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Makana Stone (Eileen Stone photo)

   Coupeville grad Makana Stone and the Whitman College women’s basketball squad is 12-0 after a big win Friday night. (Eileen Stone photo)

Taking a break did not slow them down at all.

Facing off with a foe for the first time in 17 days, the Whitman College women’s basketball squad blasted visiting Linfield 74-37 Friday night.

The win lifts the red-hot Blues, who feature Coupeville High School grad Makana Stone prominently on their roster, to 12-0 overall, 3-0 in Northwest Conference play.

Whitman, which hadn’t played since a holiday tournament in Hawaii Dec. 19-20, exploded out of the gate Friday, grabbing a 22-6 lead after one quarter of play.

The biggest play in that run, at least for people back on Whidbey, was Stone delivering her third blocked shot of the season.

The former Wolf sensation taught Linfield’s Annalise Beshears a lesson Coupeville’s rivals learned many times over — don’t try and shoot anywhere near Stone’s long, deadly arms.

Playing on the same night her former high school squad rolled Chimacum, Stone collected four points, three rebounds, an assist and the aforementioned block in 11 minutes of floor time.

Four Blues players ended up in double digits, led by Chelsi Brewer and Emily Rommel, who knocked down 13 apiece.

For the season, Stone is averaging 5.3 points and 4.7 boards a game off the bench.

She has 64 points, 56 rebounds, 10 steals, eight assists and three blocks, while leading Whitman in field goal percentage at 51% (28 of 55).

Whitman will have a quick turn-around, hosting Pacific University Saturday afternoon, the second in a stretch of four straight home games in Walla Walla for the Blues.

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Hunter Smith knocked down a team-high 15 Friday night in an overtime loss. (John Fisken photo)

   Hunter Smith knocked down a team-high 15 Friday night in an overtime loss. (John Fisken photos)

Gabe Wynn

Gabe Wynn tossed in 11, including a one-of-a-kind three ball.

So much went right, that what didn’t, hurts worse.

The Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad, thin on bodies, thin on experience and still battling to find its groove, looked as good Friday night as it has at any point this season.

The Wolves played smart team ball to open things, didn’t break when visiting Chimacum made its big run, and rallied late to force overtime.

But truly awful free-throw shooting prevented Coupeville from winning in regulation, and a dagger of a three-ball in the extra period knifed its final chance, sending the Wolves tumbling to a 63-56 loss that never should have been.

The loss drops CHS to 1-4 in Olympic League play, 1-11 overall. It also, for the moment, knocks them out of a playoff spot.

The top three teams in the league go to the postseason, and right now that’s Port Townsend (3-0), two-time defending league champ Chimacum (3-1) and Klahowya (1-3).

Coupeville still largely controls its own fate, with four league games left including the third and deciding match-up with Klahowya, who the Wolves have split with.

CHS doesn’t play another league game until Jan. 20, with its next three being non-conference affairs against Sequim, Mount Vernon Christian and North Mason.

A win Friday would have been huge, both in terms of positioning in the league standings, and in the psychological boost it would have offered the Wolves.

“I wanted it for the kids,” said Coupeville coach Anthony Smith. “I’m proud of the way we went at it. It was a good team effort, from the whole team.

“We keep battling and getting better,” he added. “It was there … it was there.”

The Wolves had battled back from a 10-point deficit (a 13-0 Chimacum run to open the second quarter was the only stretch that really stung Coupeville), and reclaimed the lead late in the fourth.

Ethan Spark split two defenders for a driving layup to knot the game up at 47, then the Hunter-to-Hunter connection gave CHS mometary control.

Flying full-tilt down the floor, Hunter Smith sucked the defense in, then rose up and fired a vicious pass over the top to Hunter Downes.

The ball hit his mitts with a bang, but the battle-hardened Downes, who enjoyed his best offensive performance of the season, held on, then spun the ball over his shoulder for a game-breaking layup.

Neither team blinked in the final two minutes, with Chimacum packaging a pair of buckets in the paint around another basket from Spark to leave things at 51-51.

Both squads had a chance to take the advantage at the charity stripe in a rough-and-tumble game that featured more than its fair share of fouls, but couldn’t do it.

Downes hit one of two to push the lead to 52-51, before the Cowboys slid one freebie through the nets, then clanked the second the very next time down the floor.

There were no Stephen Curry’s in the gym Friday, as the two schools combined to make just 26 of 50 free throws.

