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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Lindsey Roberts and Coupeville are all smiles after winning their eighth straight game. (John Fisken photo)

   Lindsey Roberts and Coupeville are all smiles after winning their eighth straight game. (John Fisken photo)

Get rocked, never get knocked out.

Twice Friday night Chimacum made runs at the Coupeville girls’ basketball squad and cut the lead to a single point.

Both times the Wolves dug down deep, found an answer sparked by an aggressive team-wide display of defensive excellence and rose to the moment.

Bending just a bit, but never breaking, the host Wolves eventually rolled to a 44-33 decision for their eighth straight victory.

Now 7-0 in Olympic League play (25-0 all-time) and 12-3 overall, CHS got something from everyone on their roster.

Big buckets from Kailey Kellner, huge rebounds from Lindsey Roberts, gritty work in the paint from Tiffany Briscoe, electrifying passes from Mia Littlejohn and a spark off the bench from both Kalia Littlejohn and Mikayla Elfrank.

The Wolves bolted out to a 10-0 lead, holding Chimacum scoreless for the first 7:58 of the game.

Kellner rippled a three-ball from the right corner, after playing give-and-go with Mia Littlejohn, to kick things off and Coupeville pressed the pedal through the metal in the early going.

Elfrank added three the hard way, making off with a steal and beating the Cowboy defense to the other end, then added a free throw after being hammered at the very last second.

The steal was one of four the Wolf junior made off with in a wild two-and-a-half minute stretch after she first jumped off the bench and jump-started Coupeville.

Chimacum, a scrappy, physical team if ever there was one, finally settled in and cut the lead to 12-11, but the Wolves never blinked.

Two free throws from Briscoe — she was 4-of-4 at the charity stripe in the first half — sent CHS on an 11-5 tear to end the half.

Four Wolves scored in the run, with Roberts nailing a gorgeous trey from the left side that was set up by Briscoe, who hauled down an offensive board, dribbled out of danger and found an open teammate.

The Cowboys made their second, and final, run right after the halftime break, using three straight baskets in the paint to once again cut the margin to a single digit.

Enter the cold-blooded Kellner, who scorched the net with a three-ball from the top of the arc.

That sent the Wolves on a game-busting 14-0 run, with Elfrank hitting twice, both on plays set up perfectly by teammate’s passes.

First Roberts dished, then Kellner, as the Wolves got out on the run and finished strongly.

Coupeville stretched the lead out as far as 17 before cruising in during the game’s final minutes, giving their end-of-the-bench players a chance to stretch their legs.

Before she left, Kellner dropped another trey, set up by Mia Littlejohn beating the Chimacum press by bull-rushing two defenders, then firing the ball over the top to her waiting shooter.

Kellner paced the Wolves with 15, while Roberts and Elfrank each went for nine. Briscoe added a season-best seven, while Lauren Grove and Kalia Littlejohn each had a basket.

Roberts hauled in 12 boards, while Kellner had eight rebounds and two blocked shots.

Mia Littlejohn played inspired ball at the point, picking up four assists and setting up numerous plays with her ball movement and dribbling skills.

Lauren Rose, Allison Wenzel, Ema Smith and Sarah Wright all got floor time as well, with Wenzel being especially scrappy on the defensive side of the ball.

Coupeville returns immediately to action, hosting Klahowya (0-5, 3-12) Saturday in a game that was postponed earlier by bad weather.

The varsity tips at 12:30, followed by the JV at 2:00.

JV sits night out:

The Wolf young guns are officially 4-0 in Olympic League play, but, if you count forfeits, they sit at 7-0.

Chimacum cancelled for the second time in three games Friday, citing a lack of players.

Tack on an earlier cancellation by Port Townsend and Coupeville’s JV has barely been able to take the court for 50% of its scheduled league clashes this year.

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(John Fisken photo)

   Mia Littlejohn (left) and Tiffany Briscoe are league champs, again. (John Fisken photo)

Our league, yesterday, today, tomorrow.

There ain’t ever been a dynasty in the 1A Olympic League like the one being crafted by the Coupeville High School girls varsity basketball program.

Playing at home for the first time in 45 days Tuesday, the Wolves jumped out to a 13-2 lead after one quarter than strolled home with a 41-26 victory over visiting Klahowya.

