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Posts Tagged ‘Chelsea Prescott’

CMS 8th grader Hannah Davidson, seen here during practice, spent most of Thursday trying to deflect constant elbows to the face, chest and back. (John Fisken photo)

  CMS 8th grader Hannah Davidson, seen here during practice, spent most of Thursday trying to deflect constant elbows to the face, chest and back. (John Fisken photo)

It was a weird afternoon all around.

Take one fairly physical visiting team, toss in a plot twist on how long a game is, then liberally sprinkle with two refs who seemed to have little understanding of their job, and it all added up Thursday to one big pain in the rear for Coupeville.

By the time things were done, both of its middle school girls’ basketball squads had suffered their first losses of the season, and its coaches and fans were left with a mixture of puzzlement and unhappiness etched on their faces.

In the opener, the Wolf 7th graders raced out to an eight-point lead midway through the second quarter, before fouls stripped them of their best inside presence.

With Morgan Pease planted on the bench for the final five minutes of the first half — which turned out to to be the final five minutes of the game (more on that later) — Coupeville watched in horror as Forks sliced into the paint repeatedly, closing the game on a 10-0 run to nail down a 19-16 victory.

If that was rough, the nightcap was worse, as the refs went from bad to ridiculous, causing normally restrained CMS coach Bob Martin to virtually implode as Forks smashed the Wolf 8th graders (in the face, repeatedly) en route to a 49-25 romp.

The losses left both Wolf squads at 2-1 on the season.

Thursday’s opener was set up to be a shorter-than-normal affair, as Forks claimed to have just five 7th graders.

Having agreed to cut the game in half, the Wolves stormed out to an early lead, and held it for most of the half.

Now, when Forks ran a sub in early in the first quarter (presumably an 8th grader), it was obvious their players wouldn’t have had to play the entire 32 minutes if the game was normal length.

Still, that was small potatoes compared to two refs who combined a lack of staying on top of the game (“Wait, what, they’re shooting free throws? Who’s shooting free throws?”) with a flair for ignoring some brutal collisions while working their whistles overtime on petty infractions.

Even with all that going on, Coupeville stretched its lead out to 14-6 when Genna Wright banked home a shot while clearing out the paint the way (elbow-swinging) older sister Sarah likely taught her.

Forks pulled off a three-point play the hard way to slice away at the lead, before Chelsea Prescott immediately answered.

Taking an in-bounds pass from Mollie Bailey, the Wolves leading scorer dropped in her final bucket of the half, giving her a game-high 10 (she’s averaging 18.4 ppg over the 2.5 games played) and pushing the lead back to 16-9.

Then came a string of foul calls on the Wolves, especially Pease, while on the other end, the Wolves couldn’t buy a break.

The most glaring example: Prescott, in the air, with a shot leaving her hands, was hammered on the upraised wrists, yet the refs gave the ball to CMS on the side, and didn’t send the Wolves to the line to shoot.

Given new life, and with the refs breath the wind beneath their wings, Forks claimed their first lead of the game on a pair of free-throws.

Then they iced the game with a put-back off of a rebound (on a play in which the Wolf who originally had the ball was clocked in the back of the head, causing her to cough it up).

As confused fans watched the two teams go down the handshake line instead of head to the locker room for halftime, the 8th graders took the floor and the refs recharged by making a silent pact to get worse. Much worse.

The nightcap featured one play over and over (and over again) — Wolf post player Hannah Davidson being smacked.

In the head. On the shoulders. In the chest. Pretty much anywhere the Forks defenders could get away with it.

Oh right, on this night they could get away with it anywhere…

At the half, Martin and 7th grade coach Ryan King had an animated three-minute-plus discussion with the refs that started at one end of the court and ended at the other.

Unfortunately (for me, at least), my life-long dream of seeing an ejection in a middle school game was for naught as both CMS coaches are smart, restrained guys who made their points, expressed their displeasure, but refused to go all Bobby Knight.

I tip my hat to the Wolf coaches, cause they handled the situation better than most.

Battered, knocked around and poked to death, the Wolves rallied a bit and got back what they could.

Scout Smith got back on defense, planted herself for a good 10 seconds, then got rocked by a Forks girl who, on the move, blasted the slender Wolf point guard hard enough the thunk was heard across the street by grocery store shoppers.

No foul.

So the scrappy one picked herself up, shot up the floor, took a pass and banked home a three-ball from the top, pausing for just a millisecond to do a little happy (and sore) dance.

Smith later sank another trey on her way to a team-high eight, while Davidson and Avalon Renninger each knocked down six.

Maya Toomey-Stout popped for five to round out the CMS attack.

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Chelsea Prescott (John Fisken photo)

   Chelsea Prescott, seen here in an earlier game, went for a season-high 24 Monday in a huge CMS win. (John Fisken photo)

From a thriller to a blow-out.

After opening its season with a win that wasn’t settled until the final play of the game, the Coupeville Middle School 7th grade girls’ basketball squad put game #2 away early.

Storming out to a 20-point lead at the half Monday, the Wolves rolled to a 42-12 thrashing of host Port Townsend to improve to 2-0 on the season.

Coupeville claimed a quick 12-4 lead after one quarter, then put the game away with a 14-2 surge in the second.

From there the Wolves pulled back on the reigns a bit and coasted in with 10-4 and 6-2 advantages over the final two quarters of play.

Chelsea Prescott sparked the CMS attack with a torrid 24, scorching the net in every quarter.

She opened with six, then dropped in eight in both the second and third quarters.

Genna Wright banked home six in support of Prescott, while Mollie Bailey knocked down four.

Morgan Pease, Megan Thorn, Luci Coleburn and Seraina Weatherford each sank a bucket to round out the Wolf scoring attack.

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Cassidy Moody played in two games Thursday, dropping in 12 points combined. (John Fisken photo)

   Cassidy Moody played in two Wolf wins Thursday, dropping in 12 points combined. (John Fisken photo)

If they quit now, they’re perfect.

Of course, the Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball squads plan to play the rest of their 10-game schedule, but opening night was so flawless, it may be hard to top.

Romping to three wins in three games against visiting Chimacum, the Wolves opened with a thriller, then put together back-to-back blowouts to cap the evening.

The CMS 7th grade varsity escaped with a 22-21 victory that was sealed with a block at the buzzer from big-game pro Chelsea Prescott, while the 8th graders ran away with a 29-8 varsity win and 36-20 JV triumph.

Despite being severely outnumbered, the seven-woman Wolf 7th grade team made up for their lack of bodies with good old-fashioned skills and grit.

Baffled a bit by the Cowboy press in the early going, they fell behind 5-0 and had trouble getting the ball across mid-court.

A jumper from Brooke Ausman finally got Coupeville in the score-book in 2016, and then, once they settled down and got over what seemed a bit like first-game jitters, the Wolves were off to the races.

Prescott, who already owns a jump-stop finishing move which is rare at her level, torched the nets for a game-high 12, while teammate Morgan Pease thoroughly dominated play in the paint.

Using her height and superior reach, Pease snatched rebound after rebound, rejected a string of Chimacum shots and convinced the Cowboys the last place they wanted to be was anywhere in the lane.

She also showed a light touch on the offensive end, dropping in all six of her points during a 10-4 second quarter run that staked Coupeville to a lead it would never relinquish.

Pease’s final bucket came on a dish from point guard Mollie Bailey, and she banked it in off the glass with a single second remaining on the clock, sending the Wolves into the break up 14-11.

Coupeville stayed hot coming out of halftime, with Prescott ripping off three straight buckets to stretch the lead to nine, then things got interesting.

Chimacum closed the game on a 10-2 surge, with a sweet jumper from the side off of Prescott’s fingertips the lone (and huge, it turned out) Wolf bucket.

Clinging to a 22-21 lead, CMS survived two scares in the final five seconds.

After missing from point-blank range, the Cowboys got the ball back with 1.9 seconds to go.

The shooter took the in-bounds pass on the left side, whirled, went to fire up the potential game-winner and … BOOM … Prescott, catching nothing but ball all the way, spiked it out of bounds volleyball-style.

The live-action punctuation mark set off a celebration from her teammates and fans that might still be going.

Ausman and Bailey each dropped in a bucket to back Prescott and Pease, while Genna Wright was an absolute wild woman on defense and Thora Iverson and Catherine Lhamon both chipped in with hustle and hard work.

The 8th graders, who had enough players to play two games, realized nothing they were about to do would match the edge-of-your-seat thrills the 7th graders threw down, so they opted to just go out and crush folks.

The varsity, spurred by the defense of hard-charging ball-hawk Avalon Renninger, scored the game’s final 15 points to blow things open.

Renninger scored all 10 of her game-high points off of steals and breakaway buckets, while Emma Mathusek knocked down eight points on a variety of inside moves.

Maya Toomey-Stout (4), Hannah Davidson (3), Cassidi Moody (2) and Scout Smith (2) also scored, with Davidson operating as  a force on the boards at both ends of the floor.

In the JV nightcap the Wolves used two epic runs to bust things wide open.

The first, a 12-0 surge with Moody draining eight, gave Coupeville its first lead after Chimacum opened the game by knocking down three straight jumpers.

Then, clinging to a narrow 14-12 lead early in the second, the Wolves ramped up their defense and picked apart the Cowboys.

Unable to successfully get the ball up-court, Chimacum watched in horror as Coupeville ripped off 16 straight points, almost all on steals in the back-court, to close out the half.

With ferry departure time rapidly approaching, the JV contest went with a running clock in the second half, and, while the scoring went down, the Wolves still had a few more highlight-reel plays left in them.

Cynthia Rachal and Jaden Marrs capped the game with back-to-back buckets — the first of the season for both players — then celebrated in style.

Rachal hopped up and down in place after her shot hit the bottom of the net, while Marrs raised two fingers and waggled them at her family in the crowd, huge smile covering her face.

Moody paced the Wolves with 10, while Seraina Weatherford, Megan Thorn and Ashleigh Battaglia dropped in six apiece.

Tia Wurzrainer (4), Rachal (2) and Marrs (2) rounded out the JV scorers as every Wolf to see floor time tallied points.

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Abby Mulholland gets ready to break some ankles in a game earlier this season. (John Fisken photos)

   Abby Mulholland gets ready to break some ankles in a game earlier this season. (John Fisken photos)

The future.

The future.

The next wave is coming and it’s hungry for success.

Capping their season strongly Saturday, the Coupeville 6th grade SWISH girls’ basketball squad split a pair of games, claiming second in their postseason tourney.

The Wolves, who went 10-4 this season under the tutelage of head coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh and assistant Trent Diamanti, opened play in Sedro-Woolley by drilling Stanwood 33-14.

They then returned to the court in the early afternoon for the title game and ran into refs who waved off three Coupeville buckets in what turned into a six-point loss to Blaine.

Having traveled down from the border, the almost-Canucks had a miracle day.

Entering the tourney seeded fifth, they shocked top-ranked Mt. Baker by 20 in the first round, then managed to survive (with some help from the guys in black and white) their showdown with the scrappy Wolves.

While Coupeville didn’t get the title they were hoping for, the tight-knit group of girls on this squad — drawn from a far smaller population than their rivals — were brilliant all season long.

“I’m very proud of this group of girls. We played hard all season,” Van Velkinburgh said. “Future looks bright for this group.

“A lot to be excited about,” he added. “I’m glad my daughter gets to play with this group. They are close on and off the court.”

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Isabelle Wells (John Fisaken photos)

   Isabelle Wells looks for an opening in the defense in an earlier game. (John Fisken photos)

Remember the names.

Remember the names.

Van Velkinburgh

“You really think you can stop my shot?!?!?”

The Wolves are on the prowl.

Coupeville’s 6th/7th grade SWISH girls’ basketball team opened the weekend with a howl, traveling down to La Conner Saturday and decimating their opponents.

The Wolves shredded Mount Vernon Christian 40-14 to improve their league record to a flawless 2-0.

Coupeville is 2-2 overall.

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