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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Sarah Wright kicked off her junior year of college softball. (Photo poached from Sylvia Arnold)

Wright in action this weekend. (Photo property Sewanee: University of the South)

She’s back in business on the diamond.

Coupeville High School grad Sarah Wright got her junior season of college softball started in style this weekend, playing in four games for Sewanee: The University of the South.

The former Wolf and her Tigers teammates traveled from Tennessee to Georgia, where they faced off with Albany State University.

While Sewanee lost all four games, Wright piled up two hits — including a double — two runs, two RBI, and two stolen bases, while playing both catcher and third base.

The last two seasons have been shortened by the pandemic, but Sewanee has a full 38-game schedule set for 2022. Games run through mid-April.

Wright, who was a multi-sport star (volleyball, soccer, basketball, softball) and Valedictorian during her time in Coupeville, is majoring in politics.

Sewanee returns to action next weekend, Feb. 11-12, when it travels to Mississippi for the MUW Invitational.

Wright and Co. will play two games apiece against tourney host Mississippi University for Women and Covenant College.

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Lyla Stuurmans is a dead-eye shooter. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

All Alex Murdy can smell is success.

Things are getting serious.

The four 1B schools in the seven-team Northwest 2B/1B League started the playoffs this past week, while the 2B schools continue to wrap up conference action.

Coupeville High School has two nights of regular season play left to finish, with both the boys and girls traveling to La Conner Thursday, Feb. 10.

After that, the Wolf girls celebrate Senior Night and host Friday Harbor Feb. 12.

Postseason action for the 2B schools starts with the district tournament Feb. 15 and 17, with all the action going down in Coupeville.

The Wolf boys have clinched their playoff berth and are in the driver’s seat to claim the #1 seed, while the CHS girls are a win away from sealing their own invite to districts.

Where things stand through games of Feb. 5:

 

Northwest League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Coupeville 10-0 14-0
MV Christian 9-2 13-4
Orcas Island 4-4 8-6
La Conner 3-4 5-10
Friday Harbor 4-6 6-8
Darrington 2-6 4-9
Concrete 0-10 2-15

 

Northwest League girls basketball:

School League Overall
La Conner 10-0 18-1
MV Christian 9-2 14-3
Coupeville 5-3 7-6
Friday Harbor 4-6 5-9
Orcas Island 3-5 5-8
Darrington 2-6 5-9
Concrete 0-11 3-15

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Makana Stone gets shots up in practice. (Photo property Leicester Riders)

Right back at it, filling up the stat sheet.

Coupeville’s Makana Stone kept the number crunchers busy Saturday in England, racking up 14 points, six rebounds, four steals, and an assist as the Leicester Riders rolled to a blowout win.

Paced by their American assassin, the Riders bounced the Durham Palatinates 88-59 in Women’s British Basketball League action.

The victory came in the quarterfinals of the WBBL Trophy competition, one of two in-season tournaments mixed in with regular season games.

Leicester, now 12-5 on the season, returns to league play Feb. 20 against the Newcastle Eagles, while the WBBL Trophy semifinals will be played at a to-be-determined later date.

Saturday, it was all Riders, all the time, as the squad came out and scorched their rivals.

Up 19-10 at the first break, Leicester stretched the margin to 39-21 by halftime, then 60-44 through three quarters.

Stone was one of five Riders players to ring up double digits scoring, with Alison Lewis leading the way with 17 off the bench.

Oceana Hamilton (14), Brooklyn Mcalear (13), and Anna Lappenkuper (11) joined the hot shooters club.

Stone, who is in her first season as a professional hoops player, has recorded 134 points, 93 rebounds, 21 assists, and 17 steals.

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Nezi Keiper was one of eight Wolves to score Friday in a key road win. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Advantage, Wolves.

Rampaging on the road Friday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team rolled to a big win and moved a step closer to clinching a playoff berth.

Taking apart host Friday Harbor to the tune of 39-25, the Wolves improve to 5-3 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 7-6 overall.

Who the victory came against is almost as important as the fact CHS claimed the rout.

Coupeville, Friday Harbor, and La Conner — the three 2B schools in the NWL — are fighting for two postseason slots.

La Conner has already clinched one berth and is all but assured of being the #1 seed.

With its win Friday, Coupeville pushes Friday Harbor to the edge of elimination.

Beat the Wolverines a second time next Saturday, Feb. 12, this time in Coupeville on Senior Night, and CHS is the #2 seed to the district tourney and plays Auburn Adventist Feb. 15 in a loser-out, winner-to-state game.

But if they should lose that regular season finale, the Wolves will immediately play Friday Harbor again Feb. 14 in a tiebreaker game for that last playoff spot.

Short answer: Friday Harbor can’t lose again, and Coupeville has two chances to win one game (but would prefer to do it in just one game).

Now that it’s all as clear as mud, on to this Friday’s win, in which the Wolves overcame the absence of three key players.

Lyla Stuurmans, Alita Blouin, and Carolyn Lhamon were all sidelined for various reasons, but their teammates more than handled things, with eight different players scoring for CHS.

The game was a tense affair through the first eight minutes, with Friday Harbor clinging to a 9-8 lead at the first break.

After that, the Wells sisters went to work, combining for seven points in the second frame as Coupeville went on a 12-6 run.

Older sister Izzy knocked down a pair of buckets, lil’ sis Savina rippled the nets on a three-ball, and the Wolves went to the locker room up 20-15.

From there Coupeville stretched the margin out to 31-19 through three quarters, then ran the clock out on their hosts.

Izzy Wells dropped in a game-high 10 points to fuel the balanced Wolf attack, with Nezi Keiper, Maddie Georges, and Audrianna Shaw chipping in with six apiece.

Savina Wells (5), Ja’Kenya Hoskins (2), Gwen Gustafson (2), and Abby Mulholland (2) also scored, while Katie Marti brought energy off the bench.

CHS players enjoy the action.

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Alex Murdy was dynamic on both ends of the floor Friday as Coupeville survived an overtime thriller to get to 14-0. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Playoffs? We’re talking about playoffs.

Taking the court without two starters Friday — thanks to Covid protocols — the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball squad survived its biggest gut-check of the season, while moving a step closer to realizing a lot of big goals.

Despite not hitting a field goal in the fourth quarter, the Wolves forced overtime on a pair of Alex Murdy free throws, then held off highly combative Friday Harbor 56-53.

The road win lifts Coupeville to 10-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 14-0 overall.

The only unbeaten team left in 2B has one more regular season game left to play — a road trip to La Conner Feb. 10 — then heads to the postseason.

With Friday’s victory, Coupeville clinches one of the two playoff spots available to 2B teams from the NWL.

Beat La Conner, or have the Braves lose to Friday Harbor Feb. 8, and CHS earns the #1 seed.

That would send the Wolves directly to the district title game Feb. 17 — a tilt which will be played on their home court — while also clinching the program’s first trip to state since 1988.

Friday’s royal rumble in a frenzied gym perfectly captured what has made this Coupeville team shine so brightly.

The three-point margin of victory was the smallest of the season, and only the third time an opponent has come within single digits of the Wolves.

But it will stand as maybe Coupeville’s defining moment, as the Wolves absorbed every body blow and got back off the canvas to deliver the night’s final roundhouse in stirring fashion.

Living in the Age of Coronavirus, with three Covid tests a week making it all but impossible to field a full roster most days, Wolf coach Brad Sherman has seen seven of his 10 regular varsity players miss at least one game this season.

Friday night was no different, with Caleb Meyer and Logan Downes sidelined.

But once again, the Wolves seem to live by a simple mantra — if you’re in uniform, it’s your turn in the spotlight. Find a way to win, no matter the odds.

Coupeville could have cracked, probably should have fallen apart as an eight-point lead slipped away late.

But not now, not this season.

Friday Harbor closed the third with a 3-0 mini-surge, then stuffed the Wolves 7-0 over the first seven minutes and two seconds of what we assumed was the final frame.

Trailing 45-43, unable to get a shot to drop from any angle, playing in front of a vocal, testy road crowd, Coupeville needed a spark.

So it turned where it always does — to its defense.

Five Wolves firing as one, attacking, pressing, relentlessly pressuring, making their own luck through hard work and gut-busting intensity.

And, playing on their aunt Mandi Black’s birthday, the marauding Murdy boys made the magic happen.

Xavier yanked a steal out of midair, and flipped the ball to his younger brother, who crashed to the hoop hard (the only way he knows) and got hammered.

Sent to the line with just 58 ticks left on the fourth quarter clock, Alex Murdy silenced the Friday Harbor crowd by calmly flicking a pair of free throws through the net, each shot a dagger to go with a slight curl of his upper lip.

Now, of course, things didn’t end there, however.

The final 50+ seconds of regulation produced no points, while giving everyone in the gym free unlimited angina.

Friday Harbor had a player dribble a ball off his foot, then later missed a three-ball which could have been devastating.

Meanwhile, Xavier Murdy came up with an epic rebound to end Friday Harbor’s final hope, outmuscling two rivals while Wolf fans screamed loud enough to be heard in Bangladesh.

Coupeville fired off a good shot at the buzzer, hoping to claim a walk-off win, but it wouldn’t fall. Mainly because this was the type of game which was fated to go to overtime.

Once in the extra period, the Wolves jumped out in front, never surrendering the lead after Grady Rickner put a rebound back up and in to open things.

Free throws from Xavier Murdy and Logan Martin kept Friday Harbor at bay, while Hawthorne Wolfe slashed through the defense for a twisting layup to stake CHS to a 55-51 lead.

But remember that angina we spoke of earlier?

It resurfaced, after Friday Harbor sliced the margin to 55-53, before BOTH teams missed the front end of one-and-one free throw opportunities with less than 10 seconds to play.

Enter the Wolf defense and exit the angina — at least for one coach.

Coupeville pressured Friday Harbor so badly the Wolverines threw away the ball with 3.4 seconds to play.

Which was immediately followed by the coup de grâce — the host team being whistled for a technical foul after one of its players viciously slammed the ball into the wall in frustration.

Wolfe slipped one last dagger through the net to set the final margin, before he and his teammates played keep-away on the inbounds play, sending one section of fans home happy.

Spoiler: it wasn’t the Friday Harbor fans.

CHS boys varsity coach Brad Sherman (left) discusses strategy with fellow hoops gurus Alex Evans and Scott Fox.

The anxiety-soaked finale capped a game which didn’t go the way most Coupeville contests have this season.

The Wolves trailed for much of the first half, falling behind by as much as 10 points in the opening quarter.

Back-to-back buckets to end the first frame made things a bit closer at 15-9, but Friday Harbor immediately stretched the deficit back out, with the Wolves not claiming the lead until right before the half.

Logan Martin came up huge in the second quarter, shifting from being a rebound-first player to knocking down buckets on his way to seven points in the period.

He tickled the twines on a midrange jumper, with the shot set up by a Cole White feed, giving CHS its first lead at 25-23, then immediately scored again right before the buzzer.

After playing from behind, the Wolves led throughout the third quarter, twice running their advantage out to eight points.

The first time came after Rickner and Wolfe converted back-to-back steals into breakaway buckets, with Rickner getting above the rim for Coupeville’s first legitimate in-game dunk in several seasons.

But each time the Wolves seemed to be set to bust things open, Friday Harbor, which has been a thorn in Coupeville’s side, stayed tough.

Of course, as the final result showed, there’s tough and then there’s Coupeville tough.

Mixing in jumpers and slashes to the hoop to go with his dunk, Rickner popped for a team-high 15 points, while Xavier Murdy banked in 12, and Alex Murdy deposited 10.

Martin (9), Wolfe (7), and White (a big early three-ball) also scored, with Dominic Coffman giving the Wolves a burst of energy off the bench.

With his performance Friday, Rickner breaks into the 200-point club.

With 202 career points and counting, he’s one of four active CHS players to reach the mark, joining fellow seniors Wolfe (768) and Xavier Murdy (417), as well as junior Maddie Georges (234).

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