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Posts Tagged ‘Carolyn Lhamon’

Savina Wells became the first 8th grade girl to score in a CHS varsity basketball game Thursday, and ended the night as her team’s top scorer. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

No fans, but plenty of history.

Savina Wells, playing alongside big sis Izzy, achieved at least three things Thursday no Coupeville 8th grade girl has ever done on a basketball court.

Playing a key role as the Wolf hoops squad fell 41-38 to visiting Orcas Island in an empty-gym thriller, the younger Wells became the 231st Wolf girl to score in a CHS varsity basketball game since the program launched in 1974.

More importantly in terms of history, she became the first to do so while still in middle school, in a game in which she both started and led her team in scoring with eight points.

Which already puts Savina Wells, active middle schooler, in an eight-way tie for #190 on the CHS girls varsity career scoring chart.

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves, as chart topper Brianne King — with 1,549 career points — is still feeling pretty comfortable atop her perch tonight.

In between the history, Thursday’s rumble with Orcas Island, which was played with no fans per a request from the visitors, was a back-and-forth affair in which Coupeville’s young players almost pulled off a great win.

Of the nine Wolves to see the floor, four were sophomores, four were juniors, and Savina Wells … well, you heard.

Coupeville was missing two of its veterans, with juniors Anya Leavell and Ja’Kenya Hoskins sidelined, but it got big efforts from everyone in uniform.

“We’re very young, but have great potential,” said Wolf coach Scott Fox. “We’ll have some growing pains and we’re learning as we go. A few breaks here and there and we get the win today.

“I’m very proud of the kid’s effort,” he added. “Izzy was a monster on the boards, and Audri (Shaw) and Maddie (Georges) got our defense really going.”

Trailing by seven headed into the fourth quarter, the Wolves put some snap into their game, and came within one semi-questionable call of having a chance to win the game at the buzzer.

Georges drilled a three-ball to open the quarter, off of a rebound and feed from fellow sophomore Gwen Gustafson, only to see Orcas respond with back-to-back buckets.

Shrugging it off, the Wolves closed with a 10-3 run in which five different players scored for Coupeville.

Savina Wells got it started, taking the ball off a press break and swooping to the hoop for a running layup.

Big sis Izzy slapped home a second-chance bucket off of an offensive rebound, followed by a sweet lil’ jumper in traffic from Kylie Van Velkinburgh, and suddenly Orcas was sweating.

Shaw bolted up the middle, sucked the defense to her, then sliced around a defender and scooped the ball high off the glass, while Carolyn Lhamon, who was a two-way warrior all day, stepped up and drilled the bottom out of the net.

Orcas had answers, though, and a pull-up jumper with 30 ticks to play kept them up one.

Coming hard on defense, all five Wolves crashing, arms flying every which way, Coupeville got the break it needed, then had it yanked away.

The ball popped loose in the middle of a mad scrum, with Izzy Wells gaining control.

But, as she did, a pile of players plowed into her body, causing her to lurch maybe a half of a step.

Instead of calling a foul, or letting the play run its natural course, the refs of the day opted to call a traveling violation on Coupeville.

Which would have elicited some howls of protest if there were fans in the stands.

I considered throwing my notebook at the nearest ref, but am trying to pick on refs less these days and opted not to.

But I thought about it.

Back on the floor, the possibly (I said possibly!) unfair exchange of possession allowed Orcas to dribble away a few seconds before drawing a foul.

Two free throws later — always easier to shoot when the visiting team isn’t facing a wall of sound from hyped-up local fans — CHS needed a three-ball to force overtime, and had to start on its own end-line with just two seconds left.

If the Wolves had hit that shot, this story would have long ago gone in a different direction. Which it didn’t.

But take nothing away from Coupeville, which may be 0-2, but is primed for future success.

The Wolves showed they can dominate, closing the second quarter on a 13-3 run to take a 19-14 lead into the halftime break.

That streak featured six different CHS players tallying a point or better, with Savina Wells leading the way with a pair of impressive buckets.

On the first, she took the ball, rolled hard to her left and her defender crumbled as she blew by her.

On the second, reacting like a free safety, Wells suddenly shot forward, picked off a pass in mid-air, then beat the pack to the hoop at the other end, softly kissing the ball off the glass for an elegant bucket.

The other Wolf young guns were clickin’ as well, with Gustafson slicing ‘n dicing her defender on a quick move in the paint, while Georges savagely stole a ball, then flipped a note-perfect pass to a streaking Shaw for a layup.

The third quarter was a bit rough for Coupeville, but the Wolves did have one stellar play, on which a Georges pass hit Lhamon’s fingertips, and was redirected to Izzy Wells for a bucket.

Seven of the nine Wolves to play scored, with Savina Wells (8), Lhamon (7), Georges (7), Shaw (6), and Izzy Wells (6) leading the way.

With her performance against Orcas, Georges moves within four points of becoming the 101st Wolf girl to join the 100-point scoring club.

Van Velkinburgh and Gustafson rounded out the scoring attack, with a bucket apiece, Ryanne Knoblich and Morgan Stevens played scrappy defense, and 8th grader Lyla Stuurmans rocked the joint while cheering on her teammates.

