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Robert Clay

Coupeville athletes have lost one of their most ardent supporters.

Robert Clay, a longtime Town Councilman and Island Transit board member, who died at age 85 Tuesday, spent many a game enjoying popcorn while watching the Wolves play.

While he was unable to attend games in person this spring, he kept track of granddaughter Zayne Roos and her CHS softball teammates as they won league and district titles before advancing to the state tourney.

Wednesday afternoon wife Marilyn posted the following to Facebook:

Hello friends.

I wanted to let you know that our Bob passed away yesterday morning.

He was a good man that served his community well.

He was loyal to the Portland-based company that hired him right out of college, Hyster, and could tell you the model of every year ad infinitim.

He was a salesman and then a sales manager and eventually managed dealerships.

He had a charming sense of humor, could dance like a star, possessed a fine face, loved his family and his friends.

He was an athlete and played football for Oregon State University.

His love for football was imbedded in his DNA. Golf came in a strong second.

He had a beautiful singing voice and could not remember a single word of a single song, but that did not prevent him from singing it.

He died in comfort while surrendering to congestive heart failure at the age of 85.

After decades of successfully managing his heart disease, he lived his final four years at Regency in Oak Harbor.

I cannot say enough good things about that wonderful facility and the staff there that truly become family to the residents.

The care and respect for others is built into their business practices, which shows in every aspect of the dignity of the lives of the residents.

I’m feeling gratitude and love today, piled up on top of the knowing of how I will miss that guy.

Jada Heaton, one of the most-joyful athletes to ever wear a Wolf uniform. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Joy, absolute unbridled joy.

There have been Coupeville athletes who seemed happy to be playing, whether on a field or a court, but few have exuded the consistent level of bliss that Jada Heaton brought to everything she did.

That positivity, through every game, every at-bat, every sideline interaction, made her a valuable linchpin to very-successful Wolf volleyball, basketball, and softball squads.

Ready to tear up the softball diamond with running mate Mia Farris. (Jennifer Heaton photo)

Jada, who graduated from CHS in 2025, was part of what always seemed to be an especially tight-knit group of young women, a band of sisters from other misters who played together from when they were pee-wees to their final Senior Night moments.

That group went to state in multiple sports, earning league titles and both team and individual honors along the way.

Maybe more importantly, however, they genuinely seemed to like each other, taking delight in both their own praise-worthy accomplishments, but also in the achievements of their teammates.

A lot of that, in my opinion, seemed to spring from the bright, beating heart of joy at the center, one Jada Rose Heaton, whose positiveness never seemed to wane, win or loss.

Up to shenanigans. (Bailey Thule photo)

During her athletic career there were moments where she was a key contributor, stepping up and seizing the spotlight, and others where she was the perfect supporting crew.

A rebounder and a scrapper and a hustler on the hardwood, she lit up Orting one Saturday afternoon in front of her hometown fans.

Coupeville had lost a key league game to Friday Harbor just hours before, ending any playoff dreams for the Wolves, who needed a spark.

Enter Joltin’ Jada, who suddenly became a rampaging offensive dynamo in the game’s final moments.

Kickin’ butt and takin’ names. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Demanding the ball (well, OK, politely asking for it…), she scored on three consecutive trips down the floor in the fourth quarter to ice the victory, the bounce in her step getting bigger after every play.

First Jada took a lob from Katie Marti, slapping the ball off the glass for a quick bucket.

Then, wham, bam, thank you ma’am, she scored on a power move down low, muscling her way through a mass of players trying to viciously elbow and knee her tender regions.

Capping things, Jada elevated to snatch an offensive board — as she so often did — before using a quick dip to get past a defender for the put-back.

There were other spotlight reel moments as well, especially on the softball diamond, where she lashed extra-base hits and mentally scarred Darrington pitchers for the next three generations.

Or when Jada made this game-saving catch during her little league days, captured in one of my all-time favorite images from 14 years of doing this blog.

“And just where do you think you’re going, Mr. Softball? Get in my glove!!” (Jackie Saia photo)

When she got magical, she celebrated with all her heart.

But, and this is huge, when her teammates, her lifelong friends, her compadres, got magical as well, Jada celebrated even harder.

Her kindness shone through in the toughest of moments.

Her inner strength and resilience amazed when she ripped a nasty foul ball off her own chin at the state softball tourney, then tried to stay in the game even with a chipped tooth and badly swollen jaw.

And that joy?

It washed over every teammate she ever had, and it was the secret super glue which bound together one of the most-successful band of sisters to ever grace the Coupeville sports scene.

The smiling assassin. (Corinn Parker photo)

Jada is a good athlete and a great human being, and she was an absolute joy to write about.

Diploma in hand, she went off to find new challenges and impress new people, and I hope all of her dreams come true.

In this moment, though, we want to take Jada back for a second to her school days and make sure she knows how highly she is regarded.

Today we swing open the doors to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame and induct a smart, graceful, kind, and joy-filled young woman who made even the stormiest of prairie days seem sunnier.

