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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Gabe Wynn dropped in a team-high 14 Friday in a loss at Klahowya. (John Fisken photo)

   Gabe Wynn dropped in a team-high 14 Friday in a loss at Klahowya. (John Fisken photo)

Two boys basketball programs in need of a win ran headlong into each other Friday night, but only one came away satisfied.

Sparked by the hot shooting of Sawyer Snope and John Hartford, Klahowya roared out to a big early lead, then squashed any late comeback hopes to send Coupeville back to Whidbey on the wrong end of a 48-37 score.

The loss drops the Wolves to 0-4 overall, 0-2 in 1A Olympic League play.

For Klahowya, which entered the night 0-4 under first-year head coach Bryan Thoemke, the victory was huge.

Coming off a 1-19 season, the Eagles were looking for any signs of progress.

And they found it on a night when Klahowya was one of the few schools to host a game, thanks to the snow that blanketed Western Washington.

The Eagle girls, who were supposed to travel to Whidbey, didn’t make the trip.

In fairness, there was a lot less snow in Coupeville, which is why the Wolf boys had no problem getting on a bus and ankling out of town.

Once off the bus, though, they had to jump right into things as the varsity played first. And they appeared to have left their shooting touch back on The Rock.

Other than a pair of free throws from Hunter Smith, Coupeville struggled to mount any kind of offensive flow in the first quarter, falling behind 16-2 at the first break.

Hartford came out on fire, knocking down nine in the opening period, then Snope took over.

The only Eagle to score in every quarter, he banked home 12 of his 19 in the first half as Klahowya stretched the lead out to 31-14 at the break.

Something changed, at least for a time, in the third, as Coupeville finally warmed up.

With Gabe Wynn throwing down nine of his team-high 14 in the quarter, CHS controlled things to a 14-5 tune, slicing the lead down to eight heading into the stretch run.

Free throw shooting stung the Wolves, however, as they missed six of seven at the charity stripe in the fourth.

For the game, Coupeville was just 7-15, and if you take away Smith’s flawless 5-5 night, the percentage takes a huge dip.

Snope and Hartford finished with 19 apiece to outscore the Wolves by themselves, while CHS got 14 from Wynn and 13 from Smith.

Brian Shank and Ethan Spark each added five to round out the Coupeville offensive attack.

The two teams will see each other again almost immediately, with a rematch Tuesday on Whidbey. The third and final leg of their trilogy doesn’t come until Jan. 24.

JV cruises to win:

The second unit put a positive spin on Coupeville’s exit strategy, rolling to a 16-6 lead after one quarter, en route to a 45-37 win.

The Wolf JV sits at 2-2 overall, 1-1 in league play.

Sean Toomey-Stout paced the Wolves with 12 points, while also hauling down 10 second-half rebounds to blunt any rallies from Klahowya.

Mason Grove popped for seven, Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim and Jered Brown each went for six and Ulrik Wells (5), Koa Davison (5), Kyle Rockwell (2) and Nikolai Lyngra (2) all etched their names in the scoring column.

Davison rejected a team-high five shots to lead the defense.

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Brian Shank (John Fisken photo)

   Brian Shank, seen here in practice, knocked down a season-high 13 Wednesday night at Chimacum. (John Fisken photo)

Talk about riding the see-saw.

Playing their first league game of the year Wednesday, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball team played superb defense in the first and third quarters at Chimacum.

Unfortunately, the Wolves couldn’t stop the host Cowboys in the second or fourth, and fell 48-40.

The loss drops Coupeville to 0-3 overall, 0-1 in 1A Olympic League play.

Facing off with the two-time defending league champs, the Wolves came out strongly, holding an 8-5 lead at the first break.

But then the see-saw crashed in the second, as the Cowboys rode a 19-10 surge over the next eight minutes to stake themselves to a 24-18 lead at the break.

Even as the score was slipping away a bit, one bright spot in the second was the play of Brian Shank.

The Wolf senior, who had three points through the first two games, erupted for seven in the quarter in a bid to keep the Wolves close.

Shank dropped another four in the third, while Hunter Smith picked up the hot hand, drilling nine of his team-high 15 as CHS put together its best run of the night.

A 13-5 advantage in the quarter put Coupeville up by a bucket entering the final eight minutes, but the pendulum swung back just as fast.

Using three treys and eight free throws down the stretch, the Cowboys matched their second quarter output, and a 19-9 closing run gave them the win.

