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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Jordan Ford (John Fisken photos)

   Jordan Ford (5), seen here in an earlier game, dropped in a team-high 12 Friday, but Coupeville lost at Port Townsend. (John Fisken photos)

Ty Eck rained down 26, best by any Wolf this season, in the JV loss.

Ty Eck rained down 26, best by any Wolf this season, in the JV loss.

Three steps forward, one step backward.

The Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad rolled into play Friday night on a three-game winning streak, but a poor first quarter threw a wrench into the gears.

Trailing 20-9 after the first eight minutes, the Wolves fought back hard but couldn’t overcome a steady Port Townsend team, falling 67-51 on the road.

The loss dropped Coupeville to 7-7 overall, 2-2 in league play.

Port Townsend sits atop the standings at 4-0, while the Wolves are in a tie with Chimacum (2-2) with five to play.

Klahowya (0-4) would be the odd man out right now, if the playoffs started tomorrow.

They don’t though, which gives Coupeville plenty of time to control its playoff fate and still make a run at a title.

The Wolves play their next three games at home, starting with Chimacum Tuesday, Jan. 26.

Friday night CHS was stung early and late.

In the first half it was RedHawk ace Kaiden Parcher, who went for all of his game-high 16 points before halftime.

In the late going, it was a 15-5 Port Townsend run to open the fourth that was the final blow.

Coupeville’s best run came in the second quarter, when Risen Johnson, Gabe Wynn and Wiley Hesselgrave each tossed in five points as the Wolves held an 18-14 advantage.

Jordan Ford paced CHS with a team-high 12, while Hunter Smith hit for nine.

Wynn and Hesselgrave each popped for eight, with Risen Johnson (6), JJ Johnson (3), Dante Mitchell (2), Jared Helmstadter (2) and DeAndre Mitchell (1) rounding out the scorers.

JV nipped:

Coupeville’s big two — Ty Eck and Brian Shank — combined for 43 points, but it wasn’t quite enough, as the Wolf young guns fell 64-53.

The loss dropped the JV squad to 2-10 overall, 0-4 in league play.

Eck was electric, going off for 26, the best by any CHS hoops player this season, boy or girl.

He rained down three treys along the way, scoring in every quarter, with a 10-point first quarter kicking things off.

Shank added 17 with a variety of inside moves, while Cameron Toomey-Stout banked home six. Andre Avila and Hunter Downes both chipped in with a bucket apiece.

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Mia Littlejohn (21), seen here in an earlier game, dropped in nine points Friday to spark Coupeville to a league win. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Mia Littlejohn (21), seen here in an earlier game, dropped in nine points Friday to spark Coupeville to a league win. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

They almost threw a shutout.

Using an opportunistic, scrambling defense, the Couepville High School girls’ basketball squad held visiting Port Townsend scoreless for nearly a quarter-and-a-half to kick off Friday night’s game.

And, while they finally did give up a bucket at the 4:25 mark of the second quarter, the Wolves stayed almost as stingy the entire game, freezing out the RedHawks en route to a 29-14 win.

The victory, which capped a long week in which the Wolves faced finals at school while playing three games in five days — two on the road — lifted CHS to 10-4 overall, 4-0 in league play.

Coupeville, the defending league champs, once again sits atop the 1A Olympic League, with Klahowya (2-2), Chimacum (1-3) and Port Townsend (1-3) trying to play catch-up.

While they maybe didn’t play perfect on this night, they kept their record perfect by bringing the heat on ‘D’.

“In the first half we definitely played strong defense; our help defense was there,” said Coupeville coach David King. “I love that we had that energy.”

He would have liked a little stronger showing on the boards, though, as the RedHawks controlled the rebounding game early, but could not get a shot to go down.

No matter what they tried.

Shot after shot slid off the rim for Port Townsend, caught a bad bounce on the glass or started to drop, only to pop back out.

In the early going, Coupeville wasn’t much luckier themselves, as the two teams combined to go scoreless until the 3:37 mark of the first quarter.

The Wolves finally broke through when Lauren Grove banked in a long jumper from the left side, getting the ball to rattle around before it settled through the twines with a sigh.

Of course, that sigh might have come from anxious Wolf fans.

If it did, it changed to a roar in an instant, as Mia Littlejohn drained a pull-up trey from the top on the very next possession, effectively ending the game at 5-0.

