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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Sam Wynn was a four-year star on the CHS pitch. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Cael Wilson brings the thunder.

It’s the big bounce back.

From having the program cancelled, to unexpectedly returning to play, to handing out varsity letters to 14 players, Coupeville High School boys soccer had a topsy-turvy, but successful season.

The reborn Wolves got six games played on the pitch during a pandemic-altered campaign, and head coach Robert Wood acknowledged the effort and grit his players showed while awarding letters.

Senior Sam Wynn was honored with a four-year award for playing every season of his prep career, while Cael Wilson was noted for being the first 8th grader to ever score in a CHS boys soccer game.

 

Varsity letter winners:

Owen Barenburg
Ryan Blouin
Cameron Epp
Preston Epp
Nathan Ginnings
Nick Guay
Logan Martin
Xavier Murdy
Cole White
Andrew Williams
Aidan Wilson
Cael Wilson
Jesse Wooten
Sam Wynn

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CHS senior gridiron star Alex Jimenez earned the Coaches Award. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sage Downes was one of 20 Wolf football players to letter this season.

Alex Jimenez earned the respect of his mentors.

The Coupeville High School senior received the Coaches Award Wednesday, highlighting the football team’s award banquet.

Fellow senior Ben Smith earned a Four-Year award for playing every season, while 20 players were lettered by head coach Marcus Carr.

The Wolves finished 3-2, with wins over La Conner, Lummi Nation, and Concrete, clinching a second-straight winning season after a 13-year dry spell for the gridiron program.

 

Varsity letter winners:

Isaiah Bittner
Cameron Breaux
Brian Casey
Dominic Coffman
Miles Davidson
William Davidson
Logan Downes
Sage Downes
Dakota Eck
Scott Hilborn
Daylon Houston
Cole Hutchinson
Alex Jimenez
Coen Killian
Zane Oldenstadt
Mikey Robinett
Ben Smith
Josh Upchurch
Tim Ursu
Kai Wong

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Wolf freshman Cole White scored his first varsity points Tuesday at home against Concrete. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Milestones make stat geeks giddy.

Tuesday night, as the Coupeville High School boys basketball team battered visiting Concrete 71-17, there were two such moments in time.

One — Hawthorne Wolfe cracking the 500-point career scoring club — was noted in my game story last night.

Today we note the other.

When Wolf freshman Cole White scored his first varsity points, he joined an exclusive club.

With 5:13 left in the game, Jonathan Valenzuela, trapped under the basket, looped a pass to his fellow swing player, who was lurking on the left side.

White caught the ball, popped a short jumper, and the net flipped upwards as history tumbled through it.

With the bucket, Cole joined dad Greg, watching the game from the bench as a CHS assistant coach, on the school’s career scoring chart.

The elder White rippled the nets for 604 points back when he was wearing short-shorts, and still sits #31 all-time.

But the basket had another historical note to it, as Cole White became the 400th Wolf boy I’ve been able to document scoring at least one point in a varsity hoops game.

From Jeff Stone and Mike Bagby, tied with 1,137 points, to Paul Baher, Robert Engle, Bob FranzenMeryl Gordon, Oscar Liquidano, and Raleigh Sherman — who all netted a single varsity free throw — it’s a long and diverse list.

Boys basketball has been active at CHS since 1917, and my pursuit of what is now 104 years of scoring history is not a complete one.

I’m missing points for a fair amount of players from the 1930’s and 1940’s, but I do have totals for two seasons in the 1920’s(!), so we’re getting there.

If a bunch of old-timey scorebooks suddenly appeared in the blink of a time machine, we obviously would go above 400 Wolf boys having scored.

Floyd Wanamaker, Dean Edmundson, and the rest of the 1925-1926 Wolves, you will be honored, one day!

OK, probably not, but we can still hope.

But we’re pretty dang solid from the early ’50s to today, with scattered records from before, so if the 400 isn’t 100% correct, it’s getting closer and closer.

For the moment, though, don’t worry about what could be. Instead, celebrate what is known.

Valenzuela, who also scored his first varsity points Tuesday, became #399 in the third quarter, then set up White to be #400.

Milestone city, baby.

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Coupeville junior Hawthorne Wolfe is the 48th CHS boy in 104 years to crack the 500-point scoring club. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hawk got historical, then he got off the floor.

Coupeville High School junior Hawthorne Wolfe cracked the 500-point career scoring club Tuesday, then he and the other starters handed the game over to their teammates.

Jumping out to a 31-2 lead after one quarter, with Wolfe and Grady Rickner each tossing in 10 points, CHS eventually coasted in with a resounding 71-17 thumping of visiting Concrete.

The win evens Coupeville’s record at 2-2 heading into another home game Thursday, with La Conner set to visit Whidbey.

Everything was dropping for the Wolves Tuesday, especially in the early going.

Xavier Murdy, Logan Martin, and Wolfe all hit three-balls, as seven different Coupeville players got into the scoring column in the first quarter.

With the game already all but decided just eight minutes in, Coupeville coach Brad Sherman went deep on his bench, getting all 12 players a chance to score.

The Wolves pushed the lead out to 47-6 at the half, then the starters took a seat and let their backups play most of the second half.

That allowed the scoring to be spread out all the way across the scorebook, keeping June Mazdra and her well-sharpened pencils busy.

Grady Rickner paced Coupeville with a game-high 15 points, while Wolfe’s 12 points all came in the first half.

That was enough to lift him to 504 points, making him the 48th CHS boy in the 104-year history of the program to crack the exclusive club.

Wolfe passes Jason Bagby (499) and David Lortz (502), moving into 47th place on the career scoring chart.

Xavier Murdy added nine points in support of his Class of 2022 teammates, with Logan Downes and Jonathan Valenzuela adding seven apiece.

Alex Murdy (5), Daniel Olson (4), TJ Rickner (3), Martin (3), Cole White (2), Cody Roberts (2), and Sage Downes (2) rounded out the explosive offensive barrage.

It was the first varsity points for Valenzuela and White, who joins dad Greg on the Wolf boys career scoring chart.

With Cole’s bucket, the CHS assistant coach father-freshman son duo now have a combined 606 varsity points to their credit.

Coupeville had a strong shooting performance in every aspect of the game, hitting 13 of 17 from the free-throw line, while six different players nailed a three-ball.

Raining down treys were Valenzuela, Logan Downes, Wolfe, Grady Rickner, Xavier Murdy, and Martin.

 

JV grabs some pine time: 

Concrete only goes one team deep, with a thin roster at that, so the younger Wolves had the night off.

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Coupeville 8th grader Savina Wells scored 10 points Tuesday, including hitting a pair of three-balls. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Not great, but good enough.

Overcoming a rough start Tuesday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball squad turned on the heat in the second half and romped past Concrete late, pulling out a 39-19 win.

The Wolves closed with a 17-2 run, busting open a close game and lifting their record to 2-2 on the season.

“This seems to be our theme this year — to start off sluggish and then play much better in the second half,” said CHS coach Scott Fox.

The Wolves, playing in front of their home fans for the first time this season, struck first, with sophomore gunner Maddie Georges rippling the nets on a jumper after a feed from 8th grader Savina Wells.

But then the offense flat-out disappeared, as Coupeville couldn’t get a bucket to fall for much of the first quarter.

Concrete slowly built a 7-2 lead, but it always seemed like just a matter of time before things would change, and they did.

Audrianna Shaw flipped the nets high on a jumper with a tick over a minute left on the clock, then Wells dropped in a three-ball off an inbounds play, and the score was back to 7-7 at the end of the quarter.

The Wolves couldn’t seem to pull away, however.

Georges nailed a three-ball of her own in the second quarter, but a 12-7 lead sputtered into just a 15-13 edge at the half.

Worse, Coupeville lost its point guard when Georges turned her ankle midway through the quarter, and she never returned to the game.

Missing their sparkplug, the Wolves gave more floor time to youngsters like Ryanne Knoblich, Gwen Gustafson, and Lyla Stuurmans, and the bench injected a bit of get-up-and-go.

Wells opened the second half with her second trey, but Concrete continued to hang around, cutting the deficit back to 22-17 midway through the third on a long outlet pass and layup.

That seemed to trigger something deep inside the Wolves, as they promptly went into lockdown mode from that point, starting a 17-0 run which stretched into the final seconds of the game.

Shaw swished a jumper and Carolyn Lhamon put back an offensive rebound to end the third, then CHS went to work in the fourth.

Junior post Ja’Kenya Hoskins picked up her first points of the season, and liked it so much, she finished with five in the fourth, while Lhamon, Shaw, and Knoblich also scored.

Concrete finally broke through in the final minute, hitting a pair of free throws to stop the bleeding right before the final buzzer blared.

Wells and Shaw tied for game-high honors, netting 10 points apiece, while Lhamon (6), Hoskins (5), Georges (5), and Knoblich (3) rounded out the offensive attack.

Everyone on the roster played, and everyone contributed, with Morgan Stevens, Izzy Wells, Kylie Van Velkinburgh, Anya Leavell, Gustafson, and Stuurmans all getting quality floor time.

Things get tougher next, as Coupeville welcomes Northwest 2B/1B League ruler La Conner to town Thursday.

The Braves, who have a win over 1A power King’s this season, bopped Orcas Island 83-21 Tuesday to raise their record to 5-0.

 

NO JV:

Concrete doesn’t have a second squad, so Coupeville’s young guns sat this one out.

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