Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Chris Cernick’

Chris Cernick had six points, six rebounds, and two blocks Tuesday for Coupeville’s C-Team. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Backs against the wall, they played their best.

The Coupeville High School C-Team boys basketball squad knew it would be in for a rough night Tuesday, hitting the road to play Mount Vernon’s freshmen.

The Bulldogs attend a 4A school, while the Wolves rep a 2B-sized student body spending its final year in 1A.

Plus, Mount Vernon has been especially strong, routing teams left and right.

So, when I tell you the Bulldogs rolled to a 65-13 win, it’s not a huge surprise.

But just because they lost doesn’t mean the Wolves, who sit at 1-2 on the season, went down easy.

Sparked by the play of Chris Cernick, Coupeville put together its best stretch of the game in the fourth quarter, holding its own while being nipped just 10-9.

Chris had a good game for our team,” said CHS coach Patrick Upchurch. “He led with two blocks, six rebounds, and really aggressive defense to help lead the charge in the fourth quarter.”

Cernick, a second-year hoops player who also doubles as a soccer star, popped for six points, sharing team-high honors with Ty Hamilton.

Alex Wasik slid a free throw through the twine to round out Coupeville’s scoring.

Also seeing floor time for the Wolves were Nick Armstrong, Ben Smith, Dominic Coffman, Simon Shelley, Brayden Coatney, Coen Killian, and Josh Upchurch.

While Coupeville’s varsity and JV have two games left before winter break, neither of their opponents fields a C-Team, so the young Wolves don’t play again until the first week of January.

Read Full Post »

Chris Cernick will have two less games to play, thanks to Granite Falls abandoning its season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

April just got a lot more open.

The Coupeville High School boys soccer team was originally set to play seven games that month, but now it’s down to five.

Granite Falls abandoned its season Thursday, citing a lack of numbers, which shrinks the North Sound Conference soccer title race from six teams to five.

For Coupeville, the games falling off the schedule are a home game Apr. 9 and a road game Apr. 25.

The Wolves, at least for the moment, are looking at a 13-game schedule, with eight league clashes.

CHS opens the season 12:30 PM this Saturday, Mar. 9 at home against non-conference foe Chimacum.

Read Full Post »

Chris Cernick, who has crashed the boards hard all season, knocked down eight points Monday in a rumble with Oak Harbor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Bringing defensive heat, Wolf bangers (l to r) Ben Smith, Cernick and Miles Davidson fouled out Monday, but left a trail of destruction in their wake. (Deb Smith photo)

Success on the basketball court is about more than just wins and losses.

For a young, wildly-inexperienced team, improvement, dedication and fire in the belly tells a coach a lot.

Which is why Scott Fox, a hoops veteran pulling his first tour of duty at Coupeville High School, was all smiles after his boys C-Team fell Monday in a tightly-contested game with visiting 3A Oak Harbor.

“You look back to when we started this in November, and we’ve come a long way,” he said. “These kids have bought in to what we want to do. We’ll still make some mistakes, sure, but not like in the beginning.

“I’m proud of what they have given me,” Fox added. “It’s fun to coach kids when they like to be coached.”

While Coupeville ultimately lost 41-30 Monday, it was a marked change from the first time the two schools met back in the season-opener.

That game was a blowout. This one was anything but.

This time around, the Wolves struck first, hung tough in the late going, and never lost focus even after whistle-happy refs fouled out almost half Coupeville’s roster.

By the time the final buzzer sounded, three of eight Wolves (Chris Cernick, Miles Davidson, and Ben Smith) had been sent to the bench for good, while several other teammates were close to joining them.

Invoking memories of ’80s NBA basketball (when pretty-boy three-ball shooters frequently had their chins massaged by flying elbows), the Wolf defenders left a trail of tears (and possibly some rattled teeth).

Oak Harbor seemed a bit shaken by the mosh pit in the paint, failing to take advantage of a huge lead in free throw attempts.

Dropping in just 12 of 38 tries from the charity stripe (a meager 31.5% “success” rate), the Wildcats left the door open for Coupeville.

And, while the Wolves couldn’t quite get all the way home (10 missed free throws of their own didn’t help), they did push their big city rivals up and down the floor.

Keying things was the springy speedster, Jaylen Nitta, who threw down three of the first four buckets of the night on his way to a team-high 17 points.

Strong enough to hold on to the ball under extreme pressure, and quick enough to break the OHHS press on his own most times, Nitta was in full-on wheel-and-deal mode, and he got some help from the bangers inside.

Cernick, a first-year hoops player whose game has improved by leaps and bounds, continued his emergence as a rebounder to watch.

Whether out-leaping his foes, or using his long arms to pluck the ball from the air right as it came off the glass, he was also able to take several offensive rebounds right back up for put-backs.

