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Posts Tagged ‘Alita Blouin’

Katie Marti makes the net jump. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

OK, you can have one bucket, but that’s it.

Visiting Crescent scored the first basket of the night Wednesday, then the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad unleashed a tsunami.

Closing the first quarter on a 21-0 run, with five different players scoring, the Wolves built an insurmountable lead on their way to a 46-22 rout of the Loggers.

The non-conference victory evens Coupeville’s record at 2-2, with road trips to Sedro-Woolley and Forks coming up fast on the schedule.

The first of those two bouts arrives Thursday, the second Saturday.

If the Wolves play in those contests like they did against Crescent, good things are on the horizon.

Attacking the Loggers from the opening tip, Megan Richter’s squad harassed the visitors into frequent turnovers, before converting many of those opportunities.

Maddie Georges delivered the first knife thrust, poppin’ the net on a long, low three-ball, added another bucket off of a steal and breakaway, then became the reincarnation of John Stockton.

Pulling in the Logger defense before zipping note-perfect passes to her teammates, the Wolf senior had the magic touch when it came to racking up assists.

Georges fed Alita Blouin with a laser which tore through a pack of Crescent players, before feeding Ryanne Knoblich for back-to-back short jumpers.

Bouncing off of foes all night, Knoblich dodged bruises and made the Loggers pay for their roughhouse defense, pumping in eight of her game-high 12 points in the opening frame.

Add in buckets off of the fingertips of Gwen Gustafson and Carolyn Lhamon, and Coupeville wouldn’t be denied.

The game did get a bit slower and lower scoring after the torrid opening frame, but the Wolves remained in control no matter what the lineup on the floor.

The second quarter was highlighted by Mia Farris launching a perfect setup pass to Lhamon, who rumbled in the paint for a bucket, while the third featured a buzzer beater.

It came courtesy Farris, who snatched a rebound away from a Logger and slapped the ball back up and off the glass a millisecond before Joel Norris punched the buzzer to signal the end of play.

Delivering superb work on the game clock, plus doling out sweet, sweet chocolate chip cookies to bloggers hanging out in the bleachers, the owner of Kapaw’s Iskreme was in mid-season form.

While the game was well in hand as the fourth quarter began, Coupeville’s players combined to keep things hopping.

Blouin creased the nets with a feathery three-ball to kick things off, before Lyla Stuurmans drilled her own trey while on the move.

Jada Heaton (center) joined an exclusive club Wednesday. (Jackie Saia photo)

The emotional high of the game came from sophomore Jada Heaton, making her varsity debut and becoming the 239th Wolf girl to score since the program was launched back in 1974.

After setting up Blouin’s three-ball with an assist, and snatching several rebounds, Heaton earned a nice roar from the crowd when she knocked down a pressure-packed free throw midway through the fourth quarter.

In all, 10 Wolves saw the floor Wednesday, with nine of them scoring.

Knoblich’s 12 is her best performance at the varsity level, while Blouin (9), Gustafson (8), and Georges (5) provided solid backup.

With 283 career varsity points and counting, Georges continues to climb up the all-time scoring chart.

She passed Hailey Hammer (282) Wednesday, and, at #39, is hot on the trail of Bessie Walstad (288), Scout Smith (290), and Amanda Fabrizi (299) as she makes a run at cracking the 300-point club.

Lhamon (4), Stuurmans (3), Katie Marti (2), Farris (2), and Heaton (1) also scored against Crescent, while Skylar Parker brought big energy to her defensive duties.

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Coupeville freshman Camden Glover scored six points in his high school hoops debut. (Photo courtesy Stevie Glover)

The fab five is filling up the bucket.

So far, 37 different Coupeville High School basketball players have scored this season, with four boys and one girl averaging double-digits.

Junior gunner Logan Downes leads the way, having topped 20 points in each of four games.

At 23.5 a night, he’s joined by fellow varsity vets Alex Murdy (13.8), Alita Blouin (13.0), and Nick Guay (10.8), as well as JV ace Chase Anderson (10.0).

The week ahead gives that five-pack, and their teammates, plenty of chances to ring up some more points.

Wolf varsity teams face Crescent, Sedro-Woolley, and Forks in a four-day span between Wednesday and Saturday, with the JV playing against the second and third of those foes.

As we look ahead, where everyone in Wolf Nation currently stands in the great bucket chase:

 

Varsity girls
(3 games):

Alita Blouin – 39
Maddie Georges – 25
Gwen Gustafson – 14
Ryanne Knoblich – 14
Carolyn Lhamon – 13
Lyla Stuurmans – 9
Mia Farris – 6
Katie Marti – 6

 

JV girls
(3 games):

Madison McMillan – 26
Jada Heaton – 12
Desi Ramirez-Vasquez – 8
Reese Wilkinson – 8
Kierra Thayer – 6
Teagan Calkins – 5
Bryley Gilbert – 4
Kayla Arnold – 2
Skylar Parker – 1

 

Varsity boys
(4 games):

Logan Downes – 94
Alex Murdy – 55
Nick Guay – 43
Cole White – 37
Jonathan Valenzuela – 16
Ryan Blouin – 12
Chase Anderson – 4
Jermiah Copeland – 4
William Davidson – 1
Zane Oldenstadt – 1

 

JV boys
(3 games):

Chase Anderson – 30
Hunter Bronec – 25
Aiden O’Neill – 22
Hurlee Bronec – 19
Johnny Porter – 17
Jack Porter – 12
Camden Glover – 6
Mikey Robinett – 6
Malachi Somes – 3
Carson Field – 2
Landon Roberts – 2

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Ryanne Knoblich eyeballs a free throw. (Morgan White photo)

It’s all about the sound of that sweet swish.

Defense, hustle, and intangibles matter a lot in basketball, but games are decided by who scores the most points.

With that in mind, our first look at individual season scoring stats for all four Coupeville High School hoops teams.

 

Varsity girls
(2 games):

Alita Blouin – 25
Carolyn Lhamon – 13
Maddie Georges – 12
Gwen Gustafson – 11
Ryanne Knoblich – 11
Mia Farris – 6
Katie Marti – 3
Lyla Stuurmans – 2

 

JV girls
(2 games):

Madison McMillan – 14
Desi Ramirez – 8
Kierra Thayer – 6
Reese Wilkinson – 6
Teagan Calkins – 5
Jada Heaton – 5
Bryley Gilbert – 4
Skylar Parker – 1

 

Varsity boys
(2 games):

Logan Downes – 47
Cole White – 17
Alex Murdy – 14
Jonathan Valenzuela – 14
Nick Guay – 12
Ryan Blouin – 6
Chase Anderson – 2
Jermiah Copeland – 2
William Davidson – 1

 

JV boys
(2 games):

Hunter Bronec – 25
Chase Anderson – 13
Hurlee Bronec – 13
Aiden O’Neill – 13
Jack Porter – 12
Johnny Porter – 8
Mikey Robinett – 6
Malachi Somes – 3
Carson Field – 2

Aiden O’Neill swoops to the hoop. (Morgan White photo)

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Alita Blouin (left) and Maddie Georges, back on the volleyball court one final time. (Photos courtesy Suzan Georges)

One more trip to the land of spikes and sets.

Coupeville High School seniors Alita Blouin and Maddie Georges played Sunday in the 1B/2B/1A All-State volleyball games.

The duo, who were First-Team All-Conference picks when Northwest 2B/1B League coaches voted, played alongside spikers from school such as Adna, Forks, Kalama, and Meridian.

The event, put on by the Washington State Volleyball Coaches Association, went down at Burlington-Edison High School.

Blouin and Georges are the first Wolf volleyball players to earn an All-State invite in many years, and they join former CHS classmate Xavier Murdy, who played in the boys’ basketball All-State game earlier this year.

Sunday’s extravaganza was more about the experience than the scores, and both young women cherished the opportunity.

“The girls had fun,” said Maddie’s mom, Suzan Georges.

“A few tears once again. The real last time wearing their jerseys.”

The Wolf duo hang out with their new teammates.

Coupeville coach Cory Whitmore joins his spikers for a fond farewell.

A pack of fellow Wolves showed up for Blouin and Georges’ big day.

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Alita Blouin leads Coupeville’s varsity girls in scoring through the first two games. (Morgan White photo)

One bad stretch.

A span of five minutes and change — that’s what killed the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad Saturday night.

Take away that segment, when visiting Lakewood went on a 28-3 run to end the first quarter, and it was a much different, far closer contest.

But they count every point, so the 2B Wolves ultimately absorbed a 70-37 loss to the 2A Cougars.

The non-conference defeat evens Coupeville’s early-season record at 1-1, with a week to work on things before Sultan visits Whidbey Island Dec. 10.

CHS coach Megan Richter and her players will be able to look at the game film from Saturday’s tilt and pick out a lot of positives.

Though they may want to fast forward through the second half of the opening quarter.

Things were looking pretty good, with the score knotted at 5-5 after Alita Blouin plucked a steal and beat a pack of defenders down court for a layup.

Gwen Gustafson opened the night’s scoring with a pullup jumper, before Carolyn Lhamon added a free throw, and the Wolves were aggressive on both ends of the floor.

But then the roof fell in.

Lakewood ramped up its defense and stifled Coupeville, holding it without a field goal for the remainder of the first quarter, while scoring quickly and efficiently from multiple angles.

The Cougars splashed home a trio of three-balls during the 28-3 run, but it was a string of steals and breakaway lay-ins which really stung.

Then things went back to almost normal.

The scoring across the final three quarters of the night still came out in favor of Lakewood, but only to a 37-29 tally.

The Wolves, who were being hacked and pummeled all game, hit the majority of their free throws, while also breaking out some well-run plays to crack Lakewood’s press.

A 7-0 surge midway through the second quarter, with Lhamon slapping runners off the glass on feeds from Gustafson and Maddie Georges, was quality work.

As was Katie Marti’s debut as a WWE wrestler, on a play when the rough ‘n rowdy defensive dynamo flipped not one, but two Lakewood players end-over-end while battling for, and winning, control of a loose ball.

Lhamon and Mia Farris both pounded home multiple buckets in the paint in the second half, while Georges flipped the net on a long, low three-ball, but the deficit ultimately proved too much to overcome.

Still, Coupeville fought until the end, with its players still crashing the boards and pestering Lakewood ballhandlers even as the final buzzer loomed.

Blouin paced the Wolves in scoring for the second-straight game, rattling home 10 points, while Lhamon backed her up with a season-high nine.

Georges (6), Farris (4), Ryanne Knoblich (3), Marti (2), Gustafson (2), and Lyla Stuurmans (1) also etched their names in the scorebook, as all eight Wolves to see floor time scored.

With her six points, Georges moves into 40th place all-time on the CHS girls’ hoops career scoring chart, which dates back to 1974.

The senior guard sits with 265 points, passing program legends Madeline Strasburg (261) and Carly Guillory (260) Saturday night.

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