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William Davidson and other Wolf basketball players are hard at work. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Three schools, four games, one wild opening night.

High school basketball starts Wednesday, Dec. 1 in Coupeville with a home doubleheader.

The Wolf boys welcome Oak Harbor to town, while the CHS girls square off with Granite Falls.

The girls varsity plays at 5:15 PM in the high school gym, with JV tipping off at 7 PM across the hallway in the middle school gym.

Meanwhile, the Wolf boys operate in reverse, with JV at 5:15, and varsity at 7 PM.

With an ongoing pandemic, all fans are required to wear masks at games this season.

Savana Allen

Jonathan Valenzuela

Jada Heaton (left) and Mia Farris

Skylar Parker

Logan Martin

Katie Marti

And then, a moment of rest…

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Today’s Wolf hoop stars, back in earlier days. (Contributed photo)

The female athletes in the Coupeville High School Class of 2025 are already stars.

As a group, and as individuals, they have been achieving success since the first day they picked up a basketball, or a softball, or popped into a gym.

After a strong start with fall sports, the Wolves of 2025 are getting ready for their freshman season of CHS hoops.

So, a perfect time to jump into the Wayback Machine and trip the light fantastic back to when these athletes were in first grade. Or, somewhere close to that.

Back row, left to right, it’s Chloe Marzocca, Candace Meek, Jada Heaton, Katie Marti, Savina Wells, and Lyla Stuurmans.

Front row brings us Taylor Brotemarkle, Edie Bittner, Mia Farris, Leela Burdge, and Shayla Towne.

Stars, one and all.

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“Basketball is back!!” (Jackie Saia photo)

We’re hours away.

The sport which matters the most, to me at least, begins anew Monday afternoon.

We’re not supposed to play favorites, but, face it, basketball should always be the king (and queen) when it comes to high school athletics.

No disrespect to all the spikers, and booters, and harriers, and duffers, and athletes who patrol gridirons and diamonds.

You work hard, you play hard, and you often produce thrilling games, magnificent moments, and lasting memories.

But, you’re just not basketball.

And you’re talking to a guy who spent a chunk of his childhood dunking on my bedroom net while listening to radio broadcasts as the Portland Trailblazers meandered through the Billy Ray Bates and Peter Verhoeven years.

Radio? It was a thing. Go look it up on Wikipedia, you punks!

Anyways.

Basketball is dunks (maybe not all that often at Wolf games, but still…), behind the back passes, and three-balls tumblin’ through the nets after being fired up from the parking lot.

It’s Makana Stone grabbing a rebound with one hand, firing a full-court outlet pass, then sprinting to the other end to snatch an offensive rebound and slap home the bucket — all on the same play.

It’s Kacie Kiel burying a trey from the corner on the final play to make Sequim (yes, the whole town) cry salty tears.

It’s Maddie Strasburg banking home consecutive half-court shots at the third-quarter buzzer from the same exact spot on the floor, with the games played 17 days apart.

It’s Ethan Spark pursuing a loose ball and blowing up his bench with a gleeful grin, teammates and water containers bouncing off the walls.

It’s Wiley Hesselgrave staring a hole through his rival’s souls.

It’s Julia Myers unleashing her Elbows o’ Death, daring private school whiners to wander through her paint at their own peril.

And it’s Julia Felici scoring her only high school bucket … on an absolutely-flawless hook shot which would have made Kareem smile in approval.

Monday afternoon, a whole new season begins.

Covid restrictions still linger, but, unlike last year, the schedules are full, and playoff action is once again a possibility.

Hawthorne Wolfe, my own next gen, small town version of Pete Maravich, is gunning for the big boys on the CHS scoring chart, while Brad Sherman’s squad has realistic dreams of competing for a league title.

On the girls side of things, Megan Smith, whose nickname could have been “Buckets” during her own days in a Wolf uniform, moves into the head coaching position with a team which features a solid collection of talented young stars on the rise.

The presents are under the trees, ready to be unwrapped.

A three-ball to win a game and make Wolf fans storm the floor?

History, of the personal or team variety?

Or merely the beauty of a pick set perfectly by a hustling role player, a small moment of sublime excellence in the grand flow of life on the hardwood?

We shall see.

Because no matter how it plays out, we’re headed into the best time of the year.

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Ready to hit the basketball court? Now’s your time.

Coupeville students in K-5 can register to play for free in the Coupeville Youth Basketball Association season, which runs from January 10 to March 5.

Parents or guardians can register players online, or in person at an open house Nov. 20.

The association web site listed in the flier above is expected to go live this coming Monday, Nov. 15.

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Coupeville grad Dante Mitchell (far right) is working as a basketball coach at North Whidbey Middle School. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Keeping an eye on the action.

Different town, same game.

Coupeville High School grad Dante Mitchell is now working in Oak Harbor, coaching basketball at North Whidbey Middle School.

That follows on the heels of his time as a Wolf, where he was both a player, and later, a coach, continuing the work of mom (and hoops guru) Avis.

As Dante worked the sidelines Monday in a season-opening matchup against Mt. Baker Middle School, wanderin’ photographer John Fisken was on hand to document the moment.

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