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Nick Guay sizes up a free throw Thursday during the CMS boys hoops season finale. (Morgan White photos)

Andrew Williams gets ready to rocket a pass cross-court.

Noted ball-hawk Cole White lunges for the steal.

You always want to end the season on a positive.

Regardless of your final record, if you can exit on a high note – be it a big win, a highly-competitive loss or just overall improved play, it has a strong chance to carry over to future seasons.

So consider Thursday night a roaring success for the three Coupeville Middle School boys hoops teams, which all closed with a bang against visiting Granite Falls.

How it played out:

 

7th grade varsity:

The most successful Wolf team provided the biggest finale moment, using a 19-7 run in the fourth quarter to smash open a nail-biter and run away with a 43-28 win.

The victory, the second-straight for Coupeville’s young guns, lifts their final record to 4-6.

The game was a tightly-played, and low-scoring, affair through the first two quarters, with the visitors clinging to a 10-9 lead at the half.

Things took a change after the break, however, as the Wolves started to knock down shots from behind the arc, picked up the pace, and threw the Tigers back on their heels.

A 15-11 surge in the third quarter, fueled by a pair of three-balls from Ryan Blouin, plus treys off the fingertips of Cole White and Nick Guay, changed the entire flow of the game.

Once it had the lead, CMS didn’t let up, pouring on the offense in a torrid fourth quarter.

The Wolves got all their points in the final frame from three players – Logan Downes, who banked in eight, Guay, who popped for seven, and Blouin, who kicked in four.

The buckets were set up by Coupeville’s stingy defense, with White making off with three straight steals and Zane Oldenstadt dominating his rival big men in the paint.

“Boys played well tonight!,” said Wolf coach Greg White. “It was a tight game until the fourth.

Zane played great defense on their giant post – it was a true team effort tonight,” he added. “It was a fun one to end on!”

Downes paced the Wolves with 14 points, while Blouin and Guay had season-highs, swishing home 13 and 10, respectively.

White and William Davidson added three apiece, while Oldenstadt and Mikey Robinett were rock-solid on defense.

 

7th grade JV:

Coupeville’s least-experienced squad didn’t get the game win, but they did score several moral victories.

First, after falling behind 14-0 at the end of the first quarter, the Wolves rallied to win a 4-3 battle in the second, and final, frame.

Also, Alex Clark netted his first bucket of the season, a big moment for both the player, and his coach.

Alex had a huge smile!,” Greg White said. “Justin (Wilkinson) and Andrew (Williams) also played really tough defense.

“Even though our scoring was limited, I thought it was a much better showing for our JV squad.”

Robinett tossed in Coupeville’s other basket, while Quinten Pilgrim, Timothy Nitta and Chris Villarreal all saw floor time.

 

8th grade varsity:

Playing their final middle school game, the Wolves came dangerously close to nabbing a season-closing win.

But, in the end, Granite Falls escaped with a 24-23 triumph, leaving Coupeville to finish 1-9 on the season.

The Wolves had one of their strongest performances of the season at the free-throw line, with four players combining to net eight shots at the charity stripe.

Alex Wasik, who showed tremendous growth as a player from game one to game 10, led the Wolves with seven points, notching at least a point in every quarter.

Ty Hamilton was hot on his heels, pouring in six, while Alex Murdy flicked in five, Dominic Coffman and Mitchell Hall swished two apiece and Josh Upchurch sank a free throw.

Rounding out the roster were Kevin Partida, Levi Pulliam and Jesse Wooten.

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William Davidson netted three points Tuesday as the Coupeville 7th grade basketball team blasted arch-rival South Whidbey. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a beautiful day for a rivalry game.

Dodging the rain Tuesday, the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball teams trekked down-Island to face South Whidbey for the only time this season, returning with a split of the varsity games.

How things played out:

 

7th grade varsity:

This one was over after just one quarter, as Coupeville bolted out to a 17-6 lead en route to a run-away 32-15 win.

The victory lifts CMS to 3-6 heading into its season finale Thursday at home against Granite Falls.

The early run was sparked by an unexpected offensive explosion from Nick Guay.

The Wolf guard, who had rattled home five points across the first eight games, torched the nets Tuesday for seven in just the first quarter.

With five other Coupeville players adding a bucket apiece in the opening frame, Greg White’s scrappy band of marauders set Langley back on its heels, and never let up.

While the offense cooled off a bit after that, the Wolves continued to add to their lead up until the final buzzer.

Logan Downes topped Coupeville with eight points, running his season scoring total to a crisp 100, while Guay (7), Zane Oldenstadt (6), Cole White (4), Ryan Blouin (4) and William Davidson (3) also scored.

 

7th grade JV:

A lack of offense stifled Wolf hopes, as they fell 15-2 in a two-quarter game.

Mikey Robinett knocked down Coupeville’s lone bucket, which came after a scoreless opening frame for he and his teammates.

Quinten Pilgrim, Timothy Nitta, Andrew Williams, Chris Villarreal, Alex Clark and Justin Wilkinson rounded out the Wolf roster.

 

8th grade varsity:

The Alex & Alex combo was clickin’ for Coupeville, but it wasn’t enough.

Despite 11 points from Alex Murdy and 10 rebounds from Alex Wasik, the Wolves fell 44-28 and drop to 1-8 on the season.

“The guys played well,” said CMS coach Dante Mitchell. “We had a little comeback and brought the deficit down to like 13 but just couldn’t pull thru.

Alex Wasik was a monster for us on rebounds!”

Wasik and Dominic Coffman each kicked in five points apiece, with Coffman draining a three-ball, in support of Murdy.

Levi Pulliam netted four, Ty Hamilton banked in two, Kevin Partida split the net for a free throw and Jesse Wooten and Josh Upchurch also saw floor time for the Wolves.

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Alita Blouin knocked down 14 points Saturday as Coupeville’s SWISH basketball team split a doubleheader. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

On to the postseason, and don’t spare the gas.

The Coupeville 8th grade SWISH girls basketball squad closed the regular season Saturday, splitting a pair of games to run its record to a crisp 6-2.

The Wolves, playing without back-court ace Savina Wells, who was on a family trip, hung tough with high-powered Victorious Hoops, before falling 33-18 in their opener.

Then, they rebounded and drilled Arlington 28-9 in the nightcap.

Now it’s on to the league tournament, which goes down in Mount Vernon Dec. 15.

Saturday, the twin terrors that are Alita Blouin and Maddie Georges paced the Wolf scoring attack, rattling home 15 and 10 points, respectively, across the two games.

Lauren Marrs and Nezi Keiper each added six, Carolyn Lhamon slapped home five and Gwen Gustafson banked in four.

Keiper led Coupeville on the glass, ripping down 16 rebounds, while Lhamon snagged 11 and Gustafson corralled five.

Ryanne Knoblich, Brionna Blouin and Hayley Fieldler rounded out the active roster for the doubleheader.

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Coupeville 8th grader Mitchell Hall notched eight points Thursday at Sultan. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolf 7th grade coach Greg White and his sharp-shooting point guard (and son) Cole watch a recent high school game.

Four games, four very different results.

The Coupeville Middle School boys basketball squads trekked to the wilds of Sultan Thursday, and while the Wolves lost all four contests, the scores differed wildly.

 

8th grade varsity:

CMS came within a basket or two of sweeping the season series with their rivals, but fell just short.

Coupeville had strong first and third quarters, but cold shooting in the other two frames doomed it in a 28-26 nail-biter.

The loss drops the Wolves to 1-7 on the season.

“They got us, it sure is a stinger,” said CMS coach Dante Mitchell. “But I can’t be more proud of the guy’s heart and hustle they showed tonight.”

His squad torched the nets for 10 points in the first and third, but were held to two and four in the second and fourth.

Free throws also hurt the Wolves, as they connected on just 2-9 from the charity stripe.

Mitchell Hall and Alex Murdy paced Coupeville with eight points apiece, while Ty Hamilton tossed in four.

Alex Wasik, Kevin Partida and Dominic Coffman rounded out the Wolf scoring machine with a bucket each, with Levi Pulliam, Jesse Wooten and Josh Upchurch also seeing floor time.

 

7th grade varsity:

The roughest part of the afternoon, as Coupeville inadvertently played the role of the log being force-fed into the chipper.

Facing a brutally-good Turk team, the Wolves, now 2-6, suffered through their coldest offensive performance of the season, falling 47-7.

While his team fought until the end, CMS coach Greg White could see this loss coming.

“Sultan has the best 7th grade team I’ve seen,” he said. “They’ve got some great athletes.”

The Turks blew out to a 17-3 lead after one quarter, stretched the margin to 34-3 by halftime, then coasted home on fumes in the second half.

Cole White, Logan Downes and Mikey Robinett each scored two, while Nick Guay arced a free-throw through the net to complete the limited offensive fireworks for the Wolves.

Ryan Blouin, William Davidson and Zane Oldenstadt rounded out the CMS roster.

 

7th/8th JV:

A joint team, with three eighth-graders (Pulliam, Wooten and Upchurch) joining the younger crew, played twice, facing off with separate Sultan squads.

CMS doesn’t have enough 8th grade players to form different JV teams this season.

Both final scores were lost to the winds, as Sultan’s books went missing, but we know for a fact Coupeville scored 12 points across the pair of two-quarter games, and they were both Wolf losses.

Robinett had the hottest hand for the Wolves, knocking down a team-high six, while Pulliam netted four and Chris Villarreal added a bucket.

Quinten Pilgrim, Timothy Nitta, Andrew Williams, Alex Clark and Justin Wilkinson all saw floor time as well.

 

Next up:

Coupeville wraps its 10-game season with a pair of contests on the Island, traveling to Langley Dec. 11, then hosting Granite Falls Dec. 13.

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Coupeville Middle School 8th grader Dominic “The Dominator” Coffman, who plays with fury and heart, while embracing the credo of Ivan Drago in Rocky IV – “I must break you!!” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The effort was there, just not the wins.