While that might sound a bit extreme, it’s not, as Port Townsend could not get anything going on offense, no matter what they tried.

After a Makana Stone put-back staked the Wolves to a 7-0 lead at the end of one, Coupeville finally surrendered a runner in the key, then closed the half out with an 8-0 run.

Littlejohn and Stone each dropped in four during the surge, with the best bucket coming on a vintage coast-to-coast rampage by Coupeville’s lone senior.

On that play, Stone went to the ceiling to absolutely crush a Port Townsend shot.

Having snagged the loose ball off of the block, she hit the rocket boosters in her shoes and promptly out-ran everyone to the other end for a swooping, slicing lay-up.

Port Townsend’s shooting touch warmed up just a bit in the second half, as they finally struggled into double digits in the fourth quarter, but they never truly threatened the Wolves.

Coupeville ran the lead out to 29-10, off of back-to-back buckets from Kailey Kellner, on a beautiful pump fake and drive, and Stone, before the RedHawks tossed in two baskets in the final seconds.

Stone paced the Wolves with 12 points, 18 rebounds, seven blocks and four steals, while Littlejohn banged away for nine points, seven boards and two assists.

Kellner (four points, three rebounds) and Grove (four points, two rebounds) rounded out the Wolf scorers.

Mia played well tonight,” King said. “She was aggressive on defense and helped us get going on offense early on.

Lauren Grove hit a couple big shots for us, as well.”

Lindsey Roberts (3), Skyler Lawrence (3), Tiffany Briscoe (2) and Kyla Briscoe (2) all chipped in on the boards, while Lauren Rose and Allison Wenzel were relentless on defense during their floor time.

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Hunter Smith (3), seen here in an earlier game, poured in 16 Tuesday, one of three Wolves to break double digits. (John Fisken photo)

   Hunter Smith (3), seen here in an earlier game, poured in 16 Tuesday, one of three Wolves to break double digits. (John Fisken photo)

Never turn your back on a Wolf.

Chimacum may be the defending 1A Olympic League boys’ basketball champs, but Coupeville is coming for that title.

There is no doubt about that.

Throwing down a 27-point fourth quarter Tuesday night, in which six different players scored, the Wolves rallied for a 72-65 road win that has sent reverberations through the league standings.

The third straight win for a suddenly-jelling CHS squad, it lifted Coupeville to 7-6 overall, 2-1 in league play.

A win Friday night at Port Townsend (5-8, 3-0) and the Wolves will be tied for first place with five games to play.

Chimacum (3-11, 1-2) would claim the league’s third and final playoff berth right now, while Klahowya (1-13, 0-3) would be on the outside looking in.

The Cowboys and Eagles also face off Friday.

Playing in the opening game of a doubleheader Tuesday, the Coupeville boys battled basket for basket with Chimacum for the first three quarters. But they couldn’t quite get over the hump.

Down 14-12 after one, they trailed 31-27 at the half and 49-44 after three.

Maybe.

If that’s true, Coupeville’s 27-16 performance in the fourth should have given them a 71-65 win, and that’s what the scoring totals in the book reflect.

But the Chimacum scoreboard operator, and both coaches, are hanging their hats on 72-65, so we’ll just have to accept a point got lost somewhere.

Either way, the Wolves closed like a team with its eyes locked firmly on the prize.

Silky-smooth senior guard Risen Johnson poured in eight of his team-high 18 in the final quarter, and Coupeville, a streaky team when it comes to hitting free throws, was a sizzling 8 of 11 at crunch time.

Jordan Ford came up big as well, with six in the fourth, while Hunter Smith chipped in with five and Wiley Hesselgrave netted all four of his points at the end.

Coupeville continues to be a very well-balanced squad, with three players in a virtual dead-heat for the team scoring lead.

Hesselgrave, at 156 points on the season, is narrowly ahead of Johnson and Ford, who are tied with 151.

Smith, who missed a chunk of the season with an injury, continues to heat up as he gets his legs back under himself.

He hit for 16 on the night, coming on the heels of a 19-point performance against Stevenson Friday.

Ford (14), DeAndre Mitchell (7), Gabe Wynn (4), Dante Mitchell (4), Hesselgrave (4), JJ Johnson (3) and Desmond Bell (1) rounded out the scorers.

