Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Chase Anderson makes it rain. (Julie Wheat photo)

It’s a milestone reached by very few.

Coupeville High School boys’ basketball debuted in 1917, with the Wolf girls finally getting to claim their share of the hardwood in 1974.

During that 109-year span, only 28 players have cracked the 700-point club — 22 boys and six girls — with the newest member joining the inner circle Tuesday night.

CHS senior Chase Anderson tallied 20 points during a win in Concrete, pushing him to 709 for his career, with more than half of his final campaign remaining to be played.

How rare is entry in the 700 Club?

So far, I’ve been able to document 687 Wolves who scored in a varsity game — 432 boys and 255 girls — with just 4% of those players reaching the mark.

While there is still a chunk of (really) old-school CHS boys (think the 1920’s through the 1940’s) whose scoring contributions are lost to time, no one back in that time period remotely scored at the kind of clip needed to amass 700 points.

Barring a pile of ancient scorebooks being discovered in a barn loft someday, we’ll never have a 100% complete record, but our count of 28 players seems pretty set in stone — at least until the next great scorer comes along.

Who will that be?

Likely no one currently playing at the high school level, as the next leading active scorers are Teagan Calkins (281 points) and Camden Glover (195), who are both seniors.

After that comes junior Haylee Armstrong (148) and sophomore Tenley Stuurmans (103), who would both need to ramp up their pace considerably.

Getting to 700 (or more) takes skill, but it also takes luck.

Injuries alter careers, the pandemic threw everything asunder, and playing time is a tricky beast.

For every player who hits varsity on day one as a freshman, has a green light to shoot, and plays for teams which make long state runs each season, there’s an equally talented scorer caught in a number’s game who doesn’t get let loose until their senior season.

Hello, Allen Black.

While we wait for that 29th player to emerge — and they will at some point, likely when we least expect it — what about Anderson?

Now that he’s in the 700-Point Club, there are still higher rungs to reach.

The 800-Point Club has 21 members, while the 900-Point Club goes 13 deep. Get really hot over the remainder of the season and the 1,000-Point Club, home to just 10 Wolves, beckons.

Let the nets bounce!

 

CHS Basketball 700-Point Club:

Brianne King – 1549
Logan Downes – 1305
Zenovia Barron – 1270
Makana Stone – 1158
Mike Bagby – 1137
Jeff Stone – 1137
Randy Keefe – 1088
Megan Smith – 1042
Mike Criscoula – 1031
Jeff Rhubottom – 1012

Bill Riley – 934
Ann Pettit – 932
Pete Petrov – 917
Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby – 892
Brad Sherman – 874
Denny Clark – 869
Arik Garthwaite – 867
Bill Jarrell – 855
Hunter Smith – 847
Corey Cross – 811

Hawthorne Wolfe – 800
Jack Elzinga – 770
Barry Brown – 769
Hunter Hammer – 755
Steve Whitney – 730
Dan Nieder – 729
Tom Sahli – 719 (*Missing stats for his sophomore season in 1951-1952*)
Chase Anderson – 709 (*Active*)

Camden Glover is the hot knife, and the defense is the butter. (Julie Wheat photos)

Consider it an early Christmas gift for Brad Sherman.

Back on the floor after a schedule scramble, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball squad drilled host Concrete 67-31 Tuesday night, sending their coach to the holiday break on a high note.

The victory, coming in a “non-conference game against a conference foe,” lifts the Wolves to 2-5 on the season.

The game was added to the schedule after CHS was unable to go East this past weekend for games against Manson and Entiat due to bad weather at the passes.

While Coupeville and Concrete are rivals in the Northwest 2B/1B League, the 2B schools such as Coupeville normally only play 1B schools Darrington and Concrete once during the hoops season.

That regularly scheduled rumble will arrive Jan. 20, with the Wolves once again hitting the road to travel to the town made famous on movie screens by Leonardo Di Caprio and Robert De Niro.

Now, barring any more late-breaking additions to the schedule, Coupeville’s boys are off until Jan. 3, when they climb on the bus for a trip to play non-conference foe Morton-White Pass.

Tuesday’s tilt, coming against a winless Concrete squad which dropped to 0-5, was a romp from start to finish.

The Wolves, sparked by 14 first-quarter points from Chase Anderson, ran out to a 21-11 lead by the first break, then stretched the advantage to 40-22 by the half.

Camden Glover banked in 10 points during the second quarter, while Coupeville got scoring from five different players during a 23-2 surge in the third frame to end things with a bang.

Malachi Somes scans the defense.

Sherman was able to spread floor time out between 10 Wolves in uniform, with eight of them scoring on this night.

Anderson finished with a game-high 20, all compiled in the first three quarters, while Glover (12) and Davin Houston (10) also reached double-digits.

Malachi Somes (9), Aiden O’Neill (6), Riley Lawless (4), Easton Green (4), and Sage Arends (2) all chipped in to the offensive attack, with Liam Blas and Carson Grove helping anchor the Wolf defense.

Two Wolves reached personal milestones in the victory, with Anderson cracking the 700-point club for his career — he sits with 709 and counting and is the 22nd CHS boy to reach the mark for a program launched in 1917.

Meanwhile, Glover surged into the top 150 scorers all-time, passing former standouts like Ryan Blouin, Dale Sherman, and Scott Stuurmans.

The burly senior now has 195 career points and is currently tied with Mitch Aparicio and John Engstrom at #145 on the career list.

RayLynn Ratcliff has helped guide a new generation of Wolf hoops stars. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The job title is changing, but not the passion.

After three seasons as a Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball coach, RayLynn Ratcliff is stepping away, but she’ll remain a vibrant force on the hardwood, now focusing on her SWISH team.

As she transitions roles, the high-energy hoops guru offered a few words to her many fans.

 

It has taken me some time to muster up the courage, and right words, to share my resignation.

This opportunity presented itself three years ago, and I jumped in headfirst with an outpouring of support from family, friends, and mentors.

Over these past three seasons, it has been an honor to serve this program alongside our dedicated coaching staff and committed athletes.

Together, we worked to build an environment grounded in grit, gratitude, humility, trust, excellence, and growth.

Watching our athletes develop — not only in their skills and understanding of the game, but also as individuals — has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my career.

It has truly been a privilege to coach such a special group of young people.

To my husband: Thank you for your support of my wild ideas – you put up with long days, late nights, frustrations, ideas of practice plans and always grounded me on the importance of balancing being successful as a coach with being joyful and grateful.

It takes a true partner in life to be married to a sports coach – I appreciate you, always.

To my boys Kamden and Braxten: Thank you for teaching me the importance of the role coaches play in your lives – you challenged me to be more patient, understanding and appreciative for all the good days and all the bad days.

To my mentors and colleagues: Thank you for always being available to ask questions, share ideas, give input and partner to work to create such an amazing program that not only develops these young athletes as players but also as young adults in a time of their development when they need it the most.

Ratcliff pours her passion into the game.

To my players: Never stop working hard, never stop challenging yourself and pushing yourself towards your goals.

Never forget the feeling you have celebrating the successes with your teammates and the motivation those hard moments create for you.

Never stop loving the game of basketball and THANK YOU for three seasons of laughs, jokes and memories I will never forget.

While I am stepping away from this role, my passion for supporting youth basketball in our community remains strong.

I will continue to coach a group of now-sixth graders in our third season of the Skagit County Swish league and look forward to continuing to build their skills and love for the game throughout the next few years before they make their transition to high school.

I hope they get to be part of something amazing in their high school careers.

I am deeply grateful for this opportunity and do not take lightly the role I played in these middle schoolers’ lives over the last few years.

As the group that I had as sixth graders three seasons ago makes their transition to high school next year, I hope they remember the importance of always working hard, always holding themselves accountable, having integrity and challenging themselves — but most importantly, always having fun and loving the game of basketball.

I look forward to continuing to contribute my time and energy to local programs, and I hope that my journey will allow me to continue to invest myself in the community and Coupeville basketball program.

And who knows what the future may hold as I may eventually find my way back into the Coupeville basketball program in some capacity.

Aiden O’Neill flies into action. (Julie Wheat photo)

No games for you. Or you. Or even you.

Maybe.

The Northwest 2B/1B League is basically taking a week off for Christmas, with the only basketball contests currently scheduled for next week being a pair of non-conference rumbles Monday for La Conner.

Well, that was true until just as I went to publish this story, a game was slipped on the schedule for Tuesday, Dec. 23, sending the Coupeville varsity boys to water-logged Concrete for a “non-conference game against a conference foe.”

That makes up a bit for the Wolves losing their two-game trip to Eastern Washington this weekend due to troublesome weather at the passes.

But, other than that, the hoops landscape is bare until the following week, when a fairly busy New Years week slate of games kicks off Monday, Dec. 29.

Included in that is a trip to Meridian for the Coupeville varsity girls, who are scheduled to play three games in three days Dec. 29-31 at the Trojan Storm Classic.

Though, even as you read this, anything and everything could be changing – tis the season to use a pencil and not a pen to write down scheduling info.

With that in mind, a look at where things presently sit:

 

Northwest League boys’ basketball:

School League Overall
Orcas Island 2-0 5-0
MV Christian 1-0 3-2
Concrete 0-0 0-4
Darrington 0-0 3-2
Friday Harbor 0-0 0-6
La Conner 0-1 0-5
Coupeville 0-2 1-5

 

Northwest League girls’ basketball:

School League Overall
La Conner 1-0 4-2
MV Christian 1-0 4-1
Orcas Island 1-1 4-3
Concrete 0-0 3-1
Darrington 0-0 0-3
Friday Harbor 0-0 1-5
Coupeville 0-2 1-4

Cami Van Dyke slices through the defense. (Julie Wheat photos)

The first 798 points are in the books.

With 2025 rolling to a close, and the 2026 section of the high school basketball season coming up, scorebook keepers have put down their pencils for the holiday break.

At least here in town.

The Wolf varsity girls are slated to head to Meridian Dec. 29-31 for the Trojan Storm Classic, but other than that, we’re almost done with the first leg of the campaign.

As we pause for a moment, a look at where CHS players currently sit in the scoring race.

 

GIRLS:

Varsity
(5 games):

Haylee Armstrong – 50
Tenley Stuurmans – 40
Teagan Calkins – 39
Danica Strong – 19
Kennedy O’Neill – 16
Adeline Maynes – 7
Ari Cunningham – 3
Capri Anter – 2
Lexis Drake – 2
Sydney Van Dyke – 2

 

JV
(5 games):

Ava Lucero – 45
Cami Van Dyke – 29
Willow Leedy-Bonifas – 23
Anna Powers – 20
Finley Helm – 10
Olivia Hall – 3
Elizabeth Marshall – 3
Emma Cushman – 2

 

BOYS:

Varsity
(6 games):

Chase Anderson – 90
Camden Glover – 68
Aiden O’Neill – 36
Davin Houston – 30
Malachi Somes – 25
Mahkai Myles – 12
Easton Green – 10
Sage Arends – 8
Riley Lawless – 4
Carson Grove – 3

 

JV
(6 games):

Carson Grove – 49
Josh Stockdale – 39
Jayden McManus – 34
Nathan Coxsey – 28
Liam Lawson – 25
Khanor Jump – 7
Trent Thule – 7
Ayden Warren – 6
Chris Zenz – 2
Brian Thompson – 1

A screaming Falcon can’t stop Mahkai Myles from making the net flip.