Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Basketball’

   Wolf grad Makana Stone and mom Eileen goof around after a Whitman College basketball game earlier this season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The appetizer went well. Now on to the entree.

Taking care of business Tuesday, the red-hot Whitman College women’s basketball squad crushed visiting Whitworth 101-68, claiming its 13th straight win.

With the victory, the Blues and their super sophomore, Coupeville grad Makana Stone, are 13-1 overall and sit alone atop the Northwest Conference at 5-0.

Now it’s on to the big brawl, with George Fox (11-2, 4-0) coming to Walla Walla Friday for a first-place showdown.

It’ll be a clash of titans, with the visitors on a hot streak of their own, having won nine straight.

Facing a Whitworth squad hovering around .500 on the season, Whitman unleashed its two-headed beast, with Stone and All-American Casey Poe each going off for 21 points.

Stone added nine rebounds and two assists, while the 21 points was a college career-best, topping the 20 she scored against LaVerne earlier this season.

Whitman crept out to a 27-20 lead after one quarter, then turned up the heat in the second, using a 24-12 surge to put the game away.

For the season, Stone has 187 points, 88 rebounds, 31 assists and nine steals, and leads the Blues in both scoring and rebounding.

She’s also shooting an electric 60% from the field on 82 of 136.

Read Full Post »

   The high-flying ’77-’78 CHS boys basketball squad. Jeff Rhubottom (44) scored 459 points that season, second-best in program history. (Photos courtesy Renae Mulholland and Brad Sherman)

   Ron Bagby and his ’87-’88 squad, the last Wolf boys hoops team to make it to the state tourney.

   Coupeville’s ’84-’85 hoops stars, back when high school basketball players (or some of them, at least) knew how to rock the ‘stache.

10 days and counting.

Coupeville High School’s boys basketball anniversary shindig goes down Jan. 19, and we’re putting the call out for people to cram the stands.

The Wolves play Chimacum that night (3:30 JV, 5:15 varsity) and it’s the exact 101st anniversary of the first hoops game in school history (a 29-7 win over Langley in 1917).

Are you a former CHS player, coach, manager, stat keeper, ticket taker? Did you cheer at the games, either in an official capacity or as a fan?

Be there!

Whether you scored one point or 1,000, you are a part of the history of Wolf boys basketball, and this is your night.

There’ll be a special game program, honoring the first game, the immortal ’69-’70 team that still holds all the school records, and the Top 15 individual career scorers.

Toss in halftime festivities and an epic “team” photo after the game — when all former Wolves will be asked to take part — and things will be hoppin’.

There’s a few other things in the works, which will be announced in the next few days, and, as we count down, I am in the market for any and all Wolf basketball pics you might have.

Send them to me at davidsvien@hotmail.com, then rearrange your calendar and make sure you have Jan. 19 circled in red.

Read Full Post »

   Caleb Meyer was one of seven Wolves to score Monday as the CMS 8th graders rocked Blue Heron 73-49. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Consider it a warning shot fired across the bow.

Playing a day before their respective high school teams clash, the Coupeville Middle School varsity boys basketball squad crushed host Blue Heron (Port Townsend) Monday 73-49.

Powered by a 29-point performance from guard Hawthorne Wolfe, the Wolves romped to their fourth straight win and improve to 5-2 on the season.

The CMS JV, a much-greener team that is still very much a work in progress, fell 50-25 in the opener. The younger Wolves sit at 1-6.

Both teams return home for their next two games, with the first one being Thursday against Chimacum. Tip-off is 3:15.

Monday, everything worked, and all its shots (or, at least a great majority of them) dropped for the Wolf varsity as it hit a season-high in scoring.

Coupeville was remarkably consistent all afternoon, dropping in 19, 19, 18 and 17 in the four quarters.

Wolfe was the man with the golden touch, scoring in every quarter.

After opening with a modest four points in the first eight minutes, he went off for 11 in both the second and third quarters.

Hot on his heels were Logan Martin, who combined a pair of three-balls and some buckets in the paint for a season-best 16 points, and Xavier Murdy, who tickled the twines for 13.

Caleb Meyer (7), Grady Rickner (5), Cody Roberts (2) and Aiden Burdge (1) rounded out the team-wide scoring attack.

Coupeville was active behind the three-point arc, raining down seven treys.

Wolfe led with four, while Martin knocked down a pair and Meyer swished one.

Read Full Post »

   Ethan Spark tossed in 20 Friday against North Mason. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Ema Smith (top) and Lindsey Roberts helped Coupeville topple Klahowya Saturday in a big Olympic League tussle.

It was a weird week.

Back in action after returning from winter break, the Coupeville High School basketball teams found mixed results.

The Wolf girls started with a poor performance at North Mason, but rebounded with a vengeance to grab a huge league win over Klahowya.

Despite playing without its top scorer, Coupeville evened its conference mark and pulled back within a game of Port Townsend as it seeks a fourth-straight league crown.

On the other side of the ball, the Wolf boys lost a heart breaker in overtime to North Mason, then never got to tip off with Klahowya.

A snafu left the two teams without refs, and the game will have to be rescheduled.

Still, thanks to a better winning percentage, Coupeville remains atop the boys standings, though that will be tested next week.

Games against Port Townsend and Chimacum will go a long way towards determining who’s the team to beat as the heart of the league schedule arrives.

Until games start back up Tuesday, a quick look at varsity scoring totals and league standings through Jan. 7:

Girls:

Mikayla Elfrank 99
Lindsey Roberts
80
Sarah Wright
51
Ema Smith
46
Kalia Littlejohn
38
Kyla Briscoe
33
Scout Smith
24
Chelsea Prescott
20
Allison Wenzel
3
Hannah Davidson
2

Boys:

Hunter Smith 192
Ethan Spark 107
Joey Lippo 44
Hunter Downes 24
Mason Grove 15
Jered Brown 14
Kyle Rockwell 13
Dane Lucero 5
Cameron Toomey-Stout 3
Gavin Knoblich 2
Ulrik Wells 2
Jacobi Pilgrim 1

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 3-1 5-6
Chimacum 2-1 5-7
COUPEVILLE 1-1 3-9
Klahowya 0-3 2-9

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 1-0 3-7
Port Townsend 3-1 6-5
Klahowya 1-1 4-7
Chimacum 0-3 0-7

Read Full Post »

   Sarah Wright filled up the stat sheet Saturday, collecting five points, seven rebounds, two steals and an assist in a Wolf win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was gut check time, and the Wolves passed.

Playing on the road less than 24 hours after its worst offensive performance of the season, missing its top scorer and facing the unthinkable — a slide into the Olympic League cellar — the Coupeville High School girls basketball squad responded with grit and fire.

Putting together a ferocious defensive stand in the late going, the Wolves rallied to upend host Klahowya 29-23 Saturday, evening their conference mark at 1-1.

Now 3-9 overall in a rebuilding year, CHS pulled within a half game of Chimacum (2-1) and a full game of Port Townsend (3-1) in the league standings.

The three-time defending champs, who lost four starters before the season (three to graduation, one to a transfer) and two more starters in the past month (one to injury, one who quit), needed to dig deep, and they did.

Hitting seven of 10 free throws in the fourth quarter, after netting just 5-15 up to that point, Coupeville used a 12-5 surge in the final eight minutes to turn a one-point deficit into a semi-comfortable win.

“The fourth hit and something clicked,” said Wolf coach David King. “We came out with more fire, a confidence, one could say.

“Our energy was at its highest throughout the fourth,” he added. “We threw on a press and created havoc. Got some turnovers and got them sped up.”

Trailing 18-17 after three quarters of defensive struggle, the Wolves seized their moment.

Lindsey Roberts, stepping up big to fill the gap left by the absence of top scorer Mikayla Elfrank, out with a severe ankle injury, dropped in both ends of a one-and-one opportunity at the free throw line.

That put CHS up 21-20, and gave it a lead it would never relinquish.

To drive home the point, the Wolves immediately jumped on Klahowya on the very next play, stealing the in-bounds pass and turning it into a game-busting play.

With the shot clock running down, Sarah Wright set a screen for Kyla Briscoe, who drove right to left, got into the free throw line area, then threaded a flawless pass to Roberts on the wing.

The never-nervous junior caught the ball and promptly drained a three-ball, stretching the lead to four and knifing the Eagles for good.

“That play was the one that we could see the air went out of the Klahowya players,” King said.

Down the stretch, Coupeville iced the game with free throws and another play run to perfection by Wright and Briscoe.

On this one, Briscoe came off of a screen set by her teammate, rolled inside the charity stripe and singed the nets with a jumper over the outstretched arms of a defender who was a step too late to stop her.

Rebounding quickly after a sub-par 17-point performance in a non-conference loss to 2A North Mason, King was thrilled to see his players show their heart and will to win.

“Everyone had better games than last night,” he said. “It really was a game to see what we were made of, and we found a way.

“It was a well-deserved win by and for the players.”

Playing in Klahowya’s deadly-quiet gym, the Wolves allowed their hosts to be the aggressors in the early going. After falling behind 8-4 at the end of one quarter, however, Coupeville noticeably toughened up.

Wright ripped down “a monster rebound” in the second quarter, in which she out-dueled three rivals in her pursuit of the ball, and that lit a spark under the Wolves.

Radically cutting down their turnovers in the second half, and relentlessly attacking the hoop (“I’ll take 25 free throws every game!”), Coupeville turned the tide.

“They battled the whole night,” King said.

With Elfrank injured, Avalon Renninger sick and Hannah Davidson on her way back from an out-of-state trip, Coupeville only went seven deep Saturday, but got big play from everyone in uniform.

Ema Smith was a whirling dervish on both ends of the floor, and when foul trouble sent her to the bench, freshman Chelsea Prescott stepped up, hitting the boards hard.

Still recovering from her own illness, Scout Smith was healthier than she had been against North Mason and brought “energy and heart to the court,” while Allison Wenzel drew a tough assignment and nailed it.

Matched up against Klahowya’s talented Amber Bumbalough, Wenzel was an aggressive shadow, always with a hand in her face, preventing the Eagle gunner from getting hot.

Allison is a hard-nosed defender and she did a great job all night,” King said.

Rounding out the Wolf bench were Maddy Hilkey and Ashlie Shank, who made the jump up from the JV squad. While the duo didn’t see floor time, they brought an extra jolt of energy as vocal cheerleaders for their teammates.

With Elfrank expected to be out for much, if not all, of the rest of the regular season, others will need to help fill the gap.

“We need everyone else to step up their games,” King said. “It’s going to have to be a team effort. Tonight, that’s exactly what it was.

“All of the players have a well-earned day off tomorrow.”

Roberts paced the Wolves, throwing down a double-double with 11 points and 10 rebounds, while still finding time to pilfer three steals.

Briscoe, Ema Smith and Wright each dropped five points in support, while Prescott notched three.

Every girl who played helped fill up the stat sheet, with Briscoe (five rebounds, three steals, two blocks) and Ema Smith (five boards, four steals, two assists) busy bees.

Wenzel ripped down three rebounds, while Scout Smith picked the pocket of an Eagle ball-handler twice.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »