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Archive for the ‘Girls Basketball’ Category

Tenley Stuurmans is off to the races. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Rough first quarter, super-close final three frames.

Continuing a trend which seemed to affect every Coupeville team Monday night, the Wolf JV girls’ basketball team stumbled out of the gate, before turning on the intensity.

Ultimately, an early 10-1 deficit was a bit too much to overcome for the CHS young guns, who fell to 1-2 on the season with a 39-26 loss.

But hanging tough for the game’s final 24 minutes was a victory in itself.

“We fought a tough battle against a well-prepared Forks JV,” said Coupeville coach Scout Smith.

“Overall, it was a good game, and I was very proud of how we played.

“I never questioned our belief as a team that we could come back.”

The deficit was never more than two points in any of the final three quarters for Coupeville.

The Wolf offense was led by swing player Tenley Stuurmans, as the fab frosh exploded for a game-high 15 points while being limited to just two quarters of action.

Adeline Maynes (6), Chelsi Stevens (2), Ari Cunningham (2), and Capri Anter (1) also tallied points, with Marin Winger, Amelia Crowder, Lexis Drake, Willow Leedy-Bonifas, Sydney Van Dyke, Jeann Nitta, and Ava Lucero seeing floor time.

Smith praised her entire roster, from Cunningham and Maynes, who “were troopers playing every minute of the second half” to a duo who came up big on defense.

“Sydney did well defensively. She was disciplined in her role and protected the paint,” Smith said.

“Lexis brought a lot of energy defensively and forced a lot of turnovers towards the end of the game.”

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Wolf senior Katie Marti reached a personal milestone Monday in Forks. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They left their shooting touch at home.

Coming out ice cold in the early afternoon Monday on the road at far-off Forks, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball team built itself a big deficit and couldn’t get all the way back.

The undermanned Wolves, who were missing a key starter with Lyla Stuurmans out ill, did fight back strongly in the second half, but ultimately fell 42-29.

The non-conference loss to the always-tough Spartans snaps a two-game winning streak for Coupeville, which slips to 2-2 on the season.

Megan Richter’s squad will get to stay closer to home for its next two tilts, welcoming Orcas Island and Morton-White Pass to Whidbey Friday and Saturday, respectively.

Monday’s rumble in Forks got off to a bad start for CHS, which fell behind 16-2 after one quarter of play.

From there, the deficit stretched out to 22-4 at the half and 32-11 through three quarters.

The fourth frame was Coupeville’s strongest, with five different Wolves finding the bottom of the net to spark a game-closing 18-10 run.

Haylee Armstrong navigates the defense.

Sophomore guard Haylee Armstrong provided a large chunk of the offense for CHS, pumping in a season-high 11 points.

Mia Farris banked in seven to back her up, with Madison McMillan chipping in with four.

Jada Heaton (3), Danica Strong (2), and Katie Marti (2) rounded out the scoring, while Teagan Calkins and Tenley Stuurmans also saw substantial floor time for the Wolves.

Forks 8th grader Brooklynn Rondeau led all scorers with 17 points, including netting four of the six three-balls the Spartans made on the afternoon.

Marti did nab a bit of history in the loss, moving past Hilary Kortuem into 50th place on the CHS program’s all-time scoring chart.

The feisty senior sits with 232 points for her career, and next up on her “hit list” is her cousin, Breeanna Messner, who scored 235 points during her stellar run as a Wolf.

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Back-to-back wins have the Wolf girls at 2-1 on the year. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Welcome to the frozen tundra of Cow Town, and here’s a loss for you.

Playing in a very chilly gym Saturday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball team turned up the heat with some white-hot shooting, romping to a 53-10 win over visiting Clallam Bay.

The non-conference victory, in which nine different Wolves made the net pop, lifts Megan Richter’s squad to 2-1 on the season.

Having racked up back-to-back triumphs in less than a 24-hour span, Coupeville will try and carry its sweet shot-making ability way down the road to Forks Monday, kicking off another three-games-in-six-days stretch.

Saturday, while their fans contemplated lighting bonfires in the bleachers to warm up, the Wolves played some scorching ball.

Busting out to a 20-0 lead, Coupeville didn’t give up a shot across the first four minutes of the game, and didn’t surrender any points until a miracle three-ball plopped in with two seconds to play in the opening quarter.

Teagan Calkins set the tone by ripping down an offensive rebound, then powering back up through multiple defenders for a bucket to open the scoring.

From there, six different Wolves netted a bucket in the opening frame, with Katie Marti drilling a three-ball from the side and Danica Strong netting a gorgeous turnaround jumper to spark things.

The best play came late in the quarter, with Strong snagging a rebound and firing an outlet pass to quicksilver guard Haylee Armstrong.

