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Lindsey Roberts (John Fisken photo)

   Kailey Kellner (left) and Lindsey Roberts combined for 14 points and 28 rebounds Friday as Coupeville won in overtime. (John Fisken photo)

It’s not how you start, it’s how you finish.

Overcoming a rocky beginning, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad came roaring back late Friday, turning a double-digits deficit into a wild one-point overtime win.

Pulling out a 42-41 non-conference thriller at Orcas Island, the Wolves, who hadn’t played in nine days, soared to 6-3 heading into the new year.

Coupeville, which has played seven of nine games on the road this season, will stay in road warrior mode next week, when it faces perhaps its biggest test of the season.

The Wolves, 2-0 in 1A Olympic League play, travel to Port Townsend (2-0) Tuesday and Chimacum (1-2) Friday.

As they aim to keep their 20-game league winning streak alive, the Wolves are hoping for more of how they played down the stretch Friday, and less of how they opened the game.

Coupeville, which found itself in a 18-8 hole after a rough first quarter, scraped away at the Vikings, but still trailed by seven entering the fourth.

Utilizing a strong press and crafty shot-making, CHS dominated in the final quarter of regulation, however, using a 12-5 surge to knot things up at 38 and give the fans extra action.

Coupeville got something from everyone down the stretch, with Mia Littlejohn knocking down a huge three-ball to spark things.

Lindsey Roberts scored four of her team-high 10 in the fourth, while Kailey Kellner dropped in three and both Kalia Littlejohn and Mikayla Elfrank tickled the twines on a successful free throw.

If the Wolves could have been a bit sharper from the charity stripe, there would have been no need for overtime, as CHS connected on just 11 of 26 free throws on the night.

With neither team able to deliver a knockout punch at the end of regulation, overtime beckoned.

Orcas drew first blood with a bucket, but Kalia Littlejohn immediately sliced through the Viking defense to re-tie the game with a basket of her own.

After that, neither team could hit from the field, but free throws from Mia Littlejohn (tying things at 41) and Kellner (pushing Coupeville ahead 42-41) were crucial.

Orcas had the ball and a chance to win with 2.5 ticks left on the clock, but the Wolves successfully hounded the Vikings ball handler down the sideline, preventing a final shot before time expired.

The finish was quite a turn-around from the start.

A bit rusty from the week-and-a-half break between games, and bothered by illness, the Wolves came out a step slow in the early-afternoon game.

“The first quarter continues to be a struggle for us; today was no different,” said Coupeville coach David King. “Offensively we are slowing the ball down too much and ending a possession with a rushed shot.”

Things picked up, in brief spurts at least, going forward, as the Wolves won the scoring battle in every other quarter.

A huge key was Coupeville’s team-wide defensive effort.

After giving up 18 in the first eight minutes, the Wolves steadily reduced Orcas’ scoring going forth, from eight to seven to five to a meager three in overtime.

Lauren Rose drilled a couple of key shots to set up the fourth quarter rally, while super sophomores Kalia Littlejohn and Roberts played crucial roles all night.

“Seems like this year, from game to game, we have different players stepping up on the offensive end,” King said. “Today it was Lindsey and Kalia.

“Yesterday I challenged Lindsey that the team needs her to be confident on offense and to look to score when she’s open,” he added. “Kalia is a spark plug on defense, but game after game I can see her confidence growing with handling the ball and taking the open shots.”

Eight different Wolves scored, something King loves to see.

“It was truly a team win.”

Kalia Littlejohn dropped in a season-high seven to back Roberts and her 10 points, while Mia Littlejohn (6), Rose (5), Tiffany Briscoe (4), Kellner (4), Elfrank (4) and Kyla Briscoe (2) all scored.

A huge factor in the comeback win was Coupeville’s relentless work on the boards.

Kellner snatched 15 and Roberts hauled in 13 as CHS made off with 52 caroms, including 28 on the offensive end.

“The players aren’t quitting. We talked about getting back into the game with our defense,” King said. “It’s great seeing the fight and will to win games like this.

“Once we put a first half together like our last two second halves we won’t have to climb out of the hole we put ourselves in,” he added. “It’s a process and we are seeing signs that have us headed in the right direction.”

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(David King photo)

   Wolf JV players listen to coach Amy King plan out strategy during a timeout Friday afternoon. (David King photo)

Win. Survive. Move on.

After spending many a season bunkered down in gyms, dealing with sick or missing athletes, Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball coach Amy King knows the drill.

“Winter time really is a tough time for sports with the holidays, family vacations and sickness,” she said. “Over the winter break, I think we had 4-5 JV girls at practice every day.”

King managed to scrape together nine mostly functioning players Friday, though, and the Wolves, coming off of a nine-day gap between games, savaged host Orcas 39-13.

The non-conference victory sends the Wolf young guns into 2017 boasting a 5-2 record.

Defense was the key for Coupeville, as it used a season-high 19 blocks to thoroughly frustrate the Vikings.

“It took a short time to get our offense going; shots went up and just didn’t fall,” King said. “But we took care of business on the defensive end and got in their heads a little bit.”

Sarah Wright and Ema Smith dominated on the glass, allowing the Wolves to put the game away in the second quarter.

Holding a narrow 6-4 lead after one quarter, CHS pounded away in the second, romping to a 17-7 advantage.

“The second quarter just unleashed all things great,” King said. “Buckets were pouring out of the girls from all sides.”

Maya Toomey-Stout singed the nets with a long three-ball, while Ashlie Shank, Maddy Hilkey, Avalon Renninger, Scout Smith and Ema Smith all chipped in with points during the explosion.

“The quarter was so exciting,” King said. “All of the girls fought for the ball, anticipating passes, grabbing rebounds and fast breaking like crazy down the floor.”

Coupeville’s defense was especially unrelenting in the second half, when the Wolves held Orcas to just a single bucket over the final 16 minutes of play.

King came away impressed with her entire team, heaping extra praise on a few standouts.

Scout was impressive today. Point guarding and feeding her teammates, but in the second half she found herself with steals and drives too,” King said. “Maya ran the floor all night and whoever she guarded didn’t have a chance.

“She along with her teammates are finding their confidence and it is so awesome to see. I love seeing the excitement of the game in this group. Sweet way to go into the new year!”

Wright paced the Wolves with 10 points, while Toomey-Stout rattled home seven.

Scout Smith (6), Hilkey (4), Shank (4), Ema Smith (4), Nicole Lester (2) and a very ill Renninger (2) rounded out the scoring attack.

Ema Smith snatched a game-high 12 rebounds, while Shank, Wright and Scout Smith had seven boards apiece. Tia Wurzrainer and Lester each hauled down six.

The stats were eye-popping up and down the chart, with Scout Smith pilfering four steals and rejecting seven shots. Wright swatted an additional six shots herself.

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Nikolai Lyngra knocked down a season-high eight points Friday, sparking the Wolf JV to their sixth win. (John Fisken photo)

   Nikolai Lyngra knocked down a season-high eight points Friday, sparking the Wolf JV to its sixth win. (John Fisken photo)

These are the kind of games that build character.

Coming off of a nine-day break, missing a considerable chunk of players, forced to travel all day and night to the wilds of Orcas Island Friday, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squads were tested.

The Wolf JV responded in style, holding off the host Vikings 50-46 to reach the halfway point of the season with a winning record.

Coupeville’s varsity, however, was unable to contain hot-shooting Orcas and fell 80-50.

The two CHS squads start the second half of the season Tuesday, when they welcome Port Townsend to Whidbey for a 1A Olympic League clash.

Coupeville’s varsity is 1-9 overall, 1-2 in league play.

The Wolves sit in third place in the four-team league, just a game and a half off of the first-place RedHawks heading into their first meeting of the season.

Meanwhile, Coupeville’s JV is rampaging, winners of five of their last seven, and 6-4 overall.

Varsity shot down:

With three players hitting double digits, Coupeville had one of its better offensive nights this season, but the Vikings were relentless as they built a lead, then continued to add to it quarter after quarter.

Up 25-13 at the first break, the Vikings stretched things out to 43-24 at the half and 61-39 after three quarters of play.

Ethan Spark paced the Wolves with 15, while Gabe Wynn hit for 14 and Hunter Smith knocked down 12. Brian Shank banked home nine to round out the scoring.

Coupeville had just seven players available, with Hunter Downes, Ariah Bepler and Cameron Toomey-Stout also seeing floor time.

JV holds on:

Hot early, cold later, then nerves of steel at the end.

Despite missing seven players, the Wolf JV jumped out to a 14-point lead in the first half.

Orcas tightened things up in the second half by clamping down on defense, forcing CHS into poor shot selection.

“We ran good offense early, but they tied the game because we took ill-advised shots that they turned into layups,” said Coupeville coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh. “The second half we struggled to run consistent offense and it hurt us.”

The Wolves “kept battling,” though, and pulled out the win in fingernail-biting fashion.

Down by two late, CHS forced a turnover, and freshman phenom Jered Brown turned it into a back-breaker.

Making off with a steal, he crossed his defender over, causing the Viking to crash into his own teammate, then pulled up and drilled his fifth three-point bomb of the night.

Clinging to a 47-46 lead, the Wolves salted the win away thanks to Mason Grove’s skills as a rebounder and free-throw shooter.

Snatching an offensive board through a thicket of Viking hands, he was fouled and sent to the line with just six ticks on the clock.

