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Posts Tagged ‘Boys Basketball’

Logan Martin dropped in nine points Saturday, but the Coupeville JV fell to The Bush School. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Great set-up, disappointing finale.

Having rallied to tie up the game heading into the fourth quarter Saturday, the Coupeville High School JV boys basketball squad looked to be in good shape.

But the Wolves host in Seattle, The Bush School, proved to be just a little too deadly down the stretch, holding off CHS to escape with a 42-35 win.

The non-conference loss drops Coupeville’s young guns to a still-respectable 3-2 on the season.

And now, having played four of their first five on the road, the Wolves get three straight at home next week, then a long winter break.

CHS hosts Chimacum Tuesday, Port Townsend Thursday, and Nooksack Valley Saturday.

Playing in Seattle, the Wolves fell behind early, then got hot coming out of the halftime break.

Down 8-5 after the first quarter, Coupeville saw the gap widen to 19-13 after the second frame wrapped up.

Perhaps Wolf coach Chris Smith gave a rousing halftime speech, or maybe the Wolves naturally shooting ability just clicked back into place.

Either way, Coupeville was a different team in the third quarter.

With Logan Martin popping for four points to lead the way, five different Wolves scored as CHS used a 13-7 surge to knot the game up at 26-26.

That set up a frantic finale, but one The Bush School managed to control, using a mix of field goals and pressure-packed free throws.

Sage Downes led Coupeville’s offensive attack, making the nets pop for 10 points, while Martin banked in nine and Grady Rickner knocked down eight.

Alex Jimenez (5), Daniel Olson (2), and Cody Roberts (1) also scored, with Downes, Martin, and Jimenez all connecting on three-balls.

Chris Cernick, Alex Murdy, and Miles Davidson also saw floor time for the Wolves.

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Jean Lund-Olsen netted a three-ball Friday for his first points of the season as the Coupeville varsity boys whacked Concrete. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They made some noise on Silent Night.

Romping to their most lopsided win in years, the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball squad destroyed visiting Concrete Friday.

I’m not talking a 20-point or 30-point win here, either.

Catching a young Lions squad in the middle of the rebuilding process, the senior-heavy Wolves ran out to a 27-0 lead, put five players in double-digits scoring and romped to a 72-19 victory.

Yes, you read that right.

Coupeville, which has worked hard to rebuild its own program, just won by 50+ points, and in front of its home fans.

With the non-conference victory, the Wolves improve to 2-3 in a season in which they have been a handful of buckets away from being 5-0.

Heading into a match-up with The Bush School Saturday in Seattle, the CHS boys are beginning to click under third-year coach Brad Sherman, and are a dangerous squad when everything is working.

Friday night, fans wanted to cheer early, but couldn’t, as the team was holding a Silent Night game, in which everyone is supposed to remain quiet until the home team scores its 10th point.

That came fairly quickly, as the Wolves relentlessly attacked the Lions defense, which bent, then broke.

Hawthorne Wolfe banged home the game’s first bucket, off a steal and breakaway, before Sean Toomey-Stout and Jacobi Pilgrim slapped in layups.

Just like that, Coupeville was up 6-0 almost before clock operator Joel Norris was fully settled into his seat.

Quickly flexing his fingers, “The Ice Cream Man” got ready to keep up with the offensive onslaught, only to have the game halted by the one down moment of the night.

Senior big man Koa Davison, who has been having a breakout season, went down awkwardly on a play in the paint and hobbled off, forced to ice his ankle the rest of the game.

While his status going forward is unknown, any loss of time for Coupeville’s best offensive inside presence hurts.

Subbing in for Davison, fellow senior Ulrik Wells netted a pair of free-throws to stretch the lead to 8-0, and then, in a burst of speed and big-time hops, Toomey-Stout gave the crowd what it wanted.

As his layup slipped though the net, the Wolf faithful, led by former CHS hoops standout Hunter Smith losing his freakin’ mind, went bonkers — pretty much the way Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith had planned it.

The Silent Night idea comes from Taylor University in Indiana, which has pulled it off for 20+ seasons.

With the festivities out of the way, the Wolves, now with far-more vocal support, went right back to doing what they were doing.

Beatin’ the crud out of the Lions, who may (and I stress may) have gotten off at least one shot in the opening quarter.

Clamping down ferociously on defense, Coupeville forced turnover after turnover, then converted them into buckets in a blink of an eye.

Everyone had the magic touch, as seven different Wolves scored during a 27-0 first quarter which was unlike anything the CHS boys program has put together this decade.

