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CHS basketball players pose with some of the toys they collected for kids in need. (Photo courtesy Willie Smith)

They shoot, they score for the kids.

Coupeville High School basketball players collected more than 250 toys this winter for local youth in need.

In the end, the Wolf boys edged their female counterparts by seven toys to win the team competition.

It was the fourth year the CHS hoops stars have done the event, with the toys being dispersed by the Holiday Help House.

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Coupeville High School football coach Bennett Richter, daughter Adeline, and father-in-law Willie Smith are psyched for some hoops action. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

A busy week, then the break.

Coupeville High School basketball teams have their second-straight three-game set in the days ahead, before a two-week holiday shutdown arrives.

Both the Wolf girls and boys welcome Forks to town Tuesday, before climbing on a school bus and heading East for tournament-style action.

Coupeville’s girls square off with Cle Elum Wednesday and Kittitas Thursday, while the boys reverse things.

Brad Sherman’s squad rumble with Kittitas Thursday, then play Cle Elum Friday in the 2023 finale.

“A long trip on a school bus? Yay…”

After that, both CHS squads are off (from games at least) until the first week of January.

With that in mind, here are where things sit through Dec. 16:

 

Northwest League boys’ basketball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 2-0 2-4
Coupeville 1-0 5-1
Orcas Island 1-1 3-4
La Conner 0-0 3-3
Concrete 0-1 3-3
Darrington 0-1 3-3
Friday Harbor 0-1 2-3

 

Northwest League girls’ basketball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 2-0 6-1
Darrington 1-0 3-3
Friday Harbor 1-0 2-4
La Conner 0-0 5-2
Concrete 0-1 4-2
Coupeville 0-1 3-3
Orcas Island 0-2 0-7

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Makana Stone crashes through the defense. (Photo property Erik Berglund)

It’s time for a break.

Coupeville grad Makana Stone and her Ammerud teammates have been running the gauntlet of late, and Saturday’s bout with co-league leader Ullern was another stern test.

The Queens, despite a 25-point, 10-rebound performance from their American assassin, fell 83-52, dropping to 3-7 on the season.

Ullern gets to 9-1, keeping even with Ulriken atop the standings.

Ammerud heads into the holiday break now, not returning to the floor until it plays back-to-back games Jan. 6-7.

Saturday’s rumble on the hardwood actually started in favor of the Queens, who powered out to a 17-13 lead after one quarter of back-and-forth action.

But after that Ullern asserted its dominance, putting four players into double digit scoring and steadily pulling away from its hosts.

The league leaders had a 40-31 advantage at the half, then pushed that out to 64-41 after three quarters.

While Stone added three assists and a blocked shot to her double-double, she was the lone Queen to mount much of an offensive challenge to Ullern, as no one else tallied more than seven points.

Now in her third season of professional overseas basketball, Andre’s sister has racked up 207 points, 118 rebounds, 34 assists, 30 steals, and seven blocks.

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Carolyn Lhamon, born to be a Hall o’ Famer. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Whoops.

In the crush of whacking out four stories a day, every day, sometimes I look up and discover I didn’t actually do something I thought I did.

Case in point — putting Carolyn Lhamon where she belongs, in the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Catherine’s lil’ sis, now a freshman tearing up things in college, both in the classroom and on the soccer pitch, is a slam dunk for my digital shrine.

She qualifies in every way.

Superb student? Check.

Entertaining off the field when she’s telling elaborate stories to keep fellow CHS softball fans from thinking about the fact they’re freezing during another balmy, windswept, rain-splattered “spring” afternoon?

Check and double check.

Being a kick-ass three-sport athlete, whose impact goes far beyond mere stats, a young woman who was a captain and team leader, an award-winner, a force of nature who was also forever graceful?

Check and triple check, and how the heck did I forget to give Carolyn her rightful due?

Cause I’m an idiot, apparently.

Carolyn is that rare student-athlete who already looked like a Hall o’ Famer in middle school, where she helped lead the CMS girls’ basketball team to an 8-0 record during her 8th grade campaign.

Jump forward to high school, and she had an immediate impact in every single one of her sports.

Born to play varsity, and only varsity, Carolyn was a two-way whirlwind on the soccer pitch, offering a nuclear-powered leg which could rattle the goal from far away, while also seemingly loving to thwart other team’s would-be shooters.

She scored seven goals, tied for 9th best in program history, but that stat is deceiving.

If Carolyn had focused on scoring, the number would have been much higher.

Instead, her touch with the ball, while deadly, was just a small fraction of what she brought to the game.

Enjoying her time on the pitch with Nezi Keiper. (Carlota Marcos Cabrillo photo)

As one half of a Wonder Twins combo with fellow Hall o’ Famer Nezi Keiper, Carolyn thumped people, made the smart pass, always knew where she needed to be, and was invaluable.

Scoring? It’s nice, but she was playing chess while others played checkers.

That carried over to the basketball court, where Carolyn once again provided scoring pop when it mattered most — she tallied 153 points — but was most valuable because of everything else she did.

Knifing her foes, one shot at a time. (Andrew Williams photo)

Need a rebound, and need her to outduel three rivals to get it? Done.

Need a smart pass, a well-set pick, a willingness to take the brunt of a charge, an artful use of her hip to send an opposing player crashing into the parking lot?

Done and done, each bruise telling the tale of another small battle won in the pursuit of helping Coupeville win the big wars.

Once “spring” broke, Carolyn headed outdoors for track and field, where she competed in shot put, discus, the 400, and all three relays across three seasons.

She was always game to try just about any event, and advanced to state four times, saving her best for last.

We have launch! (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Nailing a PR in the shot put as a senior, Carolyn claimed 4th place and brought home a medal to top off her long list of awards, certificates, and trophies.

Among those was being named the CHS Female Athlete of the Year as a junior and earning Salutatorian status as a senior.

So, in short, Carolyn, every step of the way, has been a Hall o’ Famer in waiting.

Not that she needs my nod of approval, as she demonstrates her awesomeness every day, in every way.

But today (finally!!) I’m officially catching up by inducting the youngest of the Lhamon supernovas into my Hall o’ Fame.

After this you’ll find Carolyn hanging out at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab, right next to her sister.

You know, right where she should have been this whole time!

Legendary. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Teagan Calkins drives to the hoop. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There’s 496 points in the book, and many more to come.

High school basketball is just getting revved up, and the week ahead is a busy one for Coupeville’s four hardwood teams, who each have three games on the schedule.

That will give the Wolves plenty of opportunities to fill up the bucket as individual scoring races start to shape up.

Monday is just a practice day, with games set for Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday — so, an ideal time to scan those stats.

Where we stand on Dec. 11:

 

Varsity – Girls
(3 games)

Mia Farris – 22
Katie Marti – 19
Madison McMillan – 17
Lyla Stuurmans – 8
Jada Heaton – 6
Skylar Parker – 2

 

JV – Girls
(2 games)

Haylee Armstrong – 17
Capri Anter – 9
Teagan Calkins – 9
Bryley Gilbert – 7
Tenley Stuurmans – 5
Lexis Drake – 2

**Missing 26 points​​**

 

Varsity – Boys
(4 games)

Logan Downes – 91
Cole White  – 42
Ryan Blouin – 28
Chase Anderson – 13
Nick Guay – 8
Hunter Bronec – 5
Hurlee Bronec – 5
William Davidson – 4

 

JV – Boys
(3 games)

Jack Porter – 33
Aiden O’Neill – 27
Johnny Porter – 23
Camden Glover – 22
Landon Roberts – 19
Riley Lawless – 7
Davin Houston – 6
Jayden McManus – 6
Easton Green – 2
Makai Myles – 2

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