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8th grade ace Cameron Van Dyke, seen here during volleyball season, made her high school hoops debut Tuesday night. (Julie Wheat photo)

Victory was in their grasp but slipped away.

Playing with four 8th graders in the lineup Tuesday, the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team led at the end of the first, second, and third quarters.

Just not the fourth.

Using a 9-2 tear to end the game, visiting South Whidbey made off with a 32-27 win on opening night to claim the advantage in the Island rivalry.

With former Wolf hoops star Alita Blouin making her debut as JV coach, CHS edged out to a 6-4 lead by the first break, before stretching the advantage to 19-12 by halftime.

The second half was firmly in favor of the Falcons, however, as the visitors sliced away at the lead with an 11-6 run in the third quarter before holding the Wolves to just a single bucket in the final frame.

CHS did have balanced scoring, getting points from six of the nine players in uniform.

Ava Lucero paced the Wolves with a team-high eight points, while Willow Leedy-Bonifas knocked down seven.

Anna Powers (6), Cameron Van Dyke (2), Finley Helm (2), and Ellie Marshall (2) rounded out the offensive attack, with Emma Cushman, Allie Powers, and Zayne Roos also seeing floor time for Blouin’s squad.

Van Dyke, Roos, Helm, and Anna Powers are all 8th graders, and get to double up, playing high school ball before having the chance to also play at the middle school level when that season unfolds in 2026.

The Wolf JV, which is currently scheduled to return to action next Tuesday, Dec. 9 against East Jefferson, may actually get to play before then.

Eastside Prep, which comes to Coupeville Dec. 6, originally said it wouldn’t have a JV squad, but that may have changed.

If so, the move will be confirmed later this week.

Nico Strong enjoys slicing ‘n dicing the defense. (Julie Wheat photos)

The last road trip of the season went off with a bang.

Playing away from home for the fourth time Tuesday, the Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball teams won two of three at South Whidbey, claiming the early advantage in the Island rivalry series.

Now, the Wolves finish the 2025 hoops campaign with three straight in their own gym, hosting Lakewood (Dec. 4), Sultan (Dec. 8) and South Whidbey (Dec. 15).

 

How Tuesday played out:

 

Level 1:

Getting double-digit scoring from both Diesel Eck and Kamden Ratcliff, CMS ran the Cougars off the floor during a 50-32 romp.

The win, Coupeville’s second straight, lifts its top squad to 2-3 on the season.

Balanced scoring was the plan, as the Wolves poured in 13 points each in the first, third, and fourth quarters, while spreading the offensive love out between six players.

Eck pounded away for a game-high 17, while Ratcliff popped for 15, with both Wolf gunners racking up points in all four frames.

The dynamic duo was backed by Trey Stewart (9), River Simpson (5), Aiden Wheat (2), and Maverick Walling (2), while Jacob Lujan, Xander Beaman, Darius Stewart, Gracen Joiner, and Colton Ashby rounded out the roster.

The Wolves listen to some words of wisdom.

 

Level 2:

Coupeville’s hottest team captured its third consecutive victory, crunching South Whidbey 41-34 to get to 4-1 on the season.

Gracen Joiner poured in a season-high 18 points, with 10 of those coming in just the third quarter, to pace the Wolves, with Brady Sherman and Xander Flowers each banking in eight in support.

Braxten Ratcliff (3), Nico Strong (2), and Henry Purdue (2) also scored for CMS, with Brayden Grinstead, Mario Martinez, Abel O’Neil, Jack Bailey, Hayden Maynes, Liam Stoner, and Mica McCloskey also in uniform.

 

Level 3:

Coupeville’s only loss of the afternoon, as the Wolves fell 35-24.

Now 1-3 on the season, the third team was led by Liam Stoner, who tossed in a team-high eight points.

Alton Hansen (4), Dreyke Mendiola (4), Mica McCloskey (4), Luke Blas (2), and Logan Flowers (2) also tallied points, with Oliver Miller, Jon Driscoll, Logan Dees, Jack Bailey, Dom Durbin, LJ Schultz, Burke Winger, and Gabe Reed also offering hustle on the hardwood.

Edmundo Corrales and his family.

Several communities are rallying to help the wife and young daughter of a well-loved local teacher killed in a head-on car collision Monday by Deception Pass.

Edmundo Corrales, a 2007 graduate of Oak Harbor High School who lived on Whidbey, taught Spanish and coached multiple sports in the Anacortes School District.

