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Joel Walstad, seen here in an earlier game, hit for nine on his Senior Night. (John Fisken photo)

Joel Walstad, seen here in an earlier game, hit for nine on his Senior Night. (John Fisken photo)

They were waiting for a bang. They got a fizzle.

Seconds away from pulling off their second straight thriller in front of the home fans, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad stumbled at the worst possible moment Monday.

Two questionable plays and one rebound that got away — all in the final 11.2 seconds — doomed the Wolves to a 44-43 loss to visiting Klahowya, putting a damper on Senior Night festivities.

The loss dropped Coupeville’s record to 7-12 overall, 3-6 in Olympic League play.

They finished third in the conference and will open the playoffs Saturday with a loser-out game against Cascade Christian in Puyallup.

Win and they advance to the double-elimination portion of districts and a match-up with the Olympic League’s #1 team, Chimacum.

Closing strongly behind a rampaging Wiley Hesselgrave, the Wolves looked like they would wrap the regular season with back-to-back huge wins over the teams sitting just ahead of them in the league standings.

Using a 17-4 run that carried from late in the third to late in the fourth, CHS rebounded from a 10-point deficit to reclaim the lead at 41-38.

Coupeville’s defense was on point, anchored by shot-blocking beast Ryan Griggs, and Klahowya went nearly six minutes into the fourth before scoring.

After finally breaking the drought with a pair of free throws, however, the Eagles nailed a mile-long three-point bomb from the right sideline to shoot back in front.

Showing the same composure under pressure that they had Friday, when they shocked Chimacum in overtime, the Wolves fought right back.

Playing on an injured foot, Mohawked senior Aaron Trumbull ripped down a rebound and shot right back up at the heart of the beast, getting hammered (and two free throw opportunities) for his pain.

He calmly netted both, not being even slightly fazed when Klahowya tried to ice him with a time out between charity stripe shots.

With the game cinched tight at 43 and the Eagles bringing up the ball, everything was set for a firecracker of a finale.

But, sometimes the biggest, brightest firecrackers refuse to go off and just sputter aimlessly across the driveway, and that’s what happened to the Wolves.

A Coupeville player was whistled for a foul with 11.2 ticks left on the clock, and the refs made it a technical since the Wolf had yanked (perhaps accidentally) his rival’s jersey.

Still, hope lived, as the Eagle missed the front end of a one-and-one.

Then hope took a hit.

The ball came off the rim and skittered away from two Wolves, rolling until a Klahowya player loitering in the right place grabbed it and was fouled.

Even then, hope wasn’t completely KO’d, as the Eagles only made one free throw and Coupeville got the ball up-court quickly, calling a timeout.

With a full three seconds to run a game-winning play, the Wolves went to Hesselgrave, who had a team-high 13, but it wasn’t to be as his long-range jumper over the packed-in defense skimmed across the rim but refused to drop.

The less-than-satisfying ending wrapped what had been a back-and-forth affair.

Both teams held narrow leads in the first half, swapping baskets and refusing to let the other get too far out in front. A 14-12 Wolf bulge after one became a 27-24 deficit at the break.

Things fell apart a bit to start the third, as Klahowya dropped the first seven points to build the game’s only substantial lead at 34-24.

The Wolves rallied strongly, however, closing the quarter on a 9-4 run that saw five different players score.

For the game, the scoring was effectively spread out, with seniors Joel Walstad (9), Trumbull (8), Aaron Curtin (6) and Matt Shank (4) and junior Griggs (3) backing up Hesselgrave.

It was the final home game for the four seniors and classmate Isaac Vargas, and the five-pack went out together as starters.

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Allison (John Fisken photos)

   Allison Wenzel (and her extremely photo-friendly hair) clamp down on defense. (John Fisken photos)

Trumbull

Aaron Trumbull rumbles in the paint.

Mia

Mia Littlejohn holds on to the ball while absorbing a shot to the kidneys.

Wynter

Flying in like Superman, Aaron Curtin has his eyes set firmly on the goal.

Wynter

Wynter Thorne’s face was in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Wiley

Ballet-like elevation gets Wiley Hesselgrave room to shoot.

Tiffanmy

Tiffany Briscoe takes a shot to the mid section, but refuses to bow down.

Ryan

  Matt Shank (right) and Curtin watch in awe as Ryan Griggs climbs the stairway to hoops heaven.

The action was hair-raising.

Facing off with physical Chimacum squads Friday, the Coupeville High School basketball teams managed to win three of four games, while keeping most, if not all, of their limbs.

The photos above capture the teams that won (girls varsity and JV and boys varsity) in action.

No disrespect to the Wolf JV boys, but travelin’ photo man John Fisken had to jet to Oak Harbor to cover the Wildcats as well, so you ended up getting left out of this batch of photos.

Next time.

To see more of what he was able to shoot under a time crunch, pop over to:

Girls Varsity — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8033&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

Girls JV — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8032&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

Boys Varsity — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=8030&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

P.S. — Plug in the coupon code EB80304962 before Feb. 22 and you’ll get 15% off any photo purchases.

All purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes.

