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Always ready for a photo shoot. (Julie Wheat photos)

No more races, no more throws, but still plenty of photos.

While the Coupeville Middle School track and field team wrapped its season Thursday at the Cascade League Championships, we still have some pics to disperse.

The eight-pack seen above and below, capturing a variety of Wolves in action this spring, come to us from the camera of Wolf Mom Julie Wheat.

Kaleigha Millison flies to the finish line. (Julie Wheat photo)

The weather wasn’t so hot this spring, but the performances were torrid.

Over the past two decades of track and field action, there have been seven Coupeville Middle School students who won 10 or more times in a single season.

Three of those came this spring, all from 7th graders.

Les Queen, who won three times as a 6th grader, tops the list, having piled up 18 wins in his second season.

That ties him with Lindsey Roberts for the most in a single campaign by a CMS athlete, a mark which the future high school Athlete of the Year winner set way back in 2015.

With one more season of middle school action on his schedule, Queen sits with 21 career wins, trailing just Roberts (24) and Tamsin Ward (39), who went to state in two events this year as a high school freshman.

Laurel Crowder and Jesse Kehoe were impressive as well this spring, racking up 12 and 11 wins respectively.

They join Queen, Roberts, Ward (16 in 2025), Diesel Eck (13 in 2025), and Alex Murdy (12 in 2019) as the only Wolves to nail double-digit win totals in a season since athletic.net started tracking all of this back in the early 2000’s.

Overall, 32 different Wolves claimed at least one victory this spring, showcasing the talent and depth of the CMS track program.

Les Queen gets ready to rumble. (Julie Wheat photo)

 

First number is 2026 season; second number is career win total:

Les Queen — 18/21
Laurel Crowder — 12/13
Jesse Kehoe — 11/12
Malachi Chapa — 8/17
Henry Purdue — 7/8
River Simpson — 7/19
Zariyah Allen — 4/10
Xander Beaman — 4/10
Juniper Dotson — 4/4
Diesel Eck — 4/18
Bella Sandlin — 4/4
Liam Stoner — 3/3
Vincent Alguire — 2/2
Sarai Dangerfield — 2/2
Logan Dees — 2/2
Alton Hansen — 2/2
Ella Holm — 2/2
Sabrina Judnich — 2/2
Claire Lachnit — 2/2
Kaleigha Millison — 2/4
Miles Abram — 1/1
Jasmine Allen — 1/1
Ava Clark — 1/1
Addison Jacobson — 1/1
Daisy Leedy-Bonifas — 1/1
Jacob Lujan — 1/2
Josilyn McColl — 1/1
Eveylyn Merino Martinez — 1/1
Sawyer Rudat — 1/1
Dresden Rusch — 1/1
Lincoln Wagner — 1/1
Maverick Walling — 1/3

Xander Beaman celebrates. (Jacob Lujan photo)

Wolves (left to right) River Simpson, Kaleigha Millison, Vincent Alguire, and Maverick Walling go out on top. (Photos by Kelly Powers, Reagan Green, and Jacob Lujan)

“So many students brought their “A” game to the grand finale!”

Coupeville Middle School track and field coach Jon Gabelein and his staff came away thrilled from Thursday’s season-ending Cascade League Championships at Lakewood High School.

“They showed that today was the day to lock in and apply their strongest efforts,” Gabelein said. “This resulted in a ton of PRs and high placings while helping Coupeville be well represented at the league finals.

“There were lots of happy CMS athletes who were very proud of themselves for doing so well.

“It was great seeing them realize the success they created for themselves through their hard work and pushing their limits.”

Ella Holm marinates in sweet victory.

Wrapping up the two-day league event, which started Monday, the Wolves battled with six other teams, finishing in the top two of the team standings in three of four contests.

The Wolf 6th/7th grade girls finished first, holding off South Whidbey 89.5-79.5.

Meanwhile, both boys’ units claimed second, with the 6th/7th graders nipped 76-75 by King’s and the 8th graders trailing just Lakewood.

The CMS 8th grade girls, with a limited roster, finished sixth.

The three top-two performances were the best showing by any school.

Les Queen and Laurel Crowder racked up the medals.

Individually, 7th graders Les Queen and Laurel Crowder paced the Wolves, combining to claim seven titles.

Queen won the discus Monday, then beat the field in the 200, 400, and shot put in the finale.

He finishes his second track campaign with 18 wins, tying the program single-season high-water mark set by 8th grader Lindsey Roberts in 2015.

Crowder, who won the high jump Monday, added titles in the 100 and 200 and finishes the year with 12 wins, the third-best single-season showing by a CMS girl.

Xander Beaman gets legendary.

Coupeville also got titles from Jesse Kehoe (High Jump), Zariyah Allen (Discus), Ella Holm (Shot Put), and Xander Beaman (High Jump), with the latter smashing the school record in his event.

Kehoe’s win was his 11th of the season, just the fourth CMS boy to reach that mark in a single year.

Jesse Kehoe pushes hard for the line.

Whether they won or pushed their opponents to the final step or throw, the Wolves impressed their coaches.

“I am very proud of all the work they put in to improve themselves as well as all they did to support their teammates throughout our adventures,” Gabelein said.

“I look forward to the 6th and 7th grade students returning and continuing to get even better.

“I hope our 8th grade students will take their track and field skills to the next level by joining the high school team next year.”

That’s a feeling shared by Gabelein’s fellow coaches, Kelly Powers and Shaloma Allen.

“At least two CMS records were broken today, added to the half dozen broken earlier in the year and I’d say it’s been a great season!” Powers said.

“Not without its highs and lows … we had a dropped baton or two and a few scratches here and there, but how these athletes bounce back and lift each other up will always inspire me.

“In a sport where only one person can finish first, I definitely feel we’ve had more wins than losses and I am exceptionally proud of how far every single athlete pushed themselves throughout the season and especially today.”

Henry Purdue is a PR machine.

 

Thursday results:

 

GIRLS:

 

8th grade:

400 — Zariyah Allen (5th) 1:09.34 *PR*

100 Hurdles — Anna Powers (4th) 20.11; Kaleigha Millison (6th) 20.30 *PR*

Discus — Z. Allen (1st) 86-06; Claire Lachnit (5th) 69-09 *PR*; Emma Green (11th) 61-06 *PR*; Sabrina Judnich (12th) 61-05 *PR*; Addison Jacobson (18th) 55-01 *PR*

Long Jump — Millison (13th) 12-04; Amira Annunciado (17th) 11-11 *PR*

 

6th/7th grade:

100 — Laurel Crowder (1st) 13.93 *PR*; Bella Sandlin (5th) 14.45 *PR*; Josilyn McColl (6th) 14.56

200 — Crowder (1st) 28.47 *PR*

400 — Sandlin (2nd) 1:11.39 *PR*; Sophia Magdolen (4th) 1:14.96

1600 — Juniper Dotson (6th) 6:19.16; Sarai Dangerfield (7th) 6:25.18 *PR*

100 Hurdles — Dotson (2nd) 19.91 *PR*; Abby Hunt (6th) 20.77 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Sandlin, Eden Weeks, Magdolen, Ruby Folkestad (6th) 1:04.17

Discus — McColl (3rd) 54-02 *PR*; Dani Halsing (20th) 41-08

Long Jump — Dotson (7th) 12-00; Mia Goers (9th) 11-11.50; Jasmine Allen (22nd) 9-08; Folkestad (27th) 4-07

Jasmine Allen, Josilyn McColl, and Juniper Dotson are the bright future of Wolf sports.

 

BOYS:

 

8th grade:

100 — River Simpson (3rd) 12.39

200 — Simpson (3rd) 25.23 *PR*

400 — Malachi Chapa (2nd) 57.86 *PR*

800 — Henry Purdue (2nd) 2:17.40 *PR*; Lincoln Wagner (6th) 2:31.71 *PR*; Maverick Walling (7th) 2:36.02 *PR*; Archer Schwarz (10th) 2:46.34 *PR*

110 Hurdles — Jacob Lujan (8th) 25.81

4 x 100 Relay — Xander Beaman, Aiden Wheat, Walling, Chapa (4th) 51.80

4 x 200 Relay — Simpson, Chapa, Wagner, Sawyer Rudat (2nd) 1:48.88

Shot Put — Vincent Alguire (4th) 35-09

High Jump — Beaman (1st) 5-09 *PR*; Chapa (5th) 4-10; Alguire (6th) 4-10; Wheat (8th) 4-08; Purdue (12th) 4-06

 

6th/7th grade:

100 — Jesse Kehoe (2nd) 12.76 *PR*; Liam Stoner (5th) 13.48 *PR*

200 — Les Queen (1st) 26.11; Stoner (5th) 27.74 *PR*

400 — Queen (1st) 59.62 *PR*

800 — Miles Abram (16th) 2:56.60 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Stoner, Logan Dees, Henry Tierney, Alton Hansen (4th) 55.43

Shot Put — Queen (1st) 38-03; Jackson Coxsey (23rd) 13-05

Discus — Queen (1st) 112-04; Tierney (10th) 75-11.50 *PR*; Shiloh Johnson (24th) 42-09.50 *PR* — This event was contested Monday, but results were accidentally left out of that story.

High Jump — Kehoe (1st) 5-01; Johnson (9th) 4-00; Abram (13th) 4-00

 

Logan Dees, Henry Tierney, Liam Stoner, and Shiloh Johnson

Claire Lachnit, Emma Green, Sabrina Judnich, and Anna Powers

Congrats and on to next season!

Arianna Cunningham (left) and Milly Somes

They’re the leaders of the pack.

Eight Wolf spikers were honored by Coupeville High School volleyball coaches this week as the program held a development camp.

The players, a mix of veterans and relative newbies, were hailed by Scout Smith and her staff for modeling the program’s core strengths of “leadership, excellence, accountability, and discipline.”

Olivia Martin (left) and Rhylee Inman

Isa Mc Fetridge (left) and Josie McColl

Capri Anter (left) and Halle Black

Cael Wilson flies the friendly skies during his high school days. (Parker Hammons photo)

He slipped under the radar.

Turns out Coupeville grad Cael Wilson, a standout soccer and track athlete during his Cow Town days, has been out there competing at the collegiate level this past school year, quietly taking care of business while not looking for any pomp and circumstance.

While we’ve been monitoring the college track adventures of former Wolves Taygin Jump at Plattsburgh State and Tate Wyman at Oregon Tech, the man who earned five state meet medals at CHS stayed incognito.

Not even his former Wolf coaches knew, and I stumbled across the info only by accident as I was looking up his high school numbers.

Well, you can run, but you can’t hide (forever) on the internet.

So, where is Wilson these days?

According to athletic.net, he’s a freshman at Benedictine College, an NAIA institution in Atchison, Kansas, which makes him a Raven now.

Wilson competed during both the indoor and outdoor seasons, vying in the high jump, pole vault, and long jump.

The former Wolf ace put together ten top-10 finishes, with his best showing a 4th place performance in the pole vault at the Spire Distance Carnival and Team Challenge in March.

During his high school days, Cael, who followed in the footsteps of older brother Aidan, was one of the most successful athletes to rep the black and red in recent memory.

On the soccer pitch, he became the first 8th grader to score a varsity goal for the Wolves, finishing his five-year run with 13 goals, tying him with his sibling for #7 all-time in program history.

When spring was sprung, Wilson piled up 30 wins as a high school track and field athlete, claimed five state meet medals, and tied a 25-year-old school record in the high jump, clearing six feet, four inches during his senior season.