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Posts Tagged ‘WIAA’

Coupeville High School football coach Bennett Richter is losing one of his two league rivals. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

As the schedule for Coupeville High School’s 2024 football season begins to take shape, new names are appearing, and an old one is vanishing.

While things are still in flux, a partial schedule on the Northwest 2B/1B League web site shows the Wolves picking up home games next fall with Annie Wright and Winlock.

But what’s missing is La Conner, as the Braves gridiron program faces tough times.

With declining enrollment in the school overall and a sharp decrease in the number of athletes playing football, school officials petitioned the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association to play eight-man football in the 1B classification.

La Conner would have remained a 2B school in every other sport.

While schools can play “up” in Washington state, football is the only athletic pursuit in which they can play “down.”

But only with WIAA approval, which La Conner did not get.

Now, La Conner officials are holding a community meeting Feb. 20 to seek input on the best way to proceed.

In a presentation to the school board Monday, Athletic Director Christine Tripp outlined three possibilities.

One, kill the football program and focus on other fall sports such as soccer, as league mate Orcas Island did several years ago.

Two, play eight-man football as an independent school. Under that scenario, the Braves have no opportunity to play in the postseason.

Or three, combine with 2A Anacortes, and send whatever players they have off to join the defending state champs. Just not in a Braves uniform.

Tripp told La Conner’s school board the plan is to make a decision by mid-March.

The group making that call will include the athletic director, a district rep, a coach, and a board member.

With La Conner unlikely to be playing 11-man football any time soon, that leaves Coupeville and Friday Harbor as the only 2B schools in the seven-team NWL to be doing so.

Mount Vernon Christian and Orcas move up from 1B to 2B next fall, but neither have a football program, while Concrete and Darrington are 1B schools already playing the eight-man game.

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Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith contemplates a future in which his school will have increased playoff opportunities. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Get comfortable, cause no one is going anywhere.

The Washington Interscholastic Activities Association finalized its classification numbers Sunday for the 2024-2028 cycle, and the seven-team Northwest 2B/1B League won’t be affected at all.

Well, a little bit, but in a pro-Coupeville way.

The Wolves, Friday Harbor, and La Conner remain as 2B schools, while Mount Vernon Christian and Orcas Island go from 1B to 2B.

Darrington and Concrete remain as 1B institutions.

With the NWL going from a league where 1B schools held the edge at 4-3, to one where 2B schools now dominate 5-2, will increase playoff opportunities in most sports for the bigger schools.

So, a positive for Coupeville, which has the largest student body in the league.

Now, the change won’t affect football, as MVC and Orcas don’t practice the dark arts of the gridiron, but God’s Chosen Sport — basketball — will definitely benefit.

When setting numbers, the WIAA takes into consideration each school’s free and reduced lunches, though it calls that “Direct Cert” now.

If a school has a rate greater than the state average of 34%, its enrollment number is reduced, with a cap at 40%.

Two NWL schools — La Conner and Concrete — had their numbers adjusted for this reason.

Schools with an adjusted student body of 1-104 land in 1B, with 105-224 calling 2B home.

Going forward, there are 54 schools in 2B and 105 in 1B.

For those that care, the other numbers are 60 schools in 4A, 73 in 3A, 63 in 2A, and 55 in 1A.

Whidbey Island’s two other schools, Oak Harbor (1,179.88 students) and South Whidbey (273.63) remain 3A and 1A schools in the next cycle.

Where NWL schools currently sit:

Coupeville — 192.50
Friday Harbor — 185.63
Mount Vernon Christian — 134.63
Orcas Island — 123.00
La Conner — 108.36 adjusted from 129.00
Concrete — 87.31 adjusted from 93.88
Darrington — 85.38

The next classification cycle begins in August and runs through the 2027-2028 school year, assuring current Coupeville Middle School 8th graders will be 2B athletes for the entirety of their high school careers.

 

To crunch all the numbers, pop over to:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/10QWzZeJ2LOeHhIMS3waPTz7SXEAXWWHxuUXJ2qI4RAw/edit#gid=0

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“We’re #1! We don’t have a team, but we’re #1!!!”

Psst, someone tell the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association its basketball rankings system is still broken.

It was just days ago that the WIAA finally corrected — after three weeks — the fact it had a boys’ hoops squad ranked #1 despite that team not actually existing this season.

You can read about it here:

WIAA ranks seemingly non-existent boys’ hoops team #1

And now the cucumber sandwich eatin’ scalawags are back at it.

A scan of the WIAA’s RPI rankings Tuesday reveals the sudden emergence of something called Firm Foundation Christian as the new #1 among 1B girls.

Not Neah Bay, not Crosspoint, not Mount Vernon Christian — the triple threat trio of the division.

Firm Foundation Christian.

The Eagles boast a 1-0 record, with a win Jan. 9 over the Washington School for the Deaf, which is 2-2, and … oh, here we go again.

When you click through from the WIAA, you find Firm Foundation Christian doesn’t even list a girls’ basketball team on its site, just a boys’ team.

Look over at the Washington School for the Deaf, and its girls’ team shows a 2-1 record, not 2-2, with no record of any contest against Firm Foundation Christian.

