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Posts Tagged ‘Forks’

Zack Nall (John Fisken photos)

   Zack Nall notched his first two varsity goals Monday in a 7-2 Coupeville win at Forks. (John Fisken photos)

Ethan Spark

   Ethan Spark, seen here creepin’ through the defense in an earlier game, also scored in the rout.

Parting is such sweet sorrow.

Playing against Forks for the final time in his stellar prep career, Abraham Leyva torched the Spartans for four more goals Monday, sparking the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad to a 7-2 win deep in Twilight country.

The win, the third straight for the Wolves, lifts them to 3-4-1 and marks the end of the non-conference season.

From this point on it’s all league games, with six straight against 1A Olympic League rivals.

First up is Port Townsend (2-2-1), which visits Whidbey Thursday (JV 5 PM, varsity 6:45).

Leyva’s goal explosion, which comes a week to the day after he netted a hat trick on headers while playing Forks in Coupeville, gives him 13 on the season.

It also keeps alive his amazing streak of having scored in every game as a senior.

He now sits just a goal off of his own school single-season scoring record of 14, which he netted as a junior. That came on the heels of an 11-goal Wolf debut as a sophomore.

While Leyva was raining down goals, he wasn’t the only Wolf with a hot foot Monday.

CHS junior Zack Nall scored his first varsity goal and liked it so much he immediately went back for a second one, while sophomore Ethan Spark also launched his second score of the campaign.

Nall, Spark, Sebastian Davis, William Nelson and Zane Bundy (who had several assists Monday) each have two goals this season and sit in a five-way tie behind Leyva on the team scoring chart.

JV also wins:

Laurence Boado and Andre Avila scored as the Wolves escaped town with a 2-1 victory.

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Cassidy

   Cassidy Moody, here jumping center in an earlier game, scored all 12 of her points in the fourth quarter Monday, sparking a huge comeback win. (John Fisken photo)

First Ryan King got sick.

Then his team went and made Forks feel even sicker.

Storming back from a 14-point deficit entering the fourth quarter Monday, the Coupeville Middle School 7th grade girls’ basketball squad pulled off a stunner deep in the heart of Twilight country.

By the time they were done, pouring in 18 points in a frantic final eight minutes, the Wolves had a 25-23 victory, sweet revenge for an early season loss to the same squad, and some solace for their food poisoning-riddled coach.

“It was a phenomenal game,” King said. “Every girl that played made a difference and even those who didn’t get to play made a difference.

“I am super proud of the girls,” he added. “We fought to the very end and we are coming home with a win!”

After struggling to score in the first three quarters, amassing just a sparse seven points in 24 minutes, Coupeville (3-4) came out super-aggressive for the final stretch, and it paid dividends.

Pressing from start to finish in the fourth, the Wolves forced turnovers and turned them into buckets.

Everything started with defense, and Coupeville’s anchor in the middle, Morgan Pease, was key to that.

Morgan played her heart out for us and even though she fouled out, she definitely was the tone-setter for how tough we needed to be,” King said.

With Cassidy Moody and Chelsea Prescott combining for all of Coupeville’s fourth quarter points — Moody went off for all 12 of her points in the rally while Prescott chipped in with six — the Wolves also got big game-changers from less heralded sources.

Catherine (Lhamon), one of the shorter players we have, came out of nowhere and made a block that was a momentum changer,” King said.

Prescott, who tied Moody for game-high honors with 12 (Mollie Bailey dropped in a free throw to round out the scoring), tied the game with 30 seconds to play.

With Forks trying to set up for a game-winner, Moody made off with a steal and knocked home the go-ahead bucket with just five ticks left on the clock.

8th graders nipped:

Coupeville’s more-seasoned squad made a strong run, but fell just short at 34-26.

The loss dropped the Wolves to 4-3 on the season.

“Better game than the last by far!,” said CMS coach Bob Martin. “Their defense didn’t win the game, but it kept them in it!”

Scout Smith and Hannah Davidson each knocked down nine to pace the Wolves, while Avalon Renninger (4), Tia Wurzainer (2) and Emma Mathusek (2) rounded out the scoring stats.

