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Archive for January, 2013

Nick "The Big Hurt" Streubel, 6 feet, 4 inches of point-scoring power. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Nick “The Big Hurt” Streubel, 6 feet, 4 inches of laid-back, point-scoring brilliance. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Finding enough healthy players to field a team is job one right now for the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball team.

Missing their second (Aaron Trumbull – concussion) and third (Ben Etzell – wrist injury/staph infection) highest scorers, plus gunner Gavin O’ Keefe, who broke his leg way back in game two of the season, the Wolves found enough bodies, but not enough points Tuesday night.

Never able to score more than eight points in any quarter against host Granite Falls, Coupeville fell 62-29.

The loss dropped the Wolves to 1-18 overall, 0-13 in Cascade Conference play. Coupeville wraps its regular season with Senior Night at home against King’s Friday, Feb. 1, then heads to the district playoffs next week, with a hope of possibly getting back a player or two.

Against the Tigers, a 20-8 second quarter did in the Wolves, who had trailed by just seven after one quarter.

Big man Nick Streubel continued to pace Coupeville, rolling through the paint on his way to a team-high 11 points. Morgan Payne and Aaron Curtin each tossed in five, while Joel Walstad and Carson Risner each popped for four.

Seniors Drew Chan and Caleb Valko, who will be honored Friday, and freshman Wiley Hesselgrave, also saw floor time for the Wolves.

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Wolf senior Drew Chan will lead an injury-ravaged team into the district playoffs next week. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

   Senior Drew Chan will lead an injury-ravaged Wolf team into the district playoffs next week. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

If you’re going to pull off a series of upsets, you might as well start with the biggest one first.

There will be a David vs. Goliath feel when district playoffs open next week for the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball team. Locked in as the #3 seed from the Cascade Conference, the Wolves (1-17 with two games to play) will open against Lynden Christian in a game at Mountlake Terrace High School Tuesday, Feb. 5.

The Lyncs (currently 15-4) will not only be the #1 seed from the Northwest Conference, but they are also the defending 1A state champs. Last season, Lynden capped its postseason run with a 57-45 shredding of Zillah in the championship game.

Regardless of the outcome of their opener, Coupeville is guaranteed at least a second playoff game Thursday, Feb. 7. Win anywhere in there and they play on, with four of the eight teams from district advancing to tri-districts.

A huge key to the chances for an upset will be the overall health of the team. Gavin O’Keefe (broken leg), Ben Etzell (wrist injury, staph infection) and Aaron Trumbull (concussion) are all out or highly questionable.

While the Wolf boys know their opening opponent, the Coupeville girls (5-13) are not 100% set yet.

Trailing South Whidbey by two games with two to play, there is still a chance they could catch the Falcons for the #2 seed out of the Cascade Conference. Wins over Granite Falls and King’s and losses by South Whidbey to Archbishop Thomas Murphy and Granite Falls would leave the two Island squads with identical league records.

Coupeville and South Whidbey split their season series, each winning on their home court.

Districts kick off for the girls Monday, Feb. 4, with a second game Wednesday, Feb. 6, with all games also at Mountlake Terrace. The top three finishers in the eight-team field will advance to tri-districts.

If the Wolves are the #3 seed, they will face the #1 seed from the NWC, while, if they pull off a comeback and claim the #2 seed, they would face the #3 team from the NWC.

A close battle is still being waged for the top three spots in the NWC, with Lynden Christian holding an 8-2 mark (and all of the tiebreakers) in league play. Blaine is 7-3 and Nooksack Valley 6-4.

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Wolf senior cheerleaders Darian Emerick (back seat) and Nicole Becker.

Wolf senior cheerleaders Darian Emerick (back seat) and Nicole Becker.

Co-captains Becker and Emily Clay.

Co-captains Becker and Emily Clay.

Belgium's #1 cheerleader, Iris Ryckaert. (John Fisken photo)

Belgium’s #1 cheerleader, Iris Ryckaert. (John Fisken photo)

Legends leave the gym Tuesday night.

Co-captains and four year veterans of the Wolf cheer squad, Nicole Becker and Emily Clay have been there every step of the way for Coupeville High School basketball. Through illness, through birthdays, if there is a game in the CHS gym, the duo are front and center and leading the way.

Hollering from the sidelines, leading their squad in half-time dance performances or monitoring the madness that is the half-court shot contest, they are unparalleled at what they do.

They, along with fellow seniors Darian Emerick and Iris Ryckaert, will be acknowledged Tuesday night along with the six senior basketball players on the Wolf girls’ basketball squad.

Of course, the only way to appropriately cap the evening would be if Clay finally hit one of her half court shot attempts — which she always takes with her back to the hoop, followed by her heaving the ball skyward over her head without looking.

