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Posts Tagged ‘CMS Wolves’

Isabelle Wells (John Fisken photo)

Isabelle Wells leads the attack in a game earlier this season. (John Fisken photo)

Two wins from a title.

The Coupeville SWISH 6th grade girls’ basketball squad finished the regular season with a flourish Saturday and is now primed for postseason glory.

The Wolves didn’t get caught looking ahead, staying on target by drubbing Sedro-Woolley 16-10 to close out league play.

The victory lifted Coupeville to 9-1 in league play, 9-3 overall.

The squad, which is coached by Dustin Van Velkinburgh, with an assist from Trent Diamanti, now enters the postseason tourney as a #2 seed.

They’ll play at 10 AM next Saturday at Cascade Middle School in Sedro. Win that game and they advance to the title game at 1:30.

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(John Fisken photo)

   Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim (15) and teammates will NOT be tipping off this afternoon, after all. (John Fisken photo)

Port Townsend heard Daniel Olson was on his way, and they took the easiest way out.

Unable to face being shredded by the Coupeville Middle School marksman and his run ‘n gun teammates, the mainlanders fell back on weather conditions and postponed Thursday’s scheduled basketball games.

The Wolves were about to board the bus and head to the ferry when the news came in that they would no longer be going to Blue Heron Middle School.

Earlier in the afternoon, the National Weather Service issued a High Wind Warning to go from 2-10 PM today.

Southerly winds are expected to increase up to 40 mph late in the afternoon or early evening, with gusts of 60 mph possible.

With a very strong chance the Port Townsend/Coupeville ferry would revert back to being the Vomit Comet in the choppy water (or possibly be sidelined altogether in the wind), the decision was made not to potentially strand the Wolves on the other side.

No word yet on when, or if, the games will be made up.

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Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim (John Fisken photos)

   Jean Lund-Olsen soars into the clouds to yank away another rebound. (John Fisken photos)

Koa Davison

   They call Koa Davison “Dead-Eye” because he doesn’t miss. Well, if they don’t, they should.

crowd

Wolf fans gets extra-creative.

Jake Mitten

   Jake Mitten, reviving the glory days of his uncle, former Wolf hoops legend Jason McFadyen.

Jered Brown

Jered Brown splits the defense.

trujillo

Come to a basketball game, go home with balloons.

Dakota Eck

Dakota Eck drops in a quick two.

Sean Toomey-Stout

   He slices. He dices. He has moves for days. He’s Sean Toomey-Stout and you can’t contain (or stop) him.

Opening night was a huge hit.

Coupeville Middle School kicked off its boys’ basketball season Monday with two wins — the 7th graders romped, the 8th graders pulled it out in OT — a full gym and even a roving photographer or two.

While we have yet to see what pics Junior Photo Bomb Queen Mollie Bailey might have snapped (I’m working on it), we can present to you some of John Fisken’s work.

To see more (and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

7th grade:

https://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf362dfb15de

8th grade:

https://www.shutterfly.com/progal/album.jsp?aid=768a5498cf362dfa80a9

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Mason Grove (John Fisken photo)

   Mason Grove hit for 13 Monday, including a key bucket in overtime. (John Fisken photo)

For one agonizing second, it looked like possibly the worst defeat of all time. Then, things got better.

Much better.

Coupeville Middle School 8th grade basketball guru Bob Martin might have several new ulcers after Monday’s season-opening 46-40 overtime win over visiting Chimacum, but the balm of a victory will ease the indigestion a bit.

After controlling the game from the second basket of the game until the final 30 seconds, the Wolves somehow put themselves, with a little help from a ref, in position to lose AFTER the final buzzer.

Clinging to a 38-36 lead as time wound down, the Wolves were trying to do everything but foul Chimacum on the final play of the game.

Give credit to the Cowboy ball-handler, who took advantage of the situation.

Lowering his shoulder, he slammed into a Coupeville defender, threw up a three-point air-ball that didn’t even get halfway to the rim and wished upon a star for a miracle.

And got one.

As the game buzzer sounded and the Wolves started to celebrate, the ref on the other side of the floor zoomed into the picture, whistling a foul and sending the Cowboys to the line for three free throws with the clock reading all zeroes.

Chimacum hit the first two to tie things up, then by the grace of something (maybe karma for all the screaming, frothing at the mouth and charging out of the coaches box their coach did), the third free throw slid off the rim.

Given a reprieve, Coupeville regained its senses and re-found its mojo, thoroughly dominating overtime behind the sweet free throw shooting of Sean Toomey-Stout (4-for-4 in the extra period).