Grove banged down the front end of the one-and-one, then defied odds on the next shot.

With none of his teammates on the line — they were all back, ready to employ a soft press to keep Orcas from running — Grove skipped the second freebie off the rim.

It didn’t matter, though, as he promptly slid past the Orcas players, snared the rebound and put it back up and in to seal the victory.

“A good team win in the end,” said a relieved, and proud, Van Velkinburgh.

Brown dropped in 21, including his five-pack of treys, to lead the CHS attack, while Nikolai Lyngra added a season-high eight and Sean Toomey-Stout had seven.

Ulrik Wells and Grove added five apiece and Elliott Johnson knocked down four.

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Sisters Katie Smith (left) and Kassie (Lawson) O'Neil.

Sisters, and former CHS hoops stars, Katie Smith (left) and Kassie (Lawson) O’Neil.

Kassie

O’Neil (second from left) and her fellow seniors in 2009.

Kass

Killer Kassie strikes again.

Where were you 2,886 days ago?

She might not remember it now, but Kassie (Lawson) O’Neil spent the night of Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2009 heating up like a microwave.

In an eight-minute span during the fourth quarter, in a game against visiting Granite Falls that was ultimately decided by just two points, the Coupeville High School star went off for 13 of her team-high 19 points.

Why is that so special?

Because, during a period where she played with two of the best to ever wear the CHS uniform — Megan Smith and Ashley Manker — and when the Wolves faced off twice a year with South Whidbey’s otherworldly Lindsey Newman, O’Neil’s explosion sits as the best one-quarter performance in the books.

I have CHS girls’ basketball books from 2007-2010, and while Newman torched Coupeville for 39 and 33 and Smith waxed Friday Harbor for 30, neither one reached higher than 12 in a single quarter.

But there’s Kassie, a team captain who went on to play college ball before marriage and starting her own pack of future basketball-playing sons, holding down the top spot.

Her biggest single moment is the night she banked in a three-ball at the buzzer in overtime to upend highly-ranked King’s, but her work in the fourth against Granite Falls is a nice back-up exhibit.

Coupeville had jumped out to a 10-8 lead after one, stretched it to 24-15 at halftime, then hit a rough spot in the third.

Despite buckets from Mandi Murdy and O’Neil, the Wolves were outscored 14-4 and trailed 29-28 heading into the final eight minutes.

At that point, Smith topped the Wolves with 12 points, while O’Neil had six (she had a bucket in every quarter) and Murdy five.

Cue the offensive explosion, as the two squads, which had scored 57 points combined through three, went off for 43 in a wild fourth.

Granite Falls would escape with a 51-49 win, and it was a bit of a heart-breaker, as the Tigers scored at the buzzer to avoid overtime.

It was a barn-burner, though, as Coupeville rode O’Neil’s hot shooting to a 10-point lead, only to surrender a 12-1 run by Granite at the end.

Audrey Murphy, who poured in a game-high 26 for Granite, hit for nine down the stretch, including the game winner, while Coupeville got fourth quarter points from Katie Smith, Jesse Caselden, Murdy, Megan Smith and, of course, O’Neil.

She went off right from the start, drilling a three-point bomb.

Then came a pair of buckets, a free throw, another bucket and then a final trey to cap O’Neil’s whirlwind quarter.

The three-ball, which rattled home with just 18 ticks left on the clock, knotted the game at 49.

Win or lose, O’Neil’s dominance in the spotlight remains one of the more memorable nights in Wolf hoops history.

Plus, performances like that will enable her sons to one day turn to their own teammates and say, “I want to play like my mom. She was a freakin’ rock star!”

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Scott Stuurmans

Scott Stuurmans powers inside for two. (John Fisken photos)

Gavin

Gavin O’Keefe can kill you with the pass or the shot. It’s choose your death time.

Gavin Keohane

Gavin Keohane, still gliding.

Jason Bagby

It’s the thunder down under, as Jason Bagby works in the paint.

Brad Sherman

   Brad Sherman looks for an opening, while Stuurmans is intent on keeping the door slammed shut.

Desmond Bell

Desmond Bell triggers the offense.

Caleb Valko

Caleb Valko initiates the dance.

Dante Mitchell

“Yoink!” Dante Mitchell steals yet another rebound away.

Can you smell the liniment?

Alumni, young and old, filled the Coupeville High School gym Monday for the 9th annual Tom Roehl Roundball Classic, reliving their basketball days for a good cause.

The all-day hoops extravaganza, which honors the memory of a longtime local coach and raises funds for scholarships, drew 10 teams this year and the eye of wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken, who delivers us the pics seen above.

To view more, pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/2016-Tom-Roehl-Round-Ball-Clas

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