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Archive for the ‘Girls Basketball’ Category

Katie Marti lines up a shot. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Two games, about a billion camera clicks.

Give or take one or two.

Photo enthusiast John Fisken was on hand Tuesday, making his final appearance in the Coupeville High School gym, and the pictures above and below capture the Wolf girls hoops squads at work.

To see more, and possibly make some pre-summer purchases, pop over to:

GBB 2021-06-08 vs Friday Harbor – John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

Izzy Wells leans back and lets fly.

Madison McMillan makes a delivery.

Morgan Stevens lofts a shot.

Skylar Parker, dangerous from outside.

Ja’Kenya Hoskins high-steps it to the hoop.

Lyla Stuurmans, way out in front (as always).

Kylie Van Velkinburgh keeps her basketball safe from prying hands.

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Savina Wells knocked down a team-high 11 points Tuesday night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This was not the way it was supposed to go.

Facing a team it ran off the floor the first time around, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team stumbled Tuesday night.

Stung by a late three-ball, the Wolves fell 32-31 to visiting Friday Harbor, ending their chances at posting a winning record in this pandemic-altered season.

Now 4-6 with games against Concrete and Darrington left on the schedule, Coupeville can still finish at .500, but Tuesday’s tilt was there for the taking, and that hurts.

“We let it slip out of our hands and we’re all disappointed,” said CHS coach Scott Fox. “We’re hoping to finish strong and head into the summer a better team for next year.”

Coupeville held the lead late, clinging to a 31-29 lead after 8th grader Savina Wells capped an 11-point performance with an emphatic put-back with barely a minute to play.

But Friday Harbor caught a break when freshman Sheya Welty drilled a three-ball from the top of the arc with 40 seconds left on the clock.

Her shot barely got off over the outstretched hands of several Wolf defenders, but once airborne, it zipped low and on a line, hitting the back of the rim and dropping cleanly through the net.

It was Friday Harbor’s third trey of the night, and the second to come off the fingertips of Welty, who paced her squad with eight points.

Coupeville had several good looks at the basket in the game’s final seconds, while Friday Harbor kept things adventurous by missing a free throw which would have pushed its lead out further.

But it wasn’t to be, as the visitors escaped and headed home with only their second win of the season.

The game was a nail-biter most of the way, with neither team able to pull away.

Savina Wells opened things by lofting in a soft jumper off a feed from Carolyn Lhamon, and she and older sister Izzy closed the opening quarter with back-to-back buckets.

Holding an early 7-3 advantage, Coupeville then went cold from the field, not scoring for five-and-a-half minutes to open the second quarter.

But, thanks to a hyped-up defense and strong work on the boards from Ja’Kenya Hoskins, Lhamon, and Savina Wells, the Wolves trailed just 9-7 when they finally broke through.

Sophomore point guard Maddie Georges slashed through the paint, rolling in a layup as she flew under the glass, and Coupeville’s offense was back open for business.

Still trailing 16-12 early in the third quarter, the Wolves finally found the magic touch they had shown the first time these two squads clashed, and looked like they were taking control of things.

A 9-0 run, with four different CHS players scoring, staked Coupeville to a 21-16 lead.

The biggest bucket came from Izzy Wells, who got three points the hard way, putting an offensive rebound back up and in while getting smashed around the head.

Her ensuing free throw caressed the net, and put Friday Harbor on its heels.

But the visitors proved to be a scrappy bunch, closing the quarter on their own 6-0 mini-tear, with a put-back a millisecond before the quarter-ending buzzer a real mood killer.

The fourth quarter was a chess game, with both teams putting together big plays to retake the lead.

Savina Wells netted a jumper off of a long rebound, while Audrianna Shaw swished a shot while on the move, taking a pass from Hoskins and beating her defender to her favorite shooting spot.

That set up the ending we already discussed, as two young stars on the rise — Savina Wells and Sheya Welty — claimed center stage in the final moments.

The Wells sisters finished with 18 points, with Savina’s 11 backed up by seven from Izzy.

Shaw (8), Lhamon (2), Georges (2), and Kylie Van Velkinburgh (1) also scored, with Anya Leavell, Ryanne Knoblich, Gwen Gustafson, Hoskins, and defensive dynamo Lyla Stuurmans seeing floor time.

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Skylar Parker and the Wolf JV finished a successful season with a win in their finale Tuesday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Exit on top.

Clamping down on defense Tuesday, the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball squad closed its season with a huge win, drilling visiting Friday Harbor 27-15.

The victory lifts the Wolves to 2-3 during a pandemic-altered season.

While Coupeville’s varsity hoops teams will play 12 games, the CHS young guns had trouble finding opponents as only three of the other six schools in the Northwest 2B/1B League fielded girls JV programs this year.

But whenever they could get on the floor, Megan Smith’s players took advantage of the opportunity, and Tuesday was no different.

The Wolves steadily chipped away at Friday Harbor, before icing the game with a brilliant fourth quarter.

Up 5-2 at the first break, Coupeville pushed the lead to 8-4 at the half and 17-13 heading into the final frame.

Once there, the Wolves outscored the visitors 10-2 over the final eight minutes of the season, with Lyla Stuurmans, Madison McMillan, and Katie Marti all putting points on the board.

Having wrapped her second season as Wolf JV coach, Smith, a three-time CHS Athlete of the Year back in the day, headed to the exit with a smile on her face.

“Couldn’t have asked for a better way to end the season for these girls!,” she said. “Everyone gave me their best, and each player improved so much this year!

“Excited for the future with this crew.”

8th graders McMillan and Stuurmans paced the Wolves in their finale, both rattling the rim for eight points, while Jessenia Camarena dropped in six.

Marti (2), Kassidy Upchurch (2), and Morgan Stevens (1) rounded out the offensive show, with Kayla Arnold, Bryley Gilbert, Reese Wilkinson, Desi Ramirez, Pam Morrell, and Skylar Parker all seeing floor time.

 

Final season scoring stats:

Lyla Stuurmans – 51
Madison McMillan – 33
Jessenia Camarena – 20
Katie Marti – 9
Skylar Parker – 4
Morgan Stevens – 4
Desi Ramirez – 2
Kassidy Upchurch – 2
Reese Wilkinson – 1

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Morgan Stevens was one of five Wolves who scored Saturday in a JV game on Orcas Island. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Some games the basket likes you, some games it doesn’t.

Unfortunately for the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball squad, Saturday was one of those latter times.

With the rims on Orcas Island being unforgiving, the Wolves, who were also missing two starters, fell 45-22 to the Vikings.

The loss drops the CHS young guns to 1-3 heading into their season finale at home Tuesday, June 8.

Friday Harbor, which Coupeville thrashed the first time around, is the opponent in that one.

Saturday, the Wolves were without Katie Marti and Madison McMillan, but the 10 girls who made the long trip were ready and rarin’ to go, and gave maximum effort.

“We had a lot of good shots, but nothing seemed to fall for us,” said CHS coach Megan Smith.

“Missing a few key players forced some girls to play in different positions and sometimes it was a scramble,” she added. “But, as always, proud of what we did.”

Orcas jumped out to a 9-4 lead after one quarter of play, then stretched the margin to 24-13 by the half and 29-19 heading into the fourth.

A 16-3 tear by the Vikings over the course of the game’s final eight minutes makes the final margin look worse than it really was most of the way.

Coupeville was led by 8th grader Lyla Stuurmans, who banked in 14 points, including all nine of her team’s points in the second quarter.

She had a bit of a duel with Orcas gunner Lili Malo, who also tallied nine in the second frame, finishing with a game-high 20 on her home floor.

Jessenia Camarena (3), Morgan Stevens (2), Desi Ramirez (2), and Reese Wilkinson (1) also scored for Coupeville, with Bryley Gilbert, Skylar Parker, Pam Morrell, Kassidy Upchurch, and Kayla Arnold all seeing floor time.

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Carolyn Lhamon returned from an injury Saturday, helping Coupeville roll to a big road win on Orcas Island. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Quite the turn around.

A game after posting its fewest points of the season, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball squad bounced back with a vengeance Saturday afternoon.

Led by Izzy Wells, who knocked down eight of her game-high 14 points in the final quarter, the Wolves held off Orcas Island 45-36 for a huge road win which doubles as sweet revenge.

The first time the teams met in Coupeville, the Vikings escaped with a three-point win.

This time out, with nine Wolves scoring and the team tying its season-high for points, it all ended in a much-happier way.

“We had a great practice yesterday and that led to an awesome performance today!,” said Coupeville coach Scott Fox. “I can’t tell you how proud I am of these girls.

“We could have folded, but we came out with a vengeance for a great road win.”

CHS was coming off back-to-back losses to undefeated La Conner and one-loss Mount Vernon Christian, but the Orcas win sends the Wolves in the right direction as the season nears its end.

The Wolves, now 4-5 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, have games left against Friday Harbor, Concrete, and Darrington — all teams they have previously beaten this season by double-digits.

Coupeville only scored six points total in its loss to MVC, but put up 15 Saturday in the first quarter alone.

Yet still trailed 20-15 at the first break, as the squads swapped buckets and pushed the pace.

A pair of Orcas three-balls to end the quarter was the difference, but the Wolves didn’t seem flustered a bit.

They were moving the ball crisply, and getting points from everyone on the floor, with six different players tallying a bucket in the opening frame.

Audrianna Shaw started things, going up and around a backpedaling defender for the game’s first bucket, then turned around and fired a crisp outlet pass to set up Maddie Georges for a layup on the very next possession.

Wolf 8th grader Savina Wells netted a three-ball of her own, flipping the net high, and the game looked like it might end with both teams gunning for 70-75 points.

Instead, the combined point totals came down the rest of the way, falling from 35 in the first, to 20 in the second, then 16 and 10 after the half.

A big part of that was Coupeville’s defense, which limited Orcas to more no three-balls after the first quarter, and just 16 points across the final three quarters.

Ja’Kenya Hoskins, Carolyn Lhamon, and Savina Wells dominated the boards, while the Wolf guards attacked from all angles, causing frequent turnovers.

Once they had the ball in their hands, the Wolves continued to spread out their offense, with Kylie Van Velkinburgh and Ryanne Knoblich getting on the board with buckets to open the second quarter.

Both baskets were set up by crisp passes, as Savina Wells and Georges fired balls which zipped between defenders before landing softly in their teammate’s hands.

Coupeville took the lead for good at 23-22, with Hoskins dropping a pair of velvety-smooth free throws through the net, then continued to turn up the defensive heat.

Orcas, playing its season finale in this pandemic-altered season, didn’t go down easily, however.

The Vikings stayed within range at 37-34 through three quarters, and it could have been even tighter.

But, up by a single point, Shaw busted the defense, hauled in a long pass, and slapped home a layup right before the Orcas scorekeeper could hit the buzzer to signal the end of the quarter.

After exchanging buckets to open the fourth, the ever-serene Izzy Wells strolled across the court and drove a stake through the heart of Vikings fans everywhere.

Scoring on a combination of moves, Savina’s older sister iced things by collecting the game’s final three buckets, earning a nod of approval from her coach.

Izzy’s offensive performance was spectacular to see,” Fox said. “Audri was our rock, as usual, and Ja’Kenya crashed the boards like no other.

“It makes the ferry ride home much nicer!”

With her 14-point performance, Izzy Wells cracks the 100-point club, becoming the 102nd girl in CHS hoops history to do so since 1974.

She actually has 102 points, and counting, and is (for the moment at least) the #101 scorer all-time.

Shaw, who is making her own run at the 100-point club, finished with 11 Saturday, while Hoskins and Georges tossed in four apiece.

Knoblich (3), Savina Wells (3), Gwen Gustafson (2), Van Velkinburgh (2), and Lhamon (2) rounded out the offense, while Lyla Stuurmans and Anya Leavell also saw floor time.

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