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Archive for the ‘Girls Basketball’ Category

   Ema Smith helps anchor a bruising defense which has carried Coupeville to the playoffs. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One game, with everything riding on it.

Having made it in the postseason as the #2 seed out of the Olympic League, the Coupeville High School girls basketball squad gets a little reward mixed with a lot of danger.

The pay-off is a home playoff game 6 PM Saturday against Bellevue Christian, the #3 seed from the Nisqually League.

The danger comes with the battle royal being a loser-out game.

Win, and the Wolves get revenge for a non-conference loss earlier this season to the Vikings.

Plus, and this is probably the biggie, a victory sends Coupeville to the double-elimination portion of districts Feb. 14-17, where three of four teams will punch their ticket to the state tourney.

Here’s what you need to know before you head to the CHS gym this Saturday:

 

Ticket prices:

Cash only (no bills over $20), no checks

Adults: $8.00
Students (with ASB): $5.00
Students (without ASB): $8.00
Senior Citizens (62+): $5.00
Elementary school students: $4.00

 

How the teams compare:

Records – Coupeville (8-13); BC (12-8)

RPI rankings – Coupeville (#56); BC (#17)

Last meeting: BC beat Coupeville 51-29

Point differential – Coupeville (662-747); BC (914-692)

Seniors – Coupeville – Allison Wenzel, Kyla Briscoe, Mikayla Elfrank; BC – Catherine Dugoni, Jasmine Hathaway, Nicole Bloch 

Coaches – Coupeville – David King; BC – Mark DeJonge

 

To see the layout for the whole district hoops tourney, the final one CHS will play in District 3 before moving to the North Sound Conference and District 1 next year, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2521&sport=1

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   CMS 8th grader Katelin McCormick is counting down the days until her season starts Feb. 15. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.com)

The 7th grade Wolves pause for a group snap.

   7th grader Maddie “Mad Dog” Georges is ready to make her middle school hoops debut.

   The Wolf 8th grade squad includes a number of players from a very-successful SWISH hoops team which won a league title recently.

   Anya Leavell enters her 8th grade hoops season coming off of a strong SWISH campaign.

Like ships passing in the night.

High school basketball is headed down the backstretch, with playoffs starting this week, but middle school hoops are far from done.

Having taken control of the court, the Wolf girls kick off their 10-game season Feb. 15 with home games against Chimacum.

As they get ready under the direction of coaches Dustin Van Velkinburgh and Alex Evans, we have a sneak peak at (most of) the Wolves.

While not every player was in attendance when photos were snapped, the majority of them took time to meet with John Fisken, and the result can be seen above.

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Ashlie Shank and the Coupeville girls kick off the playoffs Feb. 10 with a home game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Winter belonged to the RedHawks, but the school year has belonged to the Wolves.

Both Port Townsend basketball teams won league titles Saturday, with the girls ending Coupeville’s three-year run atop the standings.

But, if we look at the entire 2017-2018 school year, CHS is the big dog right now.

Looking at the six fall and winter sports the Wolves play (football, volleyball, boys tennis, girls soccer and girls and boys basketball), they have the most varsity wins of any of the four Olympic League teams with 31.

Klahowya, whose boys basketball team had the title sewn up until a late-season collapse, has 28, while Port Townsend sits with 21.

Chimacum, which has suffered win-less campaigns in boys basketball and tennis, brings up the rear with nine total varsity wins.

Spring is on the horizon, and with that comes softball, baseball, girls tennis and boys soccer as we follow the team wins battle.

Track also arrives, but is largely an individual sport disguised as a team sport, and team win totals are all but impossible to keep track of when multiple schools are involved in every meet.

This is the final year of the current set-up of the Olympic League, as Coupeville is bouncing to the new North Sound Conference next fall.

Before the Wolves go, they would love to repeat as unofficial league-wide champs and defend the varsity wins title they copped last year, when they edged Klahowya 51-48.

The Eagles, who spring from the second-biggest student body in 1A, prevailed 52-40 and 45-42 over CHS the first two years of the league, with Chimacum and Port Townsend well behind in every year.

In other matters, the end of the regular season for basketball means the end of the trail for the Coupeville boys.

