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William Davidson was a force on defense Monday as the Coupeville Middle School 7th grade basketball squad routed King’s. (Photo courtesy Charlotte Young)

Get hit? Hit back harder.

It’s a philosophy which worked extremely well for the Coupeville Middle School 7th grade boys basketball squad Monday, as the Wolves weathered the best visiting King’s could throw its way, then dropped a devastating hay-maker in return.

Turning a tie game into a blowout, the CMS young guns romped to a season-opening win, kicking off a new season of hoops action in grand style.

While an undermanned 8th grade Wolf squad couldn’t keep the good times rolling, Coupeville will take the split and move on, ready to battle through a 10-game season.

 

7th grade goes bonkers:

It’s not too often you can go scoreless as a team from the final minute of the first quarter to the opening moments of the third, and win. Much less be on the positive end of a blowout.

And yet that’s just what the young Wolves did as they turned a 10-10 stalemate into a 28-13 victory romp.

The explosion, when it came, was brutally efficient, with the run ‘n gun twins, Logan Downes and Cole White, combining to drop 15 points in a game-deciding 18-0 surge.

For one second, King’s looked good. But it was a very short second.

The Knights point guard used a roll to the rim to bank home a runner on the first possession of the third quarter, capping a comeback from an early 7-0 deficit.

Knotting the game at 10, the bucket stretched Coupeville’s scoreless streak to nine-plus minutes, a time when decent CMS shots found a million ways to refuse to go down.

It would have been easy for the fairly-green Wolves to break under pressure, but early signs point to this bunch being a resilient group.

Without blinking, Downes hauled in a pass, flicked a trey through the bottom of the net, then immediately turned and sprinted back down court.

That shot, and Coupeville’s dynamic defense over the remainder of the third quarter, caused King’s to fracture.

With White, Downes, Ryan Blouin and Nick Guay relentlessly harassing the Knight ball-handlers, turnovers began to happen at a rapid rate.

When the ball did hit the rim, Zane Oldenstadt, William Davidson and Mike Robinett cleaned the glass ferociously, kick-starting Wolf fast-breaks. And once the points started falling, they arrived in a tsunami.

White knifed through a pair of defenders to slap home a layup off of a steal, then Downes pulled off almost a mirror image play.

Not content to stop with two-point buckets, the duo hit back-to-back three-balls, with White torching the net from the left side, before Downes rained down sweet pain from the far right corner.

After scoring the opening bucket of the third, King’s went scoreless for 10+ minutes.

Facing a withering Wolf D, the Knights didn’t put points on the board again until there were less than three minutes left in the game.

By that point, Oldenstadt had muscled his way in for a bucket in the paint to kick off the fourth quarter, stretching the lead all the way out to 28-10.

The frantic finish matched Coupeville’s sizzling start, when the Wolves rode a pair of buckets from Blouin and a long three-pointer from Downes — set-up by a Guay steal — out to a 7-0 lead.

Davidson added a free throw, after spending much of the first quarter diving on the floor in pursuit of loose balls, then Downes slapped home a breakaway layup to stake the Wolves to a 10-5 lead at the first break

The second quarter was surprisingly low-scoring, with a King’s three ball at the 1:47 mark the only change to the scoreboard.

In the end, it didn’t matter, as Coupeville’s explosive offense and barbed defense proved too much for the Knights.

“The defensive effort and rebounding were impressive from the whole team,” CMS coach Greg White said. “There was a lot of promising play from our boys and great support from the fans.”

Downes paced the Wolves, and outscored King’s by himself, with a game-high 15.

White banked home five, Blouin knocked down four, Oldenstadt banged inside for three and Davidson’s free throw put the final exclamation point on the scoring chart.

Robinett and Guay were joined by Quinten Pilgrim and Timothy Nitta in providing able support for Greg White and assistant coaches Michael Davidson and Arik Garthwaite.

 

8th grade learns under fire:

King’s older squad, while not equal to some of the juggernauts the private school has brought to town in the past, was still explosive enough to run away with a 50-20 win.

Mixing strong work on the boards with a dagger from three-point land, the Knights scored the first 13 points of the game, putting the Wolves on their heel.

