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Posts Tagged ‘Boys Basketball’

The Zinger lives!

One mission accomplished.

Thanks to a Google search where he inadvertently discovered my obsession with his high school hoops exploits, Jack Elzinga has helped me fill in one of the missing pieces of Coupeville High School boys basketball history.

As I’ve tried to compile a complete scoring record for a program which began in 1917, it’s been an uphill battle, especially with anything before the “modern” era.

I’ve felt pretty good about what we have, which goes 398 players deep, though the gaps will always bother me.

While we may never track down stats for the guys from the ’30s and ’40s, I can deal with that.

Scoring was at a much-lower rate back then, and no one from that time period would likely crack the career top 100, much less top 10.

But three guys from the ’50s — Elzinga, Tom Sahli, and Jerry Zylstra — kept me awake at night.

Well that, and the fact “Big” Mike Criscuola may never get his proper due, as his missing 8th grade stats and questionable playoff totals from other seasons have him #5 all-time, when he’s closer to #1.

But back to Elzinga, Sahli, and Zylstra, and the “missing” seasons of 1951-1952 and 1953-1954.

Or … formerly missing seasons, at least in the case of 53-54.

Thanks to Elzinga, who is a Professor Emeritus for the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering at the University of Florida, we now have scoring stats for that campaign.

The fast facts:

Sahli, a senior, scored 409 points that season, which is the seventh-best single-season performance by a Wolf boy.

Combined with the 310 he scored as a junior, he now sits with 719 points on my list, jumping from #90 to #19 on the career scoring chart.

Though, if someone can come up with totals from Sahli’s sophomore year (51-52), he’ll shoot even higher.

Always something to keep me awake.

Elzinga and Zylstra, sophomores on that 53-54 squad, went for 124 and 122 points, raising their (now final) career totals to 770 and 527, respectively.

That moves Elzinga from #25 to #14 and Zylstra from #59 to #42 all-time.

All while giving current Coupeville sniper Hawthorne Wolfe a little more work to do, as the 1950’s-era players getting their rightful due bumps him back (for a moment) from #47 to #49.

With 492 points and counting and nine games left in this pandemic-shortened season, the CHS junior, who has often expressed interest in players who came before him, will likely take that as a challenge.

As we update the ever-evolving 104-year history of Wolf boys basketball, I also offer up the following from Elzinga.

Like my communications with legendary former CHS coach Bob Barker, it reads more like a well-written book than an email.

 

David,

I did a vanity Google this afternoon and came upon your blog.

I can fill in some of your gaps. I have the 1954 Leloo Cly.

That was my sophomore year and Tom Sahli’s senior year. He averaged 19.5 pts/game. Later I saw him play against Elgin Baylor.

We were a pretty good team – the yearbook said we had the best record in “several years.”

Sahli was our star – we mostly passed the ball around until we could get it to him.

Leloo Cly doesn’t record rebounds but Tom seemed to snatch every one. 

I started every game, averaging 5.6 pts/game.

After Tom graduated I became the center and had two productive seasons. 

I was All-District in the end-of-year tournaments both years. As I recall, I averaged about 15 pts/game both seasons.

Gil Winje put together some scrapbooks of press clippings of the Tri-County basketball league.

These clippings were new to me – no one in Coupeville read the Everett paper.

Gil did this for his brother who played for Granite Falls. He did this for other years too.

Getting the scrapbook of my senior year of basketball was a fabulous treat.

We had a successful season that year but fell short of going to state.

La Conner was a big rivalry but we beat them home-and-away that year, but lost to them in the consolation game of the district tourney.

They went on to state where Gail Thulen set the place on fire, shattering records, scoring 41 points in one game to set the state tourney record.

We’d seen a lot of Gail and I guess we’d learned how to corral him.

I think Gail got a scholarship to Washington State.

Me? I got a scholarship to Everett Junior College, where I played one year before moving on to U-Dub to focus on my studies.

They don’t put this in the record books but I’m sure I’m the only All-District player who survived polio five years previously.

Harold Buckner was an excellent baseball player as you have noted in your blog. We’re still good friends.

This has been a ball for me. So happy to share things with someone with your quirky interests.

If I can find any more info I’ll send it along.

Best regards,

Jack

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Daniel Olson and company waged a war Saturday, coming up just short at the end. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

All you can ask for is a chance to win it at the end.

Some shots go in, some pop back out – it’s the story of basketball since the first time someone heaved a ball at a peach basket.

