Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Madison McMillan led Coupeville in scoring Saturday night. (Kaitlyn Leavell photo)

The basket stopped accepting Coupeville’s offerings in the final minutes.

After waging a tense tussle with Toledo for three-plus quarters Saturday, the Wolf varsity girls’ basketball squad went cold late, allowing the Riverhawks to storm their way to a non-conference victory.

The visitors closed on a 17-2 run across the game’s final six minutes, turning a five-point advantage into a 40-20 win.

The loss drops a rebuilding Coupeville squad to 0-2 on the season.

Megan Richter’s squad will have six days to work on its shooting touch, not returning to action against a rival until a trip to Sultan next Saturday, Dec. 9.

Saturday’s rumble, coming against a largely unknown foe, was a close, and low-scoring affair for much of the afternoon.

Madison McMillan drilled a quick shot mere seconds into play to stake CHS to a 2-0 lead, but the Wolves hit a wall after that.

Coupeville’s next bucket didn’t come until right before the end of the first quarter, courtesy a jumper from the side by Lyla Stuurmans, cutting the lead to 8-4.

The second quarter was an equal opportunity freeze-out, as the teams combined to hit six free throws … and not a single field goal.

Skylar Parker and Katie Marti connected on shots from the charity stripe, but CHS was down 11-7 at the half.

Things picked up in the third frame, though mainly for Toledo.

McMillan banked in a pair of buckets — one on a slash to the basket, the other off of an offensive rebound — but the visitors swished the game’s only three-ball as they pushed the advantage out to 21-14 heading into the fourth.

The Wolves, who played inspired defense for stretches of the game, cut the margin down to 23-18 after back-to-back buckets from Mia Farris and McMillan.

Farris made off with a steal, hitting the jets and sliding past a pursuing defender on a charge to the hoop, while McMillan knocked down a note-perfect pullup jumper.

But that was where it ended for Coupeville, at the moment where McMillan’s field goal dropped through the net and hit the hardwood.

Ramping up its attack, Toledo suddenly broke through and in a big way, raining down a series of buckets to pull away.

Farris sweetly swished a pair of free throws late, but Coupeville couldn’t get a shot from the field to drop in the game’s final minutes, mirroring its earlier struggles.

McMillan paced the Wolves with a season-high eight points, while Marti added five in support of her fellow junior.

Farris (4), Stuurmans (2), and Parker (1) also scored, while Jada Heaton, Teagan Calkins, Kayla Arnold, and Reese Wilkinson also saw floor time.

It was the varsity debut for the latter two of that group.

And in an intriguing side note, Farris, who is tied for #2 on the team in scoring with 10 points across the first two games, has notched all of her points in the fourth quarter this season.

Cole White, seen in a rare moment where a rival player is NOT smacking him in the face. (Jackie Saia photo)

This one hurt. Literally.

The Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball team suffered its first defeat of the season Saturday, falling 52-38 to visiting Toledo in a game marred by pain, lopsided officiating, and an offensive attack which sputtered at clutch time.

The good news is the rumble was a non-conference affair, so while the Wolves fall to 2-1 after a busy first week, it doesn’t put a ding in their pursuit of a league crown.

What did have a serious ding put in it was Cole White’s face, and Chase Anderson’s back.

The senior ballhandler, who has now bled in all three of his team’s games, got belted in the mouth by a Toledo elbow and was lost with Coupeville clinging to a one-point lead in the third quarter.

No foul was called on the play — not totally surprising on a night when the refs whistled the Wolves for 25 fouls to just 14 for the visitors — and White’s exit came at a point where he was the game’s leading scorer.

Anderson, who was making his season debut after sitting out the first two games with an injury, got launched into the floor by a pack of Riverhawks earlier in the third quarter.

The springy sophomore later returned to action, but only after first applying a large bag of ice to his back, while momentarily moving like a senior citizen who just lost an intense game of shuffleboard.

Toledo was big, it was physical, and it was a solid test for the Wolves, who responded strongly much of the way.

White and Ryan Blouin knocked down three-balls in the opening minutes, packaged around a slash to the hoop by top scorer Logan Downes as CHS opened with an 8-0 run.

The Wolves eventually got the lead out as far as 17-7 right before the end of the first quarter, with Blouin slapping home a breakaway layup, but the good times hit a pause after that.

With fouls piling up, Coupeville had to sit several key starters for large chunks of the first half, and Toledo took advantage.

An 11-0 surge, starting with two free throws to exit the first, allowed the Riverhawks to take the lead for the first time at 18-17 midway through the second frame.

White and Anderson, before they got bushwhacked, hit buckets to keep things close, but the visitors went in at the half up 25-21.

Coupeville slipped further behind at 29-21, then launched an 11-3 run of its own to knot things at 32-32.

Overcoming the exits of White and Anderson, the Wolves relied on hustle defensive plays from William Davidson and the Battlin’ Bronec Brothers, Hunter and Hurlee, while Downes connected on a three-ball off of an inbounds play.

Toledo slipped a pair of free throws through the net to claim the lead heading into the fourth, but Downes immediately responded with a runner, forging the last tie at 34-34.

That was when the rim turned unforgiving for the Wolves, however, with the visitors tearing off an 18-4 run to pull away.

Two three-point plays, one on a three-ball from the top, and one on a bucket and foul, sealed the deal.

Overall, Toledo hit 13 of 23 free throws, while Coupeville was 5-10.

While fans like to complain about the disparity in fouls, Wolf coach Brad Sherman is quick to shrug that off.

“A few hard-fought games this week,” he said. “Got a couple good wins, just had a tough one tonight.

“Mostly just proud of our boy’s toughness and the way they fight for each other.”

With the next game on the schedule not until Dec. 9, when the Wolves travel to Sultan, the team will have time to fine-tune things and get healthy.

“We will get back at it this week,” Sherman said. “Clean up a few things offensively, keep building on our stuff – and that starts with me.”

Downes paced Coupeville Saturday with 13 points, scoring 11 in the second half while haunted by foul trouble, with White knocking down 11 before being maimed.

Blouin (5), Anderson (4), Hurlee Bronec (3), and Nick Guay (2) also scored, with Zane Oldenstadt, Davidson, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, and Hunter Bronec also getting floor time.

Hurlee Bronec’s points, which came on a three-point play the hard way, were his first as a varsity player.

He is the 414th Wolf boy we’ve been able to document scoring in the program’s 107-year history.

Izzy LeVine can’t be stopped, won’t be stopped. (Photo courtesy Sean LeVine)

Don’t get between Izzy LeVine and a championship medal.

The former Coupeville supernova is now the queen of the wrestling mats, terrorizing grapplers in a new city seemingly every day.

This weekend, Micky and Jae’s (not so) lil’ sister was at the 50th Annual Jerry Benson Tournament in Buckeye, Arizona, and all anyone could hear was the scream of wrestlers trying (and failing) to escape her grasp.

Izzy made a clean sweep of things, winning all seven of her matches, six by pins, to claim a tourney title.

Paced by her performance, Casteel High School’s girls’ wrestling squad finished fourth in the team standings.

While the LeVine family no longer lives in Cow Town, they left behind a towering legacy, with three family members having earned induction into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Coupeville Middle School’s best and brightest. (Photos courtesy Alison Perera)

They came, they saw, they impressed the judges.

The Coupeville Middle School robotics club spent Saturday at Glacier Peak High School in Snohomish, competing in the First Lego League Qualifier.

Led by coaches Alison Perera and Doug McVey, the Wolves had two teams competing — the Robotic Wolves and Technical Duties.

CMS left school at the crack o’ dawn (or 6:00 AM) and pulled back into Cow Town about 14 hours later.

“It’s been a long day,” Perera said. “Super proud of the kids for persevering through a long day!”

Coupeville finished 8th and 9th out of a field of 31 teams.

While CMS didn’t advance to the semifinals this year, it was still a strong run for the talented students.

“It was a tough field with some great innovative projects and cool robot designs,” Perera said. “It was a great day after a great season!”

Students did a presentation in the morning, then played the robot game in the afternoon, with both CMS teams notching higher scores than they did in previous practices.

Our neighbor to the North just completed one of the most stunning turnarounds in Washington state prep sports history.

Four years after the program was on life support, and getting beat by 2B schools like Coupeville, the Anacortes High School football squad won the program’s first 2A state title Saturday at Husky Stadium, destroying six-time champ Tumwater 60-30.

The Seahawks scored 34 unanswered points in the first half and put up the most points a T-Bird gridiron squad has ever given up in a loss.

Anacortes rang up 552 yards in the win, with quarterback Rex Larson throwing for 346 yards and four touchdowns.

The Seahawks, who have a Coupeville connection in cheerleader Kate McFadyen, daughter of former Wolf QB Jason, scored on nine of 11 drives.

Anacortes also currently claims Kwamane Bowens, who formerly coached football at CHS and attended school in Coupeville in his early days.

Kwamane Bowens

Tumwater, which entered the day ranked #1, also has a Coupeville connection, as All-Conference tight end Jake Dillon is the son of former Wolf Sean.

His mom, the former Becca Jenson, was a year behind me at Tumwater.

The parental units — Jason McFadyen (left) and Becca and Sean Dillon.