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Anna Powers wheels and deals. (Julie Wheat photo)

They got tougher as the night went on.

The Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team played its strongest 16 minutes in the second half Friday on Orcas Island but couldn’t quite catch up to the Vikings.

Despite playing their hosts straight up after halftime, the Wolves ultimately fell 34-26 in a hotly contested conference clash.

With the loss, CHS slips to 0-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 1-3 overall, and heads back home to square off with Mount Vernon Christian Tuesday night.

Orcas jumped out to a 10-7 lead after one quarter of action Friday, then stretched the lead out to 23-15 heading into the halftime break.

The Wolf girls responded with an admirable show of grit, however, winning the fourth quarter 7-2 to keep the second half scoring knotted up at 11 points per team.

Ten Coupeville players hit the floor for coach Alita Blouin, with Ava Lucero knocking down 11 points to lead the scoring attack.

Cami Van Dyke (4), Anna Powers (4), Finley Helm (2), Willow Leedy-Bonifas (2), Emma Cushman (2), and Elizabeth Marshall (1) put their names in the scoring column, with Olivia Hall, Taylor Marrs, and Allie Powers also earning floor time.

Coupeville junior Haylee Armstrong rattled the rims for a team-high 14 points Friday night on Orcas Island. (Julie Wheat photo)

“We gotta make free throws.”

Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball coach Scout Smith, who was a precision shooter in her own playing days, could do little but watch in silent horror Friday as her squad gave one away on Orcas Island.

Despite getting to the line twice as many times as the host Vikings, the Wolves could not get the ball to stay in the basket, and it stung them badly in a 42-39 loss.

The defeat, coming in the Northwest 2B/1B League opener for both teams, drops CHS to 0-1 in conference action, 1-3 overall heading into a Tuesday home tilt with NWL powerhouse Mount Vernon Christian.

Friday’s fracas was decided at the charity stripe, and it could have been a blowout for Coupeville.

The Wolves earned 24 chances at the stripe to just 12 for Orcas — a rare case of the road team getting the benefit of the doubt — but the rim was unforgiving.

While the Vikings were just 5-12 with the action stopped, they still made two more free throws than their foes, as Coupeville netted just 3-24.

That blew a huge hole in the Wolves ability to hold on to the lead, or rally back in the final moments.

Up 13-10 after one quarter of play, with Haylee Armstrong going off for seven points to lead the way, the Wolves settled for a 19-19 tie at the half.

Coupeville was still within 31-29 after three frames but couldn’t quite get there and will look for some sweet revenge when Orcas travels to Cow Town later in the season.

Armstrong paced the Wolves Friday, pumping in 14 points, while Teagan Calkins banked in 11 in support.

Tenley Stuurmans (5), Adeline Maynes (4), Kennedy O’Neill (4), and Ari Cunningham (1) also scored, with Lexis Drake providing a defensive spark in her time on the floor.

The game marked a return to action for Maynes, who sat out two games after being crunched in the head in the season opener, while Stuurmans, a sophomore, cracked the 100-point career scoring club and now sits with 103 points.

“This is my baby! Go get your own!!” (Photos courtesy Megan Richter)

One baby to unite two empires.

Coupeville High School football and girls’ basketball head coaches Bennett and Megan Richter have added to the family, with Waylon joining super-excited big sis Adeline.

The birth gives Wolf legends Willie and Cherie Smith six grandchildren to spoil.

Plus, it gives me a reason to get to run baby photos, which are worth their weight in gold when it comes to page views.

So, win-win for everyone.

Brian Gianello

The Coupeville School District has lost one of its linchpins.

Brian Gianello, who worked tirelessly as Director of Finance and Human Resources, has resigned after two-and-a-half-years in the positions.

The affable money man, who was hired in July of 2023, has been at the forefront of the district’s budget work.

In a “Wolfpack Family/Community News” newsletter sent out Tuesday, Superintendent Shannon Leatherwood said:

Coupeville School District is conducting a search for a Director of Business and Finance following the recent resignation of Brian Gianello.

This position oversees financial operations, budget management, and business services that support our students and schools.

We have strong interim leadership in place to ensure continuity during this transition, and all district operations continue smoothly.

If you know a qualified professional who might be interested in serving our community in this important role, please share this opportunity with them.

Gianello held the same positions in the La Conner School District from 2021-2023 before being hired by previous Coupeville Superintendent Steve King.

An email sent to his work address Monday bounced back with the reply “I am currently out of the office, and all emails will be forwarded.”

The School Board is scheduled to hold its monthly business meeting next Thursday, Dec. 18, and Gianello’s resignation is expected to be included on the agenda.

Camden Glover can torch the net from inside or outside. (Julie Wheat photo)

They needed this.

After playing three hotly contested games to open the season, while coming up on the short end of each rumble, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball team led from (almost) start to finish Tuesday to capture its first victory.

Beating visiting East Jefferson 64-47, the Wolves, who rep a 2B school, crushed the Rivals, a 1A program which combines two former CHS Olympic League foes – Port Townsend and Chimacum.

Now 1-3 after the non-conference win, Brad Sherman’s squad hits the road Friday to travel to Orcas Island for the first Northwest 2B/1B League game of the year.

If the Wolves play like they did Tuesday, they’ll stand a strong shot at sitting atop the (very early) conference standings.

Coupeville, playing once again without a full roster as various players work through early season injuries, jumped right on East Jefferson.

The Rivals notched the game’s first bucket, and held one last lead at 4-3, but then the Wolves tore their foes to shreds for the rest of the opening frame.

CHS big man Camden Glover, who owned the paint all night, took a dish from Chase Anderson and rolled past his defender to slap home a bucket, and Coupeville was launched on a game-busting 20-1 eruption.

The Wolves attacked from all angles, with Anderson going off for 15 points in the first quarter, mixing a pair of three-balls with breakaway buckets in which he simply outran the defense before elevating and delivering gifts to the hoops gods.

Fellow seniors Glover and Aiden O’Neill combined for eight points during the tear, forcing East Jefferson to try and account for multiple incoming bogeys, while missing out on stopping any of them.

The Rivals did claw back, a bit, cutting a 23-7 deficit at the first break back down to 25-17 midway through the second quarter.

Coupeville’s answer?

More Anderson, slashing to the hoop on give-and-go plays.

More Glover, asserting his dominance down low every time he touched the ball.

And a bit of razzle-dazzle from Davin Houston, taking a break from terrorizing the Rivals on defense to hit a swooping layup which had highlight reel written all over it.

Up 35-22 at the half, Coupeville kept up the pressure in the third quarter.

Glover grabbed center stage, with eight more points in the frame, but Houston also returned for another swooping bucket which showed off his high-energy hops, and then Easton Green made his presence known.

A largely unsung role player who embraces doing the kind of dirty work which warms a coach’s heart, the Wolf senior got his biggest offensive showcase Tuesday night.

Green slipped a pair of free throws through the net, bounced outside to drill the bottom of the net out on a three-ball, then came around later in the game to slash to the hoop and knock down a layup off a perfect entry pass.

Everything was rosy at 55-35 heading into the fourth, at which point the Wolves decided to give their coach a brief burst of angina.

East Jefferson hit back-to-back three-balls to key an 11-0 surge which cut the lead back to single-digits and make the always-calm Brad Sherman ever so slightly hunch his shoulders.

Not to worry, however, as the Wolves stiffened up on defense, holding the Rivals to just a single point over the game’s final four minutes, stretching the final margin back to 15 and assuring they would not be running lines from now until Friday.

For the first time this season, CHS had two players top 20 points in the same game, with Anderson banking in 25, and Glover powering his way to 21.

With his season-best performance, Glover joins the 150-point career club (he’s actually sitting at 160), while his running mate continues to move up into rarefied air.

Anderson, now with 663 career points, bounces from #29 all-time to #26 on the Wolf boys’ scoring chart, passing Jason McFadyen (654), Wade Ellsworth (659), and Pat Bennett (659) and moving within five of #25 Foster Faris (668).

Green and O’Neill each popped for seven Tuesday, while Houston knocked down four, and Malachi Somes and Liam Blas saw floor time.