But after fighting back from an 11-point deficit on the road Saturday, the Coupeville High School varsity boys hoops squad got the look it wanted, which is a moral victory at least.

Unfortunately, what could have been a buzzer-beater rimmed out, as they sometimes do, letting host Friday Harbor escape with a gut-clenching 52-51 win.

The loss drops Coupeville to 1-2 on the season, though with a few small things going in the opposite direction, the Wolves are 3-0 at this point.

As he endured an endless wait for a ferry home, Wolf coach Brad Sherman retained his inner calmness.

“I’m not too worried about the record after the first week,” he said.

“If we can put together four quarters with the heart and tenacity we just saw from our guys in that second half, and clean up the boards a little, we are in a really good place down the stretch.”

Playing at Friday Harbor against a team which also entered the day at 1-1, the Wolves stayed close for a quarter, then hit a roadblock in the second eight-minute span.

Down just 11-10 entering the second quarter, Coupeville was outscored 18-8 in the frame, falling behind 29-18 at the break.

The third quarter was a completely different story, however, thanks to Hawthorne Wolfe’s hot hand, as he rained down 10 points to spark a 17-7 surge.

Sophomore Alex Murdy came off the bench to play big-time defense, helping shut down Friday Harbor’s main weapons, and the rally was on.

The fourth quarter was a war, Hagler and Hearns peppering each other with body blows, only this time it was Hawk and Xavier Murdy going toe-to-toe with Dylan Roberson and Kyson Jackson.

The Coupeville main men outscored their Friday Harbor counterparts 16-8 in the final stage, but the Wolverines managed to find just enough scoring from other folks to hold on to their one-point lead through the final buzzer.

Wolfe finished with a game-high 24, and has rung up 82 through the first three games of the season.

With Coupeville’s next two games at home — May 25 against Concrete and May 27 against La Conner — the CHS junior, with 492 career points, is on target to crack the 500-point club in front of his fans.

Xavier Murdy knocked down 12 points Saturday to back Wolfe, while Alex Murdy (5), Daniel Olson (4), Logan Downes (3), and Grady Rickner (3) also scored.

Logan Martin, Sage Downes, and TJ Rickner all saw floor time, as well.

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Cole White hit for a team-high 16 Saturday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A bounce here, a bounce there.

The Coupeville High School JV boys basketball team played strongly Saturday at Friday Harbor, but couldn’t seem to quite get over the hump against their undefeated foes.

A buzzer-beating three-ball at the end of the first half hurt, and, though they crawled back to within six points in the waning moments, the Wolves fell 57-46.

The loss drops Coupeville’s JV to 0-3 on the season, while their Friday Harbor counterparts improve to 3-0.

The host Wolverines jumped out to an early advantage, leading 13-8 at the first break, before stretching the margin to 31-22 by the half.

It should have been closer, but Friday Harbor caught a favorable rim, with a last-second heave running around the oval, hitting nearly every angle, before somehow flopping through the hoop as the halftime horn sounded.

Coupeville kept at it, playing the Wolverines nearly even in the second half, and getting the deficit down to 50-44 in the late going.

But despite the hot shooting touch of swing players Cole White and Jonathan Valenzuela, time ran out for the Wolves as Friday Harbor closed the game on a 7-2 run.

White paced CHS with 16, including netting a pair of three-balls, while Valenzuela backed him up with a solid 13-point effort.

Nick Guay (7), Zane Oldenstadt (4), Dominic Coffman (2), Quentin Simpson-Pilgrim (2), and Mikey Robinett (2) also scored, while Andrew Williams, Ryan Blouin, and Nathan Ginnings saw floor time.

Coupeville’s next opponent, Concrete, doesn’t have an active JV program, so the young Wolves next take the court Thursday, May 27 when La Conner visits Whidbey Island.

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Grady Rickner looks for some room to rumble. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The sound of hoops echoes across the prairie.

High school basketball was in full action Thursday, with Coupeville hosting Orcas Island for four furious rumbles.

The pics above and below come to us from always-thirsty photo guy John Fisken, and document the happenings at the boys varsity and JV games.

To see everything he shot, and maybe buy some early Christmas gifts, pop over to:

BBB 2021-05-20 vs Orcas – John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

Dominic Coffman catches some air.

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim dares the cameraman to try and take the ball away.

Jonathan Valenzuela pushes the flow of the game.

Logan Downes perfects the art of the free throw.

Wolf girls varsity players stop by to check out the boys game.

William Davidson makes a deposit.

Daniel Olson harasses the shooter.

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Xavier Murdy was a wild man on both ends of the floor Thursday as Coupeville battled Orcas Island. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

You love to see it.

Xavier Murdy scrambling to get back and draw a charging foul when the game was already lost.

Murdy, fighting his way through three rivals to haul in one of his 14 rebounds, again long after the game was decided.

Hawthorne Wolfe, coming off a 20-point performance but not happy with the end result, keeping the lights on in the gym long after the game, putting up shot after shot, only occasionally stopping to argue with the machine feeding him the ball.

It would have been easy for the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball players to have hung their heads Thursday after falling 70-53 to visiting Orcas Island.

That they didn’t, and that they actually carved their deficit in half by the final buzzer, are strong signs for a team which sits at 1-1 on the young season.

Swamped by a second-quarter monsoon in which the Vikings rained down 34 points while seemingly never missing a shot, the Wolves lost an early lead.

And it got worse from there, with Coupeville trailing by almost five touchdowns early in the fourth quarter, while playing a sport where you can’t get seven points back on one play.

Yet the Wolves kept fighting, closed the game on a 17-0 run, and are already circling the June 5 rematch on the calendar.

“I am eager to play them again,” said CHS coach Brad Sherman. “I think we match up very well with them.

“Teams make runs, and they certainly did today. We just have to be mentally tough and be better at stopping those runs.”

The game started with two fairly evenly-matched teams exchanging the lead as the first quarter played out.

Xavier Murdy crashed to the basket hard for a pair of buckets, Wolfe put up a quick seven points on a variety of moves, and X-Man’s younger brother capped things off.

Slashing through the backpedaling defense, Alex Murdy skipped a layup off the glass right before the buzzer to stake Coupeville to a 17-15 lead at the first break.

There were no fans in the stands to get the joint rockin’, but the Wolves, bouncing and barking enthusiastically at each other, made up for it.

And they were right there, at 20-20, after Wolfe hit a runner while hanging in the air long after his defender had retreated to the surly bonds of Earth.

But then the bottom fell out.

The bottom of the net Orcas was shooting at, to be precise, as the Vikings locked on and unloaded, with a 29-5 run to close the second quarter horrifying in its precision.

Everything was going in for the visitors, whether it be long bombs (they outshot Coupeville 10-2 on three-balls, 5-0 in the first half), offensive rebounds put back up and in, or pull-up jumpers on the move.

The exact opposite was happening for Coupeville, as shot after shot rolled around the rim, took a weird last-second skip, or simply popped back up and out.

Other than a couple of free throws, the only Wolf bucket in the last six minutes of the half came on a roll to the hoop by freshman Logan Downes.

Trailing 49-25 at the break, Coupeville got back into a partial groove in the third, then finished strongly in the fourth.

“I love how our guys responded in the second half,” Sherman said. “Certainly, give a lot of credit to Orcas and how they shot the ball, but we never gave in.

“Having things like Xavier crashing the offensive boards hard down 25 is a very positive sign.”

X-Man got his JV counterparts in the stands to get rowdy when he elevated down deep and rejected an Orcas shot, while the Downes brothers hooked up for a nice scoring play.

Sage, a senior, corralled a loose ball, then flipped a pass to Logan, a freshman, who crashed through the defense for a layup in a game in which both brothers scored their first varsity points, uniting them with older brother Hunter on the career scoring chart.

It was a good game to become a made man, as TJ Rickner and Cody Roberts joined Downes brothers #2 and #3, also notching the first varsity points of their prep career.

The tenth and final Orcas trey, very early in the final frame, pushed the margin out to 70-36, but then the Wolves clamped down on both ends of the floor.

Forcing turnovers and hitting the boards with abandon, Coupeville closed with intensity and passion, and another Downes-to-Downes basket.

This time, the assist went to Logan, and the bucket to Sage, proving the duo can share and share alike.

Wolfe finished with a team-high 20 points, but Orcas countered with a nasty one-two combo of Tomas Holmes and Diego Lago, who went for 37 and 20, respectively, while combining to hit all 10 Vikings three-balls.

Logan Downes and Grady Rickner each banked home seven points for the Wolves, with Xavier Murdy (5), Sage Downes (4), and Alex Murdy (3) chipping in to the effort.

Roberts (2), Daniel Olson (2), Logan Martin (2), and TJ Rickner (1) also scored, while freshman Cole White played aggressive defense.

Coupeville gets a chance to bounce right back, traveling to Friday Harbor for a Saturday afternoon rumble between two 1-1 teams.

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