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Lauren Rose

   Lauren Rose is back and looking for a second straight title at the Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic. (John Fisken photos)

(John Fisken photo)

Anticipation builds.

It’s tourney time.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad hits the road Friday for an overnight trip, a team bonding experience and a chance to defend its title all at the same time.

The Wolves are returning to Friday Harbor for the 3rd annual Tip-Off Classic, an eight-team, two-day event they won last year, when they rolled Overlake 37-20 and South Whidbey 31-27.

Neither one of those foes are back, as two Seattle teams are joining Coupeville and Friday Harbor this time around.

The Wolves open play Friday at 2 PM against fellow 1A school Seattle Academy, while the hosts face off at 5:30 with Seattle Lutheran in a battle of top 2B squads.

Saturday the teams flip, with Friday’s losers squaring off at 10 AM, while the first day winners play for the tourney title at 1:30 PM.

Meridian, Overlake, Friday Harbor and Seattle Lutheran are competing on the boys side of the tourney, but, since the Wolves aren’t involved, that’s all we have to say on that.

Coupeville’s JV girls will join their varsity counterparts on the second day and play a non-tourney game against Friday Harbor.

The Tip-Off Classic, at least based on last year’s teams, is loaded, as Coupeville, Seattle Academy and Friday Harbor all advanced to state in 2015-2016.

All three were knocked out in the round of 16.

 

Capsules for the tourney:

 

Coupeville:

This season: 0-1

Last season: 16-6

Conference: 1A Olympic League

Coach: David King

Mascot: Wolves

School colors: red, white, black

WIAA classification student enrollment (grades 9-11): 227

Best finish at state tourney: 6th in 2001-2002

 

Seattle Academy:

This season: 0-0 (*plays Bear Creek Wednesday*)

Last season: 18-4

Conference: 1A Emerald City League

Coach: Joel DeBruhl

Mascot: Cardinals

School colors: black, red

Student enrollment: 323

Best finish at state tourney: Never placed

 

Friday Harbor:

This season: 0-0

Last season: 19-5

Conference: 2B/1B Northwest League

Coach: Fred Woods

Mascot: Wolverines

School colors: purple, gold

Student enrollment: 199

Best finish at state tourney: 4th in 1979-1980

 

Seattle Lutheran:

This season: 0-0

Last season: 14-10

Conference: 2B/1B SeaTac

Coach: David Bills

Mascot: Saints

School colors: white, blue

Student enrollment: 91.75

Best finish at state tourney: 7th in 1986-1987 and 1991-1992

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Avalon Renninger (John Fisken photo)

   Freshman Avalon Renninger hit for a team-high four points in her high school basketball debut. (John Fisken photo)

(Amy King photo)

   Emma Mathusek (left) models the beginning of the black eye she got Tuesday, while Hannah Davidson demonstrates how it happened. (Amy King photo)

Emma Mathusek had a memorable high school basketball debut.

The Coupeville freshman knocked down the first basket of the season Tuesday, finished with a team-high four points and got her bell rung, departing with “a really cool black eye.”

Her offensive touch, and facial sacrifice, weren’t enough to save the Wolf JV, however, as host Blaine used a height advantage to roll to a 28-16 non-conference win.

And when I say height advantage, I mean the Borderites had a 6-foot-3 girl somehow playing JV ball.

“I believe that is where Blaine broke the game open,” said a deadpan Coupeville coach Amy King.

While the Wolves have no one remotely close to that tall (especially on the JV level), they didn’t back down from the rampaging giant.

“It was a well fought battle,” King said. “Tonight we had a group of hard-working, feisty JV’ers. This being the first actual high school game for half the team, we did well.

Ema (Smith), Hannah (Davidson) and Nicole (Lester), with help from Sarah (Wright) one quarter, were as strong as could be in the post,” she added. “We were able to shut her (the 6’3 girl) down or block her when she brought the ball down low and definitely made it uncomfortable at every opportunity.”

King was pleased with the defensive effort she got from the top of her rotation to the bottom.

“The girls went back and forth between a man and an aggressive zone defense – all worked together, looked for steals and caused a lot of turnovers,” she said.

“Every wing who stepped foot on the court did an outstanding job on defense and helping move the ball on offense,” King added. “Maddy (Hilkey) really shut players down.”

The Wolf coach also had praise for the ball-handling skills of Scout Smith and Ashlie Shank, and the scrappiness of Maya Toomey-Stout, Tia Wurzrainer, Renninger and Mathusek.

“They showed what they were made of, stopping drives and making Blaine work for every point they got,” King said. “It was an improvement from Saturday’s jamboree and they will only continue to get better.”

Mathusek and Renninger paced Coupeville with four points apiece, while Wright, Davidson, Smith and Hilkey netted two apiece.

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Mikayla Elfrank, seen here in jamboree action, had a team-high seven rebounds Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Mikayla Elfrank (23), seen here in jamboree action, had a team-high seven rebounds Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

(David King photo)

Ready to kick off a new season. (David King photo)

They were flying high for a half.

If the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad could have left Blaine at halftime Tuesday, things would have been great.

Unfortunately, the host Borderites forced the Wolves to play a full 32 minutes on opening night, and used a second-half surge to run away with a 35-19 non-conference victory.

It was a disappointing finish after Coupeville jumped on their 2A foes en route to a 13-3 lead midway through the second quarter.

“We used so much energy (adrenaline) in the first half, due to some nerves and being the first game, that we didn’t leave enough in the tank for the second half,” said CHS coach David King.

“We came out sluggish and flat-footed (after the break),” he added. “This led to easy buckets for Blaine. We couldn’t stop their baseline drives all night.”

Things got off to a great start, as Lindsey Roberts swished a baseline jumper to kick off the new season.

Coupeville was aggressive on both ends of the floor in the early going, shutting the Borderites down for much of the first half.

“Our defense was the key and our catalyst the first half,” King said. “Started in a zone and prevented open looks for Blaine most of the half.”

But while the buckets fell for the Wolves in the first two quarters, the rim was unforgiving during the stretch run.

“Offensively in the second half we played horizontal instead of vertical and attacking the basket,” King said. “We left a lot of points on the rim all game long.

“Without watching film, I would say we missed 8-10 point blank shots on either post-up moves or rebound put-backs.”

Combined with a cold touch on free throws (“this seems to be a Coupeville girls bugaboo that’s carried over from seasons past”), the Wolves straggled home with just five second-half points.

While he would have preferred the second half to be a mirror image of the first half, King didn’t come away totally disappointed.

“We looked to run more tonight and the effort was there,” he said. “It will be exciting to watch the growth in this area as the season progresses.

“Overall I was pleased with our defense for a half and our effort in looking to push the ball,” King added. “We need to minimize our turnovers and shoot a better percentage.”

One Wolf in particular drew praise for her opening night work.

“When Allison (Wenzel) was called on, she gave us a big lift each time. Diving after loose balls and playing tough defense,” King said.

Mia Littlejohn paced Coupeville with five points, while Roberts (4), Kailey Kellner (3), Wenzel (2), Kalia Littlejohn (2), Lauren Rose (2) and Sarah Wright (1) all chipped in.

Mikayla Elfrank tore down seven rebounds while Roberts collected six and Wenzel snatched five. Kellner and Kalia Littlejohn had two assists apiece.

Kyla Briscoe (three boards), Lauren Grove and Tiffany Briscoe all saw playing time, as well.

Coupeville returns to action this weekend when it defends its title at the Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic.

The Wolves open play Friday against Seattle Academy, then play either Seattle Lutheran or the tourney hosts Saturday.

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Jered Brown (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf freshman Jered Brown made an auspicious debut Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

This could be the start of something big.

Proving he’s ready for the spotlight from moment one, Coupeville High School freshman Jered Brown wasted no time.

Making his varsity debut Tuesday in the fourth quarter of an opening night loss to visiting Blaine, the Wolf gunner touched the ball for the first time and promptly drilled a three-bomb bomb from the right side.

It was the one moment the crowd truly went bonkers all night, and provided a ray of sunshine on an otherwise stormy evening.

Brown also slid a pair of free-throws through the twines, but even his perfection with the rock wasn’t enough to save Coupeville.

Hammered by a 22-0 run in the second quarter, the Wolves lost their grasp on a once-close game and fell 72-28.

CHS, which returns just two varsity players in Gabe Wynn and Hunter Smith, looked and played like a squad still adjusting to each other and the faster, more physical style of varsity basketball.