After this, Miss Heaton will reside in the Legends section at the top of the blog, never forgotten and always remembered, her joyful presence absolutely guaranteed to light the joint up.

She does like to celebrate. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The times, they are a changin.’

When Coupeville schools return for the 2026-2027 school year in the fall, start and end times for students will be altered.

Beginning in September, the high school and middle school will start at 7:50 AM, with release on normal days coming at 2:20 PM.

Meanwhile, the elementary school will run from 9:10-3:40.

The shifts are directly related to transportation issues.

“The reason for the change comes down to island geography and the limits of our current bus fleet,” said Superintendent Shannon Leatherwood.

“With the distance between our schools, we simply cannot serve both buildings with the buses we have if they dismiss at the same time.

“Staggered times give our drivers the window they need to complete drop-off at the secondary schools and travel down island for elementary pickup.”

The district conducted a transportation survey before making the changes.

“We heard you — and we know this change is not easy for everyone,” Leatherwood said.

“The survey did show a preference — though not an overwhelming one — for moving towards a single unified schedule for all schools.”

With that in mind, district officials pledge to continue to work on answers.

“We will continue actively planning for our future,” Leatherwood said.

“If this remains the goal, we will plan to add additional buses that would make combined routes possible and allow all buildings to operate on the same schedule.

“This will take time and investment, and we will keep families informed as well as seek feedback as we work towards the needs of our families.”

Jermiah Copeland, seen here in 2023.

Coupeville High School graduate Jermiah Copeland pled guilty to unpremeditated murder charges Monday in Virginia and was sentenced to 44 years in prison, with one year suspended for time served.

In his plea agreement, the former Navy sailor, now 21, was guilty of five of seven charges in the 2025 death of Petty Officer Angelina Resendiz.

This includes “aggravated assault strangulation, indecent recording, obstruction of justice, and false official statement,” while a premeditated murder charge was reduced to an unpremeditated murder charge.

Copeland, who receives a dishonorable discharge and reduction of rank to Seaman Apprentice, is slated to serve his sentence at Leavenworth Federal Prison in Kansas.

He and Resendiz both served on the USS James E. Williams.

In the plea agreement, Copeland admitted to strangling the fellow sailor to death in his barracks during a night of drinking, then lying to NCIS investigators when interviewed about her disappearance.

In court, prosecutor Lauren Mayo stated that Copeland concealed Resendiz’s body in a suitcase before abandoning it in a wooden area, where it was discovered a week later.

She described his actions as “manipulative and deceitful,” not “impulsive behavior,” but “calculated.”

Copeland attended his senior year of high school in Coupeville after transferring from Oak Harbor. He was a member of the Wolves varsity basketball team during the 2022-2023 season.

Claire Lachnit runs towards the start of her high school days. (Julie Wheat photo)

They don’t have very far to travel.

With their passages ceremony going down Wednesday night, 79 Coupeville eighth graders officially leave behind middle school and move on to high school, while remaining on the same campus.

Making the transition easier, several of the Wolves have already competed in high school sports.

That list includes Zariyah Allen and Cami Van Dyke, who both started for a CHS softball team which won league and district titles and went to the state tourney this spring.

Now, as they and their classmates move forward together, the future is a bright one.

 

The CHS Class of 2030:

Krystina Adams
Ava Alford
Vincent Alguire
Zariyah Allen
Rosemary Allred
Amira Anunciado
Zayne Atkinson
Serena Balder
Dylan Bennett
Malachi Chapa
Astoria Coles
Adrianna Collins-Diaz
Liam Coomes
Annabelle Cundiff
Tristan Dearmond
Payton Dugger
Domonic Durbin
Diesel Eck
Clarence Famiglietti
Samuel Ferguson
Aubrey Flowers
Hazel Goldman
Andrea Gonzalez
Emma Green
Sophia Greene
Viktoria Grieves
Stanley Grijalva
Toby Hamm
Finley Helm
Paige Hill
Samantha Howard
Rhylee Inman
Addison Jacobson
Marina Jadwin
Rocky Jorgensen
Sabrina Judnich
Noah Kendall
Claire Lachnit
Shaydan Laney
Ariella Lee-Spaulding
Maverick-Chase Light
Jacob Lujan
Isaac Marchese
Hayli Marley
Mario Martinez
Sarah McCune
Joseph McGraw
Maxwell Meyer
Caiden Micolichek
Kaleigha Millison
Kaylee Moore
Maddex Myles
Riley Novak
Jade Peabody
Brenna Phay
Sophie Polley
Anna Powers
Henry Purdue
Vicky Quiroga Rivera
Emily Rains
Kamden Ratcliff
Joshua Richards
Zayne Roos
Sawyer Rudat
Ceiba Rusch
Archer Schwarz
River Simpson
Scarlett Spencer
Treyshawn Stewart
Cami Van Dyke
Natasha Vega
Josue Vicente
Ari Vinson
Lincoln Wagner
Maverick Walling
Ethan Walsh
Aiden Wheat
Teagan Willis
Farrin Workman

River Simpson (red stripe on uniform) prepares for takeoff in one of his final middle school athletic moments. (Kelly Powers photo)