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   Maddy Hilkey is not too sure about the quality of the refs in Klahowya. (Amy King photo)

Playing on the road for the second time in less than 24 hours, and with a thin roster to boot, the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball squad struggled Saturday against a rugged Klahowya team.

Despite a strong effort on the boards, the young Wolves fell 33-17, evening their Olympic League mark at 1-1 on the season.

Coupeville’s JV sits at 5-6 overall heading home to play Tuesday against Port Townsend.

Facing off with Klahowya, and playing second after the Wolf varsity won in the opener, Amy King’s squad got out-muscled a bit.

“There was a lot of Eagle contact – they are always super aggressive,” she said. “We pull a rebound down, they have two to three girls mauling whoever has the ball.

“Our girls don’t appreciate that much contact, so…”

The Wolves, who only suited seven with several players missing, got strong games from Maddy Hilkey and Genna Wright.

Maddy and Genna played the most controlled during the whole game,” King said. “Maddy found herself at the free throw line a lot in the second half because she was getting some good shots off of being fouled.

Genna was just a tough player who worked hard on both ends of the court.”

Ashlie Shank and Nicole Lester both took rebounds back up strongly, netting buckets on second-chance plays, while Lester also hooked up with point guard Mollie Bailey for the best basket of the night.

Finding herself matched up with a smaller defender, Lester, listening to her coach, stepped in front of the Eagle and converted after getting a quick pass delivered onto her fingertips.

Mollie and Nicole locked eyes and it was an easy basket,” King said. “Something we did not get too many of during the night.”

Hilkey paced the Wolves with a team-high nine points, and, after one made free throw, one of her teammates tried to get a little extra.

Foreign exchange student Julia García Oñoro, still learning the intricacies of American basketball, snatched the ball away from the Eagles and tried to inbound it.

“We look and Julia had picked up the ball and was trying to throw it in,” King said. “Funnier, the Klahowya team was trying to defend the throw in.

“It was determined that it was actually their ball,” she added. “Then you hear Sarah (Wright’s) voice from the bleachers: ‘She’s from Spain.’ It was pretty funny.”

Even in a loss, King came away happy with her player’s fight. Whether the ball belonged to them or not, they weren’t willing to go down easy.

All seven Wolves who suited up had at least one rebound, with defensive dynamo Tia Wurzrainer snatching six boards and making off with three steals.

“Despite the score, the girls never let down,” King said. “Their effort was there and it was one of the better games, with everyone fighting and playing with energy from start to finish.”

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   Former Wolves Makana Stone (second from left) and Kailey Kellner (far right) are now college hoops stars. (Amy King photo)

It was a fairly flawless night for Wolf alumni.

Two CHS grads played college ball Saturday, and both helped their teams come away with big league wins.

Makana Stone was in Walla Walla with Whitman College, which ripped visiting Lewis & Clark 77-65, while Kailey Kellner took the court in Ohio as D’Youville College routed host Franciscan 68-50.

Stone soars:

With their sophomore sensation collecting eight points, six rebounds, an assist and a steal, Whitman rolled to its 12th straight win.

Now 12-1 overall, 4-0 in league play, the Blues, ranked #7 in D-II basketball, sit tied with George Fox atop the Northwest Conference standings.

Whitman jumped out to an early 21-12 lead after one quarter, stretched the margin to 19 at the half, then weathered a bit of a comeback by their three-ball happy foes.

The Blues spread their scoring out, with Taylor Chambers leading four players in double digits with 12.

Casey Poe, Mady Burdett and Maegan Martin each chipped in with 10, while Emily Rommel helped Stone on the boards, snaring eight.

Stone leads Whitman in scoring (166 points), rebounding (79) and field goal percentage (62.6% on 72-115 from the floor).

Kellner kills:

D’Youville improved to 3-1 in the Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference with its road win, and now sits at 4-7 overall.

Kellner, a freshman, swished a second-quarter jumper and pilfered a steal for the Spartans, who led from start to finish.

A 26-15 first-quarter run broke the game wide open, with D’Youville adding to its lead at a steady pace from there.

The Spartans sit in third-place in the 10-team league, trailing just Mt. Aloysius (6-0) and Hilbert (5-1).

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   Wolf fans were expecting action like this Saturday. It didn’t happen, though, as a lack of refs forced a rare postponement. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Talk about anticlimactic.

The stage was set Saturday for an exciting evening of high school basketball, with Klahowya in town for a big Olympic League game.

Win, and Coupeville would improve to 2-0 in conference play and sit alone atop the league.

If you’re a stats hound, you also knew Wolf senior Hunter Smith, who is averaging 19.2 points a night, needed just 20 Saturday to jump from #23 to #18 on the CHS career scoring chart.

In doing so, he would have swept past Wolf legends Wade Ellsworth, Pat Bennett, Foster Faris, Virgil Roehl and Gavin Keohane.

But then, in one fell swoop, all the air went out of the gym.

For reasons yet unclear, not a single ref showed for the game, and, despite scrambling, CHS officials were unable to track down any local ones sitting around their house on a Saturday evening.

Faced with no other choices, the game was officially postponed, and all tickets were refunded.

The game will be rescheduled at a later date.

While the Wolves and Eagles could have played the JV contest without official refs, using coaches in their place, that’s not allowed for varsity contests.

So, for the moment, Coupeville remains 1-0 in league play, with three games, the first two league clashes, scheduled for next week.

CHS travels to Port Townsend Tuesday, welcomes Chimacum to town Wednesday, then heads to Sultan for a non-conference rumble next Saturday.

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   Future Wolf stars (l to r) Steve Konek, Todd Pedlar, Scott Losey, Mitch Aparicio, Bill Carstensen, Brandy Ambrose and Rusty Bailey. (Photo courtesy Aparicio)

Future gridiron stars, basketball hot shots and track record holders — all wearing prime early ’80s short shorts.

The pic above, which comes to us courtesy Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Famer Mitch Aparicio, captures the junior high version of the Wolves, circa the 1981-1982 season.

As we count down towards Jan. 19, when CHS will celebrate the 101st anniversary of the first hoops game in school history, we’re collecting and posting as many basketball pics as possible.

Have one? Have 100? Send them my way, to davidsvien@hotmail.com.

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   Freshman Chelsea Prescott tossed in seven points Friday in a varsity loss. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sometimes it’s just not your night.

A combination of a depleted roster, unfriendly refs and a cold shooting touch doomed the Coupeville High School girls basketball squad Friday deep on the road.

By the time the Wolves pulled away from North Mason, they had endured a 39-17 non-conference loss which left coach David King to simply say “very few positive highlights tonight.”

The defeat, which came in Coupeville’s first game after losing leading scorer Mikayla Elfrank to a possibly season-ending ankle injury, drops the Wolves to 2-9.

CHS gets an immediate chance to bounce back Saturday, when it travels to Klahowya for an Olympic League game.

The three-time defending conference champs, who are still trying to find their groove during a rebuilding season, are 0-1 in league play.

With just seven players on their active roster Friday, and some of those suited-up battling illness and injury, the Wolves struggled to find a rhythm on offense.

Down 10-4 after the first quarter, CHS hung tough in the second (being edged just 10-8), then went belly-up in the third.

A 17-4 surge coming out of the halftime break sealed the deal for North Mason, while the fourth quarter was a relatively modest war of attrition with the Bulldogs coming out on top 2-1.

“We didn’t compete on the offensive end,” King said. “Just not seeing open teammates and our passing led to a very high number of turnovers.”

While his team spent huge chunks of the game unable to buy a bucket, the Wolves did bring a strong defensive effort.

“Defensively in the first half I was pleased,” King said. “We were scrambling and causing them to rush. Kyla (Briscoe) did a great job getting deflections and getting some steals.”

Most of Coupeville’s offense came from junior Sarah Wright, who worked down low for a team-high eight, and freshman Chelsea Prescott, who swished seven.

Lindsey Roberts added a bucket to round out the scoring.

With the game out of hand in the late going, King called a timeout “to get a quick break and see if we could dig down deep and finish strong.”

The Wolves responded and finished with a final burst which gives their coach hope for the second half of the season.

“It was good to see from a coaches perspective,” King said.

JV falls in rough one:

“Mouth guardsh and shpit … JV didn’t win the war, but we won several battles.”

Facing a rough-and-tumble North Mason squad (if we’re being polite), the Wolf JV girls, who only suited seven of their own thanks to injuries and illness, got to play old-school, forearm-to-the-head ball.

And, while her squad fell 29-22, dropping their record to 5-5 on the season, coach Amy King, still getting over her own illness, liked the spirit she saw from her players.

“Something about this group, they didn’t care about the numbers and they fought each and every quarter until the game ended,” King said. “Many of the North Mason team wore mouth guards, spitting as they talked; they were overly aggressive for no apparent reason.

“Their fouling was relentless, but our girls fought through.”

Ashlie Shank lit the spark for the Wolves, piling up rebounds and steals as a one-woman wrecking crew.

“She was on fire all night,” King said. “Sprinting down the floor, directing on offense and an animal on defense.

“In the third she had a really nice offensive rebound put back – just came out of nowhere and did her thing.”

Others making big impressions included defensive wizard Tia Wurzrainer, who played all 32 minutes and was ruthless while patrolling the back court (“I love the way her game keeps progressing”), and the duo of Maddy Hilkey and Genna Wright.

Hilkey was a leader on the floor, helping the Wolves break the North Mason press, while Wright, recently returned from injury, was “a rebounding beast!”

As her squad makes the turn to head into the heart of league play (the JV is 1-0 in conference), King sees many reasons to be proud.

“Despite the loss, we knew that we played out best and never let up,” she said. “I believe North Mason was freaked out that we stayed so close to them with only seven players.”

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