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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

South Whidbey football, seen here getting its rear spanked by Coupeville's Hunter Smith, is leaving the Cascade Conference. (John Fisken photo)

   South Whidbey football, seen here getting its rear spanked by Coupeville’s Hunter Smith, is leaving the Cascade Conference. (John Fisken photo)

Coupeville’s old stomping grounds aren’t what they used to be.

The 1A/2A Cascade Conference is falling apart before our very eyes, and football inequality is at the heart of the matter.

First 2A Lakewood fled for the Northwest Conference after a failed move to combine two leagues for football, then five of the league’s remaining seven schools refused to play eventual 2A state champ Archbishop Thomas Murphy, AKA “The Best Team Money Could Buy This Side of Bellevue.”

Now, 1A Cedar Park Christian has hired former Bellevue coach Butch Goncharoff, ensuring the school will likely launch a recruiting war with fellow private school ATM (I mean “offer academic opportunities to underprivileged 250-pound linemen”).

Taking advantage of a swinging exit door, 1A South Whidbey has fled the scene.

Coupeville’s closest rival, which suffered badly during a win-less 2016 season that started with a 41-10 pounding by the Wolves, is breaking with its league for football, and will try and put together an independent schedule for next fall.

CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith confirmed the move does not affect South Whidbey’s annual Battle for the Bucket with Coupeville, set for Sept. 1 in Langley.

What it does mean is the Falcons, who will be on their third head coach in four seasons, will cobble together a schedule of non-conference games with 1A and 2B schools.

Not having residence in a league makes qualifying for the postseason harder, though not impossible, and will require some scrambling from South Whidbey’s AD, who won’t be able to automatically plug six of 10 games with league foes.

Coupeville went down a partially similar path several seasons ago, when their gridiron program was also hit hard by injuries, forcing them to play freshmen and sophomores against the seasoned, weight-room-living juniors and seniors employed at ATM and King’s.

The Wolves got permission to play a limited league schedule, facing only the smaller schools, as they rebuilt, but did not go totally rogue like the Falcons.

Of course, CHS followed that up by making a bigger change, jumping to be a founding member in the new 1A Olympic League in 2014.

While many of South Whidbey’s athletic programs are not in the same disarray that football is, I, for one, again raise the call — it’s time for the Falcons to fully get while the getting is good.

I am an idiot, and no one is going to listen to me, but I think there are many, many great reasons for South Whidbey to fully reunite with Coupeville and grow the Olympic League to a five-school joint.

Pop over and read my thoughts at https://coupevillesports.com/2016/09/27/falcons-time-to-fly-home/ before you outright dismiss me.

It’s time, Falcon Nation, it’s time. Come home.

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Lauren Rose (John Fisken photo)

   With players like Lauren Rose setting up teammates at every turn, the Wolf girls are 13-3 this season. (John Fisken photo)

It’s all about playoff seeding heading into the final week of the regular season for high school basketball.

On the girls side of things, Coupeville is the league champ — for a third-straight season — and Port Townsend has clinched second place.

Chimacum can clinch third place, and the league’s final playoff berth, with a win Tuesday against Klahowya.

If the Cowboys fall to the Eagles, though, things would be guaranteed to go all the way to the final game on both team’s schedule — a rematch Saturday that would then be a winner-take-all.

While Coupeville is locked in regardless, the Wolves do want to win their finale Saturday against Port Townsend.

Do that and they finish 9-0 for the third straight year and stretch the league’s longest unbeaten streak, in any sport, to 27-0.

Over on the boys side, only one of four teams is 100% confident in knowing its fate, and that’s league champ Port Townsend.

The other three schools can all finish anywhere between #2 and #4 depending on how the season’s final six days play out.

Coupeville, which pulled off back-to-back wins against Klahowya and Chimacum to end last week, still has a shot of catching the Cowboys for the #2 playoff seed … or falling completely out of the playoff picture.

Both are very long shots, though, with the odds heavily in favor of the Wolves finishing #3 and hosting a first-round loser-out postseason game.

To get #2, CHS has only one option — it has to beat Port Townsend in the season finale, while needing Chimacum to lose twice in five days to Klahowya.

That’s it.

Any other result and the Wolves can’t pull off the stunning late-season reversal.

They don’t have a tiebreaker against Chimacum, having lost two of three to the Cowboys, so have to finish with a better record.

To go to the other extreme, the only way Coupeville misses the postseason is if Klahowya wins its final three games (two tilts against Chimacum wrapped around a meeting with Port Townsend) and the Wolves drop that final battle with the RedHawks.

Will things end quickly — a Chimacum win Tuesday at Klahowya ends all speculation — or go down to the final day? Stay tuned.

Where things sit through Monday morning:

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 8-0 13-3
Port Townsend 4-3 8-7
Chimacum 2-5 9-9
Klahowya 0-6 3-13

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 7-0 13-3
Chimacum 3-4 3-12
COUPEVILLE 3-5 3-13
Klahowya 1-5 3-13

And scoring stats for Coupeville’s varsity players:

Girls:

Kailey Kellner – 148
Mikayla Elfrank – 98
Mia Littlejohn – 90
Lindsey Roberts – 60
Kalia Littlejohn – 55
Tiffany Briscoe – 37
Lauren Grove – 36
Lauren Rose – 30
Sarah Wright – 15
Kyla Briscoe – 7
Allison Wenzel – 4
Charlotte Langille – 2

Boys:

Hunter Smith – 255
Gabe Wynn – 184
Brian Shank – 103
Ethan Spark – 99
Hunter Downes – 36
Joey Lippo – 20
Cameron Toomey-Stout – 18
Steven Cope – 11
Ariah Bepler – 5
Jered Brown – 5

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Nicole Lester (John Fisken photo)

   Nicole Lester had five rebounds and a blocked shot Saturday, as the Wolf JV rolled to its third straight win. (John Fisken photo)

Not so fast, Eagles.

Klahowya might have been feeling pretty good, having pushed the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball squad to the final seconds in a two-point loss Tuesday, but Saturday was a far different story.

Riding a 13-point, seven-rebound performance from Sarah Wright, the Wolf young guns were in destroy mode this time around, pasting their visitors 42-24.

The win, Coupeville’s third straight and sixth in their last seven, lifts CHS to 5-0 in Olympic League play, 9-3 overall.

Of course, give the young Wolves forfeits for the three times Chimacum and Port Townsend have failed to provide a JV team this season and it’s more like 8-0, 12-3.

After struggling at times earlier in the week, the Wolves played to their full potential this time around.

“Well, we didn’t make any friends from Klahowya today,” said an amused coach Amy King. “I asked the JV to not make it a close two-point game and they aim to please.”

The Wolves mixed things up on defense, starting in a man-to-man look, then snapping into a 1-2-2 press.

“We decided to go a little different to start,” King said. “The lesson early on is that Maya (Toomey-Stout) is the quickest player on the court.

“When she plays you on defense, you don’t get to shoot.”

When they had the ball on offense, the Wolves mixed things up, with Toomey-Stout, Ashlie Shank and Avalon Renninger all chipping in with points in the early going.

As soon as Klahowya went to focus on one CHS player, another rose up and stung them.

Brittany Powers exploded off of the bench, banging home a long bucket, then topping that the next time down the floor with an even-longer three-ball.

Not to be outdone, Toomey-Stout promptly drilled her own trey and the rout was on.

King kept things interesting, shifting her defense into a 2-3 zone, then a 3-2, confounding the Eagles.

When Klahowya tried to counter with its own zone look, the Wolves promptly broke it, with Ema Smith spearheading things and triggering Coupeville’s offense.

“I was proud of the way the girls fought,” King said. “They found a way to get shots up. When one or two of us struggled, someone else was there to pick them up.”

Wright paced the Wolves, pounding away down low for her 13, while Toomey-Stout tickled the twines for eight and Powers was money with seven.

Renninger (6), Shank (5) and Scout Smith (3) rounded out the attack, with Ema Smith and Shank both hauling down six rebounds apiece.

Nicole Lester collected five caroms and emphatically rejected an Eagle shot.

Emma Mathusek (three steals, two rebounds), Maddy Hilkey (two steals) and Tia Wurzrainer (two rebounds) all chipped in, as well.

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(John Fisken photo)

   David King has the Coupeville girls flying high at 13-3, winners of nine straight. (John Fisken photo)

No quit in these Wolves.

Overcoming fatigue, a short-turnaround and the danger of overlooking a cellar-dwelling team they had just drilled four days prior, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad took care of business Saturday afternoon.

Playing methodically, and turning up their vaunted defense to a higher level in the second half, the Wolves romped past visiting Klahowya 37-19 to pull within a win of completing their third straight undefeated league season.

Now sitting at 8-0 in Olympic League play, 13-3 overall, Coupeville has won nine straight.

The Wolves have a unique home-and-away non-conference series with Sequim Monday and Thursday, then close the regular season at home Feb. 4 against Port Townsend, where they will make a bid to improve to 27-0 all-time in Olympic League play.

After that comes the playoffs, which don’t start until Feb. 14.

Coupeville, as a #1 seed, will begin in the double-elimination portion of districts, needing two wins to return to the state tourney.

Saturday, the Wolves were playing their second game in less than 24 hours, having knocked off Chimacum Friday night.

Many of the Wolves were back in the gym at 8:15 Saturday to coach and ref youth basketball, before taking the floor for an early 12:30 tip-off.

Fatigue seemed to catch up to CHS in the early going, as it weathered crisp shooting from Klahowya’s Amber Bumbalough and held just a 9-7 lead after the first quarter.

“The first quarter was a struggle,” said Wolf coach David King. “Many of our jump shots were short (tired legs); we just didn’t have the lift needed in the legs, even though the mind told us differently.

“What kept us in the quarter was our offensive rebounds and put backs.”

Things began to take a turn for the better in the second, as Coupeville shied away from long jumpers and attacked the basket en route to a 12-6 advantage.

Despite being up 21-13 at the break, the Wolves rallied together as a team in the locker room, pledging to put the game away.

“The great thing at halftime was the whole team wasn’t satisfied with our halftime lead or our effort,” King said. “They knew we could play better in the second half.”

And they did, using a 14-2 surge in the third to take the last bit of fight out of Klahowya.

Key was going to a press on defense, which triggered a number of easy buckets off of turnovers.

The Wolves were quick to back each other up on defense, something which brought a smile to their coach’s face.

Whether it was Lindsey Roberts alertly moving to pick up a player after a teammate slipped, or Tiffany Briscoe sliding over to shut-down Roberts original rival, the Wolves were firing as a group, five players working as one.

That carried over to the offensive end, where several players stepped up to have one of their better shooting performances of the season.

Junior Mikayla Elfrank pumped in a game-high 11, while speedy Kalia Littlejohn knocked down eight and Roberts banked in seven.

Briscoe (3), Mia Littlejohn (3), Kailey Kellner (3) and Sarah Wright (2) rounded out the offensive attack.

“Every game we have players stepping in and up to help with the scoring,” King said.

Roberts also hauled down 10 boards, while Lauren Grove added four rebounds and three steals. Both Littlejohn sisters doled out three assists apiece.

While he would like to work on cleaning up some areas (free throws and minimizing turnovers), King likes the grit he sees from his players.

“This team never quits,” he said. “Never thinks they are out of a game if down or if our lead starts to shrink.

“They are unflappable! They refuse to lose.”

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Brian Shank (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf senior Brian Shank soared for five Friday as the Wolf boys won their second straight league game. (John Fisken photo)

Every point counts.

Give Coupeville High School boys’ basketball manager Axel Partida a huge assist Friday night.

He caught Chimacum in a uniform violation, giving Wolf senior Gabe Wynn two free throws thanks to a technical foul called on the host Cowboys.

Wynn drilled both of them — part of his team’s superb 13 of 15 work at the charity stripe — and that helped CHS hold off a late rally to escape with a 56-53 win.

The second straight Olympic League victory for the Wolves, it lifts them to 3-5 and pulls them within a half-game of Chimacum in the race for second place.

League champ Port Townsend can’t be caught at 7-0, but the Cowboys (3-4) are getting an unexpected challenge late from Coupeville.

Admittedly, it’s still a long-shot.

The Wolves, 3-13 overall, need to upend Port Townsend in their league finale Feb. 4 and have Chimacum stumble twice in the final week against Klahowya (1-5) to finish in second place.

If Coupeville and Chimacum finish with the same record, the Cowboys own the tiebreaker, having taken two of three games played between the teams this season.

The win, however, did strengthen Coupeville’s hold on third-place, which they need to claim the league’s final playoff berth.

The Wolves are a game up on Klahowya and own the tiebreaker, so the ONLY way they miss the postseason is if they lose to Port Townsend and the Eagles win all three of their league games next week.

OK, now that we’re all confused, let’s jump back to Friday night’s game.

Coupeville rode another red-hot performance from junior Hunter Smith, who, a game after scoring 34 in a win over Klahowya, torched the nets at Chimacum for 26.

He did most of his damage in the second quarter, raining down 14 as the Wolves blew open a tied game, turning a 13-13 stalemate after one into a 31-21 lead at the break.

Chimacum chipped away at the deficit in the second half, putting together 20-18 and 12-7 quarters, but the Wolves held fast and held on when it mattered.

Ethan Spark added 11 and Wynn knocked down 10 to back Smith up, while Brian Shank popped for five and Joey Lippo and Steven Cope each scored two points.

Cameron Toomey-Stout rounded out a very short bench, chipping in with his customary Energizer Rabbit hustle, ball-hawking defense and impeccable hair.

JV falls in second half:

A close game turned a lot less close after halftime, as the Wolf young guns saw a seven-point deficit turn into a 73-36 rout.

It was just 34-27 at the break, but the Cowboys turned up the offense after the break, with a 23-4 fourth quarter run a real killer.

Mason Grove paced the Wolves with 13, including three treys, while Sean Toomey-Stout played through a lingering shoulder injury to knock down 11.

Ulrik Wells (4), Kyle Rockwell (3), Ariah Bepler (3), Aram Leyva (1) and Tucker Hall (1) also scored, while Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim, Koa Davison, Gavin Knoblich, Nikolai Lyngra and Elliott Johnson saw floor time.

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