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   Mikayla Elfrank was a ball-hawk Saturday as Coupeville kicked off its season at a jamboree. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Freshman Kylie Chernikoff made her debut, helping the Wolf JV take wins against two much-bigger schools.

Get the jitters out and get ready for the games that count.

That was the goal for the Coupeville High School girls basketball squads Saturday, as they kicked off a new season with an appearance at a jamboree in Sedro-Woolley.

Facing off with 2A Lakewood and 3A Oak Harbor in mini-games, the 1A Wolves, who were playing without full rosters, earned a split.

The CHS varsity fell 9-6 to Lakewood and 18-14 to Oak Harbor, while the Wolf JV romped to 15-3 and 9-4 wins against the same schools.

Now, it’s on to a busy first week of real play, starting with a road game Monday at Bellingham.

Coupeville hosts Blaine Wednesday and Mount Vernon Christian Friday, before facing an Australian traveling team next Saturday, Dec. 2, in a game at South Whidbey High School.

With several players missing, the Wolves had short benches for the jamboree. The varsity played with just one sub, sending bodies to the JV to help fill out that roster.

Varsity:

Coupeville opened against a very physical Lakewood squad and fell behind quickly, trailing 6-1 in the early going.

“This was a rough and tumble game,” said CHS coach David King. “We came out timid and very nervous on offense.”

After words of wisdom from their leader, the Wolves rallied to tie the game, but couldn’t quite get over the top.

Returning to the court to face its Island rivals, Coupeville was more aggressive and benefited from Mikayla Elfrank, who “was a ball-hawk and made off with four steals that led to fast break opportunities.”

“We played a much better offensive game. Ran our plays and got some good open looks,” King said. “Defensively, we just seemed a step slow. Allowed too many baseline drives and allowing players to get to the basket with very little resistance.

“Defense is our staple and tonight we just didn’t bring it,” he added. “Something to learn from and continue to practice and improve on.”

Coupeville hung with Oak Harbor until the very end, but free-throw shooting was the difference in the end. The Wildcats drained six of eight from the charity stripe, while the Wolves were a tad cold, hitting just two of six.

Elfrank, Kyla Briscoe, Sarah Wright, Lindsey Roberts and Allison Wenzel played in both games, while Kalia Littlejohn and Scout Smith each slid down to JV for one game to help their younger counterparts.

While he always prefers wins, King came away pleased with a lot of what he saw his team do against big school competition.

“Overall, a good start to our season and getting into game situations is what tonight was all about,” he said.

JV:

With a variety of players dealing with early-season dings (a knee injury, a bone chip in a hand, a sore quad muscle, wisdom teeth removal) and two key players off on family adventures, the young guns were a work in progress.

And yet, with Littlejohn and Smith providing sparks against Lakewood and Oak Harbor, respectively, Amy King’s team still ran their foes off the floor with relative ease.

Kalia helped us out. With her guidance, we were able to get some confidence in setting up and running our plays, as well as stepping up our defense,” King said. “Then Scout stepped in where Kalia left off and the rest of the team sparked in their play.”

Tia Wurzrainer “made some great passes in both games,” piling up assists, rebounds and steals, while frosh phenom Genna Wright “came alive in the second game, ripping rebounds, taking shots and getting steals.”

Nicole Lester, Mollie Bailey and two first-time players, Kylie Chernikoff and Julia Garcia Onoro, rounded out Coupeville’s roster.

“I was very proud of those who played today,” King said. “I think they all got better and hopefully have a little more confidence in themselves and each other before going into our game on Monday.”

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Refs played foul with Makana Stone Saturday, but she used her few minutes of playing time strongly to help Whitman win its fourth-straight. (Eileen Stone photo)

Not even the refs could stop Whitman.

The Blues played major chunks of game time Saturday without their leading scorer, Coupeville grad Makana Stone, who was saddled with foul trouble, but still rolled to their fourth-straight win.

Breaking open a one-point game with a strong second-half effort, Whitman cruised past Evergreen State College 89-76 in the finale of the Kim Evanger Raney Memorial Classic.

The win lifts the Blues to 4-1.

Stone came into the game averaging 16 points a night, and started with a bang.

The sophomore sensation hit a pair of jumpers to open things, then fed freshman Kaelan Shamseldin for a three-ball.

But back-to-back fouls derailed her night less than three minutes into the opening quarter, and she stayed on the bench for much of the first half.

When she was on the court in the second half, Stone was her usual explosive self, picking up four more points, four boards and another assist.

Two more fouls severely limited her floor time, however. She entered the night averaging 22 minutes a game, but only played nine against Evergreen.

Stone finished Saturday with eight points, on efficient 4-6 shooting from the floor.

She leads Whitman in field goal percentage (66% on 27-41 shooting) and free throw percentage (86% on 18-21).

With several other key players plagued by foul trouble — Sierra McGarity fouled out, while Maegan Martin (4) and Emily Rommel (3) were hobbled — Whitman turned to its guards for much of its offense.

Preseason All-American Casey Poe rattled home a team-high 26 in her second game of the season, while Shamseldin bounced back from a scoreless game the night before to net 16.

Through the first five games, Stone remains Whitman’s #1 scorer, with 72 points, and #2 rebounder (trailing Rommel 37-34).

The Blues return to action next weekend, when they take a two-game road trip to Tacoma to face their first Northwest Conference foes.

Whitman plays at Pacific Lutheran University Friday, then revives its rivalry with the University of Puget Sound Saturday.

Last season, the Blues and Loggers split four games, with UPS taking two regular-season games in overtime, before Whitman rebounded to win a pair of playoff contests.

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   Anya Leavell (#12) scored a career-high 16 Saturday as Coupeville thrashed Oak Harbor in SWISH basketball play. (Photo courtesy Joshua Leavell)

She was a one-woman wrecking crew.

Dropping buckets from every angle Saturday, Coupeville 8th grader Anya Leavell torched Oak Harbor for 16 points, leading the Wolves SWISH squad to a 33-16 romp.

“The ladies defended The Rock!,” said Coupeville coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh. “Everyone played well.”

Leavell had “a career day offensively,” but she wasn’t the only weapon for the Wolves.

Izzy Wells added five points, including a sweet shot from beyond the three-point arc, while Audrianna Wells hit a pair of layups and Kylie Van Velkinburgh got three the hard way.

The coach’s daughter went strong to the hoop for a bucket, absorbed the foul and drained the ensuing free throw to cap the play.

Coupeville also got buckets off of jump shots from Ella Colwell and Abby Mulholland.

It was especially sweet for Colwell, as it was her first basket of the season.

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   Makana Stone volunteers to go kick some fanny and take names. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Welcome to beat down city.

With preseason All-American Casey Poe back in the lineup, and Coupeville grad Makana Stone playing near flawless ball, the Whitman College women’s basketball squad was unstoppable Friday afternoon.

Kicking off the Kim Evanger Raney Memorial Classic, the Blues crushed previously-unbeaten Walla Walla College 81-42 in a game which was over as soon as Stone knocked down the first basket.

The win lifts Whitman to 3-1 heading into another tourney game Saturday against Evergreen State College.

The Blues played the first three games of the season minus Poe, who was working on an academic project, and, with her out, Stone has emerged as a go-to scorer.

That continued Friday, as the former Wolf banged home three lay-ups in the first quarter, then iced four straight jumpers.

Stone, who didn’t miss a shot until midway through the fourth quarter, finished with 16 points on 8-9 shooting.

Poe, who went off for 12 in the third quarter, had a game-high 21. Emily Rommel and Maegan Martin chipped in with 12 apiece.

Whitman put the game away early, cruising in with a 25-9 lead at the end of the first, then stretching it to 46-14 at the half.

From there, the Blues steadily pushed the margin, which reached as high as 42 right before Walla Walla hit a game-closing three-ball.

Through the first four games of her sophomore season, Stone is averaging 16 points and 7.5 rebounds a night.

She leads Whitman in points (64) rebounds (30), field goal percentage (66% on 23-35) and free throw percentage (86% on 18-21), while also having five assists, three steals and one blocked shot.

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   Coach Lark Gustafson (center) heads up a SWISH hoops squad featuring Coupeville players in grades 5-7. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   One step away from high school ball, the Wolves playing for Dustin Van Velkinburgh are in 8th grade.

The little sisters are here, to lay claim to the court.

Coupeville’s girls SWISH basketball teams have been ultra-successful in recent seasons, and there seems little reason to think it won’t continue.

The young Wolves, many of whom have now been playing together for several seasons, are working their way towards the high school team, all with an eye on continuing the success those older squads have also enjoyed.

This year’s 8th grade SWISH team has already beaten Orcas Island and Friday Harbor, while losing thrillers to big-city foes from Anacortes, Blaine and Mount Vernon.

The Wolves, playing without several injured players, had late leads on two of those three teams.

“We are playing really well; just missing shots,” said coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh. “Should be a good group to watch throughout high school.”

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