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Wolf freshman Lindsey Roberts, roaring up the outside,

   CHS frosh Lindsey Roberts, here with coach Chad Felgar, roared up the outside lane Saturday, claiming fourth in the 100 hurdles. (Sherry Roberts photo)

(Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   The Sole Sisters — Lauren Grove, Roberts, Sylvia Hurlburt and Makana Stone, broke school records in both relays this weekend. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Jacob

   Jacob Smith (and his mom) bask in the glow of his first state meet medal. (Deb Smith photo)

Sole Sisters (Eileen Stone photo)

Sole Sisters 4 Ever. (Eileen Stone photo)

This will go down as one of the great years in Coupeville High School track history.

Capping a brilliant two-day run through the 1A state meet in Cheney, the Wolves picked up six more medals Saturday, running their total to nine.

That’s the most medals won at one state meet since the 2008 CHS squad also claimed nine.

While 2016 doesn’t match 2006, when the CHS boys won four state titles, including the only relay crown in school history, this year’s pack of Wolves can stand proud.

The girls finished 11th in the team standings, the best of any District 3 school, while the boys placed 15th, just a point-and-a-half behind Port Townsend.

Naches Valley won the girls title (South Whidbey was 17th), while Zillah took the boys trophy home.

Entering this year’s meet, Coupeville had four athletes who had won three or more medals at a single state meet — Jon Chittim (who won four in 2006), Tyler King, Kyle King and Brian Miller.

They nearly doubled that this weekend, with seniors Makana Stone and Dalton Martin and freshman Lindsey Roberts all hitting the trifecta.

Martin is the first Wolf in history to win three throwing medals at the same state meet (2nd in discus, 8th in both javelin and shot put), while Roberts and Stone became the first CHS girls to reach the three-medal, one-meet level.

The irrepressible freshman was the first to do what even former Wolf greats like Natasha Bamberger, Jennie Cross and Madison Tisa McPhee had not, when she sandwiched a shocker in the 100 hurdles in between legs on two relay squads.

Roberts, who was the only frosh to toe the starting line in the hurdles, was seeded eighth, but came roaring up on the outside to knock off half the pack and finish fourth.

Packaged around that, she teamed with the “Sole Sisters,” — Stone, Sylvia Hurlburt and Lauren Grove — to run strong in both the 4 x 100 and 4 x 200 races.

The 4 x 2 team equaled last year’s 3rd place showing, breaking a school record, while the Wolves claimed sixth in the 4 x 1.

Coupeville broke the school record in the shorter race during Saturday’s prelims.

Stone then capped her prep career with a second-place showing in the 400, trailing only three-time state champ Maya Jackson of Northwest across the line.

That left the Wolf senior with seven state meet medals, while her quicksilver running mate since 7th grade, Hurlburt, zoomed away with four of her own for her stellar career.

While the Wolf girls were running wild on the oval, Martin was pulling off his second surprise of the meet.

Jumping from a #16 seed in the javelin to medal Friday, he vaulted from a #12 seed in the shot put to put the final stamp on his life as a Wolf.

With a second-place showing in his premier event, the discus, Martin finished with four state meet medals for his high school run.

After freshman Chris Battaglia tied his PR in the high jump with a leap of 5-04, sophomore Jacob Smith delivered the final high note for Wolf Nation.

Roaring to a fourth-place finish, he put the track community on notice he’ll be back, and he wants more medals.

Many more.

While Wolf seniors Hurlburt, Stone, Martin, Jared Helmstadter, Lathom Kelley and Jordan Ford (8th in the pole vault Friday) depart, Coupeville should return several marquee athletes next season.

Eight of the 13 Wolves who competed in Cheney are underclassmen, led by Roberts, Smith and Grove, who now has three state meet medals of her own.

Other potential returnees with state experience include Skyler Lawrence, Danny Conlisk, Mitchell Carroll, Henry Wynn and Battaglia, as well as Allison Wenzel, Connor Thompson, Ashlie Shank and Grey Rische, who were alternates this year.

Complete Day 2 results:

Girls:

400 — Makana Stone (2nd) 58.74

100 hurdles — Lindsey Roberts (4th) 16.39 *PR*

4 x 100 relay — Lauren Grove, Roberts, Stone, Sylvia Hurlburt (6th) 50.98

4 x 200 relay — Grove, Roberts, Hurlburt, Stone (3rd) 1:46.41 *SCHOOL RECORD*

Boys:

200 — Jacob Smith (4th) 23.06

Shot Put — Dalton Martin (8th) 47-07.75 *PR*

High Jump — Chris Battaglia (14th) 5-04 *PR*

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The "Fearsome Foursome,"

   The “Fearsome Foursome,” which will try and make history by being the first CHS girls relay team to win a state title. (Eileen Stone photo)

Jacob Smith (Deb Smith photo)

Jacob Smith (shading eyes) is state-bound in three events. (Deb Smith photo)

So many athletes, so many events, so little time.

Having qualified nine boys and six girls for the 1A state track and field meet in Cheney next weekend (May 26-28), Coupeville High School coach Randy King will a busy bee.

Looking at what’s been posted by Eastern Washington University, which hosts the event, this would seem to be the schedule for the Wolves, with three caveats.

Athletes listed as alternates finished 4th at districts and are hopeful, but not guaranteed, of competing.

Throwing events only have finals.

Running events have both prelims and finals, and, while I’m listing both, obviously each Wolf is not guaranteed of reaching the finals.

Still, hope springs eternal and we have faith.

 

THURSDAY:

6:35 PM — 1600 boys finals (Henry Wynn-alternate)

 

FRIDAY:

10:00 AM — Javelin boys finals (Dalton Martin)

10:20 AM — 4 x 200 girls relay prelims (Lauren Grove, Lindsey Roberts, Sylvia Hurlburt, Makana Stone)

11:30 AM — 100 hurdles girls prelims (Roberts)

12:05 PM — 100 boys prelims (Jacob Smith)

12:30 PM — Discus boys finals (Martin)

2:05 PM — 4 x 100 relay girls prelims (Grove, Roberts, Stone, Hurlburt)

3:00 PM — Shot Put girls finals (Skyler Lawrence)

3:10 PM — 400 girls prelims (Stone)

3:10 PM — Triple Jump boys finals (Mitchell Carroll, Connor Thompson-alternate)

3:40 PM — 800 boys prelims (Danny Conlisk)

4:00 PM — Pole vault boys finals (Jordan Ford)

4:40 PM — 200 boys prelims (Smith)

5:10 PM — 200 girls prelims (Grove, Hurlburt-alternate)

5:55 PM — 4 x 400 boys prelims (Smith, Wynn, Jared Helmstadter, Conlisk)

 

SATURDAY:

10 AM — Javelin girls finals (Allison Wenzel-alternate)

10:20 AM — 4 x 200 relay girls finals (Grove, Roberts, Hurlburt, Stone)

11 AM — 100 hurdles girls finals (Roberts)

11:20 AM — 100 boys finals (Smith)

12:30 PM — Shot Put boys finals (Martin)

12:55 PM — 4 x 100 relay girls finals (Grove, Roberts, Stone, Hurlburt)

1:30 PM — 400 girls finals (Stone)

2:35 PM — 800 boys finals (Conlisk)

3:05 PM — High Jump boys finals (Chris Battaglia)

3:10 PM — 200 boys finals (Smith)

3:25 PM — Girls 200 finals (Grove, Hurlburt)

4:55 PM — 4 x 400 boys finals (Smith, Wynn, Helmstadter, Conlisk)

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Makana Stone signs to play college basketball. (John Fisken photos)

Makana Stone signs to play college basketball. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Wiley Hesselgrave spins towards the basket, a second away from another bucket.

   Wiley Hesselgrave spins towards the basket, a second away from another bucket. (John Fisken photos)

The dynamic duo during their junior year.

The dynamic duo during their junior year.

Makana and Wiley.

Wiley and Makana.

For the entire run of Coupeville Sports, from Aug. 16, 2012, when they were days away from entering CHS as freshmen, until today, when they are days away from graduation, Miss Stone and Mr. Hesselgrave have been the absolute gold standard.

Stars from day one, their exploits have been stellar, and their character, even more so.

The news the duo was tabbed as the 2015-2016 CHS Athlete of the Year winners Thursday was hardly a surprise.

But it is perfectly appropriate.

Stone, a transcendent basketball and track athlete, was honored for the second consecutive year, allowing her to join a relatively short list of Wolves, male or female, who earned the award more than once.

Hesselgrave, a true four-year letter-man on the gridiron and the leading scorer two years running for the Wolf boys’ basketball squad, received the top award for the first time.

While there were several other athletes who were certainly in the conversation, rarely has the award felt more like a slam dunk.

Unlike some other years, when the winners (or non-winners) could be, and were, heavily debated, Stone and Hesselgrave are perfect fits for the honor.

I’ve known Wiley a far less time than Makana — a young woman who I’ve known virtually since birth — and we never had a sit-down interview during his time as a Wolf.

That’s on me.

I’m not the most social person, and I really don’t like butting too far into the athlete’s personal lives. Especially when they seem content having it remain that way.

Wiley always seemed like a really self-contained guy. He showed up, put the work in day after day, then went home.

Rarely on social media, and not one to goof around for the cameraman, he never sought out the spotlight, but he always deserved it.

Whether he knows it or not, I have huge respect for Hesselgrave, and how he conducted himself.

From the freshman who snatched a touchdown pass in a playoff game way down in Blaine to the relentless senior who dropped his head and hurtled time and again into the pack — in both his sports — Wiley left it all on the field.

As he heads off to the next stage in his life, on his way to being a successful businessman, I wish him nothing but the best.

It was a true pleasure to watch you play for the past four seasons, Mr. Hesselgrave.

With Makana, I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again — she is, without a doubt, the most impressive athlete I have covered in 26 years of writing about high school sports.

She was amazing in soccer, back when she used to play. She is phenomenal in basketball. She is other-worldly on the track oval.

We could list all the awards she’s rightfully won. The league MVP’s. The All-State games.

Or, we could dissect the extraordinary plays she made, plays which I’ve never seen any Coupeville athlete, male or female, pull off.

But, in the end, what has always set Makana apart, at the exact same time it has drawn everyone closer, is her bliss.

She is that true rarity, a stubborn, committed, break-you-in-half winner who brings out the best in her teammates and, even when they’re being thrashed, her foes.

On her Senior Night during basketball season, the entire Klahowya team, without telling their coach in advance, ran over to Stone to hug her goodbye, to wish her the best moments before she decimated them.

It was the most touching moment I have witnessed in high school sports.

As this duo, who have given me so much to write about, prepare to depart CHS, I know there are other athletes eager to move up and take their places.

There will be great performances to come, from great performers.

Some will emulate Makana and Wiley’s skills, others their class and grace.

If we’re lucky, we’ll get some who will combine it all, like this duo did.

But, if we take what Magic Johnson said about Larry Bird on the night of his retirement and tweak the words slightly, we capture my feelings at this moment.

“You only told me one lie. You said there will be another Makana, another Wiley. There will never, ever be another Makana, another Wiley.”

Thank you both, for four years worth of memories.

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Jordan Ford, seen here with mom Barbi, shattered his school record in the pole vault at the Olympic League Championships Saturday in Poulsbo. (Sherry Roberts photos)

   Jordan Ford, seen here with mom Barbi, shattered his school record in the pole vault at the Olympic League Championships Saturday. (Sherry Roberts photos)

The fastest 4 x 200 team in 1A is (l to r) Sylvia Hurlburt, Lindsey Roberts, Lauren Grove and Makana Stone.

   The fastest 4 x 200 team in 1A is (l to r) Sylvia Hurlburt, Lindsey Roberts, Lauren Grove and Makana Stone.

Roberts

Roberts (right) gives teammate Lauren Bayne a lift.

Maybe they should order some more title banners?

By the time the Olympic League All-Division Championships were done Saturday, both of the Coupeville High School track and field teams exited Poulsbo as top dogs.

The Wolves finished 6th out of 11 teams in the boys team battle and 8th on the girls side.

More importantly, both squads finished ahead of 1A rivals Port Townsend, Chimacum and Klahowya, while the boys also beat 2A schools Bremerton and North Mason.

Large 2A schools North Kitsap (boys) and Olympic (girls) topped the standings, which featured a full-tilt battle between the seven 2A schools and four 1A schools which currently call the league home.

