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Xavier Murdy, who is dealing with an elbow fracture, leads off a group of CHS boys basketball pics. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolf varsity coach Brad Sherman

Dominic Coffman

The JV: (back, l to r) Grady Rickner, Cody Roberts, Sage Downes, TJ Rickner, Daniel Olson, Logan Martin. Front: Xavier Murdy, Miles Davidson, Alex Jimenez, Alex Murdy, Andrew Aparicio.

Ulrik Wells

JV hoops guru Chris Smith

Alex Jimenez

The varsity: (back, l to r) Sean Toomey-Stout, Gavin Knoblich, Wells, Koa Davison, Jacobi Pilgrim, Xavier Murdy. Front: Tucker Hall, Hawthorne Wolfe, Jered Brown, Jean Lund-Olsen, Mason Grove.

Closer and closer.

The tip-off of the high school hoops season draws ever nearer, as Coupeville players enter week two of practice.

The Wolf boys had their picture day Monday, and you can see a portion of what John Fisken shot.

Tuesday the camera swings towards the CHS girls, with a jamboree set for Saturday in Sedro-Woolley.

After that comes opening week, with the Wolves set to play three games in five days.

Coupeville travels to Darrington Dec. 3, makes the short jaunt to Oak Harbor the next day, then welcomes Orcas Island to town for the home openers Dec. 7.

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Coupeville senior Jered Brown has been a four-year varsity player. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Fellow senior Sean Toomey-Stout was in the top two in nearly every stat category a season ago.

They have the numbers. They have the experience. They have the talent.

As Brad Sherman enters his third season at the helm of the Coupeville High School boys basketball program, the Wolves are primed to make a big surge.

CHS, which kicks off a new season with back-to-back road trips to Darrington and Oak Harbor Dec. 3-4, boasts 33 players divided equally between three squads.

Sherman will be joined by returning JV coach Chris Smith, while the C-Team needs to replace Scott Fox, who has taken over the Wolf girls varsity program.

Coupeville’s first-string boys squad is virtually the same one which took the court a year ago, as the Wolves lost just sixth man Dane Lucero to graduation.

Hawthorne Wolfe tossed in a team-high 158 points last season, the most scored by a Wolf freshman boy across 102 seasons, but he’s not the only guy capable of filling up the hoop.

The next eight players on the scoring list, led off by Sean Toomey-Stout (122) and Mason Grove (109), were juniors last season, giving CHS a senior-heavy roster this time around.

Ulrik Wells (74), Jered Brown (71), Gavin Knoblich (65), Jacobi Pilgrim (43), Koa Davison (11), and Jean Lund-Olsen (7) are also back, while sophomore Xavier Murdy (4) is a full-time varsity player in his second season.

Rounding out the roster is one newcomer, with senior Tucker Hall making the jump from JV to varsity.

“Depth and experience are going to be big for us,” Sherman said. “This group has shown they are willing to work hard.

“With so many returners, they are getting more comfortable playing together and that’s huge,” he added. “I think we have the opportunity to be strong on both sides of the ball.”

While the Wolves kick off the second week of practice Monday, many of their players have been working on their games year-round. A strong showing at team camp is also cause for happiness.

“Our guys showed a lot of growth over the summer, especially in our transition game and showing a lot more poise on offense,” Sherman said.

“Between our summer practice schedule, the tournament win on the coast, and battling with some big schools in Cheney at camp, we were really proud of the body of work our guys put together in June to carry us toward the season.”

As he mixes and matches players, looking for the best combinations, Sherman wants to see those groups gel.

“We are seeing a lot of good things from a lot of guys right now, and really just stressing the importance of each and every role working together,” he said. “Several of our guys have quite a bit of versatility to play in different spots, which gives us a lot of flexibility with our lineups and sets.

“Trust, on and off the court (is big),” Sherman added. “We have to have five guys on the floor working together, thinking together, trusting one another to do their jobs in every aspect of the game.

“That is a big point of emphasis for us.”

As they work towards the start of the season, the Wolves are hard at work fine-tuning their games on both sides of the ball. Keeping the pressure ramped up on opposing teams is big.

“We know we need to take care of the ball better and finish at the rim,” Sherman said. “Unforced turnovers hurt us last year – and while we aren’t spending any time looking in the rear-view mirror, we do need to learn and improve on some of those key things.

“Defensively we need to just make sure we are playing four quarters of all-in defense with five guys moving hard to position on every single pass,” he added.

“We are really emphasizing closeouts, on-ball pressure, and improved communication on the defensive end.”

Coupeville has a 19-game regular-season schedule, with the final nine tilts all against fellow North Sound Conference teams.

King’s, which finished 3rd at state last year, offered league rivals a chance to play just once, and not twice, and the Wolves, along with Granite Falls and Sultan accepted.

South Whidbey and Cedar Park Christian did not, making for a lopsided league schedule.

For his part, Sherman is not super-concerned with any one team on the schedule, viewing each game as an important building block for his program.

“Really not focused on one particular team,” he said. “Our preparation as coaches and athletes has to be the same for every team we face.

“This is a tough league, and we just need to take it one game at a time.

“As a coaching staff we have full confidence in our guys ability to compete night in and night out,” Sherman added. “We certainly scout and game plan for each team we face, but ultimately it’s our ability to go out and play good team basketball and execute our own stuff that really matters.”

This will also be the Wolves final rumble against this set of conference foes, as Coupeville drops from 1A to 2B with the 2020-2021 school year.

“We part ways with this league next season, so one of our goals is to go out strong and make a statement at every level of our program,” Sherman said.

“Our ultimate hope would obviously be to earn a postseason opportunity in February, but for now, it’s just one game at a time.”

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CMS 8th grader Logan Downes pumped in 20 points at Granite Falls Monday, and is averaging 16.3 a game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

With five of their first seven games on the road, Wolf hoops stars get to see a lot of different gyms. (Michelle Glass photo)

A five-man coaching staff led by Greg White (kneeling) is teaching a promising pack of players. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Kicking off a three-game road trip Monday, the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball teams ran into a buzz-saw at Granite Falls, escaping with a tie in their best showing.

A tie???

Yes, in the continuing soccer-fication of the world, middle school hoops teams don’t play overtime.

Cause heaven forbid fans stay for five more minutes on a night when they’ve already put in four hours plus camped in the stands…

Anyways.

The trip to Granite is part of a rough early-season schedule for the Wolves, who play five of their first seven games off the Island.

After this, Coupeville travels to Sultan and Lakewood, finally returning to their own gym Dec. 4, when they welcome King’s to town.

The lopsided schedule does mean the Wolves get to play their final three games at home, however.

How Monday played out:

 

Level 1:

Logan Downes went off for his second-straight big-time scoring performance, but CMS fell 52-26.

The loss drops Coupeville’s top squad to 1-2 on the still-young season.

Downes, who suffered what seemed like a pretty-horrifying ankle injury in the opener, has continued to play through the pain and swelling, dropping 25 and now 20 points in back-to-back games.

The Wolf 8th grader pumped in half of his points Monday in the fourth quarter, as Coupeville finished strongly.

Unfortunately, a 14-4 deficit in the first quarter and a 17-6 margin in the third killed any chances of a comeback for the Wolves.

William Davidson and Ryan Blouin added buckets for CMS, with Cole White and Zane Oldenstadt each slipping a free throw through the net to round out the scoring.

Also seeing floor time for the Wolves were Landon Roberts, Nick Guay, Timothy Nitta, and Hunter Bronec.

 

Level 2:

The best, or most unsatisfying, result of the afternoon, depending on your own personal feelings about ties.

Down seven at the half, Coupeville rallied to tie the game in the third, then the two teams coasted in with a 15-15 finish.

The tie leaves the Wolves at 2-0-1 on the season.

Granite jumped out to an early lead in a defensive-minded game, taking a 6-2 advantage into the first break, then stretching it out to 8-5 at the half.

With Mikey Robinett throwing down four points in the third, Coupeville reclaimed the advantage, outscoring the Tigers 7-0 to pull back into a 12-12 tie.

And that’s where it stayed, as neither team could claim the lead for good in a tense, and low-scoring fourth quarter.

Robinett led the Wolves with six points, while Nitta (2), Johnny Porter (2), Nathan Ginnings (2), Jack Porter (2), and Hunter Bronec (1) also broke into the scoring column.

Hurlee Bronec and Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim rounded out the active roster, chipping in with defense and hustle.

 

Level 3:

A slow first quarter and a cold fourth quarter ultimately doomed the Wolves in a 26-11 loss.

The Coupeville young guns, who returned to action after sitting out the last game when Northshore Christian Academy didn’t have a third team, fell to 0-2.

Granite claimed a 9-2 advantage after the first seven minutes of play, before the teams fought to 4-4 and 5-5 ties across the next two quarters.

An 8-0 Tigers run in the fourth padded the final margin out.

Carson Fields scored his first points of the season for Coupeville, raining down a team-high six, with Harlan Mouw adding three and Justin Jansen knocking down a third-quarter bucket.

Jordan Bradford, Jesus Madrigal, Alex Clark, and Chris Villarreal also saw floor time for the Wolves.

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Zane Oldenstadt rumbles under the hoop. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

CMS students cram the stands to support their classmates.

Wolf coaches Jon Roberts (seated) and Craig Anderson ponder the action.

Coupeville’s Level One team is (back, l to r) Logan Downes, Oldenstadt, William Davidson, Nick Guay. Front: Timothy Nitta, Ryan Blouin, Hunter Bronec, Cole White, Landon Roberts.

Blouin lets the ball fly.

Greg White delivers his best Vince Lombardi speech to his players.

Downes strolls in for two of his game-high 25 points.

Calm and composed, William “Mr. Freeze” Davidson remains a cool cat, even when crashing to the floor to snag a loose ball.

Rumble, young man, rumble.

Playing at home for the only time in their first five games, the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball squads were in top form Thursday afternoon.

The Wolves captured two wins in as many games against visiting Northshore Christian Academy, while wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken worked the sidelines, clicking away.

The pics above are courtesy him, but there’s a lot more.

To see everything Fisken snapped, and maybe nab some early Christmas gifts for Gram and Gramps, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2019-2020/MSBBB-2019-11-14-vs-Northshore-Christian/

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Zane Oldenstadt flies high for the tip. (Morgan White photos)

Coupeville fans bring the love.

“And now … we win.”

Tuition for students at Northshore Christian Academy in Everett runs close to $9,000 a year.

All that money couldn’t buy the private school a win Thursday, however.

Having traveled to the wilds of Whidbey to face off with the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball squads, NCA found itself on the losing end of both contests played on the hardwood.

A sweet sweep for the public school Wolves, it gave Coupeville’s hoops stars a rare chance to shine in front of their hometown fans.

CMS hits the road for three straight games after Thursday’s rumble, starting with a Monday trip to Granite Falls.

The Wolves open the season with four of five on the road, but that does mean they will get to turn it around in the second half, with four of five at home.

“It’ll work out,” Coupeville coach Greg White said. “We’ll get to play at home when we’re playing better, because we’ll continue to improve as the season goes on.

“We’re looking forward to it.”

While Coupeville’s squads might not have been in mid-season form Thursday, they still played with passion, a lot of heart, and some considerable skill.

When things got tough, and they did in both games, the Wolves found a different gear and grabbed the wins, a testament to their grit.

How the day played out:

 

Level 1:

What doesn’t kill you makes you tougher. Or something like that.

Less than 24 hours after badly hurting his ankle in the season opener, Logan Downes, heavily-taped up and yet playing like a mad man, banked home a season-high 25 points as CMS won a wild 35-32 thriller.

The win evens Coupeville’s record at 1-1.

Thursday’s opener was a game of runs, as both teams took turns dropping hay-makers, with the biggest, most-explosive uppercut coming courtesy of the Wolves.

Having frittered away a nine-point second-half lead, thanks in large part to rimming out nine straight free throw attempts, Coupeville watched in horror as the game (seemingly) slipped away.

From up 24-15 late in the third, the Wolves found themselves on the wrong end of a 15-2 run, and trailed 30-26 with a hair over three minutes left to play.

The air in the CMS gym was thick with tension (or just all the fun odors to be found in a middle school gym…), and the Wolves huddled around their coach, faces covered in shadows.

At which point Downes smiled about something, teammate William Davidson chuckled, and, as one, Coupeville’s players strode back on to the court like Mike Tyson entering the boxing ring in his glory days.

The final 3:11 was a portrait of excellence, painted by the Wolves in a way which left few, if any, brush strokes for the visitors to add.

Downes struck first, breaking the press and throwing down a layup to pull CMS within a bucket.

That missing two points came courtesy Cole White, who, off of a pass from Downes, whirled and chucked up a shot which possibly sent his dad/coach’s heart through his shoes.

Except.

The ball was angled perfectly, and crashed through the net, somehow, with a very-satisfying whomp, sending his rockin’ fan section into a fit of delirium.

NCA was bent, but Davidson and Downes broke them on the very next play.

Jumping a pass, Mr. Freeze picked off the ball, shot past the startled former ball-handler, then dished the sweetest dish of the night to Downes, who was running like a young man with two good ankles.

Ball smacked into hands, and the third of Angie Downes‘ three sons exploded to the hoop for a sparkling layup, sending Coupeville ahead for good.

Moments later, Logan, this time standing still, broke that team-wide 0-9 free throw streak, swishing a pair of freebie shots to drive a final stake through the heart of Northshore.

The free throws were set up by Zane Oldenstadt, who out-wrestled two foes to claim possession of an offensive rebound, than had the presence of mind to kick the ball to Downes.

The play was one of many from his big men which brought a smile to Greg White’s face.

Zane and Will played really tough for us today,” he said. “As a team, we rebounded and played help defense really well.

“We had a drastic improvement in that area from the first game. We responded well.”

The victory came despite a cold opening for the Wolves, who missed their first five free throws and fell behind 7-0 early in the game.

But, this was a game of runs, as mentioned before, and once CMS scored, it didn’t stop for awhile.

A Downes free throw finally put the Wolves on the board with 2:12 left in the first, and that set Coupeville off on a 17-2 run.

Four different CMS players scored in the second quarter, with many of the buckets set up by solid passes, such as Downes slashing to the hoop to find a perfect feed from Landon Roberts awaiting him upon arrival.

Davidson and White offered up points done the right way, with the former banging down low, and the latter tip-toeing through the paint while flicking the ball off the glass.

Nick Guay added a free throw, while Downes, playing out of his mind at times, hit one basket on which he snared a rebound, then knocked down the shot while being knocked backwards to the floor.

Somewhere in the moment right before his rear slammed into the hardwood, Downes, moving in slow motion while everyone around him whizzed by, arced the ball gently up to the heavens, where his prayer was answered.

The CMS eighth grader spread his 25 points out, hitting for three, nine, five, and eight across the four quarters of play, while five of his teammates provided scoring support.

Cole White banked in four points, Davidson and Oldenstadt added a bucket apiece, while Ryan Blouin and Guay rounded out the attack, each netting a free throw.

 

Level 2:

A great run to close the third quarter was the difference, as Coupeville turned a tie into a nine-point lead, then held off the visitors 23-19 despite going scoreless in the fourth quarter.

The win lifts the Wolves to a flawless 2-0 on the season.

This one had a weird rhythm to it, as Northshore stayed in the game by making some of the funkiest three-point shots ever seen, and nothing else, until late in the third quarter.

Coupeville drew first blood on a three-ball of its own, with Timothy Nitta picking up a loose ball in the left corner and letting fly, his ball snapping the net gently as it flopped through.

NCA responded with back-to-back treys, both from the same shooter, both on awkward-looking, but very-effective Hail Mary shots.

Going airborne, they seemed to have no chance, and yet both heaves rattled around the rim and somehow found a way to drop, causing some in the audience to wonder if we were witnessing a real-life version of Angels in the Outfield play out.

Whether there were celestial beings at work or not, the Wolves responded with more down-to-Earth work, starting with a sweet pull-up jumper on the move from Nathan Ginnings.

Back to within 6-5 at the first break, Coupeville got a Hunter Bronec free throw to open the second quarter.

And then, bam, Northshore’s #40 was at it again, with a three-ball that he snapped off from somewhere down around his ankles, sending a wobbly, but uncannily-accurate shot skyward, where it shattered the Vegas odds and hit pay-dirt.

If they were troubled by The Man Who Couldn’t Miss (except when he did, which was a lot), the Wolves didn’t show it.

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim rolled hard to the hoop for a bucket, followed by back-to-back buckets from Jack Porter, the second off of a strong offensive rebound, and CMS was in charge.

Twin brother Johnny Porter tacked on a layup coming out of the halftime break, and, up 14-9, the Wolves were flowing.

Until another miracle three-ball splashed down, followed by the rarest of rarities in this game, a Northshore bucket off of an inside shot. A layup from a steal, it knotted the game at 14-14.

To which the Wolves, as a unit, turned, flexed hard, and closed the third quarter with a bold stand, comprised of one half lock-down defense, the other half superbly-executed shot-making.

Nitta rippled the net on a three-ball, then popped free for a rolling jumper, while Simpson-Pilgrim crashed hard to the hoop with a power move which brought back memories of Karl Malone delivering the mail.

Toss in a final bucket in the paint from Hurlee Bronec, and the lead was back to 23-14 headed to the final quarter.

Which was a good thing, as the Wolves went stone-cold in the ol’ shooting department across the final seven minutes.

Strong defense, especially when it came to crashing the boards, kept NCA from staging a full-on comeback, and the Wolves rode the glass work of Mikey Robinett, Simpson-Pilgrim, and Co. to the win.

Nitta paced the Wolves with eight points, while Johnny Porter (4), Simpson-Pilgrim (4), Hurlee Bronec (2), Jack Porter (2), Ginnings (2), and Hunter Bronec (1) also scored.

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