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Posts Tagged ‘Chimacum’

Maddy Hilkey was one of nine Wolves to score Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

  Maddy Hilkey was one of nine Wolves to score Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

Put ’em on the court and they will take care of business.

Capturing victories hasn’t been the problem for the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad this season. It’s getting teams not to cancel on them.

Friday night was originally going to be the third time an opponent begged off playing, but at the last minute Chimacum decided it did have enough players to take the floor.

Cue the hungry Wolves, who seized advantage of any chance to play, and promptly rolled their hosts 41-22.

The win lifts Coupeville’s young guns to 6-2 overall, 2-0 in Olympic League play.

Or 8-2, 4-0 if you give the Wolves forfeit wins for the times Port Townsend and Chimacum bailed on them earlier this season…

Friday night, CHS rode a balanced offensive attack — nine girls scored, led by Ema Smith’s game-high 11 — and, other than a third-quarter slow-down, was markedly the superior team.

A 12-4 lead after one became a 22-7 bulge by halftime, then, after a two-point bump in the road in the third, Coupeville closed on a 17-9 surge in the fourth.

“Overall, we moved the ball pretty well on offense,” said Wolf coach Amy King. “Everyone got shots up and kept looking for openings.”

After falling into their third-quarter nap, the Wolves got a wake-up call from Nicole Lester, who all but ripped a Chimacum player’s head clean off her shoulders while retrieving a rebound.

“That seemed to be the spark the JV needed to take a breath and regain our game,” King said.

Ema Smith, who filled up the stat sheet with seven rebounds, two assists and two blocked shots, set up Emma Mathusek twice for quick buckets, while Avalon Renninger and Tia Wurzrainer were ball-hawks on defense.

Coupeville’s sophomore swing players — Ema Smith and Sarah Wright — were key to the team finding, and holding its groove.

Sarah didn’t score a lot but always adds an energy to the court that is necessary to keep us going,” King said. “Ema proves every night why she is a leader on and off the court.

“She talks, explains, encourages and shows through example,” she added. “She really stepped up and got the team working together in that last quarter.”

Mathusek and Maya Toomey-Stout each dropped in six points to back Ema Smith’s 11, while Scout Smith rattled home five.

Renninger (4), Wright (4), Ashlie Shank (2), Lester (2) and Maddy Hilkey (1) rounded out the attack, with Lester snatching five boards and Wurzrainer pilfering two steals.

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Gavin Knoblich (John Fisken photo)

   Gavin Knoblich (44) and Ulrik Wells (5), seen here in an earlier game, both put in strong efforts on the boards Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

If you didn’t show up early Friday, you missed the show.

By the time Coupeville and visiting Chimacum were done playing their JV boys’ basketball game, we saw a little bit of everything.

A missing ref, frequent technical fouls, an epic number of missed free throws, a triumphant return from the injured list by CHS big man Koa Davison, and, unfortunately, a close loss for the Wolves.

Clanking 19 shots from the charity stripe (it shot just 12 of 31), Coupeville let one slip away, falling 50-43 to the chippy Cowboys.

Before they did, the Wolves got to witness the two-man ref crew (official #3 showed up an hour late) whistle three technical fouls, all for fairly unexpected reasons.

Chimacum got two — the first for a player who forget to remove studs from his ears before taking the court, the second for delay of game for repeatedly rolling the ball away from Coupeville and the refs after made baskets.

The Wolves were teed up when a defender made inadvertent, and incidental, contact with a Cowboy inbounding the ball.

Why a warning wasn’t issued before jumping to awarding Chimacum free throws remains a good question, and one the refs had no desire to answer.

When the two squads were allowed to actually play, it was a tightly-contested game, with neither side holding more than a two-point lead until late in the third.

With Davison back in action and dominating in the paint, Coupeville had opportunity to break things open, but could not buy a break at the free throw line.

That enabled Chimacum to pull away late, hitting back-to-back three-balls to stretch the lead out to nine at 44-35.

The Wolves responded, however, getting points from three different players during an 8-2 surge that pulled them back within a three-ball with 45 seconds to play.

Mason Grove kicked off the late run, burying a trey from the right side, before Jered Brown slid a pair of free throws through the twines.

Another freebie from Davison and a pull-up jumper in traffic off of Brown’s fingertips cut the lead to 46-43, but Chimacum held on, dropping in two final buckets to stretch the final deficit out to seven.

Davison, back after having leg issues, led the way with 13, while Sean Toomey-Stout hit a variety of shots to collect 10.

Grove (9), Brown (8), Gavin Knoblich (2) and Ulrik Wells (1) rounded out the scoring, while, for the first time in a long time, the Wolf bench was packed.

Aiden Juras, Nikolai Lyngra, Elliott Johnson, Tucker Hall and Kyle Rockwell all saw floor time, with Rockwell being a genuine beast on the boards.

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Hunter Smith knocked down a team-high 15 Friday night in an overtime loss. (John Fisken photo)

   Hunter Smith knocked down a team-high 15 Friday night in an overtime loss. (John Fisken photos)

Gabe Wynn

Gabe Wynn tossed in 11, including a one-of-a-kind three ball.

So much went right, that what didn’t, hurts worse.

The Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad, thin on bodies, thin on experience and still battling to find its groove, looked as good Friday night as it has at any point this season.

The Wolves played smart team ball to open things, didn’t break when visiting Chimacum made its big run, and rallied late to force overtime.

But truly awful free-throw shooting prevented Coupeville from winning in regulation, and a dagger of a three-ball in the extra period knifed its final chance, sending the Wolves tumbling to a 63-56 loss that never should have been.

The loss drops CHS to 1-4 in Olympic League play, 1-11 overall. It also, for the moment, knocks them out of a playoff spot.

The top three teams in the league go to the postseason, and right now that’s Port Townsend (3-0), two-time defending league champ Chimacum (3-1) and Klahowya (1-3).

Coupeville still largely controls its own fate, with four league games left including the third and deciding match-up with Klahowya, who the Wolves have split with.

CHS doesn’t play another league game until Jan. 20, with its next three being non-conference affairs against Sequim, Mount Vernon Christian and North Mason.

A win Friday would have been huge, both in terms of positioning in the league standings, and in the psychological boost it would have offered the Wolves.

“I wanted it for the kids,” said Coupeville coach Anthony Smith. “I’m proud of the way we went at it. It was a good team effort, from the whole team.

“We keep battling and getting better,” he added. “It was there … it was there.”

The Wolves had battled back from a 10-point deficit (a 13-0 Chimacum run to open the second quarter was the only stretch that really stung Coupeville), and reclaimed the lead late in the fourth.

Ethan Spark split two defenders for a driving layup to knot the game up at 47, then the Hunter-to-Hunter connection gave CHS mometary control.

Flying full-tilt down the floor, Hunter Smith sucked the defense in, then rose up and fired a vicious pass over the top to Hunter Downes.

The ball hit his mitts with a bang, but the battle-hardened Downes, who enjoyed his best offensive performance of the season, held on, then spun the ball over his shoulder for a game-breaking layup.

Neither team blinked in the final two minutes, with Chimacum packaging a pair of buckets in the paint around another basket from Spark to leave things at 51-51.

Both squads had a chance to take the advantage at the charity stripe in a rough-and-tumble game that featured more than its fair share of fouls, but couldn’t do it.

Downes hit one of two to push the lead to 52-51, before the Cowboys slid one freebie through the nets, then clanked the second the very next time down the floor.

There were no Stephen Curry’s in the gym Friday, as the two schools combined to make just 26 of 50 free throws.

While Chimacum (10-19) edged Coupeville (16-31) at 52.6% to 51.6%, it was the sheer number of misses, and the fact they came from everyone on the floor, that really killed the Wolves.

The final 73 seconds of action was a tense, defensive battle, with neither team able to budge the scoreboard.

Spark narrowly missed on a three-ball with four ticks on the clock, while Chimacum’s half-court chuck at the buzzer went way wide right.

Once in overtime, things broke quickly, and badly.

Two quick Cowboy buckets off of transition put Coupeville in a hole, though it did battle back.

Gabe Wynn took an offensive rebound pack up for a bucket, then Wynn and Downes each made one of two at the line to pull the Wolves within 58-56.

Needing a defensive stand, CHS instead watched its plans crumble as Chimacum knocked down a three-ball with 38 seconds to play, effectively ending the night on a sour note.

It had started so positively, with the Wolves running out to a 9-6 lead after the first eight minutes, despite not getting a single point from their top two scorers, Hunter Smith and Wynn.

Instead, it was Downes, with four, including a gorgeous trey from deeeeeeeeeeep in the left corner, leading the way.

Brian Shank added three and Steven Cope hit a soft jumper after backing his man down to close the quarter, while Coupeville’s defense held Chimacum scoreless for the game’s first four minutes.

The Cowboys got their fairly annoying, man-bun-wearing bench to its happy place by raining down the first 13 points of the second quarter, but the Wolves didn’t break.

CHS closed the half on a 7-2 tear, sparked by two buckets from Shank, to get back to within three, then snatched the lead back at 38-35 in the third.

It came off of a trey from Wynn on which the ball hit the rim, popped upwards, curled around the glass, froze in mid-air to get its picture taken, then dropped softly through the net.

Hunter Smith paced the Wolves with 15, while Wynn and Downes each knocked down 11.

Spark (9), Shank (7) and Cope (3) rounded out the scoring attack, while Joey Lippo, Ariah Bepler and Cameron Toomey-Stout brought the defensive heat.

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Ben Smith (John Fisken photos)

A rebound drops into the grateful arms of Ben Smith. (John Fisken photos)

Grady Rickner

   Grady Rickner is the picture of concentration as he sails in for two of his game-high 10 Thursday.

Dakota Eck

Dakota Eck is here to break ankles and take names.

Logan Martin

Logan Martin, rampaging force of nature in the paint.

Xavier

   Xavier Murdy, having snatched one of his 357 rebounds (give or take one or two), powers back up for the put-back.

Daniel Olson

Daniel Olson swoops to the hoop.

Alex Jimenez

Alex Jimenez, unflappable and deadly from outside.

floor

   Wolf defensive buzz-saws Cody Roberts (left) and Daniel Barajas team up to assault a helpless Cowboy.

It was a beat-down of epic proportions.

Coupeville Middle School’s hoops squads head into winter break on a high, having crushed Chimacum Thursday in a pair of games.

Making a swing-through on his way to covering wrestling in Oak Harbor, travelin’ photo man John Fisken snapped the pics above.

To see more (purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/20162017-Coupeville-BB/MS-BBB/20161215-BBB-vs-Chimacum/

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Sage Downes (John Fisken photo)

   Sage Downes pumped in 13 Thursday, as the CMS 8th graders rolled to a huge win. (John Fisken photo)

Two gyms, two teams in perfect harmony.

Heading into the holiday break on a huge high, the Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball squads shellacked visiting Chimacum Thursday in games where teamwork was the key word of the day.

The 7th grade Wolves, getting buckets from all 11 players who saw action, strolled to a 55-28 win, while the 8th graders, powered by a season-high 31 from Jake Mitten, crushed the Cowboys 57-29.

The victory was the first of the season for the older CMS team (now 1-4), while the young guns improved to 3-2 and remain a spotless 3-0 in games played in their own gym.

Coupeville won’t return to action until Jan. 5, taking a full three-week sabbatical from games at the halfway point of its 10-game season.

The CMS 7th graders were missing top scorer Caleb Meyer, on a family trip to New Zealand, but everyone (and I mean EVERYONE) stepped up to plug the holes.

The Wolves came out aggressive, flustering the Cowboy ball-handlers behind Connor “Fastest Arms in the West” Barton, repeatedly making off with steals that they turned into breakaway buckets.

In fact, the only thing which kept the score halfway close (for a bit, at least) was CMS got a little too excited and slapped a string of running lay-ins off the glass too hard.

If the Wolves had found their groove just a hair earlier, the first quarter lead wouldn’t have been a modest 11-6.

Barton spiked the game’s opening bucket in 1.2 seconds, sliding through a pair of Cowboys to snatch the opening tip.

Once the orb was on his fingertips, he jammed the gas pedal through the floor, shot to the hoop and slapped home a wicked bank-shot that buckled the Chimacum coach’s knees.

The Cowboy head man didn’t have much better luck after that, as Barton and Hawthorne Wolfe were relentless on D, picking pockets and feeding their teammates for breakaway buckets.

The few times Chimacum was able to scramble back and set up on defense, the Wolves used their tall trees (Logan Martin, Xavier Murdy and Cody Roberts) to score inside.

Roberts tossed in a soft hook in the paint that brought back memories of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (at least to fans older than Roberts), while Martin, channeling the advice dad Bob gave him pre-game, went hard at the hoop on a consistent basis.

His best bucket came midway through the second.

Grady Rickner stripped the ball, spun, fired ahead to rampaging ball o’ fire Aiden Burdge, then pumped his fist in agreement as Burdge dropped a picture-perfect pass into Martin’s hands for a running lay-up.

Murdy and Rickner controlled the third — slender assassin Murdy channeling prime-of-his-career Dennis Rodman on the boards, while his teammate slashed to the hoop for six of his team-high 10.

Chimacum had no quit, hitting a truly spectacular (and pretty dang lucky) three-ball from the parking lot to kick off the fourth, but Coupeville never bent.

With a loose ball bouncing into the back court, Burdge sent older sister Kylie into (restrained) hysterics, winning a 1-on-1 race to the orb.

Grabbing it with one hand, while on the move, he shifted the ball to his other hand in the time it took him to take one extra-large hop, and knocked the runner down, making his siblings’ trip home from college an extra-special one.

Everything was clicking in the game’s final minutes, with Daniel Barajas operating the point while working the ball like a yo-yo and the Wolves continuing to set up almost every bucket with a well-placed pass.

With 10 of his 11 active players in the scoring column, CHS coach Randy King put his arm around Jonathan Carroll while the two stood along the sideline.

Looking down at the young gunner, with the eyes that had lit a fire under so many Wolves in the past 25+ years blazing (at a relatively soft temperature) King nodded his head.

“Go get me a bucket, son,” is what I’m imagining he said.

In reality, the gym was too loud to pick up his words, but the intent was undeniable.

Boom.

Barajas whipped a pass to Carroll, who spun, and promptly melted the minds of all gathered by not only hitting the basket, but knocking down a gorgeous bank-shot from well outside his normal range.

The gym went bonkers, Carroll elevated in the air like older brother Mitchell doing the high jump and King softly arched his eyebrows and nodded — which for him is tantamount to a screaming fit of hysterics.

By the time scorekeeper-to-the-stars McKenzie Bailey was done tallying up all the buckets, Rickner finished as high man with 10.

Hot on his heels was Barton (9), Martin (8), Murdy (6), Wolfe (4), Burdge (4), Barajas (4) and Gabe Shaw (4).

Roberts, Logan Wertz and Carroll rounded out the Wolf attack with a bucket apiece.

Mitten can’t be stopped:

Playing at the same time in the big gym, the 8th graders pounded the ball inside to their big weapon, and the nephew of former CHS hoops legend Jason McFadyen responded with a vengeance.

Hitting from all angles, Mitten scorched the twine for 13 in the first minutes, as the Wolves roared out to a 17-5 margin at the first break.

Coupeville didn’t let up, outscoring the Cowboys 30-8 across the second and third quarter, decisively plowing their foes, who boasted a bench twice the size of CMS.

Mitten’s 31 were the most scored by any Wolf this season, middle or high school, boy or girl, while Sage Downes swished 13 to back him up.

Daniel Olson banked home five, Alex Jimenez knocked in three, Ben Smith and Dakota Eck each swooped in for a bucket and Tian Yu swished a free throw for his first point of the season.

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