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Aiden O’Neill pushes the ball. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a home finale full of wild mood swings.

The Coupeville Middle School boys basketball teams played their final games in the CMS gym Monday — there are two road tilts left on the schedule — and gave everyone their money’s worth.

Even if fans don’t have to actually pony up cold, hard cash for middle school games.

But you get the point.

Anyways, here’s how the day played out:

 

Varsity:

The best game of the season, regardless of the final score.

Bouncing back after losing by 15 the first time the teams played, the Wolves stormed from behind Monday, forced overtime, then fell 62-56 to visiting Sultan.

The defeat drops CMS to 2-4 on the season, but coaches Craig Anderson and Jon Roberts came away pleased with what they saw.

“We played like we expected to win, which we did not do the first time,” Roberts said. “This was us taking that next, big step.”

Sultan is perennially a middle school power, and they had at least three players who already look ready to make an impact on the high school court.

Toss in teammates who make smart passes, hit the boards with intensity, and play in-your-face defense, and it’s no surprise the Skyhawks can soar.

But give Coupeville major credit, as the Wolves never backed down — even when the Sultan coach, whipped up into a lather, got himself a technical foul and, later, a stern warning.

“You can sit down, or you can go home,” barked the ref, followed by a stare-off, and then the Skyhawk head man choosing to mute himself.

On the court, the action was intense from the get-go, with two talented teams punching and counterpunching from opening tip to wild finale.

Chase Anderson ended the first quarter by splashing home a pullup jumper, but Coupeville went to the break down 15-11.

A quick three-ball from the Skyhawks to open the second frame stretched the deficit out to seven, before the Wolves came alive.

Camden Glover, standing tall in the paint for CMS, kick-started things by rippling the net with a sweet jumper, and Coupeville brought its fans to their feet with a 12-0 run.

Four different Wolves scored during the surge, with Anderson and Aiden O’Neill knocking down three-balls, and Malachi Somes netting a jumper off of an inbounds pass.

CMS had its first lead of the game, only to see Sultan turn the tables almost as quickly.

The Skyhawks ripped off their own 9-0 rally to momentarily blunt Coupeville’s mojo, escaping to the halftime break back in front 27-23.

But this had become a game of runs, and the Wolves burst out of the locker room ready to rumble.

Glover couldn’t be stopped in the second half, scoring off of rebound put-backs and power moves in the paint, then droppin’ jumpers to keep the defense honest.

Two of his third-quarter buckets were set up by hustle work from Somes, who used fast hands and a go-go motor to always be in the right place at the right time.

First he pilfered the ball — setting up a Glover layup — then Somes corralled a loose ball and fired a beauty of a kick-out pass, hitting his teammate in stride.

The lead changed six times in the third frame, though Coupeville couldn’t stay in front and still trailed 39-36 heading into the fourth.

The (supposedly) final quarter featured the Wolves at their grittiest, as they never led over the seven-minute span, but never let Sultan escape.

Glover snatched a rebound, then powered up through three defenders for a second-chance bucket to knot things at 42-42, but time and again the Skyhawks seemed to hold the upper hand.

A pair of Sultan three-balls were deadly, and the visitors, with their coach melting down in real time, were still clinging to a 50-46 advantage with under a minute to play.

So, time for a little magic.

Anderson split the defense, faked a pass, and dropped in a roller to get the Wolves within two, before coming back around to hit two pressure-packed free throws to tie things up.

The trip to the charity stripe was courtesy the mad dog frothing at the end of the Sultan bench, who looked like he might have a stroke when one of his players missed a potential go-ahead free throw with just seven ticks on the clock.

That set up Coupeville with a chance to win things outright, but a stern Skyhawks defense made life tough for Anderson and his buzzer-beater slid off the rim.

The good times continued through two minutes of the extra period. Only problem — middle school overtime is three minutes.

Back-to-back three-balls from Anderson, with both shots kissing the glass before plopping through the net, staked CMS to its last lead at 56-55.

Unfortunately for the Wolves, that was where their offensive attack ended for the afternoon, with Sultan closing on a 7-0 spurt over the final 58 seconds.

The scorebook will tell you it was a loss. The feeling in the gym, however, was that of a win.

Anderson and Glover paced the Wolves, hitting for 21 and 20 points, respectively, while O’Neill banked in eight and kept alive a new, and intriguing, tradition.

The sweet-shooting guard has lost a shoe during action in every game I’ve seen him play during his 8th grade year. So, three.

Is O’Neill simply too fast for conventional footwear to be able to constrain him, or does someone need to start double-tying their laces? Debate.

Playing with both shoes on at all times, Jayden McManus added five points for Coupeville, Somes netted a bucket, and Easton Green and Riley Lawless also saw floor time.

 

JV:

Coupeville’s second squad, largely comprised of players new to the game, fell 48-11, dropping their record to 0-6.

But there were bright spots along the way, and proof that the work being put in by coaches and players is starting to pay off.

The Wolves were able to run more offensive sets than normal, and player’s willingness to sacrifice their bodies by setting screens for teammates was at an all-time high.

Jackson Waterbury came around the corner on one play, rumbling like a freight train going down a steep incline with no brakes.

The CMS 7th grader was intent on setting a screen, and for one beautiful second it looked like he was going to dislodge all the brain matter from the Sultan player in his way.

Veering off at the last second, Waterbury didn’t deliver the full-on crunch, opting to screech to a halt and show benevolence with a well-timed hip check instead.

Googly-eyed and content to stay down and enjoy the floor’s sweet embrace, his rival had a story to tell his parents when he got home.

“Yeah, mom, I almost died today! That dude was going to destroy me!! So yes, I think I will have seconds on dessert, and no, there won’t be any discussion on the matter!!!”

Also coming up big in the down ‘n dirty world of setting (or almost setting) screens was Wolf 6th grader Jonah Weyl, who went toe-to-toe with a kid three times his size and never blinked.

“You love to see it!” said Roberts with a note of pride in his voice.

Coupeville got its primary scoring boost from a rampaging Matthew Kuzma, who tallied his first five points of the season.

He banked in a three-ball, right after teammate Captain Teuscher made off with a steal, then came back around to get a bucket in the paint.

Lawless chipped in with four points, all set up by cleaning the offensive glass, while Joshua Stockdale made off with a steal, then went coast-to-coast for a cartwheeling layup.

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Jayden McManus rolls to the hoop. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There are 14 guys on the board.

With five games down, and three left to play, that’s how many Coupeville Middle School basketball players have notched a bucket this season.

Still left to play are a home game next Monday, Dec. 13 against Sultan, then road clashes with Langley (Dec. 15) and King’s (Dec. 16).

How Coupeville’s scoring currently breaks down:

 

Chase Anderson – 70
Camden Glover – 54
Aiden O’Neill – 34
Riley Lawless – 24
Jayden McManus – 17
Malachi Somes – 13
Easton Green – 6
Carson Grove – 6
Jacob Schooley – 6
Mahkai Myles – 4
Captain Teuscher – 4
Joshua Stockdale – 3
Ethan Welling – 3
Wyatt Fitch-Marron – 2

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Captain Teuscher and Co. have been scrappy all season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Not all losses are created equal.

Both of the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball teams fell to visiting Northshore Christian Academy Wednesday, but the games couldn’t have been more different.

How the day played out:

 

Varsity:

This one stings.

But, if the right lessons are learned, it can still be a great building block for a squad of Wolf players with a very-bright future.

In control of the game heading into the fourth quarter, Coupeville had Northshore on the ropes, only to see its offense stall out at the worst possible time.

Outscored 18-5 across the final seven minutes, the Wolves, who led by as many as 12 points in the second half, fell 45-40.

The loss drops Coupeville’s top squad to 2-3 on the season heading into its home finale next Monday, Dec. 13 against Sultan.

The Wolves then close on the road with games at Langley and King’s.

Wednesday’s match-up featured a magnificent performance from CMS 8th grader Camden Glover, who dominated play, throwing down 19 points with a variety of power moves in the paint.

Tammy Glover’s oldest grandchild was also a beast on the boards, ripping down boards, redirecting Northshore shots and thoroughly delighting his fan club.

Camden! CAMDEN!!! Caaaaaammmmmmmdeeeeennnnn!!!!!!” rang out, as his proud lil’ brothers angled for a reaction from their star, who finally consented and gave them a brief nod and smile.

Then promptly went out and laid down a hardcourt whuppin’, delighting the fan club again.

Or at least until fans #1A and #1B returned to the bliss of their coloring books.

Camden dropped in eight points in the first period, with Aiden O’Neill and Chase Anderson driving and dishing the ball to their big bruiser in the middle.

The game knotted at 10-10 headed to the first break, it started to veer in Northshore’s direction in the opening minute of the second frame.

The visitors dropped in their third three-ball to open things and stretched their margin to 15-10, only to see Coupeville regroup.

Attacking as a pack, with four different players pouring in buckets, the Wolves closed the half on a 15-2 tear.

Buckets came from all directions, whether it was O’Neill and Jayden McManus scoring off of rebounds, Chase Anderson slicing through the paint, or Glover pulling off a three-point play the hard way.

The Wolves were good, and they were also lucky, as Anderson lived up to his potential nickname — “The Magic Man.”

With the clock madly ticking down, and ace scoreboard operator Eryn Wood primed to hit the buzzer, the ball was punched loose after a mad fight for a rebound.

The orb skittered away, but, just as it looked like it would escape, Anderson came sliding through, plucked the ball off the ground and flicked a shot skyward.

Heads snapped up, the universe froze, then the ball plopped through the net, barely rippling the strings as the horn blared as background accompaniment.

Coupeville danced off the floor with a 25-17 lead, then held fast in the third quarter.

Twice the Wolves stretched the lead to 12, with the second coming at 31-19 after a Glover bucket, before Northshore trimmed the margin back to 35-27 heading to the fourth.

It was there where things went sideways.

Give Northshore credit, as its quicksilver guards fueled the comeback, forcing turnovers and converting at the other end.

A fifth three-ball for the visitors was huge, but Coupeville scoring just one basket in a six-and-a-half minute stretch proved to be the true killer.

Anderson finally broke the slide, hopping through the paint to drop in a runner and put CMS back on top 37-36 with 2:31 to play.

The Wolves wouldn’t score again for the next two minutes, however, and fell back behind 41-37 when Glover went to the free throw line with 38.5 ticks left on the clock.

He dropped in the first charity shot, while Anderson snared the missed second chance and slapped it back home to cut things to 41-40.

Northshore closed with precision, though, netting all four of its free throws from that point on, while the Wolves couldn’t get any of their desperation shots to fall.

Anderson finished with 13 points to back up Glover’s season-high 19, while O’Neill and McManus added four apiece.

Malachi Somes and Easton Green also played for Coupeville.

 

JV:

The game was a bit closer than the final score might indicate, as the visitors poured it on late in a 35-8 win.

Early on, the young, very-inexperienced Wolves, now 0-5 on the season, were competitive. Dare I say, even scrappy.

Riley Lawless pounded away down low, pumping in a pair of buckets as Coupeville hung tough, trailing just 8-4 at the first break.

One of those scores came off of a nice entry pass from Carson Grove, while the other featured Lawless rampaging end-to-end after pulling down a rebound, then hitting the gas.

He got help on defense from his teammates, with Joshua Stockdale a particular standout, pulling off a blocked shot and a steal on back-to-back plays.

The Wolves held up well on the defensive end of the floor, holding Northshore scoreless for the first four-and-a-half minutes of the second quarter.

Unfortunately, the rim proved fairly unforgiving when Coupeville fired up shots of its own, and the visitors eventually started to pull away.

A 16-4 deficit at halftime was slightly stretched out to 20-6 by the end of the third quarter, before Northshore piled up points in a furious rally across the game’s final two minutes.

In between frequent late NSA layups, the highlight of the game came when a CMS shot arced through the air, then got firmly stuck at the top of the backboard.

When ref Bernie Upchurch tried to knock the ball free by firing a second orb at it, the first ball popped free, fell about a foot, then immediately got re-stuck on a lower part of the backboard support.

But wait, there’s more!

The first poke at the ball with a stick failed to free it as well, thoroughly delighting the crowd.

A second poke freed the prisoner, however, slightly crushing those of us who were hoping the battle between man and ball would go on all afternoon.

Once the ball returned to play, Stockdale netted a bucket to go with the six points Lawless scored, accounting for all of Coupeville’s scoring.

Grove, Jonah Weyl, Matthew Kuzma, George Spear, Zach Blitch, Kenny Jacobsen, Dylan Robinett, Joshua Stockdale, Captain Teuscher, Ethan Walling, Jackson Waterbury, Wyatt Fitch-Marron, Max Ohme, Jacob Schooley, and Beckett Green also played.

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Coupeville High School/Middle School Athletic Director Willie Smith is in a hirin’ mood. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The hardwood calls.

Coupeville Middle School is in desperate need of applicants for two open girls basketball coaching gigs.

Practice begins Jan. 24, with the Wolves set to play a 10-game season.

But to do so, there has to be coaches in place.

To get in the mix, and possibly score a face-to-face interview with the silver-tongued bard of Wolf Nation — Athletic Director Willie Smith — pop over to:

https://www.applitrack.com/coupeville/onlineapp/default.aspx?all=1

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Jacob Schooley was one of 10 Wolves to score Monday afternoon. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

You win some, you lose some.

Playing at home for the first time in nearly three weeks, the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball teams earned a split Monday with visiting Granite Falls.

The Wolf varsity won big, while the JV played tough, but fell short in their contest.

How the day played out:

 

Varsity:

Aiden O’Neill is a stone-cold hardwood killer.

With barely a flicker of emotion on his otherwise-inscrutable face, the CMS 8th grader tore out Granite Fall’s beating heart and showed it to the Tigers as they spiraled out of control.

Hitting three second-half three-balls, part of his game-high 13-point effort, O’Neill sparked the Wolves to a 33-16 romp after the game was briefly tied in the third quarter.

The victory evens Coupeville’s record at 2-2 heading into another home game, this one Wednesday against Northshore Christian Academy.

Monday’s marquee matchup was actually close for the first 15 minutes, with the score knotted at 4-4 at the end of the first quarter, and Coupeville clinging to a 12-10 advantage at the half.

Granite rolled in a bucket off a nice move in the paint to tie things back up at 12-12 a minute into the third frame, and then it was time for the Wolves to bring out the whuppin’ stick.

A free throw from Jayden McManus gave CMS a lead it would never relinquish, but it was O’Neill who drove the dagger home.

Or make that daggers, as he buried a pair of treys from the left side to provide the bulk of the scoring in a game-busting 9-0 run to end the period.

In between the majestic three-balls, both of which barely rippled the nets as O’Neill (ever so slightly) cocked an eyebrow, defensive dynamo Malachi Somes ripped off a gem.

Forcing a steal, then sliding past the Granite ballhandler and leaving him spinning in place, the Wolf fireball beat the crowd to the rack at the other end, slapping home a layup.

It brought the pro-Wolf crowd to its feet, and was an especially-nice late birthday present for mom Megan, who celebrated her big day over the weekend.

Granite finally stopped the bleeding, but only when a wildly-thrown three-ball somehow beat the odds, took a lucky bounce, and fell through the net to open the fourth quarter.

Not that it ruffled the Wolves in the least, however, as they promptly scored the game’s final 12 points to put a cap on a game-closing 21-4 surge.

O’Neill drilled another trey, and found time to hit a lil’ scoop shot in the paint, while Somes pulled off the “steal/spin the defender/convert the layup” triple-feature a second time during the final run.

Coupeville, which controlled the boards all game, also came up big on the glass, with McManus and Camden Glover ripping down caroms, then bouncing back up to convert second-chance buckets.

The strong finish more than made up for a somewhat-tentative first half, when the biggest play was O’Neill losing his shoe on a play, yet still playing lock-down defense while ignoring the AWOL footwear.

Chase Anderson also sank a three-ball, off of a crisp in-bounds pass, then made a pretty dish on the fly to set McManus up for a layup.

O’Neill’s 13 was a season-high for him, while Anderson (7), McManus (5), Glover (4), and Somes (4) rounded out the Wolf attack.

Easton Green and Mahkai Myles also saw floor time for CMS in the opener.

 

JV:

Coupeville’s second unit is very raw — capable of surprising their coaches with some inspired plays, but also still very much in learning mode.

That was evident in a 52-13 loss, which drops the Wolves to 0-4 on the season.

The best bucket of the game came from Captain Teuscher, who picked the ball from a Granite dribbler, then took off on a wild rampage to the other end of the floor.

With nine other guys trying to catch up, the younger brother of CHS cheer captain Bella Velasco suddenly screeched to a halt, popped up on one leg, and calmly flicked in a jumper.

Teuscher didn’t merely break the ankles of the lone defender in front of him, but pretty much flat-out shattered both the Granite dude’s entire legs with his sudden stop-and-pop move.

Other Wolf highlights included Matthew Kuzma and Jonah Weyl crashing hard on defense, and Wyatt Fitch-Marron (somewhat accidentally) invoking the spirit of the 1980’s Detroit Pistons Bad Boys.

That squad won back-to-back NBA titles by beatin’ the crud out of opponents.

While Fitch-Marron and Co. may have a bit to go before they start hanging title banners in the gym, the young Wolf guard made a big impression with his heart and hustle on defense.

In particular, we speak of one play where he (probably inadvertently) hip-checked the guy he was guarding, sending the Granite player sprawling a good five feet.

Fitch-Marron stayed on his feet, even after being at the center of the hit-and-run accident, and had a huge grin on his face afterwards — just as he should.

Plays like that speak well for the work being put in by the young Wolves and their mentors — old-school coaches Jon Roberts and Craig Anderson.

Granite may have had a huge size advantage in the day’s second game, but Coupeville’s players have no quit. And that’s a great place to start.

Riley Lawless and Myles paced the JV with four points apiece, while Teuscher (2), Jacob Schooley (2), and Joshua Stockdale (1) chipped in to the offensive effort.

Also seeing floor time were Carson Grove, Zach Blitch, Max Ohme, Kenny Jacobsen, Dylan Robinett, Ethan Walling, Jackson Waterbury, George Spear, and Beckett Green.

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