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“See Jada? If I look through these nifty goggles, I can see all the three-balls I made!” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Two teams done, two play on, and the nets keep flippin’.

Both of the Coupeville High School JV hoops squads wrapped their seasons Friday, while their varsity counterparts kick off playoff action next week.

Taken all together, Wolf hardwood heroes have combined to score 3,022 points this season.

Where things stand as of Feb. 12:

 

Varsity girls
(19 games):

Alita Blouin – 182
Maddie Georges – 131
Ryanne Knoblich – 89
Lyla Stuurmans – 65
Gwen Gustafson – 61
Katie Marti – 46
Carolyn Lhamon – 32
Mia Farris – 24
Madison McMillan – 6
Jada Heaton – 2
Skylar Parker – 2

 

JV girls
(16 games – final):

Madison McMillan – 133
Kierra Thayer – 73
Desi Ramirez-Vasquez – 57
Carlota Marcos-Cabrillo – 49
Jada Heaton – 44
Teagan Calkins – 40
Reese Wilkinson – 35
Skylar Parker – 20
Bryley Gilbert – 17
Kayla Arnold – 14
Liza Zustiak – 14
Brynn Parker – 7
Kassidy Upchurch – 4

 

Varsity boys
(20 games):

Logan Downes – 486
Alex Murdy – 201
Cole White – 138
Nick Guay – 120
Jonathan Valenzuela – 78
Dominic Coffman – 52
Ryan Blouin – 48
Chase Anderson – 39
Jermiah Copeland – 10
Zane Oldenstadt – 8
William Davidson – 6
Mikey Robinett – 4
Hunter Bronec – 2
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim – 2

 

JV boys
(14 games – final):

Aiden O’Neill – 108
Jack Porter – 105
Hunter Bronec – 102
Camden Glover – 97
Chase Anderson – 71
Johnny Porter – 59
Hurlee Bronec – 46
Malachi Somes – 43
Landon Roberts – 38
Mikey Robinett – 6
Carson Field – 4
Yohannon Sandles – 2

Aiden O’Neill has a delivery to make. (Morgan White photo)

Maddie Georges slashes to the hoop. (Bailey Thule photo)

Deja vu, but with a better ending.

For the second time in less than 24 hours, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball team frittered away a fourth-quarter lead against Friday Harbor, but this time, when the buzzer rang, the Wolves were on top.

Forcing a turnover on the game’s final play, CHS escaped with a 26-25 win in a tiebreaker game played on a neutral court in La Conner, punching their ticket to the bi-district playoffs.

Coupeville, now 9-10, opens the four-team single-elimination tourney Monday, Feb. 13, hosting Auburn Adventist Academy — which it beat in the regular season — at 5:15 PM.

La Conner faces Northwest Christian (Lacey) in the nightcap at 7:00, with the winners returning to the CHS gym Wednesday, Feb. 15 to play for the tourney title and a trip to state.

Saturday’s game, which featured two groggy teams tipping off at high noon after wrapping their Friday showdown about 6:00 PM, was life or death.

Coupeville and Friday Harbor split their two-game season series, thanks to the Wolverines rallying from 14 down in the fourth and winning in overtime on their home floor.

Since both teams were swept by La Conner, Saturday’s rumble was for the #2 playoff seed from District 1.

Gone was the rabid crowd of Friday night, gone were a three-pack of refs who called a LOT of fouls, and yet Saturday’s game played out uncannily similar.

Coupeville once again never trailed from opening tip well into the fourth quarter, though with both squads rimming out a series of shots, the scoring was much lower in the rematch.

Instead of a 14-point advantage, the Wolves were up by nine this time, after Maddie Georges sank a three-ball from the right side while under heavy pressure.

And once again, Friday Harbor, a scrappy team with no quit, started chip-chip-chippin’ away at the lead down the stretch.

Wolverine junior McKenna Clark rattled home eight of her team-high 10 points in the waning moments, including hitting six consecutive pressure-packed free throws.

But a pair of charity shots from Coupeville senior Alita Blouin — the Wolves only points in the game’s final six minutes-plus — were epic.

“The Assassin,” staring daggers through any fool unlucky enough to foul her, barely rippled the net as both shots went down, providing the Wolves with their final margin.

To get to the win, Coupeville had to survive a goosebump-inducing final 40 seconds, however.

Katie Marti (left) and Mia Farris contemplate the defensive destruction they’re about to unleash. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

First, the Wolf defense forced a turnover.

Then they held on to the ball with iron grips, not allowing for any drops, wayward passes, or deflections as Friday Harbor frantically fouled three times, trying to stop the clock.

The third, and final foul, pushed the Wolves into 1-and-1 territory, and while the ensuing free throw wouldn’t stay in the bucket, Coupeville played the final six seconds to perfection.

The missed free throw was batted skyward, draining precious time.

Finally able to snatch the madly bouncing ball, a Wolverine shot towards the right side of the floor, only to dribble on the line as three Coupeville players trapped her in the backcourt.

The buzzer sang its song just as the ref on that side made the call, and CHS coach Megan Richter could collapse on the bench with a smile on her face.

“These girls are stressing me out and I’m exhausted,” she said with a big laugh.

“They played their hearts out today and left it all on the floor. They fight until the end, and I couldn’t be more proud of them!”

The Wolves marinate in their win, while looking forward towards the playoffs. (Bennett Richter photo)

While the game ended in a burst of adrenaline and intensity, it began sort of slowly.

Both teams looked tired in the early moments, and Friday Harbor didn’t score until nearly eight minutes into the game.

Not that Coupeville was lighting up the scoreboard all that much.

Georges dropped in a pair of buckets while on the move, and Ryanne Knoblich sank a free-throw, but the Wolves were only up 5-2 at the first break.

The offense picked up a bit in the second frame, with Georges draining a three-ball and a pull-up jumper, but Friday Harbor closed on a 6-0 run to knot things at 12-12 headed into the half.

During the break, Wolf senior Carolyn Lhamon worked on her shot with her coaches, and it paid immediate dividends.

She snatched an offensive rebound and slapped it back up and in, then came around to pull off a three-point play the hard way on a power move in the paint.

Toss in a superb bit of teamwork, with Lyla Stuurmans slipping an inbound pass through the defense to set up a Katie Marti layup, and the Wolves were up 21-15 entering the fourth quarter.

Richter gave floor time to eight of her 11 players, with five of them scoring.

Georges, who had 13 on Friday, came back around to notch a game-high 14 Saturday.

Now with 384 points and counting, the slick-shooting Wolf point guard is up to #26 on the all-time CHS girls’ hoops scoring chart.

Friday, Georges slipped past Whitney Clark (359), while Saturday she hopped Katie Smith (374), younger sister of current Coupeville JV coach Kassie O’Neil.

Lhamon banked in five points to back her teammate, while Knoblich (3), Blouin (2), and Marti (2) also scored.

Stuurmans, Gwen Gustafson, and Mia Farris rounded out the players on the floor, while Skylar Parker, Jada Heaton, and Madison McMillan made some serious noise from their perch on the bench.

Win, bow, and exit

Kayla Arnold goes strong to the hoop. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Cold-blooded closers.

Scoring almost half their points in the fourth quarter Friday, the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball players exited as winners.

Holding off host Friday Harbor 41-38, the young Wolves wrap an 8-8 season full of great promise.

Kassie O’Neil’s squad reps a 2B school, but they played seven games against 1A, 2A, or 3A teams this season, finishing a solid 3-4 against big-school rivals.

Friday’s rumble pitted the Wolves against a fellow 2B team, and one which beat them the first time around.

Revenge was in the air, and it was fueled by Madison McMillan, who was a mad bomber, dropping a pair of three-balls during an eight-point explosion in the fourth quarter.

Wolf aces Jada Heaton (left) and Madison McMillan celebrate being awesome. (Bailey Thule photo)

Coupeville squeaked out to a 10-9 lead by the first break, ever so slightly stretched the lead to 20-17 at the half, then had its only cold shooting stretch of the night in the third frame.

Not that Friday Harbor was lighting up the rim, either, as the Wolverines used a 6-3 mini-run to knot things up at 23-23.

Then, in the snap of the net flipping high, the rivals went off down the stretch, combining to rain down 33 of the night’s 79 points across the final eight minutes.

McMillan was on fire, but she got help, with Skylar Parker, Kierra Thayer, Teagan Calkins, and Desi Ramirez-Vasquez also scoring in the fourth quarter.

Coupeville spread its offense out, with 10 different players banking in shots.

McMillan led the way with a game-high 12 points, with Thayer (7), Calkins (6), Skylar Parker (6), Kayla Arnold (2), Bryley Gilbert (2), Reese Wilkinson (2), Jada Heaton (2), Carlota Marcos-Cabrillo (1), and Ramirez-Vasquez (1) also scoring.

Kassidy Upchurch, Brynn Parker, and Liza Zustiak rounded out the roster for O’Neil, the former Wolf hoops star in her first season as JV coach.

 

Final season scoring stats:

Madison McMillan – 133
Kierra Thayer – 73
Desi Ramirez-Vasquez – 57
Carlota Marcos-Cabrillo – 49
Jada Heaton – 44
Teagan Calkins – 40
Reese Wilkinson – 35
Skylar Parker – 20
Bryley Gilbert – 17
Kayla Arnold – 14
Liza Zustiak – 14
Brynn Parker – 7
Kassidy Upchurch – 4

William Davidson eyeballs the paparazzi. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A bump in the road.

It wasn’t the way the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball team wanted to end the regular season, falling 67-60 at Friday Harbor in a foul-riddled brawl Friday night.

But while the loss drops the Wolves to 13-7 on the season, it ultimately doesn’t matter all that much, except as a lesson to be learned.

Friday Harbor is still NOT going to the postseason, and Coupeville is still the #1 playoff seed from District 1, and that was set in stone long before the Wolves went Island-hopping.

The Wolves host Northwest Christian (Lacey) Tuesday, Feb. 14 in their bi-district opener, then welcome either Auburn Adventist Academy or La Conner to the CHS gym Feb. 16.

Win two games in the four-team double-elimination royal rumble, and Coupeville heads back to the state tourney for the second-straight season.

So, celebrate tonight Friday Harbor boys’ hoops fans, because tomorrow you can start thinking about spring sports.

Dominic Coffman is ready for the playoffs. (Bailey Thule photo)

Friday’s tilt started firmly in favor of Coupeville, took a nasty detour, then became a bare-knuckle slugfest in the late going.

Nick Guay opened the game by hitting a jumper, before the refs discovered the teams were using the smaller basketball normally employed by high school female players.

The basket stood, however, and then Logan Downes and Alex Murdy combined to rain down a trio of three-balls with their normal ball, helping the Wolves build an 11-4 lead midway through the first quarter.

Things got batty from there, however, as Friday Harbor hit a groove (and a bunch of buckets), using a 20-2 surge over the next 6-8 minutes, pulling ahead 24-13.

Coupeville rallied, with Murdy raining down shots while hanging in mid-air, while teammate Jonathan Valenzuela swept up a wayward baby who wandered onto the court during play.

Back within 29-23 at the half, the Wolves were playing with fire, as they have from time to time this season, falling behind, then rallying to crush foes.

This time, however, Friday Harbor didn’t crack, matching CHS bucket for bucket across the third quarter during a 19-19 stalemate.

Cole White hit a variety of pressure-packed shots, freshman Chase Anderson came up with a big steal and breakaway bucket, and Murdy was locked-in as he cracked the 400-point club like older brother Xavier before him.

But the Wolverines stayed patient, hit the boards hard, and netted a string of three-balls to keep the Wolves at bay.

For a moment at least.

Back down by 11 in the fourth quarter, Coupeville went on a 15-4 tear, knotting things up at 59-59 when Downes splashed home a trey from deep on the right side of the floor.

White set the play up with a nifty steal, and an earlier technical foul on the hosts for being chippy helped as well.

But then, as quickly as the comeback had come to life, Coupeville’s shooting touch evaporated.

Friday Harbor, cheered on by La Conner players in the stands (rival schools uniting for a night to heckle the big dogs), hit six free throws in the waning moments.

Tack on a put-back off of an offensive rebound, and the Wolverines were able to slam the door shut.

For this night, at least.

Downes finished with a game-high 29 points, while Murdy banked in 15, and White tickled the twines for 10.

Guay (2), Anderson (2), William Davidson (1), and Coffman (1) also scored, while Ryan Blouin, Zane Oldenstadt, and Valenzuela saw floor time.

With his first three-ball of the night Downes passed Jeff Rhubottom (459 points in 1977-1978), and now has the second-best single-season scoring total, boy or girl, in 106 years of CHS basketball.

The Wolf junior sits with 486 points heading into the playoffs, chasing just Jeff Stone, who rattled the rims for 644 in 1969-1970.

Career-wise, Downes cracks the 700-point club, passing Chris Good (688) to move into 21st place all-time with 710 and counting.

Sophomore slugger Katie Marti tore up the hardwood on both ends of the floor Friday night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

No time to think about what might have been.

Minutes away from clinching a playoff berth Friday night, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad couldn’t quite seal the deal, but the Wolves will get a second chance Saturday at high noon.

Squandering a 14-point fourth-quarter lead, CHS fell 49-47 in overtime at Friday Harbor.

Having split their season series, with both teams winning at home, the Wolves and Wolverines spar on a neutral court in La Conner a mere 18 hours after their most-recent rumble ended.

Since it’s a tiebreaker and not a playoff game, regular season admission prices will be charged.

The stakes are simple.

Whichever team wins Saturday is the #2 playoff seed from District 1 and joins top-seeded La Conner and District 2’s Auburn Adventist Academy and Northwest Christian (Lacey) at the bi-district tourney Monday, Feb. 13 at Coupeville’s gym.

The loser packs up and heads off to think about spring sports.

Coupeville seniors (l to r) Carolyn Lhamon, Maddie Georges, Ryanne Knoblich, Alita Blouin, and Gwen Gustafson have unfinished business. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Friday’s bout was one-sided for much of the night, with Coupeville, now 8-10 after the loss, leading almost start to finish.

The game had three ties — at 4-4 very early, then 42-42 with six seconds left in regulation, and finally 46-46 late in overtime.

Gwen Gustafson drilled the bottom out of the net to kick off the fourth quarter, taking an Alita Blouin pass and rising up to give CHS its biggest lead of the night at 40-26.

The Wolves still led 42-30 minutes later, after Maddie Georges came flying round the corner to bury a runner over outstretched hands.

And then, everything that could go wrong went wrong for Coupeville, as their hosts ended regulation on a 12-0 tear with the clock madly ticking down.

A late three-ball from McKenna Clark, who led Friday Harbor with 17 points, was a knife in the ribs, but so was a questionable travel call on the Wolves in the waning seconds.

Give the Wolverines credit, though.

After clanking numerous shots all night — Friday Harbor was just 14-27 on free throws while Coupeville was 9-15 — the host team seemingly couldn’t miss at crunch time.

Or in overtime, as Wolverine gunner Mia Blackmon scored her only points of the night on a three-ball to open the extra four-minute frame.

From there, the teams exchanged free throws, with Georges sinking four straight before fouling out, but Coupeville ran out of time as the locals went bonkers.

The wild finish capped a game which began with the Wolves jumping out to a 10-5 lead after one quarter of play.

Georges popped the net on a long three-ball, before Blouin nailed the first of her three treys to key a run in the second quarter.

Rampaging sophomore Katie Marti came up huge in the first half, whistling perfect set-up passes to Blouin and Gustafson, while also outwrestling multiple foes for rebounds.

Up 27-19 at the break after Carolyn Lhamon sank a jumper to send the teams to the locker room, the Wolves rode a nine-point third quarter from Blouin to stake themselves to a 38-26 lead heading into the fourth.

Blouin paced the Wolves, rippling the nets for 17 points, while Georges (13), Lhamon (6), Gustafson (6), Ryanne Knoblich (3), and Marti (2) also scored.

Mia Farris and Lyla Stuurmans both shone brightly on the defensive end of the floor for Coupeville.