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Archive for the ‘Boys Basketball’ Category

Zane Oldenstadt was one of five Wolves who scored Thursday as Coupeville’s JV boys won their first game of the season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hunter Smith is in the fraternity.

The player turned coach won his first game since picking up the clipboard, guiding the Coupeville High School JV boys basketball squad to a 37-21 drubbing of visiting La Conner Thursday night.

After several close calls, the victory lifts the young Wolves to 1-3 on the season.

Smith’s first W came in front of sister Scout, mom Charlotte, and dad Chris, who was the Wolf JV coach until stepping down after last season.

While the former roundball sage was wearing a mask, his smile after the victory came pouring out around the edges.

Meanwhile, the ever-calm Hunter, who rarely betrayed his feelings as he poured in 847 varsity points during his days in a CHS uniform, nodded (slightly) and moved on with his night.

His young charges bolted out to a 10-4 lead against La Conner, with Jonathan Valenzuela pouring in five points in the first quarter.

After a pair of close frames, with Coupeville taking the second 7-6, before La Conner claimed the third 9-8, the Wolves put the win on ice.

The fourth quarter was Cole White time, with the freshman guard pouring in eight of his game-high 13 points during a game-capping 12-2 run.

Fellow frosh Logan Downes, making his first JV appearance of the season, added nine points, while Valenzuela (7), Dominic Coffman (6), and Zane Oldenstadt (2) also scored.

Not only did Hunter Smith nab the win, but he also emulated his father in working his roster like a seasoned pro, getting floor time for 14 players.

Andrew Williams, Mikey Robinett, Ryan Blouin, Nick Guay, Alex Wasik, Narciso Lopez, Nathan Ginnings, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, and William Davidson all can say they played in the landmark game.

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Wolf freshman Cole White scored his first varsity points Tuesday at home against Concrete. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Milestones make stat geeks giddy.

Tuesday night, as the Coupeville High School boys basketball team battered visiting Concrete 71-17, there were two such moments in time.

One — Hawthorne Wolfe cracking the 500-point career scoring club — was noted in my game story last night.

Today we note the other.

When Wolf freshman Cole White scored his first varsity points, he joined an exclusive club.

With 5:13 left in the game, Jonathan Valenzuela, trapped under the basket, looped a pass to his fellow swing player, who was lurking on the left side.

White caught the ball, popped a short jumper, and the net flipped upwards as history tumbled through it.

With the bucket, Cole joined dad Greg, watching the game from the bench as a CHS assistant coach, on the school’s career scoring chart.

The elder White rippled the nets for 604 points back when he was wearing short-shorts, and still sits #31 all-time.

But the basket had another historical note to it, as Cole White became the 400th Wolf boy I’ve been able to document scoring at least one point in a varsity hoops game.

From Jeff Stone and Mike Bagby, tied with 1,137 points, to Paul Baher, Robert Engle, Bob FranzenMeryl Gordon, Oscar Liquidano, and Raleigh Sherman — who all netted a single varsity free throw — it’s a long and diverse list.

Boys basketball has been active at CHS since 1917, and my pursuit of what is now 104 years of scoring history is not a complete one.

I’m missing points for a fair amount of players from the 1930’s and 1940’s, but I do have totals for two seasons in the 1920’s(!), so we’re getting there.

If a bunch of old-timey scorebooks suddenly appeared in the blink of a time machine, we obviously would go above 400 Wolf boys having scored.

Floyd Wanamaker, Dean Edmundson, and the rest of the 1925-1926 Wolves, you will be honored, one day!

OK, probably not, but we can still hope.

But we’re pretty dang solid from the early ’50s to today, with scattered records from before, so if the 400 isn’t 100% correct, it’s getting closer and closer.

For the moment, though, don’t worry about what could be. Instead, celebrate what is known.

Valenzuela, who also scored his first varsity points Tuesday, became #399 in the third quarter, then set up White to be #400.

Milestone city, baby.

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Coupeville junior Hawthorne Wolfe is the 48th CHS boy in 104 years to crack the 500-point scoring club. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hawk got historical, then he got off the floor.

Coupeville High School junior Hawthorne Wolfe cracked the 500-point career scoring club Tuesday, then he and the other starters handed the game over to their teammates.

Jumping out to a 31-2 lead after one quarter, with Wolfe and Grady Rickner each tossing in 10 points, CHS eventually coasted in with a resounding 71-17 thumping of visiting Concrete.

The win evens Coupeville’s record at 2-2 heading into another home game Thursday, with La Conner set to visit Whidbey.

Everything was dropping for the Wolves Tuesday, especially in the early going.

Xavier Murdy, Logan Martin, and Wolfe all hit three-balls, as seven different Coupeville players got into the scoring column in the first quarter.

With the game already all but decided just eight minutes in, Coupeville coach Brad Sherman went deep on his bench, getting all 12 players a chance to score.

The Wolves pushed the lead out to 47-6 at the half, then the starters took a seat and let their backups play most of the second half.

That allowed the scoring to be spread out all the way across the scorebook, keeping June Mazdra and her well-sharpened pencils busy.

Grady Rickner paced Coupeville with a game-high 15 points, while Wolfe’s 12 points all came in the first half.

That was enough to lift him to 504 points, making him the 48th CHS boy in the 104-year history of the program to crack the exclusive club.

Wolfe passes Jason Bagby (499) and David Lortz (502), moving into 47th place on the career scoring chart.

Xavier Murdy added nine points in support of his Class of 2022 teammates, with Logan Downes and Jonathan Valenzuela adding seven apiece.

Alex Murdy (5), Daniel Olson (4), TJ Rickner (3), Martin (3), Cole White (2), Cody Roberts (2), and Sage Downes (2) rounded out the explosive offensive barrage.

It was the first varsity points for Valenzuela and White, who joins dad Greg on the Wolf boys career scoring chart.

With Cole’s bucket, the CHS assistant coach father-freshman son duo now have a combined 606 varsity points to their credit.

Coupeville had a strong shooting performance in every aspect of the game, hitting 13 of 17 from the free-throw line, while six different players nailed a three-ball.

Raining down treys were Valenzuela, Logan Downes, Wolfe, Grady Rickner, Xavier Murdy, and Martin.

 

JV grabs some pine time: 

Concrete only goes one team deep, with a thin roster at that, so the younger Wolves had the night off.

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Hunter Bronec, seen in pre-pandemic times, scored a team-high 10 points Saturday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“You showed grit and that’s what it took to win.”

As the Coupeville SWISH boys basketball team celebrated another win Saturday, that was the message coach Sean O’Neill delivered to his players.

And it was a message which resonated in the afterglow of a 27-25 victory over Sedro Woolley, a triumph clinched when Aiden O’Neill drained two free throws in the final moments.

Saturday, the Wolves opened slowly, but recovered with plenty of time left to play.

Overcoming “a horrific first eight minutes in which we couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn or play defense, we cleared our heads,” said Jon Roberts.

Twin terrors Hunter and Hurlee Bronec dominated in the paint, and Jack Porter drilled “a nice eight-footer” as Coupeville rallied to take a 15-14 lead into the halftime break.

Things weren’t going to be easy, however, as Sedro came out on fire to start the second, going off on a 6-0 tear.

Chase Anderson netted a three-ball for the Wolves to start the second comeback, then Coupeville clamped down on defense behind the spirited work of Landon Roberts.

Hunter Bronec paced his squad with a team-high 10 points, while Hurlee Bronec (6), Anderson (5), O’Neill (3), Jack Porter (2), and Johnny Porter (1) also scored.

Camden Glover and Landon Roberts round out the Coupeville roster, which is now 5-1 on the season heading into a bye week.

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The Zinger lives!

One mission accomplished.

Thanks to a Google search where he inadvertently discovered my obsession with his high school hoops exploits, Jack Elzinga has helped me fill in one of the missing pieces of Coupeville High School boys basketball history.

