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Archive for the ‘Middle School’ Category

Sage Downes (John Fisken photos)

   Sage Downes, seen here in an earlier game, helped the CMS 7th grade varsity have the closest game of the afternoon Monday. (John Fisken photos)

Jean Lund-Olsen scored buckets in two separate games.

Jean Lund-Olsen scored buckets in two separate games.

Some days you’re rolling and others you just get rolled.

Monday was the second kind of day for the Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball program, as all four of its teams were routed by visiting Stevens.

It was the final home game for the Wolf boys (they travel to Sequim Thursday to wrap the season), but, facing off with a ginormous school that feeds 2A Port Angeles, Coupeville had little chance for a sweet swan song.

At the eighth grade level, with a couple of players missing, the Wolves fielded seven players for their varsity game and just six for the JV contest.

Stevens, by contrast, routinely swapped out all five players at the same time, running in platoons on a regular schedule.

Buoyed by fresh legs, Stevens steamrolled to 56-20 (varsity) and 57-12 (JV) wins in 8th grade play.

Across the hall in the middle school gym, their 7th grade counterparts picked apart the Wolves 48-25 (varsity) and 48-12 (JV).

8th grade varsity — An atrocious start, with CMS falling behind 16-0 midway through the first, proved impossible to overcome.

Sean Toomey-Stout finally broke the drought for the Wolves, picking up a loose ball and taking it coast to coast for a bucket.

A sweet running hook off the fingertips of Mason Grove and a couple of soft jumpers from Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim were the highlights the rest of the way, but Stevens used a sizable height and strength advantage to control the game in the paint.

Coupeville put together its best run in the fourth, with Toomey-Stout and Pacquette-Pilgrim both tossing in four.

Toomey-Stout’s buckets, coming on consecutive possessions, were the prettiest of the day, as the left-hander muscled his way past his defender, went airborne, then hung in the air, leg kicking out as he drained the jumper.

Pacquette-Pilgrim topped the scoring chart with eight, while Toomey-Stout (6), Grove (2), Jean Lund-Olsen (2) and Jered Brown (2) penciled in their names as well.

8th grade JV — The Wolves had trouble controlling the ball and getting into any kind of offensive flow, not hitting their first basket until late in the second quarter.

Things went uphill a bit in the second half, when hard-working Omar Moralez scored all six of his points.

The first bucket came on a pullback jumper, as he charged into a pack of Stevens players, then fell back and lofted up the ball over the outstretched hands of multiple defenders.

His other baskets both came off of rebounds.

One of them, after he ripped a rebound away from a rival, banked in off the glass with 0:01 on the clock in the third, raising the biggest cheer of the afternoon from the Wolf high school players in attendance.

Dawson Houston added four, while Aram Leyva and Gavin Knoblich each netted a free-throw for CMS.

7th grade varsityJake Mitten was the lone Wolf to reach double digits, powering to a team-high 14 in the closest game of the day.

Daniel Olson tossed in four, Dakota Eck hit for three and Matthew Kelley and Sage Downes each chipped in with a bucket to round out the scoring.

7th grade JVTucker Hall and Michael Laska led the way with three apiece, while Ben Smith, Alex Jimenez and Lund-Olsen netted two apiece.

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Matthew Kelley (John Fisken photos)

   Matthew Kelley knocked down 11 Friday, one of three Wolf 7th graders to hit double digits in a win. (John Fisken photos)

Jered Brown went off for a team-high 13 in the 8th grade game.

   Jered Brown matched his uniform number, going off for a team-high 13 in the 8th grade game.

Both teams started hot, but only one stayed that way the whole night.

Playing back-to-back games for the first time this season, with both on the road, the Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball squads managed to eke out a split Friday.

The 7th grade Wolves got double-digit scoring from three of their starters in Port Townsend en route to thumping host Blue Heron Middle School 51-38.

Their 8th grade counterparts got off to a quick start, as well, but, after scoring 13 points in the first quarter, managed only 14 the rest of the way and fell 47-27.

Coupeville, which had just returned from a far-flung visit to Forks on Thursday, was forced to jump right back on the bus thanks to an earlier-season game that was denied by bad weather which grounded the ferry system.