The defensive dynamo showed off her offensive skills as well, hauling in the pass, taking a quick dribble or two, then sliding the ball under a defender’s arms and right onto the waiting fingertips of teammate Madison McMillan, who knocked down the running layup.

From 20-3 at the first break, the Wolves steadily turned up the heat.

Capri Anter rippled the nets on a jumper, becoming the 250th CHS girl to score in a varsity game across the past 51 seasons, before Armstrong and Tenley Stuurmans got artful.

On back-to-back breakaways, the duo changed up roles but produced nothing but net.

First Stuurmans set up Armstrong for a layup with a lob over the top, before Armstrong came right back on the next play, sucking the defense in, then flipping the ball to her running mate, who banked in the ball while on the move.

Up 30-5 at the half, Coupeville gave up a basket to open the third, before closing the game on another 23-3 run.

The pinpoint passing and sharing of the ball continued, with Mia Farris, Armstrong, and McMillan combining to pull off a wham-bam-thank-you-ma’am bucket.

So did the milestones.

Farris converted a steal into a breakaway bucket to reach 150 points for her varsity career, before Lyla Stuurmans sank a jumper — off a pass from her younger sister — to crack 200.

Coupeville spread the love around all day, with Marti topping all scorers with 10 points.

She was joined by Strong (8), Calkins (7), Farris (6), Tenley Stuurmans (6), Armstrong (6), Anter (4), McMillan (4), and Lyla Stuurmans (2).

Jada Heaton had at least three buckets roll off the rim at the last second, preventing Coupeville from going 10-for-10 in scoring, but the senior sparkplug was a whirling dervish on defense.

Whether coming in all elbows firing in pursuit of rebounds, poking balls loose to set up breakaways, or bouncing off the floor, huge grin still in place, she remains the feisty heart of the Wolves.

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The Wolves listen as coach Scout Smith (far left) talks strategy. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

They play just like their coach.

And that’s a good thing. A very good thing.

Handing former Wolf hoops supernova Scout Smith her first win as a high school head coach Friday, the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team decimated host South Whidbey in every facet of the game.

Whether it was Haylee Armstrong terrorizing the Falcon ballhandlers, or Ava Lucero strolling up court to drain a Caitlin Clark-style three-ball from well behind the line, the Wolves were poetry in motion on the hardwood.

The result?

A 40-15 romp which evens Coupeville’s early season record at 1-1 heading into a road trip Monday to the end of the Earth (otherwise known as Forks).

For Smith, among the most cerebral of players in her heyday, the first win as a coach was sweet.

“It was a great team win where we executed our plays and systems very well,” she said. “Everybody contributed and did their role.”

Armstrong, a buzzsaw on both ends of the floor who lives to collect knee burns, fired it up Gary Payton-style on defense.

Haylee had a great game defensively,” Smith said.

“She was a menace for South Whidbey guards to deal with, causing turnovers, steals, and chaos for their offense.”

Once they had possession of the ball, the Wolves quickly sent the orb crashing through the net, with seven different players scoring.

Lucero topped CHS with 10 — “She had a great night shooting,” Smith said — while Armstrong and Adeline Maynes netted nine apiece.

Ari Cunningham (5), Lexis Drake (3), Chelsi Stevens (2), and Sydney Van Dyke (2) rounded out the multi-pronged offensive attack, with Marin Winger, Capri Anter, Jeann Nitta, Amelia Crowder, and Willow Leedy-Bonifas also seeing floor time.

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Teagan Calkins, seen in 2023, is off to a red-hot start on the hardwood. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“The Red Dragon” roared.

Pouring in a game-high 14 points Friday, Teagan Calkins spurred the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad to its first win of the young season.

Holding host South Whidbey scoreless through the first period, the Wolves jumped out to a convincing lead, then kept adding to the advantage during a 33-18 Island rivalry triumph.

Now 1-1 on the season, the Wolves have a quick bounce back, hosting Clallum Bay Saturday in a game set to tip at 2:15 PM.

The CHS hoops stars should feel pretty good about themselves when they take the floor for that non-conference rumble, coming off a very-convincing win against their next-door neighbors.

The Wolves jumped out to a 12-0 lead after one frame, with Calkins, Lyla Stuurmans, and Mia Farris combining to scorch the net.

From there things were much more even, but Coupeville still came out on top in every quarter.

The lead blossomed to 19-6 at halftime, then went to 27-14 through three, with Calkins swishing a pair of three-balls en route to scoring all eight Wolf points in the third.

Her 14-point performance comes on the heels of dropping 13 in the season opener.

Farris (5), Lyla Stuurmans (4), Madison McMillan (2), Katie Marti (2), Danica Strong (2), Jada Heaton (2), and Tenley Stuurmans (2) also scored for Megan Richter’s squad.

Capri Anter made her varsity hoops debut for the Wolves, as well, while Baylie Kuschnereit and Juliette Wood paced South Whidbey with six points each.

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