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Cole White, seconds away from burying a jumper. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The basket keeps jumping, the totals on the scoreboard keep advancing.

With two varsity games left to play — Tuesday at home against Darrington — the four Coupeville High School basketball squads have combined to score 1,502 points during this pandemic-altered season.

Three guys have cracked the 100-point barrier, with another one having a chance to do so in the finale.

What does it all mean?

That scoring is the easiest stat to track in basketball, and it makes for good chatter when you compare numbers.

Buckets equals page views. Simple as that.

Scoring totals through June 13:

 

Varsity girls
(11 games):

Audrianna Shaw 76
Izzy Wells 56
Savina Wells 53
Maddie Georges 30
Carolyn Lhamon 29
Anya Leavell 23
Ja’Kenya Hoskins 19
Gwen Gustafson 15
Ryanne Knoblich 15
Kylie Van Velkinburgh 14
Lyla Stuurmans 13

 

Varsity boys
(11 games):

Hawthorne Wolfe 240
Xavier Murdy 115
Grady Rickner 87
Sage Downes 50
Daniel Olson 49
Logan Downes 43
Alex Murdy 39
Logan Martin 31
TJ Rickner 15
Jonathan Valenzuela 15
Cody Roberts 8
Miles Davidson 4
Cole White 2

 

JV girls
(5 games):

Lyla Stuurmans – 51
Madison McMillan – 33
Jessenia Camarena – 20
Katie Marti – 9
Skylar Parker – 4
Morgan Stevens – 4
Desi Ramirez – 2
Kassidy Upchurch – 2
Reese Wilkinson – 1

 

JV boys
(8 games):

Jonathan Valenzuela – 105
Cole White – 56
Dominic Coffman – 51
Logan Downes – 46
Nick Guay – 32
Zane Oldenstadt – 16
William Davidson – 13
Ryan Blouin – 7
Mikey Robinett – 7
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim – 2

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Hawthorne Wolfe is the 27th player in 104 seasons of CHS basketball to lead a varsity team in scoring in two or more seasons — and the first to do so in non-consecutive seasons. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

In this most unusual of basketball seasons, another quirk.

With one game left to play in a pandemic-shortened season, Hawthorne Wolfe is about to do something no Coupeville High School basketball player, boy or girl, has ever accomplished.

With 240 points in 11 games — 21.8 a night — the CHS junior will lead the boys team in scoring, no matter what happens in Tuesday’s finale against Darrington.

In finishing as the #1 point producer, Wolfe becomes the 15th boy, and 27th player overall in school history, to have topped a year-end varsity scoring chart at least two times during their career.

But, he is the first to ever do it in non-consecutive seasons.

Wolfe paced Coupeville in scoring as a freshman, tossing in 158 points while Sean Toomey-Stout was second-best with 122.

Last season, Hawk came within a bucket of repeating as scoring champ, but was edged out 254-252 by senior Mason Grove.

Now, Wolfe is back on top, with Xavier Murdy angling for runner-up status with 115 points heading into the finale.

Of the 15 CHS boys to top the charts at least twice, only one, Barry Brown, led his squad in scoring three times — something Hawk can chase next year as a senior.

On the girls side of things, six Wolves have pulled off a three-peat, with Megan Smith being the only four-timer.

CHS players with two or more seasons as the top scorer:

 

Girls:

Marie Grasser (1977-1978; 1978-1979)
Kristan Hurlburt (1979-1980; 1980-1981; 1981-1982)
Judy Marti (1982-1983; 1983-1984)
Terry Perkins (1984-1985, 1985-1986; 1986-1987)
Emily Vracin (1989-1990; 1990-1991)
Novi Barron (1995-1996; 1996-1997; 1997-1998)
Tina Lyness (1998-1999; 1999-2000)
Brianne King (2000-2001; 2001-2002; 2002-2003)
Lexie Black (2003-2004; 2004-2005)
Megan Smith (2006-2007; 2007-2008; 2008-2009; 2009-2010)
Makana Stone (2013-2014; 2014-2015; 2015-2016)
Lindsey Roberts (2017-2018; 2018-2019)

 

Boys:

Tom Sahli (1952-1953; 1953-1954)
Jack Elzinga (1954-1955; 1955-1956)
Mike Criscuola (1958-1959; 1959-1960)
Denny Clark (1962-1963; 1963-1964)
Barry Brown (1965-1966; 1966-1967; 1967-1968)
Jeff Stone (1968-1969; 1969-1970)
Bill Riley (1971-1972; 1972-1973)
Randy Keefe (1973-1974; 1974-1975)
Jason McFadyen (1989-1990; 1990-1991)
Virgil Roehl (1991-1992; 1992-1993)
Chris Good (2000-2001; 2001-2002)
Mike Bagby (2004-2005; 2005-2006)
Wiley Hesselgrave (2014-2015; 2015-2016)
Hunter Smith (2016-2017; 2017-2018)
Hawthorne Wolfe (2018-2019; 2021)

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TJ (left) and Grady Rickner are one of five sets of siblings playing basketball for Coupeville High School. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

All in the family.

There are five different sets of siblings playing basketball at Coupeville High School this season – four brother combos and one sister duo.

There’s a wide range of ages involved, as well, with every class (and then some) represented.

Break down the family affair and we find two seniors, four juniors, two sophomores, one freshman, and even one 8th grader.

With the Wolves moving to the 2B classification, CHS can use middle school students to shore up high school programs struggling with low numbers, such as boys soccer or girls basketball.

So, to the great joy of mom Katie Wells, that has meant daughters Savina (8th grader) and Izzy (11th grader) get two seasons together, and not one as originally expected.

Graduation will break up two of the five sets, with Sage Downes and TJ Rickner set to move on after this season.

But for now, there’s a whole lot of family connections at play in the Wolf hoops programs.

William and Miles Davidson

Savina and Izzy Wells

Logan and Sage Downes

Alex and Xavier Murdy

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Kylie Van Velkinburgh kicks off a series of Wolf basketball portraits. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The last batch.

As we’ve worked our way through the high school hoops season, I’ve been dispersing all the portraits shot by John Fisken — sometimes one at a time, sometimes in big clumps.

With nine days left in the season, and eight head shots still waiting to see the light of the internet, here you go.

Want to see other stuff, like action shots, which have popped out of Fisken’s camera? Take a look over at:

John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

Alex Wasik

Grady Rickner

TJ Rickner

Andrew Williams

Ryan Blouin

Jonathan Valenzuela

Cole White

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William Davidson fires up a free throw. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“Go and score, my queen.”

They keep the scorebook keepers busy.

The players on Coupeville High School’s four basketball teams have combined to tally 1,210 points this season — as best as I can tell.

The front-runner, by a lot, is net-tickler Hawthorne Wolfe.

With 215 points across nine games, the junior guard is averaging 23.9 a night, and has accounted for almost 18% of all Coupeville points by himself.

Fellow Class of 2022 gunner Xavier Murdy became the second player to crack the 100-point barrier this season, while JV players Desi Ramirez and Reese Wilkinson are the latest to join the scoring parade.

Where point totals stand with nine days left in the pandemic-altered 2021 hoops season:

 

Girls Varsity
(9 games):

Audrianna Shaw 59
Izzy Wells 45
Savina Wells 30
Maddie Georges 28
Carolyn Lhamon 23
Ja’Kenya Hoskins 18
Gwen Gustafson 15
Ryanne Knoblich 13
Kylie Van Velkinburgh 13
Lyla Stuurmans 7
Anya Leavell 2

 

Boys Varsity
(9 games):

Hawthorne Wolfe 215
Xavier Murdy 105
Grady Rickner 67
Alex Murdy 39
Daniel Olson 36
Sage Downes 33
Logan Downes 28
Logan Martin 25
TJ Rickner 11
Jonathan Valenzuela 7
Cody Roberts 4
Cole White 2

 

Girls JV
(4 games):

Lyla Stuurmans – 43
Madison McMillan – 25
Jessenia Camarena – 14
Katie Marti – 7
Skylar Parker – 4
Morgan Stevens – 3
Desi Ramirez – 2
Reese Wilkinson – 1

 

Boys JV
(7 games):

Jonathan Valenzuela – 85
Cole White – 56
Dominic Coffman – 42
Logan Downes – 37
Nick Guay – 27
Zane Oldenstadt – 14
William Davidson – 12
Mikey Robinett – 7
Ryan Blouin – 4
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim – 2

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