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The Battlin’ Bronec brothers, Hunter (left) and Hurlee, celebrate a Bi-District title with their feistiest, most loyal fan. (Brittney Spolar photo)

These are the golden years.

Through the first 104 seasons of Coupeville High School boys’ basketball, the Wolves captured a single district playoff crown.

Now, after thunking visiting La Conner 60-44 Wednesday, Brad Sherman’s squad has won two bi-district titles, and qualified for the state tourney both times, across the last three campaigns.

The Wolves sit at 17-5 — the most wins by a Sherman-coached squad in his seven seasons at the helm of the program — with the state bracket revealed Sunday, when the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association seeds the 16-team 2B field.

La Conner (15-7) returns to the CHS gym Saturday at 7:00 PM to square off with Auburn Adventist Academy (18-4) in a loser-out, winner-to-state game, with the victor joining Coupeville in claiming a golden ticket.

Auburn survived by eliminating Northwest Christian (Lacey) 76-48 in a game played at Evergreen State College.

Wednesday’s rumble in Cow Town pitted the co-champs of the Northwest 2B/1B League, in a matchup of teams which each won on the other’s floor during the regular season.

The Braves upended the Wolves 69-68 the first time around, with Coupeville bouncing back to drill La Conner 65-54 in the reunion.

Round three was decided shortly after tip-off, as the Wolves savaged the Braves by drilling shot after shot.

Logan Downes rippled the net on a three-ball on the game’s opening possession, and the deed was done.

La Conner was already dead and could do little else but weakly try to dig its way back out of the grave as Coupeville poured bucket after bucket of dirt right on top of the squirming Braves.

Cole White and company are livin’ large. (Stephanie Gebhard photo)

Cole White twirled in a bucket to stake the Wolves to a 9-0 lead, and (seemingly) half a second later the advantage was up to 20-3 after back-to-back treys from a savagely efficient Downes.

Hunter Bronec, controlling the paint like a boss, ripped down a rebound and fed Downes for one of his long bombs, then turned around and terrorized anyone who wandered to within a half mile of the rim.

With Coupeville running and gunning and leaving tread marks all over Brave backsides, Downes was coldly nasty as the point of the spear.

Raining down 18 points across the first eight minutes, the Wolf senior paced his squad to a 27-5 lead at the break, eyeballing would-be defenders after every basket.

When not checking out his own arms to count the endless scratch marks and bruises left behind by wildly flailing Brave defenders.

Not content to be a successful but one-dimensional scoring machine, Downes started flicking pinpoint passes between defenders in the second quarter, setting his running mates up for buckets of their own.

Chase Anderson, Hurlee Bronec, Nick Guay, and White all hit the bottom of the net, before Downes slammed home the punctuation mark with a rumble up the middle on the final play of the half.

Coupeville’s mad marksmen strolled to the locker room like gunfighters heading home after a successful shootout, holding a 40-14 lead while the Braves crawled away looking for a dark corner of the gym in which to hide.

There was no sanctuary for La Conner, however, as a jam-packed, hyped-up gym reached DEFCON 1 status as Coupeville stretched its advantage out to 30 points midway through the third quarter.

Having severely scorched the net, mad bomber Ryan Blouin inspects the damage. (Michelle Glass photo)

Hunter Bronec pounded away down low for back-to-back buckets, Ryan Blouin snapped the net on a high, arcing three-ball, and Guay slashed the Brave defense to ribbons on a drive down the baseline for a bucket.

La Conner, unable to find a consistent groove against a lethal Wolf defense, did trim the margin back to 50-26 heading into the fourth.

But then Coupeville delivered one last backhand to the soul, with Downes and Guay each scoring four points as CHS shoved the lead back out to 58-31.

With the game, the title, and the trip to the big dance all in hand, Sherman emptied his bench, getting all nine of his seniors a chance to play during their final moments in their home gym.

La Conner rang up some buckets in garbage time, including a sweet three-ball that banked off the glass from an unusual angle.

But by then it was all about watching the final seconds tick madly away before Wolf players and students stormed the floor.

Brad and Abbey Sherman’s sons practice for their own future celebrations. (Michael Davidson photo)

As he marinated in his 70th win at the helm of a Wolf hoops program he starred for during his younger days, Sherman praised his support staff, from his fellow coaches to parents, while saving his biggest shoutout for his players.

“So proud of these boys,” he said. “They work so dang hard day in and day out, and they play for each other.

“It really is just a joy to see them achieving the goals they set out to accomplish together.

“Onward – not done yet!”

All 12 of Coupeville’s regular varsity players saw the floor, with eight of them scoring.

Logan Downes, man of the people. (Jessica Van Velkinburgh photo)

Downes finished with a game-high 28 and reached two more personal milestones with the big-game performance.