For the school’s young guns, that proved no problem, as they romped all afternoon, with a 17-point third quarter putting the game on ice.

Freewheeling long-range gunner Daniel Olson paced the Wolves, scoring 13 of his team-high 15 in the second half.

Matthew Kelley dropped in 11, while Jake Mitten worked the paint for 10.

Dakota Eck added a season-best eight, with six coming in the third, while Sage Downes (3), Ben Smith (2) and Michael Laska (2) also scored for Coupeville.

In the 8th grade game, CMS fluctuated wildly, with 13 in the first and 10 in the third, yet just a lone basket in both the second and fourth quarters.

Only three Wolves scored, with Jered Brown leading the attack with 13.

Mason Grove popped for eight and Koa Davison banked home six.

Coupeville closes the boys middle school hoops season with two games next week against schools with huge student bodies.

The Wolves host Stevens Monday (2:45 tip), then travel to Sequim Thursday.

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Daniel Olson (John Fisken photo)

   Daniel Olson and the Wolves fought hard but fell in Forks Thursday. (John Fisken photo)

The Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball teams ventured into bat country Thursday and returned from Forks (Twilight … bats, you get it) with three losses in three games.

The JV squad, which was a joint venture between the 7th and 8th grade squads, had the best result, pushing their hosts to overtime before falling 33-29.

That game featured a breakout performance by Omar Moralez, who threw down eight of his team-high 12 during a fourth-quarter rally.

Dawson Houston tallied seven in support, Aram Leyva banked home five, Aiden Juras and Gavin Knoblich popped for two apiece and Johnathan Partida swished a free-throw to round out Coupeville’s scoring.

Tucker Hall, Jaylen Nitta, Michael Laska, Gage Powers, Ben Smith and Alex Jimenez also saw floor time in that game.

Coupeville’s varsity squads had a little more trouble scoring, racking up a combined 34 points across two losses in which final scores were buried on the side of the road before boarding the bus home.

The 7th grade Wolves were held to a season-low 14, with Jake Mitten leading the way with eight.

Matthew Kelley added five, including a three-ball, while Daniel Olson netted a free throw.

Sage Downes, Dakota Eck and Smith also saw action for the younger varsity squad.

Coupeville’s 8th grade varsity did a little better, tallying 20 points.

Sean Toomey-Stout was top dog with nine, while Koa Davison added six. Mason Grove netted three, all on free-throws, and Jered Brown dropped in a bucket.

Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim, Jean Lund-Olsen, Andrew Martin and Ulrik Wells ventured onto the court in Forks as well.

The Wolves have an immediate turn-around, venturing back on the road Friday to play Blue Heron Middle School in Port Townsend.

That’s a makeup for an earlier set of games that was denied by bad weather and timid ferry captains.

Coupeville has its final home games of the season Monday, Jan. 11 against Stevens (2:45 tip).

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Jered Brown banged home a team-high 12 in the 8th grade game

   Jered Brown banged home a team-high 12 in Coupeville Middle School’s 8th grade game Monday. (John Fisken photos)

Dakota Eck

   Wolf 7th grader Dakota Eck knocked down a bucket and played strong defense as his squad rolled to a win.

The big boys held court.

Coupeville squared off with visiting Blue Heron Middle School (Port Townsend) Monday afternoon in a pair of boys’ basketball games, and both contests came down to who had the biggest player on the floor.

In the opener, the Wolves did, and, sparked by a 22-point, 11-rebound performance from 7th grader Jake Mitten, CMS rolled to a 47-38 win in a game that wasn’t as close as the final score might indicate.

But once the two schools swapped out 8th graders for 7th graders, Coupeville ran into Noah Montoya.

Unable to contain the big, burly rebounding fiend, especially in the fourth quarter, when he keyed a 14-2 run that broke open a one-point game, the Wolves fell 48-39.

Montoya finished with a game-high 26 in the nightcap, with almost all of his points coming off of layups, as he cleaned the offensive glass like a machine.

Trailing just 30-29 coming into the fourth, Coupeville suddenly couldn’t seem to get a rebound for anything, giving Blue Heron five shots on one possession alone.

