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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

Coupeville’s Makana Stone had a strong season playing basketball in England. (Photo property Loughborough University)

It was a rough ending to a standout season.

Coupeville High School grad Makana Stone finished her first season of basketball in England on the bench after taking a nasty fall while hauling in a rebound during a Women’s National Basketball League semifinal playoff game.

Without its American assassin, who had 11 points and seven rebounds at the time of the incident, Loughborough University couldn’t hang on and fell 64-50 to host CoLA Southwark.

The loss left the Riders with a final record of 13-6, while the Pride advance to the WNBL championship game against regular-season kingpin Ipswich, which nipped Nottingham Trent 75-72.

The matchup between Loughborough and CoLA Southwark was a tense affair, with the Riders trailing just 42-36 when Stone was injured.

The Pride took advantage of the loss, closing the third quarter on a 7-0 tear to salt away the victory.

Playing in London, the two teams opened with a back-and-forth first quarter, with the hosts going to the break up 21-15.

A 13-13 stalemate in the second frame left the margin at six for Loughborough, and the Riders started strongly in the second half, with Stone slashing to the hoop for her final buckets of the season.

The former Wolf, who made the move to England after four standout seasons at Whitman College, played in 17 of Loughborough’s 19 games and was among the WNBL statistical leaders in several categories.

Stone finished with 270 points, 231 rebounds, 33 assists, 58 steals, and eight blocked shots.

While there are no more games on the schedule, she is in line for possible postseason honors, nominated for WNBL Player of the Year, Team of the Year, and Defensive Player of the Year.

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Grady Rickner looks for some room to rumble. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The sound of hoops echoes across the prairie.

High school basketball was in full action Thursday, with Coupeville hosting Orcas Island for four furious rumbles.

The pics above and below come to us from always-thirsty photo guy John Fisken, and document the happenings at the boys varsity and JV games.

To see everything he shot, and maybe buy some early Christmas gifts, pop over to:

BBB 2021-05-20 vs Orcas – John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

Dominic Coffman catches some air.

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim dares the cameraman to try and take the ball away.

Jonathan Valenzuela pushes the flow of the game.

Logan Downes perfects the art of the free throw.

Wolf girls varsity players stop by to check out the boys game.

William Davidson makes a deposit.

Daniel Olson harasses the shooter.

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Carolyn Lhamon comes in hot. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The sound of squeaking shoes mingled with the click of cameras.

The Coupeville High School girls basketball squads hosted Orcas Island Thursday, and the sound of hoops lured in wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken.

The photos above and below are courtesy him, but are far from all he shot.

To see everything Fisken snapped, and possibly purchase some glossies for the grandparents, pop over to:

GBB 2021-05-20 vs Orcas – John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

Give Skylar Parker the ball, or she will steal your soul.

Maddie Georges, with Savina Wells running behind her, flips the Coupeville offense into overdrive.

Morgan Stevens is here for the soul-stealing, too.

Wolf manager Mckenna Somes, doing 10,001 things at the same time.

Audrianna Shaw gets out of town, fast.

Kylie Van Velkinburgh lines up a shot.

Izzy Wells gets scrappy.

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Xavier Murdy was a wild man on both ends of the floor Thursday as Coupeville battled Orcas Island. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

You love to see it.

Xavier Murdy scrambling to get back and draw a charging foul when the game was already lost.

Murdy, fighting his way through three rivals to haul in one of his 14 rebounds, again long after the game was decided.

Hawthorne Wolfe, coming off a 20-point performance but not happy with the end result, keeping the lights on in the gym long after the game, putting up shot after shot, only occasionally stopping to argue with the machine feeding him the ball.

It would have been easy for the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball players to have hung their heads Thursday after falling 70-53 to visiting Orcas Island.

That they didn’t, and that they actually carved their deficit in half by the final buzzer, are strong signs for a team which sits at 1-1 on the young season.

Swamped by a second-quarter monsoon in which the Vikings rained down 34 points while seemingly never missing a shot, the Wolves lost an early lead.

And it got worse from there, with Coupeville trailing by almost five touchdowns early in the fourth quarter, while playing a sport where you can’t get seven points back on one play.

Yet the Wolves kept fighting, closed the game on a 17-0 run, and are already circling the June 5 rematch on the calendar.

