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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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Brian Shank

   Hard-working Brian Shank (with ball) scored a game-high seven points in Coupeville’s JV loss Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

The transition begins.

As the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad heads down the final stretch of the season, coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh is mixing things up.

His young guns have been throwing up a ton of three-balls in practice, as the team is looking to amp up its offense.

While the Wolves aren’t quite ready yet to play at the pace of say, Loyola Marymount from the late ’80s/early ’90s, they do want to push the flow of the game, mixing treys with layups.

First though, they’ll have to have a better shooting night than they did Tuesday, when Coupeville went 4-of-27 from behind the arc in a 59-25 loss to visiting Chimacum.

The loss dropped the Wolf JV to 2-11 overall, 0-5 in league play.

Brian Shank paced CHS with seven points, while Gabe Eck drained a pair of three-pointers to back him with six.

Ty Eck banked home four, Andre Avila popped for three, Hunter Downes notched two and Ariah Bepler tickled the twines for a free throw.

And yes, that’s 23 and not 25, as the book was missing a bucket from the second quarter.

Someone tell the JV score-keeper they’ll need to be quicker with the pencil, especially if the Wolf young guns start nailing all those three-balls.

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Makana Stone lines up the free throw that would result in her 1,000th career point. (John Fisken photo)

   Makana Stone lines up the free throw that would result in her 1,000th career point. (John Fisken photo)

Makana Stone made history, then she and her teammates took care of business.

Throwing down a season-high 28 points Tuesday, including the 1,000th point of her stellar prep hoop career, the Coupeville High School senior lit the fire that launched the Wolves to a 48-34 thrashing of visiting Chimacum.

The conference victory lifted Coupeville to 11-4 overall, 5-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

With three of the league’s four teams making it to the postseason, the Wolves officially clinched a playoff spot.

It also moved them one victory away from clinching back-to-back league titles.

They have a three game lead on Port Townsend (2-3) and Klahowya (2-3) with four to play, while Chimacum drops into the cellar at 1-4.

Win Friday night on the road at Klahowya and Coupeville would be four up on the Eagles with three to play.

Even if Port Townsend beats Chimacum that night to get to 3-3, if the Wolves win, they would be three up on the RedHawks with three to play — and they own the tiebreaker.

Tuesday, the Wolves hit the floor amped up.

Backed by an enuthisastic audience, Stone, who needed 22 to crack the 1,000 point barrier, threw  down the game’s first six points and they came on a variety of wicked moves.

First she backed her defender down in the paint, then twirled and banked home a jumper.

Next came a little runner, then she pilfered the ball and beat the crowd all the way down the floor for an emphatic lay-in.

The steal was important, as well, as she needed four to break 200 for her career, to go with the 800+ rebounds she had already snagged.

She finished with seven pickpocket jobs, more than hitting her target.

With Stone dominating — she also capped the first quarter by slashing to the basket and taking a gorgeous entry pass from Kyla Briscoe for another layup — Coupeville had Chimacum on its heels.

Add Mia Littlejohn and Kailey Kellner launching three-balls, and everywhere the Cowboys looked, someone in red and white was throwing down a basket.

Coupeville used a 16-0 run to take a narrow 9-7 lead and pad it out to 25-7, essentially ending the game midway through the second quarter.

Stone had 19 by the halftime break, and, when she wasn’t scoring, she was returning the favor to Briscoe, feeding the Wolf sophomore with her own perfect set-up for a layup.

“I feel like we came out focused and with energy tonight,” said Coupeville coach David King. “Makana set the tone early and often in the first half.

“I was very happy with the focus we had in the first half,” he added. “We moved the ball well and got open shots throughout. We also rebounded better than our previous two games. So that’s a positive.”

The Wolves were stung a bit by their go-go-go style, picking up more fouls than King might have liked to have seen.

“The energy we had was a blessing but also got us in trouble on the defensive end,” he said.

The second half was more of an even battle, as the Cowboys hung around a bit thanks to Coupeville playing a bit wild and loose.

“For some reason offensively in the second half we went away from what was working for us,” King said. “We allowed Chimacum to stay in the game with fouls and turnovers.

“We need to shore up our defense and minimize the turnovers.”

Still, Coupeville thoroughly controlled the boards, winning that battle 46-21.

“Rebounding was outstanding. Everyone contributed,” King said. “Lauren Grove did a great job diving in and picking up some big offensive rebounds, and Lindsey (Roberts) and Kailey got some timely rebounds.

The moment everyone had been waiting for came at the 2:25 mark of the third quarter.

Stone, laser-focused on the game and (seemingly) oblivious to her loud ‘n proud fan section, led by former teammate Kacie Kiel, dropped in a free-throw to crack four digits.

In a nice twist, the moment was called live by PA announcer Randy King, whose daughter Brianne also topped the 1,000 point mark during her days as a Wolf hoops star.

After letting Chimacum slide back within 10 early in the fourth, Coupeville put the game on ice with an 8-0 run that stretched the lead out to 48-30.

One of those buckets came on a soft, arcing jumper from Skyler Lawrence, a swing player who made a big impact in her fourth quarter cameo.

On the very next play down the floor, Lawrence whipped a pass between two defenders, dropping the ball right on to the fingertips of Allison Wenzel, her partner in crime on the Wolf bench.

Unfortunately, a Chimacum finger poked the ball at just the wrong moment, spoiling Wenzel’s layup attempt.

As the duo sprinted back on defense, they exchanged smiles and a little light ribbing.

Stone added 16 rebounds and two blocks to go with her 28 points, while Littlejohn put together an eight point, eight rebound, four assist evening.

Kellner drained six, snatched seven boards and dealt out three assists while Roberts, Lawrence and Kyla Briscoe rounded out the scoring with a bucket apiece.

Roberts snagged six rebounds, with Grove and Tiffany Briscoe hauling down four each. Grove and Kyla Briscoe each had two assists.

As Coupeville moves forward, King knows his team, which has never lost in league play (14-0 over the past two seasons) remains the hunted.

“We realize that the other other three teams are coming for us every game,” he said. “That means we have to be at the top of our game; tonight we did that.

“We did a lot of things well tonight.”

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Hunter Smith (3), seen here in an earlier game, poured in 16 Tuesday, one of three Wolves to break double digits. (John Fisken photo)

   Hunter Smith (3), seen here in an earlier game, poured in 16 Tuesday, one of three Wolves to break double digits. (John Fisken photo)

Never turn your back on a Wolf.

Chimacum may be the defending 1A Olympic League boys’ basketball champs, but Coupeville is coming for that title.

There is no doubt about that.

Throwing down a 27-point fourth quarter Tuesday night, in which six different players scored, the Wolves rallied for a 72-65 road win that has sent reverberations through the league standings.

The third straight win for a suddenly-jelling CHS squad, it lifted Coupeville to 7-6 overall, 2-1 in league play.

A win Friday night at Port Townsend (5-8, 3-0) and the Wolves will be tied for first place with five games to play.

Chimacum (3-11, 1-2) would claim the league’s third and final playoff berth right now, while Klahowya (1-13, 0-3) would be on the outside looking in.

The Cowboys and Eagles also face off Friday.

Playing in the opening game of a doubleheader Tuesday, the Coupeville boys battled basket for basket with Chimacum for the first three quarters. But they couldn’t quite get over the hump.

Down 14-12 after one, they trailed 31-27 at the half and 49-44 after three.

Maybe.

If that’s true, Coupeville’s 27-16 performance in the fourth should have given them a 71-65 win, and that’s what the scoring totals in the book reflect.

But the Chimacum scoreboard operator, and both coaches, are hanging their hats on 72-65, so we’ll just have to accept a point got lost somewhere.

