Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Do the ticket hustle!

Want to see Xavier Murdy and Co. play live Saturday on Orcas Island? You have some work to do. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

First come, first served — and you have to buy your ticket in advance.

When the Coupeville High School basketball teams travel to Orcas Island Saturday, seating will be restricted to 50 road fans.

Wolf fans interested in attending also need to pre-purchase their tickets online, and when 50 tickets are sold, the event will appear as “sold out.”

Tickets go on sale Thursday.

When you arrive at the gym Saturday, your digital ticket will be scanned. No cash will be accepted.

Orcas High School will pay the $1 service fee for each transaction, but fans will have to pay a 2.9% card processing fee in addition to the normal entrance fee.

This affects ONLY the games at Orcas Saturday, and not games when the Vikings travel to Whidbey to play Coupeville.

To buy tickets, go to https://orcasvikings.com/ and click on “tickets” in the top right corner of the page.

Randy King celebrates as the Coupeville High School track team wins another title. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

This is the end, my friends.

For really real this time.

First he departed as a teacher, and now longtime Coupeville High School track and field guru Randy King is calling it a career as a coach.

The longest-tenured coach at the school retired as a teacher in April, 2020.

King spent 42 years in the classroom, the final 29 at CHS.

At the time, the school board agenda indicated he was also bringing his coaching career to an end, but, to the joy of many, he agreed to stick around the track oval for a bit longer.

This time his departure is official, however, as CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith confirmed King’s resignation.

King has been involved with the Wolf track program since the mid-2000’s.

His run as coach produced 11 of the 17 individual state meet titles in program history.

Wolf state champs he coached include:

2006 — Jon Chittim (200, 400); Kyle King (3200); boys 4 x 400 (Chris HutchinsonChittim, K. KingSteven McDonald)

2007 — K. King (1600, 3200)

2008 — K. King (3200)

2010 — Tyler King (1600, 3200)

2019 — Danny Conlisk (200, 400)

Under Randy King’s tutelage, Coupeville track regularly proved quality could beat quantity, with his teams piling up strong league, district, and state finishes despite often having far fewer athletes than many of its rivals.

The high-water mark for CHS track came in 2006 and 2008, when the Wolf boys finished 4th in the team standings at the state meet.

His girls teams were some of the strongest in school history, and 11 of 18 Wolf girls track school records came on his watch.

On the boys side, 12 of 17 current school records belong to King-coached athletes.

King also led the CHS varsity boys basketball program for 20 seasons, ruling the sidelines between 1991-2011.

He led both his 1998 and 2002 squads to Northwest League titles, coaching four of the top 10 scorers in program history.

Mike Bagby (tied for #1 with 1,137 points), Pete Petrov (#7 with 917), current Wolf boys hoops coach Brad Sherman (#8 with 874), and Arik Garthwaite (#10 with 867) all called King their coach.

King also pulled a stint as a CHS assistant football coach, and, later in his career, led middle school programs for both boys basketball and volleyball.

The spikers who he taught as young women went on to provide the core of the most-recent CHS volleyball squad to earn a trip to state.

“It’s good to be the king, baby!”

Caleb Meyer lines up a shot. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

We’re (slightly) in limbo.

The Coupeville High School basketball squads are off until this weekend, when they play back-to-back games Friday and Saturday.

The first of those is at home against Darrington, the second on the road at Orcas Island.

While the Wolves work in practice, and their fans wait for games, some pics to help pass the time.

Abby Mulholland gets rowdy.

Ryan Blouin freezes time.

Class of ’22 seniors (left to right) Ja’Kenya Hoskins, Audrianna Shaw, Izzy Wells, and Abby Mulholland hang out with coach Megan Smith.

Hunter Bronec rolls to the hoop.

On the floor they’re dead serious. Off the court, not as much.

Gwen Gustafson eyeballs the defense.

Hawthorne Wolfe tempts fate.

Jacob Schooley was one of 10 Wolves to score Monday afternoon. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

You win some, you lose some.

Playing at home for the first time in nearly three weeks, the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball teams earned a split Monday with visiting Granite Falls.

The Wolf varsity won big, while the JV played tough, but fell short in their contest.

How the day played out:

 

Varsity:

Aiden O’Neill is a stone-cold hardwood killer.

With barely a flicker of emotion on his otherwise-inscrutable face, the CMS 8th grader tore out Granite Fall’s beating heart and showed it to the Tigers as they spiraled out of control.

Hitting three second-half three-balls, part of his game-high 13-point effort, O’Neill sparked the Wolves to a 33-16 romp after the game was briefly tied in the third quarter.

The victory evens Coupeville’s record at 2-2 heading into another home game, this one Wednesday against Northshore Christian Academy.

Monday’s marquee matchup was actually close for the first 15 minutes, with the score knotted at 4-4 at the end of the first quarter, and Coupeville clinging to a 12-10 advantage at the half.

Granite rolled in a bucket off a nice move in the paint to tie things back up at 12-12 a minute into the third frame, and then it was time for the Wolves to bring out the whuppin’ stick.

A free throw from Jayden McManus gave CMS a lead it would never relinquish, but it was O’Neill who drove the dagger home.

Or make that daggers, as he buried a pair of treys from the left side to provide the bulk of the scoring in a game-busting 9-0 run to end the period.

In between the majestic three-balls, both of which barely rippled the nets as O’Neill (ever so slightly) cocked an eyebrow, defensive dynamo Malachi Somes ripped off a gem.

Forcing a steal, then sliding past the Granite ballhandler and leaving him spinning in place, the Wolf fireball beat the crowd to the rack at the other end, slapping home a layup.

It brought the pro-Wolf crowd to its feet, and was an especially-nice late birthday present for mom Megan, who celebrated her big day over the weekend.

Granite finally stopped the bleeding, but only when a wildly-thrown three-ball somehow beat the odds, took a lucky bounce, and fell through the net to open the fourth quarter.

Not that it ruffled the Wolves in the least, however, as they promptly scored the game’s final 12 points to put a cap on a game-closing 21-4 surge.

O’Neill drilled another trey, and found time to hit a lil’ scoop shot in the paint, while Somes pulled off the “steal/spin the defender/convert the layup” triple-feature a second time during the final run.

Coupeville, which controlled the boards all game, also came up big on the glass, with McManus and Camden Glover ripping down caroms, then bouncing back up to convert second-chance buckets.

The strong finish more than made up for a somewhat-tentative first half, when the biggest play was O’Neill losing his shoe on a play, yet still playing lock-down defense while ignoring the AWOL footwear.

Chase Anderson also sank a three-ball, off of a crisp in-bounds pass, then made a pretty dish on the fly to set McManus up for a layup.

O’Neill’s 13 was a season-high for him, while Anderson (7), McManus (5), Glover (4), and Somes (4) rounded out the Wolf attack.

Easton Green and Mahkai Myles also saw floor time for CMS in the opener.

 

JV:

Coupeville’s second unit is very raw — capable of surprising their coaches with some inspired plays, but also still very much in learning mode.

That was evident in a 52-13 loss, which drops the Wolves to 0-4 on the season.

The best bucket of the game came from Captain Teuscher, who picked the ball from a Granite dribbler, then took off on a wild rampage to the other end of the floor.

With nine other guys trying to catch up, the younger brother of CHS cheer captain Bella Velasco suddenly screeched to a halt, popped up on one leg, and calmly flicked in a jumper.

Teuscher didn’t merely break the ankles of the lone defender in front of him, but pretty much flat-out shattered both the Granite dude’s entire legs with his sudden stop-and-pop move.

Other Wolf highlights included Matthew Kuzma and Jonah Weyl crashing hard on defense, and Wyatt Fitch-Marron (somewhat accidentally) invoking the spirit of the 1980’s Detroit Pistons Bad Boys.

That squad won back-to-back NBA titles by beatin’ the crud out of opponents.

While Fitch-Marron and Co. may have a bit to go before they start hanging title banners in the gym, the young Wolf guard made a big impression with his heart and hustle on defense.

In particular, we speak of one play where he (probably inadvertently) hip-checked the guy he was guarding, sending the Granite player sprawling a good five feet.

Fitch-Marron stayed on his feet, even after being at the center of the hit-and-run accident, and had a huge grin on his face afterwards — just as he should.

Plays like that speak well for the work being put in by the young Wolves and their mentors — old-school coaches Jon Roberts and Craig Anderson.

Granite may have had a huge size advantage in the day’s second game, but Coupeville’s players have no quit. And that’s a great place to start.

Riley Lawless and Myles paced the JV with four points apiece, while Teuscher (2), Jacob Schooley (2), and Joshua Stockdale (1) chipped in to the offensive effort.

Also seeing floor time were Carson Grove, Zach Blitch, Max Ohme, Kenny Jacobsen, Dylan Robinett, Ethan Walling, Jackson Waterbury, George Spear, and Beckett Green.

Mikey Robinett lets a free throw fly. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Audrianna Shaw is averaging 10.5 points a game for the Wolf varsity girls.

Two games in, the names at the top are familiar ones.

Audrianna Shaw and Hawthorne Wolfe, who led the Coupeville High School varsity basketball teams in scoring as juniors, are back filling up the buckets as seniors.

Both Wolf varsity squads are very balanced in their scoring attack so far, with the CHS boys one point away from having five players averaging double digits.

On the JV side of things, Madison McMillan and Ryan Blouin have the early lead for their teams.

Scoring stats through games of Dec. 4:

 

Varsity girls:

Audrianna Shaw – 21
Maddie Georges – 18
Izzy Wells – 16
Carolyn Lhamon – 12
Savina Wells – 6
Gwen Gustafson – 2
Ja’Kenya Hoskins – 2
Nezi Keiper – 2

 

Varsity boys:

Hawthorne Wolfe – 32
Caleb Meyer – 28
Logan Downes – 24
Xavier Murdy – 24
Alex Murdy – 19
Grady Rickner – 9
Logan Martin – 3
Dominic Coffman – 2

 

JV girls:

Madison McMillan – 12
Skylar Parker – 6
Katie Marti – 4
Desi Ramirez-Vasquez – 4
Mia Farris – 3
Bryley Gilbert – 3
Kayla Arnold – 2
Edie Bittner – 2

 

JV boys:

Ryan Blouin – 16
Nick Guay – 11
Hunter Bronec – 10
Zane Oldenstadt – 8
Mikey Robinett – 8
Jack Porter – 4
Johnny Porter – 2
Landon Roberts – 2