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Archive for the ‘Girls Basketball’ Category

Scout Smith, seen with Lyla (left) and Tenley Stuurmans, is the new Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball coach. (Sarah Stuurmans photo)

She was born for this.

The daughter of two coaches, and sister of two more, Scout Smith was always among the most cerebral of athletes during her playing days at Coupeville High School.

Now, the former three-sport star, who was a CHS Athlete of the Year winner as a senior, is joining the coaching fraternity herself.

Well, Scout has already been working with the school’s volleyball program as a volunteer assistant, but Tuesday she was tabbed as the new JV girls’ head basketball coach.

She replaces Kassie O’Neil, who left due to a family move, and her hire will be official once approved by the school board.

Scout played volleyball, basketball, and softball during her Wolf days, before moving on to earn degrees from the University of Washington and Gonzaga with an eye on becoming a teacher.

Dad Chris Smith coached through all three seasons for several years at CHS, working with volleyball, boys’ basketball, and baseball, while mom Charlotte Young was an accomplished little league guru.

Scout’s brothers, CJ and Hunter, have also coached at their alma mater in the past, with the former calling the shots for JV baseball, and the latter leading the JV boys’ hoops program.

Like having another coach on the floor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

While Scout, a 2020 CHS grad, is the youngest of Charlotte’s three-pack, she quickly made a name for herself.

In her first athletic event as a high school student back in 2016, she reeled off 27 points on her serve, including 18 straight at one point, in a straight-sets volleyball win over Mount Vernon Christian.

The final serve almost broke the Hurricane receiver’s elbow in half, and Scoutasouras Rex was born.

By the time she wrapped up her CHS sports career, she had helped lead both volleyball and softball to state tourney success.

A team captain in all of her sports, she often played positions (setter, point guard, pitcher) which put her in leadership roles, something she always accepted and lived up to.

Scout racked up stats, brought home All-Conference and team honors, and earned respect from fellow players, coaches, and rivals by being one of the hardest-working, smartest athletes to ever pull on a Wolf uniform.

Across a span of six years (two middle school, four high school) she was a rock for Coupeville sports teams, as dependable as any athlete this blog has ever covered.

Scout with the parental figures. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It wasn’t just that Scout could make the play, but that she was so deeply ingrained in her knowledge, that she always knew what the right play was — even during a few times when everyone else was (incorrectly) screaming at her to do something differently.

She played through pain — refusing to come off the court even after turning half her face into a giant bruise after slamming into the floor during a playoff volleyball match — and she handled good times and bad with style and grace.

Scout lost her senior softball season, and a chance to make back-to-back state tourney runs, when the pandemic wiped out all spring sports.

That stung badly, and I have no doubt she would return to the field today in a heartbeat if given a replay, but she has moved on to find new milestones to make.

She’s taught two of my three nephews as a substitute PE teacher this fall, and the CHS volleyball players have benefited greatly from her presence.

Every coaching change comes with unknowns.

Falling back on sports cliches, some hires become home runs, while a rare few are closer to strikeouts.

This one? Bringing Scout into a leadership position where she can continue the family tradition of coaching excellence?

That feels like destiny coming true.

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The CHS gym was alive with the sound of basketball lessons being taught. (Photos courtesy Megan Richter)

The next generation is building for a bright future.

Twenty Coupeville Middle School girls showed up for three days, three hours each time, for a recent basketball skills camp.

The hoops event was run by CHS head coach Megan Richter, with help from middle school net guru Brooke Crowder and a group of former Wolf players.

“They worked so hard and improved so much,” Richter said of her future stars. “It was such a great experience for everyone.”

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Coupeville High School basketball players get fueled up for on-court action. (Photos courtesy Megan Richter and Christi Messner)

It’s about basketball, but it’s about more.

Coupeville High School hoops stars are off to summer roundball camp this week, with the road trip giving the Wolves a prime chance to bond as a team.

Some paint, some sand, a few hamburgers, and possibly even a car that got stuck on the beach.

Plus, a ton of hardwood games.

You win some, you lose some, you use the “off season” to build a tighter, stronger pack of players.

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When the weather heats up, so does the basketball action.

Coupeville High School coaches and players are offering a skills clinic July 1-3 for girls entering grades 5-9, which will focus on fundamentals and the values of the Wolf program.

Info can be found in the photo above.

CHS hoops guru Megan Richter and her support staff are also gearing up for summer ball.

That’s open to current and incoming high school players, with registration due by May 24.

For any questions, email Richter at mrichter@coupeville.k12.wa.us.

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Kayla Arnold was tabbed as the Most Inspirational varsity player during a basketball banquet. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Not even a hurt leg could slow her down.

Despite missing several games late in the season after a bad on-court fall, Mia Farris was the spark which lit the fire for the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad.

That was born out Thursday, as Wolf coaches handed the junior sensation their MVP award.

Farris topped a busy night of honors, with fellow varsity stars Katie Marti (Offensive MVP) and Lyla Stuurmans (Defensive MVP) also claiming big awards.

Lyla Stuurmans will eat your very soul, sister.

Sophomore Teagan Calkins earned Most Improved, Kayla Arnold was handed Most Inspirational, and Skylar Parker and Reese Wilkinson joined Arnold in being honored as four-year players.

On the JV side of things, Bryley Gilbert (Leadership Award) and Brynn Parker (Heart Award) topped things for Kassie O’Neil’s squad.

 

Other second-team honors went to:

Capri Anter – Swiss Army Knife Award
Haylee Armstrong – Master Thief Award
Ari Cunningham – Not My House Award
Lexis Drake – Warrior Award
Ava Lucero – Uplifting Award
Taylor Marrs – Sight Award
Adie Maynes – Dependable Award
Chelsi Stevens – Brave Award
Tenley Stuurmans – Lil’ Coach Award

Lexis Drake outraces a foe for a loose ball.

 

Varsity letter winners:

Kayla Arnold
Teagan Calkins
Mia Farris
Jada Heaton
Katie Marti
Madison McMillan
Skylar Parker
Lyla Stuurmans
Reese Wilkinson

 

Varsity participation certificates:

Haylee Armstrong
Bryley Gilbert
Brynn Parker

 

JV participation certificates:

Capri Anter
Haylee Armstrong
Ari Cunningham
Lexis Drake
Bryley Gilbert
Ava Lucero
Taylor Marrs
Adie Maynes
Brynn Parker
Chelsi Stevens
Tenley Stuurmans

 

Managers:

Kauri Hamilton
Melanie Wolfe

Kauri Hamilton (left) and Melanie Wolfe, best-dressed managers in the biz.

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