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   Defensive dynamo Cameron Toomey-Stout scored a season-high seven points Wednesday as Coupeville clobbered Chimacum. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It wasn’t especially pretty, but we’ll overlook that.

Bouncing back after a rough loss a night before, the Coupeville High School boys basketball squad used a fiery fourth quarter Wednesday at home to stuff pesky Chimacum, nabbing a 67-43 win.

The victory, which was finally sealed with a 20-6 run over the final eight minutes, lifts the Wolves to 2-1 in Olympic League play, 4-8 overall.

It also gives them sole possession of second-place in the four-team conference, a game off of league leader Port Townsend (4-1, 7-5), a team they have split two games with this season.

Klahowya (1-1, 4-7) and Chimacum (0-4, 0-8) currently bring up the rear.

Wednesday’s game, which featured a mind-numbing 52 free throws, almost half of which were missed, started like a rout, turned into a pitched battle, then became more of a runaway in the final moments.

After falling behind 2-1 a few seconds into the game — the only time it would trail all night — Coupeville went on a 12-1 run, highlighted by six points from Hunter Smith, and looked like it would cruise.

Even if not all their shots were falling, and the refs were already starting to call a LOT of fouls on both teams, the Wolves were in control and it didn’t appear the undermanned Cowboys had many answers.

Until they did.

While Chimacum wasn’t the sharpest-shooting team, or the slickest-passing, it did one thing very well — hit the boards and give itself second, third and fourth chances.

That helped the Cowboys slowly amass a 14-4 surge of their own, tying the game at 17-17 early in the second quarter.

Coupeville seemed intent on playing like a yo-yo for much of the game, snapping off sizzling runs, then handing back buckets in chunks to their win-less foes, leaving coach Brad Sherman frequently wearing a look of mild indigestion.

An 8-0 run in a matter of about eight seconds, capped by Smith hitting a breakaway layup, then immediately punching home a three-ball off of a tipped pass, eased the angina. A bit.

But CHS couldn’t seem to put Chimacum away, taking a 14-point lead early in the third, only to then hand back more than half their advantage in the matter of a few plays.

Suddenly clinging to a 43-37 lead with under a minute to play in the third, the Wolves finally found their knockout punch, or punches.

They came courtesy Dane Lucero and Hunter Downes, hard-working rebound hounds, who converted on back-to-back put-backs to end the quarter.

Toss in a patented “Rock Block,” a soundly-rejected shot by senior big man Kyle Rockwell, and the Wolf bruisers fully earned their stripes against a rough-and-tumble Cowboy squad.

Back up by 10, Coupeville found a new gear in the fourth, ripping off 20 points, with five different players scoring, while limiting Chimacum to a single field goal.

“We came out on fire in that fourth quarter and rebounded really well,” Sherman said. “We needed to do that; it was a nice way to finish.”

While the team’s leading scorers this season, Smith and Ethan Spark, combined for 11 points in the fourth, CHS also got big contributions from their fellow battle-hardened seniors.

Defensive dynamo Cameron Toomey-Stout, a pass-first set-up man, went off for five points in the quarter, including a long three-ball, while Downes picked up assists with a pair of sweet dishes to Lucero and Spark.

Smith paced the Wolves, who scored their most points of the season, with 25.

That lifts him to 695, and he passed Virgil Roehl (674), Gavin Keohane (677) and Chris Good (688) Wednesday to claim 17th place on the Wolf boys basketball career scoring list.

Spark rattled home 17, including three treys, while Downes banked home eight (while snatching 12 rebounds) and Toomey-Stout sank a season-high seven.

Lucero (4), Joey Lippo (4) and Rockwell (2) rounded out the scoring.

Coupeville was very effective in disrupting the Cowboy offense, pilfering 20 steals. Smith led the assault with eight, while Spark made off with four.

In a game in which the refs called a foul after a Chimacum player out on the break fell down under his own power, with the nearest Wolf five feet away, the two teams spent an inordinate amount of time at the free-throw line.

The Cowboys shot a slightly better percentage (55% to 52%), but also missed more, hitting 17 of 31 compared to Coupeville’s 11-21.

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Ty Hamilton wheels and deals in a recent game. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   CMS coach Bob Martin gives Isaiah Bittner his marching orders. “Go destroy some fools, son!!”

They came, they saw, they conquered.

Delivering their best performance of the season right as they head into winter break, the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball squads rolled to big wins Thursday at Chimacum.

The Wolf JV ran past the Cowboys 36-26 to claim its first victory of the season, while the CMS varsity left the court carrying a 55-42 triumph.

The wins lift the varsity to 3-2 and the JV to 1-4, and those records will stay in place for a bit.

Coupeville has a three-week gap on its schedule, not returning to action until Jan. 4, when Forks makes the long trek to Whidbey to kick off the second half of the 10-game schedule.

Until then, the young Wolves can bask in the glow of victory, thanks to strong defensive efforts in both Chimacum games.

Varsity:

The Wolves put the hammer down early, with Caleb Meyer and Hawthorne Wolfe both tossing in six points apiece in the first period, part of a 17-point CMS explosion.

Other than a brief dip in the third quarter, Coupeville continued to pour in the buckets all afternoon.

Wolfe finished with a game-high 21, netting seven of his points via the free-throw line.

CMS hit 15 shots from the charity stripe as a team, one of its best performances this season.

Meyer knocked down 11 points to back Wolfe, while Grady Rickner popped for 10 and Xavier Murdy banked in six.

Logan Martin (5) and Cody Roberts (2) rounded out the scorers.

JV:

Coupeville put this game away with a 14-point run in the second quarter, keyed by six from the fingertips of point guard Aiden Burdge and a pair of buckets from enforcer Isaiah Bittner.

A three-ball from Tony Garcia in the fourth quarter put a cap on the win for the Wolves.

CMS spread its scoring around, with Bittner leading the way with 10.

He was followed by Burdge (8), Damon Stadler (8), Garcia (5) and Gabe Shaw (5).

Alex Murdy, Dominic Coffman, Levi Pulliam, Kevin Partida and Ty Hamilton rounded out the Wolf roster.

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   Wolf senior Cameron Toomey-Stout hugs lil’ sis Maya after playing his final game on the CHS gridiron. (Photo courtesy Beth Stout)

   Hunter Downes (left) and Jake Hoagland, friends since kindergarten, connected on a record-breaking TD pass. (Photo courtesy Lisa Jenne)

You don’t always get the storybook ending.

That point has been driven home repeatedly for the injury-decimated Coupeville High School football team this fall, and Friday night provided another tear-stained chapter.

On the one hand, Wolf QB Hunter Downes threw for three touchdowns on his Senior Night, with the final one breaking a school career record held since 2003 by current CHS Offensive Coordinator Brad Sherman.

That the record ball, the 34th TD toss flung by Downes, flew exactly 34 yards, then softly dropped into the waiting hands of his friend since kindergarten, Jake Hoagland, can give you goosebumps.

But, this isn’t Hollywood, and even that bit of magic wasn’t quite enough, as the Wolves fell 33-27 to visiting Chimacum.

The loss sends Coupeville, which had almost as many players in street clothes as in uniform, to 1-5 in Olympic/Nisqually League play, 3-6 overall.

With a visit Nov. 4 to state-ranked Cascade Christian (6-0, 8-1) the only game left on the schedule, the Wolves desperately wanted to send their eight seniors out on a high note Friday.

And, despite playing without key two-way starters Hunter Smith, Sean Toomey-Stout, Matt Hilborn and Chris Battaglia, Coupeville almost did just that, rallying from an 18-point deficit to have a shot at the end.

Which was kind of surprising, since things did not start out all that well, frankly.

The Wolves couldn’t stop Chimacum’s run game, and couldn’t get their own offense to fire on all cylinders.

Coupeville finished the first quarter with zero yards to its credit, with losses on four plays counteracting what small gains it could muster, and trailed 12-0 at the first break.

That stretched out to 18-0 on the second play of the second quarter, when Cowboy QB Peyton Hundley hit Isaac Purser on a 23-yard scoring strike.

Coming on the heels of a three-yard TD run from Mathew Bainbridge and another Hundley-to-Purser scoring pass, this one a wobbly 33-yarder which barely made it there, Chimacum was clicking, and Coupeville was flailing.

Other than a failure to convert a PAT and two conversion attempts, the Cowboys were golden, it seemed.

Enter Camtastic, who flipped the script in a few huge strides.

Snaring a kickoff on the run, Wolf senior Cameron Toomey-Stout shot forward, cut to his left, shredded the ankles of at least two Chimacum tacklers, then found a new gear and tore down the left sideline.

By the time he slowed down, 85 yards later, Coupeville was finally on the board, and, after Downes drilled the PAT, the momentum of the game began to take a huge turn.

Toomey-Stout broke up a third-down pass on Chimacum’s next possession, accelerating and going airborne to tip the ball free at the last second, forcing the Cowboys to punt.

Picking up positive offensive yardage for the first time all night, the Wolves packaged together a smash-mouth run from Andrew Martin, a 22-yard reverse from Camtastic and a pair of 15-yard penalties by the Cowboy defense to march down the field.

Chimacum was fond of collecting roughing the passer and unnecessary roughness penalties on this night. While that helped Coupeville pick up first downs, the abuse did take a noticeable toll on Downes.

He spent a good deal of the game limping, and had to be removed for several plays after one rough hit left him prone on the turf.

On this drive, though, Downes stayed upright, pegging an 18-yard bomb to Toomey-Stout in the left corner of the end zone for the first of his three TD passes.

Back within 18-14, the Wolves had made a fight of things, and the two teams spent the remainder of the first half counter-punching.

Chimacum dropped a hay-maker on a 60-yard TD run from Bainbridge, before Coupeville responded with a one-two counter.

First Downes popped a short scoring strike over the middle to Teo Keilwitz after a long drive.

While chewing up 70 yards, CHS used two quarterbacks, as Shane Losey slid over to replace Downes after he got knocked out of the game for two plays.

One of those plays was a short bull run by Martin, the other a quick 16-yard pass, with Losey threading the ball between defenders to Hoagland.

Back within four again, the Wolves got a huge emotional burst when a hyped-up Julian Welling tore through the Chimacum line and batted away a Cowboy field goal attempt to end the first half.

But, if the first half was about offense, with Chimacum clinging to a 25-21 lead, the second half turned the spotlight squarely on the defense.

And it was the Cowboy backfield which rose to the occasion, snuffing out three straight Wolf drives, one on a pick in the deepest, darkest corner of the end zone.

Hundley stung his rival at QB on that one, popping the ball into the air, snagging it and holding on to it against all odds as he landed on his back.

The other big stop came on a fourth-and-37 midway through the fourth quarter, after two penalties and two sacks drove Coupeville steadily backwards.

Downes, pulling off a fake punt that every Wolf fan saw coming, pulled the ball up and hit Toomey-Stout in stride, but a Cowboy pulled Camtastic down a mere four yards short of the first down.

With Chimacum having tacked on a short scoring run from Hundley in between those stops, the Cowboys had the ball and a 33-21 lead with less than three minutes to play.

The game was over, and then, it wasn’t, as the fairy tale ending started to script itself again.

Senior lineman Kyle Rockwell is a big, bad man, but one relatively new to the football field.

As he said in his Senior Night farewell, “I would like to thank my friends for continually bugging me and reminding me to talk to my parents about letting me play football, even if it meant for one year.

“Without them bugging me, I would’ve probably never played because I would have stopped asking the first time my dad said no.”

Rockwell is blind in one eye, but after convincing parents Sheldon and Tina to let him take the field, he has delivered.

He blocked a kick against Vashon and then, late, late on Senior Night, knocked the ball free on a running play and landed on it for a ginormous fumble recovery.

With the ball back in his hands and 2:43 left on the clock, Downes limped behind center, and, on his third try, hit pay-dirt, lofting the ball down the left sideline.

Hoagland beat his man by a step, reached to the heavens, and pulled in the record-breaker, two lifelong friends forging one of the great moments in CHS football history.

But, as the fog curled around the edges of the field, and the new, almost-built grandstand — which will debut after these seniors depart — glistened in the moonlight, the last bits of magic dust flickered away across the prairie.

Instead, it was Hundley, dodging the Wolf pass rush on third-and-12 with a minute to play, hitting Bainbridge in stride for a win-clinching 28-yard pickup, who got to celebrate.

He’s a senior, too, and, like his battered Coupeville counterparts, has endured a rough season. Chimacum came in bearing a six-game losing streak, not having won since it beat South Whidbey in week #2.

Sometimes, the “bad guys” get the storybook ending, and, sometimes, they probably deserve it.

For Coupeville’s gridiron Class of 2018 — Welling, Downes, Hoagland, Toomey-Stout, Rockwell, James Vidoni, Tyler McCalmont and the injured Smith — Senior Night didn’t end quite like they wanted.

Doesn’t mean they haven’t had a good run.

They’ve set game, season and career records during their time repping CHS — Smith owns seven of them by himself — and they walked off their home field Friday connected by the game they play and by friendship.

Somewhere, down the road, whether it’s six months or at their 10-year reunion, they will look back and they will remember the good times — the big plays, the wins, the inside jokes — more than the injuries and losses.

They were Wolves, every step of the way, and they did their families, their school, and themselves, proud.

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   Coupeville’s small, but scrappy, middle school football team showed great growth this season. (Bob Martin photo)

“They done good.”

While the Coupeville Middle School football team couldn’t nab a win in its final game of the season Wednesday, the Wolves earned the approval of coach Bob Martin.

Chimacum used a punishing running game to pull away for a 33-16 win on its home turf, leaving Coupeville with a final record of 1-4.

Playing mostly against teams with much-larger rosters, the Wolves held their own this season. Even when they lost, there weren’t any blowouts.

In its finale, CMS got a couple of big offensive plays from Caleb Meyer, Xavier Murdy and Cody Roberts, and strong defensive play from Nezi Keiper and Scott Hilborn.

As they hang up their uniforms, a look back at those who made up the roster:

Mathias Anderson
Lucious Binnings
Isaiah Bittner
Brayden Coatney
Brawn Gadberry
Jesus Garcia-Partida
Ty Hamilton
Scott Hilborn
Nezi Keiper
Logan Martin
Caleb Meyer
Xavier Murdy
Kevin Partida
Michael Peterson
Cody Roberts
Gabe Shaw
Damon Stadler
Josh Upchurch
Logan Wertz
Hawthorne Wolfe
Kiara Contreras
(Team Manager)
Lucas Salazar (Team Manager)

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   Gwen Gustafson and her Coupeville Middle School volleyball teammates close their season at home Thursday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’re peaking at the right time.

Finishing the regular season with three home matches in one week, the last one which will go down Thursday, the Coupeville Middle School volleyball squads are going out in style.

Wednesday, both the 7th and 8th grade Wolves romped to wins against Blue Heron, each taking two of three sets from the visitors.

Coupeville will try to keep that momentum going when it hosts Sequim in its finale Thursday. First tip is 3:15 PM.

Facing off with Blue Heron, which hails from Port Townsend, the Wolf 7th graders cruised to the win thanks to strong serving.

They hit on 35 of 44 serves across the first two sets.

Brynn Schmidt kick-started things, nailing 10 serves in a row to start the first set, before Kaielle Bepler (seven serves) and Alita Blouin (6) carried the burden in the next set.

Since Blue Heron fields only one team for each grade, Coupeville mashed together its varsity and JV teams on the afternoon.

“Everyone played, so it was great to get the whole team on the court, even though it was only three games,” said CMS 7th grade co-coach Kimberly Bepler.

“We’ll be glad to play the full three games for JV and the full three games for varsity tomorrow (Thursday),” she added. “The girls are looking forward to playing our last match after a really fun season of learning and acquiring new skills.”

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