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   Logan Martin scored seven points in the final minutes of the fourth quarter Thursday, as Coupeville roared from 12 down to beat Forks 45-44. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Now that is going to be the longest, most tear-stained, really, really morbidly-quiet trip ever taken on a school bus.

When you blow a 12-point lead in the final six minutes, get gut-punched by a ref with impeccable integrity, then lose on the game’s final play, it doesn’t make for a pleasant evening.

So … good thing none of us live in Forks!

Cause the Coupeville side of the stands, the insanely-loud, deliriously-happy side, they exited the CMS gym Thursday flashing smiles, doing fist-bumps and basking in the glow of an early contender for best game of the year.

Even if we are only four days in to 2018.

So, what drove the Wolf fans into hysterics?

Watching the Coupeville Middle School varsity boys basketball squad roar back to shock the visiting Spartans 45-44, literally winning on the final shot of the night — a pressure-packed and artfully-swished little jumper off of the magical finger tips of Xavier Murdy.

The win, coming in Coupeville’s first game since Dec. 14, lifts the varsity to 4-2 on the season and stretches its current winning streak to three games.

It also avenges a loss at Forks a month ago, while being the kind of win they’ll still be talking about long after these players have graduated high school.

The victory also forced an overly-yappy road fan or two to go stone silent at the end (my right ear greatly appreciates that) and made up for a loss in the JV contest.

In that one, the very-green Wolves played a billion times better than they did the first time around against Forks, but still fell 49-20.

Varsity roars:

Coupeville led exactly three times, once at 3-1 on an early Murdy three-ball, and twice in the game’s final 43 seconds.

But hey, the only lead that matters is the one where the clock says 0:00 in the fourth.

Trailing by seven at the half, CMS got as close as four in the third, then seemed to buckle. To which it responded, guess again.

Having surrendered eight straight points — two buckets to end the third and two to start the fourth — the Wolves were in their biggest hole of the night at 38-26.

Then, everything started to click, with the fuse being lit not by a shot, but by a pass.

Out on the run after scooping up a loose ball, Hawthorne Wolfe, the floppy-haired heir to Pistol Pete, who has never met a three-ball attempt he didn’t like trying, passed on a shot.

Instead, he zipped a note-perfect pass to sprinting teammate Caleb Meyer, who snatched the ball out of the air and muscled his way through a pair of defenders for a quick layup.

The pass, and bucket, were huge.

Not only did it break Coupeville’s dry spell, but, in one wham-bam play, it seemed to take most of Forks confidence and toss it in the direction of the very-hungry Wolves.

CMS repeated the same Wolfe-to-Meyer play 10 seconds later, before Meyer dished a gorgeous lob to Murdy for a layup the next time down the floor.

With their lead being scratched away, the Spartans got tight, their shots started to rim out after sweetly falling all night, and Logan Martin stepped up to deliver the KO.

He had been battling hard on the boards all night, but in the final minutes Martin morphed into a dead-eye shooter, knocking down a bank shot in the paint, then scrambling out to the top to drain a trey.

Toss in a Murdy three-ball and a free throw from Meyer, and, as all the blood drained out of the faces of the once-noisy Forks fans, Coupeville was back within 42-41.

Cue an insane final 43 ticks of the clock.

The Wolves struck first, with Martin taking an in-bounds pass from Meyer and turning it into a go-ahead layup, somehow getting the ball to drop while three Spartans beat the crud out of him (without a foul being called).

Forks had the answer, though, when their own big man powered inside for a bucket and foul with 22 seconds to play. Or, at least it seemed that way.

Back up 44-43, the Spartans couldn’t get the free throw to drop.

And then it got bonkers.

Forks snared the rebound, sent a pass out to the right, and a Spartan nailed what could have been a game-icing three-ball.

Except Jim Shulock, a ref with ice water in his veins and great moral integrity, screamed “NOOOOOOOOOOOOO SIR!!!!!!”

Staring down Forks players, coaches and fans as he knifed them, a guy who’s been wearing black and white stripes since before these kids were born, made the only call, in good conscience, he could make.

The only correct one, though one 98.3% of refs would probably not have had the guts to make at that moment.

A Forks player had clearly leveled a Wolf right in front of Shulock, and he punched the air, waving off the trey and calling the offensive foul on the visitors.

The Spartans wailed, while Coupeville simply went to work.

Given the ball back, down by one, with the clock ticking madly away, the Wolves found Murdy on the left side of the paint, and X-Man was flawless.

His short jumper over a sea of arms put CMS up 45-44, then, with the noise in the gym at levels that made Navy jet pilots all the way up in Oak Harbor wince, the Wolf defense sealed the deal.

Forks couldn’t hear, couldn’t think, and couldn’t hold it together, failing to get a shot off in the final eight seconds, sending Wolf fans cascading on to the floor, a sea of humanity losing its collective freakin’ mind.

“Every game should be like this!!!,” bellowed one Wolf coach, Bob Martin, as the other, Dante Mitchell, high-fived their players.

Murdy finished with a game-high 17, while Logan Martin banged home 12. Wolfe netted nine, Meyer knocked in five and Cody Roberts tickled the twines for two.

JV improves:

Coupeville’s younger players managed only six points in 32 minutes the first time these teams faced off, but they had that beat Thursday after just the first quarter.

Gabe Shaw banged down low for the game’s opening bucket, and while the Wolves couldn’t hold the lead against a more-polished Forks unit, they hung tough in the early going.

Alex Murdy was a particular standout, shutting down the Spartans on three consecutive plays down the floor. First he delivered a thunderous blocked shot, before making off with a pair of steals on back-to-back possessions.

Forks used a 9-0 surge to open the second quarter, fueled by a long three-ball, and, after that, the Wolves had few chances to get back in the game.

That didn’t stop CMS, though, as Ty Hamilton had a nice slash through the paint for a bucket and Dominic Coffman reinvented himself as a one-man wrecking crew.

He tossed in five of Coupeville’s seven third-quarter points, including getting three the hard way, but it was his electric intensity on defense which probably scarred the Spartans for life.

Near the end of the third quarter, Coffman stopped a Forks breakaway by delivering a well-timed karate chop to the head of the guy about to drop a layup. Instead the ball went one way, the rival went the other, and Wolf fans erupted.

Going one better, Coffman stopped a second fast break by leveling a Spartan like a semi-truck hitting a grocery cart full of melons left in the middle of the interstate.

On that one, the ref shook his head, tried to hide his smile and softly intoned, “foul, #1, foot to … the mouth.”

When he wasn’t blowing folks up, Coffman dropped in five points to pace the CMS offense. Isaiah Bittner (4), Aiden Burdge (4), Alex Murdy (3), Hamilton (2) and Shaw (2) also chipped in.

Tony Garcia, Kevin Partida, Alex Wasik, Brayden Coatney and Levi Pulliam rounded out the roster.

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   Grady Rickner, seen here last season, dropped in a bucket Thursday in a close loss at Forks. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Wolves got a reminder that long before he became a Coupeville coach/teacher/administrator, Ron Bagby was a state title-winning legend in Forks. (Bob Martin photo)

One was close, the other not so much.

Having traveled to the wilds of Forks Thursday, the Coupeville Middle School boys hoops squads had wildly different results.

The CMS varsity, a much more battle-hardened squad, fought down to the end before narrowly falling 34-31 to the host Spartans.

Meanwhile, the Wolf JV, which features a ton of first-year players, was rolled 76-21.

The losses dropped the two squads to 1-2 and 0-3, respectively.

Coupeville returns home next Monday, Dec. 11, when Port Townsend’s Blue Heron MS pops in for a visit.

Tip-off is 3:15, with JV followed by varsity.

Varsity:

Six of the seven Wolves to see action scored, with four of those players netting a three-ball.

Logan Martin was the most consistent player in red and white, rumbling for a team-high nine points. He was the only Wolf to score in every quarter, as well.

Raining down a pair of treys, Xavier Murdy backed up Martin with six points, while Caleb Meyer (6), Cody Roberts (5), Hawthorne Wolfe (3), Grady Rickner (2) and Aiden Burdge rounded out the roster.

JV:

Forks has a very strong youth hoops program, and that showed, as the Spartans young guns were very polished ball-hawks.

Isaiah Bittner paced Coupeville with eight points, while Kevin Partida chipped in with four. Levi Pulliam (3), Burdge (3) and Dominic Coffman (1) also scored.

And yes, that equals 19 and not 21.

A third quarter basket for the Wolves was recorded, but not awarded to a player, forever denying historians.

Such is life.

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   Eryn Wood, seen here in an earlier match, had several strong serves Monday while facing off with Forks. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Angelina Gebhard is a threat at the service line or at the net.

Jordyn Rogers and the Wolf 7th graders are a team on the rise.

One win, and a lot of fight.

Facing off with feisty Forks at home Monday, the Coupeville Middle School volleyball squads came close, but only netted one victory in four matches — and that was an unofficial “win.”

8th grade varsity:

A titanic battle and the closest match of the afternoon.

Other than a poor end to the opening set, Coupeville waged war with Forks point for point, losing by the narrowest of margins at 25-16, 21-25, 25-23.

The hero was the young woman with the loudest fan club, one Abby Mulholland.

Her serves provided 13 of Coupeville’s 48 points over the course of the final two sets, including a run of nine straight winners which completely turned the match around in the middle set.

Mulholland’s first run at the service stripe came midway through the second set, with CMS trailing 10-7 and down a set.

As her fan club, led by a boisterous Moose Moran and Lyle Wells, hooted and hollered, she dropped an ace in front of a diving Forks player on her first serve, and the spark was lit.

Mulholland continued to pepper the Spartans, with two more aces and several balls returned straight backwards, then she got some help from Audrianna Shaw.

Stalking the net, she twice found the perfect tip, dropping balls between defenders for crucial points.

The first came on a ball where Shaw reached back over her head, while the second was a classic elevate and put the ball away moment.

The duo were back at it when it came time to close out the set in favor of Coupeville.

Angelina Gebhard whacked a winner off a Forks player’s arm to push CMS ahead 22-21, then Mulholland returned to the service stripe.

Firing off three more winners to seal the deal, she got an assist from Shaw, who nailed a nice bump for a winner on the set-clincher.

The third and deciding set was a war of attrition, with the teams trading the lead down the stretch.

At one point, Jaelynn Crebbin made a sweet save on a ball which looked like a sure-thing Forks winner, diving and popping the ball up into the air where Mulholland dropped the hammer with a skillful poke.

Coupeville was up by as many as three points, then down by four, before putting together a rally started by Kylie Van Velkinburgh dropping a winner into a microscopic gap.

The two squads were tied seven times in the final set, including as late as 23-23.

It wasn’t to be, though, as errors at the very end tripped up CMS — a tip which caught net and refused to get up and over and miscommunication between teammates which let the final ball drop in.

The opening set, which featured strong serving from Izzy Wells, was very similar to the final set.

There were seven ties, but then at 16-16, things fell apart for Coupeville as a very-effective Forks server went on a nine-point tear to close things out.

8th grade JV:

OK, while I was in the gym for both 8th grade matches, I quickly lost track of things during this one while busy interacting with the future of Wolf sports, irrepressible two-year-old Maysen Van Velkinburgh.

Turns out what I missed was CMS winning the first set 27-25, then getting a forfeit in the second set while trailing 13-7. Forks had to flee to the ferry, handing the Wolves the victory.

What I did see was some strong serving from Ella Colwell, Chloe LaRue and Morgan Stevens and big hustle from Lita Woolett, Anya Leavell and Samantha Streitler.

Other than that … next match I will be more alert.

Unless Maysen is doing back handsprings or wants to spend more time nibbling on my notebook. Then I can’t promise anything.

7th grade varsity:

Coupeville captured the first set 25-20, then fell 25-12 and 25-18 in the next two.

The Wolves opened strongly at the service stripe — Harlee Ausman was 9-of-10 and Kaielle Bepler 4-of-4 in the opening set — but tailed off quickly after that.

“Our serving in the second two sets wasn’t so good,” said CMS coach Sarah Lyngra. “Receiving was also an area which needs work, but we were able to get eight three-hits a side during the last set.

“We are recording the times we get three hits a side as something to work toward improving over the course of the season.”

7th grade JV:

Beaten at the service stripe, the Wolves absorbed a 25-11, 25-17, 25-15 loss.

“It was a server’s battle and our serves weren’t making the grade,” Lyngra said.

Coupeville, which hit on 69% of its serves in its last match, skidded to just 21% Monday, and that was a killer.

Lyngra offered praise to Maya Lucero, who was a perfect 4-for-4 on serve in the first set, and Brynn Schmid, who delivered some “nice passing.”

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   CMS 8th grader Kylie Chernikoff won a league title in the discus Wednesday, smashing her PR by 13 feet. (Joanne Chernikoff photo)

They went out with a bang.

Coupeville 8th graders Kylie Chernikoff and Jake Mitten capped their middle school track careers Wednesday by winning league titles.

Chernikoff hurled the discus 78 feet to best a field of 14, while Mitten sailed over the high jump bar at five feet, two-and-a-half inches to top 21 rivals.

Their victories were the cherry on top for the Wolves, who survived a trip to the wilds of Forks for the Olympic League Championships.

The season-ending event drew seven middle schools, with the two largest ones taking team titles.

Sequim and Stevens, which support 2A high schools, took the boys and girls competitions, respectively.

Along with the wins, Coupeville also got a second-place finish in the 60 from 7th grader Ja’Kenya Hoskins and third-places finishes from its boys 4 x 100 and 4 x 200 relay teams.

Complete CMS results from Wednesday:

Girls:

60 (Varsity) — Ja’Kenya Hoskins (2nd) 8.92; Emily Fiedler (7th) 9.41

60 (JV) — Angelina Gebhard (7th) 10.59; Maddy Andrews (8th) 11.88

100 (Varsity) — Kiara Contreras (10th) 15.60; Kylie Chernikoff (12th) 16.37

100 (JV) — Ella Colwell (8th) 17.27; Andrews (9th) 19.27

200 (Varsity) — Hoskins (4th) 29.89; Contreras (11th) 33.27

200 (JV) — Alana Mihill (7th) 40.82

800 (Varsity) — Adair De Jesus-Ramirez (5th) 3:07.05; Catherine Lhamon (6th) 3:09.85

800 (JV) — Mihill (5th) 3:17.71

1600 (Varsity) — Lhamon (5th) 6:26.14; De Jesus-Ramirez (6th) 6:33.75

75 Hurdles (Varsity) — Fiedler (9th) 16.01; Contreras (11th) 16.59

200 Hurdles (Varsity) — Bella Velasco (7th) 37.24

4 x 100 Relay (Varsity) — De Jesus-Ramirez, Gebhard, Noelle Daigneault, Velasco (4th) 1:04.45

4 x 200 Relay (Varsity) — Hoskins, Contreras, Gebhard, Velasco (4th) 2:08.65

Shot Put (Varsity) — Daigneault (8th) 23-02; Chernikoff (13th) 21-03;  Andrews (16th) 15-02

Discus (Varsity) — Chernikoff (1st) 78-00; Colwell (11th) 54-04

Turbo Javelin (Varsity) — Fiedler (10th) 56-11; Mihill (12th) 50-01; Colwell (15th) 44-03; Daigneault (17th) 37-07

High Jump (Varsity) — Fiedler (7th) 4-02

Long Jump (Varsity) — Hoskins (8th) 12-04.50; Chernikoff (21st) 9-04; Gebhard (22nd) 8-07.50

Boys:

60 (Varsity) — Sam Wynn (4th) 8.67; Sage Downes (10th) 9.04

60 (JV) — Ben Smith (4th) 9.11

100 (Varsity) — Jake Mitten (4th) 12.86; Downes (9th) 13.87

100 (JV) — Smith (4th) 13.97; Zach Murtha (4th) 14.19

200 (Varsity) — Mitten (4th) 27.31

800 (Varsity) — Logan Wertz (12th) 3:16.59

1600 (Varsity) — Wynn (7th) 5:45.75; Murtha (9th) 6:03.91

1600 (JV) — Wertz (5th) 6:57.68

75 Hurdles (Varsity) — James Mayne (11th) 15.90

200 Hurdles (Varsity) — Smith (10th) 34.90

4 x 100 Relay (Varsity) — Wynn, Murtha, Downes, Mitten (3rd) 53.04

4 x 200 Relay (Varsity) — Mayne, Gabe Shaw, Trystan Ford, Smith (3rd) 2:08.44

Shot Put (Varsity) — Logan Martin (14th) 26-06; Alex Jimenez (18th) 23-06.50; Mayne (20th) 19-03

Discus (Varsity) — Martin (8th) 85-00; Wertz (20th) 64-03; Ford (21st) 62-05; Jimenez (24th) 55-03

Turbo Javelin (Varsity) — Martin (18th); Ford (16th) 81-05; Jimenez (20th) 64-01; Shaw (23rd) 58-00

High Jump (Varsity) — Mitten (1st) 5-02.50

Long Jump (Varsity) — Wynn (10th) 14-11; Downes (11th) 14-05.50

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   Chelsea Prescott, seen here in an earlier game, matched her jersey number Thursday, pouring in 23 points in an OT win. (John Fisken photo)

   Wolves (l to r) Prescott, Bella Velasco, Izzy Wells and Abby Mulholland wait for their game to start. (Susan Hulst photo)

Something for everyone.

Want a rout in favor of the good guys? We got it.

More in the mood for a thriller that comes down to the final play but also ends in favor of the good guys? We got that, too.

They got to the finish in different ways, but both Coupeville Middle School girls basketball squads sent their fans home happy Thursday, claiming emotional wins over visiting Forks.

The 7th grade Wolves cruised to a 32-13 win to improve to 5-4 on the season, while the 8th graders (now 2-7) pulled off a come-from-behind 37-35 triumph in a wild affair.

Thursday’s games couldn’t have gone more differently.

7th grade:

Kylie Van Velkinburgh hit a soft one-handed jumper a few seconds into the game, and the rout was on.

With several Wolves anxious to get things finished as quickly as possible (they had an Ariana Grande concert in Seattle to get to), CMS pushed the pace.

Back-to-back buckets from Anya Leavell, set up by strong passes from Audrianna Shaw and Van Velkinburgh, kick-started things, before Ja’Kenya Hoskins threw down three consecutive baskets to stake the Wolves to a 16-5 lead at the half.

Leavell dropped in three more buckets during a 12-0 third quarter run which effectively ended any Forks comeback hopes.

When she wasn’t filling up the bucket, her teammates were equally on fire, with Adair De Jesus tipping a loose ball right into Van Velkinburgh’s hands for a layup and Kiara Contreras rampaging end to end.

Coupeville’s Energizer Rabbit closed the third by ripping a ball free, then zipping to the other end, where she stopped ‘n popped for a sweet basket.

Not content to stop there, Contreras nailed a fourth-quarter jumper after another steal.

Leavell paced the Wolves with 10, while Hoskins (8), Van Velkinburgh (6), Contreras (4), Shaw (2) and Samantha Streitler (2) all scored.

De Jesus, Alana Mihill, McKenna Somes, Lily Leedy and Katelin McCormick all provided hustle and gritty defense, as CMS drove the Forks ball-handlers batty.

8th grade:

Walk away after the first quarter and you might be surprised with the news the Wolves won.

Trailing 13-4, with little to show except a gorgeous pull-up jumper from Genna Wright, things were looking dire.

And then the game changed thanks to a ramped-up defense and an ability to hit free throws.

Facing a fairly rough ‘n rowdy Forks squad, the Wolves went to the line more than normal, and netted 10 free throws, with most of them coming at crucial moments.

Coupeville used a 10-0 run to open the second to retake the lead, only to watch a ref miss a crucial call mere seconds before the halftime buzzer.

Forks, looking dangerously close to being shut-out in the second quarter, hit a miracle three-ball on a play where the shooter somehow escaped being called for a blatant travel.

How blatant? Even the ref’s seeing-eye dog was like, “Hey, man…”

Trailing 16-14 at the break, instead of being up 14-13, Coupeville never blinked, thanks to Mollie Bailey.

Despite not wearing the “superstar” socks older sisters McKayla and McKenzie had bought for her (and being verbally abused from the stands for said decision), the unflappable Wolf point guard went to work.

In between shooting occasional glares at her family, the youngest Bailey won a battle for a loose ball in front of the hoop, then banked it home to knot things at 16.

Very next play, she out-muscled two Spartans for a rebound, then popped the ball into Chelsea Prescott’s hands.

Cue another bucket, as Coupeville’s primary scoring threat knocked down a bank shot, part of a game-high 23-point barrage.

With Prescott singing the net from all angles, and Izzy Wells chipping in with a put-back off of a rebound, CMS twice stretched the lead out to six.

Enter a wicked one-two punch, as Forks used a dagger of a three-ball to cut the lead, before Wolf coach Ryan King was T’d up for protesting Prescott being pummeled and knocked to the floor by rabid Spartans on back-to-back plays.

While her coach was forced to sit for the remainder of the game, Prescott had no such restriction, and she made Forks feel her full fury.

With CMS down 31-28, she circled the defense, spun and dropped an ice-cold trey with 34.8 seconds to play, then stared down the Spartans as she retreated.

The Wolves forced a crucial traveling call with 15 ticks left to send the game to overtime, a three-minute period they played with brutal efficiency.

Trailing 35-32 after the larger Spartans went inside for two quick buckets, CMS closed the game on a 5-0 tear.

Prescott slid two free throws through the twines to get the Wolves close, then things got frantic.

Heidi Clinkscales made off with a steal and took it coast to coast for a layup that would have put Coupeville up by a point, only to have the lead ref wave off the bucket.

This time, he claimed, he did see a travel.

Not thrown off in the slightest, Clinkscales promptly pilfered the ball on the very next play, leading another wild chase down the floor.

This time, no travel, though she did get knocked to the floor by three Spartans at the end of her journey.

Facing a one-and-one, Clinkscales drilled the first attempt to tie things at 35, sending a jolt of energy through the Wolves, who all promptly ran back on defense, forgetting they had a second free throw opportunity awaiting them.

While that charity shot rolled around and popped off the rim, CMS held firm on defense, with a loose ball leading to the game-winner.

Out on the break, Bailey led Wells perfectly, dropping the ball into her hands, then pumping her fist as the 7th grader, who plays up a grade, hit a running layup.

Forks had a three-pointer at the buzzer to win, but couldn’t stick the mood-killer, leading the giddy Wolves to charge off the floor, win in hand.

Coupeville got points from five of its eight players, with Prescott’s 23 backed by Wells (6), Wright (5), Bailey (2) and Clinkscales (1).

Abby Mulholland, Bella Velasco and Kaitlin Painter all saw floor time for the victorious Wolves.

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