So off I went to the actual school website for Firm Foundation Christian … and, yep, no active girls’ hoops program.

The Eagles currently offer volleyball and boys’ basketball and plan to offer girls’ basketball in the future.

And when that first team arrives at some later date, it’ll be nice to know the program has already been ranked #1 in the state.

So, they got that going for them, which is nice.

The WIAA, which uses those RPI rankings when it goes to seed teams for the state playoffs?

Them folks still need to put down the cucumber sandwiches and keep a closer eye on their computers, which appear to be going haywire worse than SkyNet.

Otherwise, we all might start thinking the organization isn’t very good at this whole ranking thing.

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Ryan Blouin brings his three-ball shootin’ fingertips to the floor. (Michelle Glass photo)

Win big games, get big props.

The Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball squad dismantled Auburn Adventist Academy Monday, winning 69-57 in a game the Wolves controlled almost start to finish.

Knocking off a previously undefeated Eagles team propels CHS to 9-2 on the season, with immediate dividends in the rankings.

Coupeville lands #7 among 2B schools in a chart compiled by SB Live, which was released Tuesday afternoon.

Brad Sherman’s squad also bounces up to #8 in the RPI rankings produced by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association.

Though, since the WIAA recently had a nonexistent program ranked #1 in 1B for three weeks, we all need to take that into consideration.

The most powerful and revered of the number crunchers, Evans Rankings, will update its own list in the near future, at which point the Wolves are likely to crash the top 10 after crunching Auburn.

But, as those Eagles can tell you after being upset in Cow Town, it’s ultimately about what happens on the floor and not what the computers think.

With that in mind, Coupeville gets back at it (weather permitting) Friday with a trip to the outer islands to square off with Orcas.

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You too can be the #1 ranked team in the land, without actually playing the games.

When the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association releases its RPI rankings, it wants us to take them seriously.

And they do have an impact on more than just starting arguments.

When the state playoffs roll around, the RPI rankings are one of the things taken into consideration when teams are seeded for the big dance.

Playing deep on the road as a lower seed or getting to travel just down the street as a top-level seed, matters.

Just ask Coupeville High School boys’ basketball, which, two years ago, qualified for state while boasting a 16-0 mark, yet was sent 214 miles away to Battle Ground, while Kalama traveled just 25 for the state tourney opener.

RPI ranking likely dinged the Wolves, who still showed up and showed out, pushing the defending state champs to the final seconds in a five-point loss.

Jump forward to 2024, and CHS, which is 7-2 on the current season, sits #10 in the WIAA’s RPI rankings for 2B teams as of Wednesday morning.

Like it? Sure.

Trust it? Eh…

That’s because on the same day, the RPI currently has a boys’ basketball team ranked #1 in 1B which doesn’t seem to actually exist.

At least not this season.

For pushing three weeks now, the WIAA has listed Pacific Christian Academy, a small private school out of Federal Way, as being a perfect 1-0, boasting a 79-65 win on Dec. 15 over South Eugene High School.

A victory the Eagles never collected, as a little research shows that the team bringing home the W that night was actually Pacifica Christian/Orange County out of Newport Beach, California.

That squad is 10-8.

So, someone got two schools with similar names mixed up. Easy to do.

We’ll just go check and see how our Pacific Christian team, the one located in Washington state, is doing and … they don’t seem to have an active team this year.

At all.

The Eagles have a girls’ basketball team listed, with a three-game schedule, but that team hasn’t played a contest yet.

The boys’ hoops program? Not listed at all on the school’s website when you click through on the link offered by the WIAA.

There’s volleyball, girls’ basketball, and boys and girls track and field and that’s it.

Now, Pacific Christian (the one here in Washington) is a small school, academically strong, and likely doing its best to create opportunities for its student/athletes. No disrespect meant to the Eagles.

But the bigger question remains — how keenly is the WIAA monitoring its own rankings when it lets stuff like this linger for three weeks?

While most 1B boys’ basketball teams have played between 8-10 games, only two of 76 — Pacific Christian Academy and Chief Kitsap Academy — are listed with just one result.

CKA lost that game, legitimately it appears, 59-28 to Crosspoint, and is ranked dead last in the RPI.

Did no one think to question why #2 ranked Cusick sits at 8-0 and #3 Lummi Nation at 8-1, while the supposed top dogs sat quiet?

Was no one going to notice this until the state seeding committee sat down in February to do its business, and then, after a lot of back-patting and grazing through the fancy sandwiches provided to fuel all the hard work, suddenly noticed a fly in the ointment?

“Um, guys, gals, where is our #1 team? It didn’t qualify for state?? What do you mean it doesn’t exist???”

So, WIAA bigwigs, maybe step away from the cucumber sandwiches and get back to your number-crunching.

Because for now, it sure sounds like teams such as Coupeville could improve their RPI rankings by simply not playing any games.

And where’s the fun in that?

 

UPDATE: Three weeks with a sham #1, but two hours after this article hit the internet, Cusick — a real team playing real games — has been elevated to the top of the 1B rankings, where it always belonged.

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