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CMS 8th grader Hannah Davidson, seen here during practice, spent most of Thursday trying to deflect constant elbows to the face, chest and back. (John Fisken photo)

  CMS 8th grader Hannah Davidson, seen here during practice, spent most of Thursday trying to deflect constant elbows to the face, chest and back. (John Fisken photo)

It was a weird afternoon all around.

Take one fairly physical visiting team, toss in a plot twist on how long a game is, then liberally sprinkle with two refs who seemed to have little understanding of their job, and it all added up Thursday to one big pain in the rear for Coupeville.

By the time things were done, both of its middle school girls’ basketball squads had suffered their first losses of the season, and its coaches and fans were left with a mixture of puzzlement and unhappiness etched on their faces.

In the opener, the Wolf 7th graders raced out to an eight-point lead midway through the second quarter, before fouls stripped them of their best inside presence.

With Morgan Pease planted on the bench for the final five minutes of the first half — which turned out to to be the final five minutes of the game (more on that later) — Coupeville watched in horror as Forks sliced into the paint repeatedly, closing the game on a 10-0 run to nail down a 19-16 victory.

If that was rough, the nightcap was worse, as the refs went from bad to ridiculous, causing normally restrained CMS coach Bob Martin to virtually implode as Forks smashed the Wolf 8th graders (in the face, repeatedly) en route to a 49-25 romp.

The losses left both Wolf squads at 2-1 on the season.

Thursday’s opener was set up to be a shorter-than-normal affair, as Forks claimed to have just five 7th graders.

Having agreed to cut the game in half, the Wolves stormed out to an early lead, and held it for most of the half.

Now, when Forks ran a sub in early in the first quarter (presumably an 8th grader), it was obvious their players wouldn’t have had to play the entire 32 minutes if the game was normal length.

Still, that was small potatoes compared to two refs who combined a lack of staying on top of the game (“Wait, what, they’re shooting free throws? Who’s shooting free throws?”) with a flair for ignoring some brutal collisions while working their whistles overtime on petty infractions.

Even with all that going on, Coupeville stretched its lead out to 14-6 when Genna Wright banked home a shot while clearing out the paint the way (elbow-swinging) older sister Sarah likely taught her.

Forks pulled off a three-point play the hard way to slice away at the lead, before Chelsea Prescott immediately answered.

Taking an in-bounds pass from Mollie Bailey, the Wolves leading scorer dropped in her final bucket of the half, giving her a game-high 10 (she’s averaging 18.4 ppg over the 2.5 games played) and pushing the lead back to 16-9.

Then came a string of foul calls on the Wolves, especially Pease, while on the other end, the Wolves couldn’t buy a break.

The most glaring example: Prescott, in the air, with a shot leaving her hands, was hammered on the upraised wrists, yet the refs gave the ball to CMS on the side, and didn’t send the Wolves to the line to shoot.

Given new life, and with the refs breath the wind beneath their wings, Forks claimed their first lead of the game on a pair of free-throws.

Then they iced the game with a put-back off of a rebound (on a play in which the Wolf who originally had the ball was clocked in the back of the head, causing her to cough it up).

As confused fans watched the two teams go down the handshake line instead of head to the locker room for halftime, the 8th graders took the floor and the refs recharged by making a silent pact to get worse. Much worse.

The nightcap featured one play over and over (and over again) — Wolf post player Hannah Davidson being smacked.

In the head. On the shoulders. In the chest. Pretty much anywhere the Forks defenders could get away with it.

Oh right, on this night they could get away with it anywhere…

At the half, Martin and 7th grade coach Ryan King had an animated three-minute-plus discussion with the refs that started at one end of the court and ended at the other.

Unfortunately (for me, at least), my life-long dream of seeing an ejection in a middle school game was for naught as both CMS coaches are smart, restrained guys who made their points, expressed their displeasure, but refused to go all Bobby Knight.

I tip my hat to the Wolf coaches, cause they handled the situation better than most.

Battered, knocked around and poked to death, the Wolves rallied a bit and got back what they could.

Scout Smith got back on defense, planted herself for a good 10 seconds, then got rocked by a Forks girl who, on the move, blasted the slender Wolf point guard hard enough the thunk was heard across the street by grocery store shoppers.

No foul.

So the scrappy one picked herself up, shot up the floor, took a pass and banked home a three-ball from the top, pausing for just a millisecond to do a little happy (and sore) dance.

