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Posts Tagged ‘Basketball’

Brian Shank (John Fisken photos)

Brian Shank skies high to get a clear view of the basket. (John Fisken photos)

Kalia Littlejohn

It’s off to the races and no one is catching Kalia Littlejohn.

Kyle Rockwell

Power, thy name is Kyle Rockwell.

Tia Wurzrainer

Tia Wurzrainer patiently waits for some help to arrive.

Gabe Wynn

His rival is visibly impressed with Gabe Wynn’s shooting form.

Mia Littlejohn

“You can’t beat me. I’m Mia freakin’ Littlejohn, fool!!”

The joint was hoppin’ and the cameras were clickin’.

Wandering photo man John Fisken visited Coupeville Monday night to snap photos at all four games the Wolves played against visiting Sequim, and the pics above are courtesy him.

To see more (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes), pop over to:

Girls — http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/20162017-Coupeville-BB/CHS-GBB-/20170130-vs-Sequim/

Boys — http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/20162017-Coupeville-BB/CHS-BBB/20170130-vs-Sequim/

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Emma Mathusek (John Fisken photo)

   Emma Mathusek pushes the play up-court Monday night during Coupeville’s JV girls win. (John Fisken photo)

One team inadvertently helped another.

With the varsity boys holding Senior Night festivities at the same time the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad was tipping-off across the hallway Monday, the Wolves were momentarily missing starter Ashlie Shank.

But while she helped older brother Brian celebrate his final regular season home game, freshman Avalon Renninger stepped into the starting lineup and immediately lit up the joint.

Hitting three buckets in the game’s first four minutes, she sparked CHS to a lead it would never relinquish.

Then the Wolves, with Shank putting in quality work of her own after rejoining her teammates a minute or two into the game, strolled to a 31-24 win.

Coupeville’s fourth straight win and seventh in its last eight games, the non-conference victory lifts the young guns to 10-3 on the season.

It was a classic example of every quarter featuring a different hot player, with Renninger’s first quarter burst being topped in the second by swing player Sarah Wright, who dropped all eight of her points in her only JV action of the night.

Toss in strong play from Shank, Tia Wurzrainer, Maya Toomey-Stout and pretty much everyone in a Wolf uniform, and CHS coach Amy King enjoyed her hour-plus in the middle school gym.

“Everyone played great games and we know what we need to work on over the next few practices before we meet them on Thursday,” she said.

The two squads will have a rematch, this time in Sequim, when the hope will be Coupeville’s rivals will have learned how to count.

At one point Monday, the visitors had six players on the floor and took a well-deserved technical.

Coupeville turned an 8-5 lead after one to an 18-8 bulge at the half and a 27-11 gap after three, then gave a few points back in the fourth when it hit a brief shooting slump.

Part of that came from the Wolves rotating in their full roster and working on fine-tuning plays.

Throughout the game, CHS came with a strong team-wide defensive effort, with all 11 Wolves snaring at least one rebound.

Ema Smith paced the squad with eight boards, while Wright (6), Wurzrainer (5), Toomey-Stout (4), Renninger (4) and Nicole Lester (4) were hot on her heels.

The Wolves spread out their offense, with Wright and Renninger leading the charge with eight points apiece.

Shank (5), Toomey-Stout (4), Scout Smith (3), Maddy Hilkey (2) and Ema Smith (1) rounded out the scorers.

Emma Mathusek snared two rebounds and Brittany Powers made off with two steals as Coupeville got contributions from every player on the roster.

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Now, yes, this photo of Kyla Briscoe is from last year, but it perfectly captures the crowd's reaction (John Fisken photo)

   Yes, this photo of Kyla Briscoe is from last year, but it perfectly captures how Sequim felt as Briscoe’s CHS teammates ran wild Monday. (John Fisken photo)

Unleash the beasts.

There came a moment Monday, midway through a very-competitive game, when the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad began to channel the Detroit Pistons of the Bad Boys era.

Five players moving as one, each one attacking, relentlessly and without mercy, causing the other team to panic and crumble in on itself.

Sparked by a full-court press defense initiated by the players themselves — Kalia Littlejohn subtly nodding at coach David King and whispering “We good, my man?” and King nodding back, small smile on his lips — the game changed in a flash.

And that’s how you go from a four-point deficit halfway through the third quarter to a 12-point lead and eventually a very-satisfying 37-31 win over visiting Sequim.

The non-conference victory, coming against a large 2A school, gives the 1A Wolves their tenth straight win, lifting them to 14-3 on the season.

When the game changed from a war between fairly-even teams to a beat-down of savage proportions, it came because of Coupeville’s #1 strength — its defense.

Mikayla Elfrank was chasing everything down, including a moment she hurtled cross-court, went air-borne and somehow, against all the rules of how reality works, managed to spin a ball off of her startled foe’s leg and out of bounds.

With every roar from the crowd, the Wolves found a new spring in their strut and Sequim’s shoulders sagged a little further.

Kalia Littlejohn, working in tandem with big sis Mia, savaged the rival ball-handlers with glee, at one point spiking the ball out of a six-foot player’s hands and turning it into a game-busting breakaway layup.

Regardless of how he shuffled his lineup, King was rewarded.

Sometimes it was Lindsey Roberts and Kailey Kellner banging on the boards or Allison Wenzel elbowing everyone in sight or Tiffany Briscoe launching herself onto a loose ball like she was recovering a football fumble.

Notably, both of the Sequim players who could have given Briscoe a run for the ball chose not to, unable to contend with … yes … say it together … a rampaging beast.

Huge smile on her face, and all the air knocked out of her chest, Briscoe was promptly set upon by all four of her teammates, fellow defensive demon Lauren Grove patting her on the head as the rest slapped her back.

Once Coupeville had the lead, turning a 17-13 deficit into a 19-17 lead headed into the fourth, the Wolves were relentless.

Showcasing a nifty touch at the free throw stripe, Elfrank, Mia Littlejohn and Kellner combined to hit eight free throws in the fourth quarter.

When they weren’t getting fouled, the Wolves were running their fourth-quarter offense at a nice clip, with Mia Littlejohn bobbing, weaving, burning time off the clock and setting up her teammates.

She had a hot shooting touch all game, pacing Coupeville with 15, but it was her passing, crisp set-ups and sweet lil’ dishes while gliding through the paint, that drew much appreciation from her coach.

Mia Littlejohn’s biggest assist might have come with a little over a minute to play, as she waited for Elfrank to progressively bump her defender deeper and deeper into the paint.

At the last second, the Wolf point guard arced a note-perfect pass over a defender’s arms, dropping it right onto her teammate’s outstretched finger tips, then watched in glee as Elfrank banked home a bucket to stretch the lead to 35-25.

Sequim found a little pluck, and a lot of luck, dropping back-to-back three-balls, both on shots that were not sure things going up, to tighten things back up in the final 60 seconds.

After the visitors made one of two free throws with 5.2 ticks on the clock — the second was successful but waved off for Sequim’s third lane violation of the night — Coupeville was clinging to a 35-31 lead and had a choice to make.

King, a former softball coach who led the Wolves to the state tourney, inserted CHS catcher Sarah Wright into the game to trigger the inbound play.

Cue the play that blew the roof off the joint.

Wright launched a full-court heave over the crowd and fellow sophomore sensation Lindsey Roberts, she of the school record sprinters speed, ran it down, reaching to the heavens to tip and snare the ball.

Somehow keeping her balance, while mom Sherry went appropriately bonkers in the stands, the heir to the vaunted Roberts athletic legacy roared in for a layup and the celebration was on.

The final bucket capped a game that was a defensive war in the early going, as Coupeville crept out to a 6-5 lead after one and a 12-10 advantage at the half.

Mia Littlejohn knocked down eight of her points before the break, while setting up the other two Wolf baskets with delightful dishes to Roberts and Briscoe.

The only time Coupeville fell behind came in the third, and it responded with a great save along the baseline from Roberts, which set up a three-ball from Mamma Mia.

And then the defense got nasty and did what it does.

Elfrank scored seven of her nine in the fourth quarter to back up Mia Littlejohn’s 15, while Kellner and Roberts each dropped in four.

Kalia Littlejohn added three and Briscoe’s bucket rounded out the scoring.

The two teams will face off again Thursday, this time in Sequim, before Coupeville closes the regular season Saturday (3:30 JV/5:00 varsity) with a home Olympic League game against Port Townsend.

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Steven Cope goes up strong Monday night. (John Fisken photo)

Wolf senior Steven Cope goes up strong Monday night. (John Fisken photo)

The night started off strong and then it kind of went downhill, fast.

Senior Night festivities, honoring Gabe Wynn, Steven Cope and Brian Shank, helped the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad kick things off on a classy note Monday night.

Unfortunately, the game itself, a non-conference tilt with 2A Sequim, became a one-sided affair quickly, as the host Wolves fell behind by 20+ points early in the second quarter and never recovered, falling 72-33.

The non-conference loss snaps a two-game winning streak for Coupeville and drops it to 3-14 on the season.

The Wolves will have an almost immediate chance to reconcile things, however, as they travel to Sequim Thursday for the second half of an ultra-rare home-and-away non-conference match-up.

In the next three days, CHS needs to get quicker, much quicker, if they want to turn the tables on the guys in purple.

Sequim used superior speed, a huge edge on the boards and two back-breaking runs — 16-0 in the first half and 15-0 in the third quarter — to turns things into a rout.

Coupeville fell behind 6-0 in the early-going, not scoring until Gabe Wynn hit a pull-back jumper nearly three-and-a-half minutes into the game, and things got progressively rougher from there.

Trailing 21-6 at the first break, the Wolves couldn’t stop the rampage, falling behind by 23 shortly before halftime.

CHS got a few points back on a nice sideline jumper from Cope and a wild end-to-end run by Hunter Smith, who picked up three the hard way (a breakaway bucket and ensuing free throw) but things kept slipping away.

Other than one brief surge late in the third, when the Wolves banked home seven straight points — a breakaway off a steal and a three-ball, both from Smith, and an inside leaner from Shank — there wasn’t much to write home about.

Smith paced the Wolves with a team-high 12, while Shank dropped eight and Ethan Spark singed the nets for seven.

Cope, Wynn and Cameron Toomey-Stout each added a bucket, while Joey Lippo and Kyle Rockwell put in work on the boards.

Payton Glasser led Sequim with 23, dropping in 12 of those in the first quarter alone.

JV roughed up:

Playing without a point guard (freshmen Jered Brown is out with a broken collarbone), the young Wolves went down hard, losing 70-15.

“Worst loss of my career,” said JV coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh, and that was pretty much all he felt like saying on that.

The defeat drops the young guns to 7-10.

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Lauren Rose (John Fisken photo)

   With players like Lauren Rose setting up teammates at every turn, the Wolf girls are 13-3 this season. (John Fisken photo)

It’s all about playoff seeding heading into the final week of the regular season for high school basketball.

On the girls side of things, Coupeville is the league champ — for a third-straight season — and Port Townsend has clinched second place.

Chimacum can clinch third place, and the league’s final playoff berth, with a win Tuesday against Klahowya.

If the Cowboys fall to the Eagles, though, things would be guaranteed to go all the way to the final game on both team’s schedule — a rematch Saturday that would then be a winner-take-all.

While Coupeville is locked in regardless, the Wolves do want to win their finale Saturday against Port Townsend.

Do that and they finish 9-0 for the third straight year and stretch the league’s longest unbeaten streak, in any sport, to 27-0.

Over on the boys side, only one of four teams is 100% confident in knowing its fate, and that’s league champ Port Townsend.

The other three schools can all finish anywhere between #2 and #4 depending on how the season’s final six days play out.

Coupeville, which pulled off back-to-back wins against Klahowya and Chimacum to end last week, still has a shot of catching the Cowboys for the #2 playoff seed … or falling completely out of the playoff picture.

Both are very long shots, though, with the odds heavily in favor of the Wolves finishing #3 and hosting a first-round loser-out postseason game.

To get #2, CHS has only one option — it has to beat Port Townsend in the season finale, while needing Chimacum to lose twice in five days to Klahowya.

That’s it.

Any other result and the Wolves can’t pull off the stunning late-season reversal.

They don’t have a tiebreaker against Chimacum, having lost two of three to the Cowboys, so have to finish with a better record.

To go to the other extreme, the only way Coupeville misses the postseason is if Klahowya wins its final three games (two tilts against Chimacum wrapped around a meeting with Port Townsend) and the Wolves drop that final battle with the RedHawks.

Will things end quickly — a Chimacum win Tuesday at Klahowya ends all speculation — or go down to the final day? Stay tuned.

Where things sit through Monday morning:

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 8-0 13-3
Port Townsend 4-3 8-7
Chimacum 2-5 9-9
Klahowya 0-6 3-13

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 7-0 13-3
Chimacum 3-4 3-12
COUPEVILLE 3-5 3-13
Klahowya 1-5 3-13

And scoring stats for Coupeville’s varsity players:

Girls:

Kailey Kellner – 148
Mikayla Elfrank – 98
Mia Littlejohn – 90
Lindsey Roberts – 60
Kalia Littlejohn – 55
Tiffany Briscoe – 37
Lauren Grove – 36
Lauren Rose – 30
Sarah Wright – 15
Kyla Briscoe – 7
Allison Wenzel – 4
Charlotte Langille – 2

Boys:

Hunter Smith – 255
Gabe Wynn – 184
Brian Shank – 103
Ethan Spark – 99
Hunter Downes – 36
Joey Lippo – 20
Cameron Toomey-Stout – 18
Steven Cope – 11
Ariah Bepler – 5
Jered Brown – 5

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