Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Basketball’ Category

Twin brothers DeAndre (left) and Dante Mitchell finished in a tie atop the poll to decide the Coupeville Sports “Winter Coach of the Season.”

Back in their younger days.

Well, there’s a first time for everything.

I’ve run 21 polls in the history of Coupeville Sports, and never had this happen.

But here we are, 48 hours and 25 minutes later (yes, I overslept…) and 2,248 votes down the road, and we have a TIE for the “Winter Sports Coach of the Season.”

Which is kind of appropriate, because the winners are twin brothers.

Just as mom Avis can’t pick a favorite (at least in public), the voters decided to honor both of her sons, Coupeville Middle School 8th grade basketball coaches Dante and DeAndre Mitchell.

The former Wolf players each picked up exactly 634 votes, putting them comfortably ahead of third-place finisher Scott Fox, who strolled in with 422 votes to claim third.

The Coupeville High School boys C-Team coach was followed by CMS coach Mikayla Elfrank (145) and CHS JV guru Chris Smith (113) in a field of 14 basketball coaches.

And they were all basketball coaches in this poll, as I accidentally left out CHS cheer coach BreAnna Boon and her husband Tyson, who is providing coaching for Coupeville’s lone wrestler, Alex Turner.

Thankfully, that duo have already won state and national titles back in their own high school days, so, missing out on a chance to vie for my totally made up, but totally amazing, non-trophy, probably won’t destroy their lives.

We hope.

For the rest of the coaches, and their various fan clubs, thanks for playing along and congrats to the Mitchell brothers.

If they want to break the tie, may I suggest a brisk game of HORSE down at the CHS gym?

Read Full Post »

Fourteen basketball gurus enter the gym, but only one will emerge as the Coupeville Sports “Winter Coach of the Season.”

Ready to go to war, I mean the polls, again?

Back in October, the battle for the completely made-up and totally fake Coupeville Sports “Fall Sports Coach of the Season” brought the internet servers to their knees.

So now that we’re knee deep into basketball season, let’s do it all again.

How does this all go down, you ask? It’s simple.

We have 14 coaches, covering girls and boys high school and middle school basketball. Head coaches, assistant coaches, paid and volunteer, they’re all here.

With one small caveat.

Since girls middle school hoops kicked off practice yesterday, I’ve only included the head coaches. If any assistants pop up on the sidelines once games begin, sorry, you missed the cutoff.

For a totally fake award.

That is still totally prestigious and will still look totally amazing on your mantle, even if some spoilsports try and tell you said award is invisible.

Anyways, polls for the “Winter Sports Coach of the Season” open today, Wednesday, Jan. 23, and close 48 hours later, at 9 AM Friday, Jan. 25.

You can vote as many times as you like, with no restrictions coming from me.

Once in awhile, WordPress has tried to slow some people down for unknown reasons, but if that happens, bounce to a different device and things should be all hunky-dory.

And away we go.

Read Full Post »

Brayden Coatney gets ready to let a free throw fly. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Having yanked down a rebound, Morgan Stevens dares anyone to be foolish enough to try and take it away from her.

Keeping the ball well away from his defender, Ben Smith waits for a teammate to get open.

Wolf varsity stars (l to r) Tia Wurzrainer, Scout Smith, and Avalon Renninger rule the roost while shooting game film of their JV counterparts.

Andrew Aparicio stands tall.

The power of the braids compels you. Mollie Bailey launches a pass which seconds later turned into an Izzy Wells bucket.

Chris Cernick goes hard to the hoop.

Alana Mihill (right), who netted her first high school three-ball Monday, debates her options.

There were no school classes Monday in Coupeville, but plenty of activity still raged around the high school.

The Wolf girls JV and boys C-Team basketballs quads welcomed Oak Harbor to town for holiday games, and wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken came along for the trip.

The pics above are courtesy him.

To see everything Fisken shot while camped in the CHS gym, pop over to:

Girls:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2018-2019-boys-and-girls/GBB-2019-01-21-JV-vs-Oak-Harbor/

Boys:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2018-2019-boys-and-girls/BBB-2019-01-21-vs-Oak-Harbor/

When you do, remember purchases help fund scholarships for deserving CHS senior student/athletes.

Read Full Post »

Wolf big man Ulrik Wells jabs towards the hoop, on his way to slapping home another bucket. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Abby Mulholland: “You have one job, Mr. Ball. Get in the hoop and maybe I’ll take you out for ice cream afterwards.”

Carl Henri Chapman gets sandwiched by Wolf defenders Logan Martin (15) and Sage Downes.

Mollie Bailey: “I said I’ll pass you the dang ball when you get open … and not before!”

Sean Toomey-Stout seemingly swoops high enough to touch the speakers.

Just like her big brother, Izzy Wells is a bucket-scoring beast.

So close.

With four Coupeville High School basketball teams playing at home Friday, photographer John Fisken netted shots of two-thirds of one of Wolf Nation’s brightest trios of athletes.

Big bro Ulrik Wells and middle sister Izzy can both be seen above, providing perfect end caps to our lil’ photo essay.

That leaves us just missing the supernova herself, younger sister Savina, who was busy cartwheeling through the stands while counting down the days until she can join her siblings in a CHS uniform.

So, something for Fisken to add to his bucket list – snap all three Wells hoops stars in the same day.

Dream big, I say.

Anyway, to see everything else he shot, even those of the non-Wells variety, pop over to:

Girls — https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2018-2019-boys-and-girls/GBB-2019-01-18-vs-South-Whidbey/

Boys — https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2018-2019-boys-and-girls/BBB-2019-01-18-vs-South-Whidbey/

And, when you do, remember that any and all purchases help fund scholarships for deserving CHS senior student/athletes.

Read Full Post »

Coupeville’s Makana Stone dropped in a team-high 14 points Saturday, but Whitman College had a seven-game winning streak snapped. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A dangerous weekend turned deadly at the end.

Haunted by foul trouble, the Whitman College women’s basketball team watched a big one slip away Saturday, falling 75-67 to visiting University of Puget Sound.

The game, which was a one-point affair with less than 90 seconds to play, hinged on free throws, and frequent foul calls, at the end.

Using a 9-2 surge to close the game, with a brutally-effective three-ball and then six straight charity shots, the Loggers threw the Northwest Conference standings into disarray with eight games left on the schedule.

With the loss, Whitman falls to 7-1 in league play, 13-4 overall and slips back into a first-place tie with George Fox (7-1, 14-3).

Technically, the Blues still have a slight edge, as they won the first of two games against George Fox. The rematch is Feb. 8 in Walla Walla.

Whitman gets a second crack at UPS, which sits a game off the lead at 6-2, 13-3, a week later on Feb. 15.

After facing two of the top four teams in the league this weekend — they drilled Pacific Lutheran Friday — the Blues have a softer schedule awaiting them.

Whitman’s next four games, the ones prior to the showdown with George Fox, pit them solely against teams in the bottom half of the league.

Which makes Saturday’s loss to UPS even tougher, as a win would have kept the Blues, who had a seven-game winning streak, alone and untouched at the top of the league.

Instead, they got roughed up two times against the Loggers, unable to stop the one-two duo of Jamie Lange and Elizabeth Prewitt, who went for 27 and 25 points, respectively.

Coupeville grad Makana Stone did what she could to fire back, popping for a team-high 14 points on 7-11 shooting, but both she and front-court mate Maegan Martin were fouled out of the game by fairly one-sided reffing.

Puget Sound finished the game with no player having more than two fouls to their credit, while Whitman lost their interior stars, and had several other players with at least three fouls each.

Still, the game was close almost from the opening tip to the final buzzer.

Knotted at 19-19 after one quarter, the teams swapped two-point leads at the next two breaks. UPS went to the half up 37-35, before Whitman jumped back in front 55-53 after three quarters.

The Blues final lead, at 59-57, came when Taylor Chambers slashed to the hoop for a layup with a hair over eight minutes to play.

While Lange powered her way through the Blues defense for her own personal 6-0 run after that, Whitman stayed close, and was down just 66-65 in the late moments.

Prewitt was a savage, however, drilling a game-busting three-ball with 1:24 on the clock.

After that, it was all free throws for UPS, as the Loggers closed by hitting six straight at the line.

Given far more opportunities at the charity stripe, Puget Sound hit 14-19 on freebies, while Whitman could only scrape out four tries, nailing three of them.

UPS also out-shot the Blues from the floor, sinking 50.9% of its shots to 43.1% from the home team.

Before she fouled out, Stone added three rebounds, two assists and a steal to her 14 points.

On the season, the junior has 270 points, 151 rebounds, 27 assists, 21 steals, and 17 blocks. She’s shooting 113-217 from the floor and 43-55 at the line.

Stone, who was playing in the 74th game of her collegiate career, passed a personal milestone, crossing the 800-point barrier with her second bucket of the night.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »