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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Mikey Robinett and the Coupeville JV won their final five games. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Dominic Coffman swoops in for a bucket in an earlier game.

They finished on fire.

Closing its season on a five-game winning streak, the Coupeville High School JV boys basketball team scorched visiting Friday Harbor 49-35 Tuesday night.

With the victory, which avenges a loss to the same foe back in May, the Wolf young guns finish 5-3 in Hunter Smith’s first year at the helm of the program.

While the CHS varsity has two games left on its schedule, neither Concrete or Darrington have a JV squad this season.

That meant Tuesday’s tilt was the finale, and Coupeville seized the moment.

Up 8-5 after one quarter, the Wolves turned on the heat in the game’s middle two frames, using 13-8 and 15-4 runs in the second and third quarter, respectively, to seal the win.

Coupeville put 13 players on the floor, with seven of them scoring.

Jonathan Valenzuela paced the Wolves with a game-high 20 points, netting a trio of three-balls along the way.

Logan Downes and Dominic Coffman banked in nine apiece, with Nick Guay (5), Ryan Blouin (3), Zane Oldenstadt (2), and William Davidson (1) rounding out the offensive attack.

Andrew Williams, Mikey Robinett, Cole White, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, Nathan Ginnings, and Alex Wasik all saw floor time for the Wolves in the finale.

 

Final season scoring stats:

Jonathan Valenzuela – 105
Cole White – 56
Dominic Coffman – 51
Logan Downes – 46
Nick Guay – 32
Zane Oldenstadt – 16
William Davidson – 13
Ryan Blouin – 7
Mikey Robinett – 7
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim – 2

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Chelsea Prescott is the 2020-2021 Coupeville High School Female Athlete of the Year. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Xavier Murdy is the Male Athlete of the Year.

There’s two more names to add to the ring of honor.

Senior Chelsea Prescott and junior Xavier Murdy were tabbed as Coupeville High School’s Athletes of the Year Monday in a virtual ceremony.

Prescott, a four-year star for the Wolves, had very-strong seasons in softball and volleyball during her final year at CHS.

Opening on the diamond, with the pandemic flipping things around, she led CHS softball to a flawless 12-0 record as it returned to the Northwest 2B/1B League after a long absence.

Playing shortstop for the Wolves, Prescott brought a booming bat, quick wheels, and a laser arm to the lineup, plus a low-key, infectious spirit.

After she moved inside for volleyball, she remained on point, lashing winners left and right for a squad which finished second behind two-time defending state champ La Conner.

Prescott peppers a winner.

Tabbed as a First-Team All-Conference pick, Prescott capped her run on the CHS volleyball court by signing to play at Medaille College in New York.

During her days as a Wolf, the young woman who could hit a homerun, then rip out and replace a toilet with one hand, while repairing a car with the other, was a rare athlete.

She came up playing baseball in little league, often pitching, then played volleyball, basketball, and softball at CHS.

Murdy, currently leading a first-place Wolf basketball team in rebounds, assists, and steals, is that rarity — a star who seems to delight in other’s success even more than his own.

His junior year started on the baseball diamond, where he helped Coupeville finish second behind Friday Harbor, moved to the soccer pitch, where he helped restart the program, and is finishing on the hardwood.

Working with teammates such as Hawthorne Wolfe and his own brother, sophomore Alex Murdy, X-Man has been indispensable for a red-hot Wolf team which sits at 6-3 heading into the final week of the season.

Need a big bucket? He can get it.

Need 27 rebounds? He’s on it.

He’s the glue which holds everything together.

And now, like Prescott, and his own basketball coach, Brad Sherman, Murdy will be immortalized on the wall outside the CHS gym – one of the best of the best to ever wear a Wolf uniform.

Murdy sacrifices for the team.

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Gravity has no hold on Alex Murdy. (Jackie Saia photos)

Jackie Saia is the superwoman of Coupeville athletics.

A teacher and Wolf mom, she also clicks a steady stream of photos for the CHS yearbook, which she oversees.

Plus, she lets me use said photos for free, which makes her a saint.

The pics above and below, which come to us courtesy one of the hardest-working women in Central Whidbey, capture Wolf boys basketball beating Mount Vernon Christian last week.

Bask in the afterglow.

Miles Davidson (in black) and Logan Martin multitask.

Sage Downes swoops and scoops.

Mikey Robinett stays hydrated (and camera-ready).

Xavier Murdy dances a basketball ballet.

The Wolf bench gets excited.

Daniel Olson whispers, “Take a picture, it’ll last longer,” then banks home a runner.

When you just made Mount Vernon Christian cry sweet, sweet tears.

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Sophomore Maddie Georges was Second-Team All-Conference. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ryanne Knoblich played strongly for both the Wolf varsity and JV.

Kylie Chernikoff nabbed the Coaches Award to go with a First-Team All-League nod.

Successful season, successful banquet.

Coming off a campaign in which they finished second in the Northwest 2B/1B League, beating everyone except two-time defending state champ La Conner, the Coupeville High School volleyball squad had plenty of honors to bestow.

Seniors Maddie Vondrak, Kylie Chernikoff, Jaimee Masters, and Chelsea Prescott all received four-year awards for playing every season.

Prescott and Vondrak shared captain honors, with Prescott tabbed as varsity MVP and Vondrak bringing home Most Inspirational.

Jill Prince (Most Improved) and Chernikoff (Heart of the Wolf – Coaches Award) round out the varsity honorees.

In addition, JV awards went to Maya Lucero (MVP), Skylar Parker (Most Improved), and Allie Lucero (Most Inspirational).

NWL coaches named Prescott and Chernikoff as First-Team All-League players, with Vondrak and Maddie Georges earning Second-Team honors.

Alita Blouin and Prince received Honorable Mention.

Varsity letter winners:

Alita Blouin
Kylie Chernikoff
Maddie Georges
Ryanne Knoblich
Jaimee Masters
Abby Mulholland
Chelsea Prescott
Jill Prince
Lucy Tenore
Maddie Vondrak

Participation certificates:

Gwen Gustafson 
Issabel Johnson
Allie Lucero
Maya Lucero
Allison Nastali
Skylar Parker
Grey Peabody
Jordyn Rogers
Olivia Schaffeld

Manager:

Taygin Jump

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Kylie Van Velkinburgh kicks off a series of Wolf basketball portraits. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The last batch.

As we’ve worked our way through the high school hoops season, I’ve been dispersing all the portraits shot by John Fisken — sometimes one at a time, sometimes in big clumps.

With nine days left in the season, and eight head shots still waiting to see the light of the internet, here you go.

Want to see other stuff, like action shots, which have popped out of Fisken’s camera? Take a look over at:

John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

Alex Wasik

Grady Rickner

TJ Rickner

Andrew Williams

Ryan Blouin

Jonathan Valenzuela

Cole White

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