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Posts Tagged ‘Barry Brown’

Bill Baas

A throwback to Baas as a high school sophomore. (Photo courtesy Jack Sell)

He was part of the brotherhood.

Bill Baas, who passed away Aug. 10 at Providence St. Peter Hospital in Olympia, remains part of the rich tapestry that is Coupeville High School boys basketball.

The Wolf hoops program, launched in 1917, has 105 seasons in the record books, and I’ve managed to identify 406 young men who put the ball through the net in a varsity game.

Baas, who was 72 and lived in Rochester, appears in the scoring totals for three of those seasons.

He dropped in nine points during the 1965-1966 season, then built on that, banking in 63 points in 66-67, and another 81 in 67-68.

Points were at a premium during that stretch, with Barry Brown leading the Wolves in scoring all three of those seasons — the only CHS boy to top the charts three times — and the current all-time scoring champ, Jeff Stone, debuting in 67-68.

For his varsity career Baas finished with 153 points, which puts him #164 all-time among CHS boys, nestled right between Geoff Wacker (154) and Ulrik Wells (152).

A celebration of life will be held in Rochester Aug. 27.

And when basketball games return this winter, Baas, like Brown, Utz Conard, and other now-departed Coupeville hoops stars, will continue to live large in the collective memories of Wolf Nation.

Part of the brotherhood, forever.

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Hawthorne Wolfe is the 27th player in 104 seasons of CHS basketball to lead a varsity team in scoring in two or more seasons — and the first to do so in non-consecutive seasons. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

In this most unusual of basketball seasons, another quirk.

With one game left to play in a pandemic-shortened season, Hawthorne Wolfe is about to do something no Coupeville High School basketball player, boy or girl, has ever accomplished.

With 240 points in 11 games — 21.8 a night — the CHS junior will lead the boys team in scoring, no matter what happens in Tuesday’s finale against Darrington.

In finishing as the #1 point producer, Wolfe becomes the 15th boy, and 27th player overall in school history, to have topped a year-end varsity scoring chart at least two times during their career.

But, he is the first to ever do it in non-consecutive seasons.

Wolfe paced Coupeville in scoring as a freshman, tossing in 158 points while Sean Toomey-Stout was second-best with 122.

Last season, Hawk came within a bucket of repeating as scoring champ, but was edged out 254-252 by senior Mason Grove.

Now, Wolfe is back on top, with Xavier Murdy angling for runner-up status with 115 points heading into the finale.

Of the 15 CHS boys to top the charts at least twice, only one, Barry Brown, led his squad in scoring three times — something Hawk can chase next year as a senior.

On the girls side of things, six Wolves have pulled off a three-peat, with Megan Smith being the only four-timer.

CHS players with two or more seasons as the top scorer:

 

Girls:

Marie Grasser (1977-1978; 1978-1979)
Kristan Hurlburt (1979-1980; 1980-1981; 1981-1982)
Judy Marti (1982-1983; 1983-1984)
Terry Perkins (1984-1985, 1985-1986; 1986-1987)
Emily Vracin (1989-1990; 1990-1991)
Novi Barron (1995-1996; 1996-1997; 1997-1998)
Tina Lyness (1998-1999; 1999-2000)
Brianne King (2000-2001; 2001-2002; 2002-2003)
Lexie Black (2003-2004; 2004-2005)
Megan Smith (2006-2007; 2007-2008; 2008-2009; 2009-2010)
Makana Stone (2013-2014; 2014-2015; 2015-2016)
Lindsey Roberts (2017-2018; 2018-2019)

 

Boys:

Tom Sahli (1952-1953; 1953-1954)
Jack Elzinga (1954-1955; 1955-1956)
Mike Criscuola (1958-1959; 1959-1960)
Denny Clark (1962-1963; 1963-1964)
Barry Brown (1965-1966; 1966-1967; 1967-1968)
Jeff Stone (1968-1969; 1969-1970)
Bill Riley (1971-1972; 1972-1973)
Randy Keefe (1973-1974; 1974-1975)
Jason McFadyen (1989-1990; 1990-1991)
Virgil Roehl (1991-1992; 1992-1993)
Chris Good (2000-2001; 2001-2002)
Mike Bagby (2004-2005; 2005-2006)
Wiley Hesselgrave (2014-2015; 2015-2016)
Hunter Smith (2016-2017; 2017-2018)
Hawthorne Wolfe (2018-2019; 2021)

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   Hunter Smith poured in 15 Friday, moving into 13th place on the Coupeville boys basketball career scoring chart. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Now, they play for pride.

Unable to recover from a large early deficit Friday after its #2 scorer was literally knocked out of the game, the Coupeville High School boys basketball squad was eliminated from playoff contention.

Falling 64-41 at Port Townsend, the Wolves drop to 3-4 in Olympic League play, 5-12 overall.

With only two boys teams advancing to the postseason this year, Klahowya (6-1) and Port Townsend (5-2) have clinched those berths.

Coupeville closes with three games next week, traveling to Sequim for a non-conference tilt Tuesday, before welcoming Klahowya to Whidbey Thursday for Senior Night.

The season finale comes next Saturday, Feb. 3, when the Wolves travel to Chimacum to face the win-less (0-7) Cowboys.

After splitting the first two games this season with Port Townsend, CHS went into Friday’s rumble hoping for a strong showing.

And while the Wolves brought consistent effort, the RedHawks were in the zone and never left.

“They came out and shot the lights out to start the game,” said Coupeville coach Brad Sherman. “And then just really took advantage of how big and solid they are inside.

“We actually played a decent game. Kind of fought and fought but just couldn’t make a big enough push to get back to even,” he added. “I think they will be really hard to beat (in the playoffs).”

With Noa Montoya dropping in 10 points in the first eight minutes, Port Townsend jumped out to a 26-10 lead which drew two exclamation points in the score-book from the home stat keeper.

The Wolves played relatively close in the second quarter (an 11-9 deficit) and fourth (a 17-14 advantage), but a cold-shooting third (a 13-5 deficit) doomed them for good.

Along with the loss, Coupeville took a body blow when senior Ethan Spark was brutalized, taking a shot to the face that left him with a gash inside his mouth, a partially-dislodged tooth and a fair amount of his blood on the court.

“He left his mark on Port Townsend, that’s for sure!,” said mom Kali Barrio.

Spark wanted to re-enter the game, but officials declined. Early indications are that he did not suffer a concussion, however.

Fellow senior Hunter Smith paced the Wolves, rattling the rims for 15 points and reaching a couple of new marks along the way.

He finished the night with 776 points, passing ’60s star Barry Brown (769) for 13th place on the CHS boys career scoring chart.

With 311 points this season, and 332 last year, Smith becomes the 13th Wolf male to put up back-to-back 300-point seasons since 1960, and the first since Mike Bagby did so in 2004-2005 and 2005-2006.

Joey Lippo backed Smith up with seven points, while Mason Grove (6), Spark (4), Hunter Downes (4), Jered Brown (3) and Kyle Rockwell (2) also scored.

JV falls short:

One bad quarter doomed the Wolf young guns in a 47-30 loss.

Coupeville’s second squad falls to 3-4 in league play, 4-12 overall.

Trailing just 10-8 at the first break, CHS was outscored 17-7 in the second quarter and never fully recovered.

After torching the RedHawks for 30+ points, and multiple three-balls, in both of the team’s previous games, Grove settled for seven free throws in limited time.

While he only played two quarters, allowing him equal time in the varsity game, the CHS sophomore topped a milestone, pushing his JV scoring to 301 points on the season.

Sage Downes led the Wolves with nine, while Ulrik Wells and Jean Lund-Olsen both dropped in four.

Jake Pease, Daniel Olson and Gavin Knoblich rounded out the scoring with a bucket apiece.

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