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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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Ryan Griggs (John Fisken photos)

Ryan Griggs, workin’ hard in the paint. (John Fisken photos)

Aaron Curtin flies up the court, on his way to scoring two of his team-high 13.

Aaron Curtin flies up the court, on his way to scoring two of his team-high 13.

Continuing a disturbing trend from recent seasons, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad stumbled, badly, in the third quarter Saturday and it cost them dearly.

Outscored 21-7 in the first eight minutes after the break, the Wolves saw a close game slip out of their grasp and suffered an 80-50 beating at the hands of non-conference foe Bellevue Christian.

The loss, coming less than 24 hours after a fired-up CHS squad ran Darrington off the same floor for four quarters, dropped the Wolves to 1-3.

Coupeville travels to Mount Baker Monday for another non-conference tilt, before playing its first game in the new 1A Olympic League Friday, Dec. 12, when Klahowya comes to Whidbey.

As in all their losses this season, the Wolves came out strongly. Getting fired-up to tip-off is not a problem for CHS.

Aaron Curtin led the way, pouring in seven in the first quarter with a variety of moves.

Coupeville led in the early going, then, after briefly hitting a rough patch, rebounded sharply on a three-point bomb from Wiley Hesselgrave and a bucket off a nice inside cut by Ryan Griggs.

Bellevue, which was much, much quicker than their hosts, tried to break the game open, but the Wolves refused to fold in the first half.

The highlight was a 6-2 run in which Curtin ripped a rebound free, then forcibly bull-rushed his way through three defenders for a put-back.

The third quarter started OK, for half a second, with Joel Walstad netting a free throw and Hesselgrave slicing inside for a bucket.

But then things fell apart completely and the refs decided to stretch the game out with an endless series of ticky-tacky foul calls.

As the two teams plodded through a fourth quarter that took an eternity with a never-ending parade to the free throw line, even the hardiest of fans began to curse the never-comfortable bleachers.

The oblivious refs, having just discovered that those shiny whistles clamped between their teeth made a pleasing (to them) noise when tooted, had little mercy.

In the end, Hesselgrave (before fouling out thanks to some seriously silly foul calls by the overly-sensitive refs) and Curtin paced the Wolves with 13 apiece.

Aaron Trumbull banked in eight, Griggs and Walstad netted five each, Dalton Martin swished three, Risen Johnson popped for two and CJ Smith tickled the twines for a free throw.

JV stays close: The Wolves played straight up with BC for three quarters before falling a bit short in the third quarter, dropping their record to 0-3.

Brian Shank was a bright, shining star, however, swishing all three of his long-range bombs from three-point land.

No other stats were available.

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Lewis Pope (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Lewis Pope made an impressive debut for the Falcons. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Joel Walstad pumped in seven for the Wolves, who lost for the second straight night.

Joel Walstad pumped in seven for the Wolves, who lost for the second straight night.

Pope discusses strategy with new SWHS coach Mike Washington, who moved down the Island after eight seasons in Oak Harbor.

   Pope discusses strategy with new SWHS coach Mike Washington, who moved down the Island after running the boys’ hoops program in Oak Harbor.

The legacy lives on.

Seventeen months after the premature death of his father, South Whidbey High School boys’ basketball coach Henry Pope, Falcon freshman Lewis Pope stepped on his home court Tuesday night, wearing a #15 uniform in memory of his father’s birthday, and dazzled.

His 12-point performance, added to 30 from senior Parker Collins and 13 from junior Ricky Muzzy, was more than Coupeville could handle as it absorbed its second non-conference loss in as many nights.

Now 0-2 on the season after a 74-47 defeat, the Wolves have suffered from a similar pattern — strong first quarter, then a major stumble that forces them to play from far behind the rest of the night.

Trailing by just a point at 14-13 at the first break, Coupeville was drilled 25-13 in the second quarter and 19-9 in the third.

Then, just like they did Monday, they rallied a bit in the fourth quarter, long after the game was decided.

The Wolves were paced by senior Aaron Curtin, who banged away for 15 points, five rebounds and three steals in his second game back on the court.

After lettering as a freshman and sophomore, he sat out his junior year, but returned with his sweet shooting touch intact.

Wiley Hesselgrave and Joel Walstad chipped in seven apiece in support, while CJ Smith hit for six.

Risen Johnson and Gabe Wynn each popped for four and Aaron Trumbull and Ryan Griggs added a bucket apiece.

Much as in their loss to Meridian, turnovers killed the Wolves. They brought them down from 25 to 16, but it was still too many.

“Just like the last game, we played well in the first half and had our problems in the second half,” said CHS coach Anthony Smith. “We had a lot better effort at times; now we have a couple days to work on things so can get a victory Friday.”

Coupeville returns to action with home games Friday (Darrington) and Saturday (Bellevue Christian).

JV loses: Still missing several players who aren’t eligible yet, the young Wolves struggled, falling 76-26.

Individual scoring stats weren’t available.

While his squad is now 0-2, JV coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh is not ready to write the season off.

“We have talent and it is my job to make the best use of that talent and to get these athletes to perform at a level that is higher than they see possible,” he said. “I’m committed to making that happen.”

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