Coupeville finally got on the board when Alex Murdy slashed the back-pedaling defense for a running layup, but that was all he and his team could eke out in a rough first quarter.

Trailing 19-2 headed into the second, the Wolves stayed much closer after they found their offensive rhythm.

Murdy banked home a team-high 11 points, adding three in the second and another six in the third.

The prettiest play from the nephew of former Wolf scoring ace Allen Black arrived early in the second quarter, when Murdy pump-faked a defender out of his high tops, then spun to the hoop for a swooping lay-in.

Dominic Coffman added five points to the CMS cause, including dropping a long three-ball from a step or two outside the parking lot, while Ty Hamilton tickled the twines for a pair of buckets to round out the scoring.

Levi Pulliam, Kevin Partida, Josh Upchurch, Alex Wasik, Jesse Wooten and James Hall also saw floor time for Wolf coach Dante Mitchell and assistants Mikayla Elfrank and DeAndre Mitchell.

 

Support crew soars:

Opening nights are sometimes rough, but Coupeville’s trio on the scorer’s table — score-book sage Nicole Laxton, clock operator Ema Smith and Head of Security Ashley Menges — were flawless in the spotlight.

Well, 99% flawless.

There was one preening lil’ punk of a King’s 8th grader who needed someone to reach over and slap the top-knot off of his frequently-annoying head.

But, alas, today’s high schoolers continually prove themselves to be more polite than the ones I grew up with, so, in 2018, not all of my day-dreams get to come true…

On the other hand, I did get free potato chips from the young children of Allen and Mandi (Murdy) Black and free chocolate from Charlotte Young, so I had that going for me, which was nice.

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Lauren Marrs lines up a shot Saturday as Coupeville’s SWISH hoops squad romps to a season-opening win. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolf coaches Lark Gustafson (left) and Ryan Georges monitor the action.

Carolyn Lhamon stops ‘n pops.

The future of Wolf hoops is here, and it’s already rampaging on the hardwood.

Balanced scoring and a killer third quarter equals victory.

At least it did Saturday for the Coupeville 8th grade SWISH girls basketball squad, which bounced Mount Vernon Christian 26-18 in its season-opener.

Busting open a tied game, the Wolves used a 9-2 run in the third, with five players scoring, to claim the victory.

The big shot came from Lauren Marrs, who knocked down a three-ball, while Gwen Gustafson and Brionna Blouin added buckets of their own.

Savina Wells and Maddie Georges each slipped a free throw through the net to round out Coupeville’s third-quarter outburst.

Georges had the hot hand early, hitting a pair of first-quarter buckets as the Wolves went to the first break up 8-7.

After MVC knotted things at 12-12 at the half, Coupeville responded in grand fashion in the third, than held on behind the play of Carolyn Lhamon in a see-saw fourth quarter.

Lhamon led the Wolves with six points and 14 rebounds, while Georges (5), Brionna Blouin (4), Marrs (3), Alita Blouin (3), Hayley Fielder (2), Gustafson (2), and Wells (1) all put points on the board.

Ryanne Knoblich was a terror on defense for Coupeville, and Wells, who is just a 6th grader, snagged nine boards.

 

To see more photos by John Fisken (and maybe buy some glossies for grandma), pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2018-2019-boys-and-girls/7th8th-AAU-GBB-2018-11-03-vs-MVC

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CHS grad Makana Stone snagged a game-high nine rebounds Saturday in a double-overtime women’s basketball thriller. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Exhibition or not, this one was a thriller.

Neither Whitman College or Central Washington University will count Saturday’s women’s basketball rumble in their win/loss record, but both teams fought like it was a playoff game.

By the time the dust had settled, Central Washington, riding a 27-point performance from Taylor Shaw, held off pesky Whitman to snatch a 80-76 victory in double-overtime.

Coupeville grad Makana Stone helped spark the Blues, scoring six points and grabbing a game-high nine rebounds as she and her NCAA DIII team held their own with the DII Wildcats.

Whitman actually led for most of the game, holding a two-point advantage after one quarter before stretching the margin to 10 heading into the fourth.

Central Washington stormed back on its home court in Ellensburg, however, using a 21-11 run in the final quarter to give the fans free basketball.

Once in overtime, the teams exchanged daggers.

With Whitman holding a three-point lead and time running out in regulation, the Wildcats channeled the Golden State Warriors.

Kaelie Flores knocked down a three-ball under heavy pressure with just six ticks to play to knot things ups, while Whitman’s own trey attempt at the buzzer rimmed out.

The first five-minute overtime was all about Shaw, who knocked down nine straight points, including a three-point play the hard way to stake Central to a late two-point lead.

Whitman’s Mady Burdett answered, draining a pair of pressure-packed free throws with 26 seconds to play, tying the game while keeping fans in their seats and the lights on in the gym.

In the second OT, the game was decided in the game’s final minute.

Clinging to a one-point lead, Central hit the front end of a one-and-one opportunity at the free throw line, but bounced the second attempt off the iron.

Snatching the offensive board, the Wildcats missed the put-back, but hauled down a second carom, this time banking a shot to stretch the lead out to where it finished, at four points.

Stone, a junior, added two steals and an assist, while Burdett paced the Blues with 23 points.

After playing two exhibition games, Whitman opens the season, and starts counting wins and losses, next Saturday, Nov. 10, when it plays at Eastern Oregon University.

The Blues, who have made back-to-back NCAA tournament appearances with Stone in the lineup, have a 25-game regular season schedule.

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Coupeville grad Makana Stone went for 11 points and 10 rebounds Thursday as she kicked off her junior season at Whitman College. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Year three begins.

Coupeville High School grad Makana Stone returned to the hardwood Thursday, kicking off her junior season at Whitman College by posting a double-double in a women’s basketball exhibition game.

The Blues, moving into a new era after the graduation of All-American Casey Poe, fell 68-58 to Lewis-Clark State College while playing in Lewiston, ID.

Stone played strongly in the loss, however, banking home 11 points and pulling down a game-high 10 rebounds. She added a steal, block and assist, checking all the boxes.

Neither this game, or Whitman’s next, an exhibition road game in Ellensburg against Central Washington University, count in the standings.

The first game which affects the ol’ win/loss record arrives Nov. 10, when the Blues travel to La Grande, OR for a non-conference bout with Eastern Oregon University.

While this was Whitman’s first action of the season, Lewis-Clark already had two games, and two wins, under its belt.

A tall team, with nine of its 12 players measuring 5-foot-10 or taller, the Warriors were led by Jossilyn Blackman, a Washington state transplant (Battle Ground HS) who led all scorers with 21 points.

The game was a back-and-forth affair until the fourth quarter, with Whitman up by a bucket at the half and still clinging to a 39-37 lead late in the third quarter.

Lewis-Clark pulled ahead by one, then used a three-ball from Hannah Burland to exit the third up 46-42.

Stone cut the lead back to a single bucket when she knocked down the first basket of the fourth quarter, but an immediate three-pointer from Abbie Johnson essentially sealed things.

Whitman never got closer than four down the stretch, and Lewis-Clark closed the game effectively.

Mady Burdett scorched the nets for 17 to pace Whitman, while Taylor Chambers came off the bench to bank 10, giving the Blues three players in double-digit scoring.

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Levi Pulliam (second from left) and Alex Murdy (far right) return for another CMS basketball season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The shoes are squeaking on gym floors, the basketball is pounding on the hardwood, and the start of a new season is days away.

The Coupeville Middle School boys hoops squads are the first to take the floor this year, kicking off a 10-game season at home Monday, Nov. 5 at 3:15 against King’s.

Leading the way for the Wolves are 8th grade coach Dante Mitchell, returning for his second season as a CMS coach, and Greg White, who makes his debut as the 7th grade guru.

The 20-man roster as it sits today:

8th:

Dominic Coffman
James Hall
Alex Murdy
Kevin Partida
Levi Pulliam
Josh Upchurch
Alex Wasik
Jesse Wooten

7th:

Ryan Blouin
Alex Clark
William Davidson
Logan Downes
Nathan Ginnings
(manager)
Nick Guay
Timothy Nitta
Zane Oldenstadt
Michael Robinett
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim
Chris Villarreal
Cole White
Justin Wilkinson
Andrew Williams

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