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Brian Thompson, seen during soccer season, is part of a young, promising Wolf JV basketball squad. (Julie Wheat photo)

Back to the drawing board.

After three very competitive games to open the season, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad hit a rut in the road Tuesday, falling 58-18 to visiting East Jefferson.

The non-conference loss, coming to a 1A program which combines students from two high schools — Port Townsend and Chimacum — drops the Wolves to 1-3, with a road trip to Orcas Island set for Friday.

With a young, resilient squad at their beck and call, CHS coaches can expect a strong bounce back.

Not much went right for the Wolves against East Jefferson, with the host team falling behind 13-2 after one quarter of play and 26-8 by the halftime break.

Things didn’t get much better from there, as the visiting Rivals then scorched the nets for 21 points in the third quarter alone.

Coupeville did spread out its offensive workload, with Nathan Coxsey leading the way with five points.

Carson Grove (3), Josh Stockdale (3), Jayden McManus (2), Trent Thule (2), Ayden Warren (2), and Liam Lawson (1) also scored, with Brian Thompson, Chris Zenz, and Jaden Flores Garcia seeing floor time for the Wolves.

Ava Lucero nails a jumper. (Julie Wheat photo)

They turned up the heat midway through the night.

Dominating the second and third quarters Tuesday, the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team pulled away for a convincing 38-24 win over visiting East Jefferson to give coach Alita Blouin her first victory.

The non-conference triumph lifts the Wolves to 1-2 on the season heading into their first road trip of the season, which comes Friday with a trek to Orcas Island.

Tuesday’s tilt, against a 1A program which combines athletes from Chimacum and Port Townsend High School, was a close one for the first eight minutes.

Cami Van Dyke banked in a pair of buckets and Willow Leedy-Bonifas drained a three-ball in the opening frame, but the teams were locked up in a 7-7 tie at the first break.

After that, however, Blouin’s squad blew past the Rivals, outscoring them 10-3 in the second and 9-2 in the third to build a 26-12 advantage.

East Jefferson rallied a bit, scoring half of its points during a 12-12 tussle in the fourth, but the Wolves refused to break, coasting in for the win.

Coupeville got a huge chunk of its offense from the duo of Ava Lucero and Leedy-Bonifas, who went off for 15 and 11 points respectively.

Van Dyke chipped in with eight, while Anna Powers and Finley Helm each added a bucket to top off the scoring.

Olivia Hall, Emma Cushman, Zayne Roos, Elizabeth Marshall, and Taylor Marrs all saw floor time as well in the inaugural win.

Finn Price, Master of the Water. (Photo courtesy Rachel Price-Rayner)

Splish, splash, another couple wins for the Lone Wolf.

Competing at the Snohomish Aquatic Center Tuesday, Coupeville High School senior Finn Price set the pool on fire, capturing a win in the 200 free and another as part of a 400-meter relay team.

He also hit the wall fourth in the 100 free, qualifying for districts in both of his individual events.

Price, who has competed at the state meet the past two seasons, is in his fourth go-round of being the only male swimmer at CHS.

Since his 2B-sized school doesn’t have a swim program, he trains and travels with 4A Kamiak in Mukilteo.

Tuesday’s meet, the second of the season, also featured Glacier Peak and Snohomish.

Kamiak’s regular season runs through the end of January, and then Price will go his own way for the postseason.

Ready to rule the robotics world. (Photos courtesy Alison Perera)

The whiz kids roll on.

The Coupeville High School/Middle School robotics squad went off-Island Monday, finishing 14th in a 25-team field at an interleague tournament featuring high-level opponents.

The “32-Bit Devils” threw down against schools “from Seattle, large inner city public schools, and family/community groups with big name corporate sponsors,” said advisor Alison Perera.

“Our students rocked everything thrown at them!” she added. “Our robot performed consistently, our driver performed consistently, we had solid content for our presentation and portfolio — we had goals and we rocked them!

“And even better, the kids want to keep going! When offered the chance to meet monthly for the rest of the year and keep building their skills, they are all over it.

“I am excited for the sustainability of this program!”

Perera and fellow advisor Logan Inces have an 11-member roster headed up by CHS juniors Lina ShellyHaylee Armstrong, and Lindy Sylvester.

Sophomores Ryan Beaston and Noah Stribrny and freshman Frank Morrell are joined by eighth graders Ross Allred, Farrin WorkmanAsh Prats, Hayli Marley, and Jade Peabody.

Jacob Lujan clamps down on defense. (Julie Wheat photos)

The Wolves swept the Turks right out of town.

Playing in their next-to-last set of games Monday, the Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball squads romped to three wins in as many games against visiting Sultan, dominating for a solid three-hours-plus.

The CMS boys wrap their season next Monday, Dec. 15, with a home rumble against South Whidbey, but first, they’ll have some time to pause and reflect on a set of stellar performances.

How the day played out:

 

Level 1:

The final score doesn’t tell the true tale.

While the scorebook will tell you Coupeville beat Sultan 49-40, the Wolves were actually up 49-26 midway through the fourth quarter when they cleared the bench.

And while the feisty Turks took advantage to make a late run, there was never any doubt CMS would walk off with a bit of revenge for a loss at Sultan way back in the season opener.

Now 3-4 on the campaign, Coupeville’s top team has won three of its last four and is clicking on both ends of the floor.

That was evident Monday, as the Wolves bolted out to a 17-8 lead after one quarter of play, and never looked back.

River Simpson, Diesel Eck, and Kamden Ratcliff took turns setting the net on fire, while birthday boy Gracen Joiner skied high to deliver an impressive blocked shot which set off the Wolf faithful.

With the Wolf defense clamping down on the Turks, Coupeville got out and ran, pushing the pace and catching Sultan napping several times.

Simpson was very effective in the early minutes, drilling a runner, swishing a pullup jumper in traffic, then tossing a three-ball through the bottom of the net with a quick flick of his wrist.

When the Turks tried to stem his scoring, the Wolf 8th grader fired off passes to his teammates, who continued the destruction.

Eck hit three buckets in the first frame, with two of those coming off of offensive rebounds, while Ratcliff kicked off a perfect run for the Wolves at the free throw line, before pilfering the ball and streaking away for a layup.

Coupeville notched all six of its charity shots in the game, with Ratcliff, Simpson, and Trey Stewart each draining both of their chances.

Sultan hung tough, slicing a point off the lead to get back within 27-19 at the half, but could make little inroads overall, as both Eck and Xander Beaman came up big with blocked shots, while Trey Stewart was flying end-to-end for gorgeous breakaway buckets.

The Wolves busted the game wide open in the third, opening with an 8-0 run sparked by Eck channeling a young Shaquille O’Neal in the paint, before Aiden Wheat capped the quarter with a textbook perfect play.

Snagging a long offensive rebound, he immediately rolled ever so slightly to his right, went airborne again, and drained a jump shot from the side to put an exclamation point on things.

Six more points in a row to open the fourth staked CMS to its biggest lead at 49-26, before head coach Alex Evans made sure to get his supporting crew some solid minutes on the floor.

Coupeville’s attack was led by Eck, who banged away for 18 points, while Simpson added 13, and Trey Stewart banked in 12.

Ratcliff (4) and Wheat (2) rounded out the scorers, with Beaman, Colton Ashby, Joiner, Darius Stewart, and Jacob Lujan all chipping in with hard work on defense.

Aiden Wheat (far left), Trey Stewart (1), and Co. celebrate in an earlier game.

 

Level 2:

Coupeville’s hottest team made it five wins in a row, romping to a 47-17 rout to get to 6-1 on the season.

Five different Wolves scored in the first quarter as CMS built a 9-2 lead, with Coupeville big man Les Queen swatting shots left and right as he prevented Sultan from getting any kind of shooting rhythm going.

While the Turks did hang tough for a few moments, crawling back within 11-8 midway through the second, that was when RayLynn Ratcliff’s squad flipped the switch.

Coupeville ended the half on a 12-0 tear, with Queen scoring eight and Braxten Ratcliff and Brady Sherman swishing sweet jumpers, then kept the pedal through the metal after halftime.

Braxten Ratcliff went off on a scoring binge to open the third, rattling the rim for the first seven points of the half, while the Wolf defenders hit the board with a savage intensity.

Queen finished with a game-high 18 points, outscoring Sultan by himself, while Ratcliff notched 12 while playing in perhaps the brightest pair of pink basketball shoes ever seen on a Cow Town court.

Xander Flowers (6), Brayden Grinstead (3), Hayden Maynes (2), Abel O’Neil (2), Sherman (2), and Nico Strong (2) also scored, with Mario Martinez and Henry Purdue seeing floor time for the Wolves.

Hayden Maynes dares you to try and drive. 

 

Level 3:

The only game in which the Wolves trailed, but just for a hot second.

Down 4-2, Jaylen Nitta’s team rallied quickly, then poured it on to capture a 37-13 victory which lifts them to 2-4 on the season.

Luke Blas opened the scoring for Coupeville with a twirling jumper, while Logan Flowers and LJ Schultz banged home back-to-back buckets to send CMS to the first break holding an 11-6 lead.

Once again, the offense was sparked by scrappy play on defense, with Burke Winger rejecting a Sultan shot, and Logan Dees hitting the floor to battle for loose balls.

The Wolves shoved the lead all the way out to 21-6 late in the second quarter, with Flowers capping a personal run of seven straight points by draining a three-ball set up by a pinpoint pass from Blas.

Coming out of halftime, the Wolves got creative, running multiple lob plays, with Blas and Gabe Reed slipping past the defense, hauling in high, arcing passes, and ringing up points with twisting layups.

While the offensive attack slowed down a bit in the fourth quarter, with the two teams combining for just five points, the defensive intensity only ratcheted up.

Vincent Alguire and Winger kept the glass spotless, hauling down rebounds on a regular basis, while Oliver Miller was a rampaging madman (in a good way), frequently disrupting passes and poking balls free to keep the Turks from getting shots off.

Logan Flowers paced the Wolves in scoring, popping the nets for a season-high 16 points, while Blas (8), Schultz (6), Reed (4), and Dreyke Mendiola (3) also kept the scorebook keeper busy.

Miller, Logan Dees, Jon Driscoll, Alguire, Dom Durbin, Jack Bailey, Winger, and Gabe Ketterling rounded out the roster.

Logan Flowers busts through the defense.