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Posts Tagged ‘Boys Basketball’

Trey Stewart fires off a pass. (Julie Wheat photos)

There is hope.

In a world where the NBA has convinced every kid they should be jacking up three-balls every time they cross midcourt, the subtle art of making free throws and layups — you know, those dusty old-school things which often win and lose ball games — has taken a hit.

But they ain’t dead yet.

Yes, we’re gonna talk about everything that happened Monday as the Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball squads closed their season with three wars against visiting South Whidbey.

But first, we’re taking a moment to praise Henry Tierney.

This dude is a 7th grader at CMS, turns out for basketball, makes the practice squad, keeps on coming back, day after day.

“He’s been working hard,” says Wolf coach RayLynn Ratcliff.

Monday afternoon, Tierney, Jack Gustafson, and Gabe Ketterling — the three practice squad players who hung tough start to finish — are rewarded with floor time. All make a positive impact.

But it’s Tierney who subtly blows my mind.

Gets fouled, goes to the line — a place where so many shots have clanked off the rim during the hundreds of high school and middle school games I have witnessed in person.

So, so many missed free throws…

But Tierney not only knocks down both his charity shots, his technique is dang near flawless — the kind of artwork you want to frame.

It’s like Mark Price (that’s why you have Wikipedia, look him up…) has been reincarnated on the prairie in the body of a Cow Town teen, and it gives the old-school hoops junkie in me hope again.

In the roar and crush of a 2025 middle school game, it’s Hoosiers in live action, and it … is … beautiful.

The rest of the day? Not too bad, either.

 

Level 1:

Stronger every day.

Coupeville’s top squad closed on a tear, winning four of its final five games to finish 4-4 on the season, punctuating things by whacking South Whidbey 46-29.

Leading from start to finish, the Wolves ran the Cougars off the floor to earn the season sweep.

OK, now, technically, South Whidbey did score the first bucket of the game, but a little under seven minutes later it was 19-2, so welcome to tsunami season and there’s no place to hide.

Six different Wolves poured in buckets in the opening frame, with Kamden Ratcliff and River Simpson combining for 11 points to light the fuse.

Whether CMS was knocking down runners or banging away down in the paint, everything was dropping for the host team, which looked like it might go for 100 in its final run.

It wasn’t to be, however, as the rim turned unfriendly during the second quarter, with Coupeville getting just a free throw from Trey Stewart and a coast-to-coast sprint for a bucket from Kamden Ratcliff.

The defense was still sharp, though, and the Wolves carried a 22-10 lead into the halftime break, before rediscovering their shooting touch in the second half.

CMS big man Diesel Eck delivered back-to-back thunderous rejections of South Whidbey shots to kick off the third quarter, and the Wolves greatly benefited from crisp passing.

Kamden Ratcliff spun a laser to Trey Stewart for a layup, while Simpson drove and dished to a suddenly open Gracen Joiner for another bucket, as Coupeville stretched the lead out to 35-17 heading into the fourth.

That lead got all the way up to 39-17, was momentarily cut down to 39-25, then pushed back out to 46-27 before South Whidbey converted a put-back at the buzzer to set the final score.

A look at the scorebook shows the kind of balance CMS coach Alex Evans loves to see, with Kamden Ratcliff (14), Simpson (11), and Trey Stewart (9) leading the way.

Joiner (6), Eck (3), Xander Beaman (2), and Jacob Lujan (1) also tallied points, with Darius Stewart, Colton Ashby, Aiden Wheat, and Braxten Ratcliff all seeing floor time.

With the core of the team heading off to high school ball next season, CMS coaches took a moment to praise the growth of the veterans.

“I’d love to give a shout out to all our 8th graders,” RayLynn Ratcliff said. “Us coaches have been with them their entire middle school career and to see them grow, push themselves, overcome challenges and frustrations, has been such a reward.

“I encourage them to continue to not be afraid to do the hard work, to always believe in themselves and always push towards all their goals and dreams they have, to not be afraid of failure if they’re giving 100% and to never stop loving the game.”

 

“You shall not pass!”

 

Level 2:

Say hello to the juggernauts.

Closing with a 36-33 win Monday, Coupeville survived a late South Whidbey rally to finish 7-1 on the season, winning its final six rumbles.

The finale for RayLynn Ratcliff’s unit was on its way to being a blowout, before the scrappy Cougars made things interesting down the stretch.

The Wolves jumped on their visitors from the opening tip, raining down the first seven points thanks to buckets from Braxten Ratcliff and Brady Sherman and a three-ball off the fingertips of Nico Strong.

Up 9-4 at the first break, Coupeville got a burst of points from Abel O’Neil in the second to carry a 20-12 advantage into halftime.

Raining down pain on his hoops foes like his mom and aunts used to do, the scrappy Wolf guard swished a runner, then circled outside and banged home a three-ball from Prairie Center’s parking lot to cap the half.

The Wolves continued to push the pace, with Sherman setting up Logan Flowers for a bucket right at the end of the third quarter to stake the prairie hotshots to a 28-14 lead.

Then things got interesting.

South Whidbey erupted for a 16-5 run to open the fourth quarter, scoring more in six minutes than it had in the previous 21 minutes, and the lead was sliced all the way down to 33-30.

Thankfully, the Wolves tamped down the angina a bit, hitting three of four free throws in the final thirty seconds, with Sherman rippling the net on both of his opportunities, to push things back to 36-30.

With the win no longer within reach, the Cougars still found a bit of a miracle at the very end, sinking a miracle three-ball a half-tick before the final buzzer to rile up their fans.

Braxten Ratcliff scorched the nets for 14 points to lead the charge, with O’Neil (7), Strong (5), Sherman (4), Gracen Joiner (4), and Logan Flowers (2) also scoring.

Defensive bulldog Brayden Grinstead, Luke Blas, Jack Bailey, Mario Martinez, Hayden Maynes, and Xander Flowers rounded out the Wolf roster.

 

Jack Bailey punches the pedal through the metal.

 

Level 3:

Only in middle school.

The Cascade League, in its infinite “what the heck is wrong with you?” wisdom, doesn’t allow overtime to be played in middle school basketball games except at level one.

Which means we all have to accept an 18-18 tie, when we know in our hearts of hearts that stalemates are acceptable only for soccer fans, who live for that type of thing.

So, while Wolf fans can be happy (a bit) that Jaylen Nitta’s crew rallied from five points down and held South Whidbey scoreless in the fourth to finish 2-4-1 on the campaign, they can also be (a bit) miffed that an extra frame wasn’t played.

I mean, come on. We’d already crushed our butts on the bleachers o’ death for three-hours-plus.

We can’t go on for like five more minutes and have a definitive ending, the way God and James Naismith intended??

Anyway.

The final game of the finale started as a bruising defensive rumble, like something out of the days when the “Bad Boys” Detroit Pistons of the ’80s used to kick Michael Jordan five times in the tender vittles on every play.

Trailing 4-2 at the first break, the Wolves got a spark in the second quarter. Or, more appropriately, a series of sparks.

There was Gabe Ketterling banking in a runner like he was shooting pool.

Luke Blas rolling through a wave of defenders to get a three-point play the hard way — AKA a bucket plus free throw after being slapped six or seven times during the trip through the paint.

Those magnificent free throws from Henry Tierney. You might have read about them earlier.

And, not to be forgotten, some serious work cleaning the glass by hard-working rebounding ace Burke Winger, plus Logan Flowers bringing the ball up court while pounding each dribble like the ball owes him money.

With all that sort of balancing the ref’s decision to simply not call traveling, ever, on a South Whidbey squad prone to taking more steps than James Harden, the Wolves hung tough down 14-9 at the half, then 18-13 with about a minute to go in the third.

From that point on, Coupeville clamped down on defense, holding the Cougars scoreless for the game’s final eight minutes.

A free throw from Flowers to cap the third quarter trimmed the lead to 18-14, before Blas, playing like his aunt, Sherry Bonacci, in her late ’80s prime, knocked down back-to-back buckets in the fourth to force the tie.

South Whidbey had multiple chances to win the game in a frantic final assault on the basket, as the clock crawled to 0:00, but Coupeville pulled down the game’s final rebound to prevent disaster.

Blas finished with a game-high nine points, while Flowers (5), Ketterling (2), and Tierney (2) also delivered gifts to the hoops gods, while Oliver Miller, Jack Gustafson, Liam Stoner, Logan Dees, Dom Durbin, Jack Bailey, Winger, Jon Driscoll, Gabe Reed, Vincent Alguire, and Alton Hansen all saw action.

 

Diesel Eck rumbles down low.

