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Archive for the ‘Boys Basketball’ Category

Alex Murdy knocked down 14 points Saturday, one of four Wolves to score in double digits in a big Coupeville win. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Attack as a pack.

Two games into the season, the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball squad has proven to be very balanced, and very dangerous.

After toppling 3A Oak Harbor in their opener, the Wolves returned to the floor Saturday and came within a point of having five players score in double-digits.

Romping to a 71-53 non-conference win over fellow 2B school Forks — in a game it led by as many as 30 points — Coupeville improved to a sterling 2-0 heading into the start of league play.

The Wolves next four games, three of which will be on the road, pit them against Northwest 2B/1B League rivals.

Coupeville came within a half-game of a conference title during a Covid-altered season this spring, and coach Brad Sherman and his team want to finish the mission this time out.

So far, the Wolves have more than looked ready, as they have used a withering defense, a willingness to share the ball on offense, and an appreciation for the intangibles of the game to impress their home fans.

Saturday’s tilt was close, for about four to five minutes, and then Coupeville seized control.

The Wolves went up 6-5 on a hanger in the paint from Grady Rickner — a bucket which gave the steady senior his 100th career varsity point — and CHS never relinquished the lead after that.

The first quarter was a prime example of what this team can do when it’s clicking, as six different players dropped in points during a game-opening 23-13 run.

Hawthorne Wolfe buried a three-ball from the cheap seats, then picked the ball at midcourt and spun in for a layup on the very next play.

But it was the rampagin’ Murdy boys who let Forks know the drive home would be a long, sad one, as they terrorized the Spartans into frequent turnovers.

Alex Murdy tossed in a team-high eight points in the first frame, dipping and diving and flipping the ball off the glass with style, while older brother Xavier was, as always, the rock.

Hauling down rebound after rebound, poking balls free, then getting out on the break, X-Man attacked from every angle, earning a slight nod of approval from low-key uncle, and former Wolf hoops great, Allen Black.

Xavier Murdy sliced ‘n diced the Forks defense, just as he did against Oak Harbor.

The best bucket of the first quarter was a Murdy mashup, as Alex flipped a pass across his body to Xavier while flying down the sideline, then pumped his fist as his brother banked the ball home.

The second quarter was where the dam broke, and Forks got washed away in the ensuing flood.

Coupeville senior Logan Martin opened the frame by lofting in a gorgeous three-ball from the left side, then the Wolf defense got savage.

The game jumped from 34-21 to 48-21 in the blink of an eye, as most of Sherman’s defensive dreams came true one after another.

Jumping on the ballhandlers while backed by the increasing roar of a pro-Wolf crowd, CHS ripped off steals, and converted those thefts into buckets, so quickly I almost didn’t get all the plays written down in my notebook.

Almost.

The onslaught was an equal opportunity feast, with five Wolves scoring in the game-busting 14-0 run to end the half.

Logan Downes got the biggest roar, banging home a twisting three-ball, while a bucket from Wolfe was a major moment in the program’s 105-year history.

Those two points, almost lost in the barrage, allowed Hawk to move into 20th place on the all-time CHS boys basketball career scoring list, passing legendary early 2000’s gunner Chris Good.

Coupeville briefly stretched the lead out to 30 points coming out of the halftime break, with Wolfe burying another three-ball, then the Wolves relaxed a bit and coasted in for the win.

Forks still trailed by 27 with a little under three minutes to play, before using a 9-0 surge at the end to make the final score seem like slightly less of a blowout.

With Coupeville’s bench players on the floor, another milestone was achieved as Dominic Coffman recorded his first varsity basket.

The Wolf junior, who had a breakout season on the football gridiron this fall, rippled the net on a sweet lil’ runner in the paint, then immediately turned and scrambled back on defense in a move sure to please coaches in both sports.

Wolfe led Coupeville’s balanced attack, netting a team-high 16 points, while Alex Murdy (14), Xavier Murdy (13), and Downes (10) were hot on his heels.

Caleb Meyer (9), Rickner (4), Martin (3), and Coffman (2) also scored as the Wolves broke 70 points for the second-straight game.

Cole White and Jonathan Valenzuela rounded out the CHS players to see floor time, with Valenzuela making his season debut.

Coupeville opens league play next Friday, Dec. 10, when it welcomes Darrington to town.

After that, the Wolves hit the road for NWL games against Orcas Island (Dec. 11), Concrete (Dec. 14), and Mount Vernon Christian (Dec. 17).

A non-conference clash with next-door neighbor South Whidbey (Dec. 18) wraps the 2021 part of the 2021-2022 hoops season.

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Ryan Blouin dropped in a team-high nine points for Coupeville Saturday. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“We’re young, we’ve got some talent, we just need to keep working and learning.”

That was the assessment by veteran coach Randy Bottorff after the Coupeville High School JV boys basketball team battled visiting Forks down to the wire Saturday in a narrow loss.

