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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Caleb Meyer and Co. pushed top-seeded Kalama hard in their state playoff opener. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s a ding in the armor, but not a fatal blow.

Friday night, the Coupeville High School boys basketball team absorbed its first loss of the season, but the dream of bringing home a trophy from the state tournament still lives.

The Wolves, making their first appearance at the big dance in 34 years, fell 59-54 to Kalama, the top-ranked 2B team, in a game played at Battle Ground.

Coupeville, which used a blistering defense to spark a late 10-0 run to almost pull out the win, falls to 16-1, while Kalama improves to 20-1.

The Chinooks only loss this season came in their season opener, when a chunk of the team was still AWOL after winning a state football title.

Both teams advance to the next level of the state tourney, set for the Spokane Arena Mar. 2-5.

With the win, Kalama advances to the quarterfinals, while Coupeville will play either Lake Roosevelt or River View Mar. 2 in a loser-out game.

The top six teams at state bring home trophies.

The first round of state, played at “regional” sites, features four loser-out games pitting teams ranked #9-#16 in the draw, resulting in 12 teams advancing to Spokane.

Seeded #8, Coupeville was assured of playing at least two games, regardless of how the Kalama game went down.

For a team repping a program which last played at state in 1988 and won its first league title in 20 years and first district title in 52 seasons this year, the Wolves showed no signs of nerves.

Caleb Meyer drilled the bottom out of the net on a pull-up three-ball to open the scoring, and Coupeville played even with Kalama for much of the first half.

With the refs calling just three fouls total in the first half — a lesson for the folks wearing black and white striped shirts in our region — both teams got to play a fast-and-physical style.

The Wolves often looked quicker, while the Chinooks are a rugged bunch which hits the glass with a cold fury.

Twice Kalama nudged ahead in the first frame, only to see Xavier Murdy knot things right back up with three-balls which flipped the net high as the ball slid through.

The second trey was set up by a zippy pass off of Hawthorne Wolfe’s fingertips, with the scoreboard flicking to 11-11 as X-Man hit paydirt.

Trailing 13-11 at the first break, Coupeville put together a 7-0 run midway through the second quarter to pull back in front at 23-21.

All seven of the points came from the Maraudin’ Murdy boys, with younger brother Alex jumping in to aid Xavier.

Xavier Murdy topped all scorers Friday with 24 points.

Unfortunately for Coupeville, its only real weak stretch followed almost immediately.

Pounding away down low, Kalama used a variety of short-range shots to close the half on a 10-0 spurt, walking to the locker room with a solid 31-23 advantage.

But the Wolves weren’t ready to go away quietly. Cause that’s not their style.

Kalama, playing with precision and catching a ride on the rugged shoulders of Jackson Esary, who banged home 23 points, tried repeatedly to pull away.

Each time, however, Coupeville denied the Chinooks.

Facing a 14-point deficit midway through the third, the Wolves stormed back to cut it down to seven, thanks to a whole lot of Murdy boys and some gut-check buckets from sophomore Logan Downes.

Then, after Kalama stretched the margin back out to 13, CHS coach Brad Sherman unleashed a full-court press to fuel Coupeville’s biggest run.

Down 57-44, the Wolves forced multiple turnovers, turning the extra chances into a magical 10-0 explosion which set the Chinooks back on their heels.

Grady Rickner got things started with a sweet lil’ jumper, before Meyer nailed a free throw and Alex Murdy converted off of an offensive rebound.

That set up Xavier Murdy to seize the spotlight, as the perpetual ball of energy capped a game-high 24-point performance with two of the biggest baskets of his prep career.

First he knocked down a shot in the paint, but not before Downes punched the ball free and Alex Murdy snatched it away from the Chinooks, feeding his brother with a pinpoint pass.

With the Coupeville fans — who made a 400+ mile round-trip — shaking the bleachers, the Wolves forced Kalama to throw the ball away on the next possession, followed by Xavier Murdy getting magical.

X-Man’s three-ball went up, hit the rim, popped straight up, kissed the heavens, then tumbled back through the net, cutting the margin to 57-54 and setting off pandemonium.

But give Kalama credit.

A fair amount of their players knows what it’s like to win a gridiron state championship, and they emerged from a very-tough district tourney after winning back-to-back games in the final seconds.

So, it’s not surprising the Chinooks held up under pressure in the final 37 seconds, netting two free throws to make it a two-possession game, while keeping Coupeville from hitting one (or two) more big shots.

The Murdy boys combined to drop 38 on Kalama, with Xavier (24) and Alex (14) both reaching personal milestones along the way.

With 201 career points, and counting, Alex — Coupeville’s main defensive dynamo — cracks the 200-point club, joining uncle Allen Black (305) and big bro Xavier (472).

X-Man, meanwhile, moves into a tie with Pat O’Grady at #51 on the CHS boys career scoring chart, which dates back 105 seasons.

Downes chipped in Friday with eight points, Meyer and Rickner both banked in four, and Wolfe, Logan Martin, and Cole White saw floor time for Coupeville.

 

State tourney bracket:

http://www.nw1a2bathletics.com/m2/tourn.php?act=vt&tid=3462

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Oak Harbor’s James Besaw (left) and Coupeville’s Joey Lippo live the diamond life. (Photos courtesy Teresa Besaw)

United by baseball.

Living the hardball life often pulls Coupeville’s Joey Lippo and Oak Harbor’s James Besaw to different parts of the country, but then the diamond is just as likely to reunite them.

The duo, who first met when they were just a year old and their parents were in the Navy, are now in their second year as ballplayers at their respective colleges.

Where it all started.

Lippo suits up for the University of Maine at Presque Isle, where he plays baseball and golf, while Besaw anchors the diamond team at the University of Wisconsin-Superior.

With a new college baseball season kicking off, the pair, who grew up playing ball together on Whidbey, are slated to pass each other in the night this campaign.

Both of their schools are slated to compete in the RUSSMATT Central Florida Invitational Mar. 13-20, though Presque Isle and Wisconsin-Superior are not scheduled to play against each other.

But the diamond reunion gives moms Teresa Besaw and Connie Lippo, plus dad Jim Besaw, a chance to jet away to warmer climates during spring break and watch both young men play.

“It’s been fun to watch them grow up together,” Teresa Besaw said. “Especially watching Joey, who was once half James size, grow to be taller than James.

“Our schedules will be busy in Florida, but it will be fun to watch each other’s boys play college ball.”

Earlier days.

The week-long RUSSMATT Central Florida Invitational draws 250+ colleges each year, with teams from NCAA D-1, 2, and 3, as well as NAIA and JUCO squads.

Presque Isle is down to play five days, while Wisconsin-Superior is slated for six. Most days feature doubleheaders for the schools.

While Besaw and Lippo are currently playing for different colleges and repped different Whidbey high schools, they often played either together, or on rival teams, in little league, select baseball, and fall ball.

They also landed on the same roster during their time at Green River College in Auburn, where they played with Coupeville brothers CJ and Hunter Smith.

A little league reunion photo, featuring then-high school sophomores Besaw (back, second from right) and Lippo (bottom, far right).

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Alex Murdy crashes to the hoop. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Dig in deeper to that wallet.

The further the Coupeville High School boys basketball team goes this postseason, the more expensive it will get for Wolf fans.

An adult ticket to the district title game was $7.00, but one to this Friday’s state tourney opener against Kalama at Battle Ground High School runs $15.00

The next week, Coupeville travels to the Spokane Arena, where it will play the remainder of the big dance.

The Wolves could play between 1-4 games between Mar. 2-5.

Tickets in Spokane are also $15 a day – or you can nab a deal if you purchase a four-day pass ($50) or three-day pass ($38).

Those multi-day passes have to be purchased by Mar. 2 and 3, respectively, and there’s no refunds if your team gets knocked out before Mar. 5.

How you can buy your tickets also varies.

For the Kalama game, you have one option — purchasing tickets online through GoFan — with no paper tickets sold at the door.

Once you’re in Spokane, GoFan is still in use, but the option to buy in person will also be available.

 

For info, pop over to:

 

Kalama game @ Battle Ground HS — Friday, Feb. 25:

https://wiaa.com/ardisplay.aspx?ID=1949

 

Spokane Arena Mar. 2-5:

https://www.wiaa.com/subcontent.aspx?SecID=332

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Katie Marti gets feisty. “I will drop three-balls on your head all night, son!” (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Time to begin some spring cleaning.

Both Coupeville High School girls basketball teams have ended their seasons, but I still have a fair number of photos which haven’t run.

So, here’s nine of them, all shot by John Fisken.

To see more of his work, and possibly purchase some glossies for Grandma Gertie in Glendale Heights, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/

 

Ja’Kenya Hoskins defies the laws of gravity.

Carolyn Lhamon would prefer it if you would get your dang grubby hands off her basketball.

Wolf managers Leni Raduenz (left) and Jayden Varljen run this joint.

Reese Wilkinson, ready to rain down pain.

Brooklyn Thayer rumbles down low.

Maddie Georges, queen of drawing the offensive charge.

Jada Heaton dares you to try and take the basketball. “I got two elbows for you right here! Check one! Check two!!”

Skylar Parker pushes the ball upcourt.

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“State, here we come!” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It won’t be a one-night stand.

The Coupeville High School boys basketball team is headed back to the state tournament for the first time in 34 years, and the Wolves will play at least two games.

Depending on how things work out, those two rumbles could stretch out to as many as five.

Coupeville is guaranteed at least two games thanks to being ranked #8 in the 16-team 2B field.

Teams seeded #1-#8 start off in double-elimination mode, while #9-#16 play loser-out games, with all first-round bouts held at “regional sites.”

Twelve of the 16 teams then advance to the main site, which for 2B teams, is the Spokane Arena.

This is the first time the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association has used seeding committees for basketball.

At first glance, it might be easy to think the Wolves are being underrated a bit.

Coupeville (16-0) is the only unbeaten boys team left in 2B, its RPI ranking was higher than #8, and it won a district title — something four of the seven teams ranked ahead of it did not accomplish.

The most likely reasons for Coupeville being seeded #8, and not higher?

Its strength of schedule was low compared to some other schools.

Plus, four of the top seven seeded schools hail from hoops hotbed District 4, and the WIAA pledged not to pit teams from the same district against each other in the first round if possible.

Also, you miss the big dance for 30+ years and you don’t have a rep, something which factored in during the season when Associated Press voters virtually ignored Coupeville.

But hey, it’s a weird, wild hoops world out there, where Chief Leschi started 13-1 and did NOT make it to state, while River View started 0-13, and DID.

Ultimately though, even at #8, the Wolves got what they wanted — a guarantee their first game is not a loser-out affair, and that they will play in Spokane.

“All is good. No complaints here,” said CHS coach Brad Sherman. “Very cool for the guys.”

Coupeville opens against top-seeded Kalama (19-1), which escaped with a District 4 title after two close calls.

The Chinooks, who feature several players from this year’s 2B state champion football team, were pushed hard in their postseason tourney.

Kalama needed a buzzer-beating three-ball to nip Napavine in the D4 semifinals, then edged Morton-White Pass by a point in the title game.

Coupeville’s showdown with the Chinooks is set for Friday, Feb. 25, with a 6 PM tip-off at Battle Ground High School.

Win, and the Wolves jump straight to the quarterfinals of the state tourney.

In that scenario, Coupeville starts play in Spokane Mar. 3.

Lose to Kalama, and the Wolves instead play Mar. 2 against either #9 Lake Roosevelt or #16 River View in a loser-out game.

The state tourney, which runs through Mar. 5, is a modified double-elimination royal rumble, with the top six teams earning trophies.

 

To see the complete bracket, pop over to:

https://www.wpanetwork.com/wiaa/brackets/tournament.php?act=view&tournament_id=3462

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