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Carolyn Lhamon boldly flies into battle. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They are the team to beat, and it won’t be easy.

Mount Vernon Christian is proving to be a formidable foe in the world of girls soccer this season, something which Coupeville was reminded of Wednesday afternoon.

Playing on the road, in their first game in 11 days, the Wolves fell 6-0 to the rampaging Hurricanes.

With the win, MVC improves to 3-0 and has outscored its foes 24-0.

Coupeville falls to 1-2, with both of its losses coming to the Hurricanes.

The Wolves are a half game up on La Conner (0-2), and they face those Braves next Monday in another road game.

With Friday Harbor sitting out all fall sports this time around after Covid case numbers spiked in the San Juans, there are only three Northwest 2B/1B League schools currently playing girls soccer.

With 9-0 and 6-0 wins over Coupeville, and a 9-0 victory over La Conner, MVC seems to have the league title well in hand, with the Wolves and Braves left to battle it out for second-place.

While the Wolves fell Wednesday, CHS coach Kyle Nelson saw improvement in how his squad played.

MVC scored one goal off a penalty kick and two others on corner kicks, with Coupeville keeping the Hurricanes slowed down on their regular attack.

“We were also able to make their goalkeeper work more this time with a number of good shots,” Nelson said. “Definitely an improvement from our first outing against probably one of the best girls soccer teams in 2B/1B.

“Seems like every time we switch leagues we are going up against a state champ.”

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Noelle Daigneault leads off a collection of soccer pics. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The sun was shining, and the cameras were clickin’.

Taking advantage of a balmy Saturday, the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad hosted Mount Vernon Christian, while wanderin’ photog John Fisken worked the sidelines.

The images above and below are courtesy him.

To see everything he captured, and possibly support his hobby with some purchases of glossy pics, pop over to:

GS 2021-04-17 vs MVC – John’s Photos

 

Mary Milnes

Reese Wilkinson

Genna Wright

Ava Mitten

Audrianna Shaw

Carolyn Lhamon

Nezi Keiper

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Tate Wyman set a PR in the 300 hurdles Wednesday. (Deb Smith photos)

Hurry up and wait – the life of a track star.

Dakota Eck becomes one with his shot put.

Abigail Ramirez flies by in the 4 x 100 relay.

With this pandemic-shortened spring sports season in its final days, Coupeville High School track and field athletes only have a few more moments to showcase their skills.

The Wolves are finishing strongly, however, as evidenced by their performance at a four-team meet Wednesday in La Conner.

Led by two-event champs Logan Martin, Sam Wynn, and Aidan Wilson, Coupeville claimed eight titles and 25 PR’s.

Host La Conner edged Mount Vernon Christian to claim both team titles, with Coupeville grabbing solid third-place performances, and Concrete bringing up the rear.

CHS and its rivals close the season Saturday on Whidbey Island, with the Wolves hosting the Northwest 2B/1B League Championships.

The first event kicks off at 11 AM.

Wednesday, Martin dominated in the shot put and discus, while Ryanne Knoblich (high jump), Carolyn Lhamon (shot put), Wynn (400), Wilson (long jump), Catherine Lhamon (3200), and the boys 4 x 100 relay unit also won events.

The relay team included Wynn, Wilson, Reiley Araceley, and Dominic Coffman.

 

Complete Wednesday results:

 

GIRLS:

100 — Ryanne Knoblich (6th) 15.03 *PR*; Abigail Ramirez (8th) 16.12 *PR*; Maylin Steele (9th) 16.49 *PR*; Camryn Clark (11th) 18.57

200 — Ja’Kenya Hoskins (2nd) 29.70; Knoblich (5th) 31.65 *PR*; Cristina McGrath (7th) 33.57 *PR*; Ramirez (8th) 34.21 *PR*; Steele (9th) 35.16 *PR*; Clark (10th) 37.69 *PR*

3200 — Catherine Lhamon (1st) 13:48.03

4 x 100 Relay — Ava Mitten, Ramirez, Hoskins, Carolyn Lhamon (3rd) 58.44

4 x 200 Relay — Mitten, Car. Lhamon, C. McGrath, Hoskins (3rd) 2:06.22

Shot Put — Car. Lhamon (1st) 30-10.50 *PR*

Discus — Aurora Cernick (5th) 65-11; Erica McGrath (7th) 49-08.50

Javelin — Cernick (5th) 62-01; E. McGrath (6th) 61-05 *PR*

High Jump — Knoblich (1st) 4-08

Long Jump — C. McGrath (5th) 11-00.25 *PR*; E. McGrath (7th) 9-00.50 *PR*

 

BOYS:

100 — Ben Smith (3rd) 12.48; Dominic Coffman (5th) 12.57; Reiley Araceley (7th) 12.62 *PR*; Dakota Eck (10th) 13.04 *PR*

200 — Smith (2nd) 25.96 *PR*

400 — Sam Wynn (1st) 59.39 *PR*

800 — Hank Milnes (5th) 2:37.39 *PR*

1600 — Mitchell Hall (4th) 5:12.29; Milnes (5th) 5:52.71 *PR*; Tate Wyman (8th) 6:49.37