The Wolves, who were without injured big man William Davidson, did get seven players into the scoring column in a 41-33 non-conference defeat.

Now 0-2 on the young season, the Wolf JV has time to work on fine-tuning things, with their next game a week away.

Forks withstood an early barrage of points by Coupeville gunner Ryan Blouin and carried a 12-9 lead into the first break.

The Wolves sliced their deficit to 21-19 at the half, and were still just down 29-25 heading into the final frame.

Nick Guay has been a steadying presence for a young Wolf team.

Blouin finished with a team-high nine points — five of those coming in the opening quarter — while Zane Oldenstadt dropped in eight in support.

Nick Guay (6), Hunter Bronec (4), Johnny Porter (2), Landon Roberts (2), and Jack Porter (2) also scored, with Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, Hurlee Bronec, and Mikey Robinett chipping in with defense and hustle.

For freshmen Roberts and Johnny Porter, Saturday’s buckets accounted for their first points as high school basketball players.

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Hunter Bronec gets a new season kick-started. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The gym was loud enough you couldn’t hear the camera clicks.

But they were there, as John Fisken wandered here and there Wednesday night, capturing images from both the Coupeville High School boys varsity and JV games on opening night.

To see everything he snapped, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2021-2022/BBB-2021-12-01-vs-Oak-Harbor/

 

Hawthorne Wolfe gets fancy.

Ryan Blouin rifles a pass over the defense.

Logan Downes bolts to the hoop.

JV coach Hunter Smith discusses strategy.

Cole White dazzles like his dad, Greg (second from right), did back in the day.

Zane Oldenstadt dominates in the paint.

That moment when a 2B school beats a 3A one, and makes sure the losing team’s 10-mile trip home will feel like 1,000 miles.

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Playing in a Coupeville uniform for the first time since 8th grade, Caleb Meyer came up huge in an epic win over Oak Harbor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They could have broken.

In other seasons, they probably would have broken.

But not this team, not this year.

Kicking off a new campaign with a bang, the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball squad withstood a gut-wrenching 12-0 run by visiting Oak Harbor at the start of the third quarter Wednesday, then roared back to stun its visitors.

With multiple Wolves dropping haymakers in front of the largest crowd to cram the CHS gym in likely a decade, Coupeville came all the way back to stuff their next-door neighbors 70-64.

Which means that yes, a lil’ 2B school just spanked a much-larger 3A program, and the Wildcats are never going to hear the end of it.

Last time this happened, when Ian Smith and Hunter Hammer were running wild in Wolf uniforms, Oak Harbor didn’t play Coupeville on the hardwood again for nearly 10 seasons.

In the crowd Wednesday, all the first-graders from Wolf Nation could be heard yelling, “We’ve got next!,” while everyone else hopes OHHS officials are willing to lick their wounds and keep the renewed rivalry going.

Three years ago, when this year’s Coupeville seniors were freshmen, the two schools met for the first time in forever, and the Wildcats ran away with a lopsided win.

The next year, Oak Harbor escaped with a two-point win in overtime, then Covid erased all non-conference games last season.

Enter senior season for Xavier Murdy, Grady Rickner, Logan Martin, and Hawthorne Wolfe, the one CHS player to be on the floor for that 2018 varsity loss.

Oh yes, and add one more senior to that group, with the return of Caleb Meyer, who departed Coupeville after 8th grade, and returned Wednesday to drive a stake through the heart of Oak Harbor fans.

The curly-haired lil’ kid who once hung out at his grandmother’s movie mecca, Videoville, is now a curly-haired man, though still with a grin as big as any.

Back on the floor with the guys he grew up with, Meyer shot off the bench like a rocket unleashed during pre-game introductions, then did much of his team’s ball-handling, holding up extremely well under heavy pressure from the Wildcats.

But what will be remembered most is his play in the fourth quarter, as he pumped in 13 of his team-high 19 points, including 11 in a game-busting 13-3 run.

Having survived Oak Harbor’s third-quarter surge, thanks to a collection of big shots from ice-water-in-his-veins sophomore Logan Downes, the Wolves trailed 50-45 heading into the final frame.

That was better than 43-33 after the Wildcats hit four consecutive three-balls coming out of the halftime break, but there was still work to be done.

Perfect time for a little teleplay I like to call Caleb Meyer: Man of Destiny.

A three-point play the hard way, set up by an Xavier Murdy dish.

A runner in the paint, the ball arcing and dropping from the heavens.

A steal and breakaway.

Toss in four free throws, as Meyer was lights-out at the charity stripe all night, and Oak Harbor had little answer for the rampaging Wolf.

The few times the ball left his hands, Coupeville still hit pay-dirt, with Alex Murdy, Xavier Murdy, and Downes draining key buckets, and a banged-up Wolfe swishing key free throws in the waning moments.

The crowd, which mostly listened to CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith and kept its collective face masks pulled up, was bonkers, especially when Oak Harbor melted down, its coaching staff earning a game-capping technical foul for backtalk.

Though the mere fact the refs could hear the sass over the roar of the crowd was sort of amazing.

The furious finale, with Coupeville closing on a 25-14 run in the fourth, capped a thrilling brawl between two teams who brought everything they had to the floor.

Wolfe airmailed home a pair of three-balls in the opening quarter, with Xavier Murdy hitting one of his own, though Oak Harbor clung to a 16-15 lead headed to the break.

Coupeville flipped the script in the second frame, forcing a 31-31 tie at the half by closing on a 10-5 tear.

Meyer dropped in six of those points, with one bucket coming after Xavier Murdy made a phenomenal save on a ball headed out of bounds.

Several Oak Harbor players in the vicinity screeched to a halt, only to see X-Man hurtle past them, bound towards the back wall, and somehow redirect the ball in the millisecond before he crashed out of bounds.

Wolf sophomore Cole White was maybe a little less awe-inspiring, yet still came up almost as big in the moment, stealing the ball away as the ‘Cats stormed down court in a bid to break the tie right before the buzzer.

Riding the wave of excitement, the Wolves opened the third quarter with Meyer drawing a charge on an out-of-control foe, before Wolfe got electric, tip-toeing through the paint for a dipsy-do bucket.

And then disaster struck.

One, two, three, four times, the ball went airborne and Oak Harbor found nothing but the bottom of the net.

The home section of the crowd was stunned. The refs were even a little stunned.

The overflow Wildcat student section was, appropriately, loud ‘n proud.

Though no worries, as by night’s end, they had a whole lot less to be happy about.

But you know who wasn’t stunned? The Wolf players.

Huddled around coach Brad Sherman, Coupeville’s hardwood heroes all showed the same body language.

Heads were up. Ears were open. No pouting, no panic.

Hitting the floor with the same intensity they had before the tsunami hit, the Wolves kept coming.

Downes dropped a trey from the right side, then swished another from the left side just to even things out, before slapping home a layup off of an Xavier Murdy steal.

X-Man swished his own runner in the paint, then Alex Murdy nailed a turnaround jumper, sending their 10,837 family members in the stands into delirium.

That set up the sweet finale, and while 1-0 is just a start for a team with big dreams, it was more than enough to bring a smile to Sherman’s face.

“That was nice. Very nice. A true team win.”

A perfect choice of words, as the scorebook revealed.

While Oak Harbor senior Gage McLeod led all scorers with 21 points, it was Coupeville’s balanced attack which carried the day.

Meyer finished with 19, as four Wolves finished with double-digit scoring.

Wolfe rattled the rims for 16, moving from #24 to #21 on the CHS boys career scoring chart.

With 680 points and counting, he passes Coupeville hoops legends Foster Faris (668), Virgil Roehl (674), and Gavin Keohane (677), and moves within eight points of catching Chris Good (688).

The same Good who once ran the floor alongside Wolfe’s current coach, Sherman.

The circle of life, forever playing out across 105 seasons of CHS basketball.

Downes banked in 14 Wednesday, Xavier Murdy knocked down 11, while Grady Rickner and Alex Murdy rounded out the attack with five points each.

Coupeville got big performances from everyone on the floor, with White showing off nimble fingers on defense, and Logan Martin hitting the boards with intensity.

Meanwhile, Dominic Coffman, Jonathan Valenzuela, and Zane Oldenstadt kept the Wolf bench rockin’ as their teammates etched a win for the ages.

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Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim and the Wolf JV made their season debut Wednesday night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Good start, good finish, rough middle.

The Coupeville High School JV boys basketball squad held its own with Oak Harbor in the first and fourth quarters Wednesday, but an offensive letdown in between led to a 55-28 loss in the season opener.

The non-conference tilt, which featured a 2B school hosting a 3A one, was a tense affair for eight minutes.

With Nick Guay and Ryan Blouin dropping three-balls to lead the way, the Wolves went to the first break tied at 14-14.

Unfortunately, things fell apart a bit after that, with Oak Harbor using 18-4 and 15-0 runs across the next two frames to essentially put the game on ice.

Coupeville fought until the end, however, outscoring the visiting Wildcats 10-8 in the fourth quarter, with four different Wolves getting in to the scoring column.

Sophomore Mikey Robinett led the CHS offense, pouring in eight points, with Blouin banking in seven, and Hunter Bronec popping for six.

Guay added five, while Jack Porter hit a fourth-quarter bucket to round out the Wolf attack.

Oak Harbor was led by the one-two combo of Jackson Wesley and Taylen Bader, who went for 17 and 12, respectively.

Coupeville coach Hunter Smith, kicking off his second season at the helm of the JV program, doled out playing time to all 12 players in uniform.

Landon Roberts, Hurlee Bronec, Carson Field, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, Zane Oldenstadt, William Davidson, and Johnny Porter all saw action for a Wolf squad which returns to action Saturday at home against Forks.

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