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Brian Shank

   Wolf senior Brian Shank gets one more game on his home floor Thursday. (John Fisken photo)

In 33 hours and some change, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad will host a home district playoff game.

Their opponent? Nobody knows.

Thanks to hectic weather, the Nisqually League keeps bumping their final games of the season, from Monday to Tuesday and now to Wednesday night.

While Vashon Island (6-1 in league play) has clinched the conference title, Cascade Christian (4-3), Seattle Christian (4-3) and Bellevue Christian (3-4) are in a logjam as they fight for playoff seeds #2-#4.

Cascade Christian (8-11 overall) and Seattle Christian (11-8) play tonight (maybe) and the winner is #2 (CC won the first time around).

Bellevue Christian (9-10) is supposed to travel to Vashon (12-7) and needs to win to have a chance to avoid the #4 seed.

If they topple the Pirates and finish 4-4, the Vikings will be tied with the loser of CC/SC.

Since they split the season series with both of those schools, and there would be no days left for any kind of on-court tiebreaker, probably safe to assume a coin would be flipped.

Now, if things get cancelled for a third straight night?

We’ll make another assumption and say the league standings will be frozen as is, with #1-#4 being Vashon, CC, SC and BC.

What we do know about the playoff game:

When: Thursday, Feb. 9

Where: Coupeville High School gym

Tip-Off: 6 PM

Opponent: Nisqually League #4

Stakes: Loser-out, with the winner advancing to play Feb. 11 at the #2 Nisqually school in another loser-out game.

To see the bracket, pop over to: http://www.nisquallyathletics.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2186&sport=3

Cost: Postseason pricing is on tap, and no passes are accepted.

Adults and Students without ASB — $8.00.
Students (with ASB) — $5.00.
Elementary (under 12) — $4.00.
Senior Citizen (62+) — $5.00.
Preschool (with parent) — Free.

Last time CHS faced its possible foes:

BC — Lost a non-conference game 66-38 Dec. 16 of this season.
CC — Lost 59-36 in playoffs Feb. 14, 2015.
SC — Have not played in at least a decade.

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(Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Wolf players, trying to figure out their scoring averages. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

On to the postseason.

Both Wolf basketball squads punched their ticket to the playoffs — one a little more emphatically than the other — and will join Port Townsend and Chimacum at the next level.

Klahowya, which struggled through a rough, injury-marred winter, will sit out the playoffs on both the girls and boys sides.

The next round begins Thursday for the Coupeville boys, as they host a loser-out district game against the #4 team from the Nisqually League.

The Wolf girls, as league champs, are off until double-elimination play begins Feb. 14.

As we head towards the postseason, one final look at the regular-season standings:

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 9-0 15-4
Port Townsend 5-4 10-8
Chimacum 4-5 11-9
Klahowya 0-9 3-16

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 9-0 15-4
Chimacum 4-5 4-13
COUPEVILLE 3-6 3-16
Klahowya 2-7 4-15

And scoring stats for Coupeville’s varsity players:

Girls:

Kailey Kellner – 163
Mikayla Elfrank
– 118
Mia Littlejohn
– 113
Lindsey Roberts
– 82
Kalia Littlejohn
– 63
Tiffany Briscoe
– 43
Lauren Grove
– 38
Lauren Rose
– 30
Sarah Wright
– 16
Kyla Briscoe
– 7
Allison Wenzel
– 4
Charlotte Langille
– 2

Boys:

Hunter Smith – 303
Gabe Wynn
– 197
Ethan Spark
– 132
Brian Shank
– 119
Hunter Downes
– 36
Joey Lippo
– 28
Cameron Toomey-Stout
– 26
Steven Cope
– 13
Ariah Bepler
– 5
Jered Brown
– 5

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Allison Wenzel (left) and Tiffany Briscoe are postseason vets. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Allison Wenzel (left) and Tiffany Briscoe are postseason vets. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

The games get bigger, but so does the reward.

As the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad prepares for the postseason — the Wolves are the Olympic League’s #1 seed and open double-elimination district play Feb. 14 — it’s all about remembering what got you there, then building on that.

Wolf coach David King swings by The Coaches Corner to drop a little wisdom:

The regular portion of our season is over, but it’s not going to be forgotten.

We are going to take what we struggled with and look to shore them up and get better.

The things we did well, we will also look to improve. We aren’t going to settle where we are at.

Our goal is to enhance and improve on them.

District play is upon us and it’s a new season.

The great thing about this team is they will put in the work.

Each of the players has postseason experience in one or more sports. That experience is a great thing.

It helps with knowing what it takes to get there, the work required to be successful.

Here are a few things I want the players to realize as we begin our preparation for districts:

Never settle.

Believe in yourself, your team and the system.

Play with confidence.

Push yourself beyond what you think your limitations are.

Enjoy the experience and ride.

But, most important, have fun!

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Play as a team, win as a team. (John Fisken photo)

Play as a team, win as a team. (John Fisken photo)

The great unknown.

That’s where the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad was sailing this season.

For four seasons the Wolves always had #23 to rely on, and knowing Makana Stone was running the court alongside you (OK, almost always ahead of you … she’s fast) had to be a great comfort.

When she graduated and went off to play college ball, it was a major transitional moment.

Makana. Novi Barron. Brianne King. Lexie Black. Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby.

Those are arguably, in whatever order you want to put them today, the five greatest female hoops stars to ever wear a CHS uniform.

Yes, I know, Megan Smith, Sarah Mouw, Marlene Grasser, Ann Pettit, Amanda Allmer, Amy Mouw, Jen Canfield and Tina Lyness are also in the conversation, as are many others.

But those five — Stone, Barron, King, Lex and Ash — are my picks (for today, at least).

Losing one leaves a gaping hole in the program, and that’s what David and Amy King faced this season. Replacing the irreplaceable.

Barring a fully-formed Sarah Mouw suddenly showing up on your doorstep, ready to play her senior season in your cow town, it’s an impossible task.

So the Kings tinkered and cajoled, exhorted and drove, and got 13 players to realize that, while they couldn’t replace Makana on their own, they each could chip in with a valuable sliver of the pie.

And here they stand now, the 2016-2017 Wolf girls hoops squad, having matched last year’s Makana-led team by going 15-4 overall, 9-0 in Olympic League play.

With Klahowya, Chimacum and Port Townsend united in trying to overthrow the “Evil Empire,” every night was a test for Coupeville. And it responded.

And that’s why the team, and I put an emphasis on TEAM, is being inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame today, the sole member of the 84th class to enter these hallowed digital hallways.

Regardless of how they do in the postseason, these Wolves will forever be enshrined up at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

Because they have, almost without fail, accepted their roles.

Sacrificed where needed, risen up both as individual players and supportive teammates. Realized they are part of something bigger than just themselves.

Bought into “one team, one dream.”

We’re talking about 13 players here, 12 of whom are still with the team, and all of them are very intelligent, driven young women with their own hopes, desires and dreams.

Every player, in their heart, wants to be the “star.” Otherwise, why play?

To be successful as a basketball team, though, athletes have to sacrifice.

To sell out on defense every play, while others get the momentary buzz of scoring baskets.

To make the extra pass, set a screen like it’s life or death, accept constructive criticism from a coach, cheer on a teammate’s success even at a moment when you desperately wish it was you on the court, and not them.

Doing all that is harder than just shuffling off in a corner, pulling back within yourself and wallowing in self-pity.

But it’s also a thousand times more rewarding in the end.

I’m not in the locker room. I’m not in these players homes. I can only go on what I observe from the stands and what I hear.

And based on that, I believe a large part of this team’s success is precisely because 99% of the time, they have truly bought into “One Team, One Dream.”

It’s why they are where they are, a three-time league champ carrying a #1 seed into the playoffs. And it will be the key to any success they have at the next level, both as a team and individuals.

So, congratulations for all have you accomplished, and for the success that still lies ahead, Wolves.

A single player can shine in the moment, but to truly succeed, it takes a team.

Inducted together, as a TEAM:

David King (head coach)
Amy King (assistant coach)
Kyla Briscoe
Tiffany Briscoe
Mikayla Elfrank
Lauren Grove
Kailey Kellner
Charlotte Langille
Kalia Littlejohn
Mia Littlejohn
Lindsey Roberts
Lauren Rose
Ema Smith
Allison Wenzel
Sarah Wright
Skyler Lawrence
(manager)
Peytin Vondrak (manager)

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Lauren and Lauren (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

   When a Lauren (Rose), on left, meets a Lauren (Grove) in the paint. (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

Tiffany Briscoe

Senior co-captain Tiffany Briscoe (second from right) and family.

sign

Grove gets a shout-out from her rabid fan club.

Kaela Hollrigel

  Senior cheer captain Kaela Hollrigel (left) hangs out with mom and lil’ sis Natalie.

Kailey

Kailey Kellner gets mobbed.

sign

One of the hand-crafted signs which welcomed fans to the gym Saturday night.

Lauren Grove

   Lauren Grove with (most of) her family. Younger brother Mason was on the road with the CHS boys’ hoops squad.

Skyler Lawrence

Skyler Lawrence (left) caps a 4-year CHS hoops career alongside her sister.

First came the sniffles and photos, then another win.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad thumped Port Townsend Saturday, meaning all four players honored on Senior Night will graduate having never lost a varsity league game.

As Lauren Grove, Kailey Kellner, Tiffany Briscoe and Skyler Lawrence (plus senior cheer captain Kaela Hollrigel) received their tributes, living legend/former CHS cheer captain/school track record holder Sylvia Hurlburt clicked away.

The photos above are courtesy her.

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