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Alex Murdy dropped a team-high seven points Thursday for the CMS 8th grade hoops squad. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Cole White (5) sets a screen for Ryan Blouin during 7th grade action. (Morgan White photo)

Sometimes you hit the road, and sometimes, the road hits right back.

The Coupeville Middle School boys basketball squads trekked off to Everett Thursday, only to return with a pair of losses after running into talented Northshore Christian Academy teams.

The defeats drop the Wolf 7th graders to 1-1 and the CMS 8th graders to 0-2.

Coupeville, which has opened with back-to-back bouts against private schools, gets its first crack at a fellow public school next Tuesday, Nov. 13.

Sultan will make the trip to Whidbey, and action kicks off at 3:15 PM.

 

Thursday action:

 

7th grade:

Northshore only got scoring from three players, but when one of those hardwood assassins goes off for 32 points, that’s all you need.

Pulling away after a close first quarter, the hosts dealt Coupeville a 43-31 loss.

The game was a nail-biter at the first break, with CMS down just 10-9, but Northshore used 13-6 runs in both the second and third quarter to break things open.

Proving they wouldn’t go down easily, the scrappy Wolves rebounded to close the game on a 10-7 run in the fourth.

While he couldn’t quite match the output of Northshore’s top gunner, Logan Downes led CMS with a season-high 17 points.

Ryan Blouin chipped in with seven, while Cole White, William Davidson and Zane Oldenstadt added two points apiece.

Quinten Pilgrim notched a free-throw to cap Coupeville’s scoring attack.

Nick Guay, Mike Robinett and Timothy Nitta also saw floor time for the Wolves.

 

8th grade:

The final score has been lost to the mists of time (yes, already) as a road score-keeper failed to keep track of all the buckets.

Suffice it to say, the Wolves lost, and by a considerable margin, and, with that, we’ll move on and not worry about it.

Alex Murdy paced CMS with a team-high seven points, banking home a pair of three-balls in the third quarter.

Mitchell Hall provided back-up with four, Kevin Partida sank a trey and Dominic Coffman tickled the twines for a free throw to round out the scoring.

Levi Pulliam, Josh Upchurch, Jesse Wooten, Ty Hamilton and Alex Wasik rounded out the Wolf squad.

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The real world has taken Ashlie Shank away from Coupeville, but she will always be a part of Wolf Nation. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Shank, back in the day, hanging with (l to r) Brisa Herrera, Emma Smith and Sarah Wright.

Not everyone gets the finish they deserve.

Ashlie Shank should be four days away from her first basketball practice at Coupeville High School, a season away from bouncing at the line with her relay teammates, stalking track and field glory, months from walking with them at graduation.

It’s the way it should be. But sometimes real life intrudes on the fairy tale.

You can’t fault her father, Dr. Jim Shank, for accepting a promotion and moving on to a far bigger school system. It’s the life of a Superintendent, especially one who truly makes a difference at each landing spot.

But I feel for Ashlie, who arrived in Coupeville as a middle school student and began her high school journey with the CHS Class of 2019.

Over the course of her time here, as two of her older siblings, brothers Matt and Brian, graduated from CHS, the youngest child in the Shank household made remarkable strides.

She found a band of friends, or, more realistically, sisters, and Ashlie grew into a more-confident young woman, in the sports world and outside of it.

On the basketball court, her quiet intensity paid off, as she became a go-to player for the Wolf JV – one who could, and would, step up and drill a game-winning shot at the buzzer.

Take a sec and go relive the moment at https://coupevillesports.com/2015/12/11/klahowya-you-got-shanked/

Her hustle, her work ethic, her commitment, was rewarded with a varsity jersey during her junior season, when she became a swing player.

If the Shanks hadn’t moved across the country, Ashlie would walk through the CHS gym doors this coming Monday intent on winning a full-time varsity slot. And it would have been one she earned.

In the track and field world, she made it to state in the 4 x 100 and 4 x 200, winning respect from her teammates and coaches along the way.

At one point, I polled CHS coaches on the best athletes they had worked with, and this is what one had to say:

I feel that Ashlie Shank is the most underrated athlete that I coached.

This girl was a sleeper and for some reason it seemed that no one expected much from her, but she expected so much from herself and worked so hard to get to where she was before she left.

She was very consistent in her times and she continued to bring them down by working hard, harder than some of the best athletes on the team.

She was essential to her relays and amazing on her own. She knew how to push herself and find new limits every day.

I wish she could have stayed so I could’ve seen her senior season but I wish her the best for her senior year.

Other than writing about her on-field exploits, I had one other interaction with Ashlie during her time in Coupeville.

It came before a soccer playoff game at Oak Harbor’s stadium, when we both ended up in the press box during pre-game warm-ups.

It wasn’t a long conversation, but it reinforced my positive impression of Miss Shank.

She came across as a bright, well-spoken young woman, highly intelligent, fiercely loyal to her friends, with a good sense of humor and a quiet strength at her core.

What I witnessed in person matches what others have said about her, and what I observed from afar at her games.

I have no doubt Ashlie will do well, wherever she is, another winner from a family which has my admiration and respect for how they conduct themselves, and what they accomplish.

Still, a part of me wishes she could have had the chance to end her high school days where she started them. Shoulder-to-shoulder with her sisters from other mothers.

So today, I want to do something, I want to make a small gesture, to let Ashlie know how much of an impact she made while she was on Whidbey Island.

How impressed we were, and are, with the strong, intelligent, highly-motivated young woman who graced Cow Town for a few years.

To remind her that even when life takes you away, you will not be forgotten.

Induction into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, with a rare few exceptions, isn’t usually granted until after you graduate.

Today, we’re making an exception.

In the end, her diploma will likely come from another school, it’s true.

But, after today, when you scroll to the top of the blog and peek under the Legends tab, you’ll find Ashlie Shank’s name right where it belongs.

One of us. Always and forever.

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Cameron Toomey-Stout, Hall o’ Famer? One of the easiest calls I’ve made. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The high-flying Toomey-Stout returns to Earth.

Camtastic being Camtastic.

He was the most unlikely of stars. And yet the most likely.

When Cameron Toomey-Stout was a freshman, he arrived on the football field barely tipping the scales at three digits. So, good thing 87 pounds of that was all heart.

As he grew, and outworked everyone expect maybe his own siblings, Camtastic went from being a novelty to one of the best athletes to ever wear a Wolf uniform.

So it should come as no surprise as to why we are here today, as we swing open the doors to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame and welcome our newest addition.

After this, if you pop up to the Legends tab at the top of the blog, you’ll find Toomey-Stout right where he should be, rubbing elbows with the record-busters and name-takers.

On the gridiron, Toomey-Stout earned his playing time the old-fashioned way – he worked for it.

He was the point of the spear on special teams, the first man down the field and the first to light someone up, every dang time.

It wasn’t until younger brother Sean showed up, two years behind him, that Cameron finally had a teammate who could match him in hauling tail down the field on a kick or punt, and then inflicting damage on the would-be returner.

Watching the Toomey-Stout brothers race each other to the ball, two heat-seeking missiles unleashed, was one of the great pleasures of my sports-writing career.

Win or lose, in the lead or trailing by 40, the brothers made every special team play just that – special.

For Cameron, once he got on the field, he refused to come off, turning into a consistently-dangerous player on offense and defense to go with his special teams prowess.

In the backfield, he teamed with fellow Hall o’ Famer Hunter Smith to disrupt and deny the game plans of rival QB’s.

Toomey-Stout used his speed and his hops to pick off his fair share of passes while sharing space with Smith, who retired as the school’s all-time leading interception man.

Working together, they gave QB’s nowhere to throw that was safe, and always seemed on the verge of taking a pick six to the house.

As a receiver, Toomey-Stout was again the perfect complement to Smith, until injuries to both his running mate and his brother left Cameron as the last man standing during his senior season.

During the second half of the 2017 season, Coupeville QB Hunter Downes had one weapon left to deploy, and the elder Toomey-Stout fought valiantly while being double and triple-teamed.

Camtastic endured, fighting to the final play, out-leaping defenders, twisting his body into a pretzel, and pulling in pass after pass while knowing other teams had him in their cross-hairs.

If Toomey-Stout had any fears, he never, ever showed them once he pulled down his helmet and tightened his chin strap.

Throughout the history of CHS football, there are other players who, after their run was done, may have looked back and wondered what could of have been if they had worked harder, played more consistently or just been tougher.

With Cameron, when he walked off the field for the final time and hugged sister Maya, there were no lingering questions.

He truly gave everything he had, from day one to the final whistle.

And while football alone would have likely earned him his induction into the Hall o’ Fame, Toomey-Stout was a true three-sport man, one of just four from his class to play all 12 seasons as a high school athlete.

On the basketball floor, he was the glue that held things together. A hustler, a scrapper, a fight-for-the-ball-on-every play support guy who showed, late in his career, he could singe the nets when he wanted to let the ball fly.

Toomey-Stout could knock down a three-ball with a fluid shot, could zip a pass through a maze of arms and have it land right on the fingertips of a teammate, or out-muscle a rival six inches taller for control of the ball.

And through it all, through the sweat and the wear and tear, his hair remained, uncannily, the best in the biz. Which has to count for some extra credit.

When spring rolled around, Toomey-Stout, also a crack student in his small slice of down time, bounced from baseball to track and field.

On the diamond, he was a speed demon in the outfield and on the base paths, part of the first CHS baseball squad to win a league title in 25 years.

But the track, where he was joined by twin siblings Maya and Sean, offered Cameron the ideal way to flash his often-extraordinary physical skills.

Toomey-Stout closed his prep career with a burst of speed and derring-do, competing at the state track meet in three events – the triple jump, long jump and 4 x 100 relay.

He PR’d in the long jump and claimed a medal in the relay, leading off a unit which also included his brother.

But, as we mentioned at the start of this article, Cameron was always about more than just results.

It’s true, he put up some nice numbers, across all of his sports.

What we will remember him most for, though, is how he did it.

The way he pushed himself, every day, getting quicker, stronger, more efficient. The way he conducted himself, attacking with the same intensity in wins and losses.

Rival players, coaches and fans respected him as much as Wolf Nation did, the ultimate testament to the impact he made in his four years in a Coupeville uniform.

He carried the Toomey-Stout name with pride, always, but he fully earned the nickname Camtastic.

If you have a young son or daughter, a student/athlete with dreams of accomplishing great things, have them study Cameron’s career. Then have them emulate his passion, his will, his drive, his class, his style.

Model yourself after the best, to be the best.

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Logan Downes refuses to let any pesky basketballs get away. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

CMS 7th grade coach Greg White makes a plea to hot-shooting guard Ryan Blouin. “I need you to make it rain all day!”

Coupeville’s feisty 8th grade squad.

Blouin, seconds away from making the bottom of the net pop.

Ty Hamilton leads the charge up-court.

The next generation arrives, as the Wolf 7th graders make their debut.

Dominic Coffman gets ready to break some fools in half.

8th grade coaches Mikayla Elfrank and DeAndre Mitchell share a laugh with the bench.

The gym is alive with the sound of squeaking shoes.

Basketball has returned to Coupeville, and Monday’s middle school opener brought out a large crowd of fans and a handful of those working for their suppers.

One of the latter was paparazzi to the stars John Fisken, who worked every angle of the court, firing away with an assortment of cameras.

The pics seen above are but a small taste, however.

If you want to see everything he shot, and possibly purchase some glossies for Grandma, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2018-2019-boys-and-girls/MSBBB-2018-11-05-vs-Kings/

And, when you go, remember that purchases help fund scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes.

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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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