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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

IT looks like current CMS 8th graders like Jered Brown (with ball) and Ultril Wells

   If current numbers hold, CMS 8th graders like Jered Brown (with ball) and Ulrik Wells will play all four years of high school ball at the 1A level. (John Fisken photo)

The 1A Olympic League seems to be safe.

On Jan. 15 the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association will officially announce its proposal for how to classify the state’s high school athletic teams for the next four years.

Once those numbers are released, there will be 10 days for schools to debate the numbers and make any counter-proposals, before the WIAA rubber stamps everything Jan. 25.

If the preliminary numbers hold up, all four members of the Olympic League will remain in 1A.

The current counts would have 65 teams each in 4A, 3A, 2A and 1A, with 62 teams apiece in 2B and 1B.

Coupeville, which had been the smallest true 1A school (2B and 1B schools with smaller student populations can opt to play above their class), would no longer hold that distinction if the current numbers hold.

Two years ago, there were 225 Wolves when grades 9-11 were counted. This time around, there are 227 and there would now be six true 1A schools below CHS.

The preliminary outlook for 1A has six schools which have opted up (you can opt up but not down) and 59 true 1A schools.

For Coupeville to slide back into 2B, it would appear those six opt-ups would have to stay opted-up, while seven 2B schools would have to suddenly decide to start playing at 1A.

Barring a seismic, unexpected change to the landscape, that means the Wolves will remain a 1A school through 2020.

The WIAA previously went on two-year counts, but 2016 will mark a change, as all classification will now happen on four-year intervals.

Coupeville’s league rivals all will remain 1A, as well.

Chimacum, which had been at 237 the last time, is now at 250, while Port Townsend has slid from 327 to 278.

Klahowya remains one of the largest 1A schools, but has dropped from 455 to 445 in two years.

While the Wolves have the smallest student body in the Olympic League, they have more than held their own in the year-and-a-half the league has been in place.

In the 10 sports in which Coupeville competes, the Wolves have 54 league wins, second only to Klahowya’s 71 — and that margin could be chopped down quite a bit as basketball plays out.

Both CHS squads are in first place in the hoops standings, with the Wolf girls the defending league champs. The teams have 16 league games remaining between them.

Port Townsend has 29 league wins across those 10 sports in that time, while Chimacum has 28.

While it would appear Coupeville’s 1A status and league affiliation are all but guaranteed, there is still a bit of intrigue out there.

Once Jan. 25 comes to pass, there may be other schools left adrift by dropping or moving up to 1A.

Some of those schools could seek a new league.

If so, the Olympic League could strengthen itself, and possibly add postseason berths, by expanding, picking up new members who would start play in the 2016-2017 school year.

That, though, is intrigue for another day.

To see preliminary enrollment figures for the 2016-2020 classification period, pop over to:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/12qwdXCBPepkgxLWG4sbxIJgXo5eDX0FZHM8flfx4pdE/pubhtml#

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Makana Stone rises up and smites Klahowya for two of her game-high 23. (John Fisken photos)

   Makana Stone rises up and smites Klahowya for two of her game-high 23 Friday. (John Fisken photos)

Wolves

   Wolves Kailey Kellner (42), Lindsey Roberts (middle) and Lauren Grove (3) clamp down on defense.

They got tested, and they responded.

Oh, how they responded.

In the kind of moment that can make or break a season, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad took Klahowya’s best shot Friday and not only weathered it, but stood tall.

The Wolves won 47-38 on their home court to improve to 4-2 overall, 1-0 in Olympic League play.

But it was the way they won that may matter most.

Having to play the final three minutes without their transcendent star, the Wolves not only held their own, they prospered, closing out on a 6-1 spurt fueled by spectacular end-to-end runs by Lauren Grove and Mia Littlejohn.

Coupeville’s worst nightmare came true when Makana Stone, who had poured in 23 points, fouled out with 2:56 on the clock.

