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Posts Tagged ‘big win’

Mattea Miller brings the ball up-court under pressure.

Mattea Miller, seen in an earlier game, was everywhere Friday, banging for boards, fighting for loose balls and hitting a couple of key buckets. (John Fisken photo).

It started as a rout and ended up becoming a thriller.

From holding visiting Lakewood scoreless for the first 14 minutes of the game, to narrowly clinging to a one-point lead late in the third, the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team made life interesting for coach Amy King Friday night.

But in the end, no matter how they got there, the Wolves, repping the smallest 1A school in the state, did finish the job, knocking off the 2A Cougars, second-biggest school in the Cascade Conference, 25-19.

Coupeville did it behind a stifling defense, key buckets at the right moment from McKayla Bailey and Emily Coulter, and a monster performance in limited time from Wynter Thorne.

A swing player who also saw time in the night’s varsity contest, Thorne only stepped on the floor in the second and fourth quarters. When she was on the hardwood, however, she was large and in charge.

The second quarter was a one-woman show, as she rained down seven of her nine points.

The first bucket came off a nifty steal, when she let a Lakewood player start to slide past her, then nimbly picked her pocket.

The closing basket came on a breakaway after Thorne blocked back-to-back Cougar shots on the same play, blasting the second rejection off of the top of a Lakewood player’s head to the high-decibel screams of her many fans.

The Wolves, who led 9-0, held their visitors scoreless until almost the two-minute mark in the second quarter.

Then Coupeville got a bit lax on the boards and let Lakewood creep back into the game, with the Cougars pulling within 15-14 with under a minute to play in the third.

Instead of panicking, the Wolves slammed the door. Hard.

Carlie Rosenkrance hit a buzzer-beating jumper from the left side to cap the third, then Bailey and Thorne hit back-to-back buckets to open the fourth.

The final dagger came from Coulter, who circled out to the top of three-point land, faked a pass, and drained a wild one-handed trey with under two minutes to play.

As she ran back up the court, giddy smile beaming from one end of the gym to the other, the final resistance died deep inside the Cougar players.

Thorne paced Coupeville with nine, while Rosenkrance and the Queen of Hustle, Mattea Miller, both banked home four.

Bailey and Coulter each dropped in three and Lauren Grove rounded out the scoring with a pair of free-throws.

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The Wolf JV squad was in a great mood Tuesday. (Robert Bishop photo)

   The Wolf JV squad was in a great mood Tuesday as it romped to a huge win over big, bad Cedarcrest. (Robert Bishop photo)

Surprise!

Skyler Lawrence is a force to be reckoned with in the paint, a ferocious rebounder and powerful inside presence.

Then she goes and shocks the world with a perfectly-banked three-point bomb, after hauling in a long in-bounds pass that almost went over her head, and you realize there is no way to contain her.

The trey staked the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team to a five-point lead going into the fourth quarter Tuesday night, effectively putting an emphatic stamp on what would turn into a huge victory.

Paced by seven points apiece from Lawrence and fellow freshman Kailey Kellner, and two big plays at the end from junior swing player Wynter Thorne, the Wolves bounced visiting Cedarcrest 46-36.

With nine different players scoring, it was a win for small schools everywhere, as the smallest 1A school in the state (225 students in grades 9-11) soundly beat the biggest 2A school (691 students) in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference.

Other than a momentary letdown in the second quarter, Coupeville controlled every aspect of the game, virtually start to finish.

Down 4-2 early, the Wolves ripped off 10 straight points to end the first quarter.

Kellner, the best British sports import since David Beckham, drilled back-to-back jumpers, then, after Lawrence slammed home a rebound, Kellner went outside and lofted a three-point bomb of her own that touched nothing but net.

A free throw from Lauren Grove capped the surge and the game could have been called at that point.

The visiting Red Wolves managed to shave the lead down after that, but Coupeville never gave it all back. Every time Cedarcrest would pull to within two or three points, another Wolf would pull off a quick bucket to re-stretch the lead.

Sophia Jebrail and Carlie Rosenkrance did the honors in the third, before Lawrence dialed up long distance.

Then, in the fourth, it was a nifty jumper under extreme duress from hard-charging frosh Mattea Miller.

Cedarcrest’s final hopes were doused when Thorne scored four points in four seconds. First she hit a tough one-handed turn-around jumper, then she stole the ball and zipped in for a game-icing layup.

Thorne netted six to back-up Kellner and Lawrence, while Miller and Rosenkrance dropped in four apiece.

McKayla Bailey popped for three, Jebrail and Tiffany Briscoe each hit a bucket — with Briscoe’s coming with a second to play — and Grove tickled the twine with her free throw.

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Breeanna Messner, the steadiest of stars. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Breeanna Messner, the steadiest of stars. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

The boards belong to the Wolves.

Ripping down 43 rebounds Tuesday night — with an astonishing 25 on the offensive end — the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team crushed host Granite Falls 48-19.

The game was even more of a blowout than that might sound, as Coupeville held the Tigers to just seven points through the first three quarters, including holding their foes scoreless in the third.

If Kimberly Martinez hadn’t suddenly thrown down 12 by herself in the fourth, the Wolves might have held Granite Falls to single digits.

The win snapped a three-game losing skid for Coupeville and lifted it back to 6-5 overall, 3-3 in Cascade Conference play, heading into a home match-up Friday against King’s. The Knights (8-3, 5-0) will come to town in first place after stunning Cedarcrest 72-45.

They should have a battle waiting for them, however, if the Wolves come out playing like they did at Granite.

With senior captain Breeanna Messner back in the lineup after sitting out a game after smacking her head, the Wolves’ confidence soared.

Add in a feisty performance from Kacie Kiel, starting in place of the injured Hailey Hammer (ankle), and Coupeville was on point across the board.

“What a difference it makes having the team’s floor leader back on the court,” said Coupeville coach David King. “Bree came back and had one of her best games.

Kacie brought an aggressive mindset that helped her play her best game of the year,” he added. “She was everywhere on the court. Kacie is one of our best, if not the best, on-ball and weak-side help defenders.”

Mixing up defenses — going from a zone press to a man press — the Wolves flustered Granite Falls and nabbed a string of turnovers (Messner and Kiel combined for 10 of Coupeville’s 17 steals) that turned into easy buckets.

Than, if they missed, they sent everyone at the boards — hard.

“Crashing the boards has really caught on with this team,” King said. “There was one sequence when we shot the ball and four of the five Coupeville players on the court went hard looking to secure the offensive rebound.

“It was great to see that.”

Makana Stone, despite sitting a chunk of the game, led Coupeville with 12 boards (seven on the offensive end), while Monica Vidoni pulled down eight, Kiel snagged seven and Amanda Fabrizi snatched six.

Facing a 2-3 zone, Coupeville ruthlessly picked it apart, essentially blowing the game wide open with a 17-4 first quarter.

Stone, playing in the post with Hammer sidelined, threw down seven in the quarter, while Kiel was a terror on the boards, collecting five points off of two offensive boards and a free throw.

Defensive spark-plug Julia Myers netted three points in support, a continued display of offensive power from the junior.

Julia has been working extra on her form and it is paying off for her,” King said. “She is shooting with more confidence and when she does miss, it isn’t missing by much.”

With Stone sitting in the second quarter, Vidoni stepped up with six points to pace the Wolves, who took an imposing 34-7 lead into the locker room at the half.

If things looked bleak for Granite Falls, they got really bad in the third, when the Tigers couldn’t get a single shot to drop for eight long minutes.

“Our defense was in lock-down mode,” said a happy King.

“Overall, a very well-played game by the Coupeville players,” he added. “The girls should be very proud of how we played as a team.”

Coupeville spread the wealth on the scoring end, with eight of their nine players in uniform scoring. Stone paced the attack with 14, followed by Kiel (7), Vidoni (6), Fabrizi (6), Madeline Strasburg (5), Messner (4), Myers (4) and Wynter Thorne (2).

McKayla Bailey did not score, but, if past performances are any indication, probably freaked out a Granite Falls player or two after taking their heads off while fighting for loose balls.

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CJ Smith had a huge steal late in the game, and hit four threws down the stretch, to help ice Coupeville's win. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

  CJ Smith had a game-changing steal late in the game, and hit four free throws down the stretch, to help ice Coupeville’s win. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

It would have been easy to lose.

After falling apart a bit in the third quarter, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball team trailed by four heading into the final eight minutes Saturday against visiting Mount Vernon Christian.

Six minutes later, things looked a bit bleaker, with the Wolves now down by seven with under two minutes to play.

But it was at that exact moment that CHS reached down deep and found a miracle ending, using a mix of three-point bombs and precision free throws to stage a clock-busting 13-3 rally that carried it to an unexpected 54-51 win.

It was the third win in the last four games for the Wolf JV, and one that will leave a lasting impact.

“Very proud of our boys. They showed great resolve today,” said Coupeville coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh. “They stayed together, worked their tails off and were rewarded for their hard work with a win they will remember for a long time.

“They showed their heart.”

The ending was a wild one, as the Wolves got their points from three players who all shone brightly under pressure.

DeAndre Mitchell started the rally with a trey, then hit two free throws, while Gabe Wynn (a three-pointer and a free throw) and CJ Smith (four free throws and a huge steal) chipped in with four apiece during the run.

In a game where both teams lived at the charity stripe, Coupeville started slowly (8 of 22) but found its groove in the fourth, draining 14 of 19 down the stretch.

The Wolves, paced by big-time rebounding from Jared Helmstadter, went to the locker room with a six-point lead.

“We played with heart and enthusiasm in the first half, especially on the defensive end,” Van Velkinburgh said.

MVC rallied in the third, throwing together a 17-5 run, but Coupeville blunted the surge a bit by successfully pulling off a basket on an in-bounds play to end the quarter.

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Lauren Grove perfects her shooting touch. (John Fisken photo)

Lauren Grove perfects her shooting touch. (John Fisken photo)

Now that’s how you play defense.

Holding visiting Mount Vernon Christian scoreless for the ENTIRE SECOND HALF, the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team romped to a 25-6 win Saturday.

Yes, you read that right. The visiting Hurricanes were unable to put a single, solitary point on the board after halftime, as the Wolves — minus four key players — got big-time nasty.

“Our defense was phenomenal!,” said Coupeville coach Amy King. “We harassed ball handlers, interfered with passes, forced turn overs and yes, they got shots up, but we didn’t allow them offensive rebounds or put backs.”

The Wolves were without McKayla Bailey (softball tournament) and McKenzie Bailey (injury) and swing players Monica Vidoni and Wynter Thorne were held out of the JV game, so they would be fully available to help a varsity team missing one of its captains.

Not that the absences made the slightest difference. Every one of the Wolf girls wearing a uniform chipped in, with Lauren Grove kick-starting the offense with a season-high nine points, outscoring MVC by herself.

Lauren decided she didn’t want a close game so went on a little rampage,” King said.

With Grove raining down buckets — and getting help from her teammates, as six other girls scored — Coupeville jumped out to a 15-6 lead at the half. Than the Wolves went into lock-down mode.

“Seriously, our defense the whole game was solid,” King said. “The girls playing low on defense moved so well, coming up to help the wings, then dropping back low to protect the key … it was a thing of beauty.

Emily (Coulter) started aggressively helping and others (Mattea Miller, Jenn Spark, Tiffany Briscoe and Kailey Kellner) followed,” she added. “All while the wings (Carlie Rosenkrance, Lauren, Erin Josue and Aura Corredor) put a hand in every shooters face.

“And you’re crazy if you think anyone could get into the key. Skyler (Lawrence) and Sophia (Jebrail) kept that closed up.”

With Rosenkrance sitting out the third, so she would have a quarter left to make her varsity debut later, Grove took over handling the ball. That took a slight bump, however, when she got in foul trouble.

“No other actual point guard to lead our offense, so I did the most logical thing … put in Emily as point guard,” King said. “She can handle the ball, she knows all the plays and she plays with confidence. Why not?

“She did great and said she never wanted to do that again!”

Kellner and Lawrence backed up Grove on the offensive end, each banging home four, while Rosenkrance, Miller, Jebrail and Spark all tossed in a bucket.

“Total team victory,” King said. “So much fun to watch!!”

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