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Posts Tagged ‘Basketball’

Mia Littlejohn (John Fisken photos)

   Mia Littlejohn (back) and Kailey Kellner (front) were tabbed First-Team All-League while Lindsey Roberts was Honorable Mention. (John Fisken photos)

Ashlie Shank

   Ashlie Shank took home two honors (Best Offense and the Wolf Paw Award) from Tuesday night’s CHS basketball banquet.

Emma Mathusek

   Emma Mathusek (with ball) and Tia Wurzrainer (trailing the play) both captured Most Improved awards.

Lauren Rose won Most Inspirational and Best Chiropractor. One of those is a made-up award I just created...

   Lauren Rose won Most Inspirational and Best Chiropractor. One of those is a made-up award I just created.

They dominated the league standings, so it’s only appropriate they dominated the postseason honors.

The Coupeville High School girls basketball squad wrapped up a third straight 9-0 season in Olympic League play this year, and conference coaches honored seven different Wolves when they selected All-League teams.

Senior Kailey Kellner and junior Mia Littlejohn repeated as First-Team picks.

Meanwhile seniors Tiffany Briscoe and Lauren Grove, junior Mikayla Elfrank and sophomores Lindsey Roberts and Kalia Littlejohn were all tabbed for Honorable Mention.

The All-League honors were announced Tuesday, as the Wolf girls wrapped a very successful season with an awards banquet.

Coupeville’s varsity went 15-6, the third straight year it has won 15 or more games, while the Wolf JV finished 11-3 overall, 5-0 in league play.

Or 15-3, 9-0 if you award the JV forfeit wins for the four league games they didn’t get a chance to play when Port Townsend and Chimacum bailed on games due to a lack of players.

Awards handed out Tuesday:

Four-Year Varsity Participation:

Tiffany Briscoe
Lauren Grove
Kailey Kellner
Skyler Lawrence

Team Captains:

Tiffany Briscoe – varsity
Lauren Grove – varsity
Kailey Kellner – varsity
Mia Littlejohn – varsity
Ema Smith – JV

Managers:

Skyler Lawrence
Peytin Vondrak

Most Improved:

Emma Mathusek – JV
Tia Wurzrainer – JV
Mikayla Elfrank – varsity

Most Inspirational:

Sarah Wright – JV
Lauren Rose – varsity

Best Defense:

Maya Toomey-Stout – JV
Lauren Grove – varsity

Best Offense:

Ashlie Shank – JV
Kailey Kellner – varsity

Wolf Paw Award:

Ashlie Shank – JV
Lindsey Roberts – varsity

Coaches Award:

Avalon Renninger – JV
Tiffany Briscoe – varsity

Varsity Letters:

Kyla Briscoe
Tiffany Briscoe
Mikayla Elfrank
Lauren Grove
Kailey Kellner
Kalia Littlejohn
Mia Littlejohn
Lindsey Roberts
Lauren Rose
Allison Wenzel
Sarah Wright

Varsity Participation:

Ema Smith

JV Certificates:

Maddy Hilkey
Nicole Lester
Emma Mathusek
Brittany Powers
Avalon Renninger
Ashlie Shank
Ema Smith
Scout Smith
Maya Toomey-Stout
Tia Wurzrainer

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Kiara Contreras, wrecking ball unleashed. (John Fisken photos)

Kiara Contreras, wrecking ball unleashed. (John Fisken photos)

Lily Leedy makes the pass before the Sequim defender completely chomps her head.

   Lily Leedy makes the pass before the Sequim defender completely chomps her head off.

Chelsea Prescott takes the ball strong to the hoop.

Chelsea Prescott takes the ball strong to the hoop.

Having picked a pass out of mid-air, Genna Wright flies towards the other end of the floor. Spoiler alert: she scored on the play.

   Having picked a pass out of mid-air, Genna Wright flies towards the other end of the floor. Spoiler alert: she scored on the play.

The first quarter was a killer.

The Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball squad played two games Monday and slow starts crippled any chances the Wolves had of upending visiting Sequim.

Stung 15-2 in the 7th grade game and 13-1 in the 8th grade follow-up, Coupeville eventually fell 39-20 and 33-11, respectively.

The losses dropped the younger team to 1-2, while the older squad tumbled to 0-3.

Coupeville found an unforgiving basket in the early going of the 7th grade game, falling behind 13-0 before Audrianna Shaw broke through with a bucket off a nice drive to the hoop.

Once they escaped the first quarter, the Wolves settled down, essentially playing Sequim even until the final two minutes of the game.

From the start of the second quarter, when Anya Leavell banked home a shot, until the 2:05 mark of the fourth, when Kylie Van Velkinburgh popped a little runner in the paint, CMS was edged just 19-18.

Sequim tossed in the game’s final five points to stretch the final margin out, but, for almost three quarters, Megan Smith’s squad went toe-to-toe with a much-bigger school.

One key was the Wolves ramping up their aggressiveness, exemplified by Kiara Contreras, who went head over tail several times — once narrowly missing smacking her head on a door — chasing after loose balls.

Unfortunately, one of the other times she hit the floor, she didn’t get back up, and had to be helped out of the game, spending the rest of the night with a large ice pack on her leg.

Before she went out, Contreras rattled home four points to tie Leavell for second-best on the Wolves.

Shaw knocked down a team-high eight off of plays where she lowered her shoulder and charged into the fray for buckets, while Samantha Streitler and Van Velkinburgh each popped for a bucket.

Adair DeJesus, Alana Mihill, Lily Leedy, Katelin McCormick and Katelyn Painter also saw floor time, with Leedy especially scrappy on the defensive end of the floor.

In the 8th grade game, the Wolves, who play three 7th grader since they would otherwise have only four girls in uniform, struggled mightily with their shot selection in the first half.

Down 13-1 after the first eight minutes, getting just a single free throw from Chelsea Prescott, CMS added only a Izzy Wells jumper in the second.

Facing a 17-3 deficit coming out of halftime, the Wolves got their offense to work a little better in the second half.

Ja’Kenya Hoskins was their primary weapon, scoring a pair of buckets — one off of a rebound, the other on a breakaway where she slammed the layup home with considerable emphasis.

Coupeville’s best play of the night came from rampaging warrior Genna Wright, who jumped the play like a football safety, speared a pass out of mid-air, then beat the pack to the other end.

Flying a little out of control, she still managed to slam on the brakes at the end of the breakaway, pulled up and knocked down a sweet jumper.

Hoskins paced the Wolves with four, while Prescott (3), Wells (2) and Wright (2) rounded out the attack.

Mollie Bailey, Isabella Velasco and Heidi Clinkscales all chipped in with hustle and hard work.

To see more photos from this game (purchases fund college scholarships for Wolf student/athletes), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/20162017-Coupeville-BB/MSGBB/20170227-vs-Sequim/

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Kailey Kellner busts through the defense, on her way to rattling home another bucket. (John Fisken photos)

   Kailey Kellner busts through the defense, on her way to rattling home another bucket. (John Fisken photos)

It must be the intitials. Kellner, hanging out with fellow Hall o' Famer Kacie Kiel.

It must be the initials. Kellner, hanging out with fellow Hall o’ Famer Kacie Kiel.

Over the past three-plus years, I have had a front row seat to a transformation.

When Kailey Kellner first walked into the Coupeville High School gym midway through her freshman year, none of us knew much about her.

She was a mystery, a total unknown, a shy young woman who had been plucked from England and transported to a rock in the middle of the water in the Pacific Northwest by a family move.

Today, as we sit just a couple months away from her graduation, we all know Kailey much better, and we know this as simple truth — she is now, and has always been, a Hall of Famer.

From a tentative freshman to a sweet-shooting senior, from a girl who didn’t know a play to a rampaging force of nature ripping rebounds out of rival’s hands, she has grown before our eyes.

And so it is, with deep appreciation for how she conducts herself, on and off the court, that we, her fans, welcome her into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

After this, you’ll find her up at the top of the blog, abiding under the Legends tab that so aptly describes her.

Kailey could rain with the best of them, and her long, arcing three-balls from the corners, which would ripple the nets with a gentle splash as they hit pay dirt, were often a thing of beauty.

But she was a player who worked on her game throughout her career, adding new wrinkles to it, and could never be defined for just one small facet.

Kellner made her varsity debut as a sophomore, and was a key player as a junior and senior, a member of three teams which won Olympic League titles.

She exits having never lost a conference game as a varsity player, and Kailey is a big part of why those teams were so successful.

Scoring punch can never be underestimated, but over time, her quiet leadership skills and a willingness to sacrifice for her teammates was just as important.

When I look back at her career, the game which I feel best defines her was a district playoff game against Seattle Christian during her junior season.

The Wolves, playing on the road, had been rocked the game before by Charles Wright Academy.

Not so much on the scoreboard, where a late CHS rally almost stole a win, but down in the pits.

The much-rougher Tarriers socked the Wolves in the face (often literally) and if the Coupeville players were expecting the big city refs to save them, it was never going to happen.

Returning to the court in a game where the stakes were plain — win and you go to state, lose and you go home — CHS stepped onto the court a different team.

This time, they were the aggressors. The beasts on the boards. The ballers who weren’t takin’ no crud off of no one.

Makana Stone was transcendent, flying above the fray for 24 points and 20 rebounds. Mia Littlejohn was sparking the offense and Lauren Grove was lights-out on defense.

Every Wolf who touched the hardwood that night, all eight of them, fired as one and made the big city girls take several steps back.

It was the pinnacle of modern Coupeville basketball, a night which will stay with all of those who played, coached or lost their voice screaming in support.

And Kellner?

The three-ball-lovin’ sharpshooter who normally played most of the game on the outside, crashed into the paint with a vengeance that I have rarely seen in 25 years of high school sports coverage.

Her mere stats — 12 points, 10 boards and five assists as Coupeville roared to a 49-33 win and its first trip to state in a decade — only tell part of the story.

It was the look in Kellner’s eyes that night. The stride in her step. The pride in her work.

The soft-spoken young girl who tentatively stepped into an American gym two years before was replaced by a strong, confident young woman, and it was beautiful to behold.

On that night, for 32 minutes, no one wanted it more than Kailey did.

I hope, as she goes forward, she always remembers that night.

What it took to get there. What she accomplished. And how it felt afterwards.

Kailey is going to achieve big things in her life, and whether they come on the court or off, her large fan club is going to be thrilled for her.

But, before she leaves us and heads out to conquer new worlds, let’s take a moment to say a simple, heartfelt thank you.

Thank you, Kailey, for showing up in Cow Town, for playing with honor and fire, and for being a truly remarkable young woman.

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Makana Stone (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Makana Stone, seen here last season, had 10 points and 11 rebounds Saturday as Whitman won the Northwest Conference tournament. (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

Puget Sound sign-makers discover the folly of their ways.

Puget Sound sign-makers regret their choices in life.

Makana and Sylvia, reunited and it feels so good.

Makana and Sylvia, reunited and it feels so good.

They won when it mattered most.

Avenging two regular-season overtime losses, the Whitman College women’s basketball team shocked Puget Sound 81-72 Saturday in the championship game of the Northwest Conference tourney.

The win, coming on the road at Tacoma, lifts the Blues to 23-4, while snapping an 18-game win streak for the Loggers (25-2).

It also punches Whitman’s ticket to the NCAA Division III Women’s Basketball Championships for the first time since 2014.

Back then, the school, still playing as the Missionaries, finished second in the nation, falling 80-72 to undefeated FDU-Florham in the national championship game.

