julie Wheat photo)

Throw out the records.

When Coupeville High School football heads down to Langley this Friday to clash with South Whidbey, it doesn’t matter that the Falcons are 0-3 and the Wolves 0-5.

The annual non-conference rumble between next-door neighbors is for bragging rights, and an actual trophy, “The Bucket,” which comes complete with noticeable dent, thanks to a miffed South Whidbey coach who kicked it after losing it a few years back.

The “original” bucket once held licorice, but was filled with water by a Coupeville student, who dumped it on the South Whidbey crowd at a volleyball match, setting off a near-riot.

Looking to turn a negative into a positive, athletic directors Willie Smith (CHS) and John Patton (SWHS) transformed the weapon of mass hydration into a trophy, which is held for a year by the winning football program.

With Wolf coaches Tony Maggio and Jon Atkins each winning twice, Coupeville, with a smaller student body, kept the rivalry intense for the first decade.

But now, South Whidbey, which is currently a 1A school, has reeled off six straight wins against its 2B neighbors, stretching the lead out to 11-4 overall.

The Falcons, who will also be celebrating Homecoming this Friday (7:00 PM kickoff), are coming off a bye week, thanks to a rival which cancelled.

The last time they were on the gridiron they were whacked 63-0 by Friday Harbor, coming on the heels of losses to Brewster (55-6) and Bellevue Christian (43-15).

Coupeville, which will be playing a 1A foe for the fifth time in six games, has fallen to Annie Wright (25-7), Cascade (30-19), Granite Falls (58-27), Cedar Park Christian-Bothell (31-7), and Friday Harbor (28-14).

Wolf foes — not counting South Whidbey — are a combined 15-10 so far this season, with both Annie Wright and Granite boasting 4-1 records.

As we head into the 16th edition of the Battle for the Bucket, here’s a look at how things have gone:

2009 — SW 28-6
2010 — SW 33-7
2011 — SW 35-0
2012 — CHS 18-13
2013 — SW 57-33
2014 — CHS 35-28
2015 — SW 27-14
2016 — CHS 41-10
2017 — CHS 18-0
2018 — SW 48-20
2019 — SW 35-7
2020 — No game (Covid)
2021 — SW 33-7
2022 — SW 47-28
2023 – SW 48-28
2024 – SW 30-26

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Adeline Maynes, seen here last season, helped spark the Wolf JV volleyball team to a rivalry win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One match in and everything’s clicking.

Getting contributions from all 10 girls in uniform Friday night, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad rolled to a straight-sets win over visiting South Whidbey in the season opener.

Bouncing the Falcons 25-22, 25-18, the young Wolves made a winner of new coach Tianna Carlson in her debut on the CHS bench.

The new spike guru replaces Ashley Menges, who moved to Florida after five highly-successful seasons as JV coach.

Carlson got a strong effort across the board from her players Friday, with the Wolves combining for 12 kills, 35 digs, nine assists, and seven aces.

Along with the eight CHS players who scratched their names in the scorebook were Emma Leavitt and KeeAyra Brown, who rounded out a potent attack.

 

Friday stats:

Hailey Grijalva — 1 kill, 2 digs, 1 ace
Willow Leedy-Bonifas — 6 digs, 2 aces
Adeline Maynes — 1 kill, 2 digs, 3 assists
Isa Mc Fetridge — 1 kill, 8 digs, 1 assist, 2 aces
Kennedy O’Neill — 5 kills, 11 digs
Cassandra Powers — 3 digs, 2 assists
Chelsi Stevens — 3 kills, 1 dig
Sydney Van Dyke — 1 kill, 2 digs, 3 assists, 2 aces

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The baton is passed from Cory Whitmore to Scout Smith. (Sarah Stuurmans photos)

It may be a new era, but winning is still very much in fashion.

After a decade of success under Cory Whitmore, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball program kicked off the Scout Smith dynasty in style.

Drilling visiting South Whidbey 25-20, 25-22, 23-25, 25-16 Friday in their season opener, the new-look Wolves staked their claim to Island dominance and continued success.

Coupeville’s spikers are coming off the most-successful campaign in their history, earning 4th place at last year’s 2B state tourney.

But much has changed since that team departed the Yakima SunDome with the program’s first-ever trophy.

Seven seniors graduated after carrying an undefeated record into the final day of the season, while Whitmore stepped away after compiling a 106-45 record and three trips to state in nine years.

Taking his spot on the Wolf bench is Smith, a standout setter during her playing days at CHS.

Friday’s rivalry win in her debut as varsity head coach capped a busy, but successful series of days for the ever-talented one, as she also completed her first week as a 3rd grade teacher at Coupeville Elementary.

Guided by Smith, and sparked by the play of the team’s two returning state meet vets — senior Teagan Calkins and sophomore Tenley Stuurmans — the Wolves piled up 37 kills, 30 digs, 31 assists, and 13 service aces against South Whidbey.

Whitmore and recent Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame inductee Taylor Brotemarkle were in the stands Friday to provide moral support for their successors, who return to match action next Tuesday, Sept. 9.

The Wolves play host to another non-conference foe, Nooksack Valley, that night, with JV tipping at 5:00 PM and varsity at 6:30.

 

Friday stats:

Capri Anter — 5 digs, 1 ace
Haylee Armstrong — 8 kills, 6 digs, 1 ace
Teagan Calkins — 16 kills, 5 digs
Ari Cunningham — 3 kills, 2 digs, 2 assists, 2 aces
Lexis Drake — 1 kill, 5 digs, 1 ace
Dakota Strong — 6 kills
Tenley Stuurmans — 3 kills, 7 digs, 29 assists, 5 aces

Tenley Stuurmans filled up the stat sheet as Coupeville won its season opener.

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