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Mia Littlejohn piled up eight points, three rebounds and three assists as Coupeville won its 21st straight league game Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Mia Littlejohn piled up eight points, three rebounds and three assists as Coupeville won its 21st straight league game Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

In the relatively short two-and-a-half year history of the 1A Olympic League, no program has been as successful in conference play as the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad.

The Wolves are one of four varsity teams to have never lost in league competition, and, with a come-from-behind 39-29 drubbing of host Port Townsend Tuesday, they now have the longest winning streak of any of those teams.

With the win, its third straight, Coupeville rises to 7-3 on the season, 3-0 in Olympic League play.

From 2014 to today, CHS is 21-0 against its conference foes, topping Klahowya girls soccer (20-0), Klahowya boys soccer (12-0) and Coupeville girls tennis (11-0) in the race to the top of perfection hill.

To get there, the Wolves had to overcome a bit of a slow start Tuesday.

With Port Townsend having cancelled the JV game due to low numbers caused by a toxic mix of injuries and illness, the varsity teams, who entered the game tied for first place, were the only show on the night.

And, in the early going, it was the RedHawks who seemed in control of the plot, forcing the Wolves to once again dig themselves out of a hole.

If there was a positive, it was only a small hole this time around, with CHS trailing 10-9 after one and 17-15 at the half.

“I sound like a broken record with how we start our games,” said Coupeville coach David King. “Tonight seemed to follow that same pattern, however it was a little better than the last couple of games.”

Coupeville’s stellar defense made up for some early shooting issues, but Port Townsend seized the advantage at the free throw line, knocking down five of eight freebies in the second quarter.

Whatever was said during the break seemed to light a fire under the Wolves, as they hit the floor a different team in the second half.

Seizing the lead for good three minutes in, Coupeville then methodically stretched it out to double digits.

Part of the turnaround came from completely neutralizing RedHawk star Kaitlyn Meek, who was held to a single, solitary free throw in the game’s final 16 minutes.

As she fell quiet, Wolf sophomore Kalia Littlejohn “started heating up and percolating,” going on a third-quarter rampage in which she threw down all six of her points.

Coupeville turned the game completely around in the third, rolling to a 15-6 advantage while spreading the scoring between Littlejohn, Lindsey Roberts (4), Kailey Kellner (a long three-ball) and Sarah Wright (2).

“Everything seemed to be working well for us,” King said.

The Wolves kept up the pressure on Meek, a two-time All-Conference player, using a mix of Lauren Grove, Mikayla Elfrank, Littlejohn and Kellner to stifle her.

“We are athletic and deep enough that we were able to rotate players on her all game,” King said. “The rest of the team brought their defensive game as well, minimizing the scoring opportunities with the rest of their roster.”

Once they had the lead, the Wolves put the hammer down hard, impressing their coach.

“In the fourth, Mikayla made a very good move to split a double team to score the basket,” King said. “Kailey scored her basket on a great post-up in the middle of the key, didn’t rush and took it up hard. Made the basket and got fouled.

“This is progress and something we have been talking about all season,” he added. “Don’t shy away from contact. More often than not, good things will come your way if you go strong.”

Kellner dropped in a game-high 11 to pace her squad, while Lindsey Roberts banged down 10 in support.

Mia Littlejohn (8), Kalia Littlejohn (6), Elfrank (2) and Wright (2) also scratched their names in the scoring column.

The “twins,” Roberts and Grove, each hauled down six boards, while Mia Littlejohn and Kellner dealt out three assists apiece.

“This was one of our most consistent games,” King said. “We are still a work in progress, but it’s exciting because we are seeing more consistent play from each player.”

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Ulrik Wells (John Fisken photo)

   Ulrik Wells, here lining up a free throw Tuesday, delivered a blocked shot that sparked a huge fourth-quarter run. (John Fisken photo)

Go back, erase the second quarter and we got ourselves a barn-burner.

Tuesday night’s JV boys basketball clash between Coupeville and Port Townsend was a back-and-forth affair, highlighted by a big-game performance from Wolf frosh Sean Toomey-Stout.

It had strong work early from the Wolves.

Plus a great surge down the stretch from a tired seven-man squad facing a team that was able to sub in five fresh new players every few minutes.

So much good stuff.

And then there was the stinky cheese second quarter, when eternally-upbeat CHS coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh looked like a man who had just been slapped in the face 73 times in a row.

Take away those soul-crushing eight minutes and Coupeville is up 31-29.

Put that 23-6 second quarter back in the books, however, and the Wolves lose 52-37.

Now 6-5 overall, 2-2 in Olympic League play, the CHS young guns held up well despite missing more than half their roster.

Injuries, vacations and academic issues left a whopping eight of 15 Wolves unavailable coming out of winter break, assuring Van Velkinburgh of having little problem finding a seat on his very empty bench.

Shrugging off their lack of numbers, the young guns came out blazing in the first.

Toomey-Stout led the charge at the hoop, swooping and diving and leaving the RedHawks grasping at air as he banked in six of his game-high 19 in the opening quarter.

A running jumper from Mason Grove staked the Wolves to a 10-9 lead heading into the break and things were still looking great when a three-ball from Grove knotted things at 13 early in the second.

Then the wheels fell off in mystifying fashion.

Coupeville’s defense went AWOL (though four Port Townsend treys didn’t help) and the Wolves shooting touch evaporated in horrifying fashion.

For anyone who went out to buy a hotdog at 13-13, coming back to find the RedHawks up 32-16 at the break was the kind of surprise which would make a person wonder if the scoreboard operator was pulling a (very early) April Fools trick on everyone.

Things got moderately better in the third, with Toomey-Stout throwing down all seven of Coupeville’s points, then took a decided turn for the better in the fourth.

The pivotal moment came when Ulrik Wells held his ground in the paint and soundly rejected a RedHawk shot.

That seemed to spark something deep inside his Coupeville teammates, and they promptly went on a 14-2 run to slice a 25-point deficit down to 13.

Four different Wolves (Toomey-Stout, Grove, Wells and Gavin Knoblich) scored during the run, with half the baskets coming off of offensive rebounds.

The late run put the skip back in Van Velkinburgh’s step, the roar back in the throats of Wolf fans, and bodes well for the all-freshman JV squad.

Grove finished with eight points to back Toomey-Stout’s 19, while Jered Brown and Knoblich each dropped in four.

Wells added a bucket on a nice move in the paint, while Nikolai Lyngra and Tucker Hall rounded out the Wolf roster.

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Hunter Downes was a beast on the boards Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

Hunter Downes was a beast on the boards Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

What could have been.

For two-and-a-half quarters, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad went toe-to-toe Tuesday with first-place Port Townsend.

Unfortunately, a cold-shooting first quarter and a late fourth-quarter surge by the visiting RedHawks doomed the Wolves, as they fell 60-39.

The loss drops Coupeville to 1-3 in Olympic League play, 1-10 overall.

With the defeat, the Wolves slide into a tie with Klahowya for third-place in their four-team league, trailing Port Townsend (3-0) and two-time defending champ Chimacum (2-1).

The top three teams earn a trip to the postseason.

There’s still plenty of games ahead, with five more league tilts including the third, and final showdown with Klahowya Jan. 24.

The Wolves and Eagles have split their first two meetings this season, both winning on their home courts.

Coupeville opened Tuesday night’s match-up with just seven active varsity players (or six-and-a-half, if you count Cameron Toomey-Stout valiantly playing through a painful back injury).

It wasn’t the Wolves depth however, but their cold shooting touch, which put them in an early hole.

Unable to only get one bucket to drop — a Gabe Wynn layup off of a long outlet pass — the Wolves went to the first break down 12-2.

Detrius Kellsall stung CHS early, dropping a three-ball from the left side, then making off with a steal for a breakaway bucket.

Port Townsend, a patient team that plays under control and keeps the ball zipping from player to player, made very few mistakes all night.

When Coupeville was at its best, it was because the Wolves were forcing the situation, not because the RedHawks were giving anything away.

Down 14-2 early in the second, CHS put together its most sustained charge, twice cutting the lead down to eight.

The second came when Hunter Smith made a rampaging charge at the hoop, then reared back at the last second and swished a runner over Kelsall’s outstretched hand.

But again, the patience of the RedHawks blunted Coupeville time and again, as Port Townsend found a basket here, a bucket there to keep the lead always hovering just around double digits.

Wynn knocked down the shot of the year, nailing a trey as he got knocked on his rear by two defenders, but as soon as the Wolves pulled to within nine, the visitors had a reply.

This time it was gunner Seth Spencer, hitting back-to-back third quarter three-balls that gutted Wolf Nation.

The closest Coupeville could get in the fourth was 38-27, after Smith swished a pair of free throws to open the quarter, then Port Townsend started to finally pull away.