That brought an especially big smile to the face of Fox, since he works with all of Coupeville’s big men — varsity, JV and C-Team — and is seeing his work pay off with an increase in toughness from his charges.

Coupeville pulled out to a 6-3 lead in the early going, with Nitta’s buckets punctuated by Cernick rising up and swatting a ‘Cat shot into the cheap seats, before the Wolves settled for an 8-8 tie at the first break.

The second quarter was the one frame in which the Wolves cracked, at least for a bit, and it would ultimately deny them the win.

Take away Oak Harbor’s 12-3 advantage across the second eight-minute span, and the game would have been 29-27.

But, even after falling behind, the Wolves made charges to kick-off both the third and fourth quarters.

Two buckets from Cernick, packaged around a pair of free throws from Jonathan Partida, cut the lead back to 22-17 early in the second half.

Then, after seeing its deficit grow to 11 by the end of the third, CHS struck hard to launch the fourth quarter.

Nitta whistled home a three-ball on the move to start things, before he picked the pocket of a Wildcat ball-handler and went coast to coast for a layup.

Back within 28-22, Coupeville had its momentum blunted by the frequent bleat of a ref’s whistle after that, as the fourth quarter became a foul-strewn death march.

The Wolves, having already lost one interior player, watched two more go to the bench permanently in the fourth as they tried to stop one sturdily-built, surprisingly-nimble Oak Harbor football player in particular.

Unable to get enough momentum going to stop the impending loss, the Wolves continued to scrap, however.

Andrew Aparicio, Brayden Coatney, and Tony Garcia fortified the CHS defense, all coming up with big hustle plays, while Smith was busy slappin’ fools upside the head all the way until the refs sent him away.

Even with just a few ticks left on the clock, the Wolves managed to draw a technical foul after baiting Oak Harbor into getting too close on inbound plays twice. For a team learning as it goes, solid evidence the work is paying off.

Nitta, who capped his night by swishing a free throw off the tech, finished with 17, while Cernick banked in eight and Partida rippled the nets for five.

Read Full Post »

Chris Cernick faces off with fellow frosh Mallory Kortuem during a drill this summer. (John Fisken photo)

   Chris Cernick (left) faces off with fellow frosh Mallory Kortuem during a drill this summer. (John Fisken photo)

Cernick

   Cernick (far right) and friends celebrate his recent birthday. (Michelle Cernick photo)

“Even select (soccer) can’t make you a great player unless you put in all the hard work and effort.

“You have to want it bad enough.”

It’s that drive which keeps Chris Cernick moving forward every day as he pursues his dream of soccer success.

The Coupeville High School freshman, who will be managing the girls team this fall before joining the Wolves boys’ program as a player in the spring, is deeply committed.

And his philosophy is one which could benefit any player.

“I would love to say that if there are kids out there that feel that you have to be in Select to be great, I would just like to say that I have only played one year of soccer, but I practice four hours a day,” Cernick said.

“I am very disciplined and work very hard because I am working towards being a great player one day, which is my dream.”

When he’s not playing, Cernick will assist his dad, Reese, who runs a local U14 co-ed squad, as well as reffing rec soccer games on the weekend.

The young gun enjoys pitch life and wants to spend as much time as possible around his favorite game.

“I enjoy being outside all the time and playing soccer as an athlete,” Cernick said. “It gets boring if I am inside too long.”

Soccer offers a different flow than some other sports, something he greatly enjoys.

“It’s my favorite sport because I like using my feet rather than my hands,” Cernick said. “And I love running with a ball and doing cool tricks that you can’t do in many other sports.”

He prides himself on his endurance and determination, though he’s constantly working on upping his game.

“I would like to work on building up my endurance so I can withstand a whole soccer game,” Cernick said.

“My goals as a freshman is just to get onto varsity and if not just keep improving til I can get there one year,” he added. “My future goal is to be able to play for the MLS Sounders and then eventually play for Barcelona or another international soccer team.”

As he’s worked on fine-tuning his game, Cernick has drawn support from his family, with his father providing him a great deal of help.

“My dad has helped me a lot with soccer,” he said.  “He has taught me a lot of valuable skills and now I am ready to move on to high school.”

Cernick has also picked up knowledge from “my friend, Jean Lund-Olsen, or from watching videos on YouTube.”

When he’s not playing soccer, Cernick enjoys hanging out with friends and listening to trap music. In school he gravitates towards gym and wood shop.

But soccer is never far from his thoughts, as evidenced when he names his favorite film —  Bend it like Beckham — probably the best-known film about life on the pitch.

Now, Cernick is ready to write his own Hollywood ending on the pitch.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts