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Posts Tagged ‘Boys Basketball’

Alex Murdy was a breakout star on both ends of the floor this season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Right now, right here, it’s going to hurt.

When you leave your sweat and blood on the hardwood, and you’re left, hands on knees, watching the final moments of your high school hoops career tick away too rapidly, you want the scoreboard to reflect a win.

And when it doesn’t, it stings. Badly.

So, in the moment, it’s very likely the Coupeville High School boys basketball players will exit Spokane unsatisfied, unhappy, incomplete.

A 62-53 loss to Lake Roosevelt at the 2B state tournament, in a game in which the Wolves led from opening tip to midway through the third quarter, abruptly ends a season for the ages.

Coming on the heels of a narrow loss to top-ranked Kalama in their state opener, the defeat drops Coupeville to 16-2 and sends it home several days earlier than hoped.

Lake Roosevelt (17-6), a boys basketball program making its 18th appearance at the big dance, advances to the state quarterfinals, where it will play #2 Liberty (Spangle).

One team still harbors hopes of a state title, while the other is done, with six seniors headed towards graduation.

But, if not now, at some point — on the bus ride back to Whidbey, somewhere in the middle of a spring sports season ready to get underway, months from now, or when they are old men — each of the players on this year’s CHS team will hopefully feel something deeper than this momentary pain.

Pride.

A sense of accomplishment.

Appreciation for their place in a 105-year history.

In a season that was unlike any other — when three-a-week Covid tests meant you never knew who would be in the lineup from night to night — this group of Wolves changed the culture of the program.

They were the last unbeaten 2B boys team standing in the state.

They won a league title for the first time since 2002, back when coach Brad Sherman was still a player.

They won a district crown for the first time since 1970.

They advanced to the state tourney for the first time since 1988, and rocked two dynasty programs back on their heels, hard.

Beyond the wins, at a time when mask mandates and pandemic fatigue could have crippled attendance at games, these Wolves brought the joy back.

They flew to the ball on defense.

They smacked their closest rivals — shredding South Whidbey and ensuring Oak Harbor will cry for a decade — and didn’t back down or crack under pressure.

They shared the ball, feeding the hot hand, each player doing the small things and celebrating each other.

They were, in short, a team, and not a collection of individuals.

They filled the stands to bursting — making the gym in 2022 feel like what old-school Wolf fans tell us it was like in the go-go ’70s.

Former Coupeville hoops stars Chuck Hardee (middle) and Bill Jarrell stopped by the Spokane Arena to join Renae Mulholland in cheering on the new-school Wolves.

Most of all, these Wolves have made the next generation want to be basketball stars.

From the lil’ kids dancing behind the bench at games, getting high-fives from X and Hawk and Dom, to the elementary school students who packed Main Street to cheer the team bus departing for state, one thing rings true.

Coupeville is a basketball town again.

Today, they cheer. Tomorrow, they’re Coupeville’s next basketball stars. (Mandi Black photo)

So, to the Wolves, when you look back at the Lake Roosevelt game in an hour, a day, a decade, a lifetime, the score will slip away.

What you built, how you played, that will remain.

You earned the respect of those in the stands, and those at home watching the stream.

You played like wild animals unleashed Wednesday night, and it was freakin’ beautiful to see.

When everything was clicking in the early going, when Coupeville busted out to a 9-0 run to open a game which tipped off at a hair past 9 PM, it was carnage unleashed.

The Maraudin’ Murdy boys were up in every ballhandler’s face — Xavier looking intense and Alex looking genuinely unhinged (that’s a compliment) — and Lake Roosevelt had no answer.

Coupeville, meanwhile, was acing every test question.

Grady Rickner popped a silky-smooth jumper.

Every time a Lake Roosevelt player tried to ramble through the paint, Caleb Meyer was there to deny entry.

Xavier Murdy slashed hard to the hoop, his brother delivering the ball with a wicked pass which skidded through a defender’s hands.

Then, bobbing and weaving and smooth-talking both the ref and the defender — all while nonchalantly flicking the ball skyward — Hawthorne Wolfe stroked the first of his four three-balls.

Lake Roosevelt didn’t totally crack, but even chipping away at the lead, it trailed 15-9 at the end of the first quarter.

Logan Martin came up with a resounding block down low to snuff out a late shot and the Wolves headed to the bench with a spring in their step.

The Wolves wait for their moment in the spotlight. (Morgan White photo)

The good times continued through a chunk of the second frame, with Logan Downes and Wolfe nailing back-to-back treys to get the lead up to double-digits at 21-11.

Later in the quarter, when Downes, a sweet-shooting sophomore, rained down another three-ball, his wing man launched a celebration big enough to catch the attention of the NFHS Network announcers.

“Get yourself a hype man like Hawthorne Wolfe!” one of the voice-over dudes crowed.

“He knew that shot was going in before it left Downes fingertips, and man, was he happy about it!”

But you don’t build the kind of hoops legacy Lake Roosevelt has by giving up, and the guys who live up by the Grand Coulee Dam mounted a comeback in the second half.

Coupeville, up 28-23 at the half, was still ahead 32-29 several minutes into the third, after Xavier Murdy savagely rejected a shot, then set Rickner up for a bucket on the ensuing breakaway.

Lake Roosevelt launched an 11-0 run, however, snatching the lead for the first time all night, eventually stretching their own advantage out to 10 points.

The Wolves proved almost as resilient, using a 6-0 spurt at the end of the third to get within four, then an 8-2 surge in the fourth to cut the margin to 50-47.

That was as close as Coupeville would get, however, despite Wolfe putting together a final quarter to remember.

Hawthorne Wolfe, making highlights to the end. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A four-year varsity starter, Hawk has played a vital role in this year’s success, while also losing three games (and his Senior Night) to Covid protocols.

The young man who came of age on the floor wearing the name of his fallen teammate, Bennett Boyles, etched on his shoes, went out honoring their shared legacy.

Playing in what would turn out to be his final high school hoops clash, Hawk got the magic going, knocking down a pair of in-close floaters and a pair of way-out-there three-balls, dropping 10 of his team-high 16 points in the final frame.

Wolfe’s final basket as a Wolf was vintage Hawk, the ball arcing to the heavens before flipping the nets and making a bit of history.

That final three-ball gives Wolfe exactly 800 points in a CHS uniform, making him the 14th Coupeville boy to achieve the feat in 105 years.

Among those he joins in the club are three of his coaches – Sherman (874), Arik Garthwaite (867), and Hunter Smith (847).

Xavier Murdy and Downes each tossed in 10 points in support of Wolfe, with the former closing his own stellar prep career with 482 points.

Rickner (7), Meyer (5), and Alex Murdy (5) also scored, with Cole White and Martin seeing floor time.

The game was the swan song for seniors Meyer, Rickner, Wolfe, Xavier Murdy, Martin, and Miles Davidson, who recorded stats this season while rehabbing an injury.

 

Final season scoring stats:

Xavier Murdy – 261
Caleb Meyer – 179
Logan Downes – 172
Alex Murdy – 157
Grady Rickner – 151
Hawthorne Wolfe – 138
Logan Martin – 50
Cole White – 37
Dominic Coffman – 21
Jonathan Valenzuela – 10
Nick Guay – 6
Zane Oldenstadt – 3

The Wolves will return. (Morgan White photo)

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Caleb Meyer and dad Frank snap a two-man selfie before the Coupeville High School boys basketball team hits the road for the 2B state tournament.

When it’s been 34 years between trips, people tend to get excited.

The Coupeville High School boys basketball team left for Spokane, and the state tourney, Tuesday morning, the first such trek for the program since 1988.

Before the Wolves blew out of Cow Town and hit the open road, they got a send-off from classmates, parents, fans, teachers, and — loudest of all — the local elementary school kids.

Soak it in. No one can say for sure when that next trip will come.

The first few moments on the bus, before everyone gets stir crazy. (Photo by JohnPhotos.net)

For the first time since 1988, that’s where the Wolf boys are headed. (Angie Downes photo)

The CHS cheerleaders are making the trip to Spokane as well. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Cole White Fan Club is strong. (Morgan White photo)

The bus awaits. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Jonathan Valenzuela runs the gauntlet of well-wishers. (Morgan White photo)

Elementary school students lined the road to root on their hoops heroes as they left town. (Deb Sherman photo)

The Wolves carry memories of their late, much-loved hoops teammate Bennett Boyles with them. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Greg (left) and Cole White hit the road to Spokane. (Morgan White photos)

Let the 27-hour trip begin!

Well, OK, the trip from Coupeville to Spokane probably takes a little less time than that – though sitting in a school bus, it’s likely to feel that long.

The CHS boys basketball team is bound for the 2B state tournament, where it will put its 16-1 record on the line against Lake Roosevelt (16-6) Wednesday.

That game tips off at 9 PM and is a loser-out affair.

Win Wednesday, and Coupeville is guaranteed to play at least twice more, and maybe three times, at the Spokane Arena.

This is the first trip to the big dance for the Wolf boys hoops program since 1988.

The photos above and below, which capture the town-wide celebration send-off this morning, come to us courtesy Morgan White.

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Grady Rickner and the Coupeville High School boys basketball team leave Tuesday for Spokane, and the state 2B tournament. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wave bye-bye-bye as the wheels on the bus go round and round.

The Coupeville High School boys basketball team hits the road Tuesday, on its way to Spokane for the 2B state tournament.

The Wolves leave the CHS gym at 11 AM, then roll down Main Street on their way to the highway.

That’s to allow Coupeville Elementary School students a chance to participate in the fond farewells, and the community is also invited to join the celebration.

Coupeville, 16-1 on the season after a narrow loss to top-seeded Kalama in the state opener Friday in Battle Ground, begins play Wednesday at the Spokane Arena with a 9 PM game against Lake Roosevelt.

That’s a loser-out game, with the winner moving on to the double-elimination quarterfinals.

The state tourney runs through Saturday, with the top six teams bringing home trophies.

This is the first time the CHS boys basketball team has made it to state since 1988 and continues a season of excellence.

Brad Sherman’s squad won a Northwest 2B/1B League title, the program’s first league crown since 2002.

The Wolves followed that up with a District 1/2 title — its second district title in 105 seasons, and first since 1970.

Injured senior Miles Davidson has stayed busy compiling stats.

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Caleb Meyer and Co. pushed top-seeded Kalama hard in their state playoff opener. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s a ding in the armor, but not a fatal blow.

Friday night, the Coupeville High School boys basketball team absorbed its first loss of the season, but the dream of bringing home a trophy from the state tournament still lives.

The Wolves, making their first appearance at the big dance in 34 years, fell 59-54 to Kalama, the top-ranked 2B team, in a game played at Battle Ground.

Coupeville, which used a blistering defense to spark a late 10-0 run to almost pull out the win, falls to 16-1, while Kalama improves to 20-1.

The Chinooks only loss this season came in their season opener, when a chunk of the team was still AWOL after winning a state football title.

Both teams advance to the next level of the state tourney, set for the Spokane Arena Mar. 2-5.

With the win, Kalama advances to the quarterfinals, while Coupeville will play either Lake Roosevelt or River View Mar. 2 in a loser-out game.

The top six teams at state bring home trophies.

The first round of state, played at “regional” sites, features four loser-out games pitting teams ranked #9-#16 in the draw, resulting in 12 teams advancing to Spokane.

Seeded #8, Coupeville was assured of playing at least two games, regardless of how the Kalama game went down.

For a team repping a program which last played at state in 1988 and won its first league title in 20 years and first district title in 52 seasons this year, the Wolves showed no signs of nerves.

Caleb Meyer drilled the bottom out of the net on a pull-up three-ball to open the scoring, and Coupeville played even with Kalama for much of the first half.

With the refs calling just three fouls total in the first half — a lesson for the folks wearing black and white striped shirts in our region — both teams got to play a fast-and-physical style.

The Wolves often looked quicker, while the Chinooks are a rugged bunch which hits the glass with a cold fury.

Twice Kalama nudged ahead in the first frame, only to see Xavier Murdy knot things right back up with three-balls which flipped the net high as the ball slid through.

The second trey was set up by a zippy pass off of Hawthorne Wolfe’s fingertips, with the scoreboard flicking to 11-11 as X-Man hit paydirt.

Trailing 13-11 at the first break, Coupeville put together a 7-0 run midway through the second quarter to pull back in front at 23-21.

All seven of the points came from the Maraudin’ Murdy boys, with younger brother Alex jumping in to aid Xavier.

Xavier Murdy topped all scorers Friday with 24 points.

Unfortunately for Coupeville, its only real weak stretch followed almost immediately.

Pounding away down low, Kalama used a variety of short-range shots to close the half on a 10-0 spurt, walking to the locker room with a solid 31-23 advantage.

But the Wolves weren’t ready to go away quietly. Cause that’s not their style.

Kalama, playing with precision and catching a ride on the rugged shoulders of Jackson Esary, who banged home 23 points, tried repeatedly to pull away.

Each time, however, Coupeville denied the Chinooks.

Facing a 14-point deficit midway through the third, the Wolves stormed back to cut it down to seven, thanks to a whole lot of Murdy boys and some gut-check buckets from sophomore Logan Downes.

Then, after Kalama stretched the margin back out to 13, CHS coach Brad Sherman unleashed a full-court press to fuel Coupeville’s biggest run.

Down 57-44, the Wolves forced multiple turnovers, turning the extra chances into a magical 10-0 explosion which set the Chinooks back on their heels.

Grady Rickner got things started with a sweet lil’ jumper, before Meyer nailed a free throw and Alex Murdy converted off of an offensive rebound.

That set up Xavier Murdy to seize the spotlight, as the perpetual ball of energy capped a game-high 24-point performance with two of the biggest baskets of his prep career.

First he knocked down a shot in the paint, but not before Downes punched the ball free and Alex Murdy snatched it away from the Chinooks, feeding his brother with a pinpoint pass.

With the Coupeville fans — who made a 400+ mile round-trip — shaking the bleachers, the Wolves forced Kalama to throw the ball away on the next possession, followed by Xavier Murdy getting magical.

X-Man’s three-ball went up, hit the rim, popped straight up, kissed the heavens, then tumbled back through the net, cutting the margin to 57-54 and setting off pandemonium.

But give Kalama credit.

A fair amount of their players knows what it’s like to win a gridiron state championship, and they emerged from a very-tough district tourney after winning back-to-back games in the final seconds.

So, it’s not surprising the Chinooks held up under pressure in the final 37 seconds, netting two free throws to make it a two-possession game, while keeping Coupeville from hitting one (or two) more big shots.

The Murdy boys combined to drop 38 on Kalama, with Xavier (24) and Alex (14) both reaching personal milestones along the way.

With 201 career points, and counting, Alex — Coupeville’s main defensive dynamo — cracks the 200-point club, joining uncle Allen Black (305) and big bro Xavier (472).

X-Man, meanwhile, moves into a tie with Pat O’Grady at #51 on the CHS boys career scoring chart, which dates back 105 seasons.

Downes chipped in Friday with eight points, Meyer and Rickner both banked in four, and Wolfe, Logan Martin, and Cole White saw floor time for Coupeville.

 

State tourney bracket:

http://www.nw1a2bathletics.com/m2/tourn.php?act=vt&tid=3462

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