With a 41-34 lead and their most reliable scoring weapon reduced to being a very enthusiastic cheerleader, the Wolves could have pulled back and tried to eat clock.

Instead, two of Coupeville’s rising stars seized the spotlight and crushed Klahowya’s spirit, while perhaps giving Wolf coach David King a brief moment or two of angina.

First Grove snatched a rebound, then kicked in her record-setting sprinter speed and artfully weaved her way down the court, slicing all the way to the bucket before King could call for a timeout.

As the ball banked in, Grove spun, steely glint in her gunfighter’s eye, and zipped back down court, where she then poked the ball free, setting up Littlejohn for her own run right into the heart of the beast.

King went up on his toes, but again, one of his feel-no-pressure guards was too quick to give him a chance to do anything but silently marvel as they shot past on their way to pay dirt.

Stone, for her part, was whooping and hollering and high-fiving and then patting Littlejohn on the head, still a leader no matter her own situation.

Two more free throws from Littlejohn and a lock-down defense that throttled Klahowya from the moment Stone left until the Eagles hit a meaningless trey with a second to play, sealed the deal.

The win allowed Coupeville to pick right back up where they left off last season, when they cruised to a 9-0 mark in league play.

Back then they won every conference contest by 15+ points, but Friday’s game was markedly closer.

The Wolves drew first blood, when Stone smacked the opening tip half the length of the court, where Grove snagged it, took half a step and laid the ball up and in before Klahowya’s players could even flinch.

After that, though, the first half was a back-and-forth affair, with the lead never getting bigger than three for Coupeville or one for Klahowya.

Stone threw down nine in the opening quarter, but the Wolves led only 13-11 after they missed six free throws in the first eight minutes.

The Eagles snatched their first lead of the night at 14-13 in the second quarter, and, as the clock ticked down towards halftime, the two teams pulled off back-to-back bombs to enliven things.

Klahowya hit a long trey to knot things at 19, but Coupeville immediately responded on the final play of the half.

Kailey Kellner curled into the deepest, darkest corner on the right sideline, where she flat-out drilled a three-ball with a sweet shot that would have made Larry Bird cry sweet tears of appreciation.

Riding the electricity from her shot, the Wolves broke things open in the third, scoring on their first three possessions.

Littlejohn netted a breakaway layup off of a Kellner steal, then Stone scored back-to-back buckets on a give-and-go and a play where she exploded from the top of the key to the hoop before a single Eagle could think about moving.

From there, Coupeville never lost the lead again, stretching it out to 10, giving a few back, then making their stand once the refs KO’d Stone.

Afterwards, King praised his younger players for stepping up, his blue collar rebounders (Tiffany and Kyla Briscoe) for out-battling their foes all night and Littlejohn for continuing to show leadership under fire.

“This was a gut check for them and they responded nicely,” he said. “That’s what they need to do.”

Littlejohn finished with nine to back Stone’s 23, while Grove and Kellner had six apiece.

Freshman Lindsey Roberts hit a key fourth-quarter bucket in traffic off of a feed from Littlejohn (Kyla Briscoe started the play by going around a Klahowya player to snare a board), while Tiffany Briscoe rounded out the scorers with a free throw.

Coupeville is now off for 11 days, not returning to action until Dec. 22, when it travels to Vashon Island for a non-conference game. After that, another week-long break before hosting La Conner Dec. 30.

The break comes at a perfect time for a Wolf squad which opened with six games in 10 days and currently has several banged-up players.

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DeAndre Mitchell, seen here in an earlier game, went for 11 in Friday's win. (John Fisken photo)

DeAndre Mitchell, seen here in an earlier game, went for 11 in Friday’s win. (John Fisken photo)

If this was a statement game, consider the statement delivered.

Making a strong case that they will be right in the thick of the battle for the 1A Olympic League title this year, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad drilled host Klahowya 82-69 Friday.

With five different players scoring in double digits, the Wolves jumped all over the Eagles and never let up, improving to 3-3 overall, 1-0 in league play.

