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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Emma Smith

   Emma Smith and CHS volleyball won a league title in the fall, picking up eight conference wins along the way. (John Fisken photos)

Jakobi Baumann

   Jakobi Baumann was part of a Wolf tennis team which successfully defended its league title.

The champ is staggered, down, but not necessarily out.

Winter was rough for Klahowya, which got just two league wins combined from its varsity boys and girls basketball squads, thanks in large part to a combination of injuries and bad luck.

That’s allowed Coupeville to surge ahead in the standings at the two-thirds point of the 2016-2017 school year, boasting the most combined varsity team wins of any 1A Olympic League school.

If the Wolves can hold fast through the spring — where they are the defending league champs in baseball and girls tennis — they would unseat the Eagles, who have ruled the roost in the league’s first two years.

To get these totals, I look at 10 of the 11 sports in which Coupeville vies with its conference rivals.

That means skipping track, which is the only one of the 11 not to be a true head-to-head team sport.

Track is an individual sport conducted in the guise of a team sport, with meets typically involving a jumble of schools from different classifications. Any attempt at keeping track of a team win-loss record is a waste of time.

And this is Coupeville Sports, so if the Wolves don’t field a team (wrestling, swim, gymnastics), it would be equally pointless for me to consider that sport.

So, what I do look at is regular season league varsity wins in football, volleyball, girls and boys soccer, girls and boys tennis, girls and boys basketball, baseball and softball.

A season-by season comparison:

2014-2015:

Klahowya 52 wins/5 league titles
Coupeville 40/2
Chimacum 23/2
Port Townsend 20/1

2015-2016:

Klahowya 45/3
Coupeville 42/4
Chimacum 26/2
Port Townsend 22/1

2016-2017 (fall and winter):

Coupeville 32/3
Klahowya 24/1
Port Townsend 22/1
Chimacum 13/-

All-time:

Klahowya 121/9
Coupeville 114/9
Port Townsend 64/3
Chimacum 62/4

Now first, if you’re counting football, volleyball, girls soccer, boys tennis and girls and boys basketball, you might think I missed a title this year.

I didn’t, though, as the Olympic League united with the Nisqually League for football, and when the 8-team gridiron conglomerate anointed its champ, the crown went to outsider Cascade Christian.

Looking at the numbers, here’s what I see happening over the first two-and-two-thirds years of our conference.

In the early going Klahowya, which is the second-largest 1A school in the state with 445 students in the last WIAA classification count, got off to a strong start.

To the surprise of probably many, Coupeville, which is the smallest school in the league (227 students to PT’s 278 and Chimacum’s 250) hung tough, then quickly realized it could do more than just that.

While KSS has nearly double the student body of CHS, after years of facing down large 2A schools and private school powerhouses in the Cascade Conference, any fear factor evaporated quickly.

In year two, every other school’s win numbers went up, at Klahowya’s expense.

Plus, in a huge psychological boost, Coupeville doubled its league titles in year two, repeating in girls basketball and tennis, while taking baseball and boys tennis away from the Eagles.

That trend is continuing in year three, as boys tennis and girls basketball repeated (the hoops squad is 27-0 all-time in league play), while volleyball snatched another title away from Klahowya.

As we head into the spring, Coupeville’s greatest strength is girls tennis, which has swept titles in both years, going 11-0 in league play.

Klahowya can counter with boys soccer, also a two-time champ, and 12-0 all-time.

The two sports which could decide things are the ones played on the diamond.

Chimacum is a two-time defending softball champ, but the Eagles have the league’s best player in standout junior hurler Amber Bumbalough.

The Wolves, who got off to a great start last year, then spiraled a bit at the end, boast a lineup stacked with young talent like Katrina McGranahan, Hope Lodell, Sarah Wright and Lauren Rose.

Baseball went to Klahowya in year one, then Coupeville surprised in year two.

The Wolves lost key players to graduation in CJ Smith and Cole Payne, while Port Townsend, which went win-less in 2016, is seeing a noticeable uptick in all boys sports across the board this year.

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Brian Shank

   Wolf senior Brian Shank gets one more game on his home floor Thursday. (John Fisken photo)

In 33 hours and some change, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad will host a home district playoff game.

Their opponent? Nobody knows.

Thanks to hectic weather, the Nisqually League keeps bumping their final games of the season, from Monday to Tuesday and now to Wednesday night.

While Vashon Island (6-1 in league play) has clinched the conference title, Cascade Christian (4-3), Seattle Christian (4-3) and Bellevue Christian (3-4) are in a logjam as they fight for playoff seeds #2-#4.

Cascade Christian (8-11 overall) and Seattle Christian (11-8) play tonight (maybe) and the winner is #2 (CC won the first time around).

Bellevue Christian (9-10) is supposed to travel to Vashon (12-7) and needs to win to have a chance to avoid the #4 seed.

If they topple the Pirates and finish 4-4, the Vikings will be tied with the loser of CC/SC.

Since they split the season series with both of those schools, and there would be no days left for any kind of on-court tiebreaker, probably safe to assume a coin would be flipped.

Now, if things get cancelled for a third straight night?

We’ll make another assumption and say the league standings will be frozen as is, with #1-#4 being Vashon, CC, SC and BC.

What we do know about the playoff game:

When: Thursday, Feb. 9

Where: Coupeville High School gym

Tip-Off: 6 PM

Opponent: Nisqually League #4

Stakes: Loser-out, with the winner advancing to play Feb. 11 at the #2 Nisqually school in another loser-out game.

To see the bracket, pop over to: http://www.nisquallyathletics.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2186&sport=3

Cost: Postseason pricing is on tap, and no passes are accepted.

Adults and Students without ASB — $8.00.
Students (with ASB) — $5.00.
Elementary (under 12) — $4.00.
Senior Citizen (62+) — $5.00.
Preschool (with parent) — Free.

Last time CHS faced its possible foes:

BC — Lost a non-conference game 66-38 Dec. 16 of this season.
CC — Lost 59-36 in playoffs Feb. 14, 2015.
SC — Have not played in at least a decade.

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(Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Wolf players, trying to figure out their scoring averages. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

On to the postseason.

Both Wolf basketball squads punched their ticket to the playoffs — one a little more emphatically than the other — and will join Port Townsend and Chimacum at the next level.

Klahowya, which struggled through a rough, injury-marred winter, will sit out the playoffs on both the girls and boys sides.

The next round begins Thursday for the Coupeville boys, as they host a loser-out district game against the #4 team from the Nisqually League.

The Wolf girls, as league champs, are off until double-elimination play begins Feb. 14.

As we head towards the postseason, one final look at the regular-season standings:

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 9-0 15-4
Port Townsend 5-4 10-8
Chimacum 4-5 11-9
Klahowya 0-9 3-16

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 9-0 15-4
Chimacum 4-5 4-13
COUPEVILLE 3-6 3-16
Klahowya 2-7 4-15

And scoring stats for Coupeville’s varsity players:

Girls:

Kailey Kellner – 163
Mikayla Elfrank
– 118
Mia Littlejohn
– 113
Lindsey Roberts
– 82
Kalia Littlejohn
– 63
Tiffany Briscoe
– 43
Lauren Grove
– 38
Lauren Rose
– 30
Sarah Wright
– 16
Kyla Briscoe
– 7
Allison Wenzel
– 4
Charlotte Langille
– 2

Boys:

Hunter Smith – 303
Gabe Wynn
– 197
Ethan Spark
– 132
Brian Shank
– 119
Hunter Downes
– 36
Joey Lippo
– 28
Cameron Toomey-Stout
– 26
Steven Cope
– 13
Ariah Bepler
– 5
Jered Brown
– 5

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Steven Cope and his Wolf teammates will get a home playoff game next Thursday. (john Fisken photo)

   Steven Cope and his Wolf teammates will get a home playoff game next Thursday. (John Fisken photo)

Crisis averted.

The Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad couldn’t upend league champ Port Townsend Saturday, but thanks to Chimacum knocking off Klahowya, the Wolves are officially playoff-bound.

CHS ran into a hot-shooting RedHawk team in the regular season finale and fell 82-55, dropping to 3-6 in Olympic League play, 3-16 overall.

Port Townsend finished 9-0, 15-4.

If Klahowya had won, there would have been a three-way tie at 3-6, which would have meant a one-night, three-team mini-playoff to decide the league’s #2 and #3 playoff seeds.

That’s not necessary now as Chimacum (4-5, 4-13) and Coupeville are in, while Klahowya (2-7, 4-15) is done.

The Wolves will host the #4 team from the Nisqually League (most likely Bellevue Christian) next Thursday, Feb. 9 in a loser-out district playoff game.

Win that and CHS hits the road Feb. 11 for another loser-out game, that one at the home of the Nisqually’s #2 squad.

To see the playoff bracket, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2186&sport=3

Saturday night the Wolves got off to a slow start, trailing 23-9 after one quarter, and never recovered.

Port Townsend shared the scoring load, with four different players hitting for 16 or more and Detrius Kelsall banging home a game-high 23.

The RedHawk junior scorched the nets with six three-balls, propelling his team to a season-best scoring performance on their Senior Night.

Coupeville put together its best offensive performance in the second quarter, when Hunter Smith tossed in 11 of the Wolves 17 points.

He finished with a team-high 21, cresting the 300-point barrier in the third quarter. Smith has 303 points (15.9 a night) heading into the postseason.

Ethan Spark chipped in with 14, eight of those coming in a third-quarter explosion, while Joey Lippo (6), Brian Shank (6), Cameron Toomey-Stout (4) and Gabe Wynn (4) rounded out the scoring attack.

Rough start dooms JV :

The second half belonged to Coupeville, but a terrible first quarter (16-5 in favor of the RedHawks) put the Wolves in too deep a hole to dig out.

The 46-31 loss dropped the young guns final record to 7-12 overall, 2-7 in league play.

Freshman Mason Grove knocked down a trio of three-balls as he went for a team-high 13, while Kyle Rockwell and Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim banked home five apiece.

Ulrik Wells (4), Jean Lund-Olsen (2) and Nikolai Lyngra (2) all chipped in.

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Anthony Smith (John Fisken photo)

   Anthony Smith, in his sixth season at the helm of the CHS boys, is trying to guide his team into the playoffs. (John Fisken photo)

The suspense continues.

The Klahowya High School boys’ basketball squad upended visiting Chimacum 58-49 Tuesday, throwing the race for two of the Olympic League’s three playoff spots up in the air.

A loss by the Eagles would have eliminated them, and set Port Townsend, Chimacum and Coupeville as the #1, #2 and #3 seeds heading into the postseason.

Instead, Klahowya lives for at least two more days, while Coupeville (and Chimacum and Klahowya) could still finish anywhere from #2 to #4.

First, the standings as of 10 PM Tuesday:

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 7-0 13-4
Chimacum 3-5 3-13
COUPEVILLE 3-5 3-14
Klahowya 2-5 4-13

What we know for sure: Port Townsend is league champs and advances to the double-elimination portion of districts, from which three of four teams move on to regionals.

Now, the other three teams.

Coupeville has a tie-breaker over Klahowya, having won two of three, but does not against Chimacum, having lost two of three.

The Eagles and Cowboys have split their first two games, so Saturday’s season finale would decide that series.

How Coupeville finishes from #2 to #4:

#2 — All three have to happen. Klahowya beats Port Townsend Thursday. Coupeville beats Port Townsend Saturday. Klahowya beats Chimacum Saturday.

#3 — Only one has to happen. Klahowya loses to PT or Chimacum or Coupeville beats PT.

#4 — All three have to happen. Klahowya beats both PT and Chimacum and Coupeville loses to PT.

So, we clear?

Probably not, but check back Thursday to see if it’s any clearer.

Once we get to the postseason, here’s the playoff path:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2186&sport=3

PS — The girls race is a completely different story with three-time league champ Coupeville, Port Townsend and Chimacum 100% locked into the #1, #2 and #3 slots.

That playoff path:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2187&sport=12

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