As I’ve tried to compile a complete scoring record for a program which began in 1917, it’s been an uphill battle, especially with anything before the “modern” era.

I’ve felt pretty good about what we have, which goes 398 players deep, though the gaps will always bother me.

While we may never track down stats for the guys from the ’30s and ’40s, I can deal with that.

Scoring was at a much-lower rate back then, and no one from that time period would likely crack the career top 100, much less top 10.

But three guys from the ’50s — Elzinga, Tom Sahli, and Jerry Zylstra — kept me awake at night.

Well that, and the fact “Big” Mike Criscuola may never get his proper due, as his missing 8th grade stats and questionable playoff totals from other seasons have him #5 all-time, when he’s closer to #1.

But back to Elzinga, Sahli, and Zylstra, and the “missing” seasons of 1951-1952 and 1953-1954.

Or … formerly missing seasons, at least in the case of 53-54.

Thanks to Elzinga, who is a Professor Emeritus for the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering at the University of Florida, we now have scoring stats for that campaign.

The fast facts:

Sahli, a senior, scored 409 points that season, which is the seventh-best single-season performance by a Wolf boy.

Combined with the 310 he scored as a junior, he now sits with 719 points on my list, jumping from #90 to #19 on the career scoring chart.

Though, if someone can come up with totals from Sahli’s sophomore year (51-52), he’ll shoot even higher.

Always something to keep me awake.

Elzinga and Zylstra, sophomores on that 53-54 squad, went for 124 and 122 points, raising their (now final) career totals to 770 and 527, respectively.

That moves Elzinga from #25 to #14 and Zylstra from #59 to #42 all-time.

All while giving current Coupeville sniper Hawthorne Wolfe a little more work to do, as the 1950’s-era players getting their rightful due bumps him back (for a moment) from #47 to #49.

With 492 points and counting and nine games left in this pandemic-shortened season, the CHS junior, who has often expressed interest in players who came before him, will likely take that as a challenge.

As we update the ever-evolving 104-year history of Wolf boys basketball, I also offer up the following from Elzinga.

Like my communications with legendary former CHS coach Bob Barker, it reads more like a well-written book than an email.

 

David,

I did a vanity Google this afternoon and came upon your blog.

I can fill in some of your gaps. I have the 1954 Leloo Cly.

That was my sophomore year and Tom Sahli’s senior year. He averaged 19.5 pts/game. Later I saw him play against Elgin Baylor.

We were a pretty good team – the yearbook said we had the best record in “several years.”

Sahli was our star – we mostly passed the ball around until we could get it to him.

Leloo Cly doesn’t record rebounds but Tom seemed to snatch every one. 

I started every game, averaging 5.6 pts/game.

After Tom graduated I became the center and had two productive seasons. 

I was All-District in the end-of-year tournaments both years. As I recall, I averaged about 15 pts/game both seasons.

Gil Winje put together some scrapbooks of press clippings of the Tri-County basketball league.

These clippings were new to me – no one in Coupeville read the Everett paper.

Gil did this for his brother who played for Granite Falls. He did this for other years too.

Getting the scrapbook of my senior year of basketball was a fabulous treat.

We had a successful season that year but fell short of going to state.

La Conner was a big rivalry but we beat them home-and-away that year, but lost to them in the consolation game of the district tourney.

They went on to state where Gail Thulen set the place on fire, shattering records, scoring 41 points in one game to set the state tourney record.

We’d seen a lot of Gail and I guess we’d learned how to corral him.

I think Gail got a scholarship to Washington State.

Me? I got a scholarship to Everett Junior College, where I played one year before moving on to U-Dub to focus on my studies.

They don’t put this in the record books but I’m sure I’m the only All-District player who survived polio five years previously.

Harold Buckner was an excellent baseball player as you have noted in your blog. We’re still good friends.

This has been a ball for me. So happy to share things with someone with your quirky interests.

If I can find any more info I’ll send it along.

Best regards,

Jack

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