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Posts Tagged ‘Basketball’

"Give me the ball and no one gets hurt!!" (John Fisken photos)

“Give me the ball and no one gets hurt!!” (John Fisken photos)

Izzy

Izzy Wells prepares to scorch the bottom of the net.

Kiara

Kiara Contreras flies into the paint, looking for two.

1 on 4

It only takes one Wolf to beat four rivals.

shoot

“See the basket, be the basket.”

Dustin

Kylie Van Velkinburgh triggers the play while dad Dustin directs traffic.

down low

“Little help … little help … LOTTA HELP!!”

Georges

Maddie Georges slices ‘n dices fools on her way to a 14-point game.

Girls basketball is booming in Cow Town.

At every level, high school to elementary school, Coupeville hoops stars are laying down beat-downs.

Over the weekend, both of the Wolf girls SWISH teams handily won games, with the 6th graders pounding Mt. Vernon and the 7th/8th graders decimating a pair of Canadian squads.

Wanderin’ camera man John Fisken swung by the off-Island games and nabbed us the snappy pics seen above.

To view more and possibly purchase some glossies for Grandma’s Christmas present, pop over to:

6th gradehttp://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/SWISH-2016/Coupeville-6th-vs-Skagit/

7th/8th gradehttp://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/SWISH-2016/Coupeville-7th-vs-S-Langley/

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Kyle Rockwell

   Kyle Rockwell brings an infusion of height to the Wolf boys’ basketball squad. (John Fisken photo)

Gabe Wynn

Gabe Wynn (with ball) is one of two returning varsity players.

Another step up the mountain.

That’s what the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad wants to take this season.

The Wolves are coming off a 9-11 campaign, their best in the five years Anthony Smith has been at the helm of the program.

A year ago, they swept Klahowya in a three-game series, took a road game off of league champ Chimacum and finished third in 1A Olympic League play at 4-5.

Now Coupeville wants to continue to improve its numbers and get back into a winning groove.

“The goals are making the playoffs and getting the players to play for each other,” Smith said. “Also, for the players to want to get better every practice and be ready to compete every game, and good things will happen.”

The Wolves will be featuring almost a completely new roster thanks to graduation, returning only two varsity veterans.

Junior guard Hunter Smith and senior swing-man Gabe Wynn will anchor the squad, while the rest of the roster is expected to be filled out by guys jumping up from JV and new and semi-new additions.

Returnees include senior Brian Shank and juniors Ariah Bepler, Hunter Downes and Cameron Toomey-Stout, who “will contribute right away.”

Juniors Joey Lippo and Ethan Spark played JV as freshmen, then took last season off, and are back to bolster the team at guard.

Also in the mix are 6’3 junior Kyle Rockwell and two seniors who transferred in, Steven Cope and Taylor Consford.

However the rotation plays out, Coupeville will ask those players to put an emphasis on the defensive side of the ball.

“The plus will be us playing hard nose d, and getting after it,” Anthony Smith said. “Wanting to have teams turn the ball over, and have fun doing it.

“We will have to work on taking care of the ball and putting the ball in the basket.”

Coupeville graduated nine of the 11 players who scored a season ago, including its top three scorers in Wiley Hesselgrave, Jordan Ford and Risen Johnson.

Hunter Smith, who banged in 130 points while missing time with injuries, and Wynn (84) were #4 and #5 on the scoring chart last year.

The dynamic duo, and their new running mates, will be aiming to take down Chimacum and Port Townsend, who tied for the league’s best mark at 7-2. The Cowboys won two of three over the RedHawks to defend their title.

For now, though, the focus is firmly an internal one. Make yourself better, and then go out and beat your rivals.

“The first week of practice was good,” Anthony Smith said. “This team will work hard, and if guys accept and play their roles, which I think they will, we will be OK.”

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Steven Cope lines up a free throw during an early practice. (John Fisken photo)

Steven Cope lines up a free throw during an early practice. (John Fisken photo)

He’s back.

After spending the last two years in Spokane, Steven Cope has returned to Coupeville High School, and the timing couldn’t be better for the Wolf boys’ basketball squad.

With only two returning varsity players, competition for playing time is wide open, and Cope, a senior, is solidly in the mix.

The move back to the Island reunites him with his grandparents, among others, while offering him a chance to play alongside former teammates such as Gabe Wynn and Hunter Downes.

As a middle school hoops player, Cope was a demon on the defensive end, once blocking three straight shots against Northshore.

That continued over to high school, where he played football for the Wolves as a freshman.

In a JV game against Granite Falls that year, Cope picked off a pass and brought it back 75 yards for a game-busting touchdown.

Now that he’s back in Coupeville for his senior year, he’s back in the school band and plans to follow basketball up with a stint on the Wolf track team as a javelin thrower.

First up, though, is a chance for Cope, a post player who first picked up basketball in the fifth grade, to help his on-court buddies.

“I want to help this team make something out of it,” he said. “The boys basketball team hasn’t really been a definite force in a long time and I hope while I’m here I can either set the tone for what we need to do to win, or be that team to win.”

Cope is looking forward to working both with former teammates and new playing partners.

One of the reasons he enjoy the sport is “the diversity you can have with basketball players and how you can come together with all these playing styles and make a strong foundation of a team.”

He hails his height and “my work ethic to constantly get better” as strengths, while continuing to fine-tune his skill-set.

“I would love to get better dribbling with my right hand more, along with building a strong jump shot,” Cope said.

Away from the court, he’s a regular Dungeons and Dragons player, and enjoys splitting time between working out and watching YouTube, often at the same time.

Even though he was gone for two years, Cope has deep roots in Coupeville and is thankful for the support he gets from his relatives.

“My family, they really hold me to my own responsibility and to be a respectable human being.”

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Brittany Powers (John Fisken photo)

   Brittany Powers lines up a shot during a recent CHS girls basketball practice. (John Fisken photo)

One week in, one week to go.

Actually a little less, as the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad hits the floor next Saturday for a jamboree at Sedro-Woolley.

Real games kick off Tuesday, Nov. 29, with the Wolf girls traveling to Blaine, while the CHS boys welcome the Borderites to Whidbey.

At the midway point of the practice run, Coupeville girls’ coach David King swings by to talk for a bit in the Coaches Corner:

Week one was one of the best weeks of practices I’ve been a part of.

Players came in enthusiastic and ready to learn every day. They earned whatever rest they got on Saturday afternoon/evening and all day Sunday.

We have been breaking things down differently along with tweaking some drills to simulate game-like situations.

Oh, and we are introducing a new offense.

The jamboree is less than a week away and there are many things still needing to be introduced along with reviewing what we learned last week.

Offensively we need to continue to put the work in and make it so when the games start, it is like second nature to them.

Knowing this group, they are going to push themselves to make this happen.

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(John Fisken photo)

   Makana Stone (23), seen here perfecting her form as a high school player, is off to a torrid start as a college hoops player. (John Fisken photo)

The Stone Cold Express rolls on.

Spurred on by fab frosh Makana Stone, the Whitman College women’s basketball squad ran away with its third straight victory to open the season.

Stone, a 2016 Coupeville High School grad, went for seven points and five rebounds Saturday, utilizing her 18 minutes of playing time extremely well, as the Blues bounced Mary Hardin-Baylor 67-54 at the Whit Classic in Spokane.

The former Wolf star continued to display a blazing shooting touch, hitting three of her five shots.

Stone has the second-most field-goals on the Whitman squad, despite only taking the sixth-most shots.

She’s hit 66.8% of her shots (12 of 18), putting her way in front of any of her teammates.

Saturday, she banked home a pair of second quarter running lay-ins and topped it off with her first successful college free throw. Stone added another bucket in the fourth.

Whitman blew out to a 20-8 lead after one quarter, then strolled home with the victory.

The Blues got balanced scoring, with Chelsi Brewer hitting for 16 and Mady Burdett popping for 12 to pace the squad.

Through three games Stone has 25 points (#3 on the team), 15 rebounds (#3) and three steals (tied for #4), while coming off the bench.

Whitman puts its 3-0 record on the line next week when the Blues travel to Portland for back-to-back games. They face Multnomah Nov. 22 and Warner Pacific Nov. 23.

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