While Chimacum (10-19) edged Coupeville (16-31) at 52.6% to 51.6%, it was the sheer number of misses, and the fact they came from everyone on the floor, that really killed the Wolves.

The final 73 seconds of action was a tense, defensive battle, with neither team able to budge the scoreboard.

Spark narrowly missed on a three-ball with four ticks on the clock, while Chimacum’s half-court chuck at the buzzer went way wide right.

Once in overtime, things broke quickly, and badly.

Two quick Cowboy buckets off of transition put Coupeville in a hole, though it did battle back.

Gabe Wynn took an offensive rebound pack up for a bucket, then Wynn and Downes each made one of two at the line to pull the Wolves within 58-56.

Needing a defensive stand, CHS instead watched its plans crumble as Chimacum knocked down a three-ball with 38 seconds to play, effectively ending the night on a sour note.

It had started so positively, with the Wolves running out to a 9-6 lead after the first eight minutes, despite not getting a single point from their top two scorers, Hunter Smith and Wynn.

Instead, it was Downes, with four, including a gorgeous trey from deeeeeeeeeeep in the left corner, leading the way.

Brian Shank added three and Steven Cope hit a soft jumper after backing his man down to close the quarter, while Coupeville’s defense held Chimacum scoreless for the game’s first four minutes.

The Cowboys got their fairly annoying, man-bun-wearing bench to its happy place by raining down the first 13 points of the second quarter, but the Wolves didn’t break.

CHS closed the half on a 7-2 tear, sparked by two buckets from Shank, to get back to within three, then snatched the lead back at 38-35 in the third.

It came off of a trey from Wynn on which the ball hit the rim, popped upwards, curled around the glass, froze in mid-air to get its picture taken, then dropped softly through the net.

Hunter Smith paced the Wolves with 15, while Wynn and Downes each knocked down 11.

Spark (9), Shank (7) and Cope (3) rounded out the scoring attack, while Joey Lippo, Ariah Bepler and Cameron Toomey-Stout brought the defensive heat.

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Kailey Kellner

   Kailey Kellner (42) and the Coupeville girls have fought their way to a strong start in the state’s first RPI rankings. (John Fisken photo)

There are six varsity high school basketball teams on Whidbey Island, and one is getting a lot more respect than the other five today.

The Coupeville High School girls, who carry a 7-3 record into a game at Chimacum tonight, are ranked #15 in 1A in the first RPI rankings released by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association.

That puts them a solid 13 slots ahead of any other Whidbey hoops squad.

But wait, what is the RPI and why do we care, you ask?

After years of being ridiculed for the way it conducted the draw for the state basketball tourneys (spoiler: they basically pulled names out of a hat most of the time), the WIAA decided to take a step into the future.

The RPI, which is a complicated formula, which we shall (sort of) explain in a second, is supposed to fix that.

When we get down to the final 16 teams in each classification — the teams that are state-bound, like the Coupeville girls last year — the RPI rankings will be used to pair teams off for the tourney.

With 1 vs 16 and 8 vs 9, for example, the hope is to stop what has become a bad trend in recent years, where the blind draw often ended up putting 1 vs 2 or 1 vs 3 in the round of 16.

So, essentially, it’s only going to matter if you make it to state. Otherwise, it’s just another number to brag about (or not) as the season unwinds.

And, as always, playoff upsets will mean teams that finish in the top 16 don’t make it to state, while teams outside the “elite” will still earn their way to the big dance.

How do they get the rankings?

The formula uses a team’s winning percentage (25 percent), opponents winning percentage (50 percent) and opponents’ opponents winning percentage (25 percent).

You don’t get extra credit for beating teams in bigger classifications or from out of state, and the RPI is frozen at the end of the regular season.

So, you go on a run in the playoffs, it’ll punch your ticket to state, but you’ll carry in your regular season ranking with you.

The first rankings were released Friday, and from here on out will be updated daily through the end of the season.

Of course, there are going to be complaints about the RPI rankings, and one huge one centers around the WIAA getting its results from MaxPreps.

The web site, which “covers” the entire USA, is notorious for errors.

Case in point, they currently give the Coupeville boys two identical 48-37 losses to Klahowya on Dec. 9, even though only one game was obviously played.

That lowers the Wolves winning percentage, while inflating the Eagles winning percentage, both of which affect the two team’s RPI.

While it’s not as bad as earlier this year, when MaxPreps had a football score (Coupeville beating Chimacum) listed as a girls’ basketball result, it’s still irksome.