With Berkley Hill and Kaiden Parcher dropping eight apiece in the final eight minutes, the RedHawks prevented Coupeville from getting back-to-back buckets down the stretch and made the final score a bit deceiving.

The Wolves fought hard until the end, highlighted by junior Hunter Downes, who ripped offensive rebounds out of the hands of rival players on three successive trips down the floor.

“I’m impressed with Hunter Downes, he worked hard all night,” said Coupeville coach Anthony Smith.

“I liked our effort, if not all our results,” he added. “My guys will battle.”

Wynn paced Coupeville, raining down nine of his game-high 18 in the final quarter, while Hunter Smith banked home seven and Ethan Spark tickled the twines for five.

Brian Shank (4), Toomey-Stout (3) and Downes (2) chipped in, while Ariah Bepler turned in a strong defensive effort for the Wolves.

Port Townsend spread its scoring load out, with Kelsall (13), Hill (12) and Parcher (11) all hitting double digits.

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Kailey Kellner

   Kailey Kellner leads the first-place CHS girls’ basketball team in scoring, hitting 7.2 points a night. (John Fisken photos)

After a season off, Ethan Spark is back and currently #4 on the scoring charts for the Wolf boys.

   After a season off, Ethan Spark is back on the hardwood and currently #4 on the scoring charts for the Wolf boys.

Halfway home.

Tuesday night the Coupeville High School basketball squads kick off the 2017 portion of the 2016-2017 hoops season, and they’ll do so with a key match-up.

The Wolf girls hop across to Port Townsend for a battle of teams sitting atop the 1A Olympic League, while the CHS boys will welcome the RedHawks to Whidbey, hoping to derail the league leaders.

The second half of the season will be heavy in conference tilts.

Coupeville’s girls have 11 games left in the regular season, with seven of those against league rivals, while the Wolf boys play six of their final 10 in a battle for a league title.

Where things sit through Monday:

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 2-0 6-3
Port Townsend 2-0 5-3
Chimacum 1-2 5-4
Klahowya 0-3 3-4

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 2-0 5-2
Chimacum 2-1 2-6
COUPEVILLE 1-2 1-9
Klahowya 1-3 3-6

And scoring stats for Coupeville’s varsity players:

Girls:

Kailey Kellner – 65
Mikayla Elfrank – 54
Mia Littlejohn – 50
Lauren Rose – 27
Lindsey Roberts – 25
Tiffany Briscoe – 20
Kalia Littlejohn – 20
Lauren Grove – 19
Sarah Wright – 12
Kyla Briscoe – 8
Charlotte Langille – 2
Allison Wenzel – 2

Boys:

Hunter Smith – 152
Gabe Wynn – 94
Brian Shank – 69
Ethan Spark – 55
Hunter Downes – 21
Cameron Toomey-Stout – 10
Ariah Bepler – 5
Jered Brown – 5
Joey Lippo – 5
Steven Cope – 4

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(John Fisken photo)

   The Coupeville High School varsity girls, currently 6-3 and atop the 1A Olympic League for a third straight season. (John Fisken photo)

The calendar changes, but the focus doesn’t.

As he prepares to jump into the ’17 portion of the 2016-2017 basketball season, Coupeville High School girls’ coach David King has some thoughts on the new year.

Let’s join him over in the Coaches Corner:

I’m not one to declare New Years resolutions.

I do believe that the start of a new calendar year is a great time to reflect on where you are at and ways we can improve.

It may be minor or a major change.

It could be something that has picked an interest but something that seems far fetched or out of your reach. Whatever it is, do it with no regrets!

We are about half way through our season.

We have played well more often than not and shown how good we can be.

As a coach I hope for consistency from each player and a willingness to learn.

If we can do that we will put ourselves in a very good spot by the time the regular season ends and the postseason starts.

That’s when you want to be playing your best ball.

For us to be consistent and to continue on an upward trend, we need to play to our strengths and make some adjustments to our game to get better.

It’s easy to stay in our comfort zones and maybe defer to a teammate or rely on others to make a play.

My hope is that each player begins the new year with a hunger to make the necessary changes to their game and for the team so we can compete with confidence with every opponent we face.

I see it every season, players want to make changes and learn new skills, but we are our own worst enemies.

I say, take a chance on yourself, step out of your comfort zone.

Come into the first practice of 2017 and practice with a passion and fervor that you didn’t know you had.

Practice and play to be the best player you can be. If we all do that the games will take care of themselves.

After a positive first half of the season, I am excited to see the team take the next step and improve on our first half.

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