Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Basketball’

Britain’s COVID-related shutdown will keep Makana Stone from returning to the hardwood this weekend. (Photo property Loughborough University)

Boris Johnson has done what her opponents couldn’t do – shut down Makana Stone.

The Coupeville grad, who has been tearing up the Women’s National Basketball League in Britain, was set to return from winter break with a game this Saturday, January 9.

Now, though, she and her teammates are on hold. At least for a week.

Johnson, England’s wild-haired Prime Minister, announced a new national lockdown Monday, as Britain deals with a substantial rise in COVID-19 cases.

While most activities, including sports, are shut down, there is an exemption for “elite-level teams.”

Despite that, 38 of 40 games originally scheduled to be played Saturday by NBL teams have been postponed.

That includes Stone and the Loughborough University women facing off with Southwark.

For now, the Riders next game, which is Jan. 16 against Cardiff, remains on the schedule.

The situation remains fluid, with decision-makers weighing all options.

“We find ourselves in an unprecedented situation with a combination of national lockdown and elite exemption, alongside serious concerns for the welfare of those active in the game,” said Basketball England CEO Stewart Kellett.

“We will be taking a short period of time to assess whether if, in light of the current circumstances, and with the increased risk from the new variant of Covid-19 to our members’ health and safety, it is right for us to press on with competition for our elite game and what the ramifications are for the sport as a whole.”

The Loughborough women went to break riding a hot streak.

The Riders are 5-2, a game back of league-leader Ipswich (6-1), who they toppled thanks to a buzzer-beater by Stone.

Loughborough is 5-1 since the Coupeville grad pulled on a uniform, and the former Wolf has been among the best players in the league.

Stone has recorded a double-double in every game she’s played in England, tallying 103 points, 95 rebounds, 13 assists, and 13 steals.

She’s currently #2 in the WNBL in rebounding (15.8 a night), #3 in efficiency (159.0), #7 in scoring (17.2), and #8 in free throw percentage (79.3%).

When she’s not pursuing her hoop dreams, the Whitman College grad is busy chasing a Master’s in Exercise Physiology.

While there’s a great deal of uncertainty right now, the easy-going Stone continues to navigate things as best as possible.

“I’m just taking slow, deep breaths!,” she said with a laugh.

Read Full Post »

Sisters Kassie (left) and Kayla Lawson were key players for the 2007-2008 CHS girls basketball squad. (Photo poached from Laurie Smith)

It was the best of times.

Jump back 13 years to January 4-5 in the year of Our Lord 2008, and the Coupeville High School girls basketball team was on fire.

Coming off of a two-week break between contests, the Wolves exploded into the new year with back-to-back wins in a 24-hour span, running their winning streak to five games.

While that CHS hoops squad eventually finished 10-10 (at least according to the scorebook), head coach Blake Severns got a taste of what was to come, with super sophomores Megan Smith and Ashley Manker ripping up the hardwood.

The Wolves, as usual, were repping a small school in a league full of athletic heavyweights like Archbishop Thomas Murphy and Cedarcrest, but they were ultra-competitive.

And that was never more apparent than during that two-day stretch in early January, when they won in two different towns, including taking down private school baddie King’s on its home floor.

Coupeville actually swept the two-game season series from the Knights in 07-08, beating the richniks a second time on The Rock Jan. 18.

So they had that going for them, which was really, really nice.

But back to Jan. 4-5, as the Wolves returned to the court after not playing since a Dec. 21 win over Friday Harbor.

Following thumpings of South Whidbey and Granite Falls, that ran their win streak to three, before Christmas and such arrived to shut things down.

Based on what we can glean from the scorebook, the layoff may have slapped some rust on Coupeville’s shooting touch, as it scraped together just two buckets in the first eight minutes, trailing visiting Sultan 10-6 after one frame.

Smith splashed home the first three-ball of the new year, while Shawna West matched her point total with a basket and a free throw.

Charity shots were a problem all night for the Wolves, though, as they converted just one of five from the line in the opening quarter, and finished 9-25.

Yet still won by double-digits, so, maybe free throws are overrated.

Said no coach ever.

The second quarter was a bit better, with Kayla Lawson and Manker each tossing in four points apiece, while the Wolf defense clamped down on the Turk shooters, forcing a 14-14 tie at the half.

With their shooting fingers loosened up, and their defense still locked-in, the Wolves used a 9-3 run in the third to take the lead, then coasted home for the win.

