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Lauren Rose stamps on home for one of the 33 runs scored Wednesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose stamps on home for one of the 33 runs scored Wednesday. (John Fisken photos)

Fighting through harsh wind (but no rain)

   Fighting through harsh wind (but no rain), the Wolves prepare to claim their one true destiny.

If you weren’t there, this is going to seem a bit like a fairy tale.

And, if you were, your brain is probably still a bit frozen and sluggish, so you’d probably believe just about anything right now.

But I swear, it really happened. All of it.

Playing in non-stop, icy cold, gale force winds (which deposited a fair amount of infield dirt into the mouths of fans), the Coupeville High School softball squad somehow found another miracle Wednesday in what is shaping up to be a season chock full of miracles.

Trailing by seven runs heading into the bottom of the sixth against visiting Bellevue Christian, the Wolves pulled off a stunner, rallying to knock off the Vikings 17-16 in eight innings.

The non-conference win, as improbable, unlikely and ultimately satisfying as any in memory on the prairie, lifted the never-say-die sluggers to an impeccable 4-1 on the season.

Now of course, the question lingers: are the Wolves, who have shown a penchant for storming from behind, good or lucky?

I say both.

They are young (not a senior on the roster), they are talented, they seem to have no nerves, they play as a team, picking each other up during rough moments while celebrating joyous moments by holding spontaneous group hugs, and they feed on other school’s mistakes.

Trailing 15-8 entering the sixth, very cold, a bit desperate after frittering away two-run leads twice, Coupeville could have quietly packed things in and headed home for dinner.

Except this team doesn’t begin to think that way.

Waiting until they had two outs (and two runners on base), the Wolves then reeled off five straight RBI hits, plating six runners and pulling back within 15-14.

Heather Nastali started things, slapping an RBI single up the middle, then Lauren Rose, Mikayla Elfrank and Katrina McGranahan went rat-a-tat-tat with their own run-producing base knocks.

Sarah Wright, the freshman catcher who plays like a seasoned vet, her raucous encouragement for her teammates reverberating across the prairie, closed the surge by crunching a two-run single that tore off a hunk of second base as it skittered into the outfield.

Bellevue Christian, suddenly flailing wildly, reloaded the bags, but escaped (seemingly) inducing a ground out to end the inning.

Except, the game had turned, and turned convincingly.

The Vikings looked miserable, they looked frazzled, they looked stunned, they looked like they wanted to be anywhere else but trapped on the frozen tundra the locals were passing off as a prairie.

And the Wolves jumped on them and devoured them whole.

First CHS took BC down 1-2-3 for the first (and only time) on the afternoon in the top of the seventh, with McGranahan reaching deep for a last bit of fire in her pitcher’s arm.

Then Coupeville dodged the biggest bullet yet.

With Jae “Flash” LeVine running for Veronica Crownover, who had started the bottom of the seventh with a gorgeous single into the gap, Bellevue had what should have been the KO punch.

Rose lashed a one-out liner down the first-base line, the Viking fielder snagged it in mid-air as LeVine started to break for second, and we were one second away from an unassisted, Coupeville-crushing double play.

Only, LeVine, the Mighty Mite herself, sacrificed her spine, throwing her body back to the bag in mid-stride and somehow, improbably, staying alive.

Which is all Elfrank needed, as the sophomore sensation made boyfriend Jordan Ford’s voice go up three octaves as he screamed like a madman when she immediately doubled LeVine home to tie the game.

Now, this being a game like no other, played in conditions that made grown men cry (starting with me…), there was no way it could end immediately.

The Viking third-baseman, who had taken a shot to the hand earlier in the game, somehow went deep into the hole two batters later to throw Wright out by a step, preventing attempt #1 at a walk-off hit and sending us to extra innings.

With both teams playing the eighth under tie-breaker rules (teams started with a runner at second), Bellevue eked out a run to re-take the lead.

At which point Hope “The Surgeon” Lodell decided to make a bid for automatic, early induction into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Fighting through the swirling winds in center field, Lodell snagged a high, arcing shot for the second out of the inning, then unleashed a cannon shot that nearly ripped Wright’s glove off her hand at home.

She held on though, even through a pop that sounded like someone had decided to go duck-hunting on the prairie, and slapped the inning-ending tag on a Viking runner who meekly collapsed in a pile and stayed down.

Roaring like a wild woman, Wright charged into a pile of her teammates as Lodell sprinted in to join the giddy melee.

Now, let’s stop for a moment and remember, Coupeville was still down a run.

Not that it mattered, because Bellevue took the field looking like the walking dead.

When you face the team of destiny and fail to land the knockout punch, you know, deep in your heart, the bell is about to toll for thee.

And, of course, it did, because this is a fairy tale come true.

Coupeville juiced the bags, thanks to a dropped ball at third (divine providence) and some crafty base-running, before Tamika Nastali and LeVine brought home the tying and winning runs with back-to-back bases-loaded walks.

As joy swept the land, as bitterly cold fans staggered around hugging each other (mainly for warmth), as the Wolves danced on the field and the Vikings stared into a dark abyss that even a stop at McDonald’s wouldn’t fix, one thing was certain.

Call it fate.

Call it destiny.

But call it amazing.

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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf sophomore Hunter Smith slices to the hoop for two of his team-high 14 Thursday in a home playoff loss. (John Fisken photo)

It wasn’t for lack of effort.

The Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad hit the floor Thursday with intensity ramped up to the roof, matched visiting Bellevue Christian bucket for bucket for a half, then got picked apart by a precision-passing, precision-shooting squad.

What was a 27-27 battle royal at the half ended with the Vikings running away with a 64-45 playoff win.

Bellevue Christian, now 9-10 on the year, advances on in the district tourney to play at Cascade Christian Saturday, while the Wolves (9-11) see their season end.

The game was the final one in the red and white for eight Coupeville seniors.

The longest-tenured of those guys, Wiley Hesselgrave, who has played varsity ball all four seasons, opened the scoring for the Wolves, slashing to the hoop for a layup to tie the game at 2-2 in the early seconds of action.

After a Bellevue three-ball on which the net never moved — a theme that recurred far too often as the Vikings were dead-eye shooters all night — Coupeville put together its best run of the night.

Kicked off by a crowd-pleasing block from Hesselgrave, who caught a Viking from behind on a breakaway and snuffed out his shot at the last second, the Wolves ripped off a 13-4 surge.

It started with Risen Johnson twirling, ballet-style, through the air, shedding defenders as he dropped a runner off the glass, and ended with Hesselgrave nailing a pull-up trey from the top.

Four Wolves scorched the nets during the run, with Dante Mitchell and Hunter Smith joining Johnson and Hesselgrave, and Coupeville looked loose, confident and ready to run away with the game.

But then, just as quickly, the switch got flipped the other way, as Bellevue scored the final five points of the first and 10 of the first 12 in the second to reclaim the lead at 24-17.

With his team starting to buckle around him, Smith, the super sophomore who will be one of only two varsity players eligible to return next year (along with junior Gabe Wynn), decided to take matters into his own hands.

Four straight trips down the floor the serene, smooth floor commander took control, putting the Vikings on their heels, then knocking down shots over their heads as they fell back.

A fall-back jumper, a coast-to-coast romp off of a rebound, a pull-up jumper and then a running layup, on a play in which Hesselgrave poked the ball free, knocked it to Johnson, then watched as Risen launched a half-court heave that dropped onto Smith’s fingertips as he zipped to the basket.

At this point, the two teams, who had played a very-close 53-50 game early in the season (Coupeville won that non-conference tilt), were like boxers, bobbing and weaving, punching and counter-punching.

And they kept it up right to the halftime buzzer, with Bellevue knocking down another three-ball in which the net barely rippled, followed by Coupeville’s JJ Johnson popping in a little jumper to knot things at 27.

With the crowd abuzz, the game had the look of a classic in the making.

