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Archive for February, 2019

Maddie Georges returns for another season of middle school basketball. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The benches will be full.

The rosters for Coupeville Middle School girls basketball go 30 deep, with 19 eighth-graders and 11 seven-graders set to kick off a new season Tuesday, Feb. 5 at home against South Whidbey.

The Wolves will be coached by Alex Evans (moving up to 8th from 7th) and Megan Smith (returning to run 7th after a season away).

Rosters as of today:

 

8th:

Alita Blouin
Adrian Burrows
Jessenia Camarena
Karyme Castro
Hayley Fielder
Maddie Georges
Gwen Gustafson
Mercedes Kalwies-Anderson
Nezi Keiper
Ryanne Knoblich
Carolyn Lhamon
Claire Mayne
Trinity McGee
Cristina McGrath
Melanie Navarro
Jill Prince
Abigail Ramirez
Jordyn Rogers
Jessica Ross-McMahon

 

7th:

Kayla Arnold
Brionna Blouin
Jackie Contreras
Kaitlyn Leavell
Lauren Marrs
Erica McGrath
Ava Mitten
Allison Nastali
Skylar Parker
Desi Ramirez-Vasquez
Reese Wilkinson

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Scoring 10 points Friday, Lindsey Roberts rose from #23 to #20 on the CHS girls basketball career scoring list. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This is how you want to head into the playoffs.

Shaking off a long wait to get on the court Friday at Granite Falls, the Coupeville High School varsity girls hoop squad responded with “great energy,” claiming a 38-29 win.

The victory gives the Wolves a season sweep of the Tigers while lifting them to 6-4 in North Sound Conference play, 8-9 overall.

Coupeville, which was picked to finish fourth in the preseason coaches poll, instead heads to districts as the #3 seed from the six-team NSC.

The Wolves open the double-elimination tourney Feb. 4 against the #2 team from the Northwest Conference, Lynden Christian (17-3).

Win or lose, they’ll be back on the court, and on the road, Feb. 6 to play either King’s (16-4) or Sultan (7-13).

While its playoff path was already set before it played Friday, Coupeville wanted to end the regular season on a positive note.

Mission accomplished.

“Long wait for game time. Sat through both JV games and an interrupted pregame due to senior festivities,” Wolf coach David King said.

“We knew the building would be energized for their six seniors and their last home game,” he added. “We matched that energy and then some.”

CHS blew out to an 8-0 lead to open things, hushing the fans and giving the Tigers a taste of what was to come.

Granite wasn’t ready to crack, however, netting a three-ball to finally get on the scoreboard at the end of the first quarter, before banking home a quick bucket to open the second frame.

That was the cue for Wolf senior Ema Smith to go to work, as she rained down 10 of her game-high 12 in the second quarter.

One, two, three, she shredded Granite’s defense for a trio of three-balls, then capped things with a free throw, sending Coupeville to the break up 21-14.

The two teams exchanged body blows in a very close second half, but the Wolves reached deep and always found an answer when they needed one.

Defensive dynamo Tia Wurzrainer got wild on the other end of the floor, popping home a pair of key buckets, while Lindsey Roberts swished a big-time three-ball in the fourth after the Tigers had sliced away at Coupeville’s lead.

The Wolves played with solid energy on defense, typified by Hannah Davidson, who “came up big with four steals,” including one on which she stole the ball at the free throw line, then led the fast break.

“Posts, they always want to play the point guard position,” King said with a big smile.

Coupeville flustered their foes with quick hands (Ema Smith and Chelsea Prescott chipped in with five and four steals, respectively) and hit the boards with intensity.

Ema Smith and Roberts paced the Wolves on the glass, ripping down eight rebounds apiece.

The senior captains also led the team in scoring, with 12 and 10, while Wurzrainer, Scout Smith, and Prescott each had four and Avalon Renninger and Davidson added a bucket apiece.

With a pair of baskets in the first quarter, Roberts passed Cassidi Rosenkrance (423), Mika Hosek (424), and Sarah Powell (425) on the CHS girls career scoring list.

Sitting with 432 points, the four-year varsity player enters her final playoff run as the #20 scorer all-time, coming up fast on #19 Maureen Wetmore (438) and #18 Vanessa Davis (448).

With seven of his eight regular varsity players scoring Friday, and point guard Scout Smith “doing a great job with her passing,” King got the boost he was hoping for as his team preps for the postseason.

“This was a good bounce-back game for us after a tough schedule in our last two games,” he said. “Very proud of the team in the regular season and especially in league play.

“We wanted to get that sixth win vs. playing .500 ball in league.”

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After losing Friday, Gavin Knoblich and Co. will have to win Saturday to grab a ticket to the playoffs. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The season comes down to 32 minutes of action.

Unable to clinch a playoff berth on the road Friday, the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball squad gets a second chance Saturday at home.

A 60-50 loss at Granite Falls leaves the Wolves tied with the host Tigers at 1-9 in North Sound Conference action.

With identical league records, and having split the season series (CHS won 52-43 in early Jan.), the two teams meet at 5 PM in Coupeville to decide the #5 playoff seed from the NSC.

Winner advances to the double-elimination district tourney and plays Feb. 4 against King’s.

Saturday’s losers exit the court and start thinking about spring sports.

King’s (10-0, 16-4), Cedar Park Christian (7-3, 11-9), South Whidbey (6-4, 13-7), Sultan (5-5, 6-14), and Saturday’s winner join Northwest Conference teams Lynden Christian (20-0), Meridian (9-12), and Nooksack Valley (7-13) at districts.

The #2-#4 NSC seeds were set after King’s savaged South Whidbey 84-15 Friday, and CPC bounced Sultan 66-35.

Coupeville, which is 2-15 overall, enters Saturday’s game having lost seven straight.

Several of those defeats have been close, though, and Friday night’s bout was a prime example.

With Granite Falls having just one court, the Wolves sat through three other games before finally taking the floor for the night’s finale, then hung tough all the way.

Sean Toomey-Stout and Mason Grove combined for 14 first-quarter points, with the former hitting for nine and both dropping in a three-ball, but Granite clung to an 18-16 lead at the first break.

While the Tigers could never completely get away from the Wolves, they did slowly but surely stretch out their advantage.

A 12-8 advantage in the second quarter pushed the lead to six, then a 16-12 surge across the third set the final margin.

Grove did his best to keep Coupeville alive, burying a trio of three-balls in the third frame, while Hawthorne Wolfe and Jacobi Pilgrim picked up five points apiece during a free-throw-heavy fourth quarter.

CHS had an advantage at the line, hitting 13 of 20 charity shots to just 4-7 by Granite, while also winning the three-ball battle 5-2.

Grove finished with a team-high 14 points, with Toomey-Stout rattling the rim for 12 and Pilgrim banking in eight.

Wolfe (7), Gavin Knoblich (5), Ulrik Wells (2), and Jered Brown (2) also scored.

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Kylie Van Velkinburgh had six points and two blocks Friday as the Wolf JV closed its season with a road victory. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

After beating Granite Falls, the young guns finished 9-7, best record of any CHS hoops team this season. (Amy King photo)

Best record in town.

Kicking off a four-games-on-one-court evening Friday at Granite Falls, the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball team got things going with a jolt.

Riding a game-winning three-ball in the final seconds from Mollie Bailey, the Wolves escaped with a 29-27 win, got a sweet bit of revenge, and capped a winning season.

The victory, which was payback for a loss to Granite earlier in the season, allows the JV to close at 5-3 in North Sound Conference play, 9-7 overall.

Despite playing less games than Coupeville’s other squads, thanks to Cedar Park Christian not having a girls JV team, the Wolf young guns have the most wins, and the highest winning percentage, of any CHS hoops team this winter.

The finale was a nice cap to another season under long-time Wolf basketball whisperer Amy King, who got her team going with a small challenge.

“Four games back-to-back (on the same court). I told the JV girls, who had the first game of the night, that their game would set the tone for the rest of the evening.

“And the battle began.”

The two teams went back and forth, exchanging big buckets and ferocious defensive stops all night.

Anya Leavell banked in a three-ball in the opening quarter, one of her two on the night, but the Wolves trailed 9-8 at the first break.

“We pressed, we got some steals, but struggled against their two posts, who used a high-low offense when possible for easy baskets,” King said. “We ran our offenses, got great steals – blocked and just worked together all night.

Kylie Van Velkinburgh had some key blocks and hit a couple of shots tonight,” she added. “Anya had some nice fast breaks, slowed down for control and hit the layups.”

Coupeville flipped the script in the second quarter, taking a one-point lead to the locker room, only to see Granite knot things up at 20-20 heading into the final quarter.

With the two teams standing in the middle of the ring and exchanging rib shots, a big play here or there was liable to be the deciding moment.

Enter Bailey, the coolest cucumber in the bunch, the drummer who bops to her own beat, long braids slapping a rhythm on her back as she glides through life.

Clock madly churning down, the Wolves pulled off of a nifty fake on an inbound pass. Three players dove towards the girl with the ball, but Bailey went her own way.

A jab step forward, a pirouette back behind the arc, ball lands on her fingertips, eyebrow arches slightly, ball flips skyward, splashes through net, world goes bonkers, Bailey slightly nods.

As excited as Coupeville was when the three-ball rippled through the net, turning a one-point deficit into a two-point lead, there were still a few ticks left on the clock.

Granite got the ball up floor, but aggressive pressure from Wolf frosh Audrianna Shaw threw the Tigers off their pace and a potential game-tying shot was not going to drop.

“Time runs out and we all go crazy,” King said. “It was an awesome game to end our season. Very proud of these girls.”

Leavell paced the Wolves with 10 points, four steals and three assists, while Izzy Wells added seven points and four rebounds.

Van Velkinburgh (6), Bailey (5), and Shaw (1) rounded out the scoring attack, with Shaw filling up the stat sheet with four rebounds, three steals and three assists.

Abby Mulholland (three rebounds), Ivy Leedy, Morgan Stevens, Ja’Kenya Hoskins (two rebounds, two steals), Lily Leedy, and Alana Mihill all saw floor time, while injured stars Kylie Chernikoff and Kiara Contreras provided vocal bench support.

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Daniel Olson scored four points Friday as Coupeville’s JV capped season with a win at Granite Falls. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Nothing sweeter than ending a season on a win.

With Xavier Murdy and Grady Rickner combining to rain down 33 points Friday, the Coupeville High School JV boys basketball team did just that.

Riding an explosive second quarter, the Wolves crunched host Granite Falls 45-36, snapping a five-game losing skid and sending everyone back to the bus with an extra skip to their step.

The wins lifts the JV’s final record to 3-7 in North Sound Conference play, 7-10 overall.

After the long trip to Granite, the Wolf boys came out a bit cold in the early going, falling behind 7-3 at the first break.

But then, with a bit of floor time beneath their feet, the young guns rediscovered their shooting touch and hit the hapless Tigers like a runaway tsunami reaching shore.

Murdy went off for 11 of his game-high 21 in the second quarter, while TJ Rickner, Daniel Olson and Sage Downes all chipped in with buckets during the second frame.

By the time the halftime buzzer sounded, CHS had ridden an 18-5 surge to a nine-point lead, and never looked back.

The two teams played dead even in the second half, but the Wolves closed strongly, with Grady Rickner at the top of his game.

The fab frosh hit from every angle in the fourth quarter, dropping in a pair of free throws, a pair of field goals and a long three-ball as he accounted for nine of his team’s 13 points down the stretch.

Chris Smith’s squad got something from everyone in its finale, with Murdy (21), Grady Rickner (12), Olson (4), Downes (3), TJ Rickner (3), and Cody Roberts (2) all scoring.

Tucker Hall, Logan Martin, Chris Ruck, and Miles Davidson rounded out the active roster, each one harassing the Tigers with an intensity which bodes well for the future of Coupeville basketball.

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