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Koa Davison (John Fisken photo)

   Koa Davison banged away inside for six points Friday and helped trigger a stifling defense as Coupeville’s JV rolled to a big win. (John Fisken photo)

Now that’s called flipping the switch.

Shrugging off a first quarter in which it largely stunk up the joint, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad suddenly found its groove Friday night and blew visiting Sultan off the court.

Roaring back from an 11-point deficit, the young Wolves combined a stifling defense with an aggressive, three-ball-happy offense and throttled the Turks 49-41 in a game that speaks well for the future.

The win evens the CHS young guns record at 1-1 heading into the start of 1A Olympic League play.

It was truly a tale of two halves — with the first one being seven minutes of agony and the second being 25 minutes of bliss.

Despite an early trey from Mason Grove, the Wolves stumbled badly out of the gate, giving up 12 straight points on a series of barely-contested buckets en route to trailing 16-5.

At which point CHS coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh unleashed the beasts.

Employing a nasty full-court press that frustrated, befuddled and terrorized the Turks, Coupeville turned the tide in a hurry.

Suddenly the Wolves were on the run, the ball was zipping from player to player and everyone was hitting nothing but net.

Meanwhile the Turks were getting dangerously close to crying, as they could barely get the ball up-court against a stifling, opportunistic defense.

Once the flow changed, the Wolves rode the wicked hot shooting touch of Jered Brown and Sean Toomey-Stout, who combined for 17 points during a game-busting 22-4 run.

The few times the duo didn’t put the ball in the hoop, their teammates did, with Kyle Rockwell knocking down a perfectly-angled bank shot and Grove hitting one of his three treys.

Coupeville’s run continued well into the third, with Grove hitting for seven in the quarter, while Koa Davison and Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim added buckets while doing the dirty work in the paint.

Up by 17, the Wolves took a breather, let Sultan crawl back to within seven, then emphatically slammed the door shut on the Turks.

Davison hit back-to-back baskets, packaged around a virtuoso bucket from Brown, on which he sucked the entire defense out to the top of the key, then slashed right through the group without being touched.

Coupeville spread its offense around, with Brown hitting for a game-high 16, while Grove notched 13.

Toomey-Stout added nine points (while snatching 12 rebounds and pilfering four steals), with Davison (6), Rockwell (3) and Pacquette-Pilgrim (2) also etching their names in the book.

Ulrik Wells, Tucker Hall, Aram Leyva, Dawson Houston, Aiden Juras, Elliott Johnson and Nikolai Lyngra also saw playing time.

The ever-growing Wells was a force on the boards while Lyngra all but ripped one Turk’s head clean off his shoulders during a scrap for a loose ball.

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Gabe Wynn, seen here in a practice, notched a team-high 15 points Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Gabe Wynn, seen here in a practice, notched a team-high 15 points Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

Anthony Smith was a man of mixed emotions.

The Coupeville High School boys’ basketball coach smiled, then grimaced, then smiled again as he talked Friday night after watching his inexperienced squad lose a game it had plenty of chances to win.

“We did some good things, we put ourselves in position to win and then…,” Smith said, his voice trailing off for a moment. “I’m not OK with losing, but I am OK with how we battled.

“We’ve learned some things in these first two non-conference games. We will get better, we are getting better.”

After a blowout loss on opening night to Blaine, the Wolves were a play or two away from making things very, very different in game two, but eventually fell 47-36 to visiting Sultan.

Coupeville (0-2) now hits the road for back-to-back 1A Olympic League games next week — Wednesday at Chimacum and Friday at Klahowya — still trying to find the magic mix with a roster that is virtually absent veterans.

Gabe Wynn, who teams with Hunter Smith as the only Wolves with prior varsity experience, did everything he could do Friday, gunning away for a team-high 15 before fouling out in the final minute.

After the game, the ref who called Wynn’s fifth foul came over to tell Anthony Smith he had messed the call up, small consolation for the Coupeville contingent.

The Wolves jumped on their former Cascade Conference rival literally in the first two seconds of the game.

Sultan won the tip, but Hunter Smith snatched the rock away from a careless Turk, then slashed to the hoop for a sweeping layup.

The visitors took note, focusing on the Wolf guard intently after that and keeping him uncharacteristically quiet on the offensive end, holding him without another bucket until the fourth quarter.

Even with its top offensive weapon stifled a bit, Coupeville controlled the first quarter, surging out to a 10-5 lead with both Wynn and Ethan Spark draining three-point bombs.

The first of several dry spells for the Wolves hurt, though, as they went scoreless over a six-minute stretch that covered the end of the first quarter and much of the second.

Even so, when they finally broke the drought with a slashing runner off of Hunter Downes fingertips at the 2:55 mark of the second quarter, CHS only trailed by a point.

Sparked by an intense effort on the defensive end, with Cameron Toomey-Stout leading a ball-hawking, aggressive zone, Coupeville overcame its cold shooting.

Spark tickled the twines for a trey to kick off the third quarter, and down 18-17, the Wolves looked ready to break things open.

But it didn’t happen.

Sultan, picking up most of its baskets on quick cuts to the hoop, put together a game-busting 13-2 surge in which Coupeville’s only points came on a pair of free throws from Wynn.

Down by 12 twice, with the last time early in the fourth quarter, Coupeville fought back.

A pull-up jumper from Wynn and a trey from Hunter Smith, wrapped around a resounding block by Brian Shank, lit the fuse and a string of successful trips to the charity stripe brought CHS back within 37-33.

The Turks held fast, however, converting back-to-back buckets off of offensive rebounds.

The second one was a particular killer on which Wynn, and not the man who crashed into him, was whistled for a game-icing foul.

Elias Lopez led Sultan with a game-high 20, while Coupeville put seven of its nine players into the scoring column.

Wynn’s 15 was backed up by seven each from Hunter Smith and Spark, while Downes, Steven Cope and Joey Lippo added a basket apiece.

Ariah Bepler rounded out the scoring with a free throw.

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Makana Stone (John Fisken photo)

   Makana Stone may have moved from high school to college, but she’s still the destroyer of worlds. (John Fisken photo)

Two undefeated teams took the floor Friday night, one left still perfect.

Advantage the team that gives a uniform to Makana Stone.

With the former Coupeville supernova continuing to play a key role off the bench, the Whitman College women’s basketball squad thrashed host Willamette 61-46 in both team’s league opener.

The win lifts the Blues to 6-0 overall, 1-0 in Northwest Conference play.

Whitman got double-digit scoring from four players, led by Alysse Ketner, who banged home 15 and Emily Rommel, who went for 12 points and 12 rebounds.

But back on Whidbey what we really care about is how Stone’s freshman campaign is playing out, and she once again used her minutes smartly.

On the floor for 13 minutes in a battle of 5-0 teams, she scored five points, pulled down three rebounds, dealt out an assist and collected another tooth-rattling rejection.

Through six games Stone is the best shooter on the team, knocking down 18 of 31 shots for a crisp 58.1%.

She’s third on the Blues in rebounding (5.7 a night), fifth in scoring (6.8 per game) and has six assists, six steals and two blocks.

Whitman, which is ranked #25 in the nation in D-3 play, returns to Walla Walla to face Whitworth Dec. 6.

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Gavin O'Keefe (John Fisken photo)

   Former Wolf sharpshooter Gavin O’Keefe gets welcomed into the rough and tumble world of alumni hoops. (John Fisken photo)

You have less than four weeks to get back in shape.

The 9th annual Tom Roehl Roundball Classic hits Coupeville High School’s gym the day after Christmas.

The all-day orgy of basketball, which brings tons of Wolf alumni back to the court they once ran as youngsters, goes down Monday, Dec. 26 from 9:30 AM until somewhere around 5 PM.

All teams will play two seeding games in the morning, with a single-elimination tourney going down in the afternoon, as everyone and their brother comes after defending champ Red Pride.

Last year’s event featured a three-point contest, handily won by Gavin Keohane, but the fate of the “Who Wants to Be Steph Curry?”-style shootout remains up in the air for this year.

Event organizer Noah Roehl is waiting to see how much interest is out there before making a final decision.

The Roundball Classic honors the memory of longtime local coach Tom Roehl, with money raised going to fund scholarships in his name.

