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Aiden O’Neill slashes to the hoop. (Julie Wheat photo)

Three games into a new season, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball team is still looking for its first victory.

But Saturday’s razor-thin 45-43 non-conference defeat to visiting Eastside Prep, a game which literally hung in the balance until the final tenth of a second, was a big step forward for the Wolves.

Coupeville, which hasn’t had its complete roster together at any point yet, in games or practices, is learning under duress, but getting tougher each time out.

Saturday was proof of that, as Brad Sherman’s 2B squad weathered an early run by a 1A team that was quick on the floor, and quick to complain, with the Cow Town hoops stars putting themselves into position to win or force overtime on the game’s final play.

And while that final shot — on which Chase Anderson had to sprint from one end of the floor to the other as the final four seconds flew off the clock — failed to drop, it still provided a final jolt of electricity to warm the cold weekend gym.

Eastside Prep, coming off a narrow loss to South Whidbey the night before, came to town riled up.

The Eagles were quick, they were occasionally dynamic, and their GQ-looking coaches filled up the air with enough complaints you might have thought they were auditioning for gigs with old-school Wolf private school rivals like King’s or Archbishop Thomas Murphy.

Up 10-2 in the early going, the whining was academic at first, then got pronouncedly more frequent as Coupeville suddenly started blowing up Eastside’s plans.

Anderson came up from beneath the hoop to split two defenders for a bucket, then fired a long outlet pass to a rampaging Camden Glover for a breakaway, and the rally was underway.

Coupeville closed the first quarter with seven straight points, the final two on a pullup jumper by Glover right in the face of his defender, before opening the second with back-to-back buckets.

In front 13-10 after the surge, which also featured some rough ‘n tumble defense from Mahkai Myles, Liam Blas, Davin Houston, and Glover, CHS showed it wouldn’t back down easy.

Neither would Eastside, however, as the Eagles combined slashing guards with a burly lumberjack-style dude clogging up the paint to battle the Wolves bucket for bucket.

Camden Glover delivered a standout performance on both ends of the floor Saturday afternoon. (Photo courtesy Stevie Glover)

Glover, who is a bit of a beast down low himself, showed off some surprisingly fleet feet, chasing down a runaway Eagle from behind and belting his would-be shot off the back wall of the gym, setting off his fan club of devoted lil’ kids.

While Eastside clung to a 21-18 lead at the half, the Wolves went ahead 22-21 shortly into the third, only to have the Eagles bounce back with a 7-0 run.

From there, it was two teams standing in the middle of the floor, whaling on each other, waiting to see who would buckle first. Answer: neither of them.

Glover and running mate Aiden O’Neill both rippled the net on three-balls, as the Wolves fought back from seven down early in the fourth to tie things up at 42-42 in the waning moments.

That set up a final 30 seconds that had passion, gusto, and, unfortunately, one big shot from Eastside Prep’s lumberjack, Vlad Guz, as he crashed into the paint for a back-breaking layup delivered through a forest of arms.

A free throw got Coupeville back within 44-43, but an Eagle freebie made it 45-43.

When Eastside’s second charity shot slid off the rim, the Wolves snatched the rebound, but had no timeouts left, forcing Anderson to try and go the length of the floor while being hacked every step of the way.

An unbalanced shot, thrown up on a dead run, came tantalizingly close, but there would be no miracles on this day.

Tomorrow, possibly, but not today.

Playing his second game of the season after missing the opener with injuries, Anderson tossed in a game-high 22 points.

That carries the Wolf senior to 638 points and moves him from #32 to #29 on the CHS boys’ basketball career scoring chart, which covers 109 seasons.

Anderson passed all-timers Wiley Hesselgrave (632), Kramer O’Keefe (636), and Rich Morris (637) Saturday, while Glover, who went for 12, raised his own career total to 139 points — passing Wolf JV coach (and Chase’s dad) Craig Anderson (132) on the list.

Myles (4), O’Neill (3), and Sage Arends (2) rounded out the scorers, with Blas, Riley Lawless, Houston, and Easton Green also seeing floor time for the Wolves.

Nathan Coxsey, seen here during football season, is now rampaging on the hardwood. (Photo courtesy Erin Coxsey)

The basket got stingy at just the wrong moment.

Up by six points on visiting Eastside Prep late in the fourth quarter Saturday, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad suddenly ran out of buckets when it needed them most, letting the Eagles slip away with a 33-29 victory.

The non-conference loss drops the Wolves to 1-2 on the season, with another home bout, this one against East Jefferson, set for Tuesday night.

After a back-and-forth first half, Coupeville seemingly seized control of the game after the halftime break.

Trailing 14-10 heading into the third quarter, the Wolves opened with an 8-0 surge, thanks to four different players putting their names in the scorebook.

Nathan Coxsey drained a pair of free throws, Josh Stockdale went coast-to-coast for a layup, Chris Zenz put a rebound back up and in, and Carson Grove swooped past the defense for a sweet runner, and CHS was living large.

