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Posts Tagged ‘1000 points’

Big milestone, bigger win. (Angie Downes photos)

Almost everybody got some.

Rolling into 2024, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball squad scorched host Darrington 72-30 Friday night to get to 2-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 8-2 overall.

Along the way, 13 Wolves saw the floor, 11 of them scored, and three hit milestones.

The biggie was senior Logan Downes, who became the sixth CHS boy, and 10th player in school history, to crack the 1,000-point club when he slashed his way through a forest of defenders for a buzzer-beating bucket at the end of the first quarter.

On the same night he hit four digits, teammates Timothy Nitta and Aiden O’Neill joined the inner circle, notching their first varsity buckets.

And while he may not have hit a milestone, Ryan Blouin was content to hit nothing but the bottom of the net, raining down six three-balls on his way to a game-high 20 points as the Wolves crushed their rivals.

Darrington could do little to stop Coupeville, which jumped out to a 12-0 lead, before running the margin to 27-5 by the end of the first quarter.

Downes entered 2024 needing 11 points to reach 1,000, and he got all of those in the opening frame.

A three-ball to open the night was followed by a putback, another trey, a runner in the paint, and then a note-perfect capper in which he hopped, skipped, and eluded multiple defenders, the ball kissing off one of the distinctive rounded backboards which loom large in Darrington’s gym before dropping through the twines.

With one milestone reached, the Wolves spread the offensive love out, and Blouin went ballistic.

Raining down three of his long-range missiles, before converting a layup off of a back-and-forth exchange with Chase Anderson, the Coupeville gunner with the sweet shooting touch scored 11 of his points in the second frame, staking CHS to a 50-19 lead at the break.

Blouin wasn’t done, swishing treys #5 and #6 in the third quarter, while Nick Guay drilled a three-ball of his own in the fourth as the Wolves connected on nine shots from behind the arc on the night.

The Wolves pay tribute to #3 after the game.

Downes finished with 16 points in limited minutes to support Blouin’s 20, and heads home for Monday’s non-conference rumble with Auburn Adventist Academy sitting with 1,005 points.

That has him at #6 on the CHS boys career scoring chart, coming up fast behind ’70s big man Jeff Rhubottom (1,012) and ’50s stud Mike Criscoula (1,031).

Chase Anderson (13), Guay (7), Hunter Bronec (6), Nitta (2), O’Neill (2), William Davidson (2), Cole White (2), Hurlee Bronec (1), and Zane Oldenstadt (1) also scored, with Anderson pulling up right behind his dad on the career scoring chart.

Now one of Coupeville’s JV coaches, Craig Anderson netted 132 points back in the day, while his son sits at 131 heading into next week.

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim and Mikey Robinett rounded out the rotation for Brad Sherman’s squad, providing hustle on defense in the impressive league win.

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Logan Downes lines up a free throw during his junior season. (Andrew Williams photo)

It’s the gold standard.

Across 107 seasons of Coupeville High School basketball, we’ve documented 762 different players — 416 boys and 246 girls — scoring in a varsity game.

Until today, only nine had topped the 1,000-point barrier.

Now, it’s double digits for the four-digit club.

Wolf senior Logan Downes became the sixth CHS boy, and tenth player overall in school history, to achieve hoops immortality, doing so Friday on a slash to the hoop as time ran down in the first quarter of a 72-30 rout at Darrington.

The silky sniper finished with 16 points in limited minutes and sits at 227 with half his senior season left to play.

The Wolves, now 8-2 on the current campaign, have 10 regular-season games still on the schedule (assuming a postponed South Whidbey clash is reinstated), then hopefully a long playoff run.

The look of a freshman who’s coming for all the records. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Downes scored 52 points as a freshman during a Covid-shortened season, then jumped to 172 the next year, helping CHS win a league title and advance to state.

As a junior, he torched the nets for 554 points, the second-best single-season performance in school history, trailing just Jeff Stone’s 644 in 1969-1970.

Downes is averaging 22.7 a night as a senior.

 

The CHS 1,000-point club:

Brianne King — 1,549
Novi Barron — 1,270
Makana Stone — 1,158
Jeff Stone — 1,137
Mike Bagby — 1,137
Randy Keefe — 1,088
Megan Smith — 1,042
Mike Criscoula — 1,031
Jeff Rhubottom — 1,012
Logan Downes — 1,005 and counting

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Logan Downes eyeballs history. (Andrew Williams photo)

We are all witnesses.

As 2024 begins to play out, Coupeville High School is deep into its 107th season of boys’ basketball and its 50th campaign for the girls.

My detective work has unearthed 658 Wolves — 414 boys and 244 girls — who have scored at least one point in a varsity hoops game.

Now, the real number is certainly higher, as the reality is there are many male players from early decades, such as the 1920’s and 1930’s, whose point totals are lost to history (and discarded score sheets).

On the girl’s side of things, other than having absolutely no stats from season #1 in 1974, we’re sitting much better.

But the reality is, with a much slower pace of play back in the (really) old school days, no one from Altus Custer or Banky Fisher’s eras would have amassed enough points to scale the school’s career scoring chart.

There is one intriguing outlier in the form of Tom Sahli, the only Coupeville grad to go on to face hoops immortal Elgin Baylor on the hardwood.

He rattled the rims for 719 points across his junior and senior seasons at CHS, but we’re missing his sophomore year (1951-1952), so may never know if he cracked the 1,000-point club.

But we do know that there are nine Wolves — five boys and four girls — who made it to four digits during their time repping the red and black (or red and white in an earlier time).

That list:

Brianne King — (1549) — (1999-2003)
Zenovia Barron — (1270) — (1994-1998)
Makana Stone — (1158) — (2012-2016)
Jeff Stone — (1137) — (1967-1970)
Mike Bagby — (1137) — (2002-2006)
Randy Keefe — (1088) — (1973-1976)
Megan Smith — (1042) — (2006-2010)
Mike Criscuola — (1031) — (1956-1960)
Jeff Rhubottom — (1012) — (1975-1978)

And we do know current CHS senior Logan Downes is just 11 points away from making it a 10-person club.

Angie and Ralph’s youngest son has torched the nets for 211 points across Coupeville’s first nine games this season, averaging 23.4 a night, so the chances the milestone moment arrives this Friday in Darrington are high.

If not, the Wolves welcome Auburn Adventist Academy to Cow Town this coming Monday, Jan. 8 in their next game.

Now, nothing is guaranteed, and not every player gets to the round numbers, no matter how talented.

Jason Bagby, a terror on the floor, finished with 499, a rimmed-out free throw shy of 500.

Amanda Fabrizi, one of the more deadly shooters in school history, finished with 299. A ref gives her credit for a three-ball on a shot where her toe touched the line and it’s 3-0-0.

Even those who reach the round numbers often get shorted.

Hawthorne Wolfe dropped in a three-ball at the state tourney on the final shot of his prep career, giving him exactly 800 points.

But a pandemic cost him a season’s worth of games across two seasons and kept him from making a run at the CHS boys’ career scoring record of 1,137 points.

So now here comes Logan Downes, who played alongside Wolfe for two seasons, making his own bid for hoops immortality.

Remember those earlier numbers.

There are 658 Wolves who we know have scored in a varsity game, and Downes would be just the 10th to top 1,000 points.

In doing so he would push the percentage of CHS players to achieve said feat to … 0.0151975683890578.

That’s historical and that’s absolutely worth celebrating.

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The family scoring record is hers.

Meadowdale High School senior Gia Powell, whose mom, dad, and aunt were all top-notch scorers on the hardwood while growing up in Coupeville, hit a big mark Tuesday.

Caleb and Terry (Perkins) Powell’s daughter, and Sarah (Powell) Lyngra’s niece, rattled home her 1,000th point while playing against Monroe.

The basketball whiz kid, who has signed to play D-I hoops for Brown University, is the lone senior on a Meadowdale squad which sits at 4-1 coming off an 83-56 dismantling of King’s Saturday.

Powell and Co.’s only loss came in the season opener to state powerhouse Lynden.

Gia’s family will split its locales next weekend.

While her teenage sharpshooter is slated to play against Lake Washington Saturday, mom, the #7 scorer in program history, plans to return to Cow Town for the 50th anniversary celebration for Wolf girls’ basketball.

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Mike Criscuola

And then there were nine.

Well, there’s always been nine. But now I can prove it.

Thanks to recently unearthed stats, we can now credit Mike Criscuola with 52 additional points from his sophomore basketball season in 1957-1958.

That officially (well, as official as anything compiled by me can be…) pushes “Big Mike” over the 1,000-point barrier, leaving him with 1,031 career points.

Which means he’s the fifth boy, and ninth player overall, to score 1,000+ points on the hardwood for Coupeville High School.

Well, actually he was the first to do it, but you know what I’m talking about.

Criscuola, who was on the CHS varsity as an 8th grader, was built like a Mack truck.

Add the glasses he normally wore, and a barrel chest which strained to pop free from his uniform, and, even as a young man, he looked like a dad who had slipped in to the team photo by accident.

The #1 scorer in school history when he graduated in 1960, Criscuola’s numbers have held up amazingly well over the past six decades, even as the three-point shot has ignited high-octane offenses.

And, while we are (slowly) able to pull his scoring stats back into focus, no one will ever know how many rebounds he hauled down, as those stat sheets long ago blew away in the prairie breeze.

Those who played with him vividly remember Criscuola yanking down nearly every loose ball within a five-mile radius.

Barring the successful completion of a time machine, or an Indiana Jones-style discovery of a secret cache of stats in the hidden basement of a 100-year old prairie barn, those rebound numbers will remain a mystery.

But, at the very least, we can continue to fine-tune the numbers we do have, and pay tribute to a true Wolf hoops legend.

Coupeville High School basketball 1,000-point scorers:

Brianne King — (1549) — (1999-2003)
Zenovia Barron — (1270) — (1994-1998)
Makana Stone — (1158) — (2012-2016)
Jeff Stone — (1137) — (1967-1970)
Mike Bagby — (1137) — (2002-2006)
Randy Keefe — (1088) — (1973-1976)
Megan Smith — (1042) — (2006-2010)
Mike Criscuola — (1031) — (1956-1960)
Jeff Rhubottom — (1012) — (1975-1978)

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