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Lindsey Roberts

   Lindsey Roberts, here passing out of trouble in an earlier game, had a team-high 11 points and four boards Thursday in Sequim. (John Fisken photo)

Almost every path to success has a few bumps along the way.

For the high-flying Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball team, nothing has been able to stop them from adding wins to the ledger the past seven weeks.

Not illness, or injury, or a schedule that had them playing a school-record eight consecutive road games at one point.

10 straight wins, 47 days without a loss.

Until Thursday, when the offense dried up spectacularly in the second half and the Wolves watched host Sequim steal away a non-conference game from out of their clutches.

Up 12-8 at the break on their 2A rivals — who they scorched Monday on Whidbey — Coupeville got hammered 17-4 in the third quarter and fell 31-19.

The loss, the first for the Wolves since way back on Dec. 16 against powerhouse Bellevue Christian, puts CHS at 14-4 heading into their regular season finale Saturday.

Coupeville hosts Port Townsend for Senior Night (3:30 JV/5:00 varsity) and is looking to wrap up a third consecutive 9-0 season in 1A Olympic League play.

Thursday’s game played out, at least in the early going, much like Monday’s match-up — low-scoring and with Coupeville on top.

With Sequim controlling the pace of the game, keeping things sluggish while the Wolves wanted to get out and run, CHS still built a 9-6 lead after one quarter.

Mia Littlejohn opened the scoring with a three-ball, followed by a bucket from little sister Kalia and two from Lindsey Roberts, but the pace of the game was already draining, even with a lead.

“Tonight wasn’t our night. We knew what Sequim wanted to do offensively and that it would be another battle like Monday’s game,” CHS coach David King said. “Even though we scored nine in the quarter it was a struggle on both ends of the court.”

The second quarter “felt like we were watching paint dry,” as the two teams combined for a grand total of five points.

Roberts knocked down her third three-ball of the season to stake the Wolves to a 12-8 lead at the break, but few of the Coupeville players were thrilled with their early performance.

“At halftime, the players weren’t happy with our play,” King said. “We felt like we could turn it up defensively and get our offense going. But Sequim and our play said differently.”

Monday it was Coupeville who took charge in the third and on into the fourth with a brutally efficient defensive stand.

Thursday, it was Sequim senior Adrienne Haggerty, who used her six-foot frame to control play in the paint, then popped outside to drain three-balls as well.

She had just four points at the break, but went off for 12 in the third quarter, five more than Coupeville would score as a team in the entire second half.

While Coupeville has been known for staging late-game rallies this season, the spark wasn’t there on this night.

“In the past we found another gear and made comebacks. There was no late game heroics or a push to get us within striking distance,” King said. “The effort was there, but what the mind was telling the players didn’t translate to the court.

“We played tired, didn’t have our best defensive game,” he added. “And our offense didn’t show up. We did get some open shots throughout the game. Nothing seemed to fall.”

Roberts paced the Wolves with 11 points and four rebounds, while Mia Littlejohn (3), Lauren Grove (2), Kalia Littlejohn (2) and Sarah Wright (1) rounded out the scoring.

Kailey Kellner hauled in four boards, Mikayla Elfrank had two steals and the Wolves got strong supporting play from Allison Wenzel, Tiffany Briscoe, Lauren Rose and Ema Smith.

While he would have preferred to keep the winning streak alive, King has a great appreciation for how this team has rallied around each other and adopted a true “refuse to lose” attitude.

“Despite the loss, I’m pleased with the attitudes of the players. They aren’t happy with the loss and know we still have things to correct,” he said. “Me, who is ultra-competitive and hates to lose, I’ve had to explain that it’s OK to enjoy and win even if we didn’t play up to our own expectations.

“After some games this year the players aren’t happy with our play. How often does one hear that! That is a winning culture and players who expect great things from themselves and the team.”

Now, the focus switches to Saturday, when the Wolves will honor Kellner, Briscoe, Grove and Skyler Lawrence, before setting out to emphatically stretch the league’s longest active winning streak, in any sport, to 27-0.

“Tomorrow is another day. All is not lost. It’s one loss and we prepare for Port Townsend,” King said. “I’m expecting a spirited practice tomorrow and we will be better for it.”

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Ethan Spark (John Fisken photos)

   Ethan Spark, seen in an earlier game, torched the nets for 12 Thursday in Sequim. (John Fisken photo)

The rain in Spain may stay mainly in the plain, but the shots off of Nate Despain’s fingers fell mainly right through the middle of the net.

With their sophomore gunner dropping 17 of his game-high 19 in the first half, outscoring visiting Coupeville by himself, the Sequim High School boys’ basketball squad rolled to a 56-40 win Thursday night.

The non-conference loss, the second in a four-day period to the 2A school, leaves CHS at 3-15 heading into its regular season finale.

That’s when things will get interesting for the Wolves.

Coupeville sits at 3-5 in 1A Olympic League play, in a tie with Chimacum, a game up on Klahowya (2-6) and well back of league champ Port Townsend (8-0), who they will visit Saturday for a 6 PM game.

All the possibilities:

*Coupeville wins, Chimacum beats Klahowya = Wolves finish in a tie with Chimacum, Cowboys own tiebreaker and are #2 seed, Wolves #3 seed in playoffs, Klahowya out.

*Coupeville wins, Klahowya beats Chimacum = Wolves #2 playoff seed, Klahowya and Chimacum tied, Eagles own tiebreaker, are #3 seed, Chimacum out.

*Coupeville loses, Chimacum beats Klahowya = Chimacum #2, Coupeville #3, Klahowya out.

*Coupeville loses, Klahowya beats Chimacum = Bring on the crazy.

In that final scenario, all three teams tie at 3-6, and all own a tiebreaker on one of the two other teams.

If that happens, the three squads travel to Port Townsend Tuesday, Feb. 7 for a battle royale that starts at 6 PM.

Chimacum would have a first-round bye, thanks to a coin flip, while Coupeville and Klahowya would play a half game (two eight-minute quarters).

Loser exits stage right and is done for season, while winner then faces Chimacum in another 16-minute game to decide the #2 and #3 playoff seeds.

Got all that? We’ll be back on Saturday with an update.

Thursday night offered Coupeville a chance to get some revenge on Sequim after taking a 72-33 beating three nights earlier.

And, while they couldn’t fully turn the tables, the Wolves did make things closer.

The primary problem was they didn’t get fully rolling until the second half, falling behind 17-7 after one quarter and 29-14 at the half.

After the break, CHS did finally corral Despain, limiting him to just a single second-half bucket, but the damage was done.

Coupeville got stronger as the game played out, scoring 12 points in the third before winning the fourth 14-10.

Wolf junior Hunter Smith poured in nine points in the final quarter, on three treys, as he notched 13 of his team-best 15 in the second half.

Ethan Spark added 12, including another trio of three-balls, while Gabe Wynn knocked down seven.

Joey Lippo (2), Brian Shank (2) and Cameron Toomey-Stout (2) rounded out the attack, while Ariah Bepler, Kyle Rockwell and Steven Cope all saw floor time.

Coupeville hit seven three-point bombs, bettering Sequim, while also hitting 7 of 10 free throws.

Sequim was deadly at the charity stripe themselves, netting 12 of 13.

JV loses:

Playing without a point guard after freshman Jered Brown’s recent broken collarbone, the Wolf young guns dropped their game to fall to 7-11 on the season.

No other info was available.

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Jon Diem heads to the hoop while playing for Oak Harbor High School. (Photos courtesy Sherry Roberts)

   Jon Diem heads to the hoop while playing for Oak Harbor High School. (Photos courtesy Sherry Roberts)

The basketball slides along the young boy’s fingertips for a moment, and then, in one smooth motion, it arcs skyward.

The young boy holds his breath, the ball hits nothing but the bottom of the net, and the young boy exhales, a superstar already on the cracked cement court.

And then the young boy is a young man, and now he’s wearing his school’s uniform, but the look in his eyes, the smile on his face, the feeling of the ball slipping off his fingertips, are all the same.

This time, when the ball hits the bottom of the net, a referee’s hands shoot skyward, the young man’s friends, family and classmates go crazy and the young man is a superstar again, but in a different world.

And then the young man is a grown man, living in the real world, helping nurture the daughter who will continue to carry his name forward, and he is a superstar still.

One day, the grown man, who has endured much hardship in his life, but has remained, against all odds, a kind, caring soul described as “the most talented and humble athlete I have ever known,” leaves our world, too soon.

The sound of the basketball rhythmically hitting the court, the baseball thunking into his mitt, fades, but his memory does not.

For his family, and his friends — which included everyone he played with and against — Jon Diem will always be here.

Diem, who passed away just weeks shy of his 45th birthday, leaves behind seven siblings — brothers David, Michael and Robert and sisters Mary, Cathie, Nancy and Shawn — his father Charles and his beloved daughter Lexie.

Diem and daughter

Jon and daughter Lexie.

He was preceded in death by his mother, Sara, and will be laid to rest next to her at Coupeville’s Sunnyside Cemetery.

From the moment he popped into the world Feb. 26, 1972, Jon brought a light with him.

One of the most gifted athletes Coupeville has ever seen, he moved up to the big city (Oak Harbor) for high school.

A standout basketball and baseball player while wearing the purple and gold Wildcat uniforms, Diem graduated with the OHHS Class of 1991.

On the hard-court, Jon was a lights-out shooter from long range, a three-ball king in short shorts who lit up the scoreboards while running alongside teammates such as Tony Midyette, Manny Martucci, Pat Herms and Trig Johnson.

Many of the first games I covered for the Whidbey News-Times, in my fledgling journalism career, involved watching Diem drop bombs from all angles against teams like Marysville-Pilchuck or Shorewood.

There wasn’t a spot on the floor on which he didn’t feel confident launching a trey, and he hit an astonishing number of his efforts.

On the baseball field, he was a two-way threat, adept with the bat and his glove while roaming the infield for the ‘Cats.

baseball

Diem comes in hot during his diamond days.

Jon played baseball at OHHS from 1988-1991 and was the starting second baseman and cleanup hitter on the Wildcat team that placed second at the 3A state tourney in 1990.

“The thing I remember most about Jon after all these years was his gentleness,” said former longtime OHHS baseball coach Jim Waller. “Teenage boys probably don’t want to be called sweet, but that is the best way to describe him.

“He was quiet and thoughtful, selfless and caring. Although he was shy around the coaching staff, he liked to laugh and would play practical jokes on his teammates.”

As an athlete, Diem had raw talent for days, but it was his work ethic which caught his coach’s attention.

“He was a graceful athlete, one of those players who moved so fluidly that it appeared sports came easily to them,” Waller said. “Yes, he had natural talent, but his success wasn’t solely from his innate ability but from his hard work and dedication to the game.

“He had the qualities all coaches want in an athlete — a strong work ethic, a willingness to put the team first, a willingness to be coached, an ability to laugh and laugh at himself, a hunger to win, a respect for his opponents,” he added. “And, more importantly, those qualities are a mark of a good person as well as a high-character athlete.”

In the days after Jon’s passing, friends and former teammates poured out their love for him on Facebook, and their words paint a picture of a gifted athlete who was a better person.

Of a man who ultimately cared as much, or more, about others accomplishments as his own.

“He was such a stud,” wrote former CHS athletic star Ben Biskovich, who grew up alongside Diem in Coupeville. “Always the best athlete on the field and always so humble.

“When we were picking teams, I always wanted to be on his team.”

That was a thought echoed by Jason LaMont, whose own athletic experiences landed on a different side of the spectrum from Biskovich.

“He (Jon) always treated everyone nice, even me, who sucked at sports,” LaMont said. “Even as a kid, he was building people up.”

For Chris Potts, who stayed in contact with Diem long after high school, it was Diem’s approach to life, and not just sports, which made him so memorable.

“He was an amazing soul, with a humble confidence,” Potts said. “A happy-go-lucky approach to life.

“An amazing sense of humor that was punctuated by a crooked grin and a laugh that invited everyone to join in,” he added. “He had a heart just a chosen few are given in this life.”

Jon’s ability to be the best athlete in the room, or on the field, and yet never make anyone feel like he was lording it over them, carried on after his prep athletic career had ended.

He continued to play in his adult years, making new friends every step of the way.

“Playing together as an adult when it was for the pure love of the game and not the pressures of school, but back to the feeling of being a kid for a few hours,” Steve Van Rensum said.

“Rest easy old friend, teammate and brother. Sit fastball and don’t get cheated.”

In the distance, you can hear it, a soft sound at first that grows with each heartbeat.

The young boy twirls the basketball on his fingertip, then lets it drop into his palm. His breath slips out in a ragged burst and the ball slides off his hands, arcing skyward.

A soft bang as it hits the backboard, a softer swish as it drops through the hoop.

The young boy continues to shoot long after the sky has turned from afternoon into early evening.

It is his escape. It is his love.

The ball drops through the hoop, again and again, and he never stops shooting.

Tonight, and every night, Jon Diem lives on, out there on that court or diamond, in all of our memories.

Jon Diem (1972-2017)

Jon Diem (1972-2017)

A service for Jon Diem will be held at 11 AM Friday, Feb. 3 at Saint Augustine’s Catholic Church in Oak Harbor. It will be followed by a graveside burial at Sunnyside Cemetery in Coupeville.

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to Boeing Employee Credit Union.

A college fund has been set up for Jon’s daughter, Lexi Diem. It’s at Bank of America Acct: Lexie Diem college fund; routing #: 125000024; account #: 138122330559.

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David and Amy King (John Fisken photo)

   Amy and David King are the masterminds behind Whidbey Island’s most successful high school hoops program. (John Fisken photo)

Wins and losses don’t lie; Whidbey Island is in the middle of a basketball funk.

With one noticeable exception — the Coupeville girls — our six high school varsity hoops squads have spent the past five years doing one thing, and one thing only, on a consistent basis.

Lose.

This is not opinion, this is fact.

There are the CHS girls, who have won 61 games and counting (they’re 14-3 this season) and then you fall off a cliff and keep rolling until the bottom.

From 2012-2013 to today, these are the numbers for the past five seasons for the Coupeville, Oak Harbor and South Whidbey programs:

Team Wins Winning seasons Seasons with 10+ wins Playoff wins
CP girls 61 3 4 2
SW girls 38 0 2 1
SW boys 36 0 0 2
OH boys 26 1 1 2
CP boys 23 0 0 0
OH girls 21 0 0 0

So, that’s four winning seasons out of a possible 30, with the Wolf girls having ripped off three straight and the only other one coming courtesy of the 2012-2013 Oak Harbor boys.

There’s a chance the South Whidbey girls will hold on to notch a fifth winning season, but the odds are stacked against the Falcons.

They’re 10-9 right now, but face juggernaut King’s in their regular season finale, which means it’s 99.2% likely they’re at .500 heading into the playoffs.

Bothered greatly by injuries, it appears unlikely South Whidbey has the depth to make a sustained playoff run, so a winning season is not getting very good odds in Vegas right now.

So, why is one team doing so well when the other five are not?

It’s true that the Coupeville girls benefited from having a transcendent player the past four seasons in Makana Stone, but other programs have been blessed with skilled hoops stars during the same time frame.

South Whidbey had Hayley Newman, Chase White and Lewis Pope, Oak Harbor suited up Dyllan Harris and Brynn Langrock and Coupeville had Wiley Hesselgrave and Mia Littlejohn.

You could argue those players were and are good, sometimes very good, but not truly great like all-timers Lindsey Newman, Pete Petrov or Brannon Stone, who led their teams to big-time success on and off Whidbey back in the day.

So, with apologies to Pope, who certainly seems to be getting there, we’ll say Stone is the one true all-timer to play on Whidbey in the past five years.

But, while say, South Whidbey fell sharply off after Hayley Newman’s departure in 2013, the Coupeville girls have responded to Stone’s graduation with a ten-game winning streak, a third-straight league title and strong hopes of a return visit to state.

So I think the Wolf girls success springs from something deeper.

All of our local coaches, at all three schools, seem to be hard workers, often innovators and deeply committed to their programs.

I’m not dogging on any of them, but I am giving a shout-out to David and Amy King, who have run the CHS girls program for five seasons now.

Their style works, and it shows both in wins and losses and in the way the Wolves are booming in numbers.

Players are staying for the full four years, new players are joining, players (on both varsity and the equally successful JV) are buying in to a team-first, every-player-has-a-role-and-accepts-it mantra.

Maybe it’s the unique situation of having a husband/wife duo running a program, maybe it’s their backgrounds as life-long hoops players and coaches, maybe they just have a magic touch.

So, other coaches, my suggestion? Study what the Wolf duo is doing. Take notes and maybe think about implementing some of their ideas into your own programs.

Cause right now, over the past five years? They’re the ones doing things right.

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Anthony Smith (John Fisken photo)

   Anthony Smith, in his sixth season at the helm of the CHS boys, is trying to guide his team into the playoffs. (John Fisken photo)

The suspense continues.

The Klahowya High School boys’ basketball squad upended visiting Chimacum 58-49 Tuesday, throwing the race for two of the Olympic League’s three playoff spots up in the air.

A loss by the Eagles would have eliminated them, and set Port Townsend, Chimacum and Coupeville as the #1, #2 and #3 seeds heading into the postseason.

Instead, Klahowya lives for at least two more days, while Coupeville (and Chimacum and Klahowya) could still finish anywhere from #2 to #4.

First, the standings as of 10 PM Tuesday:

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 7-0 13-4
Chimacum 3-5 3-13
COUPEVILLE 3-5 3-14
Klahowya 2-5 4-13

What we know for sure: Port Townsend is league champs and advances to the double-elimination portion of districts, from which three of four teams move on to regionals.

Now, the other three teams.

Coupeville has a tie-breaker over Klahowya, having won two of three, but does not against Chimacum, having lost two of three.

The Eagles and Cowboys have split their first two games, so Saturday’s season finale would decide that series.

How Coupeville finishes from #2 to #4:

#2 — All three have to happen. Klahowya beats Port Townsend Thursday. Coupeville beats Port Townsend Saturday. Klahowya beats Chimacum Saturday.

#3 — Only one has to happen. Klahowya loses to PT or Chimacum or Coupeville beats PT.

#4 — All three have to happen. Klahowya beats both PT and Chimacum and Coupeville loses to PT.

So, we clear?

Probably not, but check back Thursday to see if it’s any clearer.

Once we get to the postseason, here’s the playoff path:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2186&sport=3

PS — The girls race is a completely different story with three-time league champ Coupeville, Port Townsend and Chimacum 100% locked into the #1, #2 and #3 slots.

That playoff path:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2187&sport=12

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