Toomey-Stout tossed in eight points during the initial assault, while Mason Grove rang up another seven, including dropping the first of his three shots from behind the three-point arc.

For much of the night, the one bright spot for Concrete was the play of Levi Lowry, their 6-foot-3, 295-pound, surprisingly-nimble man in the middle.

He fought like a mad man on the boards, against great odds, and finally got the Lions into the scoring column a minute-plus into the second quarter, rolling hard inside for a three-point play the hard way.

Lowry scored Concrete’s first 13 points, and looked like he would be the only visitor to scratch his name into the scorebook until Bryon Ribera hit back-to-back corner three-balls in the final moments of the game.

While the Lions were a one-man crew for much of the night, the Wolves were the exact opposite.

Up 27-0 at the first break, they stretched things out to 44-5 at the half, then 67-13 by the end of the third quarter.

Coupeville hit three straight three-balls in the second frame, two from Grove and one from Wolfe, but that was just a set-up for a frenetic third, when CHS hit for 23 points despite a running clock being triggered a couple of seconds into the quarter.

Pilgrim was the main man, rumbling down low for three buckets, while Wolfe dropped another trey on his way to five in the quarter.

Keeping the ball moving from player to player, Coupeville again spread the love out, with seven players scoring in the quarter, then threw down a few more highlights as the clock raced from 8:00 to 0:00 in record time during the fourth quarter.

Jean Lund-Olsen came up with a spinning save on a ball about to go out of bounds, not only keeping the play alive, but ricocheting the rock right to Pilgrim, who spun around his defender for a final bucket.

Next play, some more JLO joy, as Lund-Olsen swished a long three-ball for his first points of the season.

Grove led the high-powered offensive attack, rattling the rim for 17 points, while Wolfe, Wells, Pilgrim, and Toomey-Stout collected 10 points apiece.

Rounding out the scoring were Brown (6), Gavin Knoblich (6), and Lund-Olsen (3), while Tucker Hall roughed up some folks on defense and senior Chris Ruck made his varsity debut to a huge roar from the student section.

After the game, players and fans mingled, still awash in the thrill of the rout.

Several went to Davison, offering best thoughts and encouragement as he hobbled out of the gym, ice bag still attached.

Off to the side, Brad Sherman’s four exuberant, basketball-loving little boys, perhaps the starting lineup a decade or so from now, had the time of their lives as Wolf three-ball gunner Natalie Castano helped them shoot at the far-away rim.

Eventually, Brad’s offspring would be bundled into their strollers, despite their protests, and sent home with grandma Deb and mom Abbey, while dad reflected on the win.

“Our bigs — Ulrik, Jacobi, Gavin, and Koa while he was in there — hit the offensive boards really well tonight,” Sherman said. “They all seemed really hungry on the boards, which is something we’re going to need from them going forward.

“Our defense as a team was just very impressive,” he added. “It was a really balanced team win, and that’s awesome.”

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Alex Wasik tossed in eight points Friday as Coupeville’s C-Team pounded Concrete’s JV. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Patrick Upchurch is a made man.

The Coupeville High School boys C-Team basketball guru exited the gym Friday night carrying the first win of his head coaching career.

With eight of the 10 players on his roster scoring, the Wolves rocked visiting Concrete hard, jumping out to a 14-0 lead on their way to a 39-11 victory over the Lion JV.

Coming a night after a hard-fought loss to a tough 3A Squalicum squad, the win evens Coupeville’s record at 1-1 on the season.

While it will go down as the first (of probably many) wins for Upchurch, the CHS coach handed all the credit to his players.

The Wolves handled the ball well, spread out the scoring wealth, and benefited from a strong defensive effort.

Ben Smith delivered three “huge” blocks which rattled a few teeth and brought the Wolf fans to their feet, while Brayden Coatney “battled hard on the glass, taking down at least seven or eight rebounds.”

Coupeville spread out its offense, though freshman Ty Hamilton outscored Concrete by himself, rattling home 12 points.

The slash-and-shoot guard torched the nets for a quick six points in the opening quarter, then added a bucket in each of the remaining three frames.

Coatney and Alex Wasik provided key support, as each Wolf drained eight points, with Simon Shelley netting a fourth-quarter three-ball.

Dominic Coffman, Smith, Nick Armstrong, and the coach’s son, Josh Upchurch, all chipped in with a bucket, while Coen Killian and Jaden Goodrich also saw floor time for CHS.

Riding high off the win, the C-Team heads to Mount Vernon next Tuesday, Dec. 17 to play its first road game of the season.

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Jered Brown, here thundering to the hoop in an earlier game, scored seven points Wednesday at Friday Harbor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A play here, a play there, and they’re 4-0.