Smith later sank another trey on her way to a team-high eight, while Davidson and Avalon Renninger each knocked down six.

Maya Toomey-Stout popped for five to round out the CMS attack.

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Daniel Olson (John Fisken photo)

   Daniel Olson and the Wolves fought hard but fell in Forks Thursday. (John Fisken photo)

The Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball teams ventured into bat country Thursday and returned from Forks (Twilight … bats, you get it) with three losses in three games.

The JV squad, which was a joint venture between the 7th and 8th grade squads, had the best result, pushing their hosts to overtime before falling 33-29.

That game featured a breakout performance by Omar Moralez, who threw down eight of his team-high 12 during a fourth-quarter rally.

Dawson Houston tallied seven in support, Aram Leyva banked home five, Aiden Juras and Gavin Knoblich popped for two apiece and Johnathan Partida swished a free-throw to round out Coupeville’s scoring.

Tucker Hall, Jaylen Nitta, Michael Laska, Gage Powers, Ben Smith and Alex Jimenez also saw floor time in that game.

Coupeville’s varsity squads had a little more trouble scoring, racking up a combined 34 points across two losses in which final scores were buried on the side of the road before boarding the bus home.

The 7th grade Wolves were held to a season-low 14, with Jake Mitten leading the way with eight.

Matthew Kelley added five, including a three-ball, while Daniel Olson netted a free throw.

Sage Downes, Dakota Eck and Smith also saw action for the younger varsity squad.

Coupeville’s 8th grade varsity did a little better, tallying 20 points.

Sean Toomey-Stout was top dog with nine, while Koa Davison added six. Mason Grove netted three, all on free-throws, and Jered Brown dropped in a bucket.

Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim, Jean Lund-Olsen, Andrew Martin and Ulrik Wells ventured onto the court in Forks as well.

The Wolves have an immediate turn-around, venturing back on the road Friday to play Blue Heron Middle School in Port Townsend.

That’s a makeup for an earlier set of games that was denied by bad weather and timid ferry captains.

Coupeville has its final home games of the season Monday, Jan. 11 against Stevens (2:45 tip).

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Ulrik Wells barrels to the hoop for two Monday. (John Fisken photo)

Ulrik Wells barrels to the hoop for two Monday. (John Fisken photos)

Sean Toomey-Stout

   Sean Toomey-Stout dropped 10 of his game-high 14 in the second half, as the Wolf 8th graders rallied for a win.

They just needed more people in the stands.

Playing in the big gym for the first time this season, the Coupeville Middle School 8th grade boys’ basketball team got off to a slow start Monday afternoon.

But once they emerged from the halftime locker room and found the number of fans in the high school gym had increased, they picked up their game noticeably.

Sparked by Sean Toomey-Stout and Mason Grove, the Wolves used a 13-5 third-quarter advantage to snatch the lead away from visiting Forks and never looked back, eventually pulling out a narrow 32-30 win.

The victory lifted CMS to 2-0 on the season.

Coupeville started slowly, going five minutes into the game without scoring.

Even with a little better flow, and a couple of buckets from big men Ulrik Wells and Koa Davison, the Wolves still trailed 15-9 at the break.

But the second half was a different story.

Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim got things started with a smooth jumper under pressure from the right side, then Grove splashed home a three-ball off of a fast break.

Forks didn’t immediately fold, hitting their own trey and twice stretching the lead back out to four.

The Wolves wouldn’t be denied, though, closing out the quarter with an 8-2 run, netting their first lead of the game at 22-20 on a sweet bucket from Jered Brown in which he slashed through the paint, avoiding three defenders on his journey.

Brown’s basket was set up by a game-tying bucket and free throw from Toomey-Stout, who paced the Wolves with a game-high 14.

Forks tied the game up three times in the final quarter, but CMS had an answer each time, never relinquishing the lead.

Toomey-Stout put the team on his shoulders, scoring five of Coupeville’s final six points.

That included a free throw to ice the game with three seconds to play, garnering a shout of approval from twin sister Maya.

Seven of the eight Wolves who played scored, with Grove (6), Pacquette-Pilgrim (5), Wells (2), Brown (2), Davison (2) and Omar Moralez (1) providing support for Toomey-Stout.

Jean Lund-Olsen didn’t score, but provided hustle and quick hands on defense.

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