The win, Coupeville’s 24th without a loss in the three-year history of the conference, clinches a third-straight league title for the Wolves.

Now sitting at 6-0 in league, 11-3 overall, CHS is on a seven-game winning streak and hasn’t tasted defeat since Dec. 16.

Coupeville, which has five regular season games left, will open the playoffs Feb. 14 against a yet-to-be-decided foe at Bellarmine Prep High School.

With the league title, the Wolves have automatically qualified for the double-elimination portion of districts and will need to win twice to punch their ticket to state for a second straight year.

To see the playoff bracket, pop over to: http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2187&sport=12

CHS girls’ hoops joins Klahowya girls’ soccer as the only 1A Olympic League programs to have won three straight league titles, but the Wolves 24-0 mark betters the Eagles booters, who are 20-0 in league play all-time.

To get there, Coupeville hit the court aggressively Tuesday night.

After playing an unprecedented eight straight on the road (and going 7-1 against a mix of league and non-league foes), the Wolves might not have recognized their own gym, but they adapted quickly.

Kailey Kellner kicked the game off with a long three-ball from the left side, then, after a Klahowya bucket sliced the lead to one, it was all Wolves, all the time.

Six different players scored to stake Coupeville to a 13-2 lead after one quarter, with Kellner capping things with a running layup off of a nifty steal and set-up pass from Kalia Littlejohn.

The Wolves continued that trend, of teammates setting each other up, throughout the game.

Whether it was Lindsey Roberts snatching a rebound and dishing to Mia Littlejohn for a put-back, or Littlejohn returning the favor by leading a breakaway, then dropping the ball into Roberts waiting fingers at the very last second, CHS was a well-oiled unit for much of the game.

Wolf guards Lauren Grove and Mia Littlejohn were on top of their passing game, threading balls between bodies or sucking in defenders, then flipping the ball to waiting teammates like Allison Wenzel for easy buckets.

Coupeville stretched the lead out to 31-14 midway through the third quarter, before hitting its only true dry spell.

Three straight Klahowya buckets, two coming off of in-bounds passes, put a little starch in CHS coach David King’s collar, and the loss of defensive scrapper Kyla Briscoe (she emerged from a tussle with a broken nose) slowed the Wolf strut for a moment.

But just a moment, as Coupeville came out firing in the fourth, scoring the quarter’s first 10 points to put an exclamation point on things.

Kellner knocked down a runner off a pass from Grove, then stepped outside, way outside, to drain a pretty three-ball, before Mia Littlejohn twinned her, but in reverse order.

Her trey, which was launched from somewhere up around Deception Pass, came first, before Littlejohn dropped in a jumper off of a little stutter-step drive to cap things.

Mia played one of her better games all year,” King said.

He also praised Wenzel (“Allison gave us some really good defense”), Roberts (“she has provided us with a strong rebounding presence out there all year”) and Coupeville’s ability to control the boards against the Eagles.

Roberts (11), Kellner (7) and Tiffany Briscoe (3) led the carom collection troops, as the Wolves repeatedly got second chances in the paint off of offensive boards.

Coupeville put eight of its 12 players in the scoring column, led by Kellner, who rained down a game-high 18, scoring in every quarter.

Mia Littlejohn (7), Roberts (6), Mikayla Elfrank (3), Wenzel (2), Tiffany Briscoe (2), Grove (2) and Kalia Littlejohn (1) rounded out the well-balanced attack.

Lauren Rose was a spark-plug on both sides of the ball, Kyla Briscoe was a ball-hawk (even while getting blasted across the face by a wayward elbow) and swing players Ema Smith and Sarah Wright brought hustle to the floor in the late-going.

After playing so much of their season on the road, the Wolves close with five of their final six on their home court.

They have two more games this week, with Chimacum (3:30 JV/5:00 varsity) in town Friday and Klahowya (12:30 varsity/2:00 JV) returning to Whidbey Saturday.

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Hunter Smith knocked down a team-high 15 Friday night in an overtime loss. (John Fisken photo)

   Hunter Smith knocked down a season-high 34 Tuesday to lift Coupeville past Klahowya in a must-win game. (John Fisken photo)

Too bad Hunter Smith has already won the WIAA Athlete of the Week award this winter.

The Coupeville High School junior put on an award-worthy performance Tuesday night, torching the nets for a game-high 34 to spark the Wolves to a 60-58 win at Klahowya in a game with huge playoff implications.

