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   Hunter Downes, here wrestling away a rebound in an earlier game, was a defensive demon Friday, coming up with a huge steal in the final 10 seconds of regulation. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Everything but the win.

Playing for only the second time in 16 days, the Coupeville High School boys basketball squad went to war with visiting North Mason Friday, coming within a play of upending their speed-demon 2A rivals.

But the Bulldogs, who were atrocious all night from the free throw line, were flawless in the one moment which mattered, holding on for a wild 63-61 win in overtime.

The non-conference loss drops Coupeville to 3-7, but the Wolves have an immediate chance to rebound, hosting Klahowya Saturday afternoon (3:45 varsity tip) in a key Olympic League clash.

Topple the Eagles and the Wolves will sit atop the league standings at 2-0.

Coupeville has faced a tough non-conference schedule, and, by and large, the Wolves have held up well.

Friday was no different as the Wolves bolted out to a big lead early, scrambled to pull off a miracle in the final 10 seconds of regulation, then almost pulled off a second miracle in the extra period.

Trailing by four with 25 seconds left in regulation, CHS improbably tied up the game thanks to one sure thing, and one huge surprise.

The sure thing was Hunter Smith attacking the basket, drawing a foul, then banking home a pair of free throws which softly snapped through the net.

The improbable came after the Wolves used back-to-back fouls to frustrate North Mason.

Coupeville had fouls to give, and the calls forced the Bulldogs to take the ball out of bounds both times. The second time, with eight seconds to play, the Wolves took advantage.

North Mason, rushing to beat a five-second call, threw a pass into the wrong thicket of arms, and Wolf defensive ace Hunter Downes read it perfectly.

The senior snared the ball off of the fingertips of a rival, spun and fed Smith for a breakaway layup to knot things at 53-53, sending his home fans into hysterics.

CHS then almost pulled off a true miracle, as Joey Lippo knocked the ball away on the next play, stole it and chucked up a prayer right before the final buzzer.

It wasn’t answered, however, and, for the second time this season, Coupeville went to overtime.

The extra four minutes weren’t as kind this time around as they were the first time during a win over Port Townsend, as North Mason hit back-to-back three-balls to start things off.

Suddenly down eight, with time running out, Ethan Spark did his best one-man impersonation of a scoring machine, hitting a trey and two free throws to pull Coupeville within 61-58.

Forced to foul, the Wolves sent Jha’mal Johnson to the line.

North Mason was just 7 of 18 at the charity stripe to that point, but Johnson was money, dropping in both shots to all but seal the win.

Spark nailed another long three-ball, his fifth of the game, but the Wolves couldn’t buy a foul at the end, poking at the North Mason players to no avail as the final six seconds ran off the clock.

The wild finale capped a game that went in spurts.

Coupeville opened on fire, rolling out to a 17-5 lead midway through the first quarter, with four different players knocking down buckets.

Smith and Lippo had six apiece in the opening run, with the latter netting three the easy way (a trey on the first shot of the game) and three the hard way (a bucket in the paint, followed by a free throw).

Toss in a three-ball from Spark and a short jumper from Kyle Rockwell, who was moving like a young Karl Malone, and things were humming for the Wolves.

Until they weren’t.

North Mason turned the tables from late in the first quarter until right before halftime, compiling its own 17-5 surge to knot things at 22-22.

That just meant it was Lippo time, again, as the senior, who was having the finest offensive night of his basketball career, tossed in another four, with his final layup sending CHS into the locker room up 27-23.

Coupeville’s Achilles heel has been the third quarter, and North Mason took advantage of a brief bit of Wolf sluggishness to run off nine straight points to open the quarter.

Spark finally stopped the bleeding with a silky jumper from the side five minutes into the quarter, and another three-the-hard-way from Lippo pulled the Wolves back within 37-33 headed to the fourth.

The final quarter was a donnybrook, with seven lead changes.

Downes, who would later come up with the game-defining steal and assist, had a put-back off of a rebound that was huge, while North Mason gunner Trey Fisher started hitting everything from everywhere.

Fisher, who didn’t score in the first half, finished with a game-high 22, with the majority of that coming in the fourth quarter and overtime.

Included in that were three straight eyebrow-raising shots, counting for seven points total, which he rained down immediately after a Spark three-ball gave Coupeville a 49-46 lead.

The Wolves spread much of their scoring among three players, with Spark hitting for 20, while Smith and Lippo chipped in with 18 apiece.

That was a career-high for Lippo, while Smith’s points raise his career total to 657.

He passed Jason McFadyen (654) Friday to move into 23rd on the CHS boys basketball career scoring chart.

Downes (3) and Rockwell (2) rounded out the scoring.

JV stumbles early:

Take away the first quarter, in which they dug themselves a 20-0 deficit, and the Wolf JV made a game of things.

But that opening eight minutes, where a full-court press shredded a lot of their resolve, made things hard, and CHS couldn’t get all the way back in a 58-28 loss.

The non-conference defeat drops the Wolf young guns to 1-8 on the season.

Coupeville, which didn’t get a shot off in the first three minutes of the game, finally broke through on the scoreboard on the opening shot of the second quarter.

Then promptly suffered another 13-1 run at the hands of the Bulldogs.

Pick the game up from the final minute of the second quarter through the end of regulation, and it was a 25-25 stalemate, though, with Mason Grove raining down five treys on his way to a team-high 15.

Jake Pease fought hard in the paint for six points, while Sages Downes (4), Koa Davison (2) and Jonathan Partida (1) rounded out the scoring.

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   Makana Stone hangs out with big bro Andre at a game earlier this season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

At least it was over quickly.

Facing the weakest team in its league Friday, the Whitman College women’s basketball squad knocked off the rust from a two-week break and rolled to another easy win.

Sparked by Coupeville grad Makana Stone, who tossed in five points while setting team-highs with 10 rebounds and five assists, the Blues crushed visiting Pacific University 75-50.

The victory, coming in Whitman’s first game since Dec. 21, lifts it to 11-1 overall, 3-0 in Northwest Conference play.

The Blues take their 11-game winning streak right back on the court Saturday, when they host Lewis & Clark (7-5, 2-1).

Whitman is opening the second half of the 2017-2018 season with four straight on their home court in Walla Walla, and plays nothing but league games from here on out.

Friday night they got an easy welcome-back-to-the-gym courtesy a Pacific team that is 1-10 on the season.

With Stone hauling down six boards in the first quarter, Whitman inched out in front 15-10, then steadily pulled away from there.

Emily Rommel dropped in 21 to pace the Blues, while Casey Poe rattled the rim for 16 and Mady Burdett banked home 12.

Stone’s sophomore campaign continues to go smoothly, as the former Wolf now sits with 158 points, 73 rebounds, 28 assists and eight steals.

She leads Whitman in scoring, rebounding and field goal percentage, where she’s hitting 64% on 68 of 107 from the floor.

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   Bill Jarrell, whose 415 points in 1975-1976 still stands as the fifth-best individual season in CHS boys basketball history, slices to the hoop. (Photos courtesy Brad Sherman and Bill Jarrell)

The 1974-1975 squad, the second Wolf team to make it to state.

The bright-faced Wolf stars of the ’50s.

   Randy Keefe remains the #3 scorer in school history, and is the only man to have two Top 10 individual seasons, scoring 398 in 1974-1975 and 397 a year later.

   The 1975-1976 Wolves were the first to win a game at state, drilling Columbia (Burbank) 80-63.

The pride of the prairie in 1952-1953.

Two weeks and counting.

If you played, coached, managed, took stats, played in the band or cheered from the stands during a Coupeville High School boys basketball game, Jan. 19 looms large.

That’s the 101st anniversary of the first hoops game in CHS history (a 29-7 win over Langley in 1917), and the current Wolves host Chimacum that night (5:15 tip).

The school is commemorating the moment with a celebration that night, which will include an expanded game program focusing on the history of the program.

The record-setting 1969-1970 team will be honored at halftime, and, after the game, all former Wolves in attendance are invited to take part in an epic “team” photo.

As we count down the days towards then, I’m searching for Wolf hoops photos from any years.

If you have them, shoot them to me at davidsvien@hotmail.com.

The pics seen above capture two different generations at play — the trailblazers from the early ’50s and the gunners from the mid-’70s.

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   Logan Martin scored seven points in the final minutes of the fourth quarter Thursday, as Coupeville roared from 12 down to beat Forks 45-44. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Now that is going to be the longest, most tear-stained, really, really morbidly-quiet trip ever taken on a school bus.

When you blow a 12-point lead in the final six minutes, get gut-punched by a ref with impeccable integrity, then lose on the game’s final play, it doesn’t make for a pleasant evening.

So … good thing none of us live in Forks!

Cause the Coupeville side of the stands, the insanely-loud, deliriously-happy side, they exited the CMS gym Thursday flashing smiles, doing fist-bumps and basking in the glow of an early contender for best game of the year.

Even if we are only four days in to 2018.

So, what drove the Wolf fans into hysterics?

Watching the Coupeville Middle School varsity boys basketball squad roar back to shock the visiting Spartans 45-44, literally winning on the final shot of the night — a pressure-packed and artfully-swished little jumper off of the magical finger tips of Xavier Murdy.

The win, coming in Coupeville’s first game since Dec. 14, lifts the varsity to 4-2 on the season and stretches its current winning streak to three games.

It also avenges a loss at Forks a month ago, while being the kind of win they’ll still be talking about long after these players have graduated high school.

The victory also forced an overly-yappy road fan or two to go stone silent at the end (my right ear greatly appreciates that) and made up for a loss in the JV contest.

In that one, the very-green Wolves played a billion times better than they did the first time around against Forks, but still fell 49-20.

Varsity roars:

Coupeville led exactly three times, once at 3-1 on an early Murdy three-ball, and twice in the game’s final 43 seconds.

But hey, the only lead that matters is the one where the clock says 0:00 in the fourth.

Trailing by seven at the half, CMS got as close as four in the third, then seemed to buckle. To which it responded, guess again.

Having surrendered eight straight points — two buckets to end the third and two to start the fourth — the Wolves were in their biggest hole of the night at 38-26.

Then, everything started to click, with the fuse being lit not by a shot, but by a pass.

Out on the run after scooping up a loose ball, Hawthorne Wolfe, the floppy-haired heir to Pistol Pete, who has never met a three-ball attempt he didn’t like trying, passed on a shot.

Instead, he zipped a note-perfect pass to sprinting teammate Caleb Meyer, who snatched the ball out of the air and muscled his way through a pair of defenders for a quick layup.

The pass, and bucket, were huge.

Not only did it break Coupeville’s dry spell, but, in one wham-bam play, it seemed to take most of Forks confidence and toss it in the direction of the very-hungry Wolves.

CMS repeated the same Wolfe-to-Meyer play 10 seconds later, before Meyer dished a gorgeous lob to Murdy for a layup the next time down the floor.

With their lead being scratched away, the Spartans got tight, their shots started to rim out after sweetly falling all night, and Logan Martin stepped up to deliver the KO.

He had been battling hard on the boards all night, but in the final minutes Martin morphed into a dead-eye shooter, knocking down a bank shot in the paint, then scrambling out to the top to drain a trey.

Toss in a Murdy three-ball and a free throw from Meyer, and, as all the blood drained out of the faces of the once-noisy Forks fans, Coupeville was back within 42-41.

Cue an insane final 43 ticks of the clock.

The Wolves struck first, with Martin taking an in-bounds pass from Meyer and turning it into a go-ahead layup, somehow getting the ball to drop while three Spartans beat the crud out of him (without a foul being called).

Forks had the answer, though, when their own big man powered inside for a bucket and foul with 22 seconds to play. Or, at least it seemed that way.

Back up 44-43, the Spartans couldn’t get the free throw to drop.

And then it got bonkers.

Forks snared the rebound, sent a pass out to the right, and a Spartan nailed what could have been a game-icing three-ball.

Except Jim Shulock, a ref with ice water in his veins and great moral integrity, screamed “NOOOOOOOOOOOOO SIR!!!!!!”

Staring down Forks players, coaches and fans as he knifed them, a guy who’s been wearing black and white stripes since before these kids were born, made the only call, in good conscience, he could make.

The only correct one, though one 98.3% of refs would probably not have had the guts to make at that moment.

A Forks player had clearly leveled a Wolf right in front of Shulock, and he punched the air, waving off the trey and calling the offensive foul on the visitors.

The Spartans wailed, while Coupeville simply went to work.

Given the ball back, down by one, with the clock ticking madly away, the Wolves found Murdy on the left side of the paint, and X-Man was flawless.

His short jumper over a sea of arms put CMS up 45-44, then, with the noise in the gym at levels that made Navy jet pilots all the way up in Oak Harbor wince, the Wolf defense sealed the deal.

Forks couldn’t hear, couldn’t think, and couldn’t hold it together, failing to get a shot off in the final eight seconds, sending Wolf fans cascading on to the floor, a sea of humanity losing its collective freakin’ mind.

“Every game should be like this!!!,” bellowed one Wolf coach, Bob Martin, as the other, Dante Mitchell, high-fived their players.

Murdy finished with a game-high 17, while Logan Martin banged home 12. Wolfe netted nine, Meyer knocked in five and Cody Roberts tickled the twines for two.

JV improves:

Coupeville’s younger players managed only six points in 32 minutes the first time these teams faced off, but they had that beat Thursday after just the first quarter.

Gabe Shaw banged down low for the game’s opening bucket, and while the Wolves couldn’t hold the lead against a more-polished Forks unit, they hung tough in the early going.

Alex Murdy was a particular standout, shutting down the Spartans on three consecutive plays down the floor. First he delivered a thunderous blocked shot, before making off with a pair of steals on back-to-back possessions.

Forks used a 9-0 surge to open the second quarter, fueled by a long three-ball, and, after that, the Wolves had few chances to get back in the game.

That didn’t stop CMS, though, as Ty Hamilton had a nice slash through the paint for a bucket and Dominic Coffman reinvented himself as a one-man wrecking crew.

He tossed in five of Coupeville’s seven third-quarter points, including getting three the hard way, but it was his electric intensity on defense which probably scarred the Spartans for life.

Near the end of the third quarter, Coffman stopped a Forks breakaway by delivering a well-timed karate chop to the head of the guy about to drop a layup. Instead the ball went one way, the rival went the other, and Wolf fans erupted.

Going one better, Coffman stopped a second fast break by leveling a Spartan like a semi-truck hitting a grocery cart full of melons left in the middle of the interstate.

On that one, the ref shook his head, tried to hide his smile and softly intoned, “foul, #1, foot to … the mouth.”

When he wasn’t blowing folks up, Coffman dropped in five points to pace the CMS offense. Isaiah Bittner (4), Aiden Burdge (4), Alex Murdy (3), Hamilton (2) and Shaw (2) also chipped in.

Tony Garcia, Kevin Partida, Alex Wasik, Brayden Coatney and Levi Pulliam rounded out the roster.

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   After a trip home over the holidays, Kailey Kellner is back on the basketball court in New York. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Back at it and time to get the rust knocked off.

Coupeville grad Kailey Kellner and her D’Youville College teammates returned to the hard court Thursday, the first time they had seen action in almost a month.

The last time the Spartans took the floor was Dec. 9, and it showed a bit, as D’Youville couldn’t quite find its rhythm in a 70-48 loss to visiting Alfred State.

The non-conference defeat drops the squad to 3-7, but they sit at 2-1 in league play.

After this, the Spartans play 15 straight conference tilts, starting with a road trip Saturday to face Franciscan.

D’Youville hung tough for a quarter Thursday, trailing just 17-15 at the first break.

After that Alfred State steadily pulled away, with a 21-11 run in the fourth quarter the final huge nail in the coffin.

Kellner finished with three points, hitting a trey, and four rebounds.

She’s played in every game this season for D’Youville, starting four, and is averaging 3.3 points and 2.4 rebounds a night in her freshman campaign.

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