The final shot? Yep, a put-back by Montoya, and it was the basket which seemed to break the Wolves remaining spirit.

Up until then, Coupeville had held its own, using a pair of buckets from Koa Davison to build an early 8-4 lead.

After Blue Heron rallied to claim the lead midway through the second quarter, the Wolves didn’t flinch.

Point guard Jered Brown, who dropped in a team-high 12 while playing with an injured leg, completely owned the final two minutes of the half.

First he scored on a give-and-go, then pilfered the ball from a Blue Heron ball-handler and made a sensational pass to Mason Grove on the move for another basket.

Not content to stop there, he staked Coupeville to a 16-14 halftime lead, hitting a slicing runner while sliding between three defenders right before the buzzer.

Montoya started to roll in the third, though, breaking Blue Heron out to a six-point lead, before the Wolves closed the quarter with a 9-4 run.

Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim scored five of those points, collecting a bucket off of a hard-fought rebound before stepping outside and softly drilling a three-ball the next time down the floor.

Grove, showcasing nerves of steel, slipped a pair of free throws through the net with just a few ticks left on the clock to close out the third, setting up what seemed like it would be an epic fourth-quarter duel.

It wasn’t to be, though, as Montoya went wild down the stretch, raising one question — what’s the chances his family decides to move to Coupeville before high school?

Hey, it could happen…

For the guys who are undeniably Wolves, Pacquette-Pilgrim banked home 11 to support Brown’s 12, while Grove (8), Sean Toomey-Stout (4) and Davison (4) rounded out the scorers.

Aiden Juras and Jean Lund-Olsen also saw serious floor time for Coupeville.

While the 8th grade game was close until a late collapse, the 7th grade game was a runaway win made a little closer by a late Blue Heron rally.

The Wolves, riding 17 first-half points from Mitten, were cruising at the break, up 31-15.

With Matthew Kelley wheeling and dealing, threading passes to Mitten and running mate Daniel Olson for quick buckets, Coupeville had its foes back on their heels.

Getting a little something from everyone — Sage Downes went off for six in the third, while Dakota Eck banked in a bucket from deep in the corner — the Wolves stretched the lead out to 20 early in the fourth quarter.

But then, after Olson hit a trey that rattled around, managing to hit seven different parts of the rim before flopping through for three, Coupeville went a little cold from the field.

Part of it was pulling most of its starters, as the subs, coming off of a long vacation break, were a bit rusty. The other part was having Blue Heron suddenly find its shooting touch en route to closing on a 14-3 tear.

While the final three minutes weren’t flawless, a win is a win, though, and this was one in which five different Wolves put their name into the scoring column.

Mitten added five steals and three blocks to go with his 22 points, while Olson hit for nine, Kelley dropped in eight, Downes netted six and Eck collected a bucket.

Michael Laska, Ben Smith, Gage Powers and Alex Jimenez also played for Coupeville, which now hits the road for back-to-back games Thursday (Forks) and Friday (a rematch with Blue Heron in Port Townsend).

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Coupeville High School head football coach Brett Smedley. (John Fisken photos)

  Coupeville High School head football coach Brett Smedley. (John Fisken photos)

Smedley works with last year's 8th grade hoops stars.

   Smedley works last year with Nicole Lester (51), Sarah Wright (33) and Ashlie Shank (right), who have all made the jump to high school ball this season.

Brett Smedley is paring down his many jobs.

The very-popular physical education teacher, who just completed his first season as head varsity football coach for Coupeville High School, is giving up his other coaching assignment.

Smedley, who has coached the CMS 8th grade girls’ basketball squad for several seasons, submitted a resignation letter this week.

Approval of the move was just added to the agenda for Monday’s school board meeting.

In his farewell note, which is available on-line as part of the agenda, Smedley hailed the middle school position for offering a strong start to his coaching career in Coupeville.

“It has been a very enjoyable process and something I have learned a lot from,” he wrote.

A new middle school girls’ basketball season starts Feb. 1 with the first day of practices.

CMS 7th grade coach Bob Martin is expected to return, though whether he will stay in that role or slide up to coach the 8th grade squad is unknown at this time.

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