Either way, the Wolves closed like a team with its eyes locked firmly on the prize.

Silky-smooth senior guard Risen Johnson poured in eight of his team-high 18 in the final quarter, and Coupeville, a streaky team when it comes to hitting free throws, was a sizzling 8 of 11 at crunch time.

Jordan Ford came up big as well, with six in the fourth, while Hunter Smith chipped in with five and Wiley Hesselgrave netted all four of his points at the end.

Coupeville continues to be a very well-balanced squad, with three players in a virtual dead-heat for the team scoring lead.

Hesselgrave, at 156 points on the season, is narrowly ahead of Johnson and Ford, who are tied with 151.

Smith, who missed a chunk of the season with an injury, continues to heat up as he gets his legs back under himself.

He hit for 16 on the night, coming on the heels of a 19-point performance against Stevenson Friday.

Ford (14), DeAndre Mitchell (7), Gabe Wynn (4), Dante Mitchell (4), Hesselgrave (4), JJ Johnson (3) and Desmond Bell (1) rounded out the scorers.

The missing point? We’ll never know, but hey, when you win, who cares?

JV falls short:

Missing three players, including two starters, the Wolf young guns hung with Chimacum for most of the first half, but went cold in the second half, falling 68-35.

The loss dropped the JV to 2-9 overall, 0-3 in league play.

The Wolves got all of their scoring from three players, with Brian Shank leading the way with 17.

Ty Eck added 13, including three treys, while Ariah Bepler netted five.

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Current 8th graders like Maya Toomey-Stout (3) and Scout Smith (2)

   Current 8th graders like Maya Toomey-Stout (3) and Scout Smith (2) now know Coupeville will be a 1A school for their entire high school run. (John Fisken photo)

It’s a done deal. Well, 99% done.

Coupeville High School will remain a 1A school for the next four years, and so will the three other schools who joined the Wolves to form the 1A Olympic League in 2014.

The Washington Interscholastic Activities Association released its 2016-2020 enrollment figures Thursday, with final approval set to come when their executive board meets Jan. 24-25.

After years of doing classification counts every two years, the WIAA is changing that to every four years beginning this year.

Two years ago, Coupeville was the smallest true 1A school in the state, but it no longer holds that distinction.

With 227 students in grades 9-11, it is now the 6th smallest, with Columbia (Burbank) inheriting smallest status with 214.50 students.

Schools can choose to opt up (but not down), and eight schools with 2B numbers decided to do just that, so, technically, CHS has the 52nd biggest student body of the 65 schools which will compete in 1A.

Coupeville’s three league mates all remained in 1A, as well, though Klahowya came close to not making the cut.

The Eagles slid in just under the line, and they will be the 2nd biggest 1A school with 445.07 students.

Port Townsend has 278.25, which is way down from two years ago, and Chimacum sits at 250.38.

As the WIAA dots the I’s and crosses the T’s, there is still one thing to keep an eye on.

Across the state, schools are jumping leagues, either because of moving up or sliding down a level, or for other reasons.

The Everett Herald is reporting the four 2A schools from Coupeville’s former league, the 2A/1A Cascade Conference, are joining up with schools from the Northwest Conference, such as Anacortes, to form a 12-team “super conference” for football only.

That would leave the conference’s four 1A schools — King’s, South Whidbey, Sultan and Cedar Park Christian-Bothell — on their own, at least for the biggest revenue sport.

Whether that could help prod South Whidbey to seek out a chance to rejoin Coupeville is unknown at this time.

If the 1A Olympic League were to expand (Forks has been frequently mentioned in the past, as well), the league could set itself up for more playoff berths in all sports.

Only time will tell, though.

Until then, it’s all just gossip. Juicy, juicy gossip to fill up the day.

To see the final, almost-official WIAA figures, pop over to:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/12qwdXCBPepkgxLWG4sbxIJgXo5eDX0FZHM8flfx4pdE/pubhtml?gid=1635670243&single=true

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