 

Final season scoring stats:

Diesel Eck – 97
Kamden Ratcliff – 82
Les Queen – 71
River Simpson – 70
Braxten Ratcliff – 66
Trey Stewart – 53
Luke Blas – 36
Gracen Joiner – 36
Logan Flowers – 35
Xander Flowers – 32
Brady Sherman – 28
Nico Strong – 27
Dreyke Mendiola – 25
Abel O’Neil – 25
Liam Stoner – 18
LJ Schultz – 11
Alton Hansen – 10
Henry Purdue – 10
Gabe Reed – 10
Hayden Maynes – 7
Jack Bailey – 6
Xander Beaman – 6
Logan Dees – 6
Brayden Grinstead – 5
Mica McCloskey – 4
Aiden Wheat – 4
Mario Martinez – 3
Jon Driscoll – 2
Gabe Ketterling – 2
Darius Stewart – 2
Henry Tierney – 2
Maverick Walling – 2
Colton Ashby – 1
Jacob Lujan – 1

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Davin Houston torched the nets for a varsity career-high 19 points Friday afternoon. (Julie Wheat photo)

A strong finish. Balanced scoring. Better than average free throw shooting.

There were a lot of positives Friday afternoon for the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball team as it played its first road game of the year.

Unfortunately for the Wolves, there was just one negative — a cold start — and it proved to be too much to overcome in a 63-56 loss on Orcas Island.

With the defeat to the undefeated (3-0) Vikings, the Wolves slip to 0-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 1-4 overall, with a home game against Mount Vernon Christian set for Tuesday.

Friday’s rumble featured the varsity boys playing first, and whether it was the long ferry ride or something else, Coupeville wasn’t clicking at first, falling behind 18-4 through one quarter of play.

Orcas sank four of its five three-balls in the opening frame, with Viking gunner Joe Stevens nailing three as he singed the nets for 13 of his team-high 19 points to set the early pace.

After that, however, the Wolves found their rhythm, outscoring their hosts 52-45 the rest of the way.

Coupeville cut the deficit down to 31-22 at the half, saw it get nudged back out to 45-34 after three quarters, then poured in 22 points across the game’s final eight minutes.

CHS didn’t get to the free throw line as often as Orcas did, but shot with much more consistency once there, sinking 17-22 attempts while the Vikings clanked their way to a 14-29 performance.

Brad Sherman’s squad also had the kind of balanced scoring any coach likes to see, with three different players landing in double figures.

Davin Houston, who had 11 varsity points to his credit coming into the contest, went off for a game-high 19, scoring in every frame and doing it in a variety of ways.

The Wolf junior knocked down a pair of three-balls, as did senior Chase Anderson, who had 13 points, while Camden Glover banged home 16 while controlling the paint.

Malachi Somes (4), Riley Lawless (2), and Aiden O’Neill (2) also tallied points, with Liam Blas, Carson Grove, and Easton Green seeing floor time.

With his 13 points, Anderson gets to 676 and moves from #26 to #24 on the CHS boys career scoring chart, passing ’70s legend Foster Faris (668) and ’90s big man Virgil Roehl (674).

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Christopher Zenz slashes to the hoop. (Julie Wheat photo)

One team took care of business.

Making the first road trip of the season Friday, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball team led from start to finish, polishing off host Orcas Island 45-24 in the league opener for both teams.

The victory lifts the Wolves to 1-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 2-3 overall, with a Tuesday home tilt against always-tough Mount Vernon Christian coming up quickly.

Squaring off with the Vikings, Coupeville claimed the advantage in every quarter.

Up 10-5 at the first break, with Josh Stockdale having poured in eight points fueled by a pair of three-balls, CHS got brutal on defense in the second quarter, holding Orcas to just two points.

That staked the Wolves to a 17-7 lead at the break, which soon blossomed into a 31-14 margin by the time the third quarter had come to a close.

Stockdale finished with 11 points, while running mate Carson Grove led all scorers with a season-high 17.

Toss in nine points from Jayden McManus, four from Liam Lawson, and a bucket apiece for Trent Thule and Nathan Coxsey, and the scoring came from all directions.

Khanor Jump, Brian Thompson, Ayden Warren, Christopher Zenz, and Jaden Flores Garcia also saw floor time for the triumphant Wolves.

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Camden Glover can torch the net from inside or outside. (Julie Wheat photo)

They needed this.

After playing three hotly contested games to open the season, while coming up on the short end of each rumble, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball team led from (almost) start to finish Tuesday to capture its first victory.

Beating visiting East Jefferson 64-47, the Wolves, who rep a 2B school, crushed the Rivals, a 1A program which combines two former CHS Olympic League foes – Port Townsend and Chimacum.

Now 1-3 after the non-conference win, Brad Sherman’s squad hits the road Friday to travel to Orcas Island for the first Northwest 2B/1B League game of the year.

If the Wolves play like they did Tuesday, they’ll stand a strong shot at sitting atop the (very early) conference standings.

Coupeville, playing once again without a full roster as various players work through early season injuries, jumped right on East Jefferson.

The Rivals notched the game’s first bucket, and held one last lead at 4-3, but then the Wolves tore their foes to shreds for the rest of the opening frame.

CHS big man Camden Glover, who owned the paint all night, took a dish from Chase Anderson and rolled past his defender to slap home a bucket, and Coupeville was launched on a game-busting 20-1 eruption.

The Wolves attacked from all angles, with Anderson going off for 15 points in the first quarter, mixing a pair of three-balls with breakaway buckets in which he simply outran the defense before elevating and delivering gifts to the hoops gods.

Fellow seniors Glover and Aiden O’Neill combined for eight points during the tear, forcing East Jefferson to try and account for multiple incoming bogeys, while missing out on stopping any of them.

The Rivals did claw back, a bit, cutting a 23-7 deficit at the first break back down to 25-17 midway through the second quarter.

Coupeville’s answer?

More Anderson, slashing to the hoop on give-and-go plays.

More Glover, asserting his dominance down low every time he touched the ball.

And a bit of razzle-dazzle from Davin Houston, taking a break from terrorizing the Rivals on defense to hit a swooping layup which had highlight reel written all over it.

Up 35-22 at the half, Coupeville kept up the pressure in the third quarter.

Glover grabbed center stage, with eight more points in the frame, but Houston also returned for another swooping bucket which showed off his high-energy hops, and then Easton Green made his presence known.

A largely unsung role player who embraces doing the kind of dirty work which warms a coach’s heart, the Wolf senior got his biggest offensive showcase Tuesday night.

Green slipped a pair of free throws through the net, bounced outside to drill the bottom of the net out on a three-ball, then came around later in the game to slash to the hoop and knock down a layup off a perfect entry pass.

Everything was rosy at 55-35 heading into the fourth, at which point the Wolves decided to give their coach a brief burst of angina.

East Jefferson hit back-to-back three-balls to key an 11-0 surge which cut the lead back to single-digits and make the always-calm Brad Sherman ever so slightly hunch his shoulders.

Not to worry, however, as the Wolves stiffened up on defense, holding the Rivals to just a single point over the game’s final four minutes, stretching the final margin back to 15 and assuring they would not be running lines from now until Friday.

For the first time this season, CHS had two players top 20 points in the same game, with Anderson banking in 25, and Glover powering his way to 21.

With his season-best performance, Glover joins the 150-point career club (he’s actually sitting at 160), while his running mate continues to move up into rarefied air.

Anderson, now with 663 career points, bounces from #29 all-time to #26 on the Wolf boys’ scoring chart, passing Jason McFadyen (654), Wade Ellsworth (659), and Pat Bennett (659) and moving within five of #25 Foster Faris (668).

Green and O’Neill each popped for seven Tuesday, while Houston knocked down four, and Malachi Somes and Liam Blas saw floor time.

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Brian Thompson, seen during soccer season, is part of a young, promising Wolf JV basketball squad. (Julie Wheat photo)

Back to the drawing board.

After three very competitive games to open the season, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad hit a rut in the road Tuesday, falling 58-18 to visiting East Jefferson.

The non-conference loss, coming to a 1A program which combines students from two high schools — Port Townsend and Chimacum — drops the Wolves to 1-3, with a road trip to Orcas Island set for Friday.

With a young, resilient squad at their beck and call, CHS coaches can expect a strong bounce back.

Not much went right for the Wolves against East Jefferson, with the host team falling behind 13-2 after one quarter of play and 26-8 by the halftime break.

Things didn’t get much better from there, as the visiting Rivals then scorched the nets for 21 points in the third quarter alone.

Coupeville did spread out its offensive workload, with Nathan Coxsey leading the way with five points.

Carson Grove (3), Josh Stockdale (3), Jayden McManus (2), Trent Thule (2), Ayden Warren (2), and Liam Lawson (1) also scored, with Brian Thompson, Chris Zenz, and Jaden Flores Garcia seeing floor time for the Wolves.

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