But, sometimes those shots don’t drop, or those passes go wide, or that defensive stand doesn’t quite hold long enough, and you’re 1-3.

The Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball team has played strongly all season, and Wednesday night was no different.

That being said, the Wolves came out on the short end of a 43-38 defensive war at Friday Harbor, the third time in four games they have fallen by just a bucket or two.

Coupeville’s losses have been by four points (in overtime to a 3A school), five, and seven, while their win was a 19-point romp over Orcas Island.

As the Wolves try and find the perfect mesh between strong play and a positive win/loss record, they’ll get two more chances this weekend.

CHS hosts Concrete (0-2) Friday, then travels to Seattle Saturday to face off with The Bush School (2-2).

Wednesday night the Wolves led 8-7 after the first quarter, thanks to four points apiece from Sean Toomey-Stout and Koa Davison.

After that, the two schools waged a tense back-and-forth affair, with Friday Harbor slowly pulling away.

A 13-10 surge in the second frame sent the host team to the locker room up 20-18, while the third and fourth quarters went 9-8 and 14-12 in favor of Friday Harbor.

Dylan Roberson and Ethan Germain led the Wolverines with 15 and 10 points, respectively, while the game’s final margin was set at the free throw line.

Coupeville netted its highest percentage of the season, nailing six of eight shots at the charity stripe, but Friday Harbor, while not shooting particularly well (11-20), converted just enough to ice the win.

Sophomore shooting guard Hawthorne Wolfe, who was named a WIAA Athlete of the Week earlier in the day Wednesday, was top man for Coupeville with nine points, while Mason Grove banked in eight.

With the performance, which included a pair of three-balls in the third quarter, the senior reached a personal milestone, becoming the 132nd Wolf boy (in 103 seasons) to score 200+ career points.

Grove sits with 207 after Wednesday’s game.

Jered Brown notched all seven of his points in the heat of the fourth-quarter battle, with Toomey-Stout (6), Davison (4), Ulrik Wells (2), and Gavin Knoblich (2) also scoring.

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Timothy Nitta hit big buckets Wednesday as Coupeville went toe-to-toe with Sultan. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The seats don’t get any softer the longer you hang out in the Coupeville Middle School gym.

Bur rock-hard bleachers or not, the games did get closer with each passing hour Wednesday.

And while the Wolves weren’t able to pull out any wins against visiting Sultan, losing two of three by a single play, they did provide local fans with a lot to feel good about.

How the day played out:

 

Level 1:

Sultan’s top team is the best middle school hoops squad I’ve witnessed in person, and yes, that includes any number of King’s teams from years past.

The Turks have played together as a group over the past several years, both in and out of school, and it’s paying dividends.

There are no weak links, every Turk on the floor has a high basketball IQ, they are proficient and deadly, and they will kill you in any of 1,000 different ways.

That being said, Coupeville fought back hard, and used a second-half run against the Sultan bench to keep the final score halfway reasonable at 44-22.

The loss drops the Wolves to 2-6, with a pair of home games left on the schedule.

Langley travels to Coupeville Dec. 16, then Granite Falls pop in for the season finale Dec. 19.

Wednesday’s game was essentially over after one play, as Sultan came thundering down and hit a silky-smooth pull-up jumper from the right side.

Attacking ferociously on defense, the Turks blitzed the Wolf ball-handlers into submission, converting turnovers into quick buckets and blowing out to a 13-0 lead seemingly before the official scorer could get her pencils unpacked.

Cole White finally stopped the bleeding, hitting his own pull-up jumper, but Sultan stretched the lead out to 19-2 at the first break and 39-8 by the half.

CMS sharpshooter Logan Downes tickled the twines three times in the second frame, hitting buckets on a variety of moves, but Sultan had an answer for everything.

Drop back on defense, and the Turks launched three-balls with abandon, hitting six of them in the first half, including one which dropped through the bottom of the net right at the buzzer.

Come up to meet Sultan, and it used super-sharp passing to zip the ball around, before depositing the ball right onto the fingertips of a player in exactly the right place at exactly the right time.

It was sort of demoralizing, but also sort of inspiring, in a twisted way – proof rural public schools can build a powerhouse program just the same as big-city private ones can.

Sultan’s current high school program isn’t tearing up the North Sound Conference, but just hold on a year or two. Things are about to get interesting.

After one more looooooooong three-ball stretched Sultan’s lead out to 44-8 early in the third quarter, Coupeville buckled down and closed the game with conviction.

