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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Joel Walstad and his four senior teammates

Joel Walstad is taking his skills to the playoffs. (John Fisken photos)

(John Fisken photo)

The Wolves celebrate at the end of Friday’s upset of #1 Chimacum.

Playoffs? Yeah, we’re talking about playoffs.

The Coupeville High School boys’ hoops squad danced along a razor edge for a day or two, tempting elimination, but the final piece fell into place late Friday night and the Wolves are postseason bound.

A wild 72-68 overtime upset of league champ Chimacum put CHS in the driver’s seat for the Olympic League’s third and final playoff berth, then Port Townsend officially gave up the fight with a 41-40 loss to Klahowya.

Those results leave the Wolves at 3-5 in league play, a game up on the 2-6 Redhawks with one to go.

Coupeville took two of three from Port Townsend, giving them the tiebreaker.

The Wolves will wrap the regular season Monday at home with Senior Night, facing Klahowya (5-3), while Port Townsend lines up opposite Chimacum (6-2).

Regardless of the outcome of those games, Coupeville will play at least one more game, traveling for a loser-out postseason tilt at the home of the #2 seed from the Nisqually League Saturday, Feb. 14.

Win that game and the Wolves advance to the double elimination portion of districts, which would start with a rematch against Chimacum Feb. 17.

On the girls side of the ball, Coupeville (8-0) is the league champ and will avoid a loser-out game.

They start double elimination play Feb. 16 at Sumner High School against the winner of a game between the #3 seed from the Olympic and #2 seed from the Nisqually.

Klahowya (4-4) will be the #2 team from the Olympic, while Port Townsend (2-6) and Chimacum (2-6) play Monday to decide the league’s final playoff berth.

The top two teams at districts advance to regionals.

Playoff brackets:

Girls — http://www.wiaadistrict1.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=1&page=1&school=0&sport=12&tournament_id=1446

Boys — http://www.wiaadistrict1.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=1&page=1&school=0&sport=3&tournament_id=1445

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After fighting hard for four seasons, Aaron Trumbull and his fellow seniors sit on the cusp of earning a playoff berth. (John Fisken photo)

   After fighting hard for four seasons, Aaron Trumbull and his fellow seniors sit on the cusp of earning a playoff berth. (John Fisken photo)

Chimacum rolled into the gym in high spirits. Their players left with their chins hanging on the ground.

A game after the Cowboys clinched the 1A Olympic League boys’ basketball title, they got walloped at crunch time by a feisty, fired-up Coupeville squad Friday night.

Rebounding from a slow start, the Wolves came up with gut-check play after gut-check play when it mattered most and drove a standing-room-only home crowd bonkers with a wild 72-68 overtime triumph.

The fourth win in its last seven games, the victory lifted Coupeville to 7-11 overall, 3-5 in league play.

It also put the Wolves in the driver’s seat for the league’s #3 (and final) playoff seed.

If Port Townsend lost to Klahowya (their game was late Friday night), Coupeville is in.

A Redhawk win and they and the Wolves would be tied with a game to play, with CHS owning the tiebreaker.

Just as they had done in their previous game, a comeback win against Port Townsend, the Wolves put together their best effort in the fourth quarter.

Up 45-44 entering the final eight minutes, Coupeville stretched the lead to five, then gave it all back, falling behind by three with two minutes to play.

It was at that point that Wiley Hesselgrave took over, scoring the Wolves’ final eight points.

After hitting a spectacular shot where he came roaring up the gut, took a body blow in mid-air from a Cowboy defender and stayed upright long enough to drain the ball, he showed further composure under fire.

A technical foul on Chimacum sent the Wolf junior to the line, where he drained both free throws to give his squad a 62-59 lead.

It wouldn’t hold, however, as the Cowboys stole the ball on the next play and sprinted down court, where, without blinking, they immediately went for the three-point bomb that would tie the game.

As it tickled nothing but the net on the way down, the collective scream of agony from Wolf Nation was louder than a Navy jet taking off from your front lawn.

While Matt Shank’s jumper to win the game at the buzzer fell short, Coupeville kept the pressure up entering overtime, and it paid off.

Shank hit a pair of free throws, then banged home a short jumper after corralling a loose ball to stake the Wolves to a 68-64 lead and they never looked back.

Chimacum scored twice more, but each time Coupeville answered right back.

After a mad melee in the paint, Aaron Curtin roared back skyward for a crucial put-back bucket, then Hesselgrave dropped in a final pair of free throws, each make a dagger to the heart of the Cowboys.

The wild finish capped an intense, hard-nosed game.

Coupeville fell behind by seven in the early going, then got a kick start from a ferocious block by Ryan Griggs that seemed to change the flow of the game.

The Wolves snagged their first lead of the game seconds before the halftime break on a smooth running jumper off the hands of Joel Walstad.

Twice after that they would stretch the lead out to five, but were never able to pull away from the Cowboys.

Then came the fourth quarter, known around these parts as Wiley Time.

Hesselgrave threw down 13 of his team-high 21 in the final period in regulation, then added four more in overtime as he once again proved himself the master of crunch time.

Before he took off, Coupeville had spread the offense around nicely.

Three other players finished in double digits, led by Curtin’s 13.

Walstad popped for 12, Trumbull rumbled for 11, Shank banked in eight and Griggs dropped in seven.

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Don't ever doubt Wiley Hesselgrave's heart. (John Fisken photo)

Don’t ever doubt Wiley Hesselgrave’s heart. (John Fisken photo)

One torrid 33-point fourth quarter rally later, the dream of advancing to the playoffs still lives for the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad.

Trailing by 15 with eight minutes to play at Port Townsend Tuesday, when a loss would have eliminated them from postseason contention, the Wolves rode the hot shooting touch of Wiley Hesselgrave all the way back to capture a shocking 60-57 win.

The CHS junior poured in 14 of his 26 points down the stretch to spark Coupeville to its second straight win over the Redhawks.

Now 6-11 overall, 2-5 in Olympic League play, the Wolves are in a tie for third place with Port Townsend with two to play, but own the tiebreaker.

While they can’t catch Chimacum (6-1) or Klahowya (4-3 and owner of a tiebreaker over CHS), they are in prime position to earn the league’s final playoff berth.

To get into that position, the Wolves had to dig down deep.

Saddled with numerous injured players, including two who gutted it out and played through foot pain in Aaron Trumbull and Joel Walstad, Coupeville trailed by seven at the half.

The third quarter wasn’t much better, as Port Townsend stretched its lead out to 15.

But then, a miracle.

A Wolf team which had scored just 27 points in the first 24 minutes suddenly couldn’t miss in the fourth, raining down buckets from all directions and getting the Redhawks frazzled as their lead slipped away.

“When we’re on our game, we allow other teams to get frustrated,” Coupeville coach Anthony Smith said with a chuckle. “We just believed and grinded and grinded and grinded and sank our free throws and got our rebounds.”

While Hesselgrave was near unstoppable — including hitting key free throws off of a Port Townsend technical late in the game — having Walstad on the floor, even at less than 100%, was a huge factor.

Joel played tough. He didn’t start, but he finished,” Smith said. “With him out there, we are a much better team.”

Hesselgrave snatched three boards and made off with three steals to go with his offensive output, while Trumbull and Ryan Griggs paced a strong team rebounding effort with seven boards apiece.

Curtin popped for 10 points, while Walstad (7), Griggs (5), Trumbull (5), Risen Johnson (3), Matt Shank (2) and CJ Smith (2) rounded out the scorers.

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Makana Stone

  Makana Stone (23) and the Wolf girls’ hoops squad have ruled their new league with an iron fist. (John Fisken photos)

Former Coupeville AD Lori Stolee deserves a large chunk of the credit for working tirelessly to get the Wolves into a new league.

  Former Wolf AD Lori Stolee deserves a large chunk of the credit for working tirelessly to get Coupeville, the smallest 1A school in the state, into a new league.

This has been a school year unlike any in recent memory at Coupeville High School.

After a decade of taking a systematic beating at the hands of large 2A schools and private schools with athletic scholarships while a member of the 2A/1A Cascade Conference, the Wolves were set free.

Thanks largely to the hard work of former CHS Athletic Director Lori Stolee (now part of the administration at Marysville-Pilchuck), Coupeville, the smallest 1A school in the state, jumped to the newly-formed 1A Olympic League.

Joining Port Townsend and Chimacum, which are much closer in size to Coupeville and are similarly public, rural, fairly isolated schools, and Klahowya (admittedly larger, but not a private sports academy), the Wolves have recaptured something that was missing for several years — a true fighting chance.

Now, it’s true. Last spring was a watershed moment for CHS, as it sent its baseball and softball teams to state, with tennis players Ben Etzell and Aaron Curtin, track star Makana Stone and golfer Christine Fields also making trips to the Big Dance.

But that achievement was attained in the postseason against other 1A schools, after the Wolves struggled mightily at times during their conference schedules.

It was a start, a great start, but the new league has been the next step that was sorely needed.

Look at the six sports which have played this year (we’re not counting any like swim in which Coupeville doesn’t have a team) — football, volleyball, boys’ tennis, girls’ soccer and boys’ and girls’ basketball.

The Wolves have 18 varsity conference wins across those sports so far, second only to Klahowya’s 27. Port Townsend has 14 and Chimacum 10.

The highlight, of course, is the Wolf girls’ basketball team, which is 6-0 in league play with three games left. They will hoist the school’s first new league championship banner since 2002.

Add in the fact the JV girls are also 6-0 and the future is a bright one for what is, right now, Coupeville’s premier program.

But it’s not just a one-team affair.

The Wolves posted a winning record in tennis (then upset Klahowya in the postseason), was competitive with eventual state champ Klahowya in soccer and came within a play of making the playoffs in football.

Even when they posted losing records, as they did in volleyball and are currently doing in boys’ basketball, it has not been the routs of before.

With King’s and Archbishop Thomas Murphy gone, a psychological block has been lifted.

Win or lose, you can see it in the eyes of the Coupeville athletes. They can compete with these schools, and it is a huge deal.

When you put banners up, you inspire the kids coming up behind you.

When you compete on a nightly basis, regardless of the sport, you draw more fan interest, you push athletes who were wavering to commit.

You build your numbers, you build your base, you build your spirit.

Do the games start earlier now? Often, yes. Are the travel arrangements still in flux? Certainly.

But those are minor things compared to what the change in leagues has given the Wolves.

Hope.

It burns again in Coupeville, and we should thank Lori Stolee for going the extra mile to bring that back before she had to leave us.

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Wiley (John Fisken photo)

   Wiley Hesselgrave is Coupeville’s top scorer this season, averaging 12 a game. (John Fisken photo)

The door to the playoffs is still open, but it’s closing fast.

Riddled with injuries, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad is limping to the finish line, in dire need of a win to keep its season alive.

After suffering a 58-39 loss at Klahowya Friday, the Wolves sit at 5-11 overall and 1-5 in Olympic League play.

That puts them in last place in the four-team league, trailing Chimacum (5-1), Klahowya (4-2) and Port Townsend (2-4) and facing a must-win game Tuesday.

The top three teams make the postseason.

If they make the ferry trip across to Port Townsend and beat the Redhawks for a second time this season, things will look a lot better. That would slide them into a third-place tie and give them the tiebreaker.

If they lose, however, they’re done.

Two back with two to play (home games against Chimacum Feb. 6 and Klahowya Feb. 9) and Port Townsend owning the tiebreaker would eliminate Coupeville from postseason contention.

Friday night the Wolves had three decent quarters and one terrible one.

Coming out of the halftime locker room trailing by just six, Coupeville went ice-cold from the field in the third quarter, sealing its fate.

Outscored 16-3 over an eight minute stretch, the Wolves, who were playing without Joel Walstad, Ryan Griggs, Gabe Wynn, Jared Helmstadter and Dalton Martin, were unable to stop the Eagles from putting the game out of range.

The team’s most potent offensive weapon, junior Wiley Hesselgrave, did his best to keep CHS in the game, throwing down 23, but the Wolves only got scoring from three other players.

Aaron Curtin and Risen Johnson each popped for six, while Aaron Trumbull, fighting through his own injury issues, banked home four.

Second quarter blues kill JV:

Injuries also hurt the JV squad, as top scorers DeAndre Mitchell and Hunter Smith were limited to just a quarter of play so they could slide up and replace missing players on the varsity team.

After a close first quarter (9-9), Klahowya surged to a 17-point halftime spread on its way to a 55-33 win.

The loss dropped the young Wolves to 6-9 overall, 3-3 in Olympic League play.

They’ll get a chance to get back on their winning ways when they face Port Townsend, a team they’ve beaten twice this season.

“Three games to go. Trying to go 6 and 3 in conference,” said Wolf coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh. “We look to get Gabe Wynn back Tuesday in Port Townsend. We will see how things go.”

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