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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

   David King has preached defense all season, and it has carried the Wolves back to the playoffs. (Amy King photo)

   Kyla Briscoe was one of three Wolves honored on Senior Night. (Jackie Calkins photos)

   An injury has kept senior Mikayla Elfrank on the bench for a chunk of the season, but she and her family could joke about it as they all sported bandaged legs.

Allison Wenzel capped Senior Night by playing like a beast on defense.

Defense is their calling card.

Through injuries and defections, through great games and struggles, the Coupeville High School girls basketball squad has hung its hat on stopping the other team from putting the ball in the bucket this season.

Saturday night was a prime example, as the Wolves stepped up huge, holding visiting Chimacum scoreless for 10 minutes to open the second half.

Sparked by the rush of corralling rebounds, taking charges and making off with steal after steal, Coupeville held on for a taut 36-29 win in a game which decided the #2 playoff seed from the Olympic League.

Now 8-13 overall after winning for the fourth time in their last six games, the Wolves finished 6-3 in Olympic League play.

They will host a loser-out playoff game next Saturday, Feb. 10 against the #3 team from the Nisqually League. Their foe will be known after play in that conference wraps Tuesday.

Win that postseason clash and Coupeville advances to the double-elimination portion of districts, from which three of four teams will move on to the state tourney.

After three consecutive 9-0 seasons, Coupeville capped a 33-3 run through the four-team conference by pulling off maybe its biggest accomplishment.

In past seasons, the Wolves had a transcendent star in Makana Stone and deep, veteran rosters.

This time around, they began by losing four starters (three to graduation, one to a transfer), then lost two more, including their leading scorer, as the season progressed.

That required CHS coach David King to find different ways to win, and defense has always been at the core of his teachings.

Saturday night, in the crucible against a very physical Chimacum squad, it paid off handsomely.

“Defensively we have been working really hard on sliding our feet and not reaching,” King said. “Tonight we really played the way we wanted.

Sarah (Wright) and Allison (Wenzel) were so outstanding stopping the dribble drive,” he added. “Then you take our steals off of our press and going hard to the basket once we had the ball – exactly the goal.”

Clinging to a 20-18 lead at the half, the Wolves erupted from the locker room with fire in their eyes and passion in their hearts.

With youngsters like Scout Smith and Chelsea Prescott coming of age under considerable fire from the elbow-throwing and hip-checking Cowboys, Coupeville’s defense stood tall in the third quarter.

Forcing wild shots or turnovers, then pounding the boards or getting out on the break, the Wolves took control of the game with a 10-0 run.

Kyla Briscoe netted an epic three-ball from the left side, while Ema Smith, Wright and Lindsey Roberts all drained huge buckets off of set-ups from teammates.

Wenzel fed Ema Smith, Scout Smith punched the ball between defenders to find Wright, and Prescott laid the ball right on Robert’s fingertips on a note-perfect in-bounds pass.

Coupeville’s shooting touch dried up a bit in the fourth, as the Wolves couldn’t get a field goal to drop.

A combination of stellar defense, free throws from Ema Smith (she drained six pressure-packed freebies in the game’s final minutes) and Chimacum’s terrible night at the free throw stripe (8-25) prevented the Cowboys from mounting a full comeback.

Chimacum pulled within 33-29 with a little over a minute to play, but Ema Smith drained three of four free throws to close the scoring.

Even better, the Wolf defense thoroughly shut down the Cowboys over those final 60 seconds, not letting the ball come anywhere close to hitting the net.

The game had started with a little back and forth, as Coupeville went to the first break up 9-6.

Scout Smith had the sweetest bucket of the quarter, pulling in a long pass from Briscoe, then hanging in air for an eternity before slapping home a layup over a defender’s outstretched arm.

The second quarter belonged to Roberts, who played the entire 32 minutes and combined with Wright to dominate on the boards.

The Wolf junior tossed in six points in the quarter, sticking a jumper back in off of a rebound, before converting on a pair of breakaways.

Scout Smith was back at it again, as well, losing the handle on the ball, only to spin and steal the ball right back from a Cowboy.

Completing the play o’ wonder, she promptly knocked down the layup to thoroughly befuddle Chimacum.

Ema Smith and Roberts paced the Wolves with 10 points apiece, while Wright knocked down seven, Briscoe popped for five and Scout Smith had a dazzling four.

Prescott, Wenzel and Hannah Davidson all contributed greatly to Coupeville’s withering defense.

JV falls in final moments:

The win slipped through the fingers of the Wolf young guns in literally the final few seconds, as Chimacum scored the last four points en route to a 33-29 win.

The loss leaves the JV with a final record of 3-5 in league play, 7-11 overall.

Coupeville fell behind 8-0 in the early going, then rode the stellar shooting of Ashlie Shank and some strong defense of its own to get back in the game.

Shank, who rattled in a game-high 14, got the Wolves on the board with back-to-back buckets to end the first quarter, then tossed in 10 more in the second-half.

After surging in front 10-8 midway through the second, when Maddie Hilkey took a pass from Avalon Renninger and slashed through two defenders for a go-ahead basket, CHS led most of the way.

Chimacum didn’t regain the lead until a minute into the fourth, when a 6-0 run put it up 24-20.

Shank was having none of that, knocking down a jumper, then snatching a rebound off of a missed free throw and knotting the game up with a put-back.

From that point, there were four lead changes, with neither team being more than two points ahead.

A free throw from Genna Wright gave the teams their final tie, at 29-29, but Chimacum slipped in a basket off of a nice roll under the hoop by their point guard, then sealed the deal with two free throws.

Hilkey finished with six to back Shank’s 14, while Wright (3), Renninger (2), Tia Wurzrainer (2) and Nicole Lester (2) also scored.

Kylie Chernikoff, Julia García Oñoro and Mollie Bailey also saw court time in the JV team’s season finale.

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   Hunter Smith tossed in 17 in a win Saturday and finished as the #12 scorer in Wolf boys basketball history. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Mason Grove dropped in 12 in Coupeville’s JV win, giving him 337 in 19 games for the second Wolf squad. 

They closed the season on fire.

Raining down three-balls in both games Saturday, with almost everyone on the roster scoring, the Coupeville High School boys basketball squads put a final stamp on their campaigns, crushing host Chimacum.

The Wolf varsity rolled 60-31, while the JV cruised in for a 61-23 victory.

With the wins, the first squad finished 7-13 overall, 5-4 in their final season of Olympic League play.

Coupeville’s second team closed out at 5-14, 4-5.

Varsity:

Facing a win-less Cowboys team limping to the finish, the Wolves put them down hard and fast, busting out to a 24-2 lead at the first break and not slowing down.

“The boys should be proud of how strong they finished out the season,” said Coupeville coach Brad Sherman. “Taking care of the ball, shooting well, tough on defense – playing their best team basketball.

“Says a lot about them, their character, and how hard they worked,” he added. “They can hold their heads high.”

Nine of the 10 Wolves to see action Saturday scored, with Hunter Smith leading the way as he tossed in 17 in three quarters of action.

That gave him 382 for the season and 847 for his career.

Despite missing a chunk of his sophomore year with an injury, Smith finished as the 12th highest scorer in Wolf boys basketball history.

Fellow senior Ethan Spark banked home 13, which gives him 216 for the season.

Cameron Toomey-Stout knocked down 10 in support of the big two, with Dane Lucero (6), Hunter Downes (4), Gavin Knoblich (3), Mason Grove (3), Kyle Rockwell (2) and Ulrik Wells (2) also scoring.

Lucero, a big man who plays in the paint most of the time, shocked the world in the finale, scoring all of his points off of a pair of three-point bombs.

James Vidoni was the lone Wolf not to score, but he drew praise from Sherman for “his toughness on the boards.”

JV:

The big quarter was the third in this one, as the Wolves used a 22-4 surge to ice the game.

Much as in the varsity game, Coupeville spread its scoring out, with 11 of 13 tallying at least one point.

Freshman Sage Downes and sophomore Mason Grove tied for top honors with 12.

That brought Grove’s final mark to 337 over 19 games this year, just shy of the unofficial school JV record of 347, set by Allen Black in 2002-2003.

Grove, who hit double figures in 16 games, and topped 30 three times, was denied the record by his own success.

In the latter stages of the season, he stopped playing full JV games, so he could swing up to varsity, where he finished sixth on the #1 squad in scoring in very limited court time.

The JV scoring Saturday was rounded out by Jake Pease (9), Tucker Hall (7), Koa Davison (5), Daniel Olson (4), Alex Jimenez (4), Vidoni (2), David Prescott (2), Trevor Bell (2) and Knoblich (2).

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   With a win Thursday, Chelsea Prescott and her Wolf teammates kept alive their hopes of earning a share of the Olympic League title. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It has been a season-long battle.

A rebuilding Coupeville High School girls basketball squad, especially after it lost its top scorer to a season-ending injury, has had issues putting the ball in the bucket.

On many nights, the Wolf defense has been a true bright spot, but the offense has largely been a work in progress.

Until the fourth quarter Thursday afternoon.

Suddenly, everything clicked and Coupeville ripped off a 20-1 tear over the game’s final eight minutes, running host Klahowya off the floor to a 36-21 tune.

“We found lightning in a bottle!,” exclaimed Coupeville’s very-happy coach, David King.

The win lifts the Wolves to 5-3 in Olympic League play, 7-13 overall and keeps alive their hopes of garnering a share of the conference title.

Coupeville, which has hung three consecutive league title placards on the school’s Wall of Fame, still needs everything to break its way Saturday.

The Wolves face Chimacum (4-4), while Port Townsend (6-2) plays Klahowya (1-7).

Wins by Coupeville and Klahowya would leave CHS and PTHS with identical 6-3 marks.

While the schools would share the title, Port Townsend has clinched the league’s #1 playoff seed, since it owns a tiebreaker, having taken two of three from Coupeville this season.

Saturday’s game, which is Senior Night for Kyla Briscoe, Allison Wenzel and Mikayla Elfrank, will determine if the Wolves enter the postseason as a #2 or #3 seed.

Win and Coupeville hosts a loser-out playoff game Feb. 10, one win away from the double elimination portion of districts.

Fall to Chimacum Saturday, a team it has split two games with, and CHS would be the #3 seed and open the playoffs Feb. 8 at home.

Under that scenario, they would have to survive two loser-out games to advance.

Playing their final regular season road game Thursday, the Wolves looked like they were following a familiar, and distressing, pattern.

Shot went up, but shots refused to stay in the cylinder, and CHS trailed 20-16 headed to the fourth.

A strong defensive effort kept Klahowya from pulling too far away, but buckets, any kind of buckets, was what King desired.

And the Wolves answered.

“After struggling through the first three quarters, we caught fire in all facets of the game,” he said. “Everything clicked.”

While they trailed, the Wolves were playing with a great deal of confidence, something King praised in the huddle.

“I could see a momentum shift and that we needed to keep up the effort,” he said. “It all started with our press and defensive effort.

“We got a couple of steals and easy buckets to start the fourth, then caused a couple of more turnovers,” King added. “That got our half-court defense ramped up and helped us settle down on offense.

“The jumpers we were missing in the first half all of a sudden looked smooth and put up with confidence. They started falling in bunches.”

A trio of Wolves provided the late-game offensive heroics, with Ema Smith knocking down eight in the quarter, Kyla Briscoe adding seven and Lindsey Roberts capping things with five.

Briscoe and Roberts both netted huge three-balls, while Smith (4-4) and Briscoe (2-2) combined to ice the game with flawless free-throw shooting.

All of the fourth-quarter free throws were of the 1-and-1 variety, as well, putting an added degree of danger for the Wolves, who responded like seasoned pros.

The comeback had begun in the third quarter, when King used his bench players to light a spark.

“We looked to be heading into a tailspin, so we went to our bench quickly and often trying to find a flicker of light,” he said. “Chelsea (Prescott), Allison, Avalon (Renninger) and Hannah (Davidson) did just that with their effort and defense.

Scout Smith rattled home a big bucket to turn the tide, then Roberts dropped in a trey to end the third quarter.

Riding the momentum, the Wolves dominated in the fourth by “controlling the boards and being the aggressor.”

Roberts went coast-to-coast on one play, slapping home a layup after she snagged a defensive rebound, then charged right at the heart of the Klahowya defense.

“I’ve been waiting for her to make a play like that!,” said a proud coach.

Ema Smith paced Coupeville with a game-high 13, while Roberts (10), Briscoe (9) and Scout Smith (4) also scratched their names in the book.

“We only had four players score, but each player contributed in this victory,” King said. “Defense doesn’t always show up in the stats, but all nine players contributed at some point to our success in the third and fourth quarters.”

Roberts snagged seven boards, as all nine Wolves nabbed at least one rebound. Briscoe (four assists and five steals) and Ema Smith (six steals and six rebounds) also filled up the stat sheet.

Sarah Wright capped the game with a play which perfectly captured Coupeville’s grit and will to win.

With the game all but done, an Eagle tried to take the ball to the hoop hard for a last-second layup, only to have Wright slide into place, plant herself and absorb the full brunt of the charge, causing an offensive foul call as the buzzer rang.

JV sits out (again):

The Wolf young guns failed to play for the second-straight game thanks to extenuating circumstances.

Issues with refs (or the lack of them) cost Coupeville’s #2 squad a chance to play Tuesday at Sequim.

Thursday, it was the cancellation of ferry runs, which ensured CHS had to ankle for the exits at Silverdale early.

The young Wolves sit at 7-10 heading into Saturday’s season finale.

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   Kyle Rockwell, celebrating Senior Night with dad Sheldon, played the best game of his career Thursday as Coupeville shocked first-place Klahowya. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They could not lose. They would not lose.

Weathering a torrid fourth-quarter run by their first-place foes, and the loss of a key starter mid-game to injury, the Coupeville High School boys basketball players reached down deep Thursday, finding a final bit of magic to close out their home careers.

Playing for much of the game with essentially five players, all seniors, the Wolves toppled visiting Klahowya 59-54 for an emotion-packed victory which will be remembered for some time to come.

The win lifts Coupeville to 4-4 in Olympic League play, 6-13 overall, with a road game Saturday at win-less Chimacum all that’s left on the schedule.

Klahowya slips to 6-2 and its game Saturday against Port Townsend, also 6-2, will be a battle royal for the league crown.

With only two playoff spots available, Coupeville will miss the postseason, so the Wolves had to make their memories now.

And did they ever.

Playing on Senior Night, the six-pack of Hunter Downes, Ethan Spark, Cameron Toomey-Stout, Joey Lippo, Hunter Smith and Kyle Rockwell attacked with a wild abandon.

Lippo was lost to a hyper-extended knee two minutes into the second quarter, but his teammates rallied in his absence, closing the half on an 11-2 run.

The lanky defensive ace returned to the bench in the second half, limping and grimacing, yet trying to talk his coaches into putting him back on the floor.

Instead, they chose the prudent route, leaving Lippo strapped to his seat and operating as a vocal, impassioned fan for his classmates.

Other than brief cameos for junior Dane Lucero and sophomore Mason Grove, the other five seniors never left the floor, and all five made huge plays down the stretch.

A tightly-contested game started to turn into a pro-Coupeville blowout early in the fourth quarter, then the game took a sickening lurch before things righted themselves again.

With Smith raining down buckets from every direction on his way to a career-high 35, including a three-ball that caressed the net as it sank through in perfect unison with the third-quarter buzzer, CHS was on fire.

When Toomey-Stout poked a ball free, then hit the afterburners to beat two Eagles to the ensuing loose ball and slap it home for a breakaway bucket, the Wolves were up 51-39.

The stands were rocking, the Wolf bench was pounding the floor and CHS coach Brad Sherman had a huge smile on his face.

And then Klahowya reminded everyone how it landed in first place in the beginning.

Using a 12-2 run, with the final exclamation point a “no way that’s going in and … CRUD, it just did” three-point bomb, the Eagles pulled all the way back to 53-51 with 30 ticks on the game clock.

Coupeville could have cracked. It probably should have cracked.

But it didn’t.

Smith knocked down a free throw to stretch the lead to three, and, when he shocked the world by missing attempt #2, Rockwell made the single most memorable play of his sporting life.

The Wolf big man, an urban legend who the fans adore, came roaring up the lane, out-muscled three Klahowya players, yanked the rebound to his chest, then exploded up and banked home the put-back as he got savagely beat around the head and arms.

As Rockwell headed to the line to try and make it a three-point play the hard way, you could cue the bedlam and the celebration.

Except there was still 28.4 agonizing seconds on the clock and we weren’t done quite yet.

Rockwell’s charity shot rimmed out, popped airborne and … Smith came flying in from the right side to return the favor to his teammate, yanking down the rebound and hugging the ball to his chest.

Two more Smith free throws, another Klahowya three-ball, then a Spark free throw and the margin was finally too large and the time left on the clock too little for even the most die-hard of Eagle fans to still be dreaming of a win.

Just to drive home the point, Toomey-Stout jumped 72 feet in the air (give or take a few inches) to pick off Klahowya’s final in-bounds pass.

In the scrum, a Klahowya player unloaded a kick into Rockwell’s shins, then, realizing it was probably better not to tick off the otherwise gentle giant, started profusely apologizing for his inadvertent field goal attempt.

Not that it mattered all that much, as Rockwell, celebrating an epic end to his final home game, was all smiles and in a forgiving mood at the moment.

Before things got crazy in the late going, the game was an intense back-and-forth affair.

The first quarter saw three ties and an incredible display of body control in mid-air from Smith.

Sprinting the length of the floor as the clock ran down, he pulled in a long outlet pass, hopped towards the basket, split two defenders, then held in the air as both Eagles returned to the surly bonds of Earth beneath him.

As they did, Smith slapped home the layup from an impossible angle, absorbed a shot to the arms from a defender, then calmly went to the line and sank a free throw to cap the play.

All while staying as calm and composed as an old man sitting on a porch drinking a cup of tea and talking about the alfalfa crop.

Down 14-12 at the first break, Coupeville was trailing 18-14 when Lippo crashed to the court and stayed down.

While he was eventually able to limp off the floor and head to the locker room, with a lot of assistance, the play could have sucked all the air out of the joint.

Instead, it lit a fuse under the remaining seniors, as they seized the lead and never looked back.

Spark knocked down back-to-back three-balls, with the first one coming after he pulled off a fake which caused his defender to lose all sense of balance and crash, butt-first, to the ground.

A breakaway bucket for Toomey-Stout, in full “Camtastic”-mode, and a jumper from Smith, set up by another big board from Rockwell, sent CHS to the halftime break up 25-21.

The third quarter started as a battle of treys, as the teams combined to net five straight three-balls to open things, then turned into a display of sheer Wolf grit.

Downes and Rockwell abused the Eagles on the boards, and, even when a play broke down, Coupeville found a way to make it work.

Spark lost the handle on the ball near his bench, but pulled off a ballet move more typically shown by Lippo, a seasoned veteran of the dance stage.

Flicking the ball over his shoulder a moment before he crashed out of bounds, Spark not only saved the ball but directed it right onto the fingertips of Smith, who promptly bashed home a runner off the glass.

With every one of the six seniors selling out on seemingly every play, Sherman came away with a rosy glow of pride in his cheeks.

“This is a really special group of seniors,” he said. “I am really happy they got to go out on their home court this way. Very, very proud of how they played and how they finished.

“These guys have worked so hard, and they deserved this. They really did.”

Smith’s 35 was spread out, with 10 in the first, three in the second, another 10 in the third and 12 in the crucible of the fourth quarter.

With that display of offensive fire power, he runs his scoring total to 830 points, passing Corey Cross (811) for 12th place on the Wolf boys career scoring chart.

Toomey-Stout knocked down nine in support, while Spark (7), Rockwell (6) and Lippo (2) also scored.

And, while points get a lot of the glory, it was Coupeville’s defense which ably shared the spotlight.

“We needed to control the boards and we did,” Sherman said. “We really got them out of their rhythm and had hands in the passing lanes on almost every play.

Kyle was huge for us and Hunter (Downes) is just a special athlete with the way he fights for every ball.

“I’m really, really happy for all of them!”

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   Hannah Davidson and other CHS sophomores will spend the next two years in the 1A North Sound Conference. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

No and, once again, no.

That was the response from the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association, as it denied Coupeville High School’s request to reclassify from 1A down to 2B.

After denying the original request Sunday afternoon, the WIAA also shot down an appeal Monday morning.

Despite CHS having lost 10% of its student body in the two years since the last official count in 2016 placed it as one of the smallest 1A schools in the state, the Wolves will be required to maintain the status quo until at least 2020.

That’s when the WIAA conducts its next round of state-wide student body counts and reclassification.

In the past, those counts happened every two years, but that changed when the state switched to a four-year plan in 2016.

Coupeville had 227 students in grades 9-11 then, and 1A was set at 214.5-461.24.

The parameters for 2B in 2016 were 83-214.49, and CHS, with 208 students currently in grades 9-11, falls within those guidelines.

The WIAA did not see it that way, however.

“The first decision was based on two areas: a leveling out of enrollment drop and that we would become the largest 2B school,” CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith said.

“My appeal was based on the language of the WIAA, that it was a significant drop and their placement of schools in classifications are strictly determined by enrollment numbers,” he added.

“Our numbers are below the current 2B numbers, but they didn’t feel it was significant enough of a drop and because our projected numbers showed a steady enrollment of 208 (six below the current cutoff of 214) it wasn’t enough to make the change.”

While Coupeville has been competitive in many sports in the last couple of years, it is in no shape or form a powerhouse, something Smith asked the WIAA to consider.

“In regards to being the largest 2B I argued that if we were perennial state tournament attendees or had racked up league title after league title then I would agree it wouldn’t make sense,” he said. “However, we are not that.”

If Coupeville had won approval to drop to 2B, it would have rejoined the Northwest 2B/1B League, which it played in through most of the ’70s and ’80s and part of the ’90s, competing with schools like Concrete, La Conner and Darrington.

“Traditionally, we have been in a league with the members of the NW 2B League and have never dominated,” Smith said. “In fact, they voted us in as soon as they heard we were appealing, which would strongly indicate their desire to have us back.”

While Coupeville could very likely be reclassified as a 2B school in the next state-wide counts in 2020, the WIAA decision ensures it will play at least two full school years as one of the smallest, if not the smallest, 1A school in the state.

The Wolves are leaving the 1A Olympic League at the end of the 2017-2018 school year, ending a four-year run in which they have won multiple titles in girls basketball, volleyball, baseball and girls and boys tennis.

Despite having a much-smaller student body count than Klahowya, which at 445 students in grades 9-11 was the second-biggest 1A school in the 2016 count, Coupeville has played the Eagles virtually even in varsity wins across the 11 sports in which CHS fields teams.

Both schools have been substantially ahead of league mates Port Townsend and Chimacum in titles and varsity wins.

Coupeville’s decision to leave was based on several factors, such as the unpredictability of the Port Townsend ferry, staggering travel costs and Klahowya’s desire to shave games off the league schedule starting next year.

Since they are staying in 1A for at least two years, the Wolves will join a new league, the 1A North Sound Conference, which launches this fall.

Formed out of the steaming carcass of the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, it will feature King’s, South Whidbey, Cedar Park Christian (Bothell), Sultan and Granite Falls, with Coupeville making it a six-pack.

The move reunites Coupeville with teams it played from 2006-2007 to 2013-2014.

CPC-Bothell is the only new foe for the Wolves, as the private school joined the Cascade Conference as Coupeville’s replacement when it departed in 2014.

A large selling point of the North Sound Conference is the chance for next-door neighbors Coupeville and South Whidbey to once again be aligned in the same league.

That will increase the number of times the Wolves and Falcons play in every sport, and, with the close proximity of the schools and the increased significance of the games, likely drive box office receipts upward.

With 208 students in grades 9-11, CHS will obviously be the smallest school in the league, with CPC-Bothell (249.38 in 2016) the only other school which came in under 347 students in the 2016 count.

While it might not be as ideal as returning to 2B, the new league will at least be a 1A-only league, with former 2A Cascade Conference rivals Cedarcrest, Archbishop Thomas Murphy and Lakewood not involved.

Smith, an extremely positive man who is the epitome of “whistle while you work,” sees the next two years as a chance for Coupeville to build, fight and not back down.

“It simply means that we just have to work harder, play smarter, and be more committed at every level: administrative, coaches, athletes, and community,” he said. “I’m ready for this, our coaches are ready for this and we will see if the other two can step it up.”

The decision to leave the Olympic League came before the decision to apply to drop to 2B, and it was one everyone involved in Wolf athletics openly embraced.

“Our coaches voted to move to the new league prior to finding out we could be 2B without hesitation,” Smith said. “They believe that they can take our programs to the next level and I truly believe that as well.

“No sour grapes, no feeling sorry for ourselves, just strapping up our boots and getting to work because no matter what classification we were going to end up that’s the only option we have to get better.”

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