“I am eager to play them again,” said CHS coach Brad Sherman. “I think we match up very well with them.

“Teams make runs, and they certainly did today. We just have to be mentally tough and be better at stopping those runs.”

The game started with two fairly evenly-matched teams exchanging the lead as the first quarter played out.

Xavier Murdy crashed to the basket hard for a pair of buckets, Wolfe put up a quick seven points on a variety of moves, and X-Man’s younger brother capped things off.

Slashing through the backpedaling defense, Alex Murdy skipped a layup off the glass right before the buzzer to stake Coupeville to a 17-15 lead at the first break.

There were no fans in the stands to get the joint rockin’, but the Wolves, bouncing and barking enthusiastically at each other, made up for it.

And they were right there, at 20-20, after Wolfe hit a runner while hanging in the air long after his defender had retreated to the surly bonds of Earth.

But then the bottom fell out.

The bottom of the net Orcas was shooting at, to be precise, as the Vikings locked on and unloaded, with a 29-5 run to close the second quarter horrifying in its precision.

Everything was going in for the visitors, whether it be long bombs (they outshot Coupeville 10-2 on three-balls, 5-0 in the first half), offensive rebounds put back up and in, or pull-up jumpers on the move.

The exact opposite was happening for Coupeville, as shot after shot rolled around the rim, took a weird last-second skip, or simply popped back up and out.

Other than a couple of free throws, the only Wolf bucket in the last six minutes of the half came on a roll to the hoop by freshman Logan Downes.

Trailing 49-25 at the break, Coupeville got back into a partial groove in the third, then finished strongly in the fourth.

“I love how our guys responded in the second half,” Sherman said. “Certainly, give a lot of credit to Orcas and how they shot the ball, but we never gave in.

“Having things like Xavier crashing the offensive boards hard down 25 is a very positive sign.”

X-Man got his JV counterparts in the stands to get rowdy when he elevated down deep and rejected an Orcas shot, while the Downes brothers hooked up for a nice scoring play.

Sage, a senior, corralled a loose ball, then flipped a pass to Logan, a freshman, who crashed through the defense for a layup in a game in which both brothers scored their first varsity points, uniting them with older brother Hunter on the career scoring chart.

It was a good game to become a made man, as TJ Rickner and Cody Roberts joined Downes brothers #2 and #3, also notching the first varsity points of their prep career.

The tenth and final Orcas trey, very early in the final frame, pushed the margin out to 70-36, but then the Wolves clamped down on both ends of the floor.

Forcing turnovers and hitting the boards with abandon, Coupeville closed with intensity and passion, and another Downes-to-Downes basket.

This time, the assist went to Logan, and the bucket to Sage, proving the duo can share and share alike.

Wolfe finished with a team-high 20 points, but Orcas countered with a nasty one-two combo of Tomas Holmes and Diego Lago, who went for 37 and 20, respectively, while combining to hit all 10 Vikings three-balls.

Logan Downes and Grady Rickner each banked home seven points for the Wolves, with Xavier Murdy (5), Sage Downes (4), and Alex Murdy (3) chipping in to the effort.

Roberts (2), Daniel Olson (2), Logan Martin (2), and TJ Rickner (1) also scored, while freshman Cole White played aggressive defense.

Coupeville gets a chance to bounce right back, traveling to Friday Harbor for a Saturday afternoon rumble between two 1-1 teams.

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Savina Wells became the first 8th grade girl to score in a CHS varsity basketball game Thursday, and ended the night as her team’s top scorer. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

No fans, but plenty of history.

Savina Wells, playing alongside big sis Izzy, achieved at least three things Thursday no Coupeville 8th grade girl has ever done on a basketball court.

Playing a key role as the Wolf hoops squad fell 41-38 to visiting Orcas Island in an empty-gym thriller, the younger Wells became the 231st Wolf girl to score in a CHS varsity basketball game since the program launched in 1974.

More importantly in terms of history, she became the first to do so while still in middle school, in a game in which she both started and led her team in scoring with eight points.

Which already puts Savina Wells, active middle schooler, in an eight-way tie for #190 on the CHS girls varsity career scoring chart.

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves, as chart topper Brianne King — with 1,549 career points — is still feeling pretty comfortable atop her perch tonight.

