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Posts Tagged ‘Amanda Fabrizi’

Fab

Amanda Fabrizi (right) gets her pregame good luck hug from team manager Jae LeVine. It worked, to the tune of 18 points. (John Fisken photos)

Wolf coach David King (in red) remains the only calm person in the gym. (John Fisken photos)

  Wolf coach David King (in red) remains the only calm person in the gym as Julia Myers hits what would be the winning free throw.

win

And then they all lost their freakin’ minds.

When it was darkest Thursday night, when the season seemed to be slipping away, Amanda Fabrizi refused to let her high school basketball career end.

With her Coupeville girls’ hoops squad trailing by eight in the third quarter and momentum swinging wildly in favor of visiting Meridian, it would have been easy for the Wolf senior to give in, give up.

But Fabrizi has never quit on a basketball court, ever.

Which is why CHS came roaring back to beat the Trojans 42-41, carried by Fabrizi’s 18 points, to capture its first 1A district playoff win in at least five seasons.

Julia Myers iced the game, ripping a rebound out of an opposing player’s hands while being hammered, then calmly swishing a free throw with 9.9 seconds to play to break the game’s final tie.

But she never would have had her chance to be the heroine if Fabrizi hadn’t pulled the Wolves on her back.

And she did, drilling back-to-back shots — a high, arcing three-point bomb and a tough jumper with three girls in her face — sparking an 11-0 run that turned a 30-22 deficit into a 33-30 lead.

With Makana Stone tossing in a pair of buckets and freshman Carlie Rosenkrance hitting a jumper from the top of the key off of a brilliant pass from Breeanna Messner, Coupeville looked dominant for a four-minute run.

With the losing team being eliminated, Meridian wasn’t ready to roll over, however, and the Trojans fought back, setting up a knockdown brawl in the fourth.

First Coupeville surged to a four-point lead, on buckets from Stone and Fabrizi, then Meridian retook the lead at 38-37.

Back came Coupeville as Kacie Kiel wrested a ball free on the offensive boards and roared back up for her only bucket of the night, followed by Fabrizi picking the pocket of a Meridian ball-handler and racing in for a breakaway layin.

Up 41-38, it was over. Or was it?

After netting a free throw, Meridian forced a turnover on an inbounds pass and got their own breakaway to tie things at 41.

Worse, the girl flying to the hoop was fouled, setting her up for a three-point play the hard way with 27 ticks on the clock.

With CHS fans doing their best 12th Man impression and creating a sonic boom inside the gym, Meridian missed the free-throw, their 16th miss at the charity stripe on the night.

Fabrizi had a chance to reclaim the lead for Coupeville, but both of her free throws with 11.1 seconds to play rolled around and rimmed out at the very last moment.

Enter Myers, who, as she has done all season, simply wanted the rebound more than the girl on the other team reaching for the ball. Cleanly wrestling away the carom, the Wolf junior hunkered down and let herself get smacked, then hit the biggest free throw of her life.

Even then, things weren’t completely done, as Meridian managed to get two wild shots off at the end.

It wasn’t to be, though, and the Wolf students in the bleachers charged the floor, setting off a giddy celebration with their classmates who had just pulled off the biggest win in recent CHS girls’ basketball history.

It was a win accomplished without two starters, as junior Hailey Hammer (ankle injury) was joined in street clothes by junior Madeline Strasburg, who had been battling a high fever.

The hope is Strasburg will be back in uniform when Coupeville (10-12) travels to Blaine Friday for another loser-out playoff game.

The Borderites lost 55-26 to King’s Thursday.

The winner of the Coupeville/Blaine game is guaranteed a tri-districts berth and will play the winner of Mount Baker/Nooksack Valley Saturday on a neutral court at Mountlake Terrace High School for seeding.

Fabrizi (18) and Stone (12) combined to score 30 of Coupeville’s 42 Thursday, while Messner (3), Myers (3), Kiel (2), Rosenkrance (2) and Monica Vidoni (2) all chipped in.

Vidoni and Messner both scored off of big offensive rebounds, as the Wolves fought hard on the boards with a tough-nosed Meridian squad.

McKayla Bailey and Wynter Thorne didn’t score, but put in quality minutes off the bench, playing tough on defense and helping handle the ball smartly under considerable pressure.

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(Shelli Trumbull photo)

Plotting strategy on the Wolf bench. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

bree

Captains Madeline Strasburg (left) and Breeanna Messner share a moment.

Wolf senior Amanda Fabrizi will get at least one more game on her home floor. (John Fisken photo)

Wolf senior Amanda Fabrizi will get at least one more game on her home floor. (John Fisken photos)

Wynter Thorne is part of a Wolf bench that has come on strong in the second half of the season.

 Wynter Thorne is part of a Wolf bench that has come on strong in the second half of the season.

Coupeville Middle School hoops stars kick off their season today, as well. (Amy Briscoe photo)

Coupeville Middle School hoops stars like Hope Lodell (green hat) and Kyla Briscoe (right) kick off their season today, as well. (Amy Briscoe photo)

Lace the sneakers up nice and tight.

When the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team hosts Meridian tonight (7 PM tip) in a loser-out 1A district playoff game, one thing is for certain — someone’s season ends.

The Wolves (9-12) and visiting Trojans (4-17) will be fighting to stay alive, with the winner advancing to play Friday against the loser from a game between King’s and Blaine.

The winner Friday is guaranteed a spot at tri-districts and will play Saturday on a neutral court at Mountlake Terrace High School in the district tourney’s 3rd/4th place game.

Some quick facts:

*This will likely be the final home basketball game for Wolf seniors Amanda Fabrizi and Breeanna Messner, though there is an outside shot CHS could get a home game if it reaches tri-districts.

*Coupeville and Meridian met in a non-conference game back on Dec. 7. The Wolves, behind 13 points from Fabrizi, used a 15-2 run to break open that game, holding on for a 46-34 win, their first victory of the then-young season.

*Meridian was blown out 59-7 by Lynden Christian in its opening district playoff game, while Coupeville had the smallest margin of loss (10 points) of the four teams to lose their first game.

*If you want to have a really, really flat rear, you can watch basketball most of Thursday. The Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball squads kicks off their  eight-game season by hosting Langley.

Tip off for those games (7th and 8th JV and varsity) is 3 PM in the CMS gym, and there is no charge.

*Since this is a district playoff game, ticket prices for the high school game are altered.

They are $7.00 for adults or students without an ASB, $5.00 for children/seniors/students with a valid ASB.

*For those worried about The Fun Police, don’t be. What are they going to do? Ban you from home basketball games for the rest of the season?

Be loud. Be proud. Give the Wolf girls a true home court advantage. They deserve nothing less.

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Amanda Fabrizi

Amanda Fabrizi, a danger in the open court. (John Fisken photos)

Breeanna Messner

Breeanna Messner (5) and Fabrizi — hard work during the early days of practice has paid off.

They were everywhere.

It was Senior Night Friday, and, in every nook and cranny of a densely-packed Coupeville High School gym, you were reminded of the love and respect the Wolf basketball community has for Amanda Fabrizi and Breeanna Messner.

The dynamite duo, who have played together since their middle school days, could be seen in photo collages, in giant face masks brandished by Messner’s billion relatives and on the one-of-a-kind tie worn by CHS coach David King.

Showcasing images of both girls from the five years they have coached the pair, starting with SWISH ball in eighth grade, the tie was designed by King’s wife, Wolf JV hoops guru Amy King.

The unifying theme — both young women sporting huge smiles in almost every shot.

That look was on display again as they sparked their Wolf squad to a 43-20 romp over visiting Granite Falls, notching Coupeville’s third win in its last five games.

Now 9-10 overall, 5-8 in Cascade Conference play, CHS wraps its regular season with a trip to Everett Saturday to play first-place King’s. District playoffs begin Tuesday, with the Wolves traveling to Mount Baker to kick off the double-elimination tourney.

Putting Granite Falls (1-18) out of its misery fairly quickly, Coupeville’s seniors put a distinctive stamp on the game.

They combined for eight points in the first quarter, with Messner hitting for six with a pair of jumpers and a sweet rolling hook.

After that, it was the Fabrizi Show, as she rained down points in every quarter, on her way to a career-high 20.

That’s right, she matched Granite Falls by herself … and probably would have outscored the Tigers if King hadn’t pulled the duo in the fourth to give them a proper curtain call.

Running and gunning, and joining Messner in scrapping for every loose ball, ripping the ball away from Granite Falls defenders with a grin on her face, Fabrizi got her points in a variety of ways.

She rained down a pair of three-pointers from well beyond the arc, one coming off of a quick in-bounds pass, while also slashing to the hoop repeatedly.

Coupeville spent most of the game making off with steals and kicking the ball out quickly, and Fabrizi was the first player out in front on almost every fast break.

The few times the duo didn’t have the ball in their hands, the Wolves were still quite effective. Madeline Strasburg converted a pair of breakaway buckets off of steals, while Monica Vidoni triggered and finished an impressive full-court play.

The junior ripped down a board, passed off to Messner, then hauled tail down court. Messner, having split two defenders, kicked the ball to Strasburg, who whirled and whipped it to Vidoni, now down in the paint, for a quick layup.

Granite Falls only weapon was an occasional trey, usually of the desperation variety.

The Tigers cut the early lead to 6-4 on a three-pointer, then hit another one — but only after the Wolves poured in 15 straight points. Granite Falls went without a two-point bucket until the final minute of the third quarter, at which point they were trailing 31-10.

Fabrizi capped her career night by pouring in seven of her 20 points in the opening moments of the fourth quarter.

Strasburg and Messner each popped for six, Vidoni and Makana Stone dropped in four apiece, Kacie Kiel swished a jumper for two and McKayla Bailey notched a free-throw to round out the scoring.

Wynter Thorne, Carlie Rosenkrance and Julia Myers all saw floor time, as well, with Myers, AKA “Elbows,” controlling the boards.

Twice she snatched rebounds away from Granite Falls players so ferociously the hapless Tiger involved ended up planted on the floor clutching nothing but the deep frown plastered on their face.

Exactly the opposite of the looks on the faces of every Wolf on a night that played out perfectly to script.

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Amanda Fabrizi (3) and Breeanna Messner.

Amanda Fabrizi (3) and Breeanna Messner as seniors.

Juniors.

Junior year artistry.

True grit.

That is what has marked the high school basketball careers of Breeanna Messner and Amanda Fabrizi.

Highly-intelligent, super-friendly, easy-going young women off the court, they do not EVER back down from their opponents on the hardwood.

It is a trait that should be greatly respected and honored as the duo play for perhaps the final time in the CHS gym tonight.

There is a chance the Wolf girls’ hoops squad (8-10) will end up playing one or more of its playoff games at home, but that’s not a given.

So tonight’s Senior Night (JV 5 PM/varsity 6:45) against Granite Falls (1-17) is a must-attend if you want to pay tribute to two of the toughest to ever put on the uniform.

And when I say that Fab and Mess are tough, I mean it as a positive.

In my time watching them, I have seen the duo poked in the eye, slammed to the floor, clocked in the back of the head and all manner of roughed-up.

Boys’ high school hoops is a far, far daintier world these days — girls beat the crud out of each other, and, frankly, complain about it a lot less than their male counterparts do.

And that’s why the Wolf duo shine brightest.

When a rebound is extra tough to snare, when a ball is on the floor skittering away, when a charge needs to be taken, Breeanna and Amanda step up.

Every single time.

They sacrifice their bodies time and again. Floor burns, black eyes, even concussions, all overcome.

They are quiet leaders, not prone to screaming at their younger teammates or ridiculing them, as some seniors on visiting teams have done this year.

That makes them better captains, frankly.

They lead by example. They show the next group of girls what it takes to be tough, to not fear another team simply because of a private school name on the jersey.

As a junior, Messner got whacked in the face, hard, as she came up-court and crumpled.

There was considerable pain on her face, but she never left the court.

Instead, she got up, blinked 1,204 times to try and clear her vision and drilled back-to-back three-point bombs to seal a Coupeville win.

Both times, she went back down-court afterwards not pumping her fists in people’s faces, but with a small, quiet smile of steel gracing her face.

Mess with Mess, and she will make you a mess, and then tell you that you played a good game afterwards and really mean it. She is class, through and through.

Fabrizi is no less tough and just as much of a class act.

She is the one who will take a last-second shot without hesitation.

The one who, time and again, slashes hard to the hoop on breakaways, throwing down little hook-shot layins and drawing fouls, never blinking or pulling back, even when she fully knows she is about to be hammered.

My favorite snapshot of Fabrizi in action came when she was a junior.

A ball bounced free. Two opposing players started to tentatively reach out for it.

Then Amanda came crashing through, slamming into the floor, arms wrapping around the ball, biceps flexing like they were made out of steel, her feet going up in the air and inadvertently kicking one of the other players in the face.

That girl never reached out for a loose ball again. Possibly ever.

There was nothing dirty about the play. Just full-on commitment to playing the way you wish every player would handle their business.

Fabrizi may have done time as a cheerleader (the same as Messner), but she can, and will, kick your butt.

That play kept alive a hard-nosed tradition handed down from the days of legendary Wolf brawlers like Jennie (Cross) Prince, Sherry (Bonacci) Roberts and Jodi (Christensen) Crimmins to today’s rough-and-tumble stars like Messner, Fabrizi, Julia “Elbows” Myers and Madeline Strasburg.

Coupeville does not have to accept second-class citizenship on the court, regardless of how much bigger or richer the opposing school is.

The Wolves can, and should, go down fighting with every ounce of their strength, even when it sparks another round of crying from the King’s coach.

You do not intentionally hurt your opponent (as some other schools are prone to doing) but you DO NOT back down, EVER.

Amanda Fabrizi and Breeanna Messner have lived that every moment they have been on a basketball court.

