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Alex Murdy rampaged for 20 points Saturday as Coupeville improved to 13-0 on the season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

History achieved.

Three times in the last 105 years, a Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball team started the season 12-0, only to stumble in unlucky game #13.

Not so for the 2021-2022 Wolves, who have done what the 1969-1970, 1976-1977, and 1996-1997 teams couldn’t do.

Holding off a feisty Granite Falls squad on the road Saturday, Coupeville escaped with a 70-62 win.

The non-conference victory over a 1A school which has been a longtime rival gives Brad Sherman’s squad — the only unbeaten 2B boys team in the state — a 13-0 mark heading into the home stretch of the regular season.

Left on the schedule are Northwest 2B/1B League tilts at Friday Harbor (Feb. 4) and La Conner (Feb. 10), before a likely appearance at the district tournament.

Coupeville once again demonstrated Saturday why they are so dangerous this year.

This group of Wolves doesn’t break under pressure, it can beat you from inside or outside, and it doesn’t matter which five players are on the floor at any given time.

As the Age of Coronavirus plays out, the state’s edict to test high school hoops players three times a week has left coaches to shuffle their rosters.

Saturday, the Wolves were down two varsity players, but as in every game before when other athletes were sidelined, the remaining group stepped up and seized the moment.

Facing a physical Granite Falls team which also hit the three-ball — at least in the early going — Coupeville didn’t blow its foe out.

But a win, by eight points or 48 points, is still a win. Get in, get the W, and get out.

Wolf senior Caleb Meyer, his curly locks glistening under the gym lights, got things started with a thunderous block on a Granite shot, and we were off.

The two teams traded baskets early, but a 13-2 run midway through the opening frame helped CHS open up a 17-13 lead after one quarter.

The Wolves kept Granite guessing, with Hawthorne Wolfe rippling the net on a long three-ball, before Meyer crashed end-to-end, taking a rebound all the way in for a bucket at the other end.

The biggest play, however, was a simple one, as Xavier Murdy got himself in perfect position on defense to draw a charge from a rampaging Tiger, sending a jolt of energy through the Coupeville faithful who traveled on a weekend night.

Cole White exploded off the bench to knock down back-to-back buckets to open the second quarter, but Granite hung tough.

The Tigers reclaimed the lead for a hot second at 27-26, before an Alex Murdy free throw tied things up, and then a wham-bam play staked CHS to a 29-27 lead at the half.

Logan Martin, rumblin’ down low in the paint, started things by coming up with a loose ball, before flicking an outlet pass to White.

The lanky sophomore led the charge down floor, sucked the defense in, then spun the ball to Grady Rickner — who was racing on his right — setting up a layup for his senior teammate.

Grady Rickner came up big on both ends of the floor.

Coupeville, as it has done so often this season, looked like it was blowing things wide open coming out of halftime.

Four Wolves combined to rattle the rims during a 21-9 third quarter surge, pushing the lead all the way out to 50-36 with eight minutes to play.

Wolfe led the way, lofting a pair of three-balls from the parking lot as part of an eight-point run, while Meyer slapped home six in support.

The rampaging Murdy siblings, who combined to toss in the other seven third-quarter points, teamed up on a pretty brother-to-brother bucket, with Xavier setting up Alex, and things looked safe.

But Granite had a few tricks still to play, as the Tigers rang up 26 points in a furious fourth-quarter rally.

Coupeville kept the lead right around 10, until Alex Murdy went out late after taking a rough tumble on a drive to the hoop and Wolfe fouled out on a questionable (at best) call.

A Tiger three-ball cut the lead all the way down to 66-60, but Granite also shot itself in the foot multiple times in the final moments.

Two missed free throws, an air ball on another trey, and a pair of turnovers forced by the aggressive Coupeville defense kept the hosts from staging a full comeback.

The Wolves missed some of their own free throws down the stretch, giving Granite a chance to dream, but converted when they needed it most.

Xavier Murdy, who joined the 400-point career scoring club Saturday, drained three of four charity shots in the final seconds to drive the final stake home.

As usual, the Wolves put together a very-balanced scoring attack, with Alex Murdy powering his way to a game-high 18 points.

Rickner kissed the glass for 16, Meyer drained 12, Wolfe made the nets jump for 11, while Xavier Murdy (9) and White (4) rounded out the offense.

It marked the ninth time in 13 games this season that Coupeville has topped the 70-point barrier.

After tossing in 11 points at Granite Falls, Hawthorne Wolfe has 761 for his career and moves to 16th place on the CHS boys career scoring chart.

Lyla Stuurmans and Co. played hard Saturday but fell at Oak Harbor. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Tough start, better finish.

Missing four key players Saturday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team struggled in the first half at Oak Harbor, before finishing strongly.

Unfortunately, the 2B Wolves, who only had seven players hit the floor, couldn’t complete the comeback against their 3A neighbors and fell 54-33.

The non-conference loss, coming in a game thrown together at virtually the last moment, drops Coupeville to 6-5.

The Wolves return to the floor Tuesday, hosting 2A Sedro-Woolley in another game recently added to the schedule.

After that comes a three-game stretch which will determine Coupeville’s playoff fate.

The Wolves travel to Friday Harbor Feb. 4, trek to La Conner Feb. 10, then host Friday Harbor on Senior Night Feb. 12

Two of the three 2B schools in the seven-team Northwest 2B/1B League make the postseason, and powerhouse La Conner (3-0 overall against Coupeville and Friday Harbor) has (almost) clinched the #1 seed.

The Wolves, who are 0-1 in the three-team mini-rumble, sit a half-game up on Friday Harbor (0-2) in the pursuit of the #2 seed.

Whichever of the two schools gets that second slot faces Auburn Adventist in a loser-out district playoff game in Coupeville Feb. 15.

Win there, and you play in the district title game Feb. 17 — also at CHS — with both teams in that game earning trips to the state tourney.

While the next two weeks will determine if Coupeville’s girls can get to the big dance for the first time since 2016, Saturday’s game was a chance to go toe-to-toe with the biggest school on Whidbey Island.

Putting nine girls into the scoring column — led by 13 points from Heidy Hurtado — Oak Harbor jumped on the undermanned Wolves, however.

Up 19-6 by the first break, the Wildcats stretched their lead out to 36-14 at halftime.

Coupeville put together its best run in the third quarter, with freshmen Savina Wells and Lyla Stuurmans knocking down three-balls during a 10-4 surge.

As she reflected on the game, and the strong effort put out by the players she had in uniform, CHS coach Megan Smith was philosophical about things.

“Lots of turnovers in the first half really hurt us,” she said. “Made some adjustments at halftime and came out much stronger in the second half.

“Put up a good fight, but it was just too late into the game to turn it on,” Smith added. “Good learning game though.”

Junior gunner Maddie Georges tied Hurtado for game-high honors, flipping the nets on four treys as she rolled up 13 points of her own.

Savina Wells backed her up with nine points, including a perfect six-for-six performance at the free throw line, while Stuurmans added her three-ball.

Everyone who played for Coupeville scored Saturday, with Nezi Keiper, Izzy Wells, Audrianna Shaw, and Carolyn Lhamon each netting a bucket.

 

No JV game:

Saturday’s Island rivalry matchup was varsity only, with Coupeville’s second squad taking the night off.

With another solid game Saturday, Maddie Georges moves into 55th place on the CHS girls career scoring chart.

Nick Guay tossed in 13 points Saturday in a Coupeville JV win. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They made it rain.

Throwing down eight three-balls Saturday, the Coupeville High School JV boys basketball squad blitzed host Granite Falls 49-42.

The non-conference victory lifts the young Wolves to 3-6 on the season, with two more games on the schedule.

The JV closes with road games against Northwest 2B/1B League foes Friday Harbor (Feb. 4) and La Conner (Feb. 10).

Coupeville will enter that home stretch awash in a nice afterglow, thanks to Ryan Blouin, Nick Guay, and Zane Oldenstadt scorching the Granite nets.

The first two of that trio connected on three treys apiece, while Oldenstadt drilled the bottom out of the net twice from distance.

Ryan Blouin ponders life as a three-ball assassin.

CHS actually trailed 15-10 at the first break Saturday, then found its shooting groove.

Six different Wolves scratched their name in the scoring column during a 15-8 second quarter run, before Coupeville blew things open with a 16-6 tear in the third frame.

From there the sweet-shooting assassins coasted in for the win, the first of two claimed by Coupeville’s male hoops players on this night.

Guay topped the scoring chart with 13 points, while Oldenstadt tossed in 11 and Blouin added nine.

Mikey Robinett (6), William Davidson (5), Hunter Bronec (3), and Johnny Porter (2) also scored, with Landon Roberts, Hurlee Bronec, and Jack Porter all seeing floor time.

Coupeville’s Makana Stone (left) works on her game during practice in England. (Photo property Leicester Riders)

Teamwork makes the dream work.

Putting six different players into double-digit scoring Saturday, including Coupeville’s Makana Stone, the Leicester Riders stormed to a big victory in Scotland.

Roaring from behind to finish the game on a 25-6 tear, the Riders routed the Caledonia Pride 77-62 in Women’s British Basketball League action.

With the victory, Leicester improves to 8-4 in league action, 11-5 overall.

Stone and Co. sit comfortably in fourth place in the 13-team WBBL.

The game was a tense affair most of the way, with the score knotted at 16-16 at the first break.

From there Caledonia surged ahead 38-33 by halftime, before carrying a 56-52 lead into the final frame.

Leicester had all the answers, however, throwing down 13 straight points en route to turning the fourth quarter into a romp.

Oceana Hamilton paced the Riders with a team-high 17, while Alison Lewis, making her debut after transferring in from Luxembourg earlier in the week, banked home 15.

Anna Lappenkuper (12), Hannah Robb (12), Stone (11), and Brooklyn Mcalear (10) also scored as Leicester shared the ball all day.

My past, and present.

With one exception, every movie I’ve seen in 2022 originally debuted in 1997.

It’s part of my New Year’s resolution, which was to build a virtual time machine and travel back to my lazy, hazy days behind the counter at Videoville.

I ate a kajillion Reese’s Pieces, was rightly described by my boss more than once as a “gossipy old church lady,” and injected cinema into my veins at a staggering rate between 1994 and 2006.

Even got paid more than a few bucks to do so.

Life hasn’t been the same since, as future jobs in the dish pits and out on farms beat the crud out of my back — something later made worse by lounging on too many butt-eroding bleachers while writing about prep sports.

If one thing has remained constant over the years, it has been my habit of mainlining movies into my cranium.

Let’s just say I’ve seen a lot of good to great films, and a LOT of bad to worse ones.

And yet I endure.

How I watch them has changed over the years, with video stores sidelined, streaming systems taking over the world, and the act of going to the theater having irreversibly changed.

Not just by Covid, though, as ever-present cell phones, in all their annoying glory, ruined the live cinematic experience long before anyone worried about being coughed on in the dark.

Why should I go out of my way to arrange a six-movies-in-a-day marathon at the nearest mall — complete with squares of light popping on and off around me — when I can spend the same day buried under blankies on my recliner?

Especially now that I’ve chosen to spend a chunk of 2022 living in 1997.

So now I’m 38 flicks — 34 features and four short films — down the movie memory hole, and a few things already stick out.

Batman and Robin is not only still the worst superhero film ever made, but it’s somehow gotten worse in the 25 years since I ruined a Friday afternoon watching it in a theater on opening day.

The only good thing to come out of it is that George Clooney has been so willing to ridicule the film (and his own performance) every day since.

Meanwhile, Speed 2, thoroughly lambasted at the time for not being a carbon copy of the awesome first film in the series, is NOT as bad as you think it was.

Sandra Bullock is both adorable and a butt-kickin’ heroine, Willem Dafoe is reliably bonkers playing with his leeches, and the cruise ship crashing through town like Godzilla is still a hoot.

Also, it’s interesting what the passage of time will do.

I loved The Spanish Prisoner the first time around, and loved it this time too, having forgotten all the intricate surprises waiting to be sprung.

With other revisited thrillers like Switchback, Cop Land, Scream 2, and Jackie Brown, the twists were still lodged in my brain, but other than the basic outline of David Mamet’s con man caper, the rest had filtered away.

Then there’s Hercules, which I saw 17,808 times in the first few years after it hit home video, thanks to my oldest nephew — who was very young at the time.

Eventually, he moved on to new things, and there was a big enough time gap before nephews #2 and #3 arrived, that they never got hooked on the film.

Coming back after all these years, I found Hercules — with its hero channeling the nerdy charm (and vocal stylings) of Christopher Reeve in Superman — to be one of the best of the new-era Disney animated films.

Not to the level of Aladdin, certainly, but personally I prefer it to The Lion King or Beauty and the Beast.

Yes, yes, I’m a blasphemer.

Meanwhile, I Married A Strange Person, with its super-horny animated birds, is still a hoot — if you’re not watching it with other people. Then it gets awkward fast…

Snow White: A Tale of Terror with Sigourney Weaver is an underrated story perfect for those of us who wanted to see Prince Charming get thrown out an upstairs window, while Princess Mononoke remains a pristine gem.

And Jurnee Smollett, at 11 years old, knocked it out of the park in Eve’s Bayou, which, like other hidden gems such as Traveller, never had a chance come Oscar time. Which is a pity.

What’s still ahead to revisit? A lot.

All-timers like L.A. Confidential, The Sweet Hereafter, and Boogie Nights, plus more middling fare such as Anaconda, Good Burger, and Leprechaun 4: In Space.

The good. The godawful.

The ones I remember. The ones I don’t.

Even a few which, horror of horrors, I somehow never saw the first time around.

I’m stuck in 1997, and I’m not coming back anytime soon.

 

To follow my journey, pop over to:

https://letterboxd.com/davidsvien/list/we-have-to-go-back-rewatching-1997-in-2022/