To register your team (or sign up as a free agent) pop over to:

http://www.tjroehl.org/2016-registration-page.html

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Hawthorne Wolfe, seen here in his SWISH days, scored 17 in his middle school hoops debut. (Pat Kelley photo)

   Hawthorne Wolfe, seen here in his SWISH days, scored 17 in his middle school hoops debut. (Pat Kelley photo)

Aiden Burdge

   Aiden Burdge, who turned three steals into six points, poses with part of his fan club. (Photo courtesy Kiara Burdge)

The game changed in a flash.

For the first 10 minutes Thursday, Coupeville and Sequim’s 7th grade boys’ basketball squads were content to exchange body blows in a tightly-contested contest.

Then Hawthorne Wolfe, with his electric shooting touch, came off the CMS bench and the somewhat-annoying visiting fans got really, really quiet in a big hurry.

With Wolfe going off for a game-high 17, including 12 straight at one point in the third, Coupeville stretched a two-point lead to 17, then sauntered home with a 47-41 opening night victory.

CMS coach Randy King, battling illness, had virtually no voice by the end.

The Wolf fans were in a similar condition, but their vocal straining came from screaming like banshees as Wolfe slid dagger after dagger through the net.

When he first hit the court, Coupeville was clinging to a 10-8 lead, benefiting greatly from the solid inside work of Caleb Meyer and Xavier Murdy.

Meyer, who would have been the heir to the Videoville throne if video stores were still paying me to watch movies, took the ball to the hoop with polished aggression all night.

His running mate is Mr. Clean, since Murdy pulled down every last rebound within a ten-mile radius, helping CMS to get out and run and then get multiple chances on the offensive end.

Once Wolfe slipped onto the court, the flow changed, as the quicksilver one darted in front of a pass, picked it clean, then outran a pack of Sequim players for a swooping layup.

He nailed the first of his three treys two plays later, and the Wolves went to the locker room up 19-17 after Connor Barton beat the defense and the buzzer with a gorgeous drive through the paint.

Whatever the two teams drank at halftime put an extra kick in their step, as the schools combined to score 37 points in a wild third quarter.

Barton, Meyer and Grady Rickner knocked down buckets, then Wolfe hit like TNT.

He ripped off 12 straight CMS points, doubling Sequim’s output in the same time period, and his offensive show was far from one-dimensional.

A three-ball from the left, a swooping layin off a pass from Murdy, a steal that led to a breakaway bucket, a little runner in the paint and then the coup de grâce.

Coupeville beat Sequim’s full-court press as Barton heaved the ball down the line while on the move.

For a second, the ball seemed intent on flying over Wolfe’s head for a turnover, but he snagged it over his shoulder, whirled, put the ball once on the floor, then drilled a trey.

As the fans were just beginning to comprehend what they had seen, another CMS player went on his own run, as Rickner knocked down three straight shots to officially slay Sequim.

Two more buckets from Meyer to kick off the fourth stretched the lead out to 47-30, before Sequim chipped away at the deficit with a late run.

While Wolfe’s 17-point middle school debut is one for the ages, Coupeville got something from everyone on the floor.

Meyer banged home 10, Rickner hit for eight, Murdy swished six, Barton tinkled the twines for four and Cody Roberts had two on a nifty give-and-go.

Logan Martin was the lone Wolf not to score, but he hauled down a ton of rebounds, made crisp passes and was a stalwart on defense for Coupeville.

JV almost pulls off a miracle:

The CMS 7th grade JV, facing a Sequim squad that was a mix of 7th and 8th graders, scored the game’s final seven points, but time ran out on them in a 22-19 loss.

Down by 10 and dealing with a running clock, as the visitors inched closer and closer to the door with plans to dash off to the ferry, Coupeville made an inspired late stand.

Daniel Barajas, Aiden Burdge and Gabe Shaw hit back-to-back-to-back buckets, with Shaw’s coming off a steal by Jonathan Carroll, before Barajas netted a free throw.

Coupeville then forced a turnover, but the ball got loose and rolled away.

As the running clock madly ticked down, the young Wolves, not realizing how little time was left (and the reduced-to-a-whisper King being unable to scream above the crowd) never got the ball back in play in time to heave a desperation three-point shot.

Barajas paced CMS with seven, while Burdge drained six, with all three of his buckets coming off of steals.

Shaw dropped in four and Miles Davidson, the game’s leading rebounder, knocked down a basket to round out the scoring.

Carroll, Tony Garcia, Logan Wertz and Joseph Starr also saw floor time for the Wolves.

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