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Hunter Bronec, fan favorite, hard at work. (Chloe Marzocca photo)

It started as a low rumble, then became a roar.

“I love you, Hunter!!” echoed off the walls of the Coupeville High School gym, as Wolf JV players hooted and hollered as swing player Hunter Bronec prepared to check into Friday night’s varsity hoops game.

A fourth-quarter appearance by the lanky young gun, who hit the floor like a ball of fire unleashed, was the perfect cap to a night on which everything went right for CHS.

Putting 13 players into action, with 10 of them scoring, Wolf coach Brad Sherman crafted a perfectly calibrated team win, shepherding his squad to a 64-25 dismantling of visiting Darrington.

The victory, Coupeville’s fifth in its last six games, lifts it to 1-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 7-5 overall.

With another game roaring up fast — a road trip Saturday to face non-conference foe Neah Bay — being able to spread out minutes and keep his top guys fresh was exactly Sherman’s hope.

And, like the A-Team before him, the prairie hardwood sage does love it when a plan comes together.

Coupeville jumped on the Loggers quickly, with Logan Downes going off for seven points in about seven seconds.

A layup, off of a dish from Jonathan Valenzuela, a three-ball from the right side, and then a steal and breakaway bucket and the Wolves and their scoring ace were ready to punch the pedal through the metal.

Toss in back-to-back buckets from Valenzuela, with William Davidson and Downes zipping perfect set-up passes to the silky-smooth senior, and Darrington had few answers.

Dominic Coffman, rampaging from one end of the floor to the other and enjoying his best offensive performance of the season, capped the first quarter with another steal and swooping layup.

Powered by 11 points off the fingertips of Downes, the Wolves had a 19-6 lead heading into the first break, and it felt like much more.

Darrington couldn’t generate much offense, and definitely couldn’t slow down Coupeville, which got points from six different players in the second quarter en route to building a 38-14 halftime lead.

The Wolves attacked from all angles, with Alex Murdy and Downes droppin’ three-balls, while Ryan Blouin, Cole White, and Coffman converted steals into points.

Dominic Coffman will devour your soul. (Chloe Marzocca photo)

Fab frosh Chase Anderson turned an offensive rebound into a bucket, snagging an air ball and putting it back up and in a millisecond before a shot clock violation, while White got fancy.

Streaking down court after picking the pocket of a Logger ballhandler, he was headed for a layup, only to find his path blocked at the very last second.

Stopping on a dime, White stepped back and drained a short jumper over the arms of a defender, the ball splashing home as dad Greg nodded in approval from the Wolf bench.

“Just the way I did it back in the day,” was what his expression seemed to say.

To which Sherman arched one eyebrow in the direction of his assistant coach, then went back about his business.

Job #1 was getting quality floor time for everyone on the roster, and he nailed it.

With the Wolf starters sitting out most of the second half, Coffman and Nick Guay picked up the scoring slack, the former jamming the ball down the throats of the defenders, the latter showing off a series of slick inside moves.

When the ball went back outside, Blouin made the Loggers pay, knocking down a pair of second-half treys to help push the lead out to 40.

Before the running clock kicked into play, Murdy also delivered a crowd-pleasing defensive gem.

Darrington had the ball on the break, with a Logger careening into the paint in hopes of netting a rare bucket.

Instead Murdy emphatically stuffed the shot, rising up to rip the ball away while delivering a death stare which made his feelings recognizable to everyone in the gym, from the first row to the top of the bleachers.

“Don’t try that again, son. Just don’t.”

Playing his fewest minutes of the season, Downes paced the Wolves with a game-high 16 points, enough to help him achieve a personal milestone.

With his first quarter three-ball, the junior, who entered play Friday averaging a hair under 25 points a night, became the 50th Wolf boy to score 500 career points for a program launched in 1917.

Downes, who heads to Neah Bay with 512 points and counting, passes Jason Bagby (499) and David Lortz (502), moving from #51 to #49 on the all-time list.

He got plenty of support Friday, with Coffman ringing up a season-high 10 points, while Guay banked in nine and Blouin rippled the nets for eight.

Anderson (6), Murdy (5), White (4), Valenzuela (4), Jermiah Copeland (1), and Zane Oldenstadt (1) also scored for the Wolves, with Bronec, Davidson, and Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim seeing floor time.

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim and Co. have won five of their last six. (Bailey Thule photo)

You shall not score!!

With another win in hand, Ryanne Knoblich and friends are off to face Neah Bay. (Helene Strelow photo)

Unleash the piranhas.

Attacking like a pack of flesh-devouring killers, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball players put on a defensive clinic over the final three quarters Friday night.

Limiting visiting Darrington to just nine points over the final 24 minutes of action, the Wolves romped to a 36-17 win, capturing their first conference victory of the 2022-2023 season.

Now 1-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 5-5 overall, Megan Richter’s team has a fast turnaround, heading off to Neah Bay Saturday for a non-conference rumble with the Red Devils.

Coupeville will bounce across the backroads of America still flush with the success of a well-executed dismantling of Darrington.

The Loggers actually claimed the early lead, bolting out to a 5-2 advantage, then slipping back ahead 7-5 after Wolf senior Maddie Georges knotted things up with a long three-ball.

But from that moment on, the game changed.

The Wolves began to press much more aggressively, creating turnovers and frustrating the Darrington ballhandlers, who got flustered and chippy once the heat was turned up.

Georges, backcourt mate Alita Blouin and the ever-rampaging duo of Katie Marti and Lyla Stuurmans keyed the defensive effort, while Mia Farris ripped down 11 rebounds in a ferocious performance.

Having one of their best free throw shooting nights of the seasons, the Wolves rippled the nets behind the deadeye shooting of Blouin, closing the first quarter with a 12-8 lead.

The second quarter was a bit of an odd affair, as it felt as if Coupeville was ahead by 20, though it went to the break leading just 20-14.

The Wolves dominated play on both ends of the floor but had a number of shots spin out of the basket, limiting their ability to pull away from the Loggers.

Blouin knocked down a pair of runners, while Stuurmans and Gwen Gustafson both converted buckets off of sweet set-up passes from Georges, who time and again made the smart choice when she had the ball on her fingertips.

Gustafson also came up big in the intangibles department, drawing an offensive foul on an out-of-control Logger, before bouncing back up off the floor with a grin on her face.

And yet Darrington refused to go away, scoring the first bucket in the second half to get within 20-16 and stir hopes of a comeback.

The Loggers, who also now sit at 1-1 in league action, entered play Friday boasting a 7-2 record, and a large part of their success seems to come from their sheer willpower.

Darrington might not be the most talented team in the NWL, but to a woman, they play hard, they play physical, and they don’t back down. Give them credit.

But also pass a lot of credit to the Wolves, who sealed the deal by closing the game on a 16-1 surge over the game’s final 14 minutes.

Buckets from Blouin and Ryanne Knoblich, plus a Stuurmans free throw, pushed Coupeville’s lead back out to 25-16 heading into the final quarter, and the Wolves were brutally efficient in that frame.

Georges and Blouin delivered knockout punches thanks to three-balls which dropped from the sky, barely moving the net as they hit paydirt, while the CHS defense was unrelenting.

Lyla Stuurmans clamps down on defense. (Bailey Thule photo)

Late in the game, swing players Jada Heaton and Madison McMillan provided the final highlights.

First, Heaton slipped a free throw through the twines, then was cheated out of another successful shot by a ref, who, missing his seeing-eye dog, claimed the Wolf sophomore entered the lane too soon.

Whether the second conversion counted or not, both free throws were small works of art, as Heaton has maybe the smoothest free throw shot on the team.

The game’s final roar came for McMillan, who was crashing around, yanking down rebounds and chasing down loose balls.

Georges collected a rebound with mere seconds to play, then fired a bomb nearly the length of the court.

The ball dropped neatly into the hands of her young teammate, who was motoring to the other end of the floor in an attempt to beat the madly ticking clock.

Slapping home a layup right before the game-ending buzzer shrieked, McMillan notched her first varsity points, making her the 240th Wolf girl to score for a program launched in 1974.

Blouin, who paced the Wolves with a game-high 12, also hit a personal milestone, cracking the 100-point club and doing it in just 12 games.

She scored 11 in two games as a junior, then missed the rest of the season after breaking her ankle during pregame introductions.

Back healthy and back on the floor, Blouin has tallied 99 points in the first 10 games of her senior campaign, and now sits with 110 career points and counting.

Georges popped for eight Friday to support her running mate, while Gustafson (6), Knoblich (4), Stuurmans (3), McMillan (2), and Heaton (1) rounded out the attack.

Farris, Marti, and Skylar Parker also played, while injured starter Carolyn Lhamon made her presence felt while rooting for her teammates from the bench.

Ryanne Knoblich and friends have added a game against Lummi Nation. (Bailey Thule photo)

The schedule maker’s job is never done.

Continuing to work the phones as the season progresses, Coupeville High School Athletic Director Willie Smith has picked up another home game for the Wolf girls’ basketball teams.

The addition brings Lummi Nation to Whidbey Island Monday, Jan. 30 for a non-conference rumble.

JV tips at 5:15 PM, varsity at 7:00.

The tilts get Coupeville’s varsity back to 19 regular-season games, while bumping the JV out to 15 contests.

Megan Richter’s lead squad originally had a full 20-game schedule, but the Wolves passed late on going to a two-game Christmas tournament in Eastern Washington as they dealt with a number of nagging injuries.

Alex Murdy, about to deliver the dagger. (Bailey Thule photo)

This is a heady time for hoops stat heads.

Nationally, LeBron James is on his way to taking down a record which has stood almost 40 years, as he’s 400 points and some odd change from topping Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’s NBA career scoring mark.

That’s huge.

Michael Jordan never got there. Neither did Kobe, or either of the Malone’s, Karl or Moses.

Abdul-Jabbar set the record April 5, 1984, in a game against the Utah Jazz played in Las Vegas — nine months before LeBron was born — bumping Wilt Chamberlain from the top spot.

With the passage of time, Wilt the Stilt is now #7 all-time, yet we still remember his dominance, and that’s aided by the fact that his name resurfaces each time someone new makes a run at the title.

Stats are ever-changing, but, when we track one player scaling the mountaintop, while taking time to remember those who breathed that same rarified air, we connect the past to the present to the future.

Or at least that’s always been my belief while writing about small town high school and middle school basketball.

No one in Coupeville has thrown down 38,000+ points, maybe.

But when we look at the mosaic painted by those who’ve scored in a Wolf varsity game, each player is worthy of their moment, however brief or extended, in the spotlight.

The CHS boys’ hoops program is in its 106th season, the Wolf girls in their 49th year, and I’ve been able to document 651 players (412 boys, 239 girls) who’ve scored.

The list ranges from Brianne King (1,549 points) to 12 players, including current sophomore Jada Heaton, who slipped a single free throw through the net.

Jada Heaton becomes one with the universe. (Bailey Thule photo)

Which is all a long way to getting around to the point of this story, which is when the occasional person tells me I focus too much on scoring stats, I hear you — I’m just not listening to you.

I appreciate rebounds, smart passes, well-set picks, and the most-exciting moment in basketball.

And yes, that’s when a player hustles back, plants their body, accepts the incoming pain, and draws an offensive charge, selling it to the ref by falling to the floor like they’ve been smacked by an in-his-prime Mike Tyson.

It’s a thing of frickin’ beauty, and something Coupeville players, girls and boys, have become very smart at achieving this season.

But points ultimately decide who wins and who loses.

Points are the one stat which we have a fighting chance to tally in a town where too many scorebooks and stat sheets ended up in the garbage can or tossed into a barn for a curious cow to munch.

Listen, I’d love to know how many rebounds Tom Sahli snagged in the ’50s, but barring time travel being perfected, I currently have a better chance of marrying Margot Robbie than I do of ever knowing that number.

I’m not holding my breath, is what I’m saying.

Especially when I’m still missing a season’s worth of Sahli’s scoring stats, thanks to the 1951-1952 season forever staying just out of my reach.

But we do what we can do, and the 2022-2023 season has been chockful of meaningful milestones to record and ramble on, and on and on, about.

Seniors Maddie Georges and Alex Murdy both cracked the 300-point club, while sophomore Lyla Stuurmans and junior Cole White recently gained entry to the 100-point club.

Friday brings Darrington to town, and with the arrival of the Loggers, there’s a chance seniors Alita Blouin (98) and Gwen Gustafson (91) hit triple digits.

And then there’s the biggie, with Logan Downes sitting just four points away from becoming the 50th Wolf boy to hit the magical 5-0-0 for their career.

Having topped 20 points in nine of 11 games, with a high of 40 against Orcas, the junior marksman has already rung up 272 of his 496 points this season.

Which means the youngest of the three Downes brothers could retire to Rio tonight and still have the best season for any CHS player, boy or girl, in the last five years.

Logan Downes has places to be. Get out of his way. (Chloe Marzocca photo)

Hunter Smith tallied 382 points in the 2017-2018 campaign, coming within shouting range of the 10th-best season by a Wolf boy — current Coupeville coach Brad Sherman’s 396 in 2002-2003.

The last CHS player to hit 400 in a season was current Norwegian pro hoops star Makana Stone, who scorched the nets for 427 in 2015-2016.

That’s sixth-best in school history, and third-best by a Wolf girl.

Across 153 seasons (so not counting 2022-2023, which is still in progress), nine Coupeville hoops stars have combined to record 10 seasons of 400+ points.

Brianne King (446 and 442) is the only two-timer, with Jeff Rhubottom (459), Pete Petrov (442), Makana Stone (427), Arik Garthwaite (423), Bill Jarrell (415), Mike Bagby (414), and Tom Sahli (409) also on the list.

But wait, David, you said 10, and that’s nine.

That’s because Jeff Stone (no relation to Makana, though both are connected by talent) rang up 644 points across 24 games during the 1969-1970 season.

You read that right, any first timers to this blog.

Leading the way for a Wolf team which went 20-4 and won the first district championship by ANY Whidbey Island basketball team, Jeff Stone scored almost 200(!) points more than any other CHS player has amassed in a single season.

He also set the school’s single-game record of 48 points against Darrington, at the biggest moment, in the game which won that title.

Even with no three-balls, and while getting pulled from the contest with a full 90 seconds to play.

48 and 644 have seemed almost untouchable for quite a long time.

Just like 38,387, which is how many points Kareem Abdul-Jabbar popped through NBA nets.

But now, as LeBron makes his own run at history, we have a new contender at the local level, as well.

Logan Downes still has a long way to go, but through 11 games, he is only 23 points off Jeff Stone’s pace.

295-272.

26.8 a night against 24.7.

He’s a contender.

Listen, the small things matter in God’s chosen sport.

Rebounds, backdoor cuts, or Katie Marti reviving the spirit of ’90s “bad girl” Jodi Christensen, exploding into the scrum, blowing up bodies and gloriously freakin’ out the visiting fans.

The team titles on the wall are the gold standard.

It’s what we talked about when Jeff Stone and his 69-70 teammates returned to the CHS gym for the 101st anniversary of Wolf boys’ basketball, reuniting with the coach, Bob Barker, who led them to glory.

But, at its core, basketball is about points, and it’s about the eternal dance as the numbers ebb and flow.

It’s why I update my career totals for CHS hoops after each game — before I write the story — and not at the end of the season, so I can watch things unfold in real time.

Mia Farris ponders the possibilities. (Bailey Thule photo)

One night, Mia Farris, just beginning to climb the chart, scores three points and passes 11 more players on the list, each name evoking a memory.

Another time out, Alex Murdy supplants his uncle, Allen Black (310-305), with Black in the stands for the game.

“I scored 39 against Concrete my senior year and you ain’t touched that yet, skippy,” is what the old school ace’s small smirk seems to say, even as his pride in his nephew also shines through.

And the dance continues, one point at a time.

Luke Samford poses with the 2019 CHS girls’ cross country team. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

He’s back in the college ranks.

Former Coupeville High School cross country coach Luke Samford has been tabbed as the new Assistant Athletic Director for Bethany College in Kansas.

An NCAA D-1 athlete himself, he coached college athletes for seven seasons before taking over the Wolf harrier program.

In his one season at the helm, Samford helped build a recently revived Coupeville cross country program, with Catherine Lhamon advancing to the state meet.

After also working as an assistant track and field coach at CHS, he and wife Hayley left Whidbey in mid-2020 to pursue career opportunities in Kansas.

After departing Coupeville, Samford worked as a high school pole vault coach and held a position in the Student Success Center at Bethany College.

The NAIA school, located in Lindsborg, Kansas, fields 20+ athletic teams.