With the Turks starters having departed, the Wolves actually scored the game’s final 14 points, getting 11 from Downes, a runner from Ryan Blouin, and, finally, a sweetly-swished free throw from Nick Guay.

Downes finished the game with 17 points, just off of his season average of 18 a night, while Blouin (2), White (2), and Guay (1) also scored.

Zane Oldenstadt and William Davidson worked hard on the boards for the Wolves, while fan favorite Landon Roberts merrily crashed through anyone who got in his way, fighting for loose balls until the final buzzer.

 

Level 2:

We was robbed.

A fourth-quarter comeback fell just short, as Coupeville lost 24-23 in a game which ended with Wolf gunner Timothy Nitta being severely hammered right in front of the ref on the final contested shot.

Sadly, the man in stripes swallowed his whistle, and instead of Nitta shooting free throws, CMS headed back to the locker room having taken a rare loss.

The most-successful Wolf squad sits at 5-2-1 on the season.

The game was extremely close through the first two quarters, knotted at 6-6 after one, then 15-13 in favor of Sultan at the half, before taking wild mood swings down the stretch.

Nitta banked home a three-ball to open the third quarter, but then he and his teammates went ice cold the remainder of the frame, allowing Sultan to build a 22-16 lead heading into the game’s final seven minutes.

At which point the switch got flipped, as the Turks started clanking shots in the fourth, and the Wolves mounted a comeback.

Hunter Bronec slipped away from his man under the basket and threw down a bucket to open the final quarter, then Nathan Ginnings, wandering out in the parking lot, sank a gorgeous three-ball from the corner.

Clamping down on defense, Coupeville forced numerous turnovers, converting one into what seemed like a game-busting basket.

Getting out fast ahead of the crowd, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim hauled in a long pass from Bronec, cut back inside and pounded home a layup while multiple Turks thumped him around the shoulders.

Up 23-22, CMS held on for a minute, but needed to make it a full two minutes.

Sultan slipped in a runner lofted in the paint to reclaim the lead, then things got dicy.

With the ball in the hands of the Turks and the clock running under 10 seconds, Coupeville needed to foul.

Instead, Mikey Robinett made a sensational play, getting his hands on the rock and forcing a jump ball, which returned the ball to the Wolves for one final play.

And it could have been something special, as Nitta, under heavy pressure, pulled in the inbounds pass and got off a shot.

As he let the ball go, at least two Turks made solid contact with his arms, something everyone in the gym except the ref standing a foot away seemed to see.

While the non-call astonished Wolf coaches, they will be able to look back on a solid team effort, one in which seven of eight players scored.

Nitta finished with seven points, while Johnny Porter (4), Hunter Bronec (4), Ginnings (3), Jack Porter (2), Simpson-Pilgrim (2), and Hurlee Bronec (1) also scored.

The only Wolf not to notch a point was Robinett, who merely made the defensive play of the game, more than earning his keep.

 

Level 3:

It was there, then it was gone.

Led by a strong all-around effort from Harlan Mouw, the Wolves carried a lead into the fourth quarter, before falling 23-21.

The razor-thin loss drops CMS to 0-6 on the season.

Coupeville played most of the game like a team very, very interested in getting its first win of the season.

In the opening quarter, JP Edoukou shone brightly, scoring off of an offensive rebound, then flat-out killing a hapless Turk on a later play.

Setting a nasty, beautiful screen, the Wolf big man stood tall and never moved a millimeter, while the Sultan player unlucky enough to come face-to-chest with Edoukou flew backwards several feet.

Landing flat on his back, the Turk stayed down, muttering about how they needed to stop letting semi trucks drive through the gym.

With Edoukou and Mouw playing forcefully in the paint, the Wolves stayed close through the first half, trailing just 14-11, then shot out to a 19-16 lead by the end of the third quarter.

Mouw was a one-man wrecking crew coming out of the locker room, dropping six of his season-high 12 points in the third frame, but it was Ginnings who had the prettiest bucket.

Snagging an offensive rebound, the Wolf guard flipped the ball back up and in while crashing backwards, landing prone on his rear as the ball trickled through the net.

Sultan got its mojo back in the final quarter, using a three-ball and consecutive put-backs to retake the lead, before Mouw scored one final bucket to keep things close.

With just a small handful of fouls to its credit, Coupeville couldn’t get the ball back by sending Sultan to the free throw line, however, and the Turks ran out the clock.

Edoukou and Ginnings both finished with four points, backing up Mouw and his 12, while Justin Jansen added a free throw to round out the scoring.

Carson Fields, Jordan Bradford, Jesus Madrigal, Alex Clark, and Chris Villarreal also saw floor time for Coupeville.

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