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Posts Tagged ‘Basketball’

Wolf junior Jada Heaton is a busy bee, having played three sports for three seasons running. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

We have a record. I believe.

I’ve been tracking the number of three-sport athletes at Coupeville High School since the blog started in 2012, and an early look at spring rosters indicates this is the deepest year ever.

There are 24 Wolves — 14 boys and 10 girls — who are finishing their year-round odyssey.

That breaks the previous high of 23, achieved in 2014, 2017, and 2022.

Not counting 2020, where Covid restrictions erased spring sports and made the concept of three-sport athletes impossible to achieve, CHS has had 20+ iron men and women almost every year in the Coupeville Sports era.

The only sub-20 years were 2013, when 18 Wolves completed the journey, and 2016, when we hit our low of 17.

At a small school like CHS, having full rosters is huge, and it speaks strongly to the work put in by Athletic Director Willie Smith and his coaches.

And it’s also a testament to the work ethic of the Wolf athletes themselves, as they fully embrace the chance to get the most possible out of their prep sports careers.

So, tip your hat to the ones who are there, every season:

 

GIRLS:

Capri Anter – Volleyball, Basketball, Softball
Haylee Armstrong – Volleyball, Basketball, Softball
Teagan Calkins – Volleyball, Basketball, Softball
Lexis Drake – Volleyball, Basketball, Track
Mia Farris – Volleyball, Basketball, Softball
Jada Heaton – Volleyball, Basketball, Softball
Katie Marti – Volleyball, Basketball, Track
Madison McMillan – Volleyball, Basketball, Softball
Brynn Parker – Soccer, Basketball, Tennis
Lyla Stuurmans – Volleyball, Basketball, Track

 

BOYS:

Chase Anderson – Football, Basketball, Baseball
Camden Glover – Football, Basketball, Baseball
Easton Green – Cross Country, Basketball, Baseball
Nick Guay – Soccer, Basketball, Track
Davin Houston – Football, Basketball, Track
Zane Oldenstadt – Football, Basketball, Track
Aiden O’Neill – Football, Basketball, Baseball
Jack Porter – Football, Basketball, Baseball
Johnny Porter – Football, Basketball, Baseball
Landon Roberts – Cross Country, Basketball, Baseball
Mikey Robinett – Football, Basketball, Track
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim – Soccer, Basketball, Track
Malachi Somes – Football, Basketball, Track
Cole White – Soccer, Basketball, Baseball

If there’s a sport to be played, Chase Anderson will be there.

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Team Whidbey is ready to rumble. (Photos courtesy Tiffany Wheeler Thompson)

Put a basketball in their hands, and they soar.

Two Whidbey Island hoops teams participated in the Special Olympics state championships in Wenatchee this weekend, with both nabbing top finishes.

South Whidbey Wind claimed silver after enduring a nail-biting triple-overtime affair, while Team Whidbey earned fourth place in their division.

“It was a long day for our athletes, but they made all of us so proud,” said Tiffany Wheeler Thompson.

South Whidbey Wind players sport their medals.

The 2024 Special Olympics State Winter Games ran from Mar. 1-3, with athletes competing in events such as alpine skiing, basketball, cheerleading, figure skating, snowboarding, and speed skating.

There were 495 athletes taking part in the basketball competition.

 

Spring sports kickoff:

While basketball has capped its season, Team Whidbey is moving on to swimming and track.

The events are open to ages eight and up, with no skill required.

To sign up, or for more, info contact Shari Mays at wispecialolympics@gmail.com.

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Caleb Meyer and his fan club president, who also brought him into this world. (Photos courtesy Sarah Flay)

One big night down, more to come.

Coupeville grad Caleb Meyer was one of four Skagit Valley College basketball players honored Wednesday during a Sophomore Appreciation Night win over Bellevue College.

The Cardinals, with the former Wolf in the starting lineup, rolled to a 75-63 win.

The home victory lifts SVC to 9-5 in Northwest Conference play, 24-5 overall heading into the playoffs.

Skagit finishes second in the eight-team North region, trailing just red-hot Edmonds, which closed on a nine-game win streak.

The 16-team, single-elimination NWAC postseason tourney runs Mar. 6-17 at Columbia Basin College in Pasco.

Current CHS hoops players showed up to watch the former Wolf play college ball.

Meyer was a key member of a 2021-2022 Coupeville High School hoops squad which won the program’s first league title in 20+ years, and advanced to state for the first time since 1988.

He was also part of a Wolf relay team which finished second in the 4 x 100 at the state track and field meet.

Ready to attack.

During his two years playing at Skagit, Meyer has been part of a very stacked roster.

Fighting for floor time with an assortment of fellow former high school all-stars, he has racked up 27 points (included hitting a trio of three-balls), four rebounds, five assists, and four steals this season.

 

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Coke ain’t Pepsi, and in a country where my winter depression beard is allowed to get this out of hand, you don’t have to accept the latter as the former. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There you are in a restaurant, and it’s time to order your beverage.