The missing point? We’ll never know, but hey, when you win, who cares?

JV falls short:

Missing three players, including two starters, the Wolf young guns hung with Chimacum for most of the first half, but went cold in the second half, falling 68-35.

The loss dropped the JV to 2-9 overall, 0-3 in league play.

The Wolves got all of their scoring from three players, with Brian Shank leading the way with 17.

Ty Eck added 13, including three treys, while Ariah Bepler netted five.

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Skyler LAwrence notched her first-ever varsity points in her team's huge win Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Skyler Lawrence notched her first-ever varsity points in her team’s huge win Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

It is the coach’s lot in life to see greatness, and know there can be more.

So, even though the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad thrashed host Chimacum 55-28 Tuesday, David King could appreciate the win, but still hope for improvement.

Especially when the Wolves (9-3 overall, 3-0 in 1A Olympic League play) have to immediately hit the road again in less than 24 hours to play a non-conference game.

That opponent? Bellevue Christian, which sits at 12-1.

“Tomorrow is going to be a test for us,” King said. “To compete with them our defense will have to be better than tonight and we will have to be efficient on offense.”

Facing off with a Cowboy squad that was missing two top players, the Wolves were able to run wild, even when they might not have seemed to be clicking on all cylinders.

Having sat for nine days, and smack-dab in the middle of Finals week, King’s players “came out slow to start the game.”

Not that the scoreboard reflected that, as the Wolves roared out to a 15-4 bulge after one quarter, then stretched that to 29-11 at the half and 43-15 after three quarters.

Coupeville has never lost a varsity girls game in the short history of their current league, and the Wolves seem intent on repeating last year’s flawless 9-0 mark.

Senior Makana Stone, the defending league MVP, continued her torrid pace, throwing down 18 of her game-high 22 in the first half.

The rest of her stat sheet?

17 boards, five steals, four assists, a block and one more opponent that weeps at the sight of her taking the court.

Stone had plenty of help, with all nine Wolves who were healthy enough to play (Lauren Rose was ill and left home) getting their names in the scoring column.

The third quarter was the most well-rounded of the night, with six different CHS players scoring.

Sweet-shooting gunner Kailey Kellner worked the nets for 11, while Mia Littlejohn banged home seven and Lauren Grove and Skyler Lawrence added four apiece.

They were the first varsity points for the always hard-working Lawrence.

Tiffany Briscoe (2), Kyla Briscoe (2), Allison Wenzel (2) and Lindsey Roberts (1) rounded out the scoring attack.

The Wolves hit the boards hard, and, when Stone didn’t snag the carom, Tiffany Briscoe collected seven, while Roberts ripped down six.

Kellner had three steals while Littlejohn handed out three assists.

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Lauren Grove (John Fisken photos)

   Lauren Grove and the Wolf girls sit atop the 1A Olympic League standings. (John Fisken photos)

boys team

Seven games left, one goal for the CHS boys — win a league banner.

There are titles to be won.

And let’s put an emphasis on that S, as both the Coupeville High School girls’ and boys’ hoops squads are in prime position to take the crown in the 1A Olympic League this season.

The Wolf girls are the defending league champs, and remain undefeated as a program in the short history of the league, with both their varsity and JV squads being 11-0 in league play (9-0 last season).

As they prepare for the final seven games of regular season league play — they also have a non-conference tilt left against 12-1 Bellevue Christian — the focus will be on staying the course.

Doing that thing coaches love. Taking one game at a time and not mentally hanging another banner on the gym wall until it’s real.

For the boys, this is fairly new territory.

Coupeville has worked itself back uphill after bottoming out with a win-less season in coach Anthony Smith’s first go-around in 2011-2012 and sits snugly in a tie for second-place in the current standings.

Just a game-and-a-half out of first with seven to play, and two of those against current front-runner Port Townsend, the Wolves will have a large say in their final fate.

Standings through Jan. 18 (league record followed by overall record):

GIRLS

Coupeville 2-0, 8-3
Klahowya 2-1, 3-10
Port Townsend 1-2, 3-9
Chimacum 0-2, 3-10

BOYS

Port Townsend 3-0, 5-8
Coupeville 1-1, 6-6
Chimacum 1-1, 3-10
Klahowya 0-3, 1-13

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