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Hawthorne Wolfe scorched Darrington for 32 points Friday, netting eight shots from behind the three-point arc. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hawthorne Wolfe fears no gym.

Ignoring all the urban legends about Darrington’s old-school facility, which looks like it could have been used in Hoosiers, the Coupeville High School junior lit the joint up Friday night.

Odd backboards or not, Wolfe outdueled the Loggers, dropping in a game-high 32 points, including netting eight three-balls, pacing CHS to a 64-51 win.

Coming 24 hours after the Wolves fell on a last-second bucket to La Conner, the victory lifts Coupeville to 3-3 at the halfway point of a pandemic-altered season.

Channeling coaches who have mentored him — hardwood gurus like Willie Smith and David King — current Wolf head man Brad Sherman was reflective in his postgame comments.

While he is still somewhat haunted by trying to shoot at Darrington during his own otherwise stellar playing days, Sherman was pleased with how the current generation responded.

“Obviously games like last night can take a lot out of you emotionally,” he said. “So today’s test was really to see how quickly we could bounce back on the road.

“And our guys came out, played hard, and did what was needed to get the W today. Have to be proud of that!”

It was a solid team effort, with all nine Coupeville players who hit the floor scoring.

But it was the Wolf named Wolfe, the bobbin’ and weavin’, smooth-talkin’ and sweet-shootin’ Hawk who captured the spotlight.

Dueling with Darrington’s Caleb Rivera, who went off for 27 points and five treys of his own, Wolfe was electric from long range.

He netted a trio of three-balls in the first quarter, tossed in two more in the second frame, then popped for yet another three in the third.

Is that a single-game record for CHS shooters?

Likely, but I’m not 100% sure.

Sherman netted six treys in a game while playing for the Wolves in the early 2000’s, and Gabe Wynn and Mason Grove both swished seven in 2017 games.

Grove once hit 10 three-balls against Port Townsend, but that came in a JV game, so Wolfe’s eight may very well be a CHS varsity record.

Either way, Wolfe’s big bombs were huge, with Xavier Murdy and Logan Downes each adding a single three-ball as Coupeville picked up 30 of its 64 points while shooting from the parking lot.

The game itself was close, especially in the early going, as Coupeville led just 13-12 at the end of the first quarter.

Wolfe already had 11 at that point, and he and his teammates stretched the lead out to 34-26 at the half, then 52-39 after three quarters.

The fourth quarter played out to a 12-12 stalemate, clinching the win for CHS, with six different Wolves scoring in the final frame.

Wolfe’s 32 was his second-best work of the season, trailing just the 38 he dropped on Mount Vernon Christian in the season opener.

Continuing his torrid tour through the 104-year history of CHS boys basketball, the floppy-haired Dairy Queen employee jumped Friday from a tie for #43 on the program’s all-time scoring list to #37.

With 558 points and counting, Wolfe leap-frogs Brad Miller (526), Jerry Zylstra (527), Denny Zylstra (538), Marc Bissett (549), Jim Syreen (550), Roy Marti (551), and Randy Duggan (552).

Xavier Murdy, a force on both ends of the floor, chipped in with nine points Friday, and is now just a bucket off of 150 career points.

Freshman Logan Downes (7), TJ Rickner (4), Sage Downes (3), Alex Murdy (3), Logan Martin (2), Daniel Olson (2), and Grady Rickner (2) scored as Sherman’s crew all contributed.

In this compressed season, next week will be huge for Coupeville, as it plays three games in four days.

The Wolves get a rematch with La Conner, this time on the road, next Wednesday, June 2.

Then they host MVC June 3, before traveling to Orcas Island June 5.

 

JV stays home:

There was no second game for the Wolf boys Friday, though Darrington is currently scheduled to play a JV game the second time these schools meet.

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“My name is Izzy Wells, and I’m here to torch the joint.” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Right back where they want to be.

A night after losing to likely the best 2B team in the state, the Coupeville High School girls basketball team rediscovered that winning feeling.

With nine players dropping in buckets, the Wolves ran circles around host Darrington Friday, coming away with a highly-satisfying 45-11 win.

The victory, the third in the last four games for Coupeville, lifts it to 3-3 at the halfway point of a pandemic-altered season.

“A nice bounce back win,” said CHS coach Scott Fox. “Everyone saw minutes tonight and it was a great way to end the first half of the season.”

Thursday, the very-young Wolves, who play two 8th graders and are missing injured point guard Maddie Georges, had few answers for undefeated La Conner.

Jump forward a night, and Coupeville, after riding a bus to the wilds of Darrington, came out hyper-focused and ready to rumble.

Five players scored in the first quarter, with Izzy Wells leading the way, and the Wolves carried a 13-4 advantage to the first break.

Coupeville never relented, posting 11-2, 10-2, and 11-3 runs across the next three quarters, while clamping down on defense.

Ten Wolves hit the floor Friday, with Izzy Wells singing the nets for a game and season high 10 points.

She was backed by Gwen Gustafson, who banked in seven points, and the three-pack of Lyla Stuurmans, Audrianna Shaw, and Ja’Kenya Hoskins, who each hit for five.

Ryanne Knoblich (4), Carolyn Lhamon (4), Savina Wells (3), and Kylie Van Velkinburgh (2) also scored, while Morgan Stevens brought considerable defensive heat to the floor.

Stuurmans and Shaw both netted a three-ball.

 

No JV action:

Darrington only has one team, so Coupeville’s second squad had the night off.

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Chelsea Prescott delivered a big-time performance Thursday, leading Coupeville to a straight-sets win at Darrington. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ryanne Knoblich scrapes a ball off the floor.

Back in a groove.

A match after being roughed-up by two-time defending state champ La Conner, the Coupeville High School varsity volleyball squad was ready to rumble Thursday night.

Invading Darrington, the fired-up Wolves chopped down the Loggers, felling their foes 25-20, 25-14, 25-16.

The straight-sets victory, Coupeville’s second-straight on the road, lifts it to 2-1 on the season heading into a home clash Saturday with Mount Vernon Christian.

With a day of practice in between the La Conner and Darrington tilts, the Wolves were able to refocus, said coach Cory Whitmore.

“Much, much better showing last night against Darrington,” he said. “After a very focused and productive practice on Wednesday, I was very pleased to see our response in the immediate game following, and on the road no less.

“The goal was to keep control of the game’s energy and tempo, and remain focused from warmups through the final point, and this team did just that.”

Coupeville got something of value from everyone on the floor, but senior Chelsea Prescott was the undeniable focal point of the evening.

Combining grace with savage power, she whacked 13 kills, delivered six service aces, went low for 10 digs, and even found time to climb high for an emphatic block.

Chelsea had herself a game,” Whitmore said. “She was as focused as I’ve ever seen her and contributed basically in each statistical category.

“The game seemed to unfold out as exactly as she wanted it to,” he added. “Adding six aces to a double-double is a dominating performance.”

Strong work came from everyone in a CHS uniform, with sophomore setter Maddie Georges kick-starting the offense with nimble passing.

Maddie G. did a great job of getting Chelsea the ball on her fluid hitting routes,” Whitmore said. “But then just as impressive, Chels moved the ball around with her shots.

“Both outside attackers did a great job with Kylie (Chernikoff) also taking a lot of the serve receptions and pulling in a team-high 11 digs,” he added.

“This allowed Maddie G. to find the best available hitter in transition. Maddie Vondrak’s .308 hitting efficiency was important as well, and, as always, she sparked the team with each kill.”

Chernikoff finished with eight kills and a team-high 11 digs, while Vondrak mashed six kills of her own.

Georges doled out a season-high 27 assists to go with four digs, with Lucy Tenore (six service aces, two kills), Jill Prince (two kills), Jaimee Masters (seven digs, three aces), Abby Mulholland (two aces), and Ryanne Knoblich (four digs) all piling up stats.

Coupeville was very-efficient at the service stripe, with 17 aces (including three in a row from Masters), with just six service errors.

“I’m very happy to see that as a team, we remained fairly low-error. But, almost more importantly, we grew in our knowledge of what it meant to be focused and execute a game plan, in addition to keeping the energy high internally,” Whitmore said.

“Our leaders were big tonight in that regard, and then each player to see the court contributed about exactly what we needed from them.

“With a condensed season, it is important to have a group of quick learners, and so we will keep pushing this energy.”

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Coupeville freshman Allison Nastali played strongly Thursday, sparking the Wolf JV spikers to a tense three-set road win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Grit and guts.

Pushed to the edge Thursday, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad rallied for a huge road win, showcasing the resolve of the young Wolves.

It was edge-of-your-seat time in Darrington, as the road warriors from Cow Town pulled out a 25-8, 22-25, 16-14 thriller.

The win lifts the CHS spikers to 2-1 on the season, heading into a Saturday match at home against Mount Vernon Christian.

A day after her 20th birthday, Coupeville JV coach Ashley Menges got a big present from her team, as they dug down deep and played the way their leader did back when she wore a Wolf uniform.

“They played great in the first set,” Menges said. “Energy was high, everyone was playing very consistent, and they played well as a unit.”

Then came a brief detour into the wrong side of town, setting up the third-set rally.

“Second set Darrington came back with a vengeance, which was expected, but we just got too comfortable,” Menges said.

“Third set was also good, coming back from being in a deficit but overall was a great game, and a great way to respond from our previous game and our practice.”

Freshman Allison Nastali drew praise from her coach, as did several of her teammates.

Allison did great being put in a new position and was very consistent on her serve!,” Menges said. “Olivia (Schaffeld) and Grey (Peabody) had some great swings in the middle as well.

“And Maya (Lucero) and Jordyn (Rogers) were very consistent on the outside attack.”

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Undefeated and ready to roll. (Jackie Saia photo)

One team to rule them all.

Handily winning a battle of the last two undefeated teams in the Northwest 2B/1B League Tuesday, the Coupeville High School softball squad improved to a fairly flawless 4-0 on the season.

The Wolves got there by clubbing host Darrington 11-4 behind another dazzling pitching performance from Izzy Wells.

The junior ace whiffed seven of the nine hitters she faced, then stepped aside and let sophomore Gwen Gustafson make her high school debut in the pitcher’s circle.

Up big early, the Wolves also went to their bench, giving Sofia Peters, Melanie Navarro, and McKenna Somes their first varsity action of the pandemic-shortened season.

Darrington came into play Tuesday sitting at 2-0, but Coupeville, playing on the road for the first time, was more than ready.

The Wolves eked out two runs in the first, then peppered the Loggers for another four in the second, adding three more in the third to build a 9-0 lead.

CHS coach Kevin McGranahan flipped out Wells for Gustafson, gave his young guns quality playing time, and coasted in for the win.

Darrington chipped away a bit at the end, but not enough to get back into the game.

“We got a little sloppy on defense, but it never really mattered,” McGranahan said.

The diamond guru kept several key players such as senior Chelsea Prescott on the field to provide leadership, and the veterans responded as expected.

Chelsea played great when she got a chance, with a leaping catch in deep shortstop to end the game,” McGranahan said.

Coupeville spread its hits out, racking up 11 base-knocks, including doubles from Prescott, Wells, Kylie Van Velkinburgh, and Maya Lucero.

Wells and Mollie Bailey led the way with two hits each, while Audrianna Shaw, Gustafson, Bella Whalen, and Heidi Meyers all collected singles.

Coral Caveness picked up a walk and scored, as well.

Coupeville, which has outscored its foes 34-10 this season, returns to action with a pair of games this weekend.

The Wolves island-jump Friday, when they’ll face defending league champ Friday Harbor (2-2), before having a home game Saturday against Concrete.

The second of those games was originally scheduled as a road trip, but has been flipped, with the March 26 game against Concrete sliding from a home game to a road game.

Saturday’s home game starts at 1 PM.

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