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Coupeville’s Makana Stone continues to light up the European basketball scene. (Photo property Leicester Riders)

She’s bonafide.

Makana Stone became Coupeville’s first professional athlete in decades (maybe ever?) Saturday, making her debut with the Leicester Riders of the Women’s British Basketball League.

And she got a win to put the cherry on top.

With Stone coming off the bench to pop for six points, haul in five rebounds, and dish out an assist, the Riders bounced the Oaklands Wolves 57-48 in Wales.

The game was the first of at least three games Leicester will play in the 13-team WBBL Cup.

The Riders clash with Gloucester City Sunday, then play Cardiff Met Sept. 29.

If Stone and Co. finish atop Group C, they advance to the semifinals of the tourney.

The regular season kicks off Oct. 3.

Saturday’s game marked a bit of a twist for Stone, as she came off the bench for the Riders after being a starter for almost every game while playing four years of high school ball and five college seasons across two countries.

She ended up playing almost 17 minutes, second-most of any bench player, and finished with a +/- rating of 12, best of any Leicester player, starter or bench.

Stone poured in all six of her points in the fourth quarter, as the Riders stretched a three-point lead after three frames out to nine by the end of the game.

A jump shot which tickled the twines at the 7:43 mark was her first official professional points, then was quickly followed by a layup, and a pair of pressure-packed free throws.

Anna Lappenkuper and Hannah Robb paced Leicester with 14 and 11 points, respectively.

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Want to watch Steve Kiel work the volleyball lines? You’ll have to pay. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The free ride is over.

With the pandemic throwing everything asunder last school year, Coupeville High School waived entry fees, allowing fans to view any and all Wolf games for free.

Now, we’re going back to reality.

CHS, like its fellow Northwest 2B/1B League rivals, will once again charge for entry to volleyball, football, and basketball games during the 2021-2022 school year.

Softball, tennis, track and field, soccer, cross country, and baseball remain free.

 

NWL admission prices for 2021-2022:

$6.00 for adults and high school students without ASB cards
$4.00 for visiting students with ASB cards and senior citizens (62+)
$4.00 for grade school (K-5) and younger

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Dale Sherman, man of the hour. (Photos courtesy Jack Sell)

Everyone gets a win.

You get one, and you get one, and what the heck, you get a couple more for good measure.

Coupeville High School’s athletic programs were all clicking during the 1963-1964 school year, as a look through one of my landlord’s yearbooks proves.

It was a year when Wolf football, boys basketball, and baseball all posted winning records, going a combined 28-14, while the CHS boys tennis team captured league and sub-district titles.

What was the netters record, you ask?

The Leloo Cly of the day ain’t tellin’, so I ain’t sayin’, but it was a campaign which included multiple titles and ended with David Lortz and Ron Edwards playing at the state tourney, so probably pretty darn good.

Toss in what appears to be a four-man track and field squad, and a seven-woman girls tennis team which (rare for the time period) got to compete against rival schools, and things were hoppin’ back in the day.

Roger Eelkema, ready to run like the wind.

 

How things played out in ’63-’64:

 

Baseball:

The Wolves, paced by Bob Rea, the Strikeout King of Snakelum Point, went 11-5 overall, 8-4 in Northwest League play, finishing a close second to Granite Falls.

Coupeville dropped 19 runs in one win over Langley, and swept all four games against arch-rival La Conner, but it was a mid-season game at Darrington which will live forever.

That was the day Rea, then a junior, rang up 27 strikeouts across 16 innings in a 2-1 win.

Yes, those numbers are correct, and as we descend further and further into a nanny state dominated by pitch-count rules, it is the one CHS record, in any sport, which will absolutely, positively, NEVER be broken.

 

Boys basketball:

Denny Clark closed one of the great Wolf hardwood careers, pouring in 365 of his 869 career points to pace a squad which went 12-5, finishing third at the league tourney.

The buzz-cut one was #2 all-time in scoring when he graduated, behind just Mike Criscuola, and nearly 60 years (and the introduction of the three-point line) later, still sits at #9 on the career scoring chart.

Clark had plenty of help, with three others putting up triple-digits in the time of the two-hand set-shot.

David Lortz banked in 251, Dick Smith popped for 173, and future prairie farming legend Dale Sherman tossed in 142 during a campaign in which the Wolves won eight straight games at one point.

 

Boys tennis:

Coupeville beat Friday Harbor in the season finale to claim the Northwest League crown, with Lee Milheim, Bill Bainbridge, and Bruce Seiger coming up big in the match.

From there, the Wolves stormed their way through the postseason, with Ron Edwards and David Lortz keying a sub-district team title, then advancing to state, where the duo made the final eight.

 

Cheer:

Carolyn Hancock led a five-woman team, with Sharon Meadors, Marilyn Sherman, Sue Gable, and Christy Carter joining her in bringing the noise ‘n pep.

 

Football:

A team which featured my landlord, Jack Sell, and was led by coach Ray Olmstead, overcame injuries to finish 5-4, beating everyone it played except league kingpins Chimacum and Granite Falls.

The Wolves started 3-0, with a 57-7 shellacking of La Conner capping the run, before a one-point loss to Chimacum ended any dreams of a perfect season.

Coupeville bounced back to blow out La Conner again, this time triumphing 33-13, while a 39-6 thrashing of Darrington clinched the winning mark.

Six seniors — Paul Leese, Denny Keith, Gary Crandall, Dale Sherman, Denny Clark, and Ed Brown — led the way, with Crandall earning Most Inspirational honors.

 

Girls tennis:

Title IX was still years away, with girls sports mostly intramurals under the banner of the Girls Athletic Association.

But in ’64, the CHS girls purchased their first tennis uniforms — “white sweatshirts, bright red Bermuda’s, and white tennis shoes” — and played Friday Harbor, Tolt, and Granite Falls.

Coupeville’s top girls doubles duo.

While no record is recorded in the yearbook, the lineup is:

1st singles — Liz Edwards
2nd singles — Sue Gable
3rd singles — Sharon Meadors

1st doubles — Jan Pickard/Marilyn Sherman
2nd doubles — Betty Brown/Sue Bowers

 

Track and Field:

Dick Bogardus, Paul Messner, Roger Eelkema, and Lee Dennis are all shown in photos, though there is not a word about their exploits.

Still, looking at a photo of pole vaulter Messner, gridiron legend and future Santa Claus, draws a line from the past to the present.

“How you doin’?”

Decades later, one of Messner’s grandchildren, Jordan Ford, also repping Coupeville, went all the way to the state tourney and medaled in the pole vault.

It was meant to be.

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Coupeville’s Makana Stone has signed a pro contract and will play in England’s top basketball league. (Photo property Loughborough University)

Same country, a higher level of competition.

Coupeville grad Makana Stone is remaining in England, but will make the jump to the country’s top basketball league after signing her first professional contract.

After stellar four-year runs on the hardwood at both CHS and Whitman College, the former Wolf went overseas, suiting up last season for Loughborough University in England’s Women’s National Basketball League.

Now, she will play for the Leicester Riders in the Women’s British Basketball League.

Stone and her new squad have a 24-game regular-season schedule, which kicks off in October and runs through April, 2022.

The top eight teams in the 13-team league advance to the playoffs.

Leicester and its rivals also square off in two tournaments which run alongside the regular season, with the WBBL Cup first up.

The Riders open play in that event Sept. 25, facing the Oaklands Wolves.

And yes, for my fellow Americans, there is supposed to be an “s” at the end of Oaklands, which plays out of Hertfordshire, and is not to be confused with the city in California which gave us Damian Lillard.

Stone, who earned a B.A. in Biology at Whitman, wraps up her Master’s in Exercise Physiology at the end of August.

Graduation is not until December, but other than making the walk to get another diploma, Andre’s lil’ sister will be able to focus full-time on the hardwood lifestyle.

Stone practiced with Leicester last season, but, as a non-European Union player, needed to qualify for a work permit before being eligible to play in the WBBL.

So, her game action came for Loughborough, which is sort of, kind of, the farm team for Leicester.

Running wild, the Coupeville native averaged a double-double, pouring in 270 points and snatching 231 rebounds across 17 games.

Stone added 33 assists, 58 steals, and eight blocked shots, had the third-best efficiency rating in the league, and finished second among all players in voting for the WNBL Team of the Year.

Her best performance was likely a 20-point, 21-rebound afternoon against previously-unbeaten Ipswich.

That game was capped by Stone banking in a buzzer-beater over the defense of Gonzaga-signee Esther Little, lifting Loughborough to a 77-76 win.

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Ja’Kenya Hoskins, Superstar. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ja’Kenya Hoskins. Say her name, and write it down for good measure.

I’m calling it right now – this is her year.

When the students who form the Coupeville High School Class of 2022 head back to school for their senior year, there will be multiple athletic storylines waiting to play out.

From Hawthorne Wolfe chasing the all-time CHS boys basketball scoring record to Izzy Wells trying to become the first pitcher to lead the Wolf softball squad to state twice, potential glory is everywhere.

But, with no slight meant to any girl or boy in the Class of ’22, I’m anointing Ja’Kenya as the North star for this pack of Wolves.

It’s a testament to what she could accomplish athletically, as a key basketball and track star.

On the hardwood, Ja’Kenya is a high-energy, rebound-snatching, let’s-roll-in-the-open-court wrecking machine.

And, when next spring rolls around and brings with it the hope of a state meet for the first time in three pandemic-altered seasons, Miss Hoskins will brandish a major distinction.

She’s the only active CHS track athlete to own a state meet medal, as she was part of a 4 x 200 relay squad which finished 3rd at the big dance during her freshman season.

That also put Ja’Kenya up on the CHS track record board, where she joined older sisters Ja’Tarya and Jai’Lysa, part of record-owning 4 x 100 and 4 x 400 teams, respectively.

It was a great start, but then the pandemic took a chomp out of Ja’Kenya’s prep track career.

Covid completely wiped out her sophomore campaign, then track returned with a limited number of meets, but no postseason, during her junior year.

While nothing is guaranteed, the rise of vaccination numbers hopefully promises a more traditional final track campaign for Ja’Kenya and Co.

Breakin’ records, every day.

But the reason we’re tabbing this “The Year of Ja’Kenya” goes beyond sports.

The youngest of four children in her family (brother Will joins his three sisters), Miss Hoskins is everything you could hope for if you want someone to be the representative of your town, and its school.

Anyone who has met her can tell you she is a vibrant ray of sunshine disguised as a human being, someone whose mere presence makes everyone in the immediate area happier.

From middle school on, when rival teams arrive in Coupeville, it’s not been unusual to see most of the opposing players immediately crowd around Ja’Kenya, with her peals of laughter rising up to the ceiling as she greets everyone she knows and loves.

Which is just about everyone.

It’s the same when she hangs out with her fellow Wolves, such as close friends like Izzy Wells.

Want to find Ja’Kenya? Listen for the laughter, and look for the part of the crowd having the best time of anyone in the gym.

Ja’Kenya and Izzy Wells, possibly up to shenanigans.

Last year, during soccer season, I saw her on a fairly-regular basis in the press box, as she ran the clock and did announcements, and I pretended like I understood soccer.

I came away impressed.

Ja’Kenya is whip-smart, but not in a show-off way, very funny, remarkably-poised, and as genuinely kind and caring as any teen you’re likely to meet.

She was deeply-concerned when she thought she might have stumbled over a rival soccer player’s name during pre-game introductions (trust me: she nailed it), and had something nice to say about every single one of her classmates.

Every … single … one.

And she wasn’t being a smart-ass. Ja’Kenya is just that nice.

Now, she may have no memory of Videoville, a sad confirmation that we’ve gone far enough past my lazy, hazy video store days for that time to mean anything to the Netflix ‘n Instagram generation.

But even then, Ja’Kenya’s kindness shone through.

“Oh, I’m sure I would have liked the video store if I was there! Especially the gumball machine!!,” she assured me.

Meanwhile, I’ll just go sit over here in the corner, babbling like Grandpa Simpson, about the olden days…

But enough about me. Back to Ja’Kenya.

She impresses me, and has every day and in every way, since she was just a wee lass. The more I learn about her, the more my admiration grows.

I hope Ja’Kenya knows how highly others think of her – from the adults she interacts with to her fellow student/athletes.

The hope is for the 2021-2022 school year to play out as normal as possible, and to see a lot of really great Coupeville teens end their CHS days on a high note, athletically, scholastically, and socially.

But I’ll admit it.

I really want to see Miss Hoskins be rewarded. I want this to be “The Year of Ja’Kenya.”

She’s earned it; she deserves it.

Way back in 2013, Ja’Kenya (pink shirt) was already lovin’ the spotlight.

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