The win, which came after Coupeville rallied from a seven-point deficit headed into the fourth, lifts CHS to 2-5 in Olympic League play, 2-13 overall.

It also moves them a half game up on Klahowya (1-5, 3-13) for the league’s third and final playoff spot. Having taken two of three against the Eagles this season, the Wolves own the tiebreaker, as well.

Coupeville, which has two league games left — Friday at Chimacum (3-3, 3-10) and Feb. 4 at Port Townsend (7-0, 12-3) — will need to win both, and hope for some help, to catch the Cowboys for second place.

But thanks to Smith, and teammate Gabe Wynn, who pumped in 17 in support, the Wolves now have a serious edge on Klahowya for third place.

Hold on and they will host a loser-out playoff game against the #4 seed from the Nisqually League, which is currently Bellevue Christian.

Both teams came out and put on a show Tuesday, exchanging leads back and forth.

Riding a 13-point outburst from Smith, who had three treys in the early going, Coupeville led 20-15 at the first break.

The Eagles responded, knotting things up at 33 at the half (despite 11 more in the second from Smith), then used a 16-9 third-quarter surge to stake themselves to a 49-42 lead with eight minutes on the clock.

Coupeville hacked away at the lead, sharing the ball between Smith, Wynn, Brian Shank and Ethan Spark, who combined to hit five baskets and, maybe more importantly, eight free throws.

A streaky team at the line, the Wolves were money in the fourth, led by Wynn, who was a sizzlin’ 7 of 8 for the game at the charity stripe.

Klahowya may have been shafted of a chance to tie or win at the end, however, as there was a jump ball called with one second to play.

The clock ran out, and, instead of re-setting the clock at 0:01 and giving the ball to the Eagles, the refs reportedly ankled for the door, leaving local fans frustrated.

The Wolves went with a short bench, getting all of their scoring from Smith (34), Wynn (17), Shank (6) and Spark (3).

Joey Lippo, Steven Cope and Cameron Toomey-Stout delivered quality minutes, with Toomey-Stout coming up with a key fourth quarter steal that turned into a bucket at crunch time.

JV gets battered:

The score wasn’t all that important, as the Wolves had to deal with losing two key players to injury.

Down by one at the half, Coupeville left Sean Toomey-Stout on the sidelines coming out of the locker room (shoulder injury), then lost Jered Brown to a broken collarbone in the third.

After that, “the wheels sort of fell off,” according to JV coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh, and the Wolves eventually lost by 23.

The defeat sends the young guns to 7-8 overall, 2-5 in league play.

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Kyla Briscoe and Co. are one win away from clinching their third-straight Olympic League crown. (John Fisken photo)

   Kyla Briscoe and Co. are one win away from clinching their third-straight Olympic League crown. (John Fisken photo)

One is riding sky-high, the other is fighting for its playoff life.

With two weeks left in the regular season, the Coupeville High School basketball squads are going in opposite directions.

The Wolf girls need just one win in their final four league games to clinch a third-straight Olympic League crown, while the CHS boys sit a half game off of their conference’s final postseason slot.

Now 23-0 all-time in Olympic League play, the girls will go for the clincher at home Tuesday against last-place Klahowya.

After an unprecedented eight straight games on the road — Tuesday’s tilt will be their first home game in 45 days — the Wolf girls play five of their final six in their own gym.

The CHS boys, who came within a play of stunning league champ Port Townsend Friday night, will have to succeed on the road, as they travel off of Whidbey four of their final five games, including all three league affairs left to play.

Where things sit through Monday morning:

Olympic League girls basketball:

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

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 7-0 12-3
Chimacum 3-3 3-10
Klahowya 1-4 3-12
COUPEVILLE 1-5 1-13

And scoring stats for Coupeville’s varsity players:

Girls:

Kailey Kellner – 112
Mia Littlejohn
– 80
Mikayla Elfrank
– 75
Kalia Littlejohn
– 44
Lindsey Roberts
– 38
Lauren Grove
– 32
Lauren Rose
– 30
Tiffany Briscoe
– 25
Sarah Wright
– 13
Kyla Briscoe
– 7
Charlotte Langille
– 2
Allison Wenzel
– 2

Boys:

Hunter Smith – 195
Gabe Wynn
– 157
Brian Shank
– 92
Ethan Spark
– 85
Hunter Downes
– 36
Joey Lippo
– 18
Cameron Toomey-Stout
– 18
Steven Cope
– 9
Ariah Bepler
– 5
Jered Brown
– 5

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Lauren Grove racked up five points, four boards, two assists, two steals and played stellar defense as Coupeville won its sixth straight. (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf senior Lauren Grove played stellar defense Friday as Coupeville won its sixth straight. (John Fisken photo)

Find a way, night after night.

Not every game this season has been a thing of beauty, but a scrappy Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad refuses to bend under pressure.

Sparked by a “great start and a good finish,” packaged around two sub-par quarters, the Wolves held off host Port Townsend 39-31 Friday night for a victory that was huge for several reasons.

One, it lifts Coupeville to 5-0 in Olympic League play (10-3 overall) and moves the Wolves two games up on the RedHawks (4-3, 8-6).

After playing an unheard-of eight straight games on the road, CHS plays its first home game in 45 days this coming Tuesday.

Beat Klahowya (0-4, 3-10), or, for that matter, win at least one of their final four league games — all at home — and the Wolves clinch a third-straight league title.

The victory was Coupeville’s sixth straight, capped a 7-1 road trip from Hell and gives them nine wins away from the CHS gym this season, an especially strong sign as the Wolves look ahead to postseason play.

Friday night was a bit of a mixed bag for CHS coach David King, but a win always helps ease any concerns over a rough spot here or there.

“We came out red hot in the first, moving the ball well,” he said. “I’m not sure what happened to us in the middle quarters after such a great start.

“The middle quarters were tough, with the third being a grind and just not played well on either end of the court.”

Coupeville roared out to a 12-0 lead at the first break, then struggled to scrape out another 12 points combined across the second and third.

But, as quickly as the offense vanished, it returned in a 15-point fourth.

Lauren Grove opened the game by knocking down a three-ball, followed by a bucket off the finger-tips of Kailey Kellner, and the Wolves seemed headed to a rout.

While Coupeville only tallied six in the second, its defense was still strong and CHS carried an 18-6 lead in at the half.

“Then the third quarter hit,” King said. “It hit us hard and we staggered the whole quarter.

“I’m going to take that and place the blame squarely on me.”

Recognizing some opportunities offered by the Port Townsend defense, he decided to change up the offense on the fly, having the Wolves try out a set they haven’t run this year.

It didn’t go particularly well.

“It should have worked, but we didn’t execute it,” King said. “I shouldn’t have put our team in that situation.

“But something to prepare us for when we see them (Port Townsend) later this month.”

The RedHawks splashed down a pair of treys during a 13-6 run to cut the lead down to five heading into the final quarter, then tied things up at 24 early in the fourth.

Showing composure down the stretch, the Wolves never blinked, however.

A “huge three” from Kellner was key, while Coupeville stamped the win with its work at the free throw line in the game’s final minute.

Mia Littlejohn hit the front end of one-and-one opportunities twice, while Mikayla Elfrank crushed the home fan’s hopes by slipping past a RedHawk to snare the rebound and put it back up and in on off a Littlejohn miss.

Mikayla made a nice move,” King said. “This is the type of effort we see every game from every player that steps on the court.”

Other than their mid-game shooting struggles, the Wolves played solid ball, with seven of 11 players scoring and the team keeping its turnovers to a minimum.

“Offensively we had some very sweet passes into players in the post,” King said. “Many players hit some big shots early, then when we needed them in the middle quarters. The big shots carried over to the fourth as well.

“We only had 12 turnovers; that’s 22 total in our last two games. Trending in the right direction, just what I like to see.”

Kellner paced CHS with 13 points and six rebounds, while Elfrank pumped in eight and snatched six caroms. Lindsey Roberts topped the rebound chart with seven.

Mia Littlejohn (6), Grove (5), Kalia Littlejohn (3), Roberts (2) and Tiffany Briscoe (2) rounded out the offensive attack.

Just as important as the buckets was the team-wide emphasis on defense, with Grove and Kalia Littlejohn clamping down on RedHawk star Kaitlyn Meek and Kellner and Elfrank taking charges to draw offensive fouls on Port Townsend.

“Big momentum swings when defensively we step in and take a charge!,” King said.

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