In between the history, Thursday’s rumble with Orcas Island, which was played with no fans per a request from the visitors, was a back-and-forth affair in which Coupeville’s young players almost pulled off a great win.

Of the nine Wolves to see the floor, four were sophomores, four were juniors, and Savina Wells … well, you heard.

Coupeville was missing two of its veterans, with juniors Anya Leavell and Ja’Kenya Hoskins sidelined, but it got big efforts from everyone in uniform.

“We’re very young, but have great potential,” said Wolf coach Scott Fox. “We’ll have some growing pains and we’re learning as we go. A few breaks here and there and we get the win today.

“I’m very proud of the kid’s effort,” he added. “Izzy was a monster on the boards, and Audri (Shaw) and Maddie (Georges) got our defense really going.”

Trailing by seven headed into the fourth quarter, the Wolves put some snap into their game, and came within one semi-questionable call of having a chance to win the game at the buzzer.

Georges drilled a three-ball to open the quarter, off of a rebound and feed from fellow sophomore Gwen Gustafson, only to see Orcas respond with back-to-back buckets.

Shrugging it off, the Wolves closed with a 10-3 run in which five different players scored for Coupeville.

Savina Wells got it started, taking the ball off a press break and swooping to the hoop for a running layup.

Big sis Izzy slapped home a second-chance bucket off of an offensive rebound, followed by a sweet lil’ jumper in traffic from Kylie Van Velkinburgh, and suddenly Orcas was sweating.

Shaw bolted up the middle, sucked the defense to her, then sliced around a defender and scooped the ball high off the glass, while Carolyn Lhamon, who was a two-way warrior all day, stepped up and drilled the bottom out of the net.

Orcas had answers, though, and a pull-up jumper with 30 ticks to play kept them up one.

Coming hard on defense, all five Wolves crashing, arms flying every which way, Coupeville got the break it needed, then had it yanked away.

The ball popped loose in the middle of a mad scrum, with Izzy Wells gaining control.

But, as she did, a pile of players plowed into her body, causing her to lurch maybe a half of a step.

Instead of calling a foul, or letting the play run its natural course, the refs of the day opted to call a traveling violation on Coupeville.

Which would have elicited some howls of protest if there were fans in the stands.

I considered throwing my notebook at the nearest ref, but am trying to pick on refs less these days and opted not to.

But I thought about it.

Back on the floor, the possibly (I said possibly!) unfair exchange of possession allowed Orcas to dribble away a few seconds before drawing a foul.

Two free throws later — always easier to shoot when the visiting team isn’t facing a wall of sound from hyped-up local fans — CHS needed a three-ball to force overtime, and had to start on its own end-line with just two seconds left.

If the Wolves had hit that shot, this story would have long ago gone in a different direction. Which it didn’t.

But take nothing away from Coupeville, which may be 0-2, but is primed for future success.

The Wolves showed they can dominate, closing the second quarter on a 13-3 run to take a 19-14 lead into the halftime break.

That streak featured six different CHS players tallying a point or better, with Savina Wells leading the way with a pair of impressive buckets.

On the first, she took the ball, rolled hard to her left and her defender crumbled as she blew by her.

On the second, reacting like a free safety, Wells suddenly shot forward, picked off a pass in mid-air, then beat the pack to the hoop at the other end, softly kissing the ball off the glass for an elegant bucket.

The other Wolf young guns were clickin’ as well, with Gustafson slicing ‘n dicing her defender on a quick move in the paint, while Georges savagely stole a ball, then flipped a note-perfect pass to a streaking Shaw for a layup.

The third quarter was a bit rough for Coupeville, but the Wolves did have one stellar play, on which a Georges pass hit Lhamon’s fingertips, and was redirected to Izzy Wells for a bucket.

Seven of the nine Wolves to play scored, with Savina Wells (8), Lhamon (7), Georges (7), Shaw (6), and Izzy Wells (6) leading the way.

With her performance against Orcas, Georges moves within four points of becoming the 101st Wolf girl to join the 100-point scoring club.

Van Velkinburgh and Gustafson rounded out the scoring attack, with a bucket apiece, Ryanne Knoblich and Morgan Stevens played scrappy defense, and 8th grader Lyla Stuurmans rocked the joint while cheering on her teammates.

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