The final frame was a frantic one, however, at least on the scoreboard, as the two squads combined to score 46% of their total points in just one eight-minute stretch.

It was 23-17 at the end of the third, yet the fourth was its own game, with five Wolves scoring (and four successfully hitting free throws!) during a torrid 19-15 battle royal.

Smith tickled the twines for her third trey of the night, while Paige Mueller slipped through the defense for a quick four points, but it was Manker who stood tallest.

Capping a game-high 14-point performance, Coupeville’s inside threat racked up three buckets and a pair of free throws in the final quarter.

On the night, six of nine Wolves to see action scratched their names in the scorebook, with Smith (11), Mueller (6), Kayla Lawson (4), West (4), and Kassie Lawson (3) all scoring.

Marie Hesselgrave, Hayley Ebersole, and Sarah Vass also saw floor time, while future scrappy Wolf star Courtney Boyd was likely creating havoc while cheering from the bench.

While the win was a nice one, Severns and his crew had little time to bask in the afterglow of a 42-32 win.

They were heading off to Shoreline the very next day, their four-game win streak at stake as they prepared to face off with the evil empire.

King’s had the name, but not the game this time out, though, as Coupeville jumped on them early, survived a third-quarter scare, then escaped out the door with the big W.

Kassie Lawson peppered the rim for a pair of first-quarter buckets as the Wolves came out super-balanced, with six players netting points before the halftime break.

Up 10-6 after one frame, CHS held King’s to just a pair of free throws in the second quarter en route to amassing a 19-8 advantage through 16 minutes.

Then, the Knights woke up. At least for a bit.

Using a 21-11 surge in the third, King’s closed within a single, solitary point at 30-29 headed into the closing eight-minute leg.

To which the Wolves, to a woman, apparently said, “No problemo.”

Smith and West anchored Coupeville down the stretch, combining to score nine of their team’s 12 fourth quarter points, while Manker banked in a bucket and Kassie Lawson drained a key free throw.

It was a very-effective one-two punch, as Smith, who finished with a game-high 14 points, and West, who tallied 10, scored 18 of Coupeville’s 23 second-half points.

Backing them up, Manker finished with six, while Kassie Lawson (5), Mueller (4), and Ebersole (3) also scored in a 42-37 win.

Heading home, things must have looked really good for the Wolves, then 6-3, even though they would have known the remainder of the schedule was going to be brutal.

Just 10 days away was a rematch with King’s.

That turned out to be one of the biggest single-game moments in CHS hoops history, as Kassie Lawson banked in a buzzer-beating three-ball in overtime, sending the Knights weeping to the locker room after a 33-32 Wolf win.

Smith, who would finish her prep career as the #4 scorer in Coupeville girls hoops history (#3 at the time, but Makana Stone was on her way) led the Wolves in 07-08, banking in 255 points.

She was one of three CHS players to break triple digits that season, with Manker (151) and West (122) providing able support.

Read Full Post »

On this day in 1990 these Wolves combined to score 50 points in a 61-56 Coupeville basketball win. Back, l to r: Ben Biskovich and Sean Dillon. Front: Frank Marti, Jason McFadyen. (Photo courtesy McFadyen)

Every day a milestone.

Pluck a date out of time, flip open a random scorebook from the past, and chances are you’ll find something of interest.

Today we jump back 30 years, to December 27, 1990, a moment when the Coupeville High School boys basketball squad rode the hot shooting touch of Sean Dillon to pull out a nail-biting 61-56 win over Vashon Island.

Two seasons out from its last trip to the state tourney, a rebuilt Wolf hoops program was starting to hit its stride again that day.

Legendary CHS coach Ron Bagby was in his final season calling the shots on the hardwood, and he had a team full of guys who could fill up the hoop.

In fact, all four guys featured in the photo with this story would finish their prep careers among the top 56 Coupeville scorers all time.

That’s out of at least 391 Wolves to tally at least a point between 1917-2020.

Well, it’s actually probably well more than 400 players, but some of those really old-school CHS scorebooks and stat sheets continue to evade capture.

For now, we have Jason McFadyen at #24 all-time (654 points), with Dillon at #48 (469), Frank Marti at #49 (462), and Ben Biskovich at #56 (407).

When the Wolves took the floor Dec. 27, it was their first action in nine days, back when they bombed Orcas Island 69-49.

Coupeville would get one more game in before 1990 clicked over to 1991, but it was run off the floor by an Australian traveling team on the 29th, so we’ll focus here on the 27th.

If there was any rust in the Wolves collective shooting touch after a week-and-a-half of rest, it doesn’t show up in the scorebook.

CHS blew out to a 19-10 advantage after one quarter of play, with six different players popping the ball through the rim.

Dillon, who would finish second to McFadyen in the season scoring race, edged out just 261-258, led the way all game against Vashon.

Later he would marry the former Becca Jenson, a volleyball star who was a year behind me at Tumwater High School (small world), but on this date his thoughts were still on torching nets.

The first seven of his game and season-high 22 points came in the opening eight-minute stand, and Dillon lit a fire under his teammates.

Vashon didn’t go away quietly, however, steadily hacking away at the lead over the next two quarters.

A 13-9 run in the second cut the deficit to 28-23 at the half, then things got really tight at 44-41 heading into the fourth.

Dillon dominated in the third quarter, gunning in 11 of Coupeville’s 16 points, hitting shots from all angles.

He banked home four field goals — neither team connected on a three-point bomb in the game — while also hitting three of four free throws in the frame.

Charity shots were anything but for both teams, however, as the Wolves netted just 17-31 (54.8%) from the line, while Vashon was an even-worse 12-23 (52.1%).

And yet, free throws proved to be Coupeville’s salvation down the stretch.

The Wolves crashed hard to the hoop (or so we would presume from the stat line), garnering twice as many free throw attempts in the final frame as their foes did.

While CHS only banked home nine of 18 free shots in the fourth — possibly giving Bagby a coronary — Vashon couldn’t catch up, thanks to netting just five of nine at the stripe during the finale.

Marti, for one, actually did pretty well after being fouled, sinking four of five freebies as part of his six point-performance in the final quarter.

He finished with 12 points, backing up Dillon’s 22.

Biskovich knocked down 10 and the duo of Brad Haslam and McFadyen banked in six apiece.

Brian Barr (2), Todd Smith (2), and Brian Hageman (1) rounded out Coupeville’s offensive attack, while Todd Brown and Nate Steele also saw floor time for the Wolves.

Future star Troy Blouin was also listed on the active varsity roster that night, but didn’t play.

He would get his moment later, however, scoring 256 points over the next two seasons, which would be the first two of a 20-year run for Randy King as CHS boys hoops guru.

Read Full Post »

Makana Stone has been a fixture on the Team of the Week while playing basketball in England. (Photo property of FocusHoops)

Forget about using a pencil. They can write her name in with a marker at this point.

Coupeville grad Makana Stone, tearing up the hardwood in jolly ol’ England, was tabbed Tuesday to the FocusHoops Team of the Week.

It’s the fourth time in six weeks the former Wolf has appeared on the list, with two Player of the Week honors already to her credit.

This time out, Flo Ward of Bristol earned top honors after a 28-point performance, but Stone was hot on her heels.

The American Assassin racked up a game-high 18 points, a team-best 13 rebounds, and four assists, hitting the game-winning free throw Saturday as Loughborough University toppled Nottingham Trent 71-70.

Stone has played in six games for the Riders, putting together a double-double each time out.

Loughborough heads to winter break with a 5-2 record, tied for second-place in the 12-team Women’s National Basketball League.

The Riders, who are 5-1 since Stone pulled on a jersey, sit a game back of Ipswich (6-1), who they beat on a last-second shot from Coupeville’s progeny.

On the season, the Whitman grad has 103 points, 95 rebounds, 13 assists, and 13 steals.

Stone is currently #2 in the WNBL in rebounding (15.8 a night), #3 in efficiency (159.0), #7 in scoring (17.2), and #8 in free throw percentage (79.3%).

When she’s not pursuing her hoop dreams, she’s busy chasing a Master’s in Exercise Physiology.

Read Full Post »

Coupeville grad Courtney (Arnold) Sleister puts up a shot while getting ready for an alumni game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

We’re in the sweet spot here.

By random chance, I currently am in possession of six scorebooks for Coupeville High School basketball teams of the past, and half those squads played a game on December 21 or 22 that season.

And all three won.

So, that’s something … said the guy looking for anything to write about during a largely sports-less pandemic.

While we wait for current players to return to the hardwood, a look back at a small slice of Wolf hoops history.

 

Boys Basketball
Coupeville 38
Crescent 36
**Played Dec. 22, 1988**

Hop on the roller coaster.

A year after a run to the state tourney, the Coupeville boys, who graduated their top five scorers from that team, lost six of their first seven games.

Offense was at a premium, as the Wolves managed just 16 points against Sultan, and 17 when matched up with perennial hoops power La Conner.

But then, they hit the Dec. 21-22 sweet spot.

With Tony Ford pounding away for nine points in the paint, CHS put visiting Crescent back on its heels and went to the first break up 13-9.

Whatever Wolf coach Ron Bagby told his troops during the timeout promptly … didn’t work.

The Loggers went on a 14-5 tear in the second quarter, reclaiming a 23-18 advantage and sending Coupeville to the locker room puffing ‘n panting.

But this time, perhaps allowed to be a tad more vocal inside the privacy of the locker room, Bagby got his point across, and the Wolves were a different team in the second half.

At least I assume so, as I was still living in Tumwater when this game went down on The Rock, a couple of months away from my family’s unexpected exodus to Whidbey.

Based on the book, the second-half surge was very much a team effort, as Coupeville spread out its scoring among five players.

Ford, who was overwhelmingly the #1 get-buckets guy all season, was held to just a basket in the final 16 minutes, but his teammates stepped up.

Brandy Ambrose popped for six points after the break, while Frank Marti (4), John Zimmerman (4), and Dean Grasser (4) all came up big in a game where Wayne Hardie, Jesse Smith, and Jason McFadyen also played.

Was the final margin set by a late game-winning bucket, or did the Wolves grab the lead and hang on by the skin of their teeth?

Like I said, I was in Tumwater at the time, so don’t have a clue.

I do know both teams dreaded the free-throw line all night, with Crescent (10-21) and Coupeville (2-10) clanking shots in every direction.

And, I do know the rebuilding Wolves promptly lost their next five games, eventually finishing 4-14.

But things rapidly improved after that, with young studs like McFadyen turning their 88-89 lumps into future success.

 

Girls Basketball
Coupeville 40
Friday Harbor 34
**Played Dec. 21, 2007**

Survive and thrive.

The Wolf girls got out to an early lead, then let the visitors chip away, before sealing the deal with an impressive final stand.

Up 10-8 after one period, Coupeville clung to a 22-21 advantage at the half, then trailed 30-29 headed into the fourth.

Crunch time belonged to Shawna West however, as she battered her way to the hoop for seven of her 10 points to spur a game-closing 11-4 run.

Only four Wolves tallied points in the victory, with Megan Smith and Hayley Ebersole tying for game-high honors with 13 apiece.

Ebersole had an especially hot hand in the second quarter, rattling home eight points on a variety of shots.

She tickled the twines on a long three-ball, one of two treys she netted in the game, while adding a pair of two-point buckets and a free throw during a busy stretch.

West added her 10 points — giving CHS three players in double figures on a night when Friday Harbor’s top scorer, Kelsey O’Day, topped out at nine — while Ashley Manker added four for the Wolves.

In a close game, both teams left points off the board thanks to free-throw shooting, though the visitors (10-22) probably rued it more than Coupeville (10-16) ultimately did.

While four scored, nine played for CHS coach Blake Severns, with Kayla Lawson, Courtney Boyd, Sarah Vass, Paige Mueller, and Kassie Lawson all seeing floor time.

 

Girls Basketball
Coupeville 41
Friday Harbor 37
**Played Dec. 22, 2009**

Two years later, same opponent, a lot of the same players, almost same result.

Coupeville played like a pack of savages en route to claiming a 13-5 lead by the first break, before Friday Harbor started chip, chip, chippin’ away.

A 14-10 advantage in the second, tacked on to a 12-8 margin in the third let the visitors get all the way back, and the game went to the final frame knotted at 31-31.

Down the stretch, it was Manker, with two big buckets, who led the final stand.

Marie Hesselgrave added a fourth-quarter basket, while Katie Smith and Cassidi Rosenkrance each netted a pair of free throws, sending Severns and Co. out the door with a smile.

In a game in which the Wolves sank five bombs from behind the three-point arc, Smith was the leader, recording three treys as part of a game-high 14-point effort.

Manker added 11, with Hesselgrave (6), Smith (4), Kendra O’Keefe (3), Rosenkrance (2), and Courtney Arnold (1) also scoring, while Taya Boonstra shredded folks on defense.

 

So, what this does all prove?

A couple of things, skippy.

That, in a (very) small sample, Coupeville High School basketball owns the dates of Dec. 21-22.

And, that if I look hard enough, I can probably scrape together a story out of just about anything.

Which is how, here on Dec. 21, 2020, Coupeville Sports — which launched Aug. 15, 2012 — officially reaches article #8,000.

So, that’s something.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »