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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Will Thayer watches daughter Brooklynn light up the hardwood. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolf Nation is big on fan support.

Coupeville High School hoops teams draw a sizable number of lookie-loo’s to their games, as seen in the photos above and below.

The pics come to us courtesy John Fisken, but they’re just the tip of what he’s shot this season.

To take a gander at his work, and maybe purchase some glossies for the cousins in Poughkeepsie, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/

 

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Current Wolves get support on the road from the next generation of Coupeville hoops stars. (Michele Murdy photo)

Roll on, Wolves, roll on.

Capping what’s believed to be the first undefeated regular season in the 105-year history of the program, the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball team dismantled host La Conner Thursday, romping to a 79-45 win.

The victory lifts the Wolves to 11-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 15-0 overall.

Next up for CHS is the District 1/2 tournament, which it will host.

As the #1 seed from the NWL, the Wolves advance directly to the title game next Thursday, Feb. 17, when they will play for the program’s first district title since 1970.

A win in that game also assures the Coupeville boys of their first trip to state since 1988.

Thursday night, facing a La Conner team which had been run off the court by Friday Harbor the day before, the Wolves rained down death from above.

Netting a season-high 12 three-balls, Coupeville put four players into double digits, with 11 of 12 players to see the floor scoring.

And Dominic Coffman, the one player not to score, still had a huge impact, sacrificing his body on dives to the floor while coming up with one of the prettiest assists of the season.

The key to getting to 15-0 — especially for a program which didn’t post a winning season between 2010 and 2021 — has been this group’s willingness to play as a team, feeding the hot hand and lifting each other up.

Alex Murdy and Co. are on the prowl. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Thursday’s game was a prime example, as seniors Caleb Meyer and Hawthorne Wolfe combined for 17 points in the first quarter, then added just one more point after that.

Not because either hardwood veteran went cold, but instead other players jumped to the forefront and the duo slid into facilitator roles, whipping pinpoint passes, forcing turnovers, doing whatever was needed in the moment.

So you had Xavier Murdy and Logan Downes each go off for nine points in the second quarter, then big moments for Grady Rickner, Alex Murdy, and Logan Martin.

Share the ball, share the glory. Just get that W.

It might almost make Coupeville coach Brad Sherman a bit misty, as he sees his best-laid plans play out in high style.

Though, steely eyes scanning the court while much of his face lurks behind a pandemic era mask, the prairie legend hides any emotion well.

His players, however, showed off a mix of bravado and joy, with just a little chest-thumping when appropriate.

Wolfe, after draining a second three-ball to cap the first quarter, dropped a few good-natured sweet nothings to the La Conner cheerleaders as he ran back down court.

Meyer, when he wasn’t busy pulling his teammates together and giving them fatherly advice, pumped his fist each time he flipped the net skyward.

And that was pretty much every time he touched the ball in the opening quarter, as he drained a trio of three-balls and a sweet lil’ jumper while on the move.

There were actually two ties in the game, the last at 10-10, and La Conner wasn’t too far off at the first break, trailing 21-16.

But then the Wolf defense got nasty, and the tsunami hit.

The lead was at 28-20 when Coupeville dropped the hammer, going off on a 15-0 tear.

Downes, already a dangerous sharpshooter and just a sophomore, rifled home back-to-back treys as he poured in nine points during the run.

The second three-ball, which sent the CHS bench into a tizzy with a 23-point lead, was set up by a kickout from Rickner, who a play earlier, benefited from another nice set-up.

That one came flying off the hand of Wolfe, who looked one way, then fired a bullet right through three defenders, the ball smacking into Rickner’s hands with a happy little sigh.

Up 43-22 coming out of the halftime break, Coupeville kept its intensity up while emptying the bench.

Basically, everyone played, and everyone contributed.

Coffman pulled off two big-time hustle plays, the first on defense, the second while he was sprawled on the floor.

On the first, he could have straggled back downcourt with a 30+ point lead and La Conner on a breakaway.

Instead, Coffman flew like a bat out of Hell, got in front of the incoming ballhandler and planted himself, absorbing a huge collision and drawing the offensive charge on his rival.

It was a play which didn’t have to happen, but meant a ton to his fellow Wolves, who pulled him back to his feet while beating the crud out of him for a second time — this time in celebration.

Later Coffman came back around, diving on the floor, before shooting the ball to a waiting Logan Martin, who calmly splashed home yet another three-ball.

There was also Nick Guay, likely another varsity star of the future, taking advantage of some floor time to pull off a three-point play the hard way.

Cole White set him up with a strong dish, then Guay powered his way to paydirt while being slammed around the head, converting the bucket under great duress.

Don’t forget about Meyer, who made his own highlight reel-worthy pass in the fourth quarter, zipping a ball through multiple defenders to set up a Jonathan Valenzuela layup.

Coupeville, which topped 70 points for the 10th time in 15 games, spread its offense out admirably.

Xavier Murdy finished with a team-high 19 points, with Downes (12), Meyer (11), and Rickner (10) hot on his heels.

Alex Murdy (9), Wolfe (7), Martin (3), Guay (3), White (2), Valenzuela (2), and Zane Oldenstadt (1) also scored for a CHS squad which has won by double digits 12 times this season.

And some side notes for stats freaks, as Wolfe and Downes hit personal milestones.

With 775 points and counting, Wolfe moves past all-timers Barry Brown (769) and Jack Elzinga (770), and now sits at #14 on the CHS boys career scoring chart, which dates back to 1917.

Meanwhile, Downes, with 205 points as he nears the halfway point of his prep career, joins the 200-point club.

He’s the fifth active Coupeville player to reach that mark, joining Wolfe (775), Xavier Murdy (436), CHS girls star Maddie Georges (234), and Rickner (212).

Up next: a run at a district title and state tourney glory. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Wolf senior Ja’Kenya Hoskins crashed the boards hard Thursday in a rumble with La Conner. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

On to Saturday.

The Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team tangled with the best squad in the region — and maybe all of 2B — and got stung Thursday, falling 83-17 at La Conner.

But, while the defeat drops the Wolves to 5-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 7-7 overall, the game which truly matters is less than 48 hours away.

Coupeville hosts Friday Harbor Saturday at noon, and a Senior Night win in the regular season finale sends the Wolves to the district playoffs as the NWL’s #2 seed.

If CHS falls to the Wolverines in the weekend rumble, the teams will face-off in a tiebreaker game Monday, Feb. 14, with the winner advancing to play Auburn Adventist the next night in the District 1/2 tourney opener.

Facing off with La Conner, Coupeville ran headlong into a team which is now 19-1 on the season, with its only loss a one-basket affair with 4A power Eastlake.

The Braves force a lot of turnovers, miss few scoring opportunities, and put other teams at a quick disadvantage.

Which is exactly what happened to Coupeville, as the Wolves struggled with La Conner’s press and quickly found themselves in a hole.

By the time Izzy Wells powered through the paint for the first CHS bucket of the night, the Braves had already built a 13-0 lead.

And it didn’t get much closer than that, as La Conner led 21-4 at the first break, then stretched it out to 47-9 by halftime.

The running clock went into use early in the second half, though the Braves still managed to score 24 points in the fourth quarter, thanks to their sudden use of three-balls and a still fairly aggressive defense.

Coupeville fought back where it could, with Izzy Wells pulling off a three-point play the hard way, and Gwen Gustafson knocking down a jumper after swiping a loose ball off the floor.

The lone Wolf bucket in the final frame came courtesy Nezi Keiper, who sliced her way through the defense with authority, rumbling in the paint until the end.

Izzy Wells paced Coupeville with five points, while Audrianna Shaw (4), Carolyn Lhamon (3), Gustafson (2), Keiper (2), and Savina Wells (1) also scored.

Maddie Georges, Ja’Kenya Hoskins, Abby Mulholland, and Lyla Stuurmans all saw floor time for the Wolves, with young guns Mia Farris and Katie Marti leading the cheers from the bench.

In a small, but important, historical side note, Lhamon, a junior, and Savina Wells, a freshman, moved into a tie at #100 on the CHS girls career scoring chart, which stretches back to 1974.

The duo both have 107 points and counting.

Wolf coaches (l to r) Megan Smith, Alex Evans, and Cherie Smith look to better days ahead.

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Hunter Bronec tossed in six points Thursday in the JV season finale. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

For eight minutes they were unstoppable.

Unfortunately, high school basketball games are 32 minutes long, and the Coupeville JV boys cooled off a bit after a torrid start Thursday and got caught from behind.

Up 13-2 at the first break, the Wolves eventually fell 44-38 in a hard-fought clash at La Conner.

The loss, coming in the JV season finale, drops Coupeville’s young guns to 1-6 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 3-8 overall.

In the opening moments it looked like the Wolves couldn’t be stopped.

CHS gunner Ryan Blouin knocked down back-to-back three-balls to open the game, while La Conner didn’t even get a shot up until the 5:42 mark of the first quarter.

Add Hunter Bronec driving and dishing to Zane Oldenstadt for a layup, another Blouin trey, and two free throws from Hurlee Bronec and the Wolves were sizzlin’.

And then it all went away for a bit.

La Conner finally found its rhythm, opening the second quarter with a 9-0 run that set the Wolves back on their heels.

Coupeville stopped the bleeding for a bit thanks to a putback from William Davidson and Blouin’s fourth three-ball of the half, but the Braves kept chipping away.

A turnaround jumper from La Conner gave the host team its first lead of the game, at 19-18 heading into the halftime break, though CHS answered on the first play of the second half.

Nick Guay slashed to the hoop for a bucket and free throw after getting hacked in the head on the play, and the Wolves had a short-lived 21-19 advantage.

Short-lived because La Conner rained down the next 11 points, effectively taking control of the game.

The Wolves continued to scrap, however, carving the deficit back to 33-31 midway through the fourth quarter.

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim drained a short jumper, on a play set up by Davidson yanking a rebound free, and that capped a 6-0 Wolf surge.

La Conner had an answer, however, driving a stake through Coupeville’s heart with a long three-ball, before closing out the win at the free-throw line.

Afterwards, Wolf coach Hunter Smith was philosophical about the defeat.

“Would’ve liked to come away with the win, but definitely some good learning moments for our boys today,” he said.

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim and Bronec give a rival player few options.

Blouin paced Coupeville with 13 points, while Davidson banked in a season-high eight and Hunter Bronec popped for six.

Guay (5), Simpson-Pilgrim (2), Oldenstadt (2), and Hurlee Bronec (2) also scored, with Mikey Robinett, Jack Porter, Landon Roberts, and Johnny Porter seeing floor time.

Robinett was a force on the defensive end for the Wolves, sweeping down rebounds and forcing turnovers.

 

Final season scoring stats:

Nick Guay – 79
Ryan Blouin – 74
Hunter Bronec – 74
Zane Oldenstadt – 38
Mikey Robinett – 30
Hurlee Bronec – 27
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim – 24
William Davidson – 18
Jack Porter – 15
Johnny Porter – 8
Landon Roberts – 8
Carson Field – 2

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Freshman Madison McMillan led the Wolf JV in scoring this season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Playing from behind is tough.

The Coupeville High School JV girls basketball team got stronger as the game went on Thursday but couldn’t catch host La Conner.

Despite outscoring the Braves in the second half, the young Wolves ultimately fell 32-22 in their season finale.

The loss leaves Coupeville’s final record at 3-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 3-8 overall.

The Wolves hit the floor ready to rumble, fighting for rebounds and loose balls, but an ice-cold shooting touch in the early going made things tough.

The ball skipped off the rim, rolled around and popped back out, and thoroughly failed to cooperate with Coupeville’s shooters as they slipped behind 7-0.

Kayla Arnold put a rebound back up and in to finally crack the scoreless run, but by then nearly six minutes had been erased from the clock.

Trailing 9-2 at the first break, the Wolves got buckets from Brooklyn Thayer and Madison McMillan in the second quarter, but the deficit widened to 19-6 by halftime.

The break seemed to help, however, as Coupeville battled La Conner even through a 9-9 third quarter, before claiming dominance in a game-closing 7-4 surge in the fourth.

Desi Ramirez-Vasquez had the hot hand in the second half, draining a pair of three-balls.

The first one was set up by a nice kick-out pass from Skylar Parker, while the second one was all Desi, all day.

The sophomore sparkplug stole the ball, beat a mad path down court, then suddenly slammed on the brakes and banked home a three-ball from somewhere deep in the parking lot, earning some oohs and ahs.

Desi Ramirez-Vasquez played strongly on both ends of the floor in Thursday’s finale.

Coupeville’s defense was key in the late game run, with Mia Farris and Jada Heaton both coming up with big plays to thwart the La Conner offense.

Ramirez-Vasquez led the Wolves with six points, while Thayer and McMillan backed her up with four apiece.

Katie Marti, Farris, Arnold, and Heaton all chipped in with a bucket, while Bryley Gilbert, Parker, and Reese Wilkinson also saw floor time.

 

Final season scoring stats:

Madison McMillan – 66
Katie Marti – 52
Brooklyn Thayer – 38
Gwen Gustafson – 32
Desi Ramirez-Vasquez – 32
Mia Farris – 19
Skylar Parker – 19
Kayla Arnold – 18
Reese Wilkinson – 13
Lyla Stuurmans – 12
Bryley Gilbert – 7
Jada Heaton – 7
Nezi Keiper – 3
Edie Bittner – 2
Yodnum Nakakul – 2

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