One player, Alysse Ketner, connects both Whitman squads.

She was a freshman reserve in 2014 and is a senior starter now for the team, which adopted a new mascot this season.

One of the biggest keys to Saturday’s win? A first-year player who came to the school just as it made the switch from Missionaries to Blues.

I speak of that rampaging Wolf of yore, Coupeville grad Makana Stone, who threw down 10 points and snatched a game-high 11 rebounds in the tourney title tilt.

The former Wolf garnered eight points and five rebounds during a mid-game hot streak that turned around Whitman’s fortunes.

Puget Sound, which won the first two meetings this season 73-71 and 89-82, bolted out to a 21-9 advantage after one quarter Saturday night.

Not to be deterred, the steady Blues chipped away at the lead with a 26-16 run in the second, then broke UPS with a 25-12 surge in the third quarter.

Five Whitman players landed in double figures in the scoring book, led by Chelsi Brewer with 19 and Casey Poe with 17.

Stone, who hauled in eight of her rebounds in the second half, out-dueled Puget Sound’s Jamie Lange, the league’s Freshman of the Year, to lead all players in cleaning the glass.

She also had two assists, setting up Mady Burdett and Emily Rommel on back-to-back buckets in the first quarter.

For the season, Stone has played in 26 of 27 games, starting 10. She has 175 points (6.7 a night), 159 rebounds (6.1), 27 assists, 13 steals and 11 blocks.

Whitman will find out its postseason path when the NCAA tourney bracket is announced Monday morning.

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Audriana Shaw (John Fisken photos)

Audrianna Shaw prepares to break some ankles. (John Fisken photos)

Kylie Van Velkinburgh

   Defensive dynamo Kylie Van Velkinburgh (right) gets up in the grill of a Stevens ball-handler.

Ja'Kenya Hoskins

Ja’Kenya Hoskins powers to the hoop for two.

"Little help. Guys ... LITTLE HELP!!"

“Little help. Guys … LITTLE HELP!!”

Sometimes it’s better to ignore the scoreboard.

Thursday was one of those days, as the Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball squads ran into a buzz-saw in the form of ginormous Stevens.

The school, which feeds 2A Port Angeles High School, is deep in numbers and loaded with talent, and the visitors took advantage of both to run the fairly inexperienced, thin-in-numbers Wolves off the floor.

Both games were virtual mirror images of each other, as the CMS 7th graders fell 47-8, before the “8th graders” lost 48-8.

I put quotes around 8th graders, since the Wolves have just four of those playing this season, which requires coach Ryan King to use a mix of younger players to fill out his roster.

Two of those 7th graders, Izzy Wells and Ja’Kenya Hoskins, each knocked down a bucket in the 8th grade game, while grizzled vets Genna Wright and Chelsea Prescott provided the other two.

In the seventh grade game, the scoring was also split between four Wolves, with Anya Leavell leading the way with three points.

Audrianna Shaw (2), Samantha Streitler (2) and Kylie Van Velkinburgh (1) rounded out the attack.

Stevens used a mix of deep shots (four treys) and inside buckets to romp in the opener, while the nightcap was one layup after another from a confident, polished squad that moved as one.

If there was one positive on the day for King and CMS 7th grade coach Megan Smith, it was that their teams didn’t crumble under pressure, and actually played stronger in the later stages.

The Wolf teams combined to score the majority of their points in the second half, rattling home 11 of 16 after the break.

Coupeville also got scrappy play from a number of girls, with Kiara Contreras and Heidi Clinkscales leading the charge on diving for loose balls.

The games were the home opener for CMS, which drew the attention of wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken, who provides the pics above.

To see all of his photos from the game (purchases fund college scholarships for Wolf student/athletes and inspire him to return to Coupeville more frequently), pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/20162017-Coupeville-BB/MSGBB/20170223-vs-Stevens/

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