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Cole White popped for a career-high 23 points Monday to spark Coupeville to a playoff win on the road. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They possess many hands, and all of them are going to slap you upside the head.

The Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball players are dead set on getting back to the promised land, and they’re carving a trail of success, one well-timed knockout punch at a time.

Monday night the spotlight shone brightly on often unsung heroes like Cole White, Nick Guay, and Hurlee Bronec, as they sparked the Wolves to a 64-50 win in their District 1/2 playoff opener at Auburn Adventist Academy.

Playing on a funky court, with a wobbly rim on one end and a staircase to nowhere on the other, in a joint that resembles an old-school airport hangar, Coupeville overcame foul trouble and a slow start and now sits a win away from returning to the state tourney.

Coupeville, 16-5 after the win, hosts La Conner (15-6) Wednesday night at 7:00 PM in the Bi-District title game.

It’ll be the third meeting this season for the Northwest 2B/1B League co-champs, with the Braves taking game one 69-68, before the Wolves rebounded to claim the rematch 65-54.

The victor in meeting #3 earns a ticket to state, as Coupeville tries to get to the big dance for the second time in the last three years.

Auburn Adventist (17-4) and Northwest Christian of Lacey (6-11), which fell 74-29 to La Conner Monday, play at 5:15 Wednesday at CHS in a loser-out game.

The survivor of that rumble squares off Saturday with the title game loser for the second berth to state being offered to District 1/2 teams.

Monday’s tilt in Auburn began with rain slashing down outside, and the host Falcons banging away from long-range.

Back-to-back three-balls early helped the home team jump out to a 14-6 lead, and then Coupeville lost sophomore sparkplug Chase Anderson, who picked up three fouls in about four minutes.

Apparently, the hometown refs had shiny new whistles and wanted to try them out.

Four different Wolves eventually ended up with four fouls apiece, but none fouled out, and CHS made up for the foul disparity by winning the free-throw shooting contest.

With Anderson handcuffed to the bench, Coupeville coach Brad Sherman shuffled his lineup, and everything, and everybody, immediately clicked.

The Wolves closed the quarter on a 14-6 rampage, with four different players knocking down buckets.

Hurlee Bronec gets dynamic.

Guay and Logan Downes rippled the net with their own back-to-back treys, while White and Hurlee Bronec slapped home layups off of crisp passes from the ever-alert Downes.

Auburn hit a three-ball right before the buzzer to knot things up at 18-18 heading into the first break, before scoring off of a rebound to open the second frame.

That would be the last truly happy moment for the Falcons, however, as Coupeville immediately reclaimed the lead and never let it go the rest of the night.

A 14-0 surge, with White twice throwing down three-point plays the hard way, deflated Auburn, and it didn’t get easier from there for the hosts.

Downes also converted a three-point play on a slash to the bucket plus a free throw, as the Wolves caressed the net, converting all nine of their charity shots in the quarter.

Up 38-28 at the half, Coupeville let Auburn get a little taste of comeback fever in the third frame, but just a little.

The Falcons cut the deficit down to five thanks to their success from behind the arc, but then the Wolves handed the ball to Downes and let him go blow things up.

In four contests against Auburn Adventist over the past two seasons, the Wolf senior has rattled the rims for 40, 24, 30, and 24 points, and he seems to take great delight in ramming home the fatal dagger.

Downes closed the third by tossing in eight points during a 10-2 run, while flinging a note-perfect lob to White, who was tiptoeing through the paint, for the other score, and CHS was on its way.

The lead was 53-40 heading into the fourth quarter, and the Wolves shoved it all the way out to 18 late in the game.

Another 9-0 surge, this one fueled by seven points from the “can’t miss, won’t miss” White, pushed the game dangerously close to blowout country, before Auburn sliced a few points off the lead in the waning moments.

Nick Guay doesn’t fear your defense, fool.

Coupeville’s final bucket, coming on a swooping layup from Guay, was a milestone moment, as the lanky senior became the fourth active Wolf to crack the career 200-point club.

CHS got a solid one-two punch at the top of the scorebook, with Downes dropping in 24 and White banking in a career-best 23.

That pushes Downes to 476 points for the season, the third-best single-season effort put up by a Wolf boy across 107 campaigns.

The only guys ahead of him?

Jeff Stone, who scorched the nets for 644 in 1969-1970, and Downes himself, as he threw down 554 last year as a junior.

With his career night White continues to push for his own milestone moments.

He’s sitting with 389 points, good for #66 all-time on the CHS career scoring chart, and he and dad Greg (#33 at 604) are seven points shy of combining for a sweet 1,000.

Guay added nine Monday to get to 200, while the Battlin’ Bronec Brothers combined for six, with Hurlee sinking four and Hunter notching two points while terrorizing folks on defense.

Ryan Blouin, coming off his own career night a game ago, added a bucket this time while zipping passes left and right, and Wolf bangers William Davidson and Zane Oldenstadt provided lock-down defense in the paint.

And Chase Anderson?

Maybe next time the refs will stop calling ticky-tacky fouls, let him stay on the floor, and marvel at his hops when his butt isn’t super-glued to a chair.

One can only hope.

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Wolf hoops star Nick Guay looms large on Senior Night. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“This was a journey I never thought would end.”

While the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball squad still has games left to play — both the regular season finale at La Conner and playoff action — Friday night was a milestone for the Wolf seniors.

CHS coach Brad Sherman and his assistants honored 10 Wolves — nine players and an indispensable manager — before going out and whacking Friday Harbor.

Whether they expected it or not, Senior Night had arrived in Cow Town.

Whether it was William Davidson, who provided the quote to kick off this article, or Zane Oldenstadt, who closes it, the sentiments were the same.

“You are more than my teammates; you are my brothers. It’s been an amazing seven years and we aren’t done yet.”

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim

Mikey Robinett

Zane Oldenstadt

Thomas Studer

Timothy Nitta

Cole White

William Davidson

Ryan Blouin

Nick Guay

Logan Downes

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Timothy Nitta pulled off a beautiful three-point play the hard way Saturday in Puyallup. (Jackie Saia photo)

It was the showdown which didn’t really happen.

At least not the way it was intended.

Saturday’s prime time special in Puyallup pitted two of the best teams in 2B boys’ basketball against each other, only to have things take a jarring left turn just minutes into the game.

Coupeville’s leading scorer, Logan Downes, who is averaging 24.5 points a night, went down with what looked like an ankle injury after only getting up one shot.

After that, a three-man ref crew which all appeared to be blind in at least one eye, further knifed the Wolves, who stayed scrappy but fell 61-42 to a strong Chief Leschi squad.

The non-conference loss, which ended with Coupeville shooting four technical free throws in the final seconds after the officials finally remembered they could call fouls on the host team, drops CHS to 13-5.

Chief Leschi improves to 15-4.

The Wolves are off for six days, not returning to the floor until Friday, Feb. 2, when they host Friday Harbor on Senior Night.

That will give time for greater clarity on the severity of Downes injury.

Coupeville trailed just 6-2 when it lost its leader and pulled to within 9-7 later in the first quarter after two strong plays.

On the first, Cole White scored on an inbounds play in which he bounced the ball off a rival’s back, then slapped home the layup.

Cole White slices through the defense. (Addie Russell photo)

The second was a three-ball drained from the top by big man Hunter Bronec, wanderin’ far away from the rim and suddenly looking like vintage Dirk Nowitzki.

Unfortunately for the Wolves, that was where things dried up for a bit.

With the offensive attack hamstrung by the loss of its scoring ace, and foul trouble for his main support guys — Chase Anderson and Cole White — CHS went dry from the floor.

Chief Leschi, by contrast, rained down a series of three-balls, with one to end the first frame and four more to make the second quarter uncomfortable for the Wolves.

A 14-7 lead at the first break blossomed into a 34-13 advantage at the half, and things looked bleak.

But the Wolves dug down deep, getting quality minutes from bench players such as Timothy Nitta and Zane Oldenstadt, and battled back in the second half.

Anderson threw down all 10 of his points in the third quarter, including rippling the net on a pair of three-balls, and CHS cut a 25-point deficit down to 44-30 late in the frame.

Chief Leschi didn’t blink, however, ending the quarter on a 3-0 mini-surge, before icing the game with an 11-4 tear to open the fourth.

Even then, with too little time remaining to seriously threaten the Warriors, the Wolves reached deep for one more comeback try.

Hunter Bronec and White knocked down back-to-back buckets in the paint while being pummeled, and Coupeville closed the night on an 8-3 rally, outscoring their foes in the second half.

That included White and Ryan Blouin slipping free throws through the net after Chief Leschi was assessed two technical fouls on the same play.

The gym was heated, both sides believed they were being shafted, and yet, to prove I might have been wrong with my earlier jab about blind refs, a look at the scorebook reveals a weird fact.

Based on watching the game, I would have sworn Coupeville players had twice as many fouls called on them, and yet it was 20-20.

Dead even, unless you count the two techs, which actually puts Chief Leschi in the lead.

Weirdness, man.

With Downes on the sideline, ice packed on his ankle, White stepped up and drilled a team-high 15 points, which pushes him into a new pay bracket.

The pale prairie prince cracks the 350-point club, just the 79th Wolf boy to do so in 107 seasons.

Take his 352 points, add them to dad Greg’s 604, and Rock White’s offspring are getting dangerously close to reaching 1,000 points as a family.

Anderson added 10 in support Saturday, while Hunter Bronec banked in nine and Nitta pulled off a three-point play the hard way.

Guay (2), Hurlee Bronec (2), and Blouin (1) rounded out the attack, with William Davidson, Oldenstadt, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, Mikey Robinett, Aiden O’Neill, and (briefly) Downes also seeing the floor.

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Chase Anderson swoops to the hoop. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Cole White bleeds, Coupeville leads.

Whether it’s a full-blown geyser or a little scratch, when the pale prairie point guard displays even a little bit of red, the Wolf varsity boys’ basketball squad usually finds inspiration.

Wednesday night was no different, as White got dinged (but just a bit) and CHS romped to a 68-42 win over visiting South Whidbey.

The non-conference Island rivalry victory lifts Coupeville to 13-4 heading into a major matchup Saturday in Puyallup against always-dangerous Chief Leschi.

The Wolves prepped for their clash with the Warriors, who are also 13-4, by picking apart their next-door neighbors.

Jumping on the Falcons early, Coupeville mixed four first-quarter three-balls from Logan Downes with a series of breakaway buckets to stake themselves to a 26-8 lead at the first break.

South Whidbey was down just 7-6 midway through the opening quarter, before White spurred his team into action.

First, he collected an offensive charge on a rumbling, stumbling Falcon, before immediately stinging his rivals at the other end of the court on a sweet lil’ runner in the paint.

After that it was Downes ripping off treys like he was a World War II machine gunner, spraying bullets everywhere, with almost all of them hitting their target.

Coupeville continued to pour it on in the second frame, opening things on a torrid 11-2 run to stretch the lead all the way out to 37-10.

The Falcons had no answer for the Wolves, as Downes continued to splash down bombs from behind the arc, while White and Chase Anderson ran laps around their defenders, outsprinting them end to end on breakaways.

A three-ball from Ryan Blouin shoved the advantage out to 28 points, before the visitors (slightly) carved things down to trail “just” 40-18 at the half.

The Wolves celebrate another bucket.

The treys kept dropping, and the net kept popping, as the third quarter played out, with Downes (twice), Nick Guay, and Blouin connecting as CHS turned the game into a blowout at 62-30 heading into the fourth.

With the starters having long since departed to chill on the sideline, Wolf bench players wrapped things up.

Coupeville’s last bucket might have been its best, with sophomore swing player Aiden O’Neill slashing around the defense to convert a three-point play the hard way.

South Whidbey, which had been outscored 30-0 from the three-point line, finally got one to drop as the final buzzer sounded, but it was (way) too little, (way) too late.

Downes paced all scorers with 29 points, hitting seven treys, and becomes the first Wolf boy to compile two 400+ point seasons.

He threw down 554 points as a junior, and now has 416 in his final go-around, the sixth-best single-season total for a CHS boy across 107 seasons.

White knocked down 12 in support, with Anderson (10), Guay (7), Blouin (6), O’Neill (3), and Hurlee Bronec (1) also tallying points.

Anderson and Blouin reached personal milestones in the win, with the former cracking the 200-point club and the latter joining the 150-point club.

William Davidson, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, Mikey Robinett, Hunter Bronec, Zane Oldenstadt, and Timothy Nitta also saw floor time as the Class of 2024 improved to 51-19 as varsity hoops players.

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Cole White (left) and Ryan Blouin — kind of a big deal. (Photo property Coupeville Schools)

They’re 40% of the starting lineup for the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball team, and 100% of the Lions Club students of the quarter.

Wolf seniors Ryan Blouin and Cole White, who kick off a busy week of hoops action Tuesday at home against La Conner, paused momentarily in their pursuit of hardwood excellence to claim their awards.

Blouin, a sweet-shooting three-ball terror, and younger brother of Alita, is the son of Shawn and June.

He juggles basketball with scooping tasty cones at Kapaw’s Iskreme and fulfilling community service projects with the National Honor Society.

Bringing in a 3.97 GPA while taking an eye-boggling number of AP classes, Ryan also works with youth basketball players in his (limited) free time.

With his tutelage, a bevy of mad gunners are learning to chuck it from the cheap seats — and make those treys.

Cole White, whose parents are School Board Prez Morgan and urban legend Greg, also refs and works with little kids learning the ways of the hardwood.

A fellow tasty treat purveyor at Kapaw’s, his spot in the National Honor Society is a given, since Riley’s big bro boasts a sweet ‘n lowdown 4.0 GPA while strolling through any AP classes they can throw at him.

The Lions Club honors two seniors per quarter, with attitude, scholarship, community service, sportsmanship, inspiration, contribution to school, and congeniality part of the assessment.

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