Where Whidbey’s teams sit on Day 1 of the Great RPI Experiment:

Girls:

Coupeville (#15 in 1A)
South Whidbey (#28 in 1A)
Oak Harbor (#54 in 3A)

Boys:

South Whidbey (#54 in 1A)
Coupeville (#63 in 1A)
Oak Harbor (#63 in 3A)

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Hawthorne Wolfe (John Fisken photo)

   Hawthorne Wolfe and the CMS 7th grade varsity are 4-2 after a big win Thursday. (John Fisken photo)

(Bob Martin photos)

Heading off to the wilds of Forks. (Bob Martin photos)

Forks

Get away from the snow and things are actually pretty dang scenic.

Sage Downes (Fisken photo)

   Sage Downes and his 8th grade teammates put up a strong fight, but fell to a high-powered offense. (Fisken photo)

No baskets. Ever.

Employing a blistering man-to-man defense Thursday, the Coupeville Middle School 7th grade varsity boys’ basketball squad froze out host Forks.

Holding the Spartans to a measly five points over the game’s first 24 minutes, the Wolves ran away with a 23-16 win in their first game in three weeks.

The victory lifts Randy King’s team to 4-2 on the season, and was the highlight on a day when Forks won two of three games.

Coupeville was nipped 46-38 in the 7th grade JV game while the 8th grade varsity fell 67-25.

Kicking off the second half of its 10-game season, CMS made its longest trek of the year, braving the snow (and alleged twinkly vampires).

The 7th grade varsity was on point from the opening tip.

“Defense. How’s about that 7th grade defense?,” King said. “Gave up one in the first and two in the second. And they were good!

“We didn’t shoot great but the “D” was incredible,” he added. “We are figuring it out!”

After combining for just 18 points in the first three quarters (the Wolves led 13-5), the two squads threw down 21 in the fourth.

Connor Barton paced CMS with 12 points, pouring in buckets in all four quarters.

He scored four in the final quarter, teaming with Hawthorne Wolfe, who knocked down all four of his points down the stretch, to keep Forks at bay.

Grady Rickner swished both of Coupeville’s free throw attempts in the fourth, as well, allowing the Spartans no hopes of launching a comeback.

Xavier Murdy rounded out the Wolf offense, dropping in five on the afternoon, while Caleb Meyer, Cody Roberts and Logan Martin also saw floor time.

7th grade JV nipped:

Coupeville had only six players, making for a lonely bench, but actually got stronger as the game went on.

Toss out a 20-8 Forks run in the first quarter, and the Wolves were the better team over the final three quarters to a 30-26 tune.

Gabe Shaw was a one-man wrecking crew, hammering home 14, while Martin added seven of his 10 in the fourth.

Logan Wertz (5), Roberts (5), Aiden Burdge (4, including a three-ball) and Jonathan Carroll rounded out the roster.

8th grade falls:

A slow start and a rough finish doomed the Wolves.

Jake Mitten banked home 11, while Daniel Olson chipped in with 10 to provide most of Coupeville’s offense.

Alex Jimenez and Dakota Eck each added a bucket, with Sage Downes and Ben Smith providing defense and hustle.

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Ethan Spark (John Fisken photos)

   Ethan Spark glides through the night, slicing through the Port Townsend defenders on his way to another bucket. (John Fisken photos)

guitar

“I’m going off-book, I swear. It’s solo time, baby!”

Mckenzie Meyer

   Mckenzie Meyer pulls split duties, putting in work on the sax and as a cheerleader.

Sean Toomey-Stout

   Sean Toomey-Stout (right) hits the floor to battle for the ball with another well-coiffed player.

Nick Blalock

   “If my calculations are correct, when this baby hits 88 beats per hour … you’re gonna hear some serious shi… oh hey, Mr. Jenkins.”

girls

The loud ‘n proud part of the student section.

Nikolai Lyngra

   Nikolai Lyngra (45) grabs a rebound or reenacts the Pride Rock scene from “The Lion King.” Your choice.

birthday

Birthday girl Kiara Burdge (center) gets mobbed by her fan club.

The gym is back open for business.

With winter break officially ending, school was back in session Tuesday, and, with that, home basketball games were back on the schedule.

With the Coupeville boys facing off with Port Townsend, players and fans were back at it, and wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken and his cameras were back in town to document the goings-on.

The photos above are courtesy him.

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

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/20162017-Coupeville-BB/CHS-BBB/20170103-vs-Pt-Townsend/

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