Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Basketball’

Kalia Littlejohn (John Fisken photo)

   Sophomore Kalia Littlejohn has heated up on the offensive end in recent games, moving up to #4 on her team in scoring. (John Fisken photos)

Ethan Spark

   A deadly three-point shooter, junior Ethan Spark also occupies the #4 scoring slot.

A fight and a runaway.

That’s what we’re facing as the chase for Olympic League championship banners plays out in the basketball world.

On the boys side, Port Townsend sits literally one win away from clinching a title and knocking off two-time defending champ Chimacum.

Take care of the Cowboys Tuesday, and the RedHawks will have swept the three-game season series from their arch-rivals.

A win would put them three up on Chimacum with three to play, while owning the tie-breaker.

It would also be Port Townsend’s sixth league victory in a season where neither Coupeville or Klahowya could possibly win more than five.

While the RedHawks don’t want to celebrate early — they did blow a two-game lead to the Cowboys last season — it’s hard to picture the change at the top not happening.

On the girls side, Coupeville, as it has from day one of the league in 2014, controls its own destiny.

The Wolves are 4-0 in league this season (with three of those wins by double digits) and 22-0 all-time, but Port Townsend is hanging around.

PTHS, which fell 39-29 to Coupeville in the two school’s first meeting, is just a half game back of the Wolves after pulling out last-second wins against Chimacum and Klahowya.

The Wolves head to Port Townsend this Friday for a first-place showdown, then host the RedHawks in the regular season finale Feb. 4.

Where things sit through Monday morning:

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 4-0 9-3
Port Townsend 4-1 8-4
Chimacum 1-4 7-7
Klahowya 0-4 3-9

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 5-0 10-3
Chimacum 3-2 3-9
COUPEVILLE 1-4 1-12
Klahowya 1-4 2-11

And scoring stats for Coupeville’s varsity players:

Girls:

Kailey Kellner – 99
Mia Littlejohn
– 74
Mikayla Elfrank
– 67
Kalia Littlejohn
– 41
Lindsey Roberts
– 36
Lauren Rose
– 30
Lauren Grove
– 27
Tiffany Briscoe
– 23
Sarah Wright
– 13
Kyla Briscoe
– 7
Charlotte Langille
– 2
Allison Wenzel
– 2

Boys:

Hunter Smith – 185
Gabe Wynn
– 131
Brian Shank
– 84
Ethan Spark
– 74
Hunter Downes
– 36
Joey Lippo
– 16
Cameron Toomey-Stout
– 16
Steven Cope
– 9
Ariah Bepler
– 5
Jered Brown
– 5

Read Full Post »

Mid-season fatigue hits every player in a different way. (John Fisken photo)

   Mid-season fatigue hits every player in a different way. But you can get through it. (John Fisken photo)

It’s the most difficult time of the season.

Illness and fatigue can have just as much impact on a high school basketball team as the opponents they face, and coach’s have to find a way to get their players to battle through.

The Coupeville girls, despite playing their most brutal schedule in years (10 of 12 games have been on the road, with the next two also away from Whidbey), are soaring in the standings.

The Wolves are sitting at 9-3 overall, 4-0 in Olympic League play, winners of five straight and ranked #13 among 1A teams in the state’s new RPI system.

As he prepares for the week ahead (a non-conference tilt at North Mason Tuesday and a first-place showdown at Port Townsend Friday), CHS hoops guru David King swings by the Coaches Corner to offer some thoughts on making it through the rough patches.

Over the years we have seen this happen to players every year. Hitting the Fatigue Wall around the first or second week of Jan.

It’s usually incoming freshman who aren’t used to the longer high school season, but it can happen to returning players also.

With late practices, the travel, sickness, family commitments during the winter break along with finals, that wall at some point looms large.

As players they need to recognize this and figure out a way to overcome the fatigue and knock that wall down.

That means rest, eating correct, taking care of yourself.

It also takes mental toughness.

The players that have this are usually the ones that scale the wall or crash right through it.

Read Full Post »

Makana Stone (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Makana Stone and her new teammates at Whitman College suffered their first loss Saturday, falling 73-71 in overtime. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

The home fans got everything but a win.

Playing on their home court in Walla Walla Saturday, with sole possession of first place in the Northwest Conference at stake, the Whitman College women’s basketball squad finally ran out of answers.

Giving up a bucket with 2.3 seconds to play in overtime, the Blues fell 73-71 to the University of Puget Sound in a thriller.

The loss drops Whitman to 14-1 overall, 5-1 in league play, while UPS rises to 14-1, 6-0.

The two schools will play again Feb. 10 in Tacoma in a game which might very well decide the league title.

Whitman, which got another strong performance from Coupeville grad Makana Stone, came within a ref’s call of perhaps sealing the deal in regulation.

With the Blues up 61-59 with 14 ticks on the clock, Casey Poe hit the back end of a one-and-one opportunity, only to have the make waved off after refs ruled a Whitman player had moved off the line early.

Given new life and only trailing two and not three, UPS was able to go inside, drew a foul and hit both free throws to knot things at 61-61.

When a final Poe shot skipped off the rim, it was on to overtime.

Stone, who played 12 minutes off the bench for the Blues, collecting two points and a team-high seven rebounds, was on the floor for the game’s final two minutes.

Trailing 71-68, Whitman got the ball to leading scorer Chelsi Brewer, who drew contact on a three-point shot as the clock slid under 10 seconds.

She calmly sank all three free throws, barely rippling the net, but UPS responded by coming down and getting a game-busting bucket in the paint from Elizabeth Prewitt.

Unable to call time, and with the clock running, Whitman threw up a half-court shot at the buzzer but could not buy a miracle.

Stone also picked up two blocked shots, a steal and an assist.

Her bucket came off of a mid-range jumper from the right side early in the second quarter, while her rebound set up a three-point bomb at the third-quarter buzzer by Mady Burdett.

Through the first 15 games of her freshman campaign, Stone is averaging 4.9 points and 4.9 rebounds a night.

She’s third on the team in rebounding with 73 caroms, and also has 11 steals, 10 assists and five blocks.

Whitman plays seven of its final 10 regular season games — all conference affairs — on the road, starting with a trip to Oregon next weekend.

The Blues face George Fox University (13-2, 5-1) Friday, Jan. 20 and Lewis & Clark College (10-5, 3-3) the next day.

Read Full Post »

Lauren Rose and Co. have stayed well-stretched and highly-efficient on their current five-game winning streak. (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose and Co. have stayed well-stretched and highly-efficient on their current five-game winning streak. (John Fisken photo)

Find a way.

Beset by illness and a schedule from Hell, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad could have crumbled a long time ago.

Instead, the Wolves have embraced every obstacle and kicked off the post-Makana Stone era in style, soaring to a 9-3 record and #14 in the state’s latest RPI rankings for 1A schools.

Friday night, still firmly stuck on the road trip which will never end, the Wolves rallied late against a very tall Mount Vernon Christian team, turning a five-point deficit entering the fourth quarter into an electrifying 34-29 win.

The victory was Coupeville’s fifth straight, and leaves them 6-1 with two games left on what will be an unprecedented nine-game road trip.

The Wolves have played 10 of 12 away from Whidbey this season, but have thrived, posting an 8-2 mark outside their own gym, with their only road losses coming to 2A Blaine and 1A power Bellevue Christian.

CHS will play five of its final six, including its final four league games, at home, yet still end the regular season having played 13 of 20 on the road.

By the time they host Klahowya Jan. 24, it will have been 44 days between home games for the Wolves.

And yet, there have been virtually no complaints from coaches and players (in public at least), as they have used the uneven schedule to pull together as a team, one tightly-knit group against the world.

Along the way, Coupeville has become quite proficient at staging rallies, forcing the situation in the late going and escaping time and again with victories which provide a strong psychological boost.

“It’s all about finding a way to stay within striking distance, ramping up the defensive pressure and making the plays down the stretch to pull out the win,” said CHS coach David King.

Friday presented its own unique challenges, as Mount Vernon Christian only has one gym, meaning the varsity girls had to sit through three other games (JV boys, JV girls, varsity boys) before taking the court for a 7:45 tip.

But, while they trailed by four at the half and five after three, the Wolves didn’t seem affected by the long wait. Instead, they were right where they wanted to be, lurking and waiting to pounce.

“I could talk about the steady game play, all game long. With this being our best effort game for the full 32 minutes,” King said. “That story would be a good read.

“Or I could talk about the three or four hustle plays that energized the Coupeville cheering section and team,” he added. “These plays show how invested each player is in helping us play to win.”

Trailing 26-21 entering the final eight minutes, the Wolves unleashed a “very disruptive man press” and completely shut down the Hurricanes.

Sparked by its stand on the defensive end of the floor, Coupeville started to knock down shots, with five players combining to carry the load on a 13-3 game-ending run.

Kailey Kellner dropped in five of her team-high 10 down the stretch, while Mikayla Elfrank and Kalia Littlejohn came up huge in the spotlight.

Elfrank broke a 29-29 tie with 18 seconds to play when she drove into the key and drilled a four-foot jumper, before Littlejohn closed out the win at the free throw line, where she had ice water flowing through her veins.

The Wolves closing surge was helped out by hustle plays, and none might have been bigger than the one pulled off by sophomore Sarah Wright.

After a missed shot, the ball skipped around madly and Wright, coming from the weak side post, threw her body airborne, snagging the loose ball and throwing it back into play as she crashed along the baseline.

The play gave CHS another offensive opportunity and thoroughly deflated the Hurricanes.

From the start, the Wolves were looking up at MVC, which starts two six-footers. Coupeville countered with aggression and passion.

“The preparation and execution of our defensive game plan couldn’t have gone much better than it did,” King said. “We worked on fronting their posts and getting a heavy dose of weak side help.

“Besides the post play our guards executed their portion as well. Making it hard for a post entry pass and then giving help on the high post,” he added. “This was our best defensive game all season.”

No Hurricane topped eight points on the night.

Coupeville bounced out to a 10-8 lead after one quarter, with Lauren Rose and Kalia Littlejohn both draining long three-balls.

Elfrank and Tiffany Briscoe added buckets, with Briscoe’s set up on a nifty play from Wolf point guard Mia Littlejohn, who wrapped the ball around the defender and dropped a beautiful bounce pass right onto her teammates fingers.

The Wolves struggled a bit in the middle two quarters, when they were outscored 18-11. King liked his squad’s ball movement, but the rim was unforgiving.

Still there were major bright spots in the game’s mid-section, including a sensational play by Kalia Littlejohn.

Doing what she does, “disrupting and harassing the player she is guarding,” Littlejohn knocked the ball loose.

“It took a high bounce; what she did next was pure instinct,” King said. “Instead of trying to go up and corral the loose ball, she went up, saw a teammate out in front of her and tapped it ahead before the MVC player could get to the ball.”

Mixing big, splashy plays with small, but very important ones, Coupeville played strongly across all aspects of the game. The Wolves controlled the boards, made off with 14 steals and committed just 10 turnovers.

“We did a great job of protecting the ball,” King said. “We have been playing consistent and steady the last three games.”

With illness and the game’s non-league status, Coupeville went to the end of its bench, getting valuable floor time for all 12 girls suited up.

“And ALL 12 contributed to the win,” King said. “Kalia, Mia, both Lauren’s (Rose and Grove) and Kyla (Briscoe) played defense the right way and caused issues for MVC.

“Our posts, led by Tiffany (who had her best game of the season) and Lindsey (Roberts), along with Sarah, Allison (Wenzel) and Ema (Smith), did a fantastic job all night in the post,” he added. “Kailey and Mikayla are hybrids and brought their defensive presence in the post and on the guard play.”

Kellner, fighting through illness, paced the Wolves with 10 points and eight rebounds, while Kalia Littlejohn filled up the stat sheet with eight points, two rebounds and six steals.

Elfrank sank five points, while Mia Littlejohn (3), Rose (3), Tiffany Briscoe (3), Grove (1) and Roberts (1) also scored.

11 of 12 Wolves snagged a rebound, with Grove (6), Roberts (5) and Elfrank (4) providing support to Kellner.

Read Full Post »

Aiden Juras swished a three-ball Friday, making him one of 11 Wolves to score in a boys JV win. (John Fisken photo)

   Aiden Juras swished a three-ball Friday, making him one of 11 Wolves to score in a boys JV win. (John Fisken photo)

Welcome to blowout city.

Raining down buckets from every direction, and seemingly from every player, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad romped Friday night.

Led by a 19-point, five three-ball performance from freshman Mason Grove, the Wolves jumped out quickly and sailed to a 57-32 win at Mount Vernon Christian.

The non-conference win lifts the CHS young guns to 7-6 on the season.

Coupeville put the game away quickly, storming out to a 20-6 lead after one quarter.

Six Wolves tallied points in the early going, with Grove hitting a pair of treys and a pair of free throws for a quick eight.

After that, Wolf coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh was able to roll out everyone who was in uniform, with 15 guys playing and 11 scoring.

Grove knocked down three more long-range shots in the fourth quarter to put a cap on his game-high 19, while his primary backup came from a brand-new Wolf.

Freshman Branden Newhard, making his CHS debut after recently moving to Whidbey, went for nine of his 11 in the second half.

Toss in six from Jered Brown, and the Wolves would have won playing a three-man game.

Coupeville didn’t stop there, however, with Sean Toomey-Stout and Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim draining four points apiece.

Aiden Juras (3), Gavin Knoblich (3), Jean Lund-Olsen (2), Nikolai Lyngra (2), Koa Davison (2) and Ulrik Wells (1) rounded out the scorers.

Kyle Rockwell, Ariah Bepler, Elliott Johnson and Tucker Hall also saw floor time.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »