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Posts Tagged ‘bi-districts’

Malachi Somes (5) drives past his defender, who meets a brick wall known as Camden Glover. (Julie Wheat photo)

The road gets tougher from here.

Unable to hold on after jumping out to a 13-1 lead Thursday against host Friday Harbor, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball squad fell 44-42 in its District 1/2 playoff opener.

With the loss, the Wolves slip to 7-12 on the season, but they’re still alive in the double-elimination tourney.

Win three straight loser-out games, with the first one coming Feb. 17, and Brad Sherman’s hardwood warriors will be headed back to state.

Lose any of them, and it’s time for the Wolves to make plans for spring sports.

That next playoff rumble will send CHS on the road again, this time to face either Mount Vernon Christian or Orcas Island.

Check out the bracket here:

https://www.wpanetwork.com/wiaa/brackets/tournament.php?act=view&tournament_id=4987

Thursday’s game was Coupeville’s third against Friday Harbor this season, and the closest by far.

The Wolverines won the regular season bouts by 12 and 10 points, respectively, but this time around CHS led from opening tip until late in the fourth quarter.

All the momentum early belonged to Coupeville, which ripped off a 10-0 run to stake itself to a 13-1 lead late in the first quarter.

Chase Anderson led the way, slapping home eight points in the opening frame, and things were looking bright for the Wolves.

Then the road rims shrunk a size or two, and buckets were much harder to get the rest of the evening.

After scoring a basket in the waning seconds of the first to cut things to 13-3, Friday Harbor battled to a 15-13 advantage in the second quarter.

Still up 26-18 at the break, CHS hung tough through a cold-shooting third to maintain a (smaller) lead at 32-29 heading into the fourth.

But down the stretch Friday Harbor came up with some big-time buckets to flip the script.

The Wolverines claimed their first lead of the night at 37-36, before stretching it out to 39-36.

Coupeville rallied as the clock madly ticked down, tying things at 39-39 on an Aiden O’Neill free throw, only to have their rivals immediately answer with a three-ball and a field goal to ice things.

O’Neill hit a buzzer-beating trey to set the final score, but it wasn’t to be for the Wolves.

CHS won the three-ball battle 5-4, with Camden Glover and O’Neill each hitting a pair, while Friday Harbor edged Coupeville at the free throw line, netting six of 11 against a 3-5 performance from the Wolves.

The road warriors got all their scoring from four players Thursday, with Anderson rattling the rim for 13 and Glover banking in 12. O’Neill sank nine, while Davin Houston rounded things out with eight points.

Easton Green, Malachi Somes, Carson Grove, and Riley Lawless also saw floor time for Coupeville.

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Adeline Maynes charges into the playoffs. (Jackie Saia photo)

It’s the ferry life for them.

The Coupeville High School varsity basketball teams start the double-elimination District 1/2 basketball tourney this coming Thursday, Feb. 12 and both Wolf squads will be on the road.

And right back where they just played.

Yes, both the CHS boys (7-11) and Wolf girls (5-13) are headed to Friday Harbor for a third game against their arch-rivals.

Scout Smith’s girls’ squad will hit the floor on a high, having beaten the Wolverines 52-42 in the regular season finale to split the season series.

Meanwhile, Brad Sherman’s hardcourt warriors hope that the third time is the charm, as they were swept by Friday Harbor during the regular season.

To check out the brackets, and map out a possible path to state, pop over to:

 

Girls:

https://www.wpanetwork.com/wiaa/brackets/tournament.php?act=view&tournament_id=4989

 

Boys:

https://www.wpanetwork.com/wiaa/brackets/tournament.php?act=view&tournament_id=4987

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CHS singles aces Tenley Stuurmans (left) and Dahlia Miller were both undefeated this season until districts. (Starla Seal photo)

The stakes were high, the competition was top-tier, and the city was big.

Coupeville High School girls’ tennis players wrapped their season Thursday in Seattle with a strong team-wide performance at the District 1/2 tourney.

And while the Wolves came up just short of sending anyone to state, the small-town net aces impressed their coaches.

“We had some great competition today,” Starla Seal said. “Played their hearts out until the very end. Proud coach moment over here.”

When Coupeville arrived at the Amy Yee Tennis Center, it joined rivals from fellow Northwest 2B/1B League schools Friday Harbor and La Conner, as well as three programs from District 2’s SeaTac League.

Puget Sound Adventist, Forest Ridge, and Summit Classical Christian rounded out the field, with Forest Ridge winning both the singles and doubles titles.

This year that meant more than normal, with Districts 1 and 2 only getting a single slot to state.

The D1/2 tourney reverts back to having two singles players and two doubles teams advance to the big dance again next spring.

This time around, Forest Ridge freshman Julia Mielke thwarted Coupeville’s Tenley Stuurmans in the singles finale, preventing the Wolf netter from making a return trip to Yakima after qualifying for state as an 8th grader.

Stuurmans claimed second in a 10-woman field, with Wolf teammate Dahlia Miller beating her #5 seed to earn 4th place.

In the doubles competition, the title went to Julia Hofler and Yazhen Qui of Forest Ridge, who held off Friday Harbor duo Megan Mellinger and Kira Clark in the title match.

Districts marked not only the end of the season for the Wolves, but the end of the road for CHS seniors Ember Light and Delanie Lewis.

Light, teaming with younger sister Mila, played one of the most-intense matches of the day, with the sisters pushing a Summit Classical duo to tiebreakers in both of their sets.

The Wolves invade Seattle. (Starla Seal photo)

 

Thursday results:

 

Singles:

 

Tenley Stuurmans:

Beat Aubrey Mathewson (Summit Classical) 6-0, 6-1
Beat Dahlia Miller (Coupeville) 6-0, 6-1
Lost to Julia Mielke (Forest Ridge) 6-1, 6-1

 

Dahlia Miller:

Beat Jacklin Liu (Forest Ridge) 6-2, 6-0
Lost to Tenley Stuurmans (Coupeville) 6-0, 6-1
Lost to Kendall Lee (La Conner) 5-7, 6-3, 9-1(tiebreaker)

 

Doubles:

 

Brynn Parker/Delanie Lewis:

Lost to Julia Hofler/Yazhen Qui (Forest Ridge) 6-2, 6-1

 

Ember Light/Mila Light:

Beat Abril Aguilar/Valaria Nizovtsev (Puget Sound) 6-1
Lost to Kelsey Milojevich/Abby Gilbert (Summit Classical) 7-6(7-5), 7-6(7-4)

With their second season in the books, CHS coaches Tim Stelling and Starla Seal head home. (Delanie Lewis photo)

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Current Wolves Haylee Armstrong and Capri Anter keep alive the memory of their late cousin, Adam Garcia. (Photo courtesy Michelle Armstrong)

Big time players make big time shots.

With the game on the line Tuesday, and the season hanging in the balance, Mia Farris and Haylee Armstrong proved that true.

The steady senior splashed home a game-tying three-ball under extreme pressure, while the scrappy sophomore knocked down the game-winning bucket in the final, frantic seconds, sending the Coupeville High School gym into a mad celebration.

Overcoming an extremely rough early performance, the crunch-time heroics capped a stunning late-game rally, lifting the Wolves to a 28-26 victory over visiting Friday Harbor in a loser-out District 1/2 playoff rumble.

Down 12 in the second half in a game in which its only lead of the night came on Armstrong’s bucket, the win lifts Coupeville to 10-11 on the season.

It also propels the Wolves into another loser-out game Thursday, when they will host Orcas Island in a game slated to tip off at 1:45 PM.

Win that one and Megan Richter’s squad gets a fifth and final Bi-District game Saturday (also at home), with a ticket to state up for grabs.

Tuesday’s tussle, the third meeting with Friday Harbor this season, threatened to slip away from the Wolves.

Other than two early ties, at 2-2 and 4-4, Coupeville was ice cold from the field.

There was a seven-minute stretch that started in the first quarter and ended in the latter stages of the second frame in which nothing would drop for the Wolves.

Free throws skimmed out, a startling number of field goal attempts missed the rim entirely, and the offensive flow was stagnant.

Farris finally got a jumper to drop at the 3:18 mark of the second, but then CHS went another two minutes-plus before Tenley Stuurmans ended the first-half scoring with a three-point play the hard way.

Trailing 18-9 at the half, Coupeville’s only saving grace was its defense, keyed by Teagan Calkins crashing the boards hard to pull down some of her game-high 16 rebounds.

Teagan Calkins gets dynamic in the paint. (Jackie Saia photo)

The deficit reached its zenith at 21-9 early in the third, and then, against all odds, the comeback began.

A quick 6-0 run, sparked by Danica Strong rumbling in the paint, Katie Marti going coast-to-coast, and team sparkplug Jada Heaton forcing a steal in the backcourt and turning it into a bucket, greatly helped.

Then, after Friday Harbor briefly rallied, Calkins launched an elegant three-ball from the right side, splashing it home to cut the lead to 24-18 heading into the fourth.

The final frame was a study in contrasts.

Friday Harbor, which had led all game, suddenly looked tense, and the ramped-up Wolf defense created a steady string of turnovers.

Hanging on for dear life, the visitors flinched, and flinched hard, in the final moments, committing a crucial turnover late and failing to convert on a pair of key free throws.

That left an opening for Coupeville, and the Wolves pounced.

A breakaway bucket from Farris and two charity shots by Marti made things interesting, with a Tenley Stuurmans free throw slicing the deficit to 26-23.

Nerves were on edge, every fight for a rebound was crucial, with Calkins and Madison McMillan standing tall, and Farris?

Well, they do call her “Mia the Magnificent” for a reason.

Mia Farris doesn’t miss. (Bailey Thule photo)

Taking a kick-out off of an offensive rebound, she drilled nothing but net on her three-ball, tying the game and pushing her to #50 all-time on the CHS girls’ basketball career scoring list.

But the Wolf magic wasn’t done just yet.

Tuesday was a day of celebration, but also of loss, a mix of bittersweet memories, for CHS teammates Capri Anter and Haylee Armstrong and their extended family.

The girl’s older cousin, former Wolf football player Adam Garcia, was murdered in Oak Harbor in 2014 and Tuesday would have been his 32nd birthday.

There are a lot of ways the clash with Friday Harbor could have ended.

That it finished with Armstrong flashing in from the left side of the floor, taking a pass from Calkins and banking in a game winner, the ball hesitating for a second before dropping through the net, is what feels right.

Tipped by an angel.

And then Friday Harbor’s final, futile push up court ended as suddenly as it began, the ball knocked free and snatched up by Calkins, with “The Red Dragon” hugging the orb to her chest as everything and everyone went bonkers around her.

While Coupeville’s scoring was limited, the points were divvied up, with eight of nine players to hit the floor keeping scorekeeper Christi Messner busy.

Farris topped the Wolves with seven points and now has 245 for her varsity career.

She’s the third active player to crack the all-time top 50, along with fellow seniors Marti (#37 with 317 points) and Lyla Stuurmans (#45 with 256 points).

Tenley Stuurmans (5), Calkins (4), Marti (4), Armstrong (2), Strong (2), Heaton (2), and Lyla Stuurmans (2) also scored Tuesday, with McMillan providing a spark on defense.

Jada Heaton, always hustling, always doing all the important little things. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Chase Anderson and Co. are back in action Tuesday night. (Parker Hammons photo)

It’s all about those ferries.

Coupeville High School basketball teams will have a home playoff doubleheader Tuesday, but the start times will be bumped ahead a bit.

With both rivals coming from other islands and needing to get back to their rocks in the water, it’s not a surprise.

So, the Wolf girls will tip with Friday Harbor at 3:15 PM, with the CHS boys squaring off with Orcas Island at 5:00.

Both District 1/2 tourney games are loser-out affairs.

Fall, and your season is done. Win, and the Wolves return to action Thursday, again on their home court.

Madison McMillan (left) and Lyla Stuurmans are ready to rumble. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

The brackets:

 

Girls:

https://www.wpanetwork.com/wiaa/brackets/tournament.php?act=view&tournament_id=4590

 

Boys:

https://www.wpanetwork.com/wiaa/brackets/tournament.php?act=view&tournament_id=4588

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