It was the second straight win for Coupeville, and the 82 points were the most the Wolves have scored in a game this season.

Coupeville’s three league rivals — Klahowya, Port Townsend and Chimacum — are a combined 0-14 this season.

Just as the Wolves are getting red-hot, they will have to cool their heels though, as they play only one game in the next three weeks.

They host Concrete Friday, Dec. 18, then are off until Dec. 30, when La Conner comes to Whidbey.

Coupeville doesn’t play another league game until it hosts Port Townsend Jan. 5.

For now, though, they can bask in another high-scoring performance.

Coming on the heels of scoring 27 in the opening quarter against Orcas Island, the Wolves threw down 25 in the first eight minutes of play Friday night.

Adding 20 more in the second quarter, they carried a 45-26 lead into the halftime locker room.

Senior Risen Johnson pumped in a team-high 22, while Wiley Hesselgrave banked home 15 and Jordan Ford and Gabe Wynn each dropped 12.

DeAndre Mitchell cashed in all three of his three-point attempts en route to scoring 11, Ryan Griggs went for nine and Desmond Bell slipped a free throw through the twines to round out the scoring.

Ford led the way on the boards with 10, while Johnson and Griggs each snared five. Hesselgrave collected four, Bell and Wynn grabbed three apiece and Jared Helmstadter claimed two.

Johnson had five assists and three steals, Ford and Hesselgrave each pilfered three steals and Griggs went sky high to reject a pair of Eagles shots.

JV falls:

Brian Shank returned from an injury to spark the Wolf JV with 12 points and eight boards, but the Wolves were nipped 41-39.

The loss dropped the young guns to 1-4 overall, 0-1 in league play.

Gabe Eck hit for six, snagged six rebounds and made off with five steals, while Beauman Davis (5), Ty Eck (5), Luke Merriman (4) and Ariah Bepler (3) rounded out the scorers.

Ty Eck had four rebounds and two steals, while Merriman chipped in with three boards and two steals of his own. James Vidoni snatched two rebounds.

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Ashlie Shank (John Fisken photo)

   Ashlie Shank, mere seconds before she won the game for Coupeville Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

The youngest one is making a play for the throne.

Coupeville High School freshman Ashlie Shank has been living in the athletic shadow cast by older brothers Matt and Brian, but Friday night she seized the spotlight all for herself.

Nailing a running jumper a tick before the buzzer, she completed a wild final play and lifted the Wolf JV girls’ basketball team to a thrilling come-from-behind 26-24 win over visiting Klahowya.

The victory, which kept CHS girls’ basketball perfect in 1A Olympic League play (the Wolf varsity and JV are a combined 20-0 since the league debuted last year), lifted the JV to 2-3 overall, 1-0 in league play.

And it only happened thanks to a game-ending surge and a final play that worked to perfection.

Having snagged the ball with the game tied and the clock madly ticking down, Ema Smith shot up the right side of the court.

As a defender lurched at her, the Wolf frosh rose up and lobbed the ball to Kyla Briscoe, who caught it, whirled and found Shank in stride.

With no hesitation at all, Shank went straight at the hoop, pulling up at the last second and letting fly with a soft lil’ jumper that splashed nothing but net.

As the ball dropped through, hitting the floor, the clock went under two seconds, and all Klahowya could do was throw a full-court desperation heave that only traveled less than half the distance before crashing back to Earth.

Shank’s dagger capped an 8-2 run to close the game for the Wolves.

After leading for the entire first half, Coupeville briefly lost the advantage in the third, then regained it, only to give it right back thanks to a stretch of ice-cold shooting.

Trailing 22-18, the Wolves got huge plays from Smith, who banged home a rebound to cut the margin to two, and Briscoe, who hit back-to-back jumpers.

Her only two buckets of the game, the first one forced a 22-22 tie, then the second one re-knotted the game at 24 after Klahowya had reclaimed the lead off of an offensive rebound.

The Eagles had the ball and a chance to take the lead, but failed against a hawkish defense employed by five Wolves who had listened to coach Amy King in the timeout huddle and came out aggressive but smart.

That set up Smith to Briscoe to Shank, which will now reside in lore when folks talk about great finishes at Coupeville hoops games.

Shank and Lauren Rose paced the Wolves with seven points apiece, with Rose dropping all of her points in the first half, when she was a one-woman wrecking crew.

Her steal and breakaway bucket, coming on the heels of a softly arcing jumper from Maddy Hilkey, gave Coupeville its biggest lead at 5-0.

Smith and Briscoe added four apiece, while Hilkey and Allison Wenzel each chipped in with a bucket to round out the scoring stats.

Skyler Lawrence didn’t score, but thoroughly controlled the paint, ripping down rebound after rebound, staring down any Eagle who dared to put a finger on the ball.

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Jordan Ford (left) and Jared Helmstadter work on a defensive drill in the early days of practice. (John Fisken photo)

   Jordan Ford (left) and Jared Helmstadter work on a defensive drill in the early days of practice. (John Fisken photo)

They have speed. They have talent. They just don’t have a lot of bodies.

A combination of injuries, lack of practice time and players who chose not to return from last year or dropped off in the first week of practice this year has left the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad thin in numbers.

Of Coupeville’s 18 players, three started late and likely won’t be eligible on opening night (Monday, Nov. 30), while two others are injured.

That could mean the only way the Wolves play a JV game in the early going would be to have five guys be 32-minute men, while stealing a swing player from the varsity just to get that starting five.

The low numbers could also affect the varsity, especially if any more injuries crop up and deplete the front-line guys.

For now, at least, CHS coaches Anthony Smith and Dustin Van Velkinburgh are looking on the bright side, however.

They may not have great depth, but the guys they do have offer nothing but upside.

“If we shoot the ball well, we’ll be hard to beat,” said Smith, who is going into his fifth season as head coach. “Teams will probably play a lot of zone against us and we need to make them pay.

“If we take care of the ball, keep the turnovers down, we’ll be right in there every game.”

Coupeville is a bit undersized, with relatively few big bangers, but they do have quickness and offensive explosiveness, and will look to ride whichever player has the hot hand on a given night.

They also have experience, with eight of what’s expected to be the top ten players being seniors.

Senior Wiley Hesselgrave, a First-Team All-Conference player a year ago, is “our gun,” and the Wolves will look to exploit his toughness on both sides of the ball.

Senior Risen Johnson and sophomore Hunter Smith will handle the ball for CHS, while seniors Jared Helmstadter and Ryan Griggs and junior Gabe Wynn round out the returning varsity players.

Gabe is our X factor,” Anthony Smith said. “With the energy he plays with, he can cause a lot of havoc for us.”

Seniors DeAndre Mitchell, Desmond Bell and Dante Mitchell slide up from last year’s JV team, while the real X factor might be senior Jordan Ford.

A transfer who can claim long athletic bloodlines in Coupeville, the bearded one was an immediate hit during football season, where he was a solid two-way player.

Now Ford will take his game to the hardwood, where he’s expected to join Griggs as the team’s only real inside players.

Also fighting for positions are senior Beauman Davis, junior Brian Shank, sophomores Luke Merriman, Ariah Bepler, Hunter Downes (who may have suffered a season-ending injury Tuesday) and Cameron Toomey-Stout and freshmen Gabe Eck and Ty Eck.

However the roster ends up shaking out, Coupeville will look to continue heading back upwards in the standings.

After a winless first season under Anthony Smith, when the new coach inherited virtually an all-freshman roster, the Wolves have increased their win total in each of the last three seasons.

Last year they went 7-13 overall, 3-6 in 1A Olympic League play.

A number of their losses were close ones, and one of the wins came against Chimacum, the eventual league champs.

The Cowboys and league mate Klahowya had senior-dominated rosters last year, so their turnover could mean good things for Port Townsend and Coupeville.

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