The comeback, after the collapse, showed the steel in the Wolves collective spine, though, in all fairness, the game should never have gone so long.

Chimacum had big bodies, but Coupeville had more talent, with the inside/outside attack offered by Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim and Mason Grove being the biggest difference.

Pacquette-Pilgrim rolled to a team-high 16 points (10 of those came in the second quarter) with a variety of inside moves, while still being very much a work in progress.

As he gets stronger and more confident, realizing he can, and should dominate, he’s looking at an especially bright future.

Grove already has the cold-blooded assassin part of his game locked into place, and there is literally no spot on the court from which he is afraid to launch a long-range bomb.

He’s also super quick and goes from zero to 60 in a few footsteps, just like older sister and CHS track record holder Lauren, and that speed killed the slower Cowboys.

When Grove wasn’t letting fly from distance, he was slashing to the hoop, and his little running jumper with two minutes to play in overtime sealed the win for Coupeville.

After Chimacum hit the first bucket of the season, the Wolves took the lead right back on a trey from Grove and a layup from Toomey-Stout.

Coupeville stretched the lead out as far as nine and never relinquished it until they got cold at the worst possible time.

Up 32-27 entering the fourth, the Wolves went scoreless for nearly a four-minute stretch.

The Cowboys knotted things up at 32, Pacquette-Pilgrim stopped the carnage with back-to-back buckets, then Chimacum roared back to tie it again at 36.

Koa Davison banked in a jumper with 33 seconds to play to stake Coupeville to its final lead in regulation, before the refs decided to spice things up.

For the game, the Wolves got scoring from five players, with Pacquette-Pilgrim (16) and Grove (13) being joined by Toomey-Stout (9), Davison (6) and Omar Moralez (2).

Jered Brown also started for the Wolves, while Ulrik Wells and Jean Lund-Olsen saw key floor time.

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Daniel Olson (John Fisken photo)

Daniel Olson channels Pete Maravich on opening night. (John Fisken photo)

Daniel Olson has no fear.

Jump back to when he was in kindergarten and first grade and every time he came in my video store, he would storm behind the counter, yank out the seat and take over the computer and cash register.

They were his from that point until the moment his parents forcibly removed him to the car when they were ready to go home. If they could catch him.

Skip forward to Monday, when my former “assistant manager” was making his middle school basketball debut, and Olson might be a little taller and a little older, but his ability to run the room is still firmly in place.

Dropping three-pointers like the reincarnation of “Pistol” Pete Maravich — including one that arced through the net in unison with the third-quarter buzzer — Olson exploded for 20 points on visiting Chimacum.

Toss in 14 from Jake Mitten, who dominated in the paint, and the duo outscored the Cowboys by themselves, sparking Coupeville’s 7th grade squad to a 60-30 rout.

The Wolves came out on fire, cooled off a wee bit in the middle, then torched the joint again in the fourth, giving legendary coach Randy King another notch on the plus side of the career win/loss ledger.

Attacking from all sides, Coupeville flustered Chimacum in the early moments, turning several steals into breakaway buckets.

The few times the Wolves didn’t immediately convert, they controlled the boards, with Mitten standing tall in the middle while Matthew Kelley and Sage Downes slid through to snatch away loose caroms.

Olson and Dakota Eck fought for loose balls, and Coupeville spread the offense around on its way to posting a 20-6 lead after eight minutes of play.

If the Cowboys were entertaining any thoughts of rallying before halftime that faded quickly, as the Wolves stretched the lead out to 20 and never looked back.

Chimacum looked more aggressive in the second half, even cutting the lead down to 13 at one point.

Coupeville responded with a 7-1 run to end the quarter, with Chandler Weil hitting a short jumper and Downes slicing to the hoop for a layup after the Cowboys lost control of a rebound.

The final nail, though, came as Olson, one eye on the clock, brought the ball across mid-court.

A dribble, a head fake, his defender lurched back and the unflappable one rose up and banked the ball neatly off the backboard for a crowd-pleasing trey, the ball spinning through the twine as the clock roared and his teammates rushed him.

His eyes pure ice, the long-range assassin just nodded, content in the knowledge he had drained the shot almost exactly the way he had described it to older brother Ben the night before.

And once he was feeling it, Olson got more and more adventurous, nailing two more three-point bombs in the fourth quarter, each one coming from another step or two further out.

If the clock hadn’t run out, he might be out lofting them up from the parking lot about now.

Coupeville’s balanced scoring attack featured Olson (20), Mitten (14), Kelley (10), Downes (8), Eck (4) and Weil (4), while Michael Laska, Gage Powers, Ben Smith and James Mayne all saw playing time as well.

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