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Posts Tagged ‘Cole White’

Zane Oldenstadt was one of five Wolves who scored Thursday as Coupeville’s JV boys won their first game of the season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hunter Smith is in the fraternity.

The player turned coach won his first game since picking up the clipboard, guiding the Coupeville High School JV boys basketball squad to a 37-21 drubbing of visiting La Conner Thursday night.

After several close calls, the victory lifts the young Wolves to 1-3 on the season.

Smith’s first W came in front of sister Scout, mom Charlotte, and dad Chris, who was the Wolf JV coach until stepping down after last season.

While the former roundball sage was wearing a mask, his smile after the victory came pouring out around the edges.

Meanwhile, the ever-calm Hunter, who rarely betrayed his feelings as he poured in 847 varsity points during his days in a CHS uniform, nodded (slightly) and moved on with his night.

His young charges bolted out to a 10-4 lead against La Conner, with Jonathan Valenzuela pouring in five points in the first quarter.

After a pair of close frames, with Coupeville taking the second 7-6, before La Conner claimed the third 9-8, the Wolves put the win on ice.

The fourth quarter was Cole White time, with the freshman guard pouring in eight of his game-high 13 points during a game-capping 12-2 run.

Fellow frosh Logan Downes, making his first JV appearance of the season, added nine points, while Valenzuela (7), Dominic Coffman (6), and Zane Oldenstadt (2) also scored.

Not only did Hunter Smith nab the win, but he also emulated his father in working his roster like a seasoned pro, getting floor time for 14 players.

Andrew Williams, Mikey Robinett, Ryan Blouin, Nick Guay, Alex Wasik, Narciso Lopez, Nathan Ginnings, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, and William Davidson all can say they played in the landmark game.

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Kylie Van Velkinburgh is going to make dang sure the ball belongs to her. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s a two-for-one deal.

Both of Coupeville High School’s varsity basketball teams rolled to big wins Tuesday, and wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken was camped out in the gym to capture photographic proof.

The pics above and below are courtesy him, but rest assured, he shot much, much more than these eight glossy images.

To see all the images he captured, and consider some early Christmas presents for the relatives, pop over to:

 

Girls:

GBB 2021-05-25 vs Concrete – John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

Boys:

BBB 2021-05-25 vs Concrete – John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

Cole White slices ‘n dices the Concrete defense.

Ja’Kenya Hoskins prepares to hit turbo.

Hawthorne Wolfe glides in to make it 24-0. Yes, 24-0.

TJ Rickner works down low.

Gwen Gustafson goes airborne.

Daniel Olson dominates in the paint.

Carolyn Lhamon ain’t givin’ up the ball. No, ma’am.

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Wolf freshman Cole White scored his first varsity points Tuesday at home against Concrete. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Milestones make stat geeks giddy.

Tuesday night, as the Coupeville High School boys basketball team battered visiting Concrete 71-17, there were two such moments in time.

One — Hawthorne Wolfe cracking the 500-point career scoring club — was noted in my game story last night.

Today we note the other.

When Wolf freshman Cole White scored his first varsity points, he joined an exclusive club.

With 5:13 left in the game, Jonathan Valenzuela, trapped under the basket, looped a pass to his fellow swing player, who was lurking on the left side.

White caught the ball, popped a short jumper, and the net flipped upwards as history tumbled through it.

With the bucket, Cole joined dad Greg, watching the game from the bench as a CHS assistant coach, on the school’s career scoring chart.

The elder White rippled the nets for 604 points back when he was wearing short-shorts, and still sits #31 all-time.

But the basket had another historical note to it, as Cole White became the 400th Wolf boy I’ve been able to document scoring at least one point in a varsity hoops game.

From Jeff Stone and Mike Bagby, tied with 1,137 points, to Paul Baher, Robert Engle, Bob FranzenMeryl Gordon, Oscar Liquidano, and Raleigh Sherman — who all netted a single varsity free throw — it’s a long and diverse list.

Boys basketball has been active at CHS since 1917, and my pursuit of what is now 104 years of scoring history is not a complete one.

I’m missing points for a fair amount of players from the 1930’s and 1940’s, but I do have totals for two seasons in the 1920’s(!), so we’re getting there.

If a bunch of old-timey scorebooks suddenly appeared in the blink of a time machine, we obviously would go above 400 Wolf boys having scored.

Floyd Wanamaker, Dean Edmundson, and the rest of the 1925-1926 Wolves, you will be honored, one day!

OK, probably not, but we can still hope.

But we’re pretty dang solid from the early ’50s to today, with scattered records from before, so if the 400 isn’t 100% correct, it’s getting closer and closer.

For the moment, though, don’t worry about what could be. Instead, celebrate what is known.

Valenzuela, who also scored his first varsity points Tuesday, became #399 in the third quarter, then set up White to be #400.

Milestone city, baby.

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Cole White hit for a team-high 16 Saturday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A bounce here, a bounce there.

The Coupeville High School JV boys basketball team played strongly Saturday at Friday Harbor, but couldn’t seem to quite get over the hump against their undefeated foes.

A buzzer-beating three-ball at the end of the first half hurt, and, though they crawled back to within six points in the waning moments, the Wolves fell 57-46.

The loss drops Coupeville’s JV to 0-3 on the season, while their Friday Harbor counterparts improve to 3-0.

The host Wolverines jumped out to an early advantage, leading 13-8 at the first break, before stretching the margin to 31-22 by the half.

It should have been closer, but Friday Harbor caught a favorable rim, with a last-second heave running around the oval, hitting nearly every angle, before somehow flopping through the hoop as the halftime horn sounded.

Coupeville kept at it, playing the Wolverines nearly even in the second half, and getting the deficit down to 50-44 in the late going.

But despite the hot shooting touch of swing players Cole White and Jonathan Valenzuela, time ran out for the Wolves as Friday Harbor closed the game on a 7-2 run.

White paced CHS with 16, including netting a pair of three-balls, while Valenzuela backed him up with a solid 13-point effort.

Nick Guay (7), Zane Oldenstadt (4), Dominic Coffman (2), Quentin Simpson-Pilgrim (2), and Mikey Robinett (2) also scored, while Andrew Williams, Ryan Blouin, and Nathan Ginnings saw floor time.

Coupeville’s next opponent, Concrete, doesn’t have an active JV program, so the young Wolves next take the court Thursday, May 27 when La Conner visits Whidbey Island.

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Freshman Cole White lofted a pretty, pretty goal Monday night, catching league champ Orcas Island flat-footed. (Morgan White photo)

Sam Wynn (19) and Owen Barenburg (7) were honored on Senior Night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Forget about Bend it Like Beckham. We’re more about Curl it Like Cole.

On the afternoon the Coupeville High School boys soccer program honored seniors Sam Wynn and Owen Barenburg, it was freshman Cole White who stole the show.

While the Wolf booters weren’t able to upend the Northwest 2B/1B League Champs, with visiting Orcas Island rampaging to a 10-1 win, that one Coupeville goal was a peach.

Not only was it the best scoring play of the season, but arguably one of the prettiest ever seen on Mickey Clark Field.

With an injury-riddled Coupeville squad battling the undefeated Vikings every step of the way, and Wolf goalie Logan Martin making one sweet save after another, CHS trailed just 1-0 at the mid-point of the first half.

That’s when White, heir to a legacy of prep athletic excellence crafted back in the day by dad Greg, lost his dang mind.

Blasting a shot from deep on the left side of the field, Cole was trying to set up teammates scrambling for position in front of the net.

Instead, the ball, showing a mind of its own, kept rising, kept curling, and kept increasing in speed and velocity, until it hooked right into the top right corner of the net.

The Orcas goaltender, who was otherwise lights-out, flung himself skyward, trying to track the incoming swerve missile, but had no chance as the orb came dangerously close to tearing a hole through the netting.

The play drew a low whistle and a reverent “That was sweet!” from CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith, who then crafted the Curl it Like Cole movie title out of thin air, before gifting it to the media assembled in his press box.

That set off pandemonium in the stands, and on the pitch, with White mobbed by his teammates, a crush of joy hailing the young star’s first high school goal, though very likely not his last.

As fast as the euphoria washed over the gathered masses, it was dampened a bit, however.

The Vikings seemed to take the score personally, and clicked into destruction mode after that.

Sending 10 of 11 players on many attacks, Orcas rattled home four scores in an eight-minute tear, breaking up a 1-1 stalemate and carrying a daunting 5-1 lead into the halftime break.

Intent on keeping their unbeaten streak intact, the very-efficient Vikings seized every opportunity, no matter how small, and rained home another five goals in the second half to make the final score much more lopsided than probably necessary.

With the loss, Coupeville drops to 1-3 during this pandemic-shortened season, with the regular-season finale set for Wednesday in La Conner.

After that, there may be another game, however.

NWL officials are working on a plan for “playoff” games to cap the season, with contests played Friday or Saturday.

The league’s #1 and #2 teams would face-off, with #3 vs. #4 and #5 vs. #6 also on the schedule.

Coupeville is currently in fifth-place in the seven-team league, ahead of La Conner (1-4-1) and Grace Academy (0-4-1).

While Monday’s tilt with Orcas was about the soccer, it was also about paying tribute to Wynn and Barenburg, the heart and soul of the Wolf backline.

They were hailed before the game, with velvet-voiced CHS announcer Ja’Kenya Hoskins reading off their senior thank-you’s, and family giving the duo a gift certificate for dinner.

Wynn, who will be attending the University of Calgary, summed up his run as a Wolf booter thusly:

“I really got into soccer and had more fun with it because of the programs at Coupeville,” he said. “I just want to thank all the coaches and everybody who’s volunteered and fed me throughout the years.”

Barenburg, who began his soccer career at age six in South Korea, and later had a stint playing in Italy, plans to attend Western Washington University.

“I like soccer to be fun for everyone and enjoyed playing Central Whidbey Rec soccer with my friend Sam in elementary school,” he said.

“Going forward I plan to study computer science and hopefully continue playing this wonderful sport wherever I can.”

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