Despite some stellar plays on both ends of the court Tuesday, the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball squads couldn’t derail visiting Northshore Christian Academy.

The private school players, who arrived in town bearing the polish of AAU veterans, swept both games, then exited stage left, straggling to their bus as their coaches tried not to lose any of them in the frosty darkness.

 

7th grade:

Coupeville started strong, and finished even stronger, but suffered through a long shooting slump in the middle, eventually falling 31-21.

The loss drops CMS to 2-5 on the season.

The Wolves jumped out to a quick 2-0 lead, as Cole White coaxed a long jumper to drop.

The ball hit the rim, popped skyward, crashed back down, rolled around, hit every part of the oval, then softly plopped through as Cole, and his dad, CMS coach Greg White, both exhaled in unison.

Another bucket from the younger of the White duo, this one off of a give-and-go, knotted the game up at 4-4, but then the Wolf offense dried up as suddenly as it had blossomed.

Other than a picture-perfect free throw from Mikey Robinett, his first varsity point, the Wolves failed to score over a six-minute stretch, eventually falling behind 15-5 early in the second quarter.

Coupeville’s top shooting star, Logan Downes, finally broke the hex on the rim, rattling home a runner while slashing up the middle.

But then the Wolves went another 10+ minutes before their next field goal.

Defense kept Coupeville semi-close, with Ryan Blouin, Timothy Nitta and Nick Guay relentlessly harassing Northshore’s guards, while Zane Oldenstadt, William Davidson and Quinten Pilgrim formed a formidable trio on the boards.

While the visitors were kept from totally running away with the game, they did stretch the margin out to 16 after a soft jumper a minute into the fourth quarter made the game 27-11.

It was then, in the blink of an eye, that Coupeville’s offense finally clicked into gear.

Pushing the ball hard at the hoop, the Wolves closed the game on a 10-4 run, with Downes, playing with a broken bone in his left hand, hitting three buckets on a variety of moves.

Pilgrim and Oldenstadt pounded away down low, with each recording a basket off of an offensive rebound, helping CMS finish with a nice display of fury and heart.

Downes topped the Wolves with 10 points, and it will be a blow if his hurt hand brings his campaign to an early close. Seven games into the 10-game season, he has outscored the rest of his teammates 90-77.

White, who had six against NCA, is Coupeville’s #2 scoring option this season, with 31 points, while Oldenstadt (2), Pilgrim (2) and Robinett (1), who was also a whirlwind on defense Tuesday, rounded out the scoring attack.

 

8th grade:

The tone was set early in this one, as Northshore fired out to an 11-0 lead, then romped to a 46-18 victory.

The Wolves, who are 1-6 heading into back-to-back road games at Sultan and South Whidbey, finally got on the scoreboard thanks to an electric move from Dominic Coffman.

The ever-rampaging “Dominator” shot right at the heart of the NCA defense, then fell back as he elevated, arcing his shot up and over his defender’s outstretched hand.

At which point the ball lightly kissed the glass and banked home to the delight of Wolf fans.

After that, it became the Alex Wasik show, as one of Coupeville’s hardest workers and all-out hustlers got a rare chance to showcase his offensive skill-set.

He slipped a free-throw through the net to center himself, then banged home a pair of buckets off of rebounds he ripped away from taller rival players.

Coupeville’s buckets were spread out too far apart to allow the Wolves much chance to rally, but what they did hit was often pretty.

Mitchell Hall drained a jumper, Coffman hit a pair of running one-handers, turning steals into breakaway buckets, and Kevin Partida capped things with a one-man assault.

Taking a pass on the right, Partida wheeled back to the left, weaved his way through a dense forest of defenders, then threw down a bank shot that caught glass and spun home with a happy little plop.

Mixed in between those buckets were two defensive gems, one that worked, and one that almost blew up the world.

The one that worked came when Levi Pulliam timed his jump perfectly, snagging a Northshore shot just as the player was ready to let it fly.

Instead, Pulliam, still airborne, clamped on to the ball, forcibly dragging the shooter down and getting the ball back for the Wolves when the refs whistled a jump ball.

The second play was your classic “if I hurt myself, I hurt myself, cause I’m a beast” play from Coffman.

Flying in from the side, he poked a ball free, then, as every other player came to a halt, went running full-bore for the sideline, trying to flag it down.

With his team down by 20+ points, Coffman showed why Coupeville High School coaches will be thrilled to welcome him to the next level.

His heart is too big for his chest, and his desire burns a hole through his jersey.

And, if that means sliding across the floor on your knees and almost pasting your face off the scorekeeper’s table, that’s how legends are born.

While Coffman ultimately wasn’t successful in saving the ball, he was a bulldog on both ends of the floor, with his team-high six points but a small part of his contributions.

Wasik joined him in the six-point club, while Partida banked home four and Hall singed the nets for two.

Alex Murdy, Jesse Wooten and Josh Upchurch rounded out the active roster Tuesday, with Wooten handling a fair chunk of the point guard duties, Upchurch crashing the boards and Murdy kick-starting Coupeville’s fast break time and again.

 

What I’d like to believe Dominic Coffman says before every basketball game:

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