His connections to The Rock were many, as he played on the OHHS state championship football team in 2006 alongside current Coupeville gridiron coaches Bobby Carr and Bennett Richter.

Corrales also worked at Oak Harbor’s Blue Fox Drive-In Theater before becoming a teacher.

After earning his bachelor’s degree in kinesiology and exercise science at Whitworth University, the former Wildcat was hired as an assistant football coach at Sedro-Woolley High School, where he worked for his former OHHS coach, Dave Ward.

Corrales has worked for the Anacortes School District since 2018, where he coached golf, wrestling, and trap and skeet shooting.

Friends of the family have launched a GoFundMe to aid his wife, Meghan, and their seven-month-old daughter, Daphne.

For more info and to help, pop over to:

https://www.gofundme.com/f/support-the-family-of-mundo-corrales

Looking to get some floor time?

Camp Casey is hosting inexpensive drop-in basketball sessions for middle and high school students the next three Friday nights.

Cost is just $5.00.

For more info, scroll back up to the picture above, or email YMCA Programs Director Laura Callahan at lcallahan@ymca-snoco.org.

Malachi Somes crashes to the hoop. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The hunt begins again.

Coupeville High School boys’ basketball kicks off its 109th season — and ninth under current coach Brad Sherman — with a home game Tuesday night against next-door neighbor South Whidbey.

That clash, set for a 7:00 tip, is a non-conference affair, and is the beginning of a four-game homestand for the Wolves, as they seek their third trip to the state tourney in the last five years.

CHS fell short of advancing to the big dance last year, after punching its ticket in 2022 and 2024, but hope burns eternal.

“We always have the goal of competing at the top of our league and district and earning one of the allocations to state out of our bi-district in February,” Sherman said.

“That opportunity is something we are all going to work hard for over the next few months.”

While the Wolves lost a pack of quality seniors to graduation, they return five of the 11 players who scored last season, including senior guard Chase Anderson, who topped the team with 339 points.

The First-Team All-Conference selection is a “dynamic athlete who does a lot for us,” Sherman said.

Anderson will have help, with fellow seniors Camden Glover (115 points as a junior) and Malachi Somes also back, plus the welcome addition of senior Aiden O’Neill, who played varsity as a sophomore before missing his junior campaign due to an injury.

The trio has impressed their coach, who remains the #9 scorer in program history.

Aiden is a strong shooter,” Sherman said. “Love his quiet leadership and presence on our team.

“With Cam, he’s really tough around the rim, (but) can (also) step out and hit from the outside,” he added.

Malachi came on strong last year as one of our best defenders and put in a lot of work this off-season.”

Aiden O’Neill (left) and Camden Glover are aiming for strong senior seasons.

Rounding out the roster will be a promising group of guys, including two — junior Davin Houston and senior Easton Green — who scored their first varsity points as swing players last season.

They’ll be joined by Mahkai Myles, Liam Blas, Sage Arends, and Riley Lawless, who all make the jump from JV.

“We are excited about what each guy brings to the table,” Sherman said.

With the core 10 set, depth will be added by using some swing players as the season progresses. Whichever unit is on the floor, Wolf coaches will go into action with a good deal of confidence.

“It’s a great group of guys that knows how to work,” Sherman said. “It’s also a group that’s grown up together, and they know how to have fun together away from the basketball court. That’s important.

“I think the toughness and the tenacity they play with is one of the things that really sets them apart and we’re excited to see them get after it.”

Brad Sherman will likely live in the gym for the next several months.

As he and his assistants have built their program into a consistent contender, Sherman has always preached approaching the game in the right way.

“First and foremost, we want to be a team that lives our pillars and values, serves our community well, and commits to a standard of excellence on and off the basketball court,” he said.

“That’s the ultimate goal.”

As in any season, the plan is to build as the games play out and finish strong.

“Basketball seasons require constant improvement,” Sherman said. “Lots of areas we need to keep focusing on each week.

“Our aim is to seek the small improvements, one day at a time, so that down the stretch we are playing our best basketball,” he added.

“We want to just keep growing as coaches and players, as leaders, as people, and giving it all we’ve got every time we step on the court.”

The seven-team Northwest 2B/1B League offers no easy games, and Coupeville has a diverse non-conference schedule which includes a two-game holiday trip to Eastern Washington.

Regardless of the name on the front of the opposing uniforms, Sherman wants his players to bring their A-game each night.

“We just need to be ready and prepared for every game, no matter who it is.”