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Posts Tagged ‘Basketball’

Ulrik Wells stakes his claim to the paint. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Avalon Renninger, seconds before she shattered another rival’s ankles.

Lindsey Roberts looks worried, but she shouldn’t. Her shooting form is flawless.

Ethan Spark shows off his new yoga move, the Downward Wolf.

Chelsea Prescott flies in to deliver an early Christmas present to the basket.

With teammates running on his side, Jean Lund-Olsen pounds the ball up-court.

The Wolf bench celebrates a rain of three-balls.

Mikayla Elfrank goes WWE on a fool.

The gym is alive with the sounds of basketball again.

And one of those sounds is the click-click-click of John Fisken’s camera, as he captures Wolf hoops stars in action.

The pics above are courtesy him.

To see more (a percentage of purchases funds college scholarships for CHS student/athletes), pop over to:

Girls (varsity and JV):

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-basketball-2017-2018/2017-12-01-GBB-vs-MVC/

Boys (varsity and JV):

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-basketball-2017-2018/2017-12-01-BBB-vs-MVC/

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Wolf senior Joey Lippo is locked and loaded. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Defensive dynamos Kalia Littlejohn (back) and Ema Smith may goof around during photo shoots, but are deadly-serious on the court.

It’s never too early to look at the numbers.

We’re only a week into the new basketball season, and the number of games played widely varies team to team.

So, take everything in the proper context and … and … Hunter Smith is coming for all your records!!

OK, deep breath.

The reality is the Coupeville boys have only played two games, or exactly 10% of their regular-season schedule. There’s a long way to go.

But, through those first two games, Smith is averaging 22 points a night, having hit 24 on the road at Blaine and 20 at home against Mount Vernon Christian.

Stay healthy and keep the same shooting touch and the Wolf senior could make a run at cracking Coupeville’s Top 10 for single-season and career scoring.

Having entered the season with 465 points, he’s now at 509 and has leap-frogged four former CHS stars to sit, for the moment, as the 41st best scorer in the 101-year history of Wolf boys hoops.

On the other side of the ball, fellow senior Mikayla Elfrank leads the way, averaging a whisper under 13 a game.

And what do the standings tell us?

Well, no one has played a league game yet, but Coupeville is the only school to get a win from both its girls and boys teams.

So, on we plunge, with the Wolves returning to the court this coming Friday and Saturday (Dec. 8-9).

CHS hosts Sequim, then travels down to South Whidbey, with both doubleheaders non-conference affairs.

A look at the varsity stats ‘n standings, through Dec. 2:

Scoring:

Girls (4 games):

Mikayla Elfrank 51
Lindsey Roberts 25
Kalia Littlejohn 24
Kyla Briscoe 11
Ema Smith 11
Sarah Wright
11
Scout Smith
8

Boys (2 games):

Hunter Smith 44
Ethan Spark 29
Joey Lippo 8
Hunter Downes 5
Dane Lucero 2
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim 1
Cameron Toomey-Stout 1

Standings:

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
Chimacum 0-0 1-0
COUPEVILLE 0-0 1-3
Klahowya 0-0 0-2
Port Townsend 0-0 0-2

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 0-0 1-1
Port Townsend 0-0 1-1
Chimacum 0-0 0-1
Klahowya 0-0 0-2

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   Coupeville’s Sarah Wright makes a cultural connection Saturday with a rival from Australia. (Amy King photos)

The Wolves show off gifts from the visitors.

   Genna Wright (left) and Maddie Vondrak play with their new finger puppet koalas.

Two continents, one shared love of goofing off for photos.

It was exactly what they needed.

Hours after a rough loss on their home court Friday night, the Coupeville High School girls basketball team dug down deep Saturday morning and rallied to pull out a win against a traveling team from Australia.

The 42-34 win over Flinders Christian Community College, captured on South Whidbey’s court, lifts the Wolves to 1-3 on the season.

It also caps a brutal open stretch to Coupeville’s schedule, in which it played four games in six days.

Now CHS gets a bit of a break, before welcoming Sequim to town Dec. 8.

The match-up with Flinders, which was added to the schedule at the last second, turned out to be a great experience for the Wolves on two fronts. They played a stellar game against a quality foe, and they got a unique cultural experience.

“The players and coaches from Flinders Christian were top notch!,” Coupeville coach David King said. “Our players enjoyed this experience so much they were hoping we could do something like this every year.

“Yes, it was a basketball game; someone was going to win and someone lose,” he added. “But meeting others from the other side of the world and having both sides come out of it like they were long-lost friends was great to see.”

Coupeville was originally set to hop back on the bus right after their game, but changed plans and hung out with their Australian counterparts as the Flinders boys team played South Whidbey in the second half of a doubleheader.

The Falcons kept Whidbey Island’s record intact, winning that one 44-33.

“We sat with the Flinders girls and I’m not sure how much actual game-watching was going on, but the conversations never stopped,” King said. “An experience to not be forgotten by those involved in the game.”

The girls game involved two tired squads, as Flinders arrived at Sea-Tac Friday night after an 18-hour plane trip (and a three-hour delay).

After their Saturday opener, the Aussies play several more games as they travel across Washington and California.

So, while the Wolves “did start a bit slow,” falling behind 12-6 after one quarter, King wasn’t about to use tiredness as an excuse.

Instead, he and his players focused on the areas which have hurt them in three close losses, from simplifying what they were doing on offense to hitting their free throws.

And boom, it all worked.

“We wanted to play to our strengths and play consistently. We did that throughout the game,” King said.

With Lindsey Roberts finding her groove on the offensive end of the floor in the second quarter, tossing in half of her game-high 12 points, the Wolves went on a 15-5 tear, turning a six-point deficit into a four-point advantage at the half.

She wasn’t the only Wolf getting hot, as Ema Smith, in her second game this season, and first as a starter, banged home a pair of buckets in support.

The second half was a war of attrition, with Coupeville stretching the lead to 10, Flinders roaring back to cut the margin to just two, then the Wolves regaining the momentum.

“When we moved the ball on offense we were able to penetrate into the key or get some open jumpers,” King said. “Flinders set up a press that had us struggling for a bit. After making an adjustment in a timeout and then again at halftime, we were able to navigate it and put pressure on them in the half court.”

One second-half play in particular brought a smile to the faces of the CHS coaching staff.

Pounding the ball down low, Wolf junior Sarah Wright, giving up several inches to a 6-foot-1 Flinders defender, made King positively gush.

“She squared up, gave an up-fake and got the defender to bite. One dribble to get space and a clean shot went up and hit nothing but net,” King said. “Almost daily we talk about getting the defender to go for a fake and Sarah has been working on this since our season started.

“We ask our post players on offense to call, better yet demand the ball in the post if they have the advantage,” he added. “Sarah did just that. Set up on the low block, and called for the ball by letting her teammates know she had a mismatch.

“Music to my ears.”

Wright was a terror all day, ripping down eight rebounds to lead the Wolves in cleaning the glass.

Roberts filled up the stat sheet as well, adding seven rebounds, two assists, a block and a steal to go with her career-high 12 points.

With 162 career points, the Wolf junior is just four points shy of passing mom Sherry (Bonacci) Roberts to become the highest-scoring Wolf hoops star in family history.

She’s already passed grandfather Sandy Roberts, dad Jon Roberts, uncles Jay Roberts and Danny Bonacci and aunt Jennifer (Eelkema) Roberts.

Mikayla Elfrank, “playing her usual disruptive game,” tossed in eight points, while Ema Smith and Wright added seven apiece. Kalia Littlejohn and Kyla Briscoe rounded out the attack with four points each.

Two of those points came on a play where she pilfered the ball and turned the steal into a fast-break layup.

“We have talked about Kyla being more decisive; that’s the kind of play we are talking about,” King said.

Coupeville also got strong play from Allison Wenzel, Avalon Renninger, Nicole Lester, Scout Smith (making her first start) and Chelsea Prescott.

For Prescott and Lester, it was their varsity debut and “both represented themselves well.”

Flinders shared its scoring load, with all nine players notching their name in the book.

Laura Gillett and Leah Davies each went for six to pace the visitors, while Charlie White (5), Natalie Cannon (5), Georgia Howes (5), Bridget Beckett (2), Charli Murr (2), Holly Gibson (2) and Olivia Brice (1) also scored.

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   Coupeville grad Makana Stone and Whitman College have won six straight after knocking off their arch-rivals. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Two different states, two very different results.

Coupeville grads Makana Stone and Kailey Kellner both laced up their shoes and hit the college basketball court Saturday, but only one came away feeling great.

Stone and Whitman College thrashed arch-rival University of Puget Sound 80-69 in Tacoma, while Kellner and D’Youville College fell 81-49 to visiting Mt. Aloysius in Buffalo, New York.

Stone:

Even saddled with some early foul trouble, the splendid sophomore finished with 12 points, four rebounds and two assists in the win.

The victory, which lifts Whitman to 6-1 overall, 2-0 in league play, was a chance for the Blues to make an early statement.

Last year they fell twice in overtime to PLU during the regular season, then bounced back to smack the Lutes twice in the playoffs.

This time around, Whitman entered ranked #8 in D-III, while PLU was #19.

The Blues took the early lead, heading into the first break up 20-15, and never let their rivals get back in the game.

Whitman put the hammer down in the fourth, as Stone scored six of her 12 points during a game-busting run to start the period.

She was one of three Blues to finish in double digits, with Casey Poe knocking down 18 and Emily Rommel tickling the twines for 16. Elizabeth Prewitt scorched the nets for 27 in a losing cause.

After back-to-back league games on the road, Whitman gets a break, heading off to the Holiday Classic presented by Red Lion River Inn in Spokane next weekend.

The Blues play non-conference foes Carroll College and Colorado College Dec. 8-9.

Through the first seven games, Stone leads Whitman in points (100) and rebounds (45) and has shown a sizzlin’ shooting touch. She’s hitting 65% from the field (41-63) and 78% from the line (18-23).

Kellner:

D’Youville had a two-game winning streak snapped thanks to wildly inconsistent scoring.

The Spartans held their own with Mr. Aloysius in the first (17-16) and third quarters (12-12), but were buried in the second (28-11) and fourth (24-10).

The loss drops D’Youville to 2-5 overall, 1-1 in league play.

Kellner, despite starting for the fourth-straight contest, didn’t get much of a chance to make a difference as the Spartans coach juggled lineup looks all game in an effort to see what his bench could accomplish.

The former Wolf pulled down a season-low eight minutes, missing the only shot she put up.

She and her teammates get right back at it Monday, when they hit the road to face Buffalo State.

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   Jean Lund-Olsen’s fingers tell the tale — two JV games Friday, two wins for Coupeville. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The small gym was hoppin’.

While the varsity basketball teams lit up the Coupeville High School gym Friday, the Wolf JV squads took turns winning thrillers against visiting Mount Vernon Christian across the hallway.

The CHS boys pulled away in the fourth quarter for a 38-36 win, evening their record at 1-1, while the girls emerged from overtime with a 24-22 victory to climb to 2-1 on the season.

Girls fight back:

Trailing 13-7 at the half, the Wolves steadily chipped away at the lead, cutting away three points in both the third and fourth quarters.

After losing its lead, MVC hit a late bucket to re-tie the game, then had a chance to win in the final three seconds.

Wolf frosh Chelsea Prescott read the play nicely, though, intercepting the in-bounds pass and sending the game to overtime, where one perfect play won the night.

Running a play it had recently installed, Coupeville used a “soccer-style” pass from pitch vet Tia Wurzrainer to Mollie Bailey to set up the only bucket of the extra period.

The wild finish capped what CHS coach Amy King termed a “back-and-forth, soccer-style game,” in which the ball was frequently loose, bodies were frequently crashing into one another, shots kept popping back out of the cylinder and there were “a million steals.”

Prescott racked up the best numbers in the scoring column with 10 (she also had five blocks and four steals), while Avalon Renninger (6), Nicole Lester (4), Bailey (2) and Wurzrainer (2) also tallied points.

Boys win a back-and-forth affair:

Both squads took turns surging, with Coupeville up 12-7 after one, down 20-19 at the half, then tied at 25-25 heading into the final eight minutes.

Once there, the Wolves got a pair of crunch-time three-balls from freshman Alex Jimenez, one of five CHS players to score in the fourth quarter.

Sophomore Mason Grove paced Coupeville with a game-high 16, netting five three-point bombs and a crucial free throw, while Ulrik Wells pounded down low for seven points.

Jean Lund-Olsen (6), Jimenez (6), Daniel Olson (2) and David Prescott (1) all chipped in to round out the scoring attack.

“The young guys really stepped up for us tonight,” said Coupeville coach Chris Smith.

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