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Posts Tagged ‘Boys Basketball’

Cole White kickstarts the offense. (Bailey Thule photo)

Pull on your padded underwear and get ready to rock.

Saturday’s varsity boys’ basketball bout between host Neah Bay and visiting Coupeville was not for the faint of heart.

The teams combined for 151 points, and probably just as many bruises, in the kind of down-and-dirty brawl which had fans on both sides of the bleachers hyperventilating.

And the best news, at least for faithful readers of this blog?

Coupeville roared back from a 13-point deficit, overcoming both the scrappy Red Devils and a hail of foul calls to pull out an electrifying 76-75 win in CHS coach Brad Sherman’s 100th game on the bench.

Then the Wolves and their fans booked it out of town, fleeing seconds after Neah Bay’s potential buzzer-beater clanged off the rim — intent on making it to the final ferry of the night.

While bouncing across the rutted backroads of small-town America, Coupeville’s hoops stars could bask in the glow of a job well done.

Playing their second game in less than 24 hours, the Wolves proved to be resilient second-half warriors and are now 8-5 after winning for the sixth time in their last seven games.

Friday’s home league win against an overmatched Darrington squad was just the appetizer, with Saturday’s non-conference tussle a true test.

The Wolves, who have played a tough early-season schedule as they prep for making a run at earning a repeat trip to the state tourney, went toe-to-toe with Neah Bay in the early going.

Logan Downes had a hot hand, pumping in 12 in the first quarter, with a final free throw being his 300th point of the season.

That charity shot, coming after teammate Jonathan Valenzuela yanked down an offensive rebound, then spun and nailed a dagger of a jumper, pulled Coupeville within 17-16.

Jonathan Valenzuela floats in for a bucket. (Chloe Marzocca photo)

If there was a downside, it came courtesy of the refs, who seemed to delight in whistling Coupeville on a frequent basis, including handing out a questionable technical foul on the Wolves.

What’s funny is you look at the scorebook, and the final foul tally for the entire day was 20 for CHS, and 17 for Neah Bay.

Yet it felt, at least in the first half, much more unbalanced than that, proving perception doesn’t always equal reality.

And to be fair, it wasn’t just the fouls, as Neah Bay was locked-in and stroking the ball, popping shots to push its lead out to 36-23 late in the half.

Coupeville rallied right at the end, with Dominic Coffman turning a steal into a breakaway bucket and Alex Murdy nailing one of his four three-balls, but the Red Devils still led 36-28 at the break.

Whatever wisdom was imparted in the locker room was crucial, however, as the Wolves seemed like a different team in the second half.

A 14-2 run, kicked off by a Cole White jumper and capped by eight straight points from Downes — including both a three-ball and a three-point play earned the hard way — gave CHS its first lead in forever.

Then, after a brief rally by Neah Bay to go back in front at 49-46, Coupeville claimed the advantage for good.

Murdy lowered his shoulder and rumbled up the middle for a bucket, followed by back-to-back treys from Downes, and Coupeville never trailed again.

Not that Neah Bay faded away, as the Red Devils cut their deficit to 54-53 heading into the fourth quarter and responded to every Wolf run with one of their own.

Downes and Murdy both dropped a pair of three-balls in the final frame, but Coupeville couldn’t pull away as the clock ran down.

First the Wolves were up seven, then later nine, and both times the Red Devils charged back into the fray.

Neah Bay only had four three-balls to Coupeville’s nine, but the two biggest came in the final seconds, as Red Devils sophomore Makyah Chambers buried a pair of pressure-packed treys with Wolf defenders hanging all over him.

Coupeville’s secret weapon down the stretch turned out to be Nick Guay, who scored all six of his points in the white-hot glare of prime time.

Three times the lanky junior sliced through the defense and banked in layups to preserve his team’s lead in the final minute, with Murdy and Downes setting him up with note-perfect passes.

In the end, the game came down not to a big shot, but to the Wolves executing the small play, and doing it on repeat.

Three times in the final 10 seconds Coupeville had to get the ball inbounds in the backcourt, knowing Neah Bay would quickly foul.

The Red Devils couldn’t send the Wolves to the free throw line until foul #3, but they could hack and chop and hope for a turnover while trying.

Instead, three times White stepped out of bounds, and three times Downes faked, spun, pivoted and made just enough room between himself and his defender to pull in the pass, cling to the ball with an iron grip and absorb getting smacked.

Try as they might, the Red Devils never came close to a steal, and finally sent Coupeville to the line for a one-and-one attempt.

Deciding the day needed just a bit more drama, the basket spit out Downes initial free throw try, giving Neah Bay a chance to make a miracle as it grabbed the rebound.

To the joy of the Wolves, and the staggering disappointment of the Red Devil fans, though, a long three-ball clanged off the rim, and a put-back wouldn’t go down.

That set off a half-celebration, half-stampede for the door from anyone with a Whidbey address.

Later, after the hubbub settled down, the 100-game coach marinated in a memorable win.

“Really just very proud of the way our guys came together and got it done against a tough, scrappy team tonight on the road,” Sherman said.

“Showed a ton of grit – especially the energy the boys came out of halftime with!”

Dominic Coffman (on floor) and William Davidson bring the defensive heat. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville got big contributions from all 10 players to see the floor, with Zane Oldenstadt, William Davidson, and Ryan Blouin fueling the defensive effort.

Downes torched the nets for a game-high 36 points — the second-best effort of his high school career — marking the fourth time he’s topped 30 in the last seven games.

That pushes him to 324 points on the season (24.9 a night), and 548 for his career.

Downes passed former Wolf greats Cody Peters (518), JJ Marti (520), Gary Faris (524), Brad Miller (526), Jerry Zylstra (527), and Gary Hammons (533) Saturday, and sits #43 on the Wolf boys all-time scoring chart for a program launched in 1917.

Murdy came up huge on both ends of the floor, adding 18 points of his own to the cause, lifting his own career total to 333, while Guay (6), White (6), Valenzuela (4), Coffman (4), and Chase Anderson (2) also scored.

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Jack Porter (22) and Hurlee Bronec (2) form a deadly duo. (Chloe Marzocca photo)

Change the rules, they’ll still find a way to win.

Playing a shorter than normal game Saturday, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad swept to its fourth straight victory thanks to balanced scoring and feisty defense.

Playing deep on the road, the young Wolves stormed past host Neah Bay 39-28 in a contest made up of six-minute quarters instead of the usual eight-minute frames.

The decision to trim a quarter of the normal running time was made for several reasons.

The Wolves were a little late arriving, Neah Bay has only one court, and the schools needed to get three games, including two varsity bouts, played before Coupeville had to hightail it in hopes of catching the night’s last ferry.

Adjusting well to the compromise, the JV boys began to pull away in the second quarter en route to running their record to 5-3.

Coming off the non-conference win over Neah Bay, the Wolves face off with Northwest 2B/1B League rivals La Conner and Mount Vernon Christian next week.

Both games are on the road, but at locales much closer.

With their game up first — Neah Bay doesn’t have a JV girls’ team — Coupeville’s young guns battled to a 10-10 tie after an abbreviated first quarter.

Hunter Bronec banged away for seven of his team-high 13 points in the opening frame, while Aiden O’Neill popped the first of a pair of three-balls he hit against the Red Devils.

Coupeville took control of the game thanks to an 11-6 surge in the second quarter, with O’Neill swishing another trey, then pushed the lead out to 30-22 heading into the final six-minute stretch.

Pushing the momentum, Hunter Smith’s squad of attack-happy snipers poured in the first nine points in the fourth quarter, before Neah Bay netted a pair of late three-balls to trim the final margin down a bit.

But just a bit.

Landon Roberts swoops to the hoop. (Chloe Marzocca photo)

With his 13 points, Hunter Bronec led the way for a team which put nine guys into the scoring column.

O’Neill (6), Camden Glover (5), Jack Porter (4), Chase Anderson (4), Landon Roberts (2), Malachi Somes (2), Johnny Porter (2), and Hurlee Bronec (1) also kept the scorekeeper busy.

Carson Field and Yohannon Sandles also saw floor time for the Wolves, as Smith got minutes for everyone on the roster.

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Hunter Bronec, fan favorite, hard at work. (Chloe Marzocca photo)

It started as a low rumble, then became a roar.

“I love you, Hunter!!” echoed off the walls of the Coupeville High School gym, as Wolf JV players hooted and hollered as swing player Hunter Bronec prepared to check into Friday night’s varsity hoops game.

A fourth-quarter appearance by the lanky young gun, who hit the floor like a ball of fire unleashed, was the perfect cap to a night on which everything went right for CHS.

Putting 13 players into action, with 10 of them scoring, Wolf coach Brad Sherman crafted a perfectly calibrated team win, shepherding his squad to a 64-25 dismantling of visiting Darrington.

The victory, Coupeville’s fifth in its last six games, lifts it to 1-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 7-5 overall.

With another game roaring up fast — a road trip Saturday to face non-conference foe Neah Bay — being able to spread out minutes and keep his top guys fresh was exactly Sherman’s hope.

And, like the A-Team before him, the prairie hardwood sage does love it when a plan comes together.

Coupeville jumped on the Loggers quickly, with Logan Downes going off for seven points in about seven seconds.

A layup, off of a dish from Jonathan Valenzuela, a three-ball from the right side, and then a steal and breakaway bucket and the Wolves and their scoring ace were ready to punch the pedal through the metal.

Toss in back-to-back buckets from Valenzuela, with William Davidson and Downes zipping perfect set-up passes to the silky-smooth senior, and Darrington had few answers.

Dominic Coffman, rampaging from one end of the floor to the other and enjoying his best offensive performance of the season, capped the first quarter with another steal and swooping layup.

Powered by 11 points off the fingertips of Downes, the Wolves had a 19-6 lead heading into the first break, and it felt like much more.

Darrington couldn’t generate much offense, and definitely couldn’t slow down Coupeville, which got points from six different players in the second quarter en route to building a 38-14 halftime lead.

The Wolves attacked from all angles, with Alex Murdy and Downes droppin’ three-balls, while Ryan Blouin, Cole White, and Coffman converted steals into points.

Dominic Coffman will devour your soul. (Chloe Marzocca photo)

Fab frosh Chase Anderson turned an offensive rebound into a bucket, snagging an air ball and putting it back up and in a millisecond before a shot clock violation, while White got fancy.

Streaking down court after picking the pocket of a Logger ballhandler, he was headed for a layup, only to find his path blocked at the very last second.

Stopping on a dime, White stepped back and drained a short jumper over the arms of a defender, the ball splashing home as dad Greg nodded in approval from the Wolf bench.

“Just the way I did it back in the day,” was what his expression seemed to say.

To which Sherman arched one eyebrow in the direction of his assistant coach, then went back about his business.

Job #1 was getting quality floor time for everyone on the roster, and he nailed it.

With the Wolf starters sitting out most of the second half, Coffman and Nick Guay picked up the scoring slack, the former jamming the ball down the throats of the defenders, the latter showing off a series of slick inside moves.

When the ball went back outside, Blouin made the Loggers pay, knocking down a pair of second-half treys to help push the lead out to 40.

Before the running clock kicked into play, Murdy also delivered a crowd-pleasing defensive gem.

Darrington had the ball on the break, with a Logger careening into the paint in hopes of netting a rare bucket.

Instead Murdy emphatically stuffed the shot, rising up to rip the ball away while delivering a death stare which made his feelings recognizable to everyone in the gym, from the first row to the top of the bleachers.

“Don’t try that again, son. Just don’t.”

Playing his fewest minutes of the season, Downes paced the Wolves with a game-high 16 points, enough to help him achieve a personal milestone.

With his first quarter three-ball, the junior, who entered play Friday averaging a hair under 25 points a night, became the 50th Wolf boy to score 500 career points for a program launched in 1917.

Downes, who heads to Neah Bay with 512 points and counting, passes Jason Bagby (499) and David Lortz (502), moving from #51 to #49 on the all-time list.

He got plenty of support Friday, with Coffman ringing up a season-high 10 points, while Guay banked in nine and Blouin rippled the nets for eight.

Anderson (6), Murdy (5), White (4), Valenzuela (4), Jermiah Copeland (1), and Zane Oldenstadt (1) also scored for the Wolves, with Bronec, Davidson, and Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim seeing floor time.

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim and Co. have won five of their last six. (Bailey Thule photo)

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Nick Guay slashes hard to the hoop. (Bailey Thule photo)

These are the nights which bring a warm glow to a coach’s heart.

Facing off with the tallest team in the Northwest 2B/1B League Tuesday, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball squad proved big hearts can beat big bodies.

Doing all the important things sometimes overlooked in the buzz over scoring records — hitting the glass, closing out on defense, making the extra pass — the Wolves held on for a 44-39 win over visiting Mount Vernon Christian in an old-fashioned bar room brawl.

The win, Coupeville’s fourth in its last five games, lifts Brad Sherman’s squad to 6-5, while the Hurricanes slip to 9-5.

While the game featured two league rivals squaring off, the result doesn’t count in the conference standings.

Thanks to a quirk in the schedule, the rematch, which is Jan. 20 in Mount Vernon, is the rumble which matters most as Coupeville seeks to defend its league crown.

But whether it was a “league” or “non-league” game, Tuesday’s tilt was a biggie, and one the Wolves really wanted.

From William Davidson drawing two offensive charging fouls on MVC players in the first quarter, to fellow Wolf bruisers Zane Oldenstadt and Dominic Coffman yanking down rebounds, this was a true team effort.

Add in ferocious defensive play from Alex Murdy and Cole White, doing their best to thoroughly frustrate Hurricane ballhandlers, and Sherman came away pleased.

“That was a good team win,” he said.

“A lot of guys played really tough tonight and got their jobs done, especially our guys battling in the paint and out pressuring the ball.”

MVC actually jumped in front early, claiming a 6-0 lead, before Coupeville stormed back.

Logan Downes popped back-to-back three-balls, kicking off a run of 13 straight points from the Wolf junior, busting things open a bit.

After teaming up with Oldenstadt on a scorching give-and-go play, Downes also picked up a bucket on a slash through the heart of the Hurricane defense, before capping things with a third trey.

Frazzled, MVC lost the ball in the back court, or rather, it was ripped away by Coffman, who immediately turned it into a bucket of his own, and the Wolves were romping, up 15-6.

The visitors were a resilient bunch, though, getting a three-point play the hard way to end the first quarter, then holding Coupeville to just five points in the second frame.

While slowed down a bit, the Wolves never lost control of the game, or relinquished the lead after claiming it for the first time.

White drew a charge on an MVC player, before Downes ran down the clock, cutting hard to the basket for a layup with a single, solitary second left before the halftime break.

His bucket staked Coupeville to a 20-17 lead, and the Wolves jumped hard on the Hurricanes to open both the third and fourth quarters.

The first time around, a 12-2 surge, with Ryan Blouin and Downes nailing back-to-back three-balls and White netting his 100th career point on a short jumper, pushed the lead out to 13 points.

MVC hung tough, closing the third quarter on its own 8-0 run to get back within 32-27, but the Wolves put together a 10-4 tear to open the fourth, all but sealing the win.

Coupeville’s buckets down the stretch were fueled by big plays on the defensive end of the floor.

Murdy yanked away a rebound, and White made off with a steal, with both Wolves feeding Downes on breakaway baskets.

Then there was Davidson, standing tall in the paint, turning a rebound into a kickout to White, who beat the defense down the floor.

While MVC narrowed the final margin from 11 to five during a frantic final 45 seconds, time ran out on the Hurricanes, with a layup under pressure from Nick Guay capping Coupeville’s offensive effort.

Downes had a hot hand, pumping in a game-high 28 points, and moves within four of cracking the 500-point club, while Guay (5), White (4), Coffman (4), and Blouin (3) provided support.

Jonathan Valenzuela, Oldenstadt, Davidson, and Murdy may not have scored on this night, but all four provided key contributions for a team which earned the victory by continuing to showcase its ability to survive a string of rough-and-tumble foes.

Up next is a home game against Darrington (3-7) Friday, with this one counting in the league standings, and a long trip Saturday to play non-conference rival Neah Bay (4-3).

That second contest kicks off a run of road games for the Wolves, who play six of their final eight regular-season bouts away from Whidbey Island.

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Camden Glover, seen with Avery Buchanan-Williams, scored eight points Tuesday in a win. (Stevie Glover photo)

Play as a pack, win as a pack.

Spreading its offense between seven players Tuesday, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad overcame a red-hot rival.

Mount Vernon Christian freshman Jake Feddema rattled the rims for a game-high 24 points, but the host Wolves still came out on top, rolling to a 41-37 win.

Coupeville’s third-straight victory, it lifts Hunter Smith’s squad to 4-3 on the season.

The Wolves countered Feddema by spreading the ball out, with different players stepping up at different times.

In the opening quarter, it was CHS fab frosh Chase Anderson, who banked in seven of his team-high 11 points as Coupeville built a 12-7 lead.

The Wolves stretched their advantage out to 23-16 at the half, watched as MVC narrowed its deficit to 34-30 after three quarters, then cruised in for the win.

Aiden O’Neill knocked down a pair of second-half three-balls to push his scoring total out to 10 points, while Camden Glover banged away down low for eight.

Hunter Bronec (4), Landon Roberts (4), Hurlee Bronec (3), and Johnny Porter (1) rounded out Coupeville’s scoring, while Malachi Somes and Jack Porter also saw floor time.

The Wolf JV returns to action Saturday with a trip to Neah Bay for a non-conference clash.

While Coupeville’s varsity hosts Darrington Friday in a Northwest 2B/1B League tilt, the Loggers don’t have a second team this season.

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