The Borderites, a deep, aggressive 2A team, won the battle in the trenches — hitting the boards with a fury — and on the outskirts, dropping seven treys, primarily on kick-outs to wide-open guys in the corners.

Coupeville actually led early (really early) when Wynn knocked down a pull-up jumper to kick off his senior campaign.

A bucket from Brian Shank, on a sweet roll to the hoop on which he sliced through a pack of Blaine defenders, knotted things at 4-4 and gave hope that the sizable opening night crowd was in for a fight to the finish.

Unfortunately things got away from the Wolves in a hurry.

Blaine dropped in a pair of three-balls to stretch the lead out to 14-7 after the first eight minutes of play, then went into lock-down mode in a second quarter that was brutally efficient.

In between a pair of free-throws from Ariah Bepler and a bucket in the paint from Steven Cope, the Borderites ripped off a game-busting run of 22 consecutive points.

After hitting three straight bombs from behind the arc, Blaine made off with back-to-back running layups off of steals, as they used their full-court press to utterly confound the inexperienced Wolves.

Things didn’t get much better after the break, as frequent steals and treys propelled the Borderites on another run, this time to a tune of 24-7.

Smith provided all the offense for the Wolves in the quarter, dropping in seven of his team-high 11 points.

The highlight came on a play where he juked his defender out of his shoes, then pulled back and nailed a soft trey from the top.

Coupeville made a stand in the final quarter, “winning” the fourth 10-9 using a sharp eye at the charity stripe and Brown’s smooth touch.

While he wasn’t a fan of the final score, CHS coach Anthony Smith knows he has a team that is very much a work in progress.

“They (Blaine) came to play. They can take you out of your game, and we have some guys who haven’t played at this level before. It’s a different game,” he said.

“It was a good thing it was a non-conference game,” Anthony Smith added. “We’ll watch some film and get back in the gym and get ready for Sultan Friday. We will get better.”

Hunter Smith (11), Wynn (5) and Brown (5) combined for 21 of Coupeville’s 28 points, while Shank added three and Cope and Bepler chipped in with two apiece.

Joey Lippo hit the boards hard in his return to the court after a year off, while Hunter Downes and Cameron Toomey-Stout contributed with scrappy defense and hustle.

JV falls:

Much like the varsity, the young guns, who have 12 freshmen on a 13-man roster, are a work in progress.

After Sean Toomey-Stout banged home a jumper from the right side, the Wolves were within 5-4 and looked to be right in the thick of things.

Then came a 26-0 run by the Borderites, stretching over chunks of the first and second quarters, and things got progressively bleaker en route to a 67-17 defeat.

Toomey-Stout paced CHS with four points, also banking in a silky runner, while Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim (3), Brown (3), Ulrik Wells (2), Koa Davison (2), Nikolai Lyngra (2) and Aiden Juras (1) all chipped in.

Mason Grove, Elliott Johnson, Aram Leyva and Kyle Rockwell all saw playing time as well.

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hair (John Fisken photos)

   Wolves (back to front) Mia Littlejohn, Lindsey Roberts and Kailey Kellner share a laugh during pre-game hair braiding time. (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Rose

Mouse is in the house! Lauren Rose leads the charge.

Sarah Wright

Sarah Wright can already taste the first bucket of the season.

Scout Smith

Frosh phenom Scout Smith scans the horizon, looking for an open teammate.

hair

That moment when your hair refuses to cooperate anymore.

Kalia Littlejohn

Kalia “Killer” Littlejohn — she slices, she dices, she can’t be caught.

Kailey Kellner

   Three Cubs are no match for one riled-up Wolf, as Kellner (42) locks in on a wayward rebound.

Tia Wurzrainer

Young gun Tia Wurzrainer, already protecting the ball like a seasoned veteran.

Cue the close-ups.

High school basketball tipped off Saturday, as the Coupeville High School girls’ hoops squads played in the Sedro-Woolley Jamboree.

Making the trip in addition to the Wolf players, coaches and fans was fast-clicking paparazzi John Fisken, who delivers us the glossy pics found above.

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

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/20162017-Coupeville-BB/CHS-GBB-/20161126-at-Sedro-Jamboree/

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