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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Sophomore Logan Downes scored a game-high 14 points Friday as Coupeville ran its record to 3-0 on the season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Best start in 11 years.

You have to go back to the 2009-2010 season to find the last time a Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball team started 3-0.

That was the next to last of Randy King’s 20 years at the helm of the Wolf program, and it marked the third-straight season his teams accomplished the feat.

Jump forward to 2021, and the current CHS team, coached by one of King’s former stars — Brad Sherman — has matched the quick start of a 2009-2010 team which finished 16-5.

Win #3 this time around was a blowout, as Coupeville dismantled visiting Darrington 75-26 Friday in its Northwest 2B/1B League opener.

The Wolves will turn around and put that spiffy record (1-0 in conference play, 3-0 overall) on the line Saturday afternoon when they travel to Orcas Island.

The first road game for Coupeville this season, it will feature a Wolf squad which is just a single point away from having five players averaging double digit scoring.

Utilizing a smothering defense and an opportunistic offense, CHS has beaten Oak Harbor, Forks, and Darrington by embracing an attack by committee.

Anyone on the roster can kill you on a given night, or a given play.

That was reinforced Friday, as eight different Wolves scored in the opening quarter, en route to Coupeville claiming a 30-8 advantage.

The hometown squad buried five of its eight three-balls in the first eight minutes, with Hawthorne Wolfe and Caleb Meyer torching the nets twice apiece.

Darrington couldn’t win.

Sit back and the Wolves peppered the net from behind the arc.

Come out, though, and Coupeville’s speedier players slashed past the Loggers, leaving them spinning, clutching nothing but air as layups rained down.

Alex Murdy swooped under the hoop, then popped out to shred the defense, while Logan Downes carved Darrington up on a mad end-to-end rush which resulted in a three-point play the hard way.

It was a pattern which quickly repeated itself in the second frame, as this time seven Wolves shared the scoring load.

Pushing the lead all the way out to 53-14 by halftime, the only thing preventing CHS from making a run at 100 points was the presence of a running clock in the second half.

Grady Rickner put a punctuation mark on things with a resounding stuff on a Darrington shot, while both of Coupeville’s Logan’sDownes and Martin — added late three-balls.

Grady Rickner played strongly on both ends of the floor for the Wolves.

Nine of 10 Wolves scored in the game, and Dominic Coffman — the one who didn’t — played strongly on defense, hauling in rebounds and flustering Darrington’s shooters.

Downes paced Coupeville with a game-high 14 points, and officially became the highest-scoring of Angie and Ralph’s sons.

Three games into his sophomore season, the sharp-shooting Logan has 90 career varsity points.

That pushes him ahead of graduated big brothers Hunter (89) and Sage (64), who made much of their fame on the defensive side of the ball.

Alex Murdy and Wolfe both popped for 12 points Friday, with Wolfe (708) now the 20th player in the 105-year history of CHS boys basketball to record 700 career points.

Meyer (8), Martin (7), Rickner (7), Jonathan Valenzuela (6), Xavier Murdy (5), and Cole White (4) also scored, with X-Man notching his 250th career point.

 

No JV action:

Darrington has no second team, so the Wolf JV remained in street clothes Friday night.

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Izzy Wells was one of nine Wolves to score Friday in a 57-9 win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They started strong, then finished even stronger.

Sparked by a mad dog defense which forced turnover after turnover, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team decimated visiting Darrington Friday night.

By the time things were done, the Wolves, who held the Loggers to just a single point in the second half, waltzed away with a 57-9 win in their Northwest 2B/1B League opener.

Coupeville improves to 1-0 in conference action, 2-1 overall, with another NWL clash set for Saturday.

The Wolves travel to Orcas Island for an afternoon game, their first road trip of the season.

The CHS girls actually play their next four games away from home, not returning to their own gym until Jan. 4.

So, before they went, the Wolves decided to dazzle local fans with one of the most dominant performances the program has delivered in recent times.

Nine of 10 players in uniform scored, with six of them tallying at least eight points apiece.

The buckets started dropping almost right from the tip, with Wolf point guard Maddie Georges flippin’ the net on a three-ball from the left side to kick things off.

Freshman Savina Wells, who used her long arms to pilfer numerous passes against a frazzled Darrington squad, immediately followed up with a steal and breakaway bucket, and the rout was on.

The Loggers didn’t get on the board until almost midway through the opening period, and the Wolves cruised to the first break up 12-4.

Georges rippled the nets with a second three-ball, this one from the corner, while Izzy Wells slapped home a layup after all four other Wolves touched the ball — sending the orb flying around the arc.

In between the buckets, which included Abby Mulholland’s first varsity basket, there was also a little intrigue.

Coupeville was whistled for a technical foul for having a uniform number incorrectly entered in the book, and while Darrington missed both free throws, CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith had a huge smile afterwards.

The man who turned Wolf girls basketball into a powerhouse in the ’90s is now an interested spectator as daughter Megan Smith works her first season as head coach of the varsity team.

Wife Cherie, who was Willie’s assistant back in the day, has returned to the bench to work with their daughter, and pops was giddy after seeing his progeny earn her first T.

“Took me eight games to get one! Only took her three!!” he said with a huge grin, then strolled off happily humming to himself.

Back on the court, Megan’s team could do virtually no wrong after the inadvertent tech.

A 14-0 run to end the second frame pushed the halftime margin to 28-8, with the buckets set up by a stern defensive push.

Georges was wheeling and dealing, playing give and go with Lyla Stuurmans, then driving and dishing, the ball slipping past defenders and landing right on teammate Gwen Gustafson’s waiting fingertips.

If Darrington had a few happy moments in the first half, the Loggers had zip to be grateful about after halftime.

Coupeville ripped off 21 straight points to open the second half, gave up a single free throw, then tossed in another eight points as a running clock raced to 0:00.

Nearly all the Wolves took turns handling the scoring load, with the fab frosh netting the two prettiest late-game buckets.

Stuurmans rolled hard against the defense, knocking down a sweet running hook shot, while Savina Wells drilled the bottom out of the net on a long jumper which was a centimeter away from being a three-ball.

In the end, the scoring was extremely balanced for the Wolves.

A defensive buzzsaw who crackles with energy when on the floor, Stuurmans can also make the nets jump, and with 10 points Friday, she beat Darrington by herself.

Shaw and Mulholland were right on her heels, banking in nine apiece, while Georges, Gustafson, and Savina Wells each went off for eight.

Carolyn Lhamon (2), Izzy Wells (2), and Ja’Kenya Hoskins (1) rounded out the offensive attack, while freshman Katie Marti made her varsity hoops debut.

Each of the Wolves hit the boards hard, but Hoskins was a particular delight on this night, ripping balls free, shredding the very psyche of her rivals, leaving them to wallow in an everlasting puddle of tears.

 

JV has night off:

Darrington only goes one team deep, so the Coupeville JV were just fans Friday night.

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Gabriella Gebhard and Walker. (Photos courtesy Stephanie Gebhard)

Lookin’ classy.

The big stage awaits.

Coupeville High School freshman Gabriella Gebhard is off to Florida next week to compete in a huge showcase event.

The young Wolf, and her faithful canine companion Walker (Set’r Ridge’s Legend in the Making) vie at the American Kennel Club National Championships Dec. 18-19 in Orlando.

Win there and Gebhard qualifies for the premier event in the sport – the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show.

Eligibility for the AKC National Championships is based on both accomplishments in the show ring and the classroom.

Each contestant must have a minimum of three first-place wins between Oct. 2020-Oct. 2021 in an Open Class, with competition present, while maintaining a 3.0 or better GPA in school.

Gebhard is currently the third-ranked juniors English Setter handler in the entire nation, trailing just Jessica Bratz of Florida, and Alexandra Apollos of Kentucky.

The AKC National Championships will air on https://akc.tv/.

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Led by their seniors, CHS girls basketball players are crushing their male counterparts during a holiday gift drive. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A gift drive for those in need wraps up soon.

The Coupeville High School basketball teams are spearheading the event, with donation boxes in the gym lobby.

Friday night’s home doubleheader against Darrington — girls varsity at 5:15, boys at 7:00, no JV — offers a final chance for fans to bring gifts with them to a game.

The boxes will be pulled Dec. 15, with all donations going to the Holiday House North.

The Wolves are looking for unwrapped gifts which can be redistributed to families in Coupeville and Oak Harbor.

There are actually two boxes, as CHS girls and boys hoops programs are competing against each other to see who can bring in the most gifts.

Cookies are at stake, and, currently, the Wolf girls are crushing the boys like the Harlem Globetrotters squaring off with the Washington Generals.

 

Gift ideas:

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Freshman Bryley Gilbert was tabbed as Most Improved when Coupeville High School cross country handed out awards. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Reiley Araceley was honored as Best Teammate.

It is done.

Fall sports came to an official end Wednesday, as the Coupeville High School cross country team closed out banquet season.

The Wolves and coach Paige Spangler honored their three state meet participants — Helen Strelow, Claire Mayne, and Mitchell Hall — while also acknowledging Strelow winning the Northwest 2B/1B League title.

Hall and Strelow were captains this season, while Reiley Araceley (Best Teammate) and Bryley Gilbert (Most Improved) also earned awards.

After a season full of individual and team success, Coupeville is set up well to keep its momentum going into season five of running the comeback trail as an in-school program.

There were no seniors on this fall’s team, and the Wolves can return 19 of 20 runners, with just foreign exchange student Svetlana Vanina guaranteed to depart.

 

Varsity letter winners:

Reiley Araceley
Carson Field
Bryley Gilbert
Mitchell Hall
Claire Mayne
Cristina McGrath
Hank Milnes
Landon Roberts
Helen Strelow
Thomas Strelow
Cole White
Tate Wyman

 

Participation certificates:

Edie Bittner
Alex Clark
Dayvon Donavon
Erica McGrath
Alex Merino-Martinez
Nehemia Myles
Svetlana Vanina
Nic Wasik

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