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Archive for the ‘Basketball’ Category

Abbey Mulholland (John Fisken photo)

   Abby Mulholland, seen here in a game last season, dropped in four points Saturday in a 31-9 win. (John Fisken photo)

People are getting massacred out here.

Coupeville’s 7th grade SWISH girls’ basketball squad is inflicting beat-downs left and right and Saturday was a prime example.

Thrashing Orcas 31-9, the Wolves improved to a flawless 3-0 on the young season.

Coupeville got strong scoring across the board, led by Izzy Wells, who dropped in 10 to outscore her rivals by herself.

Anya Leavell, Audrianna Shaw and Abby Mulholland chipped in with four apiece, while Kiara Contreras (3), Chelsea Prescott (2) and Ja’Kenya Hoskins (2) rounded out the scoring.

Kylie Van Velkinburgh, Sam Streitler and Adair DeJesus-Ramirez also saw floor time for the Wolves, who are coached by Dustin Van Velkinburgh.

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Mia Littlejohn

   Wolf gunner Mia Littlejohn attended a previous clinic and came away impressed. (John Fisken photo)

basketball

All your pertinent details.

Coupeville High School girls’ basketball coach David King is joining with King’s HS round-ball guru Dan Taylor to bring an innovative shooting clinic to CHS in mid-Nov.

All the important details can be found in the flier above, from cost to time and place.

The flier can be picked up in the CHS office, and for those with questions, David King can be reached at 360-320-0574 or dking@coupeville.k12.wa.us.

But why this clinic, you ask? Because it works.

Several Wolf players went to a similar clinic run by Taylor in Seattle and returned to Whidbey as converts.

“The clinic in August helped me realize the right way to shoot the ball,” said CHS senior Kailey Kellner.

The players started in small groups, broken down by grade levels and walked through the steps (fingers, offhand, rhythm, eyes, sway and turn) to form the acronym FOREST.

A different drill stood for each letter, and, after putting the six steps together, the players put them together to perform the correct shooting form.

“After we practiced and felt comfortable, we all did reps of the form in the spot on the court that we perform well at,” Kellner said. “There were many different elements that brought this form all together, from off the dribble to a simple step in to catch and release a money shot.

“Once I got the form down and it felt right, the form and everything followed after that,” she added. “You know when it’s going on when you release the shot from your fingertips once you get this shot locked in.”

Junior point guard Mia Littlejohn agrees.

“The shooting clinic was very helpful,” she said. “Not only did it help us with our form, but it helps us learn the drills that we needed to know to help improve it on and off the court.

For example, F for finger teaches the players to have their middle finger in the middle of the ball, something Littlejohn wasn’t doing previously.

“I normally put my middle finger on the hole that you would use to pump the ball up,” she said.

While Kyla Briscoe was sidelined with a volleyball injury during the August camp, she still attended, along with Kellner, Littlejohn, Tiffany Briscoe and Kalia Littlejohn, intent on picking up pointers even if she couldn’t be on the floor.

“From an outsiders look on this clinic, I saw major changes in all the girl’s shots!,” Kyla Briscoe said. “The form this clinic taught us was very similar to the way our coach has been teaching us.

“I’m very excited to join in on this clinic this time around, because a lot of girls shots have been consistent to the way our coach has been reinforcing upon us,” she added. “I think this clinic will be good for the Coupeville basketball program as a whole, because we aren’t as strong as shooters as we should be.”

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Cassidy Moody

   Birthday girl Cassidy Moody (left) makes a point with fellow Wolf track star Ja’Tarya Hoskins.

Moody

   The smartly-dressed Moody hangs out with Melia Welling at a boys’ basketball game. (John Fisken photo)

Remember the name Cassidy Moody.

Why, you ask?

Because the quicksilver Coupeville High School freshman, who celebrates a birthday today, is headed for big things.

One of the best and brightest young stars in Cow Town, athletically gifted and serene of spirit, Moody seems to glide whenever she walks by.

A strong, gifted young woman with a light scoring touch on the basketball court, where she frequently torches foes, she’s also one of the most promising young track stars in Wolf Nation.

While competing at the middle school level Moody was a jack-of-all-trades, vying in numerous events.

She was a sprinter (100, 200), stretched it out to a full lap around the oval (400), did hurdles, long jump, high jump, even found time to be a relay runner.

And she did it all extremely well, grabbing victories in both the hurdles and high jump, with the latter coming in the league championship meet during her 8th grade season.

With the graduation of CHS track titans such as Makana Stone and Sylvia Hurlburt, Wolf coach Randy King will be looking to his young guns to step up as Coupeville debuts its sparkling new track.

My money is on Moody, who has the skill and carriage of a star about to be born.

Of course, take away all the sports stuff and you’re still left with an amazing young woman, a quiet, friendly, hard-working, whip-smart asset to our community.

Whether she’s giggling with close buddy Melia Welling while working the scorer’s table or draining jumpers, Cassidy brightens up every room she’s in.

Happy birthday, Miss Moody.

Never stop being awesome.

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Bennett Boyles (Photo courtesy Pat Kelley)

Bennett Boyles (Photo courtesy Pat Kelley)

Two days until the biggest night of the summer.

People from near and far are expected to pack the Coupeville Rec Hall this Friday, Aug. 19 for an auction fundraiser to help an ailing Wolf hoops star.

Bennett Boyles, 11, finished three weeks of treatment for inoperable tumors on his brain stem and just returned home from Seattle, but he and his family still face a tough road ahead.

Bennett’s teachers at the Ebey Academy have been spearheading fundraisers all summer to help his mom, CHS grad Lucienne Rivera, a single mom of two who had to quit her job to take care of her son.

Friday night the Rec Hall will be jumping to the music of Jacobs Road, with more than 100 items up for auction.

Tickets are $10 and can be bought at the door (the rec hall is at 901 NW Alexander St., across the street from Christopher’s on Whidbey.)

The event, which runs from 6-10 PM, is open to all ages.

Beverages and hors d’oeuvres will be available, with wine and beer offered by donation thanks to Penn Cove Tap Room.

Some of the many items which will be up for auction:

Toby’s Tavern gift basket
Knead & Feed baking class
Framed, signed Steve Largent jersey
A party with Santa
A Seahawks tailgate party
Wine and cheese basket
A wheelbarrow full of beer
Photography sessions
A month of child care at Ebey Academy
Handyman hours
Oak Harbor Cinemas tickets
A fire pit with all the fixings

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Matthew Kelley (Photos courtesy Pat Kelley)

   Matthew Kelley shows off the shirts worn by Wolf players. (Photos courtesy Pat Kelley)

Wolves

The Wolves, pre-sunburns.

Bennett Boyles (Photo courtesy Pat Kelley)

Bennett Boyles

They burned for Bennett.

Playing under scorching skies in Enumclaw, eight Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball players poured in buckets in support of a missing teammate this weekend.

Playing at an outdoor three-on-three tourney, the Wolves raised $402 as a fundraiser for Bennett Boyles.

The CMS hoops player is battling an inoperable brain tumor and has been sidelined at a hospital in Seattle for weeks.

While he wasn’t able to travel with his teammates, he was very much in their thoughts, with each basket scored by the Wolves raising money for Boyles.

Coupeville players got fans to pledge a certain amount per basket scored in the tourney and the Wolves combined to pour in 46 buckets.

Seven of the eight CMS players on hand for the tourney scored, while nearly all of them came home with sunburns.

The Wolves were hurt a bit by a thin bench, as local teams shared players among teams.

Still, win or lose, the tourney was more about helping their missing teammate and less about worrying over the score.

So, in the end, it was a rousing success.

“Very proud of the boys,” said Coupeville coach Pat Kelley. “Go Bennett!”

Donations to help Boyles and his family (his mom Lucienne Rivera, a CHS grad, had to quit her job to be with her son) can be dropped off at Ebey Academy (140 SE Terry Road) in Coupeville.

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