Smith’s 15 paced Coupeville, while Shank banked home 13, Gabe Wynn hit for six, Hunter Downes popped for four and Ethan Spark netted a pair of free throws to round out the scoring.

JV nipped:

Incompetent scoreboard operating prevented the Wolves from possibly forcing overtime in a 60-57 loss.

Since the board said 63-55, CHS coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh had no clue a trey in the final seconds would have allowed Coupeville to knot things up.

After the final buzzer sounded, both team’s scorekeepers pointed out the mistake, but, by then it was too late.

The loss drops the Wolf JV to 1-2 overall, 0-1 in league play.

Freshmen Jered Brown went off for 23 in a game in which 10 Wolves scored.

Sean Toomey-Stout hit for seven and Kyle Rockwell knocked down six while Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim, Mason Grove and Ulrik Wells each chipped in with four apiece.

Koa Davison (3), Tucker Hall (3), Dawson Houston (2) and Nikolai Lyngra (1) also scratched their names in the book.

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Ethan Spark dropped seven in his first game of the season. (John Fisken photos)

  Ethan Spark dropped seven in his first game of the season. (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Grove (left) and Lauren Rose

   Lauren Grove (left) and Lauren Rose helped spark Coupeville to a tourney title this past weekend.

Now things get interesting.

The first week of high school basketball was about non-conference games and tournament play (the CHS girls won their second straight Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic), but things ramp up in week two.

Both Coupeville teams will play three games this coming week, with the first two Wednesday and Friday being 1A Olympic League clashes with Chimacum and Klahowya.

So far, the league’s girls teams have fared better, much better, than the boys, boasting a 6-3 mark in non-conference games against a combined 1-7 for their male counterparts.

Records through Monday morning:

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 0-0 2-1
Chimacum 0-0 1-1
Klahowya 0-0 2-0
Port Townsend 0-0 1-1

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 0-0 0-2
Chimacum 0-0 0-2
Klahowya 0-0 0-3
Port Townsend 0-0 1-0

And scoring stats for Coupeville’s varsity players:

Girls (3 games):

Kailey Kellner – 25
Mikayla Elfrank – 19
Mia Littlejohn – 17
Lindsey Roberts – 11
Lauren Rose – 10
Tiffany Briscoe – 6
Kalia Littlejohn – 4
Lauren Grove – 2
Allison Wenzel – 2
Sarah Wright – 1
Kyla Briscoe
Charlotte Langille

Boys (2 games):

Gabe Wynn – 20
Hunter Smith – 18
Ethan Spark – 7
Jered Brown – 5
Steven Cope – 4
Ariah Bepler – 3
Brian Shank – 3
Hunter Downes
– 2
Joey Lippo
– 2
Cameron Toomey-Stout

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Mia Littlejohn (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf junior Mia Littlejohn is sharing 1A Olympic League girls soccer MVP honors. (John Fisken photo)

Sage Renninger

Sage Renninger flashes her All-Conference award. (Sherry Roberts photos)

Lindsey Roberts (left) and Lauren Grove.

Lindsey Roberts (left) and Lauren Grove share their moment.

Share and share alike.

After much back-and-forth, 1A Olympic League girls soccer coaches decided to honor Coupeville junior Mia Littlejohn and Klahowya senior Emily Peters as co-MVP’s.

Littlejohn scorched the nets for a school-record 27 goals this season, lifting the Wolves to their first winning season in program history.

The MVP award marks the second time she’s been honored by the league, as she was a First-Team selection as a sophomore.

Peters, who will be playing soccer on scholarship at the University of Montana next year, paced Klahowya to its third-straight league title and its eighth consecutive trip to state.

The Eagles fell in the first round to eventual state champ Overlake.

Three other Coupeville players were also named to the All-Conference team.

It was the first selection for sophomore defender Lindsey Roberts, junior midfielder Sage Renninger and senior goaltender Lauren Grove.

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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photos)

   Hunter Smith was named a 1st-Team player on both sides of the ball by 1A Olympic/Nisqually League football coaches. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Downes

   Wolf QB Hunter Downes earned 2nd-Team honors after throwing for 1,569 yards and 17 TD’s.

They like him. They really like him.

Coupeville High School junior Hunter Smith was tabbed as a First-Team selection on both sides of the ball when 1A Olympic/Nisqually League football coaches cast their All-Conference votes.

He was named as both a receiver, where he tallied school single-season records of 916 yards and 11 touchdowns, and as a defensive back, where he picked off three passes and rang up 49 tackles.

Junior quarterback Hunter Downes, who threw for 1,569 yards and 17 TD’s, was named to the Second Team.

Wolf seniors Clay Reilly (Special Teams), Jacob Martin (running back) and Uriel Liquidano (linebacker) and junior Julian Welling (offensive line) received Honorable Mention kudos.

Port Townsend senior quarterback Berkley Hill, who ran defenses ragged with his ability to slice and dice while on the move, was the MVP.

Other top honorees included Cascade Christian junior Tyquan Coleman (Offensive MVP), Klahowya senior Gabe Wallis (Defensive MVP), and Cascade Christian’s Randy Davis (Coach of the Year).

The league’s sportsmanship award was shared by Vashon Island and Port Townsend.

Which is kind of a crock.

While no one discounts Port Townsend’s success this year, finishing second in the eight-team league and going one-and-out in the state playoffs, sportsmanship was hardly the RedHawks calling card.

When you’re up by 50, with a running clock in the fourth quarter, and you choose to put your starting offense back in to ram a meaningless TD down the throats of another team’s JV players, there are a lot of words which come to mind.

None of them are “sportsmanship.”

 

1st-Team Offense:

QB —Parker Johnson – Cascade Christian (09)

RB — Detrius Kelsall – Port Townsend (11)

RB — Bryce Hoisington – Vashon (12)

RB — Gabe Wallis – Klahowya (12)

WR — Hunter Smith – Coupeville (11)

WR — Austin Carder – Cascade Christian (12)

TE — Cooper Cochran – Charles Wright (12)

OL — Jackson Foster – Port Townsend (11)

OL — Dylan Leer – Klahowya (12)

OL — Evan Minsk – Charles Wright (12)

OL — Jeremy Ocbian – Cascade Christian (11)

OL — Corbin Nohr – Cascade Christian (11)

Athlete — Dylan Zuber – Klahowya (12)

 

1st-Team Defense:

DL — Corbin Nohr – Cascade Christian (11)

DL — Nathan Suiter – Cascade Christian (11)

DL — Jackson Foster – Port Townsend (11)

DL — Christian Miller – Bellevue Christian (12)

DL — Dylan Leer – Klahowya (12)

LB — Detrius Kelsall – Port Townsend (11)

LB — James Gherna – Klahowya (12)

LB — Tanner Carle – Cascade Christian (11)

LB — Blake Stoltenberg – Charles Wright (12)

LB — Bryce Hoisington – Vashon (12)

DB — Dylan Zuber – Klahowya (12)

DB — Alex Meadowcroft – Charles Wright (11)

DB — Hunter Smith – Coupeville (11)

Athlete — Zach Bartolome – Cascade Christian (12)

 

1st-Team Special Teams:

Kicker — Gerry Coker – Port Townsend (12)

Punter — Lane Dotson – Chimacum (12)

Kick Ret. — Bryce Hoisington – Vashon (12)

 

2nd-Team Offense:

QB — Henry Lenaberg – Charles Wright (11)

QB — Hunter Downes – Coupeville (11)

RB — Zach Bartolome – Cascade Christian (12)

RB — James Vogelgesang – Charles Wright (12)

RB — Daniel Ficca – Bellevue Christian (12)

WR — Alex Meadowcroft – Charles Wright (11)

WR — Joe Helton – Bellevue Christian (12)

TE — Tanner Carle – Cascade Christian (11)

OL — Peter Besel – Bellevue Christian (11)

OL — Riley Grider – Charles Wright (12)

OL — Lane Dotson – Chimacum (12)

OL — Kaiden Parcher – Port Townsend (11)

OL — Abel Nutu – Cascade Christian (11)

 

2nd-Team Defense:

DL — Jeremy Ocbian – Cascade Christian (11)

DL — Abel Nutu – Cascade Christian (11)

DL — Evan Minsk – Charles Wright (12)

DL — Jacob Massie – Port Townsend (12)

DL — Chris Greene – Klahowya (12)

LB — Jonathan Smith – Port Townsend (12)

LB — Michael Tucci – Charles Wright (11)

LB — Jake Nielsen – Cascade Christian (12)

DB — Connor Hoisington – Vashon (11)

DB — Joe Helton – Bellevue Christian (12)

DB — Noa Apker-Montoya – Port Townsend (09)

DB — Tyquan Coleman – Cascade Christian (11)

 

2nd-Team Special Teams:

Kicker — Billy Chissoe – Charles Wright (11)

Punter — Billy Chissoe – Charles Wright (11)

Kick Ret. — Alex Meadowcroft – Charles Wright (11)

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