“I’ll take a Coke, thanks.”

And the waitress looks uncomfortably around, takes a deep sigh that seems to travel from the top of her head to the bottom of her well-worn shoes, and asks, “Would a Pepsi be OK?”

Now your first response is “No, if I wanted to drink toilet water, I’d go drink toilet water.

“You can put a few bursts of thick, sludgy syrup in there, it’s still going flat in .00002 seconds, and it’s still tasting like something a sasquatch left on the side of Mt. Rainier.”

But you’re polite and all, so fighting down your gag reflex, you weakly smile and say, “Sure…” while knowing you will hate every Godforsaken swallow.

Now, this is a sports blog, so today our waitress is the gum-snapping, tired-beyond-belief folks at the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association, and the “Would Pepsi be OK?” and “Sure…” conversation is being used in the context of streaming.

As in me asking, “May I please watch the livestream of my state basketball game being done on Facebook by a mom who can properly frame the picture, keeps things in focus, gets close enough I can see actual faces, AND provides witty commentary with regular score updates?”

To which our waitress responds, “Would NFHS be OK?”

You mean the crap-ass company whose cameras can be defeated by a single hair, taken down by a flake of dust, brought to a standstill by a single drop of rain? Or is that just my tears…

The charlatans whose remote, often terribly positioned cameras allegedly follow action, but that means many, MANY times the ball goes one way, and the AI system sends the camera the other way, so we can watch a five-year-old cruise by clutching his giant chewy pretzel?

But that’s only if the camera isn’t already posting multiple images, causing the ballhandler to vanish, reappear, vanish again, then flat out disappear into the Bermuda Triangle.

Where hopefully they’ll find Amelia Earhart, all while the on-screen scoreboard stays stuck at 0-0.

That NFHS?

The one that struggles to stay on the air all too frequently, offering the endless loop of death for our entertainment?

The one that shoots its commercials in hi-def, NFL-ready images, then reverts back to 1970’s TV once the feed actually kicks in?

While charging us for the pleasure??????

Oh, that NFHS. The one Bigfoot deposited on the side of the trail.

Why does this come up today, you ask?

Because, as the Coupeville boys prepare to play their state opener against Tonasket, we’re being told the WIAA is trying to get the small-time innovators out of the streaming business and force us to send money to their incompetent chosen web site.

All so they can get a cut of that sweet, sweet moola, in much the same way they do when they tell you cash (the legal tender of the USA) is forbidden and GoFan (with its fees and frequent web site screw ups) is golden.

Now, I question how the cucumber sandwich-eatin’ dilettantes at the WIAA can enforce a ban on people using Facebook Live to stream games.

In this day and age, everyone, whether they want one or not, has a phone.

So, if everyone in the stands raises their devices at the same time, how do they know if you’re taking a photo, talking to Grandma, playing Fruit Ninja, trying to find what year Hoosiers hit movie screens, or live streaming the game?

Answer, 1986, and they don’t.

Remember, the WIAA is the same organization which got caught TWICE this season ranking non-existent teams #1 in their RPI rankings.

Once is an accident. Twice, someone needs to go back to school.

Those RPI rankings? The WIAA only pushes them because they have sponsors who pay to attach their names to the whole sham.

And then newspaper writers and bloggers (ahem…) use the weekly release of said numbers to get quick page hits on the internet by trumpeting the results.

Who’s rising? Who’s falling? Which team on this list doesn’t actually exist???

So, when it comes to streaming, the WIAA hopes well-meaning school officials will put subtle pressure on parents.

And that those parents, being polite like the people gagging down Pepsi against their will, will go along with the scam and turn off their feed.

That way WIAA head honchos can get back to plundering the cream cheese and veggie tasty tidbits paid for by your money.

But what if you don’t turn off the feed?

Imagine a world where you all rise up, sending countless live streams out onto the internet, all infinitely better than the mediocre pap “produced” by NFHS.

Say no to “Pepsi!”

If they won’t give you Coke, order Root-Beer or lemonade!

Free the stream! Bring the whole empire crashing down around their heads, even if it means they can’t have cucumber on their sandwiches.

Anarchy on the hardwood? God bless, America, where you’re still free to be as annoying as you like.

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“We hate to see you go, but we love to watch you walk away!” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville’s support crew gets an early weekend.

The final two games of the District 1/2 basketball tournament — neither of which features a Wolf team — have been moved from the CHS gym to La Conner High School.

The change was made “to accommodate Auburn Adventist’s religious requirements, as well as the limitation of the Friday Harbor ferry options,” said tourney director Willie Smith.

With the change in locale, La Conner will provide its people to handle scorebooks, locker rooms, and such.

The games, which are loser-out, winner-to-state affairs Saturday night, feature the Auburn Adventist Academy girls “hosting” Friday Harbor at 6:00 PM, followed by the La Conner boys hosting AAA at 7:45.

The Coupeville boys and La Conner girls, having won Bi-District title games earlier in the week, have already clinched their tickets to the state tourney.

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