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You too can be the #1 ranked team in the land, without actually playing the games.

When the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association releases its RPI rankings, it wants us to take them seriously.

And they do have an impact on more than just starting arguments.

When the state playoffs roll around, the RPI rankings are one of the things taken into consideration when teams are seeded for the big dance.

Playing deep on the road as a lower seed or getting to travel just down the street as a top-level seed, matters.

Just ask Coupeville High School boys’ basketball, which, two years ago, qualified for state while boasting a 16-0 mark, yet was sent 214 miles away to Battle Ground, while Kalama traveled just 25 for the state tourney opener.

RPI ranking likely dinged the Wolves, who still showed up and showed out, pushing the defending state champs to the final seconds in a five-point loss.

Jump forward to 2024, and CHS, which is 7-2 on the current season, sits #10 in the WIAA’s RPI rankings for 2B teams as of Wednesday morning.

Like it? Sure.

Trust it? Eh…

That’s because on the same day, the RPI currently has a boys’ basketball team ranked #1 in 1B which doesn’t seem to actually exist.

At least not this season.

For pushing three weeks now, the WIAA has listed Pacific Christian Academy, a small private school out of Federal Way, as being a perfect 1-0, boasting a 79-65 win on Dec. 15 over South Eugene High School.

A victory the Eagles never collected, as a little research shows that the team bringing home the W that night was actually Pacifica Christian/Orange County out of Newport Beach, California.

That squad is 10-8.

So, someone got two schools with similar names mixed up. Easy to do.

We’ll just go check and see how our Pacific Christian team, the one located in Washington state, is doing and … they don’t seem to have an active team this year.

At all.

The Eagles have a girls’ basketball team listed, with a three-game schedule, but that team hasn’t played a contest yet.

The boys’ hoops program? Not listed at all on the school’s website when you click through on the link offered by the WIAA.

There’s volleyball, girls’ basketball, and boys and girls track and field and that’s it.

Now, Pacific Christian (the one here in Washington) is a small school, academically strong, and likely doing its best to create opportunities for its student/athletes. No disrespect meant to the Eagles.

But the bigger question remains — how keenly is the WIAA monitoring its own rankings when it lets stuff like this linger for three weeks?

While most 1B boys’ basketball teams have played between 8-10 games, only two of 76 — Pacific Christian Academy and Chief Kitsap Academy — are listed with just one result.

CKA lost that game, legitimately it appears, 59-28 to Crosspoint, and is ranked dead last in the RPI.

Did no one think to question why #2 ranked Cusick sits at 8-0 and #3 Lummi Nation at 8-1, while the supposed top dogs sat quiet?

Was no one going to notice this until the state seeding committee sat down in February to do its business, and then, after a lot of back-patting and grazing through the fancy sandwiches provided to fuel all the hard work, suddenly noticed a fly in the ointment?

“Um, guys, gals, where is our #1 team? It didn’t qualify for state?? What do you mean it doesn’t exist???”

So, WIAA bigwigs, maybe step away from the cucumber sandwiches and get back to your number-crunching.

Because for now, it sure sounds like teams such as Coupeville could improve their RPI rankings by simply not playing any games.

And where’s the fun in that?

 

UPDATE: Three weeks with a sham #1, but two hours after this article hit the internet, Cusick — a real team playing real games — has been elevated to the top of the 1B rankings, where it always belonged.

Wolf fans keep an eye on all the gossip from La Conner. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The twists and turns keep coming.

With the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association currently conducting the process to classify schools for sports competition between 2024-2028, the Northwest 2B/1B League will likely look different next fall.

Not necessarily in terms of schools being added or subtracted, but in how the current occupants line up.

Projected numbers indicate Mount Vernon Christian and Orcas Island will move up from 1B to 2B, joining Coupeville, Friday Harbor, and La Conner, while Concrete and Darrington will remain at 1B.

Going from a 3-4 lineup to a 5-2 one helps 2B schools as it increases playoff opportunities in most sports.

Now, though, there’s another quirk, as La Conner has appealed to play down for football.

The Braves, who are a traditional gridiron powerhouse, have struggled in recent seasons, both in terms of wins and losses and roster numbers.

Schools can opt to play above their classification in any sport, but can play down only in football, and only if approved by the WIAA.

La Conner’s bid to move its pigskin program to 1B was confirmed by Coupeville High School Athletic Director Willie Smith, who is the President of the NWL.

Appeals will be heard Jan. 18-19, with the WIAA approving the full 2024-2028 plan Jan. 21.

After that leagues can set schedules, add or subtract schools, and get all their various plans hashed out ahead of the start of the 2024-2025 school year in August.

If La Conner’s appeal to play as a 1B football program is successful, it will leave Coupeville and Friday Harbor as the only 2B schools playing the sport in the current NWL lineup.

While Orcas and MVC are slated to move up, neither field a gridiron team, opting to focus on boys’ soccer instead.

With three 2B teams playing football previously, one earned a ticket to the state tourney. That will remain in effect, barring the NWL adding any other 2B football-playing members to its current lineup.

Darrington and Concrete, the league’s remaining 1B schools, play eight-man football. If La Conner is approved to join them, it’s likely the Braves will also pull three players from the field for future games.

How that would affect the status of future games with Coupeville is unknown at this time.

Coupeville High School Principal Geoff Kappes anxiously awaits the next round of computerized basketball rankings. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

I trust the baby more than the bureaucrats.

As we head into the new year, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball team sits at a spiffy 7-2, with its losses coming against always-tough non-conference foes Toledo and Kittitas.

But different computers view the Wolves in different ways.

The Washington Interscholastic Activities Association, whose wheezing ‘n huffing computer recently had a team ranked #1 with a 1-0 record for a win it didn’t actually own, puts Brad Sherman’s squad at #11 among 2B schools.

Evans Rankings, however, is the gold standard for numbers crunchers in the state — especially now that the heir to the throne, wee whippersnapper Carter, has arrived to keep an eagle eye on things — and it places the Wolves at #9.

Both sites have undefeated Lake Roosevelt atop the standings at the moment.

Wolf JV players wait for a chance to thump someone. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’re going to miss out on the hum of bus tires on asphalt.

The schedule for the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad took a hit Tuesday, with both Orcas Island and Darrington cancelling the remainder of their seasons due to a “lack of players.”

The change, which does not affect varsity action, eliminates two road trips for Kassie O’Neil’s team of young hoops hotshots.

Coupeville’s JV girls will now miss a trek to the wilds of Darrington this Friday, Jan. 5, and an island-hopping escapade Jan. 12.

Sitting at 2-4 coming into 2024, the Wolf JV has actually already played Orcas once, in a non-league game in which the Vikings poached CHS stars Haylee Armstrong and Bryley Gilbert to have enough players to field a full five-player unit.

As the schedule sits today, O’Neil’s crew has seven games remaining, with five at home.

First up is Auburn Adventist Academy, which travels to Cow Town Jan. 8.

Nicolas Cage would like to have a word regarding your use of a cell phone in a movie theater.

Movie watching ain’t what it used to be.

In so many ways.

Gone are the days of me camping out in the Oak Harbor theater to the extent where the back row seats were shaped to my butt cheeks.

It wasn’t Covid that killed the public viewing experience for me.

It was cell phones, and the moment when modern theater owners decided that no, they really didn’t want to do anything to keep the morons from lighting up in the dark and ruining the experience.

I watched films in off-island dollar theaters where we openly debated as to whether the chunks of stuff on the wall were smashed-up brownies or something far more nefarious.

Possible (human) manure? Not a deal-breaker.

Cell phones? The end of civilization as we know it.

And so I’ve gone inside, choosing my own recliner and I’m better for it.

NOT playing at a theater near you.

