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New uniform, same country, as Makana Stone (center) tears up Norwegian basketball courts. (Photo property of Erik Berglund)

Back with a vengeance.

Coupeville grad Makana Stone kicked off her third season of professional basketball, and second in Norway, with a bang.

Having made the jump from Baerum to Ammerud, the former Wolf ripped off a double-double in her season debut, pouring in 15 points and snatching 14 rebounds.

Powered by Stone, who also added six assists, three blocks, and two steals, Ammerud crunched Bergen 70-48.

The Queens also got 20 points apiece from Julia Heiden and Alexandra Polishchuk in the season opener.

Ammerud, like Baerum, plays in the Kvinneligaen, which is a six-team league this year.

Stone and her new teammates hit the floor on fire, jumping to a 22-10 lead after one quarter of play, then coasting in for the win.

A 40-26 halftime advantage blossomed into a 58-35 bulge by the end of the third quarter.

Coupeville’s progeny played four stellar seasons for Whitman College in Walla Walla, then went overseas and wowed the locals at Loughborough University in England.

Stone began her pro career with Leicester, moved to Norway to play with Baerum last season, and joined Ammerud this off-season.

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She’s part of Wolf Nation by virtue of her heritage.

Gia Powell plays basketball for Meadowdale High School, but dad Caleb Powell, mom Terry (Perkins) Powell, and aunt Sarah (Powell) Lyngra were all hoops stars at Coupeville High School back in the day.

Between them, the trio singed the nets for 1,519 points and the talent has filtered down to the next generation.

Gia, a three-ball droppin’ guard for the Mavericks, is heading into her senior season and now knows where she’ll play at the next level.

She’s committed to play basketball at Brown University, an Ivy League school in Rhode Island, which competes at the NCAA D-I level.

During her junior season at Meadowdale, Gia smashed school single-game records, raining down 41 points and nine treys in a district playoff win over Monroe.

She averaged 20 points, 6.3 rebounds, and 2.9 assists for the season.

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Makana Stone gets buckets in the land of my forefathers. Norway, I’m talking about Norway. (Photo property Marianne Maja Stenerud)

She’s back, but in a new uniform.

Coupeville grad Makana Stone is returning to Norway for another season of professional basketball, while hopping from Baerum to Ammerud.

The two franchises both play out of Oslo and are separated by 20 miles.

Stone’s signing was confirmed by Ellen Hamremoen, Director of Ammerud Basket.

Ammerud is known for its forest, its production of asphalt concrete, and its annual open air rock festival, Granittrock.

It’ll be the second season in the Kvinneligaen for Stone, a former Whitman College hoops star, and her third cashing checks, after making her pro debut in England.

Stone’s new team kicks off the season Oct. 8 with a clash against Bergen.

The former Wolf ace, who returned to Whidbey this summer to teach summer basketball camps in her hometown, has been dynamic while playing overseas.

In her Norwegian debut, Stone appeared in 26 of Baerum’s 27 games — the flu sent her to the sideline on one game day — racking up 468 points, 292 rebounds, 66 assists, 65 steals, and 11 blocked shots.

She was named to the Eurobasket.com All-Norwegian Kvinneligaen First-Team, the only American player on the five-player squad.

Andre’s younger sister was also tabbed as the league’s top forward.

Plus, she brought me Norwegian chocolate when she visited Coupeville this summer, making her the true MVP.

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Dominic Coffman will run over you, not around you. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ka-Chunk!

It is the sound I most associate with Dominic Coffman, as he chose to frequently run over, and not around, would-be tacklers on the football field.

During his time reppin’ the black and red for the Wolves, the 2023 Coupeville High School grad piled up his fair share of yards and touchdowns, and he did it by living up to the standard set by the program’s premier running back, Ian Barron.

Like the man who holds every school record associated with rushing, Coffman chose violence, and left a trail of battered and bruised rivals in his wake.

Fancy cuts are fine, sprinting for the sideline, then dodging a tackler to step out of bounds can be effective.

The Dominator, like Barron, was content to leave those moves to others, however.

Give him the damn football and get out of the way.

During his stellar senior season, when he captured Northwest 2B/1B League MVP honors while sparking Coupeville football to its first league title and trip to state in three-decades-plus, Coffman got most of his yards AFTER impact.

It took multiple tacklers to wrestle him to the ground on most carries, and if your grip slipped for a second, you were likely on your back, watching him inflict more carnage downfield.

Not that Coffman was a one-hit wonder.

He also had sticky fingers when it came to catching passes, and was a hellion on defense, steam erupting from his body on fall nights as he scared the bejesus out of rival QB’s.

The 2022 edition of Wolf football can make an argument as the best in program history — though 1990 will want a word — and Coffman, teamed with Scott Hilborn, Tim Ursu, Daylon Houston, and a host of others, were the senior core.

Enjoying Senior Night with his family. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A leader on and off the field, Coffman was rewarded with an invitation to the Earl Barden Classic, the state all-star game for small-school standouts, and he made his presence felt while lining up with a who’s who of gridiron giants.

Now the game is carrying him to Spain, where he will be suiting up for a semi-pro team playing American football.

They will know him soon, by the bruises he inflicts.

As intense as he can be on the football field, Coffman is a fairly soft-spoken dude off of the gridiron, and has always struck me as an intelligent, well-spoken young man.

The first time I came into contact with him was when, as a middle schooler, he informed me that if I had any photos of him playing sports, I should send them to him.

Younger, but already intense. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

After that, we spoke at a tennis match where he was camped out as a fan, and I couldn’t help but come away impressed with him.

He was that kid who grew up loving sports, not in a small way, but in a BIG way.

More than one coach told me stories about him having to be chased inside by teachers as he got every last second of enjoyment out of recess.

I once got detention for purposefully ignoring the bell, and continuing to play basketball — in a driving rainstorm — so I know where Dominic comes from.

As good a football player as he is, he was absolutely what a small-town school needs, playing three sports and playing them well.

On the basketball court, he played like a heat-seeking missile, fighting for rebounds and loose balls like a younger version of Dennis Rodman, while being the loudest member of the Wolf support crew.

Coffman was part of a boys’ basketball team which went 16-0 in the regular season and came dangerously close to toppling top-ranked Kalama at the state tournament.

In fact, he went to the big dance in all three of his sports, also making the trek twice in track and field, while qualifying in both the 4 x 100 relay and high jump both times.

Working with his relay teammates, Coffman brought home a pair of 2nd place medals, helping spur the Wolves to impressive team finishes.

Capping his senior season by shining at the state track meet. (Elizabeth Bitting photo)

As he prepares to head to Spain, let’s take a moment to hail Coffman.

For the high school athletic career he put together, excelling season after season in multiple sports while retaining his joy and drive through difficult times in the world.

And, for always being That Guy — a class act who combined drive and desire, hard work and a refusal to back down, into being one of the most-distinctive student/athletes to ever walk the CHS hallways.

Soon the world will know, but we knew first.

Which is why we’re the first to honor him, but probably not the last.

Today Dominic Coffman throws open the door to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, joining fellow Wolf football legends like Ian Barron and Paul Messner, Brad Haslam and Brad Sherman in our lil’ digital shrine.

After this, you’ll find The Dominator up at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab, a fitting testament to a dude who never, ever quit working.

The Dominator. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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You have to pay to watch Jada Heaton play volleyball and basketball, but not softball. (Delanie Lewis photo)

Not all sporting events are equal.

At least when it comes to whether or not you need your wallet.

We’re sitting 55 hours out from the first game of the 2023-2024 school year, so it’s a good time for a refresher on what Coupeville sports fans have to pay for, and what they don’t.

Simple answer: if you’re a CHS/CMS student with an active ASB card, everything is free until the playoffs roll around and the district steps in to put its hand in your pocket.

For everyone else, you get to fork out some cash for three high school sports — volleyball, football, and basketball.

Regular season high school tennis, baseball, softball, soccer, track, and cross country events are free, as are all middle school games.

 

Regular season ticket prices:

 

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