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Posts Tagged ‘CMS Wolves’

Riley Lawless powers through the paint. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

No fear.

King’s has supreme name value in the basketball world, but the Coupeville Middle School boys didn’t back down at all Thursday afternoon.

While the Wolves lost all three games on their home court, they hung tough in two of the bouts, and had flashes of strong play in the other.

How the day played out:

 

Level 1:

Coupeville fought King’s virtually even in the second half, but a couple of first-half breakdowns ultimately doomed the Wolves in a 48-29 loss.

CMS came out with a nice intensity, jumping to a 5-2 lead after a three-point play the hard way from Jayden McManus and a basket in the paint off the fingertips of Riley Lawless.

The Knights responded by employing a full-court press, and flustered the Wolves a bit, however.

With most of its buckets coming on plays in which it was out and running, converting turnovers into breakaways, King’s closed the first quarter on a 13-2 run.

Coupeville responded with a three-ball from Carson Grove to open the second frame, cutting its deficit back to 15-10.

Then, the baskets dried up for a bit, as the Wolves failed to hit another field goal over the final six minutes-plus of the half.

A pair of free throws in the waning moments — one each from Nic Laska and Lawless — broke the cold spell, but CMS found itself down 28-12 at the break.

King’s stretched its lead to 35-14 midway through the third quarter, before the Wolves responded with an 11-0 surge of their own.

Chayse Van Velkinburgh hit a sweet runner in the paint, lobbing the ball high up and over a defender’s outstretched arms, then McManus knocked down three straight buckets to end the third quarter.

One came on a smooth move in the paint, another off of a steal, and the third on an offensive rebound put back up and in under extreme pressure.

Toss in a three-ball from Van Velkinburgh to open the final frame, and things were getting considerably more interesting for Wolf fans.

It wasn’t to be, though, as the Knights proved to be strong closers, capping things with a 13-4 rally which included a trio of three-balls and a couple of put-backs off of rebounds.

While King’s played platoon ball — subbing in a fresh five players at a time — Coupeville got by with just seven warriors, with its starters playing most of the minutes.

McManus, back on the floor after missing a game with illness, paced the Wolves with 13 points, while Lawless (7), Van Velkinburgh (5), Grove (3), and Laska (1) also scored.

Joshua Stockdale gave CMS a burst of energy off the bench, with Davin Houston hitting the boards with savage intensity.

 

Level 2:

The roughest game of the day for the Wolves, as they absorbed a 46-8 loss.

King’s threw down the first 28 points of the contest, before Nathan Niewald broke free for an end-to-end run which resulted in a crowd-pleasing layup.

Coupeville’s remaining points came courtesy of three-balls from sharpshooters Roger Merino-Martinez and Liam Lawson.

Making his season debut, Merino-Martinez was a fireball on both ends of the floor, also picking up a blocked shot on a play in which he chased down a rival shooter who thought he was free to rumble.

Spoiler: he was not.

Dylan Robinett, Hunter Atteberry, Cyrus Sparacio, Jacob Barajas, Kenneth Jacobsen, and Charles Hart rounded out the rotation for the Wolves, who fought hard and remained scrappy until the final buzzer.

 

Level 3:

Take away the first quarter, and this was a brawl.

The visitors used a 10-1 surge in the opening frame, then hung on for a 31-15 victory in a game that got more competitive the further it went.

Coupeville put together its best seven-minute stretch in the third quarter, with Sparacio and Merino-Martinez splashing three-balls on back-to-back trips down the floor.

The Wolves spread out their offense between four players, with Merino-Martinez rattling the rims for five points, while Johnathan Jacobsen (4), Barajas (3), and Sparacio (3) flipped the net.

Khanor Jump, Zach Blitch, Atteberry, Dillin Kastner, Kenneth Jacobsen, and Jacob Meadors also saw floor time for Coupeville, which plays its next two games on the road.

CMS heads to Granite Falls Dec. 5, then visits Northshore Christian Dec. 7.

Zach Blitch keeps a watchful eye on his man in a recent game.

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“I’m just sayin’ Geno Auriemma would make a really good middle school basketball coach. We have some bake sales, and we get that salary paid, son!!” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This is your moment. Seize it.

There are not one, but two, Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball coaching positions open as the season rapidly approaches.

Kassie O’Neil bounced up to the high school, accepting the JV girls’ gig, while Kristina Forbes is resigning due to other obligations.

That leaves the CMS girls hoops program without any coaches, with the season set to start Jan. 23.

It’s basically a six-week job, with the eight-game campaign wrapping up Mar. 9, and you would have the chance to help shape the future of Wolf basketball.

Are you a former Coupeville basketball player looking to give back to where it all started? Bam!

Maybe a semi-retired coach who still gets that itch to be on the sideline? Boom!

Or just someone who has always longed to take the “seven seconds or less” offense and put it in the hands of 12-year-old girls, creating a gym-rattling, mind-fracturing attack guaranteed to blow up the scoreboard and exhaust the refs???

As mentioned before, this is your moment.

Seize it and let Haylee Armstrong and Tenley Stuurmans become the Steve Nash and Shawn Marion of the prairie.

 

PS — Athletic Director Willie Smith is also looking for middle school track and cross country coaches, as well as a high school girls soccer coach.