We’re at a time when a month of a streaming service costs less than a single matinee ticket, and that’s before adding in the gas spent, the endless ads unspooled before we even get to the movie trailers, and the inflated cost of Reese’s Pieces.

Not to mention having to overcome the urge to “liberate” all the cell phones and light them on fire in the middle of the theater in a tribute to the cinematic gods.

Not that streaming is perfect, as tracking down movies through the labyrinth is becoming increasingly more difficult.

First the studios splintered into a million little pieces, and now they’re slowly, methodically lurching their way back to being cable TV again.

The dream of me being able to hide under my blankies and watch whatever I want, whenever I want, for as few pennies as possible, remains just that — a dream.

But I endure.

While frequently complaining to the universe, which the landlord’s cats have informed me makes it harder for them to enjoy their dinner in the manner they require.

So, while I wait for them to launch a coordinated attack on the duplex and stuff a rag in my mouth, I surf the internet, and complain, then complain some more.

At least there are no cell phones to set on fire, except for the one which my sister makes me have, but which I frequently ignore.

This year, as an experiment, I decided to document every film — feature length or short — I viewed.

I counted rewatches and new experiences alike, and the final number hit 602.

Some will be horrified by the number, I’m sure, but know this — back in my video store days, it was a LOT higher.

If you want, you can pop over to the Letterboxd page I used to track my viewing:

https://letterboxd.com/davidsvien/list/recliner-life-what-i-watched-in-2023/

And then you can join my nephews in informing me that, “Uncle David … you watch a lot of crap, don’t you???”

It’s true.

Though man cannot exist on Citizen Kane or Lawrence of Arabia alone.

You need The Apple in your life, too, and some Reefer Madness: The Movie Musical to keep things interesting.

It’s why I watched two films this year, with wildly varying plots, both called Malignant.

Plus, the quadruple threat of Cocaine Bear, Grizzly II (with a very young George Clooney), Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey, and Night of the Killer Bears.

And hey, if they didn’t want me to watch the really gnarly stuff, our library system wouldn’t put crap like Cannibal Holocaust on their free-to-the-world streaming site, Kanopy.

They’re the dealers, I’m just the guy trying to keep my cinematic high going. Sometimes you get Miami Vice-grade white thunder, sometimes it’s all weeds and sticks.

Streaming, where cinematic fever dreams live forever.

As I coast into a new year and move back into not publicly documenting each and every viewing experience, thereby giving my nephews ammunition for calling my sanity into question, one question lingers.

What were the best films I saw in ’23?

To start, we’ll toss out repeat viewings and go only with stuff which was brand new to me.

I know Boogie Nights and Moulin Rouge are great. You (hopefully) know Boogie Nights and Moulin Rouge are great. Movin’ right along.

And here’s where I’m going to throw in a plot twist, and finally accept something which I had to learn over my video store years.

The films I’m about to hail are not necessarily the best I saw, but my personal favorites.

Best is in the eye of the beholder, something I thought about as I rewatched Bottle Rocket, the film that tore apart Coupeville, for the first time since 1996.

Twenty-seven years down the road it was even better the second time around … for me.

I know there are many, many people out there who probably still hate the film, or at least remember hating it, and trying to convince them to change their mind is pretty pointless.

Listen, you love Avatar, and I think the series is a pointless waste of time and money, and I love the Coen brothers, and you get the shakes when their names come up.

It is what it is.

So, here we go, 23 films that I saw for the first time in 2023 and loved (or at least seriously liked).

Your mileage may vary.

 

Short films:

 

#10 — My Cat Lucy – YouTube

Hairballs are the work of the Devil.

 

#9 — The Punisher: Dirty Laundry – YouTube

Down ‘n dirty day in the life of the Marvel Comics vigilante, and a better cinematic take on the character than all of his feature film appearances combined.

 

#8 — Hors Piste – YouTube

Fun animated mini flick about a botched mountain rescue. PS — my nephews thought the title was hilarious, even if it doesn’t mean what it sounds like.

 

#7 — Ivalu – Kanopy

A young woman goes missing in Greenland, and things spiral downwards from there.

 

6 — Ice Merchants – YouTube

Eye-popping animated tale of daredevils chasing frozen water treats.

 

#5 — (tie) La Chambre (The Room) – Netflix and Knight of Fortune – YouTube

Two different countries, two different tales of people picking up the pieces after a death in the family.

 

#4 — The Red Suitcase – YouTube

A young girl, sent to another country to be a child bride, makes a run for it in a tense thriller.

 

#3 — Bob & Don – YouTube

Beautiful tribute to lifelong friends/comedian all-stars Bob Newhart and Don Rickles, proving opposites attract.

 

#2 — An Irish Goodbye – Kanopy

Two brothers try and fulfill their late mother’s bucket list, eliciting big tears and bigger laughs.

 

#1 — Boom – YouTube

I’ve seen this three times now, and it’s better than anything Pixar or Disney have done in a decade. The eggs running away, with just the legs having broken free, was my favorite moment of 2023, hands down.

Disney needs to open the bank vault now.

 

Feature films:

 

#10 (tie) — Mandy – Tubi and Babylon – Paramount+

Fever dreams about madmen (and women), with directors going absolutely for broke, no matter how many people they offend along the way. Nicolas Cage in a drug-fueled chainsaw duel and Margot Robbie sharing screen time with degenerates, both human and animal — now that’s cinema. Of a certain type…

 

#9 — The Holdovers – Peacock

Pitch-perfect ’70s set story of a band of misfits forced to spend Christmas break together on an otherwise shuttered campus. Paul Giamatti’s best work yet, and that’s saying a lot.

 

#8 – Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny – Disney+

Listen, I’ve seen Raiders of the Lost Ark 10 billion times. Even if this was bad (and it’s not) I would have given it some slack. How nice to have it be a genuinely touching, rip-roaring farewell to Harrison Ford in the role.

 

#7 — Lifeguard – Paramount+

Sam Elliott was once a young(er) man! Long before his bushy mustache became an international star on its own, he made this tale of a man hanging on to a fading life even as everyone else around him sells out. Far deeper than you expect — but, hey, it was the ’70s, when films were far more willing to be morally complex.

 

#6 (tie) — In a Valley of Violence – Netflix and The Sisters Brothers – Tubi

Two strong recent Westerns which honor the tradition of Eastwood and Leone, while finding their own unique paths. The former is proof John Travolta still has the juice when he wants to bring it.

 

#5 — 99 Homes – Kanopy

Lacerating tale of a man who loses his family home in the economic crash, then gets it back (and more), at least for a while, by becoming the very thing he hates.

 

#4 — Boyhood – Paramount+

I put this one off for a few years, and now wonder what I was thinking. Shot over multiple years, so we can see the young lead actor grow up for real on camera, it burrows deep to find something real and remarkable.

 

#3 — Licorice Pizza – Max

Paul Thomas Anderson, the man who gave us Boogie Nights, Hard Eight, and There Will Be Blood, is money in the bank, and this coming-of-age tale is another home run for the modern master.

 

#2 — Maggie Moore(s) – Hulu

Did I mention I love the Coen brothers? This VERY dark comedy/crime thriller, starring Jon Hamm and Tina Fey, is like a perfect performance by a really good tribute band. It might not be 100% the real thing, but it’s really dang close.

 

#1 — Hickey and Boggs – Tubi

A ’70s film with morally questionable lead characters (cops/PI’s/con men, etc.) sinking into a world of corruption, with no happy endings?

That’s my jam, baby.

From Chinatown — my favorite all-time film — to others like Night Moves, The Outfit, The Seven-Ups, Dirty Harry, The Long Goodbye, Farewell My Lovely, The Conversation, The Parallax View, Trick Baby, and now this one, which somehow evaded me until this year, I eat ’em up and come back for more.

Problematic enough to make a Gen Z TikToker have a stroke.