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Peytin Vondrak

Peytin Vondrak at work and rest. (John Fisken photos)

Vondrak, hanging out with teammates Hannah Davidson (left) and Lucy Sandahl during volleyball season.

   Vondrak hangs out with volleyball teammates Hannah Davidson (left) and Lucy Sandahl.

At first glance, you would think Peytin Vondrak has been a Wolf for life.

The Coupeville High School sophomore has become so deeply ingrained in the local sports scene, it’s easy to forget she and her family only arrived on The Rock this school year.

Pensacola’s loss has been Cow Town’s epic gain, as Peytin, and lil’ sis Maddie have quickly become integral parts of Wolf Nation.

As she celebrates her 16th birthday today, the coolly elegant Peytin is blossoming into a superstar, as an athlete, but even more so as a brainy, warm-hearted young woman.

Vondrak made her first splash playing volleyball in the fall.

While adjusting to a new school, teammates and coaches (not to mention she had never played volleyball before), she helped the Wolf JV roll to an undefeated 9-0 record in 1A Olympic League play.

When she was on the floor, Vondrak used her natural height and long reach and mixed it with hard work, dedication and a refusal to ever give up on a play.

If the rotation landed her on the bench, she was loyal and supportive of her teammates, always among the first to cheer for her new friends and make sure they knew she had seen, and appreciated, what they had accomplished.

Vondrak strolled away with Most Improved honors at the postseason banquet and frequent behind the scenes praise from her coaches when they discussed their squads.

Now, she’s teaming up with Skyler Lawrence to provide CHS girls basketball with impeccable managerial service this winter.

Once again, behind the scenes praise from her coaches pours in on a regular basis.

Up ahead, plans to play softball in the spring, and even more coaches, teammates and fans to win for the extremely likeable Vondrak.

In the short time she has been here among us, Peytin has made a strong first impression.

She comes across as a well-spoken, thoughtful, talented young woman who, as she finds her way in the world, is going to continue to successfully climb one summit after another.

As a town, a school and a community, we lucked out when the Vondraks reached out, stuck a finger on the far left side of the map and said, “Yep, that’s where we’re going.”

So happy birthday, Miss Vondrak.

I hope that you are enjoying Coupeville as much as the rest of us are enjoying having you here.

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Wynter Thorne (John Fisken photo)

   Wynter Thorne knocked down 26 straight shots two seasons ago, winning Coupeville’s last free throw shooting contest. (John Fisken photo)

Who’s the new Wynter Thorne?

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad is reviving its free throw shoot-a-thon fundraiser, and all the current Wolves are chasing her legacy.

In the event, which runs the week starting Dec. 26, each Wolf player, varsity and JV, will shoot 100 free throws.

Players are busy hitting up family, friends, fans and strangers alike, seeking either a flat donation or a pledge to pay a certain amount per made shot.

The money raised helps replenish team funds, allowing for purchase of new equipment and travel to events like the Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic.

With its focus on improving free throw shooting, always a key component to a successful hoops squad, it’s also a teaching tool hidden inside a fun team-wide competition.

The last time the Wolves held this fundraiser was two seasons back.

Thorne, then a senior, torched the nets, hitting 26 consecutive shots at one point.

She finished at 78-100, edging Kacie Kiel (76) and Makana Stone (75) for the title.

If you’re interested in donating or pledging and don’t have access to a current player, you can do so by reaching out to CHS coach David King at dking@coupeville.k12.wa.us.

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CHS girls hoops coach David King. (John Fisken photo)

CHS girls hoops coach David King. (John Fisken photo)

Your typical sports season is full of ups and downs.

The trick is to enjoy the highs (while never forgetting to build on the moment), without becoming overwhelmed by the lows.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad had an extremely rough outing in its last game, a blowout loss at Bellevue Christian.

But that shouldn’t dampen the fact the Wolves currently boast a winning record (4-3) and sit atop the the 1A Olympic League (2-0) for the third consecutive year.

Having taken the weekend to clear his head, CHS head man David King swings by the Coaches Corner to drop his thoughts.

As a team we have been busy since the first day of practice (Nov. 14), with very few days off.

The players have done a great job during this time. We have been successful more often than not.

We are coming off of one of our worst games on Friday night, so the two days off couldn’t have come at a better time.

The great thing about this team — if I would have said we had practice on Saturday, they would have been there, no questions asked.

Me as a coach, I got to get away from basketball for about a day and a half.

Even took Amy to the movies and saw “Rogue One” (yes, she paid).

I was able to refresh and re-energize myself for the next stretch we are about to head into.

As a coach and also the players, sometimes we can get tunnel vision and focus so hard on what we are trying to accomplish every day that we forget to see the bigger picture.

That bigger picture is to remember we all need some downtime. Time to be able to spend with friends, family and just time to relax.

Having been around these players over the years, I know they spent their weekend relaxing and re-energizing.

We have one game this week and I’m confident we will put Friday’s showing behind us and have one of our most complete games.

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Ariah Bepler (John Fisken photos)

   Ariah Bepler is one of 10 Wolf boys to have scored in a varsity game this season. (John Fisken photos)

Kyla Briscoe

   Defensive dynamo Kyla Briscoe has helped the CHS girls stretch their unbeaten streak in Olympic League play to 20 games.

As we sit a game away from everyone heading out for Christmas break, there are several basketball story-lines developing.

The Wolf girls once again sit atop the 1A Olympic League standings, and, with two wins this year, have stretched their unbeaten run in conference games to 20.

That streak (9-0, 9-0, 2-0 and counting) ties Klahowya girls soccer (6-0, 6-0, 8-0) for the longest run of success by any program in the league’s 2.5 year run.

The other emerging tale is the offensive show being put on by Wolf junior Hunter Smith.

He torched the nets for 25-point performances in both of his last two home games, and currently has a 57-point cushion on anyone else wearing the red and black.

Smith is averaging 16.3 points a night through the first eight games, and, at 130 points, has already tied what he put up during an injury-plagued sophomore campaign.

As you get ready for Tuesday’s tango at Concrete, then a long wait until a trip to Orcas Island Dec. 30 reignites things, here’s the down-low:

Olympic League girls basketball:

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

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Port Townsend 2-0 3-1
Chimacum 2-1 2-5
COUPEVILLE 1-2 1-7
Klahowya 1-3 2-6

And scoring stats for Coupeville’s varsity players:

GIRLS:

Kailey Kellner – 52
Mia Littlejohn – 42
Mikayla Elfrank – 41
Lauren Rose – 20
Lindsey Roberts – 15
Tiffany Briscoe – 13
Kalia Littlejohn – 13
Lauren Grove – 9
Sarah Wright – 6
Charlotte Langille – 2
Allison Wenzel – 2
Kyla Briscoe – 1

BOYS:

Hunter Smith – 130
Gabe Wynn – 73
Brian Shank – 52
Ethan Spark – 37
Hunter Downes – 21
Cameron Toomey-Stout – 9
Ariah Bepler – 5
Jered Brown – 5
Steven Cope – 4
Joey Lippo – 3

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Gabe Wynn scorched the nets for a season-high 20 Saturday in a loss to Vashon. (John Fisken photo)

   Gabe Wynn scorched the nets for a season-high 20 Saturday in a loss to Vashon. (John Fisken photo)

Offense was not the issue.

Despite playing on back-to-back nights, after a long, late trip to Bellevue Friday, the undermanned Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad put up its season-high in points Saturday night.

Unfortunately, visiting Vashon Island went a bit bonkers from behind the arc and rode 11 three-balls to a 75-62 non-conference victory.

The loss, which came despite Wolf captains Hunter Smith (25) and Gabe Wynn (20) combining for 45 points, drops the Wolves to 1-7 on the season.

Coupeville has a road game at Concrete Tuesday, then gets a nine-day Christmas break from competition.

The Wolves didn’t get in from Bellevue until 12:30 AM Saturday morning, and, with just eight players available against Vashon, had to push through tired legs and minds.

It seemed to sting them in the early going, as Vashon roared out to a 19-8 lead at the first break.

CHS senior Brian Shank was doing his best to counteract the Pirates attack, dropping seven points in the opening quarter.

It was blunted by three treys from Vashon, though, as the Pirates broke Coupeville’s zone with red-hot shooting and closed the quarter on a 12-1 spurt.

The Wolves mixed things up, extending their zone, then switching to man-to-man, but Vashon seized any little opening and was ruthless in torching the nets.

The lead grew to 40-24 at the half and 59-39 after three, before cresting at 25 early in the final period.

To their credit, the Wolves put together their most sustained run of the night after that, cutting the lead in half and preventing Vashon from ever being able to pull its starters.

Smith poured in 14 of his team-high 25 down the stretch, hitting five buckets, a trey and a free throw.

“Give credit to my guys — they worked hard and never quit — they just got tired,” said Coupeville coach Anthony Smith. “My team battled.”

Wynn did most of his damage in the middle two quarters, ringing up 15 of his season-high 20 in the second and third. He paced CHS with three long bombs.

Shank, who battled through foul trouble after his early hot start, finished with nine, while Hunter Downes slid seven through the twines and Cameron Toomey-Stout banged home a free throw to round out the scoring.

Ethan Spark, Kyle Rockwell and Ariah Bepler also saw floor time for the very-thin Wolves.

Vashon was led by Casper Forest, who netted 26, and Jacob Chavez, who hit for 18. The duo combined to nail nine three-balls.

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