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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

   Jacobi Pilgrim is one of 12 Wolf boys to have scored in a varsity game this season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One week to seal their fates.

The high school basketball campaign, at least the regular season part, is nearing an end.

Three games in five days next week, and then it’s on to the postseason for some, but not all.

Coupeville’s girls are playoff-bound again, but the final games will tell the tale of whether they enter as a #1, #2 or #3 seed.

A loss Friday to Port Townsend made the run at a fourth-straight league crown exceedingly difficult, but it’s not impossible.

The RedHawks can make things even harder with a win over Chimacum Tuesday, but, if the Cowboys prevail, then things go all kaflooey for another couple of days.

Coupeville has a non-league match-up at Sequim Tuesday, then faces its fate with games at Klahowya Thursday and home against Chimacum Saturday.

If everything comes down to that final day, the Wolves will be sending good thoughts to Amber Bumbalough and the Eagles as they try and knock off Port Townsend in their finale.

However it all works out, the Wolf girls, as we said, are playoff-bound.

The same can’t be said for the CHS boys, unfortunately, as the Wolves were eliminated from playoff contention by a loss Friday at Port Townsend.

While three girls squads punch postseason tickets, only two boys teams get to make the trip this year.

As we prepare for the final week of the regular season, a look at varsity scoring stats and league standings through Jan. 28:

Girls:

Lindsey Roberts 130
Mikayla Elfrank 99
Sarah Wright 84
Ema Smith 67
Kyla Briscoe 58
Scout Smith 40
Kalia Littlejohn 38
Chelsea Prescott 34
Hannah Davidson 10
Allison Wenzel 3
Avalon Renninger 1

Boys:

Hunter Smith 311
Ethan Spark 192
Joey Lippo 82
Mason Grove 48
Hunter Downes 46
Jered Brown 24
Cameron Toomey-Stout 24
Kyle Rockwell 21
Dane Lucero 10
Gavin Knoblich 2
Ulrik Wells 2
Jacobi Pilgrim 1

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 5-2 7-10
COUPEVILLE 4-3 6-12
Chimacum 4-3 7-9
Klahowya 1-6 4-13

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Klahowya 6-1 10-8
Port Townsend 5-2 9-8
COUPEVILLE 3-4 5-12
Chimacum 0-7 0-11

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   Coupeville freshman Chelsea Prescott played strongly Friday, but Port Townsend’s Kaitlyn Meek carried the RedHawks past the Wolves. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Meek shoots over the defense of Coupeville’s Lindsey Roberts.

Kaitlyn Meek has waited for this moment.

For the last four years, the Port Townsend gunner has been one of the best girls basketball players in the 1A Olympic League, but Coupeville has always been the best team.

But the Wolves of 2017-2018, weighed down by graduation losses, injuries and defections, are not flying quite as high as they did during three straight unbeaten league campaigns.

Friday night Meek took advantage, tossing in 14 of her game-high 19 in the second half, spurring the RedHawks to a huge 39-26 come-from-behind win on Coupeville’s floor.

Sparked by its senior star, Port Townsend jumps to 5-2 in league play, and goes a game up on Coupeville (4-3) and Chimacum (4-3) with two to play.

All three are guaranteed playoff spots, since Klahowya (1-6) has already been eliminated, but a league title gives a team direct entry into the double-elimination portion of districts.

If three-time defending league champ Coupeville finishes second or third, it will host its first postseason game, but will also have to survive either one or two loser-out games.

With two conference games left, Feb. 1 at Klahowya and Feb. 3 at home against Chimacum, the Wolves still have a shot at a fourth-straight title, or at least a share of one.

But, to win the title outright and be a #1 playoff seed, Coupeville has to sweep its final two league games, while hoping for back-to-back RedHawk losses.

If CHS and PTHS were to finish with the same record, the tiebreaker for seeding would go Port Townsend’s way, as it took the season series 2-1.

Friday’s royal rumble was a tale of two halves with two very different styles.

In the first 16 minutes, Coupeville’s crushing defense did its job extremely well, limiting the RedHawks to just seven points, five from Meek.

And, while the Wolves weren’t exactly burning up the nets themselves, clinging to a 12-7 lead at the half, they looked like they were largely in control.

Exchanging buckets to open the third, Coupeville got a beauty when Lindsey Roberts slapped home a layup in traffic off of a nifty entry pass from Sarah Wright.

At which point Meek, after three years of chasing Wolf stars like Makana Stone, Kailey Kellner and Co., only to see her teams fall short, unleashed payback.

Slashing to the hoop at will, exploiting her quickness and ability to score inside and outside, the veteran RedHawk kicked off a game-busting 10-0 run that turned a five-point deficit into a five-point advantage.

CHS, which struggled mightily to get anything to drop all night, finally stopped the hemorrhaging when Hannah Davidson snared a ball out of mid-air and beat the shot clock by half a tick.

That pulled the Wolves within 19-16 and a Coupeville win still seemed very possible.

Cue Meek, who plunged into the heart of the defense, nailed a short turn-around jumper while being pummeled, then added a free throw to stretch the lead back to six exiting the third.

After a game that featured a second quarter where both teams scored just two points apiece, the fourth quarter was an offensive fireworks show.

Unfortunately for the Wolves, 17 of the 27 points to drop through the net in the final eight minutes came from the visitors, who stretched the lead out to double digits and coasted home for the win.

Roberts nailed a gorgeous three-ball from the right corner late in the game, while Wright got three the old-fashioned way with a put-back and free-throw.

The charity shot marked a milestone, as it was the 100th point of Wright’s career.

Playing without three starters, and with reserve Avalon Renninger out with a concussion, Coupeville had a thin bench and tired legs hurt the Wolves in the end.

“It was just a tough game,” said Coupeville coach David King. “I was happy with the effort put forth by those who played, though.

Lindsey was one who kept fighting until the end, even though she was dead tired.”

Roberts and freshman Chelsea Prescott led the offensive attack, each hitting for seven, while Scout Smith knocked down her four points in the first quarter.

The sophomore spark-plug swished a pair of free throws, and also snagged a long outlet pass and threw down a runner after Coupeville beat the RedHawk press.

Ema Smith (3), Wright (3) and Davidson (2) also scored.

Wright was a beast on the boards, hauling down 12 rebounds, with Roberts (eight rebounds, two blocks, two assists) and Allison Wenzel (three rebounds) backing her up.

Swing player Ashlie Shank, getting her most varsity minutes of the season, snagged a rebound, helped run the offense while on the floor and drew praise from her coach for “giving us a lot of hustle.”

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   Hunter Smith poured in 15 Friday, moving into 13th place on the Coupeville boys basketball career scoring chart. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Now, they play for pride.

Unable to recover from a large early deficit Friday after its #2 scorer was literally knocked out of the game, the Coupeville High School boys basketball squad was eliminated from playoff contention.

Falling 64-41 at Port Townsend, the Wolves drop to 3-4 in Olympic League play, 5-12 overall.

With only two boys teams advancing to the postseason this year, Klahowya (6-1) and Port Townsend (5-2) have clinched those berths.

Coupeville closes with three games next week, traveling to Sequim for a non-conference tilt Tuesday, before welcoming Klahowya to Whidbey Thursday for Senior Night.

The season finale comes next Saturday, Feb. 3, when the Wolves travel to Chimacum to face the win-less (0-7) Cowboys.

After splitting the first two games this season with Port Townsend, CHS went into Friday’s rumble hoping for a strong showing.

And while the Wolves brought consistent effort, the RedHawks were in the zone and never left.

“They came out and shot the lights out to start the game,” said Coupeville coach Brad Sherman. “And then just really took advantage of how big and solid they are inside.

“We actually played a decent game. Kind of fought and fought but just couldn’t make a big enough push to get back to even,” he added. “I think they will be really hard to beat (in the playoffs).”

With Noa Montoya dropping in 10 points in the first eight minutes, Port Townsend jumped out to a 26-10 lead which drew two exclamation points in the score-book from the home stat keeper.

The Wolves played relatively close in the second quarter (an 11-9 deficit) and fourth (a 17-14 advantage), but a cold-shooting third (a 13-5 deficit) doomed them for good.

Along with the loss, Coupeville took a body blow when senior Ethan Spark was brutalized, taking a shot to the face that left him with a gash inside his mouth, a partially-dislodged tooth and a fair amount of his blood on the court.

“He left his mark on Port Townsend, that’s for sure!,” said mom Kali Barrio.

Spark wanted to re-enter the game, but officials declined. Early indications are that he did not suffer a concussion, however.

Fellow senior Hunter Smith paced the Wolves, rattling the rims for 15 points and reaching a couple of new marks along the way.

He finished the night with 776 points, passing ’60s star Barry Brown (769) for 13th place on the CHS boys career scoring chart.

With 311 points this season, and 332 last year, Smith becomes the 13th Wolf male to put up back-to-back 300-point seasons since 1960, and the first since Mike Bagby did so in 2004-2005 and 2005-2006.

Joey Lippo backed Smith up with seven points, while Mason Grove (6), Spark (4), Hunter Downes (4), Jered Brown (3) and Kyle Rockwell (2) also scored.

JV falls short:

One bad quarter doomed the Wolf young guns in a 47-30 loss.

Coupeville’s second squad falls to 3-4 in league play, 4-12 overall.

Trailing just 10-8 at the first break, CHS was outscored 17-7 in the second quarter and never fully recovered.

After torching the RedHawks for 30+ points, and multiple three-balls, in both of the team’s previous games, Grove settled for seven free throws in limited time.

While he only played two quarters, allowing him equal time in the varsity game, the CHS sophomore topped a milestone, pushing his JV scoring to 301 points on the season.

Sage Downes led the Wolves with nine, while Ulrik Wells and Jean Lund-Olsen both dropped in four.

Jake Pease, Daniel Olson and Gavin Knoblich rounded out the scoring with a bucket apiece.

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   Ema Smith captures the mood of everyone in Coupeville when we think about OlympicLeague.com these days. 

Coupeville fans are told, again and again, that there is one “official” site for Olympic League news, schedules and standings.

But what if that site makes an error, then compounds it day after day, for 17 days?

And what if that site doesn’t want to hear from me or you, or pretty much anyone, that they are doing a mediocre (at best) job?

Welcome to http://www.olympicleague.com/, where incompetence is the flavor of the day … day after day after day.

So, what am I wailing about?

Jump back in time 17 days (so, two-plus weeks), land on the afternoon of Jan. 6 and the Coupeville girls basketball team beat Klahowya 29-23.

At which time, the big brains behind the Olympic League site updated both team’s overall win/loss records, but did NOT do the same for their league marks.

A small error at the time, but one compounded when day after day after day, they refuse to use two small key strokes to fix the issue.

And why is this big, at least relatively speaking?

Because most people (including a lot of newspaper writers) just take a quick scan of said standings when talking or writing about how teams are doing.

Which presently show Coupeville at 3-2 and Klahowya at 1-4.

Which isn’t true.

If you pop into the schedule for either CHS or KSS and go down and manually count up the league games, you wind up with 4-2 and 1-5 respectively, which rightfully places the Wolves in a first-place tie with Port Townsend heading into Friday’s showdown between those two squads.

But 99.6% of people aren’t going to go do that, so they buy the incorrect 3-2 and 1-4 records.

Is this end-of-the-world type of stuff? Probably not, but I am easily chafed, frequently vocal and have plenty of time on my hands to be irritating as all get out, so here we are.

Do your one job, OlympicLeague.com!

Do it for the kids!

Or just do it to get me to stop whining.

But do it!

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   Wolf girls hoops coaches David and Amy King have their squad smack-dab in the race for a fourth-straight Olympic League crown. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Biggest game of the year?

Biggest game of the year.

Both Coupeville High School varsity basketball teams face a major test next Friday, Jan. 26, with one Wolf team vying for a league title and the other fighting for its playoff life.

With finals going down next week at CHS, the Wolf athletic schedule is light, with just the one game.

After that, both squads cap the regular season the week of Jan. 29-Feb. 3 with three games in six days.

Friday’s bouts are the main attraction, though.

The Coupeville girls, who have overcome injuries and defections, are jelling and have won four of six heading into a home game against Port Townsend where the winner will have sole possession of first-place in the Olympic League.

For the Wolf boys, Friday is a tricky affair, as they both travel to face the RedHawks and have to win to keep their postseason dreams alive.

While girls basketball sends three teams to the playoffs this season, only two boys squads will punch a ticket in 2018.

As we prepare for RedHawkAgeddon, a look at varsity scoring and league standings through Jan. 21:

Girls:

Lindsey Roberts 123
Mikayla Elfrank 99
Sarah Wright 81
Ema Smith 64
Kyla Briscoe 58
Kalia Littlejohn 38
Scout Smith 36
Chelsea Prescott 27
Hannah Davidson 8
Allison Wenzel 3
Avalon Renninger 1

Boys:

Hunter Smith 296
Ethan Spark 188
Joey Lippo 75
Hunter Downes 42
Mason Grove 42
Cameron Toomey-Stout 24
Jered Brown 21
Kyle Rockwell 19
Dane Lucero 10
Gavin Knoblich 2
Ulrik Wells 2
Jacobi Pilgrim 1

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 4-2 6-11
Port Townsend 4-2 6-9
Chimacum 3-3 6-9
Klahowya 1-5 3-12

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Klahowya 5-1 10-7
Port Townsend 4-2 8-7
COUPEVILLE 3-3 5-11
Chimacum 0-6 0-10

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