300 Hurdles — Wyman (3rd) 58.52 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Wynn, Araceley, Coffman, Aidan Wilson (1st) 48.32

4 x 400 Relay — Wynn, Hall, Araceley, Wilson (3rd) 3:54.63

Shot Put — Logan Martin (1st) 39-06; Eck (5th) 32-07 *PR*; Josh Guay (9th) 17-07

Discus — Martin (1st) 146-11; Guay (10th) 51-09 *PR*

Javelin — Martin (5th) 107-08; Hall (8th) 76-08; Eck (10th) 71-07

High Jump — Coffman (3rd) 5-02

Long Jump — Wilson (1st) 18-07 *PR*; Coffman (5th) 16-00.50 *PR*; Araceley (9th) 15-01 *PR*; Eck (13th) 14-07.25; Hall (14th) 14-01 *PR*

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Reiley Araceley, seen here in pre-COVID times, set two individual PR’s Thursday, while also running a leg for a victorious 4 x 100 relay squad. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Some solid throws, some zippy runs.

The Coupeville High School track and field squad put in a strong day of work Thursday in Mount Vernon, capturing four titles and setting 32 PR’s at an eight-team meet.

Leading the way for the Wolves were Logan Martin, who claimed top honors in the shot put and discus, Aidan Wilson, who ran away with the 800 crown, and the boys 4 x 100 relay squad.

That unit, made up of Sam Wynn, Reiley Araceley, Dominic Coffman, and Wilson, out-leaned La Conner to capture the title.

Coupeville also notched four second-place finishes, with Catherine Lhamon (1600), Ryanne Knoblich (high jump), the boys 4 x 400 relay team, and Coffman (high jump) pushing the top finishers.

Track powerhouse Mount Vernon Christian defended its home turf, sitting atop the leaderboard in both the boys and girls team standings, while the Wolf squads finished fourth and fifth, respectively.

CHS has two meets left in this pandemic-shortened season, with a trip to La Conner Wednesday, March 31, followed by the Northwest 2B/1B League Championships.

That finale, set for April 3, will be in Coupeville.

 

Complete Thursday results:

 

GIRLS:

100 — Ryanne Knoblich (10th) 15.19 *PR*; Ava Mitten (12th) 15.32 *PR*; Abigail Ramirez (13th) 16.13 *PR*; Maylin Steele (14th) 16.70 *PR*; Camryn Clark (17th) 18.34 *PR*

200 — Ja’Kenya Hoskins (4th) 29.46; Ramirez (18th) 34.29 *PR*; Steele (19th) 35.47 *PR*; Clark (22nd) 38.03 *PR*

400 — Knoblich (4th) 1:13.05 *PR*

1600 — Catherine Lhamon (2nd) 6:19.34

300 Hurdles — Cristina McGrath (5th) 1:06.39

4 x 100 Relay — Mitten, Ramirez, Hoskins, Carolyn Lhamon (4th) 58.88

4 x 200 Relay — Mitten, Car. Lhamon, C. McGrath, Hoskins (4th) 2:09.45

Shot Put — Car. Lhamon (3rd) 26-06

Discus — Aurora Cernick (5th) 67-11; Erica McGrath (8th) 55-03.50 *PR*

Javelin — Cernick (7th) 62-07; E. McGrath (12th) 50-06 *PR*

High Jump — Knoblich (2nd) 4-10

Long Jump — C. McGrath (15th) 10-07 *PR*

 

BOYS:

100 — Sam Wynn (3rd) 12.02 *PR*; Dominic Coffman (6th) 12.42 *PR*; Reiley Araceley (8th) 12.74 *PR*; Dakota Eck (14th) 13.31 *PR*

200 — Mikey Robinett (12th) 29.40 *PR*

400 — Robinett (8th) 1:09.00 *PR*

800 — Aidan Wilson (1st) 2:13.14 *PR*; Hank Milnes (6th) 2:39.46 *PR*

1600 — Mitchell Hall (4th) 5:04.41 *PR*; Milnes (8th) 5:59.75 *PR*; Tate Wyman (10th) 6:13.51 *PR*

300 Hurdles — Wyman (5th) 58.94 *PR*

4 x 100 Relay — Wynn, Araceley, Coffman, Wilson (1st) 48.35

4 x 400 Relay — Wynn, Hall, Araceley, Wilson (2nd) 3:59.04

Shot Put — Logan Martin (1st) 41-03; Eck (7th) 29-07.50; Josh Guay (10th) 17-11 *PR*

Discus — Martin (1st) 153-10 *PR*; Robinett (9th) 71-02 *PR*; Guay (14th) 45-11 *PR*

Javelin — Martin (4th) 109-10.50 *PR*; Eck (7th) 85-04.50 *PR*; Hall (8th) 83-01.50

High Jump — Coffman (2nd) 5-06 *PR*

Long Jump — Araceley (6th) 14-09.50 *PR*; Eck (13th) 14-01; Milnes (15th) 13-09 *PR*; Robinett (16th) 13-01

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