Unfortunately, that ended about 45 seconds into the third quarter.

Coupeville struck first, with Hesselgrave sweeping under the hoop and laying it up and in to draw first blood.

Though no one knew it at the time, it would be the final points the Wolf star would score as a prep baller.

When things turned, they did so quickly.

It started with a free throw, then back-to-back buckets off of rebounds, another free throw, a steal and a breakaway bucket, then three straight shots on which Bellevue’s six-foot-six Joe Lampkin shot from about two inches from the basket.

By the time JJ Johnson stopped the bleeding with a pair of free throws, Bellevue had run off 14 consecutive points and desperation was setting in.

Things didn’t get much better as Bellevue capped the third with another bank shot from Lampkin, who led all scorers with 26, then immediately opened the fourth with another flawless trey from the corner.

The Vikings stretched the lead out to 15, Coupeville chipped away a bit, then Bellevue put the hammer down with another 12-0 surge to stake themselves to their biggest lead of the night at 64-41.

With the game lost, the Wolves took a look at the future, giving junior Brian Shank and freshman Ty Eck their varsity debuts in the fourth quarter.

Shank and senior Jared Helmstadter, two hard workers whose motors never stop humming, combined on the season’s final bucket, with the older player knocking down a jumper off of a pass from his successor.

While the end result wasn’t what he wanted to see, Coupeville coach Anthony Smith walked away from the final game of his fifth season head held high.

“I’m very disappointed for my seniors, they’ve put in a lot of hard work in practice, at open gyms, and we just came up short,” he said. “It’s been my pleasure to coach them.

“I have nothing but respect for these guys,” Anthony Smith added. “They’ve become an extended family and have always had each others backs all the way.”

Hunter Smith tallied 14 to pace the Wolves, while Hesselgrave knocked down nine to claim the team’s season scoring title.

“Gonna miss Wiley,” Anthony Smith said. “Every practice, every road trip, every game, I knew I could count on that guy.”

JJ Johnson rattled the rims for eight, Wynn and Risen Johnson netted four apiece and Helmstadter, Jordan Ford and Dante Mitchell all dropped in a bucket.

DeAndre Mitchell and Desmond Bell joined the pack of seniors playing their final game.

As he watched the players exit, Anthony Smith looked down for a moment, then looked back up, determination glinting in his eye.

“We start a new season tomorrow! See who wants to put the work in. It’ll be up to them and what they want to do, but we’ll be back.”

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Wolves (Sherry Roberts photos)

   Always smiling, even when they’re tired. Top (l to r): Lauren Grove, Makana Stone, Lindsey Roberts. Bottom: Skyler Lawrence, Tiffany Briscoe, Kailey Kellner, Mia Littlejohn. (Sherry Roberts photos)

David King

  The Wolves ponder the state of the universe as coach David King draws up a play.

Tired of the road, tired of tests, tired of dealing with a schedule from Hell, the very-young Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad is still in prime position after a narrow loss Wednesday.

Facing off with a Bellevue Christian team that entered the night at 12-1, the Wolves matched the host Vikings point for point until late in the third quarter, eventually falling 40-32.

The non-conference loss dropped Coupeville to 9-4, which isn’t much of a drop at all.

The Wolf girls still own the best record of any high school hoops team on Whidbey Island, girls or boys, and are set up to close the regular season strongly.

Sitting atop the 1A Olympic League at 3-0, the defending league champs have six conference games remaining, beginning with a rare home appearance Friday against Port Townsend (4:15 JV, 6 varsity).

As they head into the stretch run, the Wolves have been sharpened by facing down one of the best teams in the state.

“This game had a playoff atmosphere to it,” said CHS coach David King. “This was more of a heavyweight bout with both teams going toe-to-toe all game.”

Coupeville might have been expected to come out slowly, as it was playing on back-to-back nights, with both games on the road (the third time the schedule-makers have stuck them in that situation this season).

Also, it’s the middle of finals week, forcing the Wolves into double duty.

With Coupeville having sat for nine days with no games prior to this week, one might legitimately wonder at how their schedule was crafted.

But, in the moment, the Wolves were having none of that.

Despite having very few scoring opportunities themselves, Coupeville responded strongly, leading 8-5 after one quarter and earning a 15-15 tie as the teams headed to the locker room.

Foul trouble was stinging the Wolves, however, as the local refs called the game to a different rhythm than what CHS is used to seeing in its part of the world.

Team leader Makana Stone was whistled for her third foul late in the second quarter and started the second half tethered to the bench.

While the Wolves missed her explosiveness, freshman Lindsey Roberts stepped in to her shoes and pleased King with her aggressive play.

Roberts rattled home both of her buckets in the third quarter, while Kailey Kellner swished a long trey and Mia Littlejohn drove repeatedly into the heart of the Bellevue defense.

The Vikings, who had been scoring off of dribble drives the entire game, began to pull away a bit in the third, opening up a 28-24 lead entering the final eight minutes.

“Defensively we played better in the third and fourth, but we didn’t do a good enough job on the dribble drives,” King said. “We also left open some of their shooters and they knocked down some big three-pointers in the half.”

Taking advantage of more foul trouble for Stone, Bellevue stretched the lead out to 10 with four minutes to play, but the Wolves refused to bend.

They cut the game back down to 34-30, but the Vikings showed why their record is so shiny, calmly closing the game out in the final moments.

Stone paced Coupeville with a game-high 12 points, while Littlejohn (6), Roberts (4), Briscoe (4), Kellner (3) and Lauren Grove (3) also scored.

Roberts and Stone each had 10 rebounds, while the senior added four steals and four blocks.

Grove (seven rebounds, three steals), Kellner (four rebounds) and Littlejohn (two rebounds, two assists) all chipped in when it came time to fill up the stat sheet.

As his squad prepares to make a run at another league title banner, King came away happy with a lot of what his players were able to do against high-level competition.

But there are always areas to work on if the Wolves want to make a deep postseason run.

“The energy was much better tonight,” he said. “We proved we can play with a team like Bellevue Christian.

“To get over the hump we need to do a better job on defense and not let them drive into the key,” King added. “We also had 23 turnovers. If we cut these down by 8-10, who knows what we could have done differently on the offensive end.”

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Ashlie Shank (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf freshman Ashlie Shank played strongly Wednesday, snagging 10 rebounds and four steals. (John Fisken photo)

Second game in as many nights, both on the road. Middle of finals week. Three ill players and a fourth who got injured during the action.

Wednesday night was rough at times for the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad.

But even during a 27-15 loss to a very-tough Bellevue Christian squad, the young Wolves (4-8) had moments to make their coach’s heart happy.

The final three minutes of the game were a classic example.

Already missing three players (Lauren Rose, Lindsey Laxton and Brisa Herrera), Coupeville lost a rampaging force of nature when freshman Ema Smith took a blow to her knee.

Regrouping on the sideline, the Wolves elected to go to a high-intensity defensive strategy to finish the game.

“The decision was made by the team that we would go full-out man defense, full-court press and do what we could to slow them down,” said Wolf coach Amy King. “It was seriously, the most intense three minutes of the season.

“The girls did an awesome job, and left it all on the court.”

While they finished strongly, a slow start derailed the Wolves.

Coupeville managed just a single free throw from Allison Wenzel in the first quarter and fell behind 8-1 after the first eight minutes of play.

The Wolves made an immediate 180-degree turn in the second, sparked by one of their swing players.

Kyla (Briscoe) sparked the offense in the second quarter, some lay-ups off of steals or rebounds and hitting them hard on defense,” King said.

Coupeville won the second quarter battle 7-6, but tired legs began to creep in and the Wolves weren’t able to make it all the way back.

“The girls fought the whole game, fast-breaking, looking up the court but getting shots to fall just didn’t happen,” King said. “Their defense did a really good job of anticipating our passes that resulted in steals.

“That was our downfall in this game.”

King praised the work of her post players (Sarah Wright, Skyler Lawrence, Nicole Lester and Wenzel) for “digging in for rebounds,” and the defense of Maddy Hilkey and Brittany Powers.

Freshman guard Ashlie Shank, who ripped down a career-high 10 rebounds and made off with a team-high four steals, was a true standout on the evening.

Ashlie really played with an intensity we haven’t seen from her,” King said. “Diving in for rebounds and going after steals. It was great to see.”

Briscoe paced the Wolves on the offensive end of the floor, popping for seven points, while Wright banged home five. Shank tossed in two and Wenzel tickled the twines for her free throw to round out the attack.

Wright snagged seven boards, Wenzel cleaned the glass for five and Smith made off with four caroms. Briscoe and Hilkey each had three steals and Lawrence rejected two shots.

While she never accepts defeat easily, King came away focused on the good, and how it will affect her squad heading into its next game, Friday at home against Port Townsend.

“The loss was hard to take, especially after that (fourth quarter) spurt,” she said. “But we now know what we can do and will bring that with us to our next game.”

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Wiley Hesselgrave, seen here in an earlier game, went for ?? Saturday. (John Fisken photos)

   Wiley Hesselgrave, seen here in an earlier game, went for 16 Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

Revenge and redemption and baked potatoes.

They were all on the menu Saturday night at Bellevue Christian, as the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad pulled off a stunner.

Roaring back in the second half, the Wolves made their free throws down the stretch and upended the host Vikings 53-50.

The non-conference win lifted Coupeville to 1-2 on the season and avenged a 30-point loss to the same school a season ago.

And, they did it with just seven players.

With starting guard Hunter Smith out for two weeks with a back injury, the Wolves relied heavily on their other two gunners and they responded.

Risen Johnson exploded for 17, including four free-throws in the final quarter, while Wiley Hesselgrave muscled his way to a sweet 16.

Battling Bellevue’s height advantage (Joe Lampkin, who poured in a game-high 26, is six-foot-six) and, possibly, the aroma of baked potatoes (BC’s concession stand is inside the gym, along the baseline, and spuds are on the menu), Coupeville stayed close, but trailed at the break.

Down 24-19 entering the locker room, the Wolves avoided their Achilles heel in recent years — the dreaded third quarter let-down — instead seizing the game for themselves.

Using four three-point bombs in the third to rally — two apiece from Hesselgrave and Johnson — CHS pulled even at 34 at the end of three.

Then, they held off a hostile crowd in the fourth, hitting 6 of 9 free throws and refusing to yield the lead once they had it.

Johnson (7) and Hesselgrave (6) carried the scoring load in the final quarter, while Jordan Ford and Gabe Wynn each came up big time with a bucket of their own.

Ford finished with six, while DeAndre Mitchell (5), Wynn (4), Ryan Griggs (3) and Dante Mitchell (2) rounded out the scorers.

The win sends the Wolves into an extremely favorable stretch of the schedule, as Coupeville plays eight of its next nine games on Whidbey.

CHS has seven home games and a short trip to Langley Jan. 4 for a rematch against South Whidbey during that run, with just one off-Island excursion (Dec. 11 at Klahowya) between now and Jan. 19.

JV falls:

A poor third-quarter doomed Coupeville’s young guns, as the Wolves fell 64-40 in the night’s opening game.

CHS went in at the half down by 11, but any hopes of a rebound evaporated when Bellevue took control to the tune of 18-5 to start off the second half.

Freshman Ty Eck, making his season debut, went for 11 of his team-high 14 points in the fourth quarter. He hit four bombs from three-point land in the game.

Gabe Eck and Luke Merriman added nine apiece, while Beauman Davis rattled home six and Ariah Bepler netted a bucket to round out the scoring attack.

Ty Eck had three rebounds and two steals, while Merriman hauled in three boards and dealt out four assists.

Bepler and Gabe Eck each snared three rebounds apiece.

Andre Avila and James Vidoni also saw floor time for Coupeville.

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