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Posts Tagged ‘Boys Basketball’

TJ Rickner rumbles down low. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hawthorne Wolfe drops a dagger.

Cody Roberts prepares to launch a pass.

Jean Lund-Olsen lets the ball fly.

Miles Davidson ponders his options.

Past and present Wolf stars camp out in the bleachers.

Daniel Olson rains down buckets.

Jacobi Pilgrim (left) and Sean Toomey-Stout make life rough for a rival.

One final burst of hoops action.

Saturday’s matchup against visiting Nooksack Valley was the final time the Coupeville High School boys basketball teams will play this year, or this decade.

On hand to document the final shots, passes, and rebounds was wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken, who brings us the pics seen above.

To take a gander at everything he shot, and maybe buy some glossies for the grandparents, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2019-2020/BBB-2019-12-21-vs-Nooksack-Valley/

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Jean Lund-Olsen, celebrating his 18th birthday Saturday, got the game’s biggest cheer when he scored on a breakaway in the fourth quarter. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One bad quarter crippled the Wolves Saturday afternoon.

But it was how the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball team bounced back which won the approval of its coach.

While CHS couldn’t fully overcome the effects of a 26-7 deficit at the first break, it did play visiting Nooksack Valley virtually even the rest of the game in a 71-48 loss.

The non-conference defeat sends the Wolves into the winter break with a 3-5 record and a lot of positives.

Having 12 days off between games may enable Coupeville to get back some of its injured and sick players — front court warriors Koa Davison, Gavin Knoblich, and Xavier Murdy sat out Saturday — while fine-tuning its game plan.

When they return, the Wolves travel to Chimacum Jan. 3 for a final non-league tilt, then wade into North Sound Conference play.

Saturday Coupeville opened with a crowd-pleasing play, getting a thunderous blocked shot from mop-topped big man Ulrik Wells in the opening moments.

Then, Nooksack went to work.

With the win on Whidbey, the Pioneers are 6-1 this season, with their only loss to 3A Ferndale, and they showed why, running their offense efficiently while dictating the flow of the game on defense.

Coupeville struggled to score in the opening quarter, with a put-back from Wells its lone basket during an opening 16-2 surge from the visitors.

A Hawthorne Wolfe free throw tossed a pebble in the way of Nooksack’s careening SUV, then a Mason Grove jumper and an inside bucket by Jacobi Pilgrim gave CHS a bit of hope.

With the refs calling everything, and then some, a foul-heavy game had already established a herky-jerky rhythm before the first quarter drug to an end.

Saddled with three quick-fire fouls, some more questionable than others, Sean Toomey-Stout, the beating heart of Coupeville’s defense, ended up handcuffed to the bench for much of the first half.

Grove soon followed him off the court, but, at the very least, the refs were quite content to call a lot of fouls on both teams, so numerous Pioneers also quickly discovered the joy of sitting.

That set up a second quarter which was a brawl, as both teams exchanged scoring plays one after another, with neither squad able to string together consecutive buckets over eight minutes which felt like eight hours.

Grove nailed a three-ball from the left side, while Tucker Hall had the best basket of the frame, slashing hard to the hoop where he found a pass from Wells awaiting him, setting up a wham-bam layup for the hard-working senior role player.

Hall did a little bit of everything in his time on the floor Saturday, twice drawing offensive charges on Pioneers flying in hot and out of control as they neared the hoop.

Actually, it arguably should have been three times, but the one call the refs didn’t give to Hall was the one where he bounced off the back wall after absorbing the blow.

Popping up a bit tenderly, he shook his head and smiled, getting congratulatory pats from his teammates, who all had better vision than the dude in the stripes.

Other than a brief lapse late in the third, when the Wolves took a quick snooze and allowed Nooksack to rip off a 14-0 run in approximately 12.3 seconds, Coupeville played strongly through the final three quarters.

Toomey-Stout, back on the floor, made a sensational airborne, one-handed save on a ball headed for the wall to open the third quarter.

Not only did he prevent a Wolf turnover, but the ever-springy one actually picked up an assist on the play, redirecting the ball right onto the fingertips of a waiting Jacobi Pilgrim, who slapped the rock home.

Even in a losing cause, Coupeville scrapped and fought in the game’s waning minutes, closing things on a 16-6 run.

A three-ball from Wolfe snapped out the bottom of the net, Grove snatched a rebound, slid sideways and netted a jumper on the move, and Jean Lund-Olsen got some birthday love.

The CHS senior, celebrating his 18th birthday, swished a free throw to get into the scoring column, before capping things with a driving layup on a breakaway, bringing the Wolf student section to hysterics.

Wolfe and Grove led the attack, finishing with 13 and 10 points, respectively, while Pilgrim (8), Wells (6), Jered Brown (6), Lund-Olsen (3), and Hall (2) also scored.

Toomey-Stout, pulling down a ton o’ rebounds (when the refs let him rumble) and Daniel Olson rounded out the active roster.

With 13 points Saturday, Wolfe reaches a major personal milestone, cracking the Top 100 on the CHS boys career scoring chart, which stretches back 103 seasons.

The sophomore guard has tallied 285 points in a hair under 1.5 seasons, and now sits #98 all-time.

He passed Alex Evans (272), Zepher Loesch (274), Boom Phomvongkoth (275), Kit Manzanares (275), Terry Roberts (277), Keith Jameson (277), and Mike Mallo (282) Saturday.

Grove, a senior, is making his own run up the chart, and with 249 points, is now #114 all-time.

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Daniel Olson tossed in six points Saturday as Coupeville’s JV battled Nooksack Valley. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was like the steady pitter-patter of rain hitting the roof.

Nooksack Valley kept dropping shots Saturday night, a basket here, a basket there, and steadily pulled away from host Coupeville in a boys JV bout.

By the time the game was done, the Wolves had taken a rare ding on the ol’ win/loss record, falling 55-26 to the visiting Pioneers.

With the defeat, Coupeville’s JV heads into winter break sitting at 4-3 on the season.

The Wolves are off for 12 days, not playing again until Jan. 3, when they travel to Chimacum for another non-league match-up.

After that, the CHS boys move into North Sound Conference play, with the remainder of the schedule against their main rivals.

Saturday’s tilt was relatively close through one quarter, as the Wolves, behind seven points from Sage Downes, trailed just 16-9.

That changed a little too quickly for Coupeville’s liking, as Nooksack used a 13-3 tear in the second frame to stretch the halftime margin out to 29-12.

After that, the Pioneers continued to methodically pound away at their hosts, using 14-8 and 12-6 advantages over the final two quarters to set the final score.

Downes paced the Wolves, netting a team-high 12 points, while Daniel Olson backed him up with six.

Grady Rickner (3), Cody Roberts (3), and Miles Davidson (2) rounded out the scorers, while Alex Jimenez, Logan Martin, Andrew Aparicio, and TJ Rickner all saw floor time for CHS.

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Nick Guay leads off a final collection of CMS boys basketball pics. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

William Davidson

Hunter Bronec

Zane Oldenstadt

Cole White

Landon Roberts

Time to put the basketballs away and clean out the photo file.

With the Coupeville Middle School boys hoops season closing Thursday, here’s six Wolf portraits I never got around to using.

They come to us from John Fisken, and are seeing the light of the internet for the first time.

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Logan Downes let fly from the corner. (Morgan White photos)

Harlan Mouw flies to the bucket.

Cole White surveys the scene.

Hunter Bronec shoots over Granite Falls imposing defense.

No one threw up, so that’s a start.

A game after a Langley player let fly in the Coupeville Middle School gym, the only heaving on display Thursday involved players chucking the basketball at the rim.

Facing off with rugged Granite Falls in the season finale, the Wolf boys won a game, came close in a second one, and pushed a very-strong Tiger squad hard in the showcase contest.

How the day played out:

 

Level 1:

The final score is a bit deceptive, with Coupeville falling 51-22 to finish the season with a 3-7 record.

The Wolves were within four points after Logan Downes popped a jumper to open the second half, but then the Tigers found a different level.

Ripping off a 17-1 run, Granite, otherwise known as the “Man Bun Boys” for the number of players they had who took the court with their hair piled atop their heads, was a very-solid team.

The Tigers had height, speed, threw down their layups with conviction, and played smart, aggressive ball.

Coupeville answered with the sizzlin’ scoring touch of Downes, who banged home every one of his team’s points on this night, and it worked, at least for a bit.

The CMS 8th grader opened the game by netting a lil’ jumper from the left side, off of a very-nice kick-out from Zane Oldenstadt, then quieted a spirited Tiger cheering section by dropping four straight free throws.

Each charity shot sank through the net with a quiet little whisper, and sat Granite’s boisterous players back down in their seats on the rock-hard CMS bleachers.

Tied 6-6 with under a minute to play in the opening quarter, Coupeville stayed close, but was stung twice by Granite at the very end of quarters.

The first time it was a three-ball from the top of the arc right before the first quarter buzzer, the second time an offensive rebound put back up and in to stake the Tigers to a 19-13 lead at the half.

Granite’s game-busting run in the third came thanks to a varied offensive attack.

Mixing three-balls with steals which fueled breakaway buckets, the Tigers eventually overpowered Coupeville.

The Wolves didn’t go down easily, however, and we’re not just talking about Downes and his 22 points.

Oldenstadt and William Davidson pounded away on the boards and scrapped for loose balls, while guards Cole White, Landon Roberts, Ryan Blouin, and Timothy Nitta harassed the Tiger ballhandlers all game.

Also seeing action for the Wolves were Hunter Bronec and Johnny Porter, who brought hustle to the floor for a team which played far better this season than its win/loss record might indicate.

 

Level 2:

Coupeville’s middle squad was its most-successful this season, and the finale offered one more rousing curtain call.

Riding the red-hot shooting of gunner Nick Guay and big buckets in the final moments from Blouin and Mikey Robinett, the Wolves closed on a 10-2 run to capture a 24-22 nail-biter.

With the win, the second squad finished 7-2-1.

No, middle school hoops teams don’t play overtime, and yes, a tie in basketball is stupid, but that’s a long time past. Back to today.

In a game with big swings, the Wolves found themselves trailing 20-14 midway through the fourth quarter.

Granite had all the momentum, having scored the final six points of the third quarter and the first four in the final frame.

Not to worry, as the guys with ice water in their veins all wore Coupeville jersies.

The first to strike was Blouin, who swished a three-ball from the top after Davidson ripped down a rebound and kicked the ball out to his waiting teammate.

The Tigers responded with a bucket off of a power move down low, stretching the margin back out to 22-17, but, whether they knew it or not, they were officially DOA at that moment.

Robinett knocked down a roller off the glass to start the surge to victory, then Guay, who finished with a game-high 17 points, stepped up to claim the mantle of being The Man.

Flicking the ball skywards, he sank his fourth three-ball of the night to tie the game at 22-22, then made off with a steal for a go-ahead breakaway bucket.

Clinging to a two-point lead, Coupeville operated through the game’s final minute in exactly the opposite way most middle school teams do with the lead.

It’s rarely seen at this level (or, quite often, in high school play), but the Wolves LISTENED to their coaches, held on to the ball instead of flinging off a shot, and wore the clock down, daring Granite to foul them.

The Tigers instead played for the steal, but never got it, setting off a celebration from the pro-Wolf crowd.

It was a sweetly-satisfying win for CMS, especially coming in a game in which they almost went scoreless for the entire first quarter.

Trailing 6-0 thanks to a pair of Granite three-balls, and numerous shots of their own which popped out at the last second, Coupeville was struggling a bit.

But then, in one fluid motion, the lanky Guay pulled in the ball, went skyward and netted his own three-ball, the orb dropping through the net at literally the exact moment the first quarter buzzer sounded.

That shot seemed to be the spark the Wolves needed, as they reclaimed the lead in the second quarter thanks to two more Guay treys and a Davidson put-back.

Up 11-8 at the half, CMS stretched it to 14-10 midway through the third, then hit the dry spell talked about earlier in the article.

Guay’s 17 was huge, but every bucket greatly mattered for the Wolves, who also got three points from Blouin, and two apiece from Davidson and Robinett.

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, Jack Porter, Hurlee Bronec, and Johnny Porter chipped in with hustle and general scrappiness.

 

Level 3:

Coupeville trailed by 13 late in the third quarter, rallied strongly, but fell 30-24, dropping its final record to 1-7.

The Wolves best stretch of play came over the final eight minutes of play, when they outscored the Tigers 14-7.

Back-to-back buckets to close the third, with Harlan Mouw slapping a rebound back home, and Justin Jansen going coast-to-coast off of a steal, started the rally.

From there, the Wolves used the inside/outside combo of Mouw and Nathan Ginnings to cut away at the lead, getting the margin all the way down to five with about two minutes to play.

Granite needed to make a play to seal the deal, and, to their credit, the Tigers stood tall.

A bucket off of an offensive rebound, pulled down in a crowd, stopped the bleeding and ended Coupeville’s final hope.

The young Wolves finished with a balanced scoring sheet, with six of nine players scratching their names into the scorebook.

Mouw paced CMS with nine points, while Ginnings (6), Chris Villarreal (4), Jansen (2), Carson Fields (2), and JP Edoukou (1) also scored.

Rounding out the active roster were Jesus Madrigal, Jordan Bradford, and Alex Clark, who all saw solid floor time in the finale.

 

Final (unofficial) season scoring stats:

Logan Downes – 193
Timothy Nitta – 76
Cole White – 55
Hunter Bronec – 40
Harlan Mouw – 39
Nathan Ginnings – 37
Mikey Robinett – 34
Nick Guay – 33
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim – 30
Justin Jansen – 28
William Davidson – 27
Zane Oldenstadt – 25
JP Edoukou – 21
Ryan Blouin – 20
Hurlee Bronec – 20
Johnny Porter – 18
Jack Porter – 14
Carson Fields – 12
Chris Villarreal – 10
Landon Roberts – 6
Jordan Bradford – 2
Alex Clark – 2

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