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Coupeville Middle School 8th grader Dominic “The Dominator” Coffman, who plays with fury and heart, while embracing the credo of Ivan Drago in Rocky IV – “I must break you!!” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The effort was there, just not the wins.

Despite some stellar plays on both ends of the court Tuesday, the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball squads couldn’t derail visiting Northshore Christian Academy.

The private school players, who arrived in town bearing the polish of AAU veterans, swept both games, then exited stage left, straggling to their bus as their coaches tried not to lose any of them in the frosty darkness.

 

7th grade:

Coupeville started strong, and finished even stronger, but suffered through a long shooting slump in the middle, eventually falling 31-21.

The loss drops CMS to 2-5 on the season.

The Wolves jumped out to a quick 2-0 lead, as Cole White coaxed a long jumper to drop.

The ball hit the rim, popped skyward, crashed back down, rolled around, hit every part of the oval, then softly plopped through as Cole, and his dad, CMS coach Greg White, both exhaled in unison.

Another bucket from the younger of the White duo, this one off of a give-and-go, knotted the game up at 4-4, but then the Wolf offense dried up as suddenly as it had blossomed.

Other than a picture-perfect free throw from Mikey Robinett, his first varsity point, the Wolves failed to score over a six-minute stretch, eventually falling behind 15-5 early in the second quarter.

Coupeville’s top shooting star, Logan Downes, finally broke the hex on the rim, rattling home a runner while slashing up the middle.

But then the Wolves went another 10+ minutes before their next field goal.

Defense kept Coupeville semi-close, with Ryan Blouin, Timothy Nitta and Nick Guay relentlessly harassing Northshore’s guards, while Zane Oldenstadt, William Davidson and Quinten Pilgrim formed a formidable trio on the boards.

While the visitors were kept from totally running away with the game, they did stretch the margin out to 16 after a soft jumper a minute into the fourth quarter made the game 27-11.

It was then, in the blink of an eye, that Coupeville’s offense finally clicked into gear.

Pushing the ball hard at the hoop, the Wolves closed the game on a 10-4 run, with Downes, playing with a broken bone in his left hand, hitting three buckets on a variety of moves.

Pilgrim and Oldenstadt pounded away down low, with each recording a basket off of an offensive rebound, helping CMS finish with a nice display of fury and heart.

Downes topped the Wolves with 10 points, and it will be a blow if his hurt hand brings his campaign to an early close. Seven games into the 10-game season, he has outscored the rest of his teammates 90-77.

White, who had six against NCA, is Coupeville’s #2 scoring option this season, with 31 points, while Oldenstadt (2), Pilgrim (2) and Robinett (1), who was also a whirlwind on defense Tuesday, rounded out the scoring attack.

 

8th grade:

The tone was set early in this one, as Northshore fired out to an 11-0 lead, then romped to a 46-18 victory.

The Wolves, who are 1-6 heading into back-to-back road games at Sultan and South Whidbey, finally got on the scoreboard thanks to an electric move from Dominic Coffman.

The ever-rampaging “Dominator” shot right at the heart of the NCA defense, then fell back as he elevated, arcing his shot up and over his defender’s outstretched hand.

At which point the ball lightly kissed the glass and banked home to the delight of Wolf fans.

After that, it became the Alex Wasik show, as one of Coupeville’s hardest workers and all-out hustlers got a rare chance to showcase his offensive skill-set.

He slipped a free-throw through the net to center himself, then banged home a pair of buckets off of rebounds he ripped away from taller rival players.

Coupeville’s buckets were spread out too far apart to allow the Wolves much chance to rally, but what they did hit was often pretty.

Mitchell Hall drained a jumper, Coffman hit a pair of running one-handers, turning steals into breakaway buckets, and Kevin Partida capped things with a one-man assault.

Taking a pass on the right, Partida wheeled back to the left, weaved his way through a dense forest of defenders, then threw down a bank shot that caught glass and spun home with a happy little plop.

Mixed in between those buckets were two defensive gems, one that worked, and one that almost blew up the world.

The one that worked came when Levi Pulliam timed his jump perfectly, snagging a Northshore shot just as the player was ready to let it fly.

Instead, Pulliam, still airborne, clamped on to the ball, forcibly dragging the shooter down and getting the ball back for the Wolves when the refs whistled a jump ball.

The second play was your classic “if I hurt myself, I hurt myself, cause I’m a beast” play from Coffman.

Flying in from the side, he poked a ball free, then, as every other player came to a halt, went running full-bore for the sideline, trying to flag it down.

With his team down by 20+ points, Coffman showed why Coupeville High School coaches will be thrilled to welcome him to the next level.

His heart is too big for his chest, and his desire burns a hole through his jersey.

And, if that means sliding across the floor on your knees and almost pasting your face off the scorekeeper’s table, that’s how legends are born.

While Coffman ultimately wasn’t successful in saving the ball, he was a bulldog on both ends of the floor, with his team-high six points but a small part of his contributions.

Wasik joined him in the six-point club, while Partida banked home four and Hall singed the nets for two.

Alex Murdy, Jesse Wooten and Josh Upchurch rounded out the active roster Tuesday, with Wooten handling a fair chunk of the point guard duties, Upchurch crashing the boards and Murdy kick-starting Coupeville’s fast break time and again.

 

What I’d like to believe Dominic Coffman says before every basketball game:

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Kylie Chernikoff had a team-high seven rebounds and three steals Monday, as the Coupeville JV went toe-to-toe with 2A Sequim. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s all about the lessons.

Do you take them in? Do you build on them? Do they foster growth?

The Coupeville High School JV girls basketball squad is young (11 of 14 players are freshmen) and still finding its way.

So, while losses like the 35-20 defeat the Wolves absorbed Monday in Sequim hurt in the moment, they can be the start of something bigger as athletes adjust to the difference between high school ball and what came before.

“Attitude and effort are the only things in life you can control,” said Coupeville coach Amy King, and it’s a stark truth.

While the non-conference loss to a 2A school drops the Wolves to 0-2 on the season, they can look to how they responded in the second half as a positive to build on.

Coupeville could not get a shot to drop for much of the first half Monday, with buckets from Kylie Chernikoff and Anya Leavell the only small solace in a 19-4 deficit.

The Wolves struggled to break Sequim’s half-court man press, which made it hard to even get shots launched.

“We had turnover after turnover,” King said. “Passing the ball into the waiting hands of Sequim, who used that to fast break.”

Things took a turn for the positive after Coupeville coaches delivered a halftime pep talk/come to God moment.

“We challenged the team to get out of their own heads and start playing basketball,” King said. “The energy needed to elevate from everybody, talk on defense and get scrappy.”

And scrappy they got, as Leavell and Kiara Contreras led a defensive stand, going after the ball with ramped-up intensity instead of sitting back and letting the play come to them.

With Chernikoff, Ja’Kenya Hoskins and Abby Mulholland cleaning the boards with authority, CHS pushed the flow of the game, playing Sequim even in the second half (16-16), while winning the battle in the fourth quarter 10-4.

“We were stirring up some energy, started moving the ball better and getting open shots,” King said. “We moved the ball like we knew how, and we changed our press break enough to get a few longer passes down the court, which made their defense scramble a little bit.

“If we had played that way in the first half, the game may have turned out a little different.”

Izzy Wells paced the Wolves with eight points, all coming in the second half, while snagging six rebounds.

Leavell netted six, with Chernikoff, Mollie Bailey and Hoskins adding two points apiece to round out the Wolf scoring.

Coupeville’s leader on the glass was the always hard-charging Chernikoff, who ripped down seven rebounds to go with her team-high three steals.

Hoskins added six boards, with Contreras and Kylie Van Velkinburgh each doling out two assists.

All 11 CHS girls in uniform Monday played, with Alana Mihill, Lily Leedy and Morgan Stevens also seeing floor time.

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Ema Smith tallied seven points Monday at Sequim, achieving a personal scoring milestone. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Some nights it’s better to look at the small moments instead of gazing too long at the big picture.

There was likely a fair amount of frustration Monday, as the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team got pounded on the boards, went scoreless for an entire quarter and fell by a considerable margin to host Sequim.

After absorbing a 50-24 defeat at the hands of their 2A foes, keyed by a 21-0 third quarter, the Wolves sit at 0-3 on the still-young season.

But, there were positives buried in the aftermath.

For one, Coupeville rallied in the fourth quarter, winning pride points by closing the game on a 9-4 surge.

And secondly, two Wolf seniors exited the gym having achieved at least a small triumph, as both made moves on the school’s all-time scoring list.

Lindsey Roberts, back after a college trip, led Coupeville with 10 points, which gives her 316 for her career.

She sits in 35th place in program history (1975-2018), and is just 16 points from sliding into the top 30 all-time.

Her running mate, Ema Smith, added seven Monday, cracking the 100-point barrier, becoming just the 97th Wolf female to achieve triple digits in 44 seasons of hardwood play.

So, some grace notes.

Other than that, it was a fairly rough night, as Coupeville struggled at the free-throw line, hitting just 5-20, was out-muscled on the glass and couldn’t slow their foe down.

Sequim built a 13-5 lead after one quarter, stretched the margin out to 15 points midway through the second, and settled for a 25-15 advantage at the half.

Then, disaster.

“Coming out for the third, we didn’t get it done defensively and they had three quick and easy open looks at the basket for scores,” said Coupeville coach David King. “From then on, it was an all-out blitz for Sequim.

“Defensively, we are struggling and just not playing well on that end.”

The Wolves dug deep in the fourth, something their coach wants to build on.

“Some pride took over; it shows we have fight despite the score,” King said. “We have to keep pushing forward and continue to fight like we did tonight.

“It’s going to be baby steps and it starts tomorrow at practice.”

Roberts snagged a team-high nine rebounds and made off with five steals to go with her 10 points, while Ema Smith had seven points and six boards.

Avalon Renninger (4), Tia Wurzrainer (2) and Chelsea Prescott (1) rounded out the scoring, while Hannah Davidson yanked down seven rebounds, Ja’Kenya Hoskins collected five and Scout Smith hauled in four.

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Coupeville’s Sean Toomey-Stout tossed in seven points Monday at Sequim. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Closer and closer, but just not there yet.

The Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball squad has played three games this season, and cut their deficit in each outing.

Now they just need a win.

Attempt #3 went well for 16 minutes, as the Wolves carried a six-point lead in at the break Monday at Sequim, but a cold-shooting second half ultimately doomed them.

Only down by one after three quarters, Coupeville was outscored 14-7 by their hosts and fell 38-30.

The non-conference loss drops CHS to 0-3 on the season, but opportunity lurks, as the Wolves have two more games this week.

“We’ll get there,” said Coupeville coach Brad Sherman. “Just need to get our offense rolling. Shots will start to fall.”

Defense was the name of the game in the first half, as the Wolves held Sequim to single digits, heading to the locker room up 15-9.

After a 5-5 stalemate in the first, Coupeville rode the sweet shooting touch of Hawthorne Wolfe in the second frame.

A pair of buckets and a pair of free throws gave the fab frosh six in the quarter, letting him outscore his rivals by himself.

Unfortunately, while the Wolves doubled their output, scoring another 15 points after the break, Sequim ripped off 29, winning the quarter battles 15-8 and 14-7.

The hosts nailed five of their seven three-point bombs in the second half, and with Coupeville’s lone trey coming courtesy Wolfe in the fourth quarter, that tipped the scales a bit.

Both teams were fairly even at the free-throw line, as Sequim hit 5-7 and CHS finished 5-9.

Wolfe led Coupeville in scoring for the second time in three games, pouring in 11, while junior Sean Toomey-Stout banked home seven in support.

With 26 points apiece, the duo are tied atop the season scoring chart.

Ulrik Wells and Jered Brown added four points apiece in support, while Gavin Knoblich swished a pair of free throws and senior captain Dane Lucero knocked down his first bucket of the season.

Coupeville, which also gave floor time to Mason Grove, Jacobi Pilgrim, Jean Lund-Olsen and Koa Davison, has played teams from three separate classifications, and will soon make it four.

Oak Harbor is 3A, The Bush School 1A and Sequim 2A, while the next two foes, Friday Harbor and Orcas Island, hail from 2B.

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Daniel Olson torched Sequim for 25 points Monday as the Coupeville boys JV hoops squad won its second-straight game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

You can’t stop Daniel Olson, and you can’t contain him. All you can do is try and get out of his way.

The Coupeville High School sophomore found his groove Monday and didn’t stop at merely singing the nets while playing in Sequim.

Instead, Olson burnt the whole joint down, tickling the twines for a season-high 25 to spark the Wolf JV to a 58-43 win over their 2A foes.

The road non-conference victory lifts the Coupeville young guns to 2-1 on the still-young season.

Olson’s outburst, the most points dropped by any Wolf, boy or girl, varsity or JV, this year, was spread out across all four quarters.

He banked home four buckets in the first quarter, added five points in the second, tossed in another four in the third, then exited with a bang, flicking eight through the net in the final period.

That fourth-quarter assault included a pair of long three-balls, as Olson continued to drop bombs even while headed back to the bus.

Most of his scoring help came from the Rampagin’ Rickner Brothers, as sophomore TJ went for a career-high 10 and freshman Grady rattled the rims for a season-best eight.

The Rickners combined to hit three treys, with the younger brother “winning” that battle 2-1.

Logan Martin added seven points, Tucker Hall banked home four, while Cody Roberts and Miles Davidson rounded out the offensive explosion with a bucket apiece.

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