We’re just talking about basketball because it’s God’s chosen sport.

 

To peruse all coaching openings and apply, pop over to:

https://www.applitrack.com/coupeville/onlineapp/default.aspx?Category=Athletics%2fActivities

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Carson Grove brings the ball up the floor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The annual pilgrimage to the wilds of Sultan is off.

For now, at least.

Winter weather encroached on the schedule Tuesday, denying the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball team a chance to bounce across the backroads of the state.

It was snow in Sultan, and not here on Whidbey, which forced the decision.

As to whether the road trip will be rescheduled, Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith was fairly noncomittal.

“We will see…,” he said, then headed off to presumably look for a nice cup of hot chocolate.

CMS has five other games remaining on the schedule, with the season currently set to conclude Dec. 14.

That includes home matchups with King’s (Dec. 1), Sultan (Dec. 12), and Langley (Dec. 14).

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Joshua Stockdale crashes to the hoop. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The gym came alive.

Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball made its home debut Tuesday and wanderin’ photographer John Fisken was on hand to collect the first images of a new season.

The photos above and below, which are a mixture of action and team pics, are just the tip of the iceberg, however.

To see everything he shot, and possibly purchase some Christmas gifts for the grandparents, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2022-2023/MSBBB-2022-11-22-vs-Lakewood/

Rebound machine Davin Houston dares you to try and take the ball away.

Mad bomber Cyrus Sparacio slices ‘n dices the defense.

Kenneth Jacobsen soars to the rafters to win the tip.

Jon Roberts is a stern, but fair, taskmaster.

Spoiler: they will get loud if necessary.

Wyatt Fitch-Marron floats like a butterfly, and stings like a bee.

Representin’.

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Coupeville Middle School 6th grader Liam Lawson is here to singe the basketball nets, just like mom Kassie and aunts Kayla and Katie did back in the day. (Photo courtesy Kassie O’Neil)

Use every step to build for the future.

There will be stumbles along the way, but the key is to focus on the positives, while being mentally strong enough to identify and work on correcting the negatives.

That’s the mission for this year’s batch of Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball players, a collection of hoops stars who don’t have much on-court experience as a group but do have a burning desire to keep on growing.

Some days, like Tuesday’s home opener against visiting Lakewood, are bound to be rough.

The Cougars funnel players to a 2A high school, while the Wolves will be competing two rungs below that — at the 2B level — when they cross the gym hallway and become high school athletes.

That means Lakewood has a lot more bodies at its disposal, and a lot more players with prior hoops experience.

As a group, the Cougars are currently faster, tougher, more tenacious, and more skilled at things like snatching rebounds, running offensive sets, and playing heads-up defense than the still-developing Wolves.

But this is how you learn.

So, while Coupeville lost all three games Tuesday, and by fairly large margins, you hope once the lopsided scores vanish from the scoreboard, they partially fade from memory.

All I’m going to say here is that all three tilts went to a running clock, which happens in middle school basketball when you trail by 30 points,

But otherwise, I’m choosing to redact the final tallies.

Instead of dwelling on the score, we’ll focus on the moments players and coaches should remember.

Like when Wyatt Fitch-Marron went sliding across the floor, face-first, surfing the hardwood as he and a rival player fought for a loose ball.

The young Wolf bounced back to his feet, brushed off any pain from bouncing across the floor, and charged right back into the fray, even as mom and grandma (and a few other fans) gasped and winced.

Or we can stop to appreciate a solid move for a bucket in the day’s opening game from Joshua Stockdale.

Taking the ball down low and rolling through the paint for a layup to (momentarily) halt the Lakewood scoring express, it bodes well for the future.

The same with Cyrus Sparacio drilling the bottom of the net out with a three-ball from the top, then flexing for his fan club, or Riley Lawless swishing a sweet pull-up jumper in the paint while surrounded by defenders.

Young Coupeville players like Liam Lawson and Chayse Van Velkinburgh played with passion, driving the ball again and again into the heart of the storm, even while being smacked by a forest of Lakewood arms.

And shine a light on the Joltin’ Jacobsen brothers, as both Kenneth and Johnathan brought maximum effort to the floor, chasing after rebounds and poking balls away from the Cougar sharpshooters.

From Charles Hart to Hunter Atteberry, from Zach Blitch to Jacobs Meadors and Khanor Jump, the Wolves couldn’t be faulted for their effort, their hustle, and their desire.

The heart is there, and the skill will follow.

Tuesday also saw two more Wolves net their first points of the season, as Nic Laska and Stockdale each banked home a bucket.

That puts 14 Coupeville players in the scoring column two games into an eight-game season.

Games pick back up after the Thanksgiving break, with the Wolves heading to the wilds of Sultan Nov. 29, before hosting King’s Dec. 1.

 

Season scoring stats:

Cyrus Sparacio – 13
Carson Grove – 10
Jayden McManus – 10
Riley Lawless – 6
Chayse Van Velkinburgh – 5
Jacob Barajas – 4
Brantley Campbell – 4
Davin Houston – 3
Sage Arends – 2
Nic Laska – 2
Liam Lawson – 2
Nathan Niewald – 2
Joshua Stockdale – 2
Dylan Robinett – 1

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