While the Wolf girls kick off a playoff run Feb. 10,  their male counterparts were tripped up by the Olympic League only having two playoff slots this season.

Still, before they were done, a couple of Wolves hit milestones.

Ethan Spark topped the 200-point mark in his senior season, while Hunter Smith’s 382 points was the best single season for a Wolf boy since Mike Bagby tossed in 414 back in 2004-2005.

Smith also came very close to having one of the best seasons in school history, with the tenth-best single-season mark by a Wolf boy being 392 by Wade Ellsworth in 1978-1979.

On the girls side of the ball, Wolf junior Lindsey Roberts, who still has games to play, has more than doubled her previous career total.

With 152 points this season, she’s jumped from 137 career points (#77 all-time for CHS girls) to 289 points (#36 all-time).

Final regular-season varsity scoring totals and league standings:

Girls:

Lindsey Roberts 152
Mikayla Elfrank 99
Sarah Wright 99
Ema Smith 94
Kyla Briscoe 78
Scout Smith 52
Kalia Littlejohn 38
Chelsea Prescott 34
Hannah Davidson 10
Allison Wenzel 5
Avalon Renninger 1

Boys:

Hunter Smith 382
Ethan Spark 216
Joey Lippo 88
Cameron Toomey-Stout 54
Hunter Downes 53
Mason Grove 51
Kyle Rockwell 29
Jered Brown 24
Dane Lucero 16
Gavin Knoblich 5
Ulrik Wells 4
Jacobi Pilgrim 1

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 7-2 9-10
COUPEVILLE 6-3 8-13
Chimacum 4-5 7-12
Klahowya 1-8 4-15

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 7-2 11-8
Klahowya 6-3 10-10
COUPEVILLE 5-4 7-13
Chimacum 0-9 0-14

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   David King has preached defense all season, and it has carried the Wolves back to the playoffs. (Amy King photo)

   Kyla Briscoe was one of three Wolves honored on Senior Night. (Jackie Calkins photos)

   An injury has kept senior Mikayla Elfrank on the bench for a chunk of the season, but she and her family could joke about it as they all sported bandaged legs.

Allison Wenzel capped Senior Night by playing like a beast on defense.

Defense is their calling card.

Through injuries and defections, through great games and struggles, the Coupeville High School girls basketball squad has hung its hat on stopping the other team from putting the ball in the bucket this season.

Saturday night was a prime example, as the Wolves stepped up huge, holding visiting Chimacum scoreless for 10 minutes to open the second half.

Sparked by the rush of corralling rebounds, taking charges and making off with steal after steal, Coupeville held on for a taut 36-29 win in a game which decided the #2 playoff seed from the Olympic League.

Now 8-13 overall after winning for the fourth time in their last six games, the Wolves finished 6-3 in Olympic League play.

They will host a loser-out playoff game next Saturday, Feb. 10 against the #3 team from the Nisqually League. Their foe will be known after play in that conference wraps Tuesday.

Win that postseason clash and Coupeville advances to the double-elimination portion of districts, from which three of four teams will move on to the state tourney.

After three consecutive 9-0 seasons, Coupeville capped a 33-3 run through the four-team conference by pulling off maybe its biggest accomplishment.

In past seasons, the Wolves had a transcendent star in Makana Stone and deep, veteran rosters.

This time around, they began by losing four starters (three to graduation, one to a transfer), then lost two more, including their leading scorer, as the season progressed.

That required CHS coach David King to find different ways to win, and defense has always been at the core of his teachings.

Saturday night, in the crucible against a very physical Chimacum squad, it paid off handsomely.

“Defensively we have been working really hard on sliding our feet and not reaching,” King said. “Tonight we really played the way we wanted.

Sarah (Wright) and Allison (Wenzel) were so outstanding stopping the dribble drive,” he added. “Then you take our steals off of our press and going hard to the basket once we had the ball – exactly the goal.”

Clinging to a 20-18 lead at the half, the Wolves erupted from the locker room with fire in their eyes and passion in their hearts.

With youngsters like Scout Smith and Chelsea Prescott coming of age under considerable fire from the elbow-throwing and hip-checking Cowboys, Coupeville’s defense stood tall in the third quarter.

Forcing wild shots or turnovers, then pounding the boards or getting out on the break, the Wolves took control of the game with a 10-0 run.

Kyla Briscoe netted an epic three-ball from the left side, while Ema Smith, Wright and Lindsey Roberts all drained huge buckets off of set-ups from teammates.

Wenzel fed Ema Smith, Scout Smith punched the ball between defenders to find Wright, and Prescott laid the ball right on Robert’s fingertips on a note-perfect in-bounds pass.

Coupeville’s shooting touch dried up a bit in the fourth, as the Wolves couldn’t get a field goal to drop.

A combination of stellar defense, free throws from Ema Smith (she drained six pressure-packed freebies in the game’s final minutes) and Chimacum’s terrible night at the free throw stripe (8-25) prevented the Cowboys from mounting a full comeback.

Chimacum pulled within 33-29 with a little over a minute to play, but Ema Smith drained three of four free throws to close the scoring.

Even better, the Wolf defense thoroughly shut down the Cowboys over those final 60 seconds, not letting the ball come anywhere close to hitting the net.

The game had started with a little back and forth, as Coupeville went to the first break up 9-6.

Scout Smith had the sweetest bucket of the quarter, pulling in a long pass from Briscoe, then hanging in air for an eternity before slapping home a layup over a defender’s outstretched arm.

The second quarter belonged to Roberts, who played the entire 32 minutes and combined with Wright to dominate on the boards.

The Wolf junior tossed in six points in the quarter, sticking a jumper back in off of a rebound, before converting on a pair of breakaways.

Scout Smith was back at it again, as well, losing the handle on the ball, only to spin and steal the ball right back from a Cowboy.

Completing the play o’ wonder, she promptly knocked down the layup to thoroughly befuddle Chimacum.

Ema Smith and Roberts paced the Wolves with 10 points apiece, while Wright knocked down seven, Briscoe popped for five and Scout Smith had a dazzling four.

Prescott, Wenzel and Hannah Davidson all contributed greatly to Coupeville’s withering defense.

JV falls in final moments:

The win slipped through the fingers of the Wolf young guns in literally the final few seconds, as Chimacum scored the last four points en route to a 33-29 win.

The loss leaves the JV with a final record of 3-5 in league play, 7-11 overall.

Coupeville fell behind 8-0 in the early going, then rode the stellar shooting of Ashlie Shank and some strong defense of its own to get back in the game.

Shank, who rattled in a game-high 14, got the Wolves on the board with back-to-back buckets to end the first quarter, then tossed in 10 more in the second-half.

After surging in front 10-8 midway through the second, when Maddie Hilkey took a pass from Avalon Renninger and slashed through two defenders for a go-ahead basket, CHS led most of the way.

Chimacum didn’t regain the lead until a minute into the fourth, when a 6-0 run put it up 24-20.

Shank was having none of that, knocking down a jumper, then snatching a rebound off of a missed free throw and knotting the game up with a put-back.

From that point, there were four lead changes, with neither team being more than two points ahead.

A free throw from Genna Wright gave the teams their final tie, at 29-29, but Chimacum slipped in a basket off of a nice roll under the hoop by their point guard, then sealed the deal with two free throws.

Hilkey finished with six to back Shank’s 14, while Wright (3), Renninger (2), Tia Wurzrainer (2) and Nicole Lester (2) also scored.

Kylie Chernikoff, Julia García Oñoro and Mollie Bailey also saw court time in the JV team’s season finale.

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   With a win Thursday, Chelsea Prescott and her Wolf teammates kept alive their hopes of earning a share of the Olympic League title. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It has been a season-long battle.

A rebuilding Coupeville High School girls basketball squad, especially after it lost its top scorer to a season-ending injury, has had issues putting the ball in the bucket.

On many nights, the Wolf defense has been a true bright spot, but the offense has largely been a work in progress.

Until the fourth quarter Thursday afternoon.

Suddenly, everything clicked and Coupeville ripped off a 20-1 tear over the game’s final eight minutes, running host Klahowya off the floor to a 36-21 tune.

“We found lightning in a bottle!,” exclaimed Coupeville’s very-happy coach, David King.

The win lifts the Wolves to 5-3 in Olympic League play, 7-13 overall and keeps alive their hopes of garnering a share of the conference title.

Coupeville, which has hung three consecutive league title placards on the school’s Wall of Fame, still needs everything to break its way Saturday.

The Wolves face Chimacum (4-4), while Port Townsend (6-2) plays Klahowya (1-7).

Wins by Coupeville and Klahowya would leave CHS and PTHS with identical 6-3 marks.

While the schools would share the title, Port Townsend has clinched the league’s #1 playoff seed, since it owns a tiebreaker, having taken two of three from Coupeville this season.

Saturday’s game, which is Senior Night for Kyla Briscoe, Allison Wenzel and Mikayla Elfrank, will determine if the Wolves enter the postseason as a #2 or #3 seed.

Win and Coupeville hosts a loser-out playoff game Feb. 10, one win away from the double elimination portion of districts.

Fall to Chimacum Saturday, a team it has split two games with, and CHS would be the #3 seed and open the playoffs Feb. 8 at home.

Under that scenario, they would have to survive two loser-out games to advance.

Playing their final regular season road game Thursday, the Wolves looked like they were following a familiar, and distressing, pattern.

Shot went up, but shots refused to stay in the cylinder, and CHS trailed 20-16 headed to the fourth.

A strong defensive effort kept Klahowya from pulling too far away, but buckets, any kind of buckets, was what King desired.

And the Wolves answered.

“After struggling through the first three quarters, we caught fire in all facets of the game,” he said. “Everything clicked.”

While they trailed, the Wolves were playing with a great deal of confidence, something King praised in the huddle.

“I could see a momentum shift and that we needed to keep up the effort,” he said. “It all started with our press and defensive effort.

“We got a couple of steals and easy buckets to start the fourth, then caused a couple of more turnovers,” King added. “That got our half-court defense ramped up and helped us settle down on offense.

“The jumpers we were missing in the first half all of a sudden looked smooth and put up with confidence. They started falling in bunches.”

A trio of Wolves provided the late-game offensive heroics, with Ema Smith knocking down eight in the quarter, Kyla Briscoe adding seven and Lindsey Roberts capping things with five.

Briscoe and Roberts both netted huge three-balls, while Smith (4-4) and Briscoe (2-2) combined to ice the game with flawless free-throw shooting.

All of the fourth-quarter free throws were of the 1-and-1 variety, as well, putting an added degree of danger for the Wolves, who responded like seasoned pros.

The comeback had begun in the third quarter, when King used his bench players to light a spark.

“We looked to be heading into a tailspin, so we went to our bench quickly and often trying to find a flicker of light,” he said. “Chelsea (Prescott), Allison, Avalon (Renninger) and Hannah (Davidson) did just that with their effort and defense.

Scout Smith rattled home a big bucket to turn the tide, then Roberts dropped in a trey to end the third quarter.

Riding the momentum, the Wolves dominated in the fourth by “controlling the boards and being the aggressor.”

Roberts went coast-to-coast on one play, slapping home a layup after she snagged a defensive rebound, then charged right at the heart of the Klahowya defense.

“I’ve been waiting for her to make a play like that!,” said a proud coach.

Ema Smith paced Coupeville with a game-high 13, while Roberts (10), Briscoe (9) and Scout Smith (4) also scratched their names in the book.

“We only had four players score, but each player contributed in this victory,” King said. “Defense doesn’t always show up in the stats, but all nine players contributed at some point to our success in the third and fourth quarters.”

Roberts snagged seven boards, as all nine Wolves nabbed at least one rebound. Briscoe (four assists and five steals) and Ema Smith (six steals and six rebounds) also filled up the stat sheet.

Sarah Wright capped the game with a play which perfectly captured Coupeville’s grit and will to win.

With the game all but done, an Eagle tried to take the ball to the hoop hard for a last-second layup, only to have Wright slide into place, plant herself and absorb the full brunt of the charge, causing an offensive foul call as the buzzer rang.

JV sits out (again):

The Wolf young guns failed to play for the second-straight game thanks to extenuating circumstances.

Issues with refs (or the lack of them) cost Coupeville’s #2 squad a chance to play Tuesday at Sequim.

Thursday, it was the cancellation of ferry runs, which ensured CHS had to ankle for the exits at Silverdale early.

The young Wolves sit at 7-10 heading into Saturday’s season finale.

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