Coupeville will send different athletes to the league’s JV Championships Monday in Silverdale, in an event which is considered a “last chance qualifier” before the full postseason run starts next weekend.

The Wolves travel to Bremerton Saturday, May 14 for sub-districts.

After that come districts May 20 and the state meet May 26-28 for athletes who qualify.

Saturday was topped by a school record, two wins, the fastest time recorded by a 1A relay team this year and 12 PRs.

Wolf senior Jordan Ford shattered his own school mark in the pole vault, soaring 12-6, a full six inches higher than his previous best.

Meanwhile, Makana Stone (400) and Dalton Martin (discus) ended up at the top of the awards stands, while the girls 4 x 200 relay unit burnt up the oval.

Ripping off a season-best time of 1:46.90, the quartet of Lauren Grove, Lindsey Roberts, Sylvia Hurlburt and Stone sit more than two seconds ahead of every other 1A team as they continue their quest for the promised land.

The only relay team in school history to win a state title is the boys 4 x 400 in 2006.

The strong work in the 4 x 2 made up for a rare snafu in the 4 x 1, where a juggled baton hand-off left the Wolf girls bringing up the rear for the first time this season.

Almost everywhere you looked Saturday, someone was doing something spectacular, with 10 Wolves nabbing PRs.

Leading the pack were senior Lathom Kelley (triple jump, long jump) and freshman Danny Conlisk (800, 1600) who nailed personal bests in both of their events.

Complete CHS results:

GIRLS:

400 — Makana Stone (1st) 58.55

800 — Stone (3rd) 2:31.23

100 hurdles — Lindsey Roberts (7th) 17.75

300 Hurdles — Mckenzie Meyer (11th) 55.69 *PR*

4 x 100 — Lauren Grove, Roberts, Sylvia Hurlburt, Stone (9th) 54.57

4 x 200 — Grove, Roberts, Hurlburt, Stone (2nd) 1:46.90

Shot put — Skyler Lawrence (5th) 30-02

Discus — Lawrence (13th) 75-00

Javelin — Naika Hallam (7th) 96-05 *PR*; Allison Wenzel (9th) 89-03 *PR*; Lauren Bayne (10th) 86-11

High Jump — Bayne (8th) 4-06 *PR*

Long Jump — Grove (7th) 14-10.75 *PR*; Roberts (10th) 14-03.50

Triple Jump — Grove (12th) 29-0.50

BOYS:

200 — Jacob Smith (4th) 23.01 *PR*; Jared Helmstadter (12th) 24.15

400 — Helmstadter (6th) 54.82

800 — Danny Conlisk (9th) 2:08.70 *PR*

1600 — Conlisk (10th) 5:01.35 *PR*

4 x 100 — Smith, Gabe Eck, Helmstadter, Jordan Ford (4th) 45.82

4 x 400 — Smith, Helmstadter, Henry Wynn, Conlisk (5th) 3:48.30

Shot Put — Dalton Martin (3rd) 44-07.50

Discus — D. Martin (1st) 153-02; Chris Battaglia (10th) 103-09

Javelin — Grey Rische (9th) 120-09; Mitchell Losey 113-05

High Jump — Ford (9th) 5-04; Battaglia (12th) 5-02

Pole Vault — Ford (3rd) 12-06 *PR*

Long Jump — Lathom Kelley (5th) 19-02.25 *PR*; Jacob Martin (7th) 18-11.25 *PR*

Triple Jump — Kelley (3rd) 39-05.50 *PR*

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Koa Davison is ready for his close-up. (Deb Smith photos)

Koa Davison is ready for his close-up. Maybe. (Deb Smith photos)

guys

A pack of fleet-footed Wolves, hanging out and waiting for their next event.

"I'm still cold!!"

“Nope, I’m still cold!!”

girls

“Yep, we’re coming for your records. All of them.”

Aram

Aram Leyva busts a gut down the backstretch. (Pat Kelley photos)

Zoe

Relay mates Zoe Trujillo (back) and Avalon Renninger celebrate.

And so it begins.

A brand new middle school track season officially kicked off Wednesday, as Coupeville hopped over to Port Townsend for a three-team meet.

Bringing 42 athletes, the Wolves outnumbered their hosts from Blue Heron Middle School, who had 26, but fell way short of Stevens.

A large school that funnels students to 2A high school Port Angeles, Stevens had a whopping 119 athletes on site.

Even so, Coupeville dominated the day.

“We undoubtedly won the meet,” said CMS coach Bob Martin. “Our athletes swept many of the events; they’ve put in the work and it showed!”

With so many athletes involved, Martin and co-coach Elizabeth Bitting did extraordinary work keeping track of Coupeville’s stats.

Keep in mind, it’s the first meet, everything was topsy-turvy and a good chunk of these athletes are new to Coupeville Sports and try not to go bonkers if I flip some numbers or names here.

(Pretty) complete results:

GIRLS:

60 — Ja’Tarya Hoskins 8.30, Cassidy Moody 8.39; Lily Zustiak 8.50; Helen Sinclair 9.62; Raven Vick 9.72

100 — Mallory Kortuem 14.37; Morgan Pease 14.47; Zustiak 15.44; Natalie Hollrigel 15.63; Mica Shipley 15.70; Ashleigh Battaglia 16.40; Mikaela Labrador 16.93

200 — Moody 29.00; Lucy Sandahl 31.00; Zustiak 33.87; Zoe Trujillo 34.35; Labrador 34.38; Jillian Mayne 38.60

400 — Kortuem 1:11; Sandahl 1:14; Trujillo 1:16

800 — Tia Wurzrainer 3:00.97

75 hurdles — Moody 14.02; Hoskins 14.50; Battaglia 16.00; Vick 16.98

200 hurdles — Kortuem 32.09; Pease 35.95

4 x 100 relay  — Hoskins, Sandahl, Kortuem, Moody (1st) 59.00; Zara Bradley, Hollrigel, Avalon Renninger, Wurzrainer (2nd) 59.15

4 x 200 relay — Hollrigel, Renninger, Trujillo, Wurzrainer 2:06.28

Discus — Renninger 54-9; Shipley 35-8; Battaglia 33-04

Javelin — Vick 72-9; Mayne 59-4; Sinclair 53-6

Long Jump — Pease 12-1; Battaglia 10-7, Sinclair 10-1; Shipley 9-1

BOYS:

60 — Sean Toomey-Stout 7.75; Jaylen Nitta 8.08; Sage Downes 8.09; Ethan Clavette 8.18; Nick Wielandt 8.39; Gabe Carlson 8.73;

100 — Toomey-Stout 12.85; Jean Lund-Olsen 13.03; Wielandt 13.48; Jake Mitten 14.01; Downes 14.33; Carlson 14.35; Clavette 14.53; Matthew Kelley 14.56; Ben Smith 17.01; James Mayne 17.01

200 — Wielandt 26.29; Thane Peterson 26.92; Nitta 28.70; Chris Cernick 31.80; Zach Ginnings 36.52; Mayne 36.88

400 — Aram Leyva 1:05; Peterson 1:08; TJ Rickner 1:23

800 — Leyva 2:38; Rickner 3:02

1600 — Leyva 5:19; James Wood 5:30; Koa Davison 5:45; Tucker Hall 5:48; Aiden Juras 6:07; Rickner 6:21

75 hurdles — Lund-Olsen 13.37; Mitten 13.87; Cernick 14.79; Smith 19.08

200 hurdles — Mason Grove 34.7; Smith 40.4

4 x 100 relay — Lund-Olsen, Toomey-Stout, Nitta, Weilandt 53.18; Mitten, Downes, Kelley, Smith 57.05

4 x 400 relay — Davison, Hall, Leyva, Wood 4:46

Shot Put — Trystan Ford 23-04; Ricky Rebischke-Smith 20-02, Tian Yu 19-09

Discus — Peterson 95-06; Clavette 47-04; Ford 37-00, Rebischke-Smith 37-0; Yu 34-00

Javelin — Carlson 70-05; Ford 68-10; Ginnings 58-09; Yu 46-01; Rebischke-Smith 42-07

High Jump — Kelley 4-08; Mitten 4-04; Grove 4-02

Long Jump — Toomey-Stout 16-06; Lund-Olsen 15-11; Downes 13-06, Carlson 12-00, Ginnings 10-01

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