Eventually holding on to a 20-16 lead at the end of three, Coupeville continued to clamp down on defense, led by a fired-up Khanor Jump, who cleaned the boards with a fury.

Two more buckets from Stockdale and one from Coxsey staked the Wolves to a 26-20 advantage, and Eastside Prep was beginning to get desperate.

Unfortunately for the local fans, the off-Islanders suddenly found their groove, hitting a pair of three-balls, after missing approximately 11,407 prior long-range heaves, and closed the game on a 13-3 tear.

Down the stretch, CHS got free throws from Jump and Liam Lawson, but couldn’t get a field goal to drop across the game’s final four minutes and change.

The furious finish capped a game which started as a fairly low-scoring, defense-orientated affair.

Eastside Prep clung to a 5-4 lead after one quarter of action, with both of Coupeville’s buckets coming from Coxsey and set up by strong passes off the fingertips of Carson Grove.

Coxsey and Stockdale eventually pushed CHS ahead, but the visitors closed the half with a 7-2 mini-run to reclaim the lead and set up the second-half theatrics.

Ten Wolves saw floor time, with six of them scoring, led by Coxsey, who dropped in a season-high 12 points.

Stockdale (8), Grove (4), Jump (2), Zenz (2), and Lawson (1) also scored, with Brian Thompson, Trent Thule, Ayden Warren, and Jaden Flores Garcia rounding out the active roster.

A celebration of life service has been set for Edmundo Corrales, who was killed in a car accident Monday near Deception Pass.

The 2007 graduate of Oak Harbor High School lived on Whidbey with his wife and young daughter, while teaching Spanish and coaching multiple sports in the Anacortes School District.

Corrales, who worked at Oak Harbor’s Blue Fox Drive-In Theater before becoming a teacher, played on the 2006 Wildcat football team which won the program’s only state title.

Two of his teammates on that squad, Bobby Carr and Bennett Richter, currently coach football at Coupeville High School.

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

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

Finley Helm fires a pass. (Julie Wheat photo)

Two teams, two different game plans.

There wasn’t a high school JV girls’ basketball game originally on the schedule for Saturday, as Eastside Prep initially said it only had a varsity.

But the Eagles changed their minds late, giving Coupeville’s second unit some unexpected, and appreciated, floor time.

How did Eastside Prep swing the change? By basically playing its varsity in both games.

Almost everyone on the Eagles roster crossed over, with several key varsity players sparking a game-busting 18-0 run in the second quarter in a game eventually won 40-30 by the visitors.

Coupeville, which has no players currently swinging between varsity and JV, and features multiple 8th graders on its JV, got off to a strong start, jumping to a 12-5 lead by the first break.

But the second quarter tsunami swamped the Wolves.

Despite fighting back to outscore their private school rivals 18-17 in the second half, Alita Blouin’s squad fell to 0-2 with the non-conference loss.

Coupeville’s girls, repping a 2B school, have opened with back-to-back games against 1A opponents, and will get a third one Tuesday when East Jefferson comes to Cow Town.

The Wolf JV spread out its offense between four hot shooters, with middle school ace Cameron Van Dyke leading the way with 11 points.

Fellow 8th graders Anna Powers and Finley Helm added eight and four points respectively, while sophomore sparkplug Ava Lucero poured in seven.

Willow Leedy-Bonifas, Olivia Hall, Emma Cushman, Zayne Roos, Taylor Marrs, Elizabeth Marshall, and Allie Powers also saw floor time for the Wolves.

CMS 8th grader Diesel Eck leads all Wolves in scoring. (Julie Wheat photos)

Numbers make the world go round.

Well, at least they do when you’re writing stat stories, such as this one focusing on the Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball teams.

The Wolves are six games into their eight-game season, with home rumbles against Sultan and South Whidbey set for Dec. 8 and 15, respectively.

Those final two bouts on the hardwood will dictate who leads the way in the scoring column, as the race for top dog remains a close one.

So far, 31 different Wolves have slipped at least one shot through the net, combining for 562 points.

 

Where things stand as of Dec. 5:

Diesel Eck – 76
Kamden Ratcliff – 64
Les Queen – 53
River Simpson – 46
Braxten Ratcliff – 40
Trey Stewart – 32
Xander Flowers – 26
Gracen Joiner – 26
Dreyke Mendiola – 22
Brady Sherman – 22
Nico Strong – 20
Luke Blas – 19
Liam Stoner – 18
Abel O’Neil – 16
Logan Flowers – 12
Alton Hansen – 10
Henry Purdue – 10
Jack Bailey – 6
Logan Dees – 6
Gabe Reed – 6
Hayden Maynes – 5
LJ Schultz – 5
Xander Beaman – 4
Mica McCloskey – 4
Mario Martinez – 3
Jon Driscoll – 2
Brayden Grinstead – 2
Darius Stewart – 2
Maverick Walling – 2
Aiden Wheat – 2
Colton Ashby – 1

Gracen Joiner (second from right) is mobbed after hitting a buzzer-beater.