With 504 points and counting this campaign, he owns two of the three best single-season performances in the rich history of CHS hoops.

Downes tossed in 554 points as a junior, while Jeff Stone owns the school record with 644 in 1969-1970.

Angie and Ralph’s youngest son, already the #1 career scorer among Wolf boys, has rattled the rims for 1,282 points, passing Novi Barron (1270) for second-best in school history Wednesday, while trailing just Brianne King (1549).

Guay popped for eight to lead a very-balanced support crew, with Anderson (6), Blouin (6), Hunter Bronec (4), White (4), Hurlee Bronec (2), and Zane Oldenstadt (2) rounding out the offensive attack.

Zane Oldenstadt has been dreaming about this moment since before he could grow a beard. (Michelle Glass photo)

William Davidson, Timothy Nitta, Quentin Simpson-Pilgrim, and Mikey Robinett round out the Wolf roster, a tight-knit group making a final run together as a band of brothers (from other mothers).

Celebrate tonight. Rest tomorrow. Get back at it the next day, intent on living out their coach’s words.

Cause they’re not done yet.

Savina Wells (center) with mom Katy and big sis Izzy.

She still sparkles in the spotlight.

Former Coupeville three-sport star Savina Wells continues to dazzle on the hardwood, though these days she suits up in the Sunshine State.

Now a junior at Fernandina High School in Florida, Ulrik and Izzy’s “little” sister led the Pirates basketball squad in scoring, rebounds, and blocked shots this season.

Playing in 20 of her team’s 22 games, Savina racked up 250 points, snatched 175 rebounds, and rejected 50 shots.

She also tallied 27 steals and five assists for a Pirates team which finished 12-10, getting knocked out in the second round of the district tourney.

Savina began her high school hoops career as an 8th grader in Coupeville, scoring 59 points during a Covid-shortened season.

After adding 74 more as a freshman, she and the Wells family moved South, where she popped for 160 points as a sophomore during her Florida debut.

During her Cow Town days, Savina was a vital part of a tight-knit, talented group of young women who excelled in softball, basketball, volleyball, and track and field.

Both of her older siblings graduated from CHS after also playing multiple sports for the Wolves.

Cory Whitmore, a hit at two schools. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“There should be a number of faces you’ll recognize.”

When he wants me to ignore the name of the blog, which starts with the word COUPEVILLE, that’s usually how Diet Coke-fueled camera clicker John Fisken begins his pitch.

And yes, I do recognize Cory Whitmore, who doubles as an Oak Harbor High School teacher and Coupeville High School volleyball coach.

Plus, a couple of fans who call Cow Town home, and a couple of other spikers who we associate with all things Central Whidbey.

But what I also see are a lot of Wildcats who should be talking to their parents about transferring to Coupeville to become Wolves.

I mean, as someone who has a purple-tinted diploma from OHHS, I can tell you — that’s no way to go through life, son.

With that said, I then stumble across the word “free photos,” and promptly lose all my ideals.

Such is life.

Fine. Oak Harbor stuff on a pro-Coupeville web site. Cats and dogs living together next.

Nothing is sacred anymore.

Oh, and those free photos I mentioned? To see many, many more, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Events/Macho-Volleyball-2024-02-13

 

“Noooo, don’t leave me. I complete you.”

We’re building something unique here, you and me.

From those who have allowed me to use their photos, to those who have financially supported my 2:00 AM rantings, to those who read, discuss, and then choose not to throw tomatoes at me in the parking lot, you’re the backbone of what this blog is.

If you weren’t involved, it would just be a dude screaming random thoughts at the heavens, making it harder for the landlord’s cats to digest their meals in peace while staring out across Penn Cove.

But we have this interaction, on multiple levels.

Which isn’t always easy for me, as I am a severe introvert who would otherwise happily stay tucked under my blankies on my old recliner, watching endless crappy movies, if I didn’t feel a certain responsibility to fire up the Xterra and head into Cow Town to cover sports in person.

And, as anyone who plops their butt on the rock-hard bleachers in the CHS gym tonight as Coupeville’s hoops stars wage a holy war against eternal arch-nemesis La Conner will tell you — live always beats digital.

The modern era, with its streaming “options,” offers a chance to see games on your TV, computer, or (choke) phone, yes.

But the de facto national leader, NFHS, is a two-bit con job offering up cameras which break, freeze, fracture into double or triple images, or are easily defeated by a random hair floating by in the breeze.

Much less a drop of rain, which basically shuts the whole system down.

On the positive side, there is “MorganTV,” as Wolf Mom Morgan White — a one-woman wrecking crew who will come down there and rough you up if you elbow her pale prairie prince, Cole, one more time!! — delivers the best entertainment value on the internet.

For free, NFHS, for free. So, get your grubby hands out of my pocket!!

I kid, I kid … I don’t pay for NFHS. That’s why I stay on Willie Smith’s good side, so I can use his account.

But anyways, back to Coupeville Sports, which, as far as I can tell, is the only blog of its kind in Washington state.

In a world where old school newspapers have seen their staffs gutted, we’re still out here, in a small town on the prairie, in the middle of a rock in the water, covering EVERYTHING.

Which doesn’t always amuse school administrators.

But you want to bask in the 99% positivity, you sort of have to accept the 1% “negativity” — and maybe make it easier to get access to the positive stories, so I have less time to troll social media for gossip.

Just sayin’.

“Santa Claus is always watching us? He ain’t got jack on this guy! He already knows football is playing Winlock next year! And not even my mom knew that!!” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

When you have someone comin’ in hot 24/7/365, you get varsity, JV, C-Team, middle school, youth sports, off the beaten path stuff like horse riding and dog showing, and more non-sports stories than you would reasonably expect on a blog called Coupeville Sports.

Go back through the 10,944 articles I’ve produced since debuting in August 2012, and there’s a cornucopia of stories covering everything from Renaissance fairs to robotics to theater productions, to, I kid you not, mermaids.

I mean, I’ve even covered stuff from Oak Harbor, South Whidbey, Anacortes, and Brocktonville (maybe not Brocktonville…) on a blog that starts with the word … COUPEVILLE.

I move quickly, I strike when least expected (seriously, 2:00 AM is a sweet spot for publishing), and I rarely, if ever, say no to a story idea.

My unspoken agreement with my readers is that 99.92% of the time, when you get up in the morning and sit down to pour coffee into your Bran Flakes, you’ll be able to read about every game played the night before.

EVERY game, varsity or JV.

EVERY day of the year.

Today, Valentine’s Day, is the 163rd consecutive day I’ve published at least one story (and I never publish just one story…).

Last time I missed a day, there was no power in Coupeville for 24 hours-plus. And it still chafes me.

It’s a fair amount of work, but it’s resulted in a somewhat rare occurrence — instead of plateauing or receding, my readership numbers are booming as we approach 12 years in the pits.

During 2023, Coupeville Sports broke all of its high-water marks, in terms of readers and page views, and 2024 has started with another big jump forward.

Love it or hate it, people are reading it like never before.

Which keeps me going, through the great days and the mediocre ones. The days where I think I can do this forever, and the days where that recliner beckons.

As I said, I am a severe introvert.

More than once, I’ve debated taking my winter depression beard and running off into the woods to reside amongst the squirrels.

Until my sister realizes I’m living out of the Xterra on the back of her property and sends out my nephews, tasers in hand, to “clean up the joint.”

“What I want out of each and every one of you is a hard-target search of every gas station, residence, warehouse, farmhouse, henhouse, outhouse, and doghouse in that area.”

So, while I’m probably not getting that indoor/outdoor swimming pool anytime soon, I keep on writing and survive day-to-day thanks to the generosity of my readers.

Coupeville Sports has always been free, from article #1 to article 10,944, and it will remain so until whatever article marks the end of this odyssey.

Read away.

But, if you want to be my valentine, or be the wind beneath my wings, or just want to ensure that my nephews don’t taze me, man, you can support the cause several ways.

 

Venmo:

@David-Svien

 

PayPal:

https://paypal.me/DavidSvien?country.x=US&locale.x=en_US

 

Snail mail:

David Svien
165 Sherman
Coupeville, WA 98239

 

Mob style:

You haven’t fully lived until someone slips you money, or a Coke and hot dog, or smoked salmon and cookies, at a game, leaving other fans wondering if they saw a drug deal go down live and in living color.

“Is he dealing smack now?!?! Someone should tell his sister! She’ll have his nephews tase him!”

Finn Price (possibly) hums a few bars of “The Final Countdown” while preparing to unleash a watery beat-down. (Jackie Saia photo)

Make some noise.

Coupeville High School and Middle School will briefly dismiss classes Thursday so that students can give a send-off to state-bound athletes Finn Price and Jaje Drake.

Price, a Wolf sophomore, is headed to the King County Aquatic Center for the 2A swim championships, while Drake, a senior wrestler, is slated to appear at Mat Classic XXXV at the Tacoma Dome.

CHS/CMS students will be freed at 9:50 AM, with the state duo walking through the commons and on to the high school gym at approximately 10:00 AM.

Coupeville doesn’t have wrestling or swim programs of its own but has agreements with South Whidbey and Kamiak, respectively, allowing Wolf athletes to train and travel with those schools during the regular season.

Jaje Drake (in red jacket) poses with South Whidbey senior grapplers. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)