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Jayden Little flies to the hoop. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The spell is broken.

Playing at home for the final time this season Monday, the Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball teams went out with a bang.

Sweeping three wins from visiting South Whidbey, the Wolves fired the first shots in a two-day hoops extravaganza with their neighbors, while claiming their first victories of the season.

Now, during a frantic final week of hardwood action, the two schools will square off again Tuesday, this time in Langley.

That’s a makeup for earlier games postponed by a lack of refs.

After that comes the season finale against Lakewood, also on the road, and then the CMS boys hang up their jerseys for the season.

Reppin’ the red and black.

How Monday played out, on a day when I was babysitting and not in the CMS gym:

 

Level 1:

Wolf big man Nick Laska matched South Whidbey by himself as Coupeville drilled the Falcons 36-20.

The 8th grader, who leads all CMS players in scoring this season, scored in every quarter, racking up four, six, six, and four points on his way to a season high.

Chayse Van Velkinburgh tossed in 11, including hitting on a trio of three-balls, while Calvin Kappes (3) and Khanor Jump (2) rounded out the torrid offensive attack.

Kamden Ratcliff, Carson Grove, Nathan Niewald, and Jackson Sollars also saw floor time for the Wolves in the win.

 

Level 2:

Spreading out the offensive love between six players, Coupeville pulled out a 21-15 win.

Roger Merino-Martinez rippled the nets for a team-best six points, with Treyshawn Stewart adding five, including a three-ball.

Jump knocked down four, while Lincoln Wagner, Jayden Little, and River Simpson chipped in with a bucket apiece.

Xander Beaman, Diesel Eck, and Jonah Weyl rounded out the rotation for CMS coach RayLynn Ratcliff.

 

Level 3:

The biggest rout of the night came in the finale, as Coupeville romped to a 34-10 victory.

Wagner and Deacon Frost paced the Wolves, each tickling the twines for eight, with Johnathan Jacobsen backing them up with six.

Simpson (4), Aiden Wheat (2), Beaman (2), Jacob Lujan (2), and William Tierney (2) also scored, with Mario Martinez bringing the heat on defense.

It was the first points this season for Wheat, Frost, and Tierney, giving Coupeville 23 players who have scored through the first six games.

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Wolf roundball gurus (l to r) Jaylen Nitta, Alex Evans, and RayLynn Ratcliff get their moment in the spotlight. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Maybe Coupeville needs a fancy bus.

Granite Falls, and its 10,000 or so players, made the trek to Whidbey Island Tuesday in style, then went on a rebounding rampage en route to sweeping three middle school hoops contests.

While CMS put up a good fight, especially in the final quarter of the middle game, the Wolves weren’t able to corral their visitors, who played with a nice intensity.

A particular shout-out to Tigers 6th grader Jax Ashworth, who warms my ’80s NBA-loving heart by proving his motor has no shut off.

At the close of the day’s third and final game, things got scrappy, with Wolves Lincoln Wagner and Deacon Frost coming up with strong defensive plays.

Wagner crashed to the floor, then held on for dear life during a battle for the ball which went on, and on, and on some more, the refs swallowing their whistles as they watched the preteen warriors settle things mano a mano.

After Frost stuffed a Granite shot at one end of the floor, it was time for Ashworth to bring the heat.

Hurtling from end to end, and not worrying about the score, he launched himself airborne and crushed a Wolf shot attempt.

Ripping his foe’s head off and sending the ball into orbit, Ashworth might have earned a foul, but he did it in the best way possible.

By reviving sweet memories of Dennis Rodman and the Detroit Pistons back when the Bad Boys used to throttle Michael Jordan on every play.

Yes, the moment was a negative one for Coupeville, the school I’m primarily writing about, but dang, give Ashworth some love.

Now, we just need to track his parents down and talk about the whole moving to Whidbey Island before high school thing…

Anyways, back to how the day played out, with no more gushing about the guys in the road uniforms.

Coupeville points to a bright future.

Level 1:

Coupeville was playing without two key guys — Chayse Van Velkinburgh and Liam Lawson — which put the ball in the hands of an inexperienced playmaker.

The Wolves had their moments, and consistently got to the free throw line, but a huge rebounding deficit proved to be too much to overcome in a 53-19 loss.

Nick Laska, who fought like a lion in the paint against the Tigers, knocked down Coupeville’s first bucket off an inbounds pass from Carson Grove.

Unfortunately, it would be the only first quarter field goal for the Wolves, with CMS scraping together the rest of their scoring at the free throw line.

Trailing 16-6 at the first break, Coupeville briefly cut the deficit to 18-10 after Laska and Grove broke the field goal drought to start the second quarter.

Granite reclaimed control of the game, however, ending the half on a 10-1 run in which most of its buckets came via runners in the lane and putbacks on offensive boards.

The visitors continued to stretch the lead out in the second half, with 8-0 and 10-0 surges tough to overcome.

Wolf 8th grader Nathan Niewald nailed a three-ball on the move in the fourth, accounting for his first points of the season and getting a wave of applause from his fellow CMS students in the stands.

Laska led the Wolves with a team-high nine points, while Grove rattled the rim for four, and Niewald and Calvin Kappes each banked in three.

Kamden Ratcliff, Khanor Jump, Trenton Thule, Treyshawn Stewart, and Jackson Sollars all saw floor time for Coupeville as well.

 

Level 2:

The Wolves scored half their points in the fourth quarter, using a 10-4 run to cut the final margin to 33-20 in a game closer than the score might indicate.

Making things better, CMS got points in the final frame from five different players.

Jayden Little scorched the net on a three-ball, while Jump, Xander Beaman, and Thule each added a bucket, and Stewart tickled the twines on a free throw.

Granite jumped out to a 14-4 lead after one, pushed ahead to a 20-8 halftime advantage, then made life difficult for the Wolves with a 9-2 tear in the third frame.

Coupeville’s best basket before the fourth quarter?

It came from Little, who ripped the ball out of the hands of a rival player, then split two other defenders as he crashed to the hoop for a swooping layup.

Little finished with eight points to top the Wolves, with Beaman, Diesel Eck, Jump, Stewart, Jonah Weyl, and Thule all notching two points apiece.

Lincoln Wagner and Maverick Walling rounded out the roster, providing hustle on defense.

 

Level 3:

Coupeville won the second quarter (10-8) and came out even in the fourth (6-6) but ran into trouble in the first (18-4) and third (14-0) frames.

That made for a 46-20 loss, though one which came in a game where, as mentioned before, both teams brought the heat, old school style.

The Wolves best stand came in the second quarter and was keyed by Johnathan Jacobsen.

One of the few CMS players to hit the boards with a vengeance, the high-energy 8th grader also knocked down a team-high eight points and delivered the day’s most energetic celebration.

Beaman almost matched him, dropping a few dance moves after hitting a jumper, ignoring the score on the board while getting caught up in the excitement of the moment.

Wagner and Beaman both finished with four points in support of Jacobsen, while Walling and Jacob Lujan rounded out the attack with a bucket apiece.

Eck, Mario Martinez, Frost, River Simpson and Aiden Wheat also scrapped for the Wolves while CMS fans (or at least those sitting right next to me) maintained a solid 285 on the decibel meter.

 

What’s next:

With the holiday season upon us, the Wolves don’t play again until next Tuesday, Nov. 28, when they host Northshore Christian. Tipoff is 3:15 PM.

After that comes a home bout with Sultan (Nov. 30), two tangoes with South Whidbey (Dec. 4 in Langley and Dec. 11 in Cow Town), then the finale Dec. 13 at Lakewood.

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Coupeville Middle School basketball players watch action unfold on the court in Sultan Tuesday afternoon. (RayLynn Ratcliff photos)

The seal has been cracked on the net.

Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball teams became the first local hoops players to see action Tuesday, surviving a trip to the wilds of Sultan.

While the Wolves lost all three tilts against the always-tough Turks, valuable lessons were learned, and the season’s first points were recorded.

Overall, 11 different Coupeville hoops stars wrote their name in the scoring column during the road trip.

Now, it’s back to the bus Thursday for a trip to King’s, before CMS returns to Cow Town to kick off a three-game home-stand beginning with a Nov. 21 rumble against Granite Falls.

How opening day played out:

 

Level 1:

Coupeville poured in the three-balls but was edged by one of the most-consistent middle school programs in the region in a back-and-forth affair.

Chayse Van Velkinburgh paced the Wolves with a team-high 11 points, connecting on a trio of treys, while Carson Grove netted a shot from behind the arc as part of his six points.

Nick Laska provided a potent third option, pouring in eight points, with Kamden Ratcliff capping the scoring with a bucket.

Liam Lawson, Nathan Niewald, Calvin Kappes, Khanor Jump, and Trenton Thule rounded out the roster.

 

Level 2:

Kappes, just a 6th grader, led the Wolves with six points, with Diesel Eck and Jump chipping in with two points apiece.

Jonah Weyl, Maverick Walling, Aiden Wheat, Thule, River Simpson, and Lincoln Wagner also suited up for Coupeville.

 

Level 3:

6th grader Xander Beaman had the hot hand, banking in a team-best eight points, while CMS also got scoring from four others.

Johnathan Jacobsen netted four, with Eck and Walling both popping for a bucket.

Wagner, Jacob Lujan, Weyl, and Wheat were also on call for the Wolves.

It’s the ferry life for them.

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CMS 8th grader Davin Houston played strongly Monday against Sultan. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Blood was shed and buckets were scored — though not always on the correct basket.

The next-to-last set of games for Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball this season played out to their own funky rhythm Monday afternoon.

How things went down:

 

Level 1:

It was carnage on the hardwood.

Coupeville opened without leading scorer and rebounder Jayden McManus, who is battling illness.

Then, the Wolves took two more nasty hits, as inside enforcer Riley Lawless went down with a “severely sprained ankle” and point guard Chayse Van Velkinburgh got his lip split open by a wayward elbow.

While the remaining Wolves fought aggressively all game, they fell behind early to visiting Sultan and were never able to recover, losing 48-19.

The Turks set the tone of the game in the first quarter, sprinting out to a 21-5 lead while KO’ing Lawless and Van Velkinburgh.

From there Sultan pushed its advantage to 36-11 at the half, though Coupeville held up well during a low-scoring second half.

Wolf coach Jon Roberts praised the play of Davin Houston and Mahkai Myles, who carried the scoring load with eight and six points, respectively.

Mahkai probably had his best game shooting,” Roberts said.

Lawless knocked down three points before he was knocked out, while Nic Laska banked in a bucket to round out Coupeville’s offensive attack.

Carson Grove, Sage Arends, and Joshua Stockdale also saw floor time for the Wolves.

 

Team 2:

The opening act in the Roger Merino-Martinez Experience, as the Wolf gunner rattled home all of Coupeville’s points in a 49-9 loss.

The speed demon scored every which way, rippling the net on a three-ball and also hitting both of his free throw attempts.

Roger the Rocket scored on several steals or nice runners up the left side,” Roberts said.

“He surely missed enough buckets to have had another 12 points. We will work on those pesky layups tomorrow.”

Nathan Niewald, Cyrus Sparacio, Charles Hart, Dylan Robinett, Jacob Barajas, Brantley Campbell, and Kenneth Jacobsen rounded out a Wolf roster which is young and inexperienced, but feisty and hard-working.

 

Level 3:

Roger the Rocket kept the nets flipping, going off for another 15 points while coming off the bench in a 54-24 loss.

Coupeville rewarded a group of players who “have been giving max effort” with starts, sending Zach Blitch, Kenneth Jacobsen, Khanor Jump, Hunter Atteberry, and Johnathan Jacobsen out for the opening tip.

The Wolves continued to tinker with their lineup, mixing and matching and seeing what worked best.

“We messed with a tall lineup with a fast guard,” Roberts said. “We went with an all 4-foot-5 and under speed crew, and various other lineups to see if we could fluster Sultan.

“We had a good run in the third quarter,” he added. “All players saw the court and participated in one fashion or another.”

Trailing 36-13 at the half, the Wolves controlled the game in frame three, outscoring the Turks 11-8 with a little unexpected help.

Merino-Martinez tickled the twine for nine of his 15 points in the quarter, while Sultan’s #34 scored on the wrong basket, putting a rebound back up and in while probably wondering why none of the Wolves were trying to stop him.

Among guys actually wearing CMS uniforms, Sparacio rattled the rim for four points, while Campbell netted a three-ball.

 

One more rumble:

The Wolves close their season Wednesday with a rematch against South Whidbey, this time playing in Coupeville.

Tipoff is 3:15 PM.

After that, the CMS girls are next up, kicking off their season in January.

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Carson Grove brings the ball up the floor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The annual pilgrimage to the wilds of Sultan is off.

For now, at least.

Winter weather encroached on the schedule Tuesday, denying the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball team a chance to bounce across the backroads of the state.

It was snow in Sultan, and not here on Whidbey, which forced the decision.

As to whether the road trip will be rescheduled, Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith was fairly noncomittal.

“We will see…,” he said, then headed off to presumably look for a nice cup of hot chocolate.

CMS has five other games remaining on the schedule, with the season currently set to conclude Dec. 14.

That includes home matchups with King’s (Dec. 1), Sultan (Dec. 12), and Langley (Dec. 14).

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