They deserve your applause. They deserve your respect.

When #3 and #11 walk off the court for the last time — hopefully after a long playoff run — they will do so knowing they brought great honor to the uniforms they wore.

They will be missed, but they will be remembered.

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Madeline Strasburg was the only Wolf to hit two free throws in one trip to the charity stripe Friday, as an 11-of-29 performance there cost CHS a win. (John Fisken photo)

   Madeline Strasburg was the only Wolf to consistently hit her free throws Friday, as an 11-of-29 performance at the charity stripe cost CHS a win. (John Fisken photo)

It’s official.

And while it didn’t happen exactly the way the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team would have wanted — with a win over 2A Sultan at home Friday night — it did, eventually, happen.

The Wolves are playoff bound.

A hail of fourth-quarter three-point bombs from the Turks, and 18 missed free throws by the Wolves, cost Coupeville, as a fast start trickled away in a gut-wrenching 42-39 loss.

But, the defeat, which dropped the Wolves to 8-9 overall, 4-7 in Cascade Conference play, was softened by the news South Whidbey fell 47-31 to visiting Lakewood.

The Falcons dropped to 1-10 in league play, leaving Coupeville three games up with three to play in the race for the #2 seed from their league heading into the 1A district playoffs.

Since the Wolves swept South Whidbey and own the tie-breaker, game over, man, game over.

Coupeville will host the #3 seed from the Northwest Conference (currently Mount Baker) Tuesday, Feb. 11 in the opener of the double-elimination tourney.

Four of the eight teams playing (King’s is the #1 seed from the Cascade Conference, while the NWC sends six teams) will advance to Tri-Districts.

With the postseason locked into place, the Wolves can use their final three regular season games (they travel to ATM Feb. 4, host Granite Falls for Senior Night Feb. 7 and travel to King’s Feb. 8) to fine-tune their game and correct mistakes.

Nothing looms larger right now than the team-wide inability to hit a shot from the charity stripe.

Friday night, Coupeville and Sultan each made 11 free throws. But, since Sultan is a very “hands-on” team and tends to get called for its fair share of fouls, the Wolves had 29 attempts to Sultan’s 17.

Coupeville missed its first seven free throws before Breeanna Messner slid one through the hoop, and only one player, Madeline Strasburg, was able to hit two free throws in one trip to the stripe. She did it twice, draining five of Coupeville’s 11 successful free throws.

In a back-and-forth, hard-fought affair where the Wolves led in the fourth quarter, his team’s inability to convert its freebies haunted CHS coach David King after the game.

“I told the girls, we make four of those free throws, four, and we win this game,” King said. “We have to get better at this.”

Coupeville opened the game on a tear, even while clanging its free-throws, bolting out to an 8-1 lead with four different players scoring.

Messner banked home the game’s first basket on a shot that lingered on the rim for a day and a half before flopping through the net, then Strasburg, Makana Stone and Julia Myers all knocked home quick buckets.

Sultan fought its way back into the game, but Amanda Fabrizi staked the Wolves to an 11-10 lead with a dazzling driving layin.

The senior guard, who later took a nasty poke to the head that should leave her with a black eye Saturday morning, roared into the paint with her body twisted to protect the ball from a defender, only to throw down a sweeping hook off the glass at the last second.

The Wolves made several attempts to pull away in the second and third, getting the lead up to six, only to have the plucky Turks whittle the score back down.

A Sultan team that hadn’t hit a three all game got hot from behind the arc in the fourth, raining down three daggers straight into the heart of Wolf Nation.

Suddenly down by five, it was Coupeville’s turn to rally, with a 5-2 run pulling them within 39-37.

Unfortunately, the one Turk basket was as big a heart-breaker as possible, as a Sultan player picked up a loose ball, after Stone had soundly rejected her teammate’s shot, and drained a short jumper with one tick on the shot clock.

After the refs kept things interesting by calling back-to-back traveling violations — one on each team — Sultan drained three of its final four free throws, packaged around a missed field goal from Coupeville, to seal the come-from-behind win.

Stone banked in a rebound (one of about a million that she snagged) with a second to play to cap her team-high 10 point performance, but the clock ran out before Sultan in-bounded the ball, preventing the Wolves from fouling again.

Strasburg banged home nine in support of Stone, while Fabrizi netted six before taking a shot to the face in the fourth quarter. Kacie Kiel (5), Myers (4), Messner (4) and McKayla Bailey (1) rounded out the scorers.

Monica Vidoni and Wynter Thorne also saw court time for CHS, with Vidoni getting a big roar from the crowd when she grabbed a defensive rebound, then wrenched it free with conviction when a pesky Turk tried to take it away from her.

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