If the basketball gods have a sense of perfection, Clay will swish her trademark trick shot and then she and Becker will be carried out of the gym on the shoulders of their teammates.

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With a recent injury hopefully behind her, Lauren Escalle will be one of six Wolf seniors honored Tuesday. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

   With a recent ankle injury hopefully behind her, Lauren Escalle will be one of six Wolf seniors honored Tuesday night. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Katie Kiel

Katie Kiel

Jai'Lysa Hoskins

Jai’Lysa Hoskins

Rhiannon Ellsworth

Rhiannon Ellsworth

Co-captain Haley Marx

Co-captain Haley Marx

Co-captain Bessie Walstad

Co-captain Bessie Walstad

Tuesday night is the last dance.

The final time six Coupeville High School seniors will pull on the red and black and play basketball in front of a home crowd. The final time the PA announcer will intone “a 5-foot-9 senior post, number 42, Beeesssieee Walllllllllllstaaaaaaadddddddd.”

There will be games after tomorrow night. The final regular season game at King’s Friday, Feb. 1, then at least two (and hopefully more) playoff games on the road starting the following week.

But that’s the kicker. After Tuesday’s rumble with Granite Falls (JV 5:15, varsity 7), the Wolves will hit the road for the rest of their season, whether it be a handful of games or Coupeville hits a hot streak and rides it all the way to the state title game.

You either transport your buns down to the CHS gymnasium, or you’ll never see the Scintillating Six play hoops as a unit again.

No more Bessie Walstad.

No more Lauren Escalle.

No more Haley Marx.

No more Rhiannon Ellsworth.

No more Jai’Lysa Hoskins.

No more Katie Kiel.

Would you really want to live with yourself if you skipped that opportunity? Yeah, I thought not!

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Micky LeVine, seen here tracking a ball during her high school season, may be relatively small, but she packs a punch. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Micky LeVine, seen here tracking a ball during her high school season, may be relatively small, but she packs a punch. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Ride together, die together.

Like a biker gang, but with much better fashion sense, the booters who form the GU17 Whidbey Islanders soccer squad defend their own. Mess with one of them and you will have five to answer to. Really mess with them and you’re going to meet Micky “The Enforcer” LeVine.

You’re not going to enjoy that.

Playing a very aggressive Milton team on the road in a match that started rough and then turned painful Sunday, the moment that will be remembered longest is the diminutive LeVine taking on both an opposing player and a referee in defense of teammate Becca Pabona.

“The whole team had each others backs,” said Islander coach Scott Rosenkranz. “Micky had had enough and stepped in to let some opposing players and the ref know Becca had been roughed up perhaps a little too much, in her opinion. That got everyone’s attention.”

At that point, Erin Rosenkranz had left with a bloody nose (after taking a soccer ball to the face), goalie Kenzie Perry had been sidelined after taking a wicked shot to the back and Jacki Ginnings had endured a badly-mashed hand. With Pabona, one of the Islanders’ top offensive weapons, being repeatedly whacked, enter LeVine, who was ready to lay a girl out.

“We knew going into this game it was going to be tough, but we did not expect the nastiness and brutality from this team,” LeVine said. “Not only were they nasty with their physical play but they had a problem with keeping their mouths shut.”

Tension built after a series of cheap shots and finally boiled over on a play late in the game.

Becca was shielding off a player and after the ball was way out of bounds, the girl pushed her from behind,” LeVine said. “I was fed up with them getting away with it so I gave the girl a shove and told her to calm down and she turned around and shoved me with both hands.

“The referee came and broke us up, but then tried to yell at me and Becca for it,” she added. “After a little argument with the ref he was threatening to card me and it’s a good thing I was subbed out before I went after that ref, ha ha…”

Despite losing 3-0, LeVine came away very proud of how her teammates rallied to each others defense time and again.

“After the game I received lots of high fives and hugs from my team. It was a pretty great moment,” she said. “Win or lose, we still appreciate the smallest things in the game that make us smile and we still have our pride and we have each other and we would not trade this team for anything.”

While the Islanders didn’t score, they came close several times, with Selina Medina, Vivien Valles and Perry, returning to the field after her injury, pushing play. Perry even got some payback, making a superb sliding tackle that delighted her teammates (and earned her a yellow card from an obviously biased ref.)

With Perry unable to play in goal in the second half, Morgan Zlystra, who was battling through a fever, stepped in and manned the net in the second half.

From LeVine bringing the thunder to numerous players staying on the field through pain, the Islanders impressed their coach, who gave the game hustle award not to a single player, but to the team as a whole.

“There was no quit in the girls today and we walked off the field smiling despite the score,” Scott Rosenkranz said. “Once again I have to say I’m proud of how they come together and play for each other.

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