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Posts Tagged ‘Anthony Bergeron’

An extremely nice guy off the floor, Wolf senior Anthony Beregron is all business when he's rejecting shots on the court. (John Fisken photos)

Anthony Bergeron (John Fisken photos)

Nick Streubel, not exactly the shyest guy on the team.

Nick Streubel

They came from different backgrounds, but finished their high school hoops careers at the same place.

Nick Streubel was a football player first, last and always, an All-State lineman who nabbed a college football scholarship.

He played basketball to help his friends and grew into a force in the paint, a guy who crashed the boards but had a sweet touch on little inside shots.

Anthony Bergeron came late to organized ball, only playing the final two years of high school.

But he went from a raw work-in-progress as a junior to a high-flyin’ highlight show capable of filling the basket up big time as a senior.

Now, both of the Coupeville High School seniors bow out sharing the same honor, as the duo were were tabbed for Honorable Mention selection by league coaches when All-Cascade Conference voting was held Monday.

Bergeron twice topped 20 points in a game this year, scoring 23 in a win over Lakewood, while Streubel put the ever-lovin’ fear of God into any player that had to try and hold his ground against The Big Hurt.

Led by the duo, the Wolves improved in wins for the second straight season.

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Anthony Bergeron swoops in for two. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Anthony Bergeron swoops in for two. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Joel Walstad was one of three underclassmen to make the top five in scoring. (John Fisken photo)

Joel Walstad was one of three underclassmen to make the top five in scoring. (John Fisken photo)

Anthony Bergeron wasted no time.

In his first year as a varsity player, the Coupeville High School senior became the go-to scorer for the Wolves in 2013-2014.

Swooping to the hoop with a variety of silky-smooth moves, he twice broke 20 in a game (topping out with 23) and led CHS in scoring.

Six of the team’s 10 scorers, including three of the top five (Wiley Hesselgrave, Aaron Trumbull and Joel Walstad) were underclassmen, leaving behind a strong core as the Wolves make the transition from the 1A/2A Cascade Conference to the 1A Olympic League.

Varsity scoring stats (for league games):

Anthony Bergeron (162)
Wiley Hesselgrave
(131)
Nick Streubel
(98)
Aaron Trumbull
(70)
Joel Walstad (67)
Gavin O’Keefe
(57)
Morgan Payne
(55)
Matt Shank
(24)
Gabe Wynn
(3)
Oscar Liquidano (1)

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Anthony Bergeron (John Fisken photos)

Anthony Bergeron (John Fisken photos)

Gavin O'Keefe

Gavin O’Keefe

It was a season of improvement.

The Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad jumped from one win a year ago (and zero the season before) to three victories in 2013-2014.

The Wolves knocked off Mount Vernon Christian, Orcas Island and 2A league foe Lakewood, while coming close in a string of other games.

Now, as CHS, the smallest 1A school in the state, prepares to leave the 1A/2A Cascade Conference and join a four-team 1A-only division in the Olympic League next year, the seniors who led them through their final battles against ATM and King’s are looking back.

Coupeville had four twelfth graders this year (Nick Streubel, Gavin O’Keefe, Morgan Payne and Anthony Bergeron) and two of them have put their thoughts down.

The other two may follow (depending on their schedules).

Sweet-shooting guard O’Keefe missed part of the season (on top of 99% of his junior year) while fighting back from two broken legs, but, once back, was a whirlwind on the floor.

High-flying Bergeron, who has only played organized ball for two seasons, took huge strides as a senior, becoming a dangerous scorer capable of dunking in the open floor.

O’Keefe:

Even though my season didn’t go as as well as I hoped it would, I really enjoyed it and am very thankful that I got to come back for the second half of the season.

My favorite moment came when we beat Lakewood for our first conference win in three years.

One thing I will remember, is Coach (Anthony) Smith pushing me hard every day in practice; that’s something that I really appreciate and it definitely made me a lot better.

Bergeron:

Of my two basketball seasons this has been my favorite.

This year we really competed in just about every game.

The highlight of the year to me would have to be when we won our first conference game against Lakewood — that game I scored my career high of 23 points.

I will never forget my teammates and coaches.

Big thanks to Coach Smith. From day one he has always coached me hard to make me a better player.

I am really going to miss playing for Coupeville.

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Morgan Payne was one of four Wolf seniors to play their final game Thursday. (John Fisken photos)

Morgan Payne was one of four Wolf seniors to play their final game Thursday. (John Fisken photos)

Anthony Bergeron hit for a team-high 17 at Granite Falls.

Anthony Bergeron hit for a team-high 17 at Granite Falls.

An old enemy hurt the Wolves one final time Thursday night.

Too often this season third quarter blues derailed strong starts for the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad. Playing in their season finale at Granite Falls, it was more of the same.

Up by five at the half, the Wolves were outscored 22-7 coming out of the locker room and couldn’t recover, taking a 76-54 loss.

The defeat, coming in the squad’s final-ever Cascade Conference game — CHS leaves the 1A/2A league in the fall to join a new 1A-only division in the Olympic League — dropped Coupeville’s final record to 3-17 overall, 1-13 in league play.

With a league win at Lakewood and non-conference home victories over Mount Vernon Christian and Orcas Island, the Wolves tripled their win total from the past two seasons (1) combined.

The Wolves, who were led by Anthony Bergeron’s team-high 17, built a 35-30 lead through the first 16 minutes of play.

But the host Tigers, playing on their Senior Night, rallied to take control in the second half, rolling to a 46-19 advantage over the final two quarters.

Sophomore Wiley Hesselgrave poured in 15 to back Bergeron, while Nick Streubel pounded down low for 10. Gavin O’Keefe (5), Morgan Payne (3), Aaron Trumbull (2) and Matt Shank (2) rounded out the Wolf scorers.

It was the final game in the red and black for Coupeville’s four seniors — Bergeron, Streubel, O’Keefe and Payne.

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Wolf seniors (l to r) Morgan Payne, Gavin O'Keefe, Nick Streubel and Anthony Bergeron with CHS coach Anthony Smith. (John Fisken photo)

 Wolf seniors (l to r) Morgan Payne, Gavin O’Keefe, Nick Streubel and Anthony Bergeron with CHS coach Anthony Smith. (John Fisken photo)

Nick Streubel went out like the gridiron beast he is.

Three years of sacrificing his lineman’s body on the basketball hardwood came to 99.8% of an end Tuesday night, as The Big Hurt and three fellow Coupeville High School seniors played at home for the last time.

And while their almost-swan song (they have a final road game at Granite Falls Thursday) didn’t end with a win, it ended with a bang.

Or, more aptly, a sonic boom as Streubel launched himself onto the floor in pursuit of a loose ball, knocking three Archbishop Thomas Murphy players out of his way and off their feet as he relentlessly pursued the fumble.

And then, as it has ever been so for three years, the refs called a foul on the biggest kid on the floor for being, well, the biggest kid on the floor.

When Streubel made his final walk back to the bench near the end of a 78-50 loss, the Wolf fans rose and gave him a sustained standing ovation, tribute to a young man who kept on coming back, game after game, loss after loss, for three years.

A guy who has a college football scholarship waiting to sign Wednesday, but would not, could not, leave his friends behind.

Shortly after Streubel fouled out, Wolf coach Anthony Smith pulled his other three seniors so they could exit as a group.

Morgan Payne, one of the hardest working players you will ever see, and the overwhelming choice of Brian Norris and the Bad-ass Party as the next President.

Anthony Bergeron, who in only two years of organized ball went from a polite, soft-spoken diamond in the rough to a high-flying, shot-blocking, point-scoring whirlwind … while still being polite and soft-spoken.

Gavin O’Keefe, who looked like he stepped out of the movie “Hoosiers” and, unfortunately, lost way too much time over the last season-and-a-half to two broken legs.

When he was on the court, he was electric. I wish we could have seen him more.

Playing one of the better teams in the Cascade Conference, the Wolf seniors and their younger teammates never collapsed Tuesday. There was no one big quarter, just a steady drip-drip-drip of ATM baskets that eventually became too much to overcome.

Coupeville stayed within 10 for much of the first half, but every time the Wolves made a mini-run, the visiting Wildcats would answer with two or three buckets in a row off of quick, slashing drives to the hoop.

ATM’s full-court press ruffled Coupeville, as well, forcing 24 turnovers and turning most of them into baskets.

Wolf sophomore Wiley Hesselgrave scored 10 of his team-high 16 in the second half, while Bergeron threw down 11, including a long three-point bomb.

Joel Walstad hit a pair of treys on his way to eight, while Streubel pounded home six and Aaron Trumbull, Matt Shank and O’Keefe each hit for three.

JV loses: In the night’s opening game, Coupeville got 12 from CJ Smith and 11 from Jared Helmstadter, but lost 78-36 in a game that got way out of hand at the end.

Dante Mitchell and Gabe Wynn each popped for four, DeAndre Mitchell banked home three and Oscar Liquidano drained a turn-around jumper off the glass for two.

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