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Posts Tagged ‘free throws’

Brittany Powers was one of several Wolves who hit huge fourth-quarter shots Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Brittany Powers was one of several Wolves who hit huge fourth-quarter shots Tuesday night. (John Fisken photo)

Guts.

The Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad does not back down, does not give in, does not believe it will lose.

And that’s why the Wolves won again Tuesday night.

Because, one player after another stepped into the spotlight, seized their moment and sent their family and friends home riding a wave of euphoria.

Scoring the game’s final six points, the Wolves upended visiting Klahowya 29-27 to remain undefeated in Olympic League play.

They sit at 4-0 (6-0 if you give them forfeits for the two times league foes cancelled due to lack of players) and 8-3 overall.

Playing at home for the first time in 45 days, the young Wolves saved their best for the finale.

Trailing 23-21 coming into the fourth, they got one high-pressure play after another, with every player on the floor stepping up at one point or another.

Brittany Powers got things started when she swished a long jumper from the left side to knot things back up, before Klahowya scored back-to-back buckets to take its biggest lead of the night.

Little did the Eagles know they would never score again.

Sarah Wright pulled Coupeville within a bucket, backing her foe down in the paint before whirling to drop in a softly-banked shot off the glass, then Ema Smith sacrificed her body for the good of the team.

Charging from one end of the court to the other, in a mad attempt to get ahead of the ball-handler, Smith somehow got between the basket and the hard-charging Eagle.

Planting herself squarely in the oncoming path of a runaway freight train, she held her ground and got promptly run over.

A little dazed and confused, Smith happily peeled herself off the hardwood as the ref emphatically whistled an offensive foul on Klahowya, giving CHS the ball and a chance to tie with the clock ticking under a minute.

The Wolves took advantage, beating the Eagle press and putting the ball in Ashlie Shank’s hands.

Playing on the day her dad (Coupeville Superintendent Dr. Jim Shank) was celebrating his birthday, the youngest member of the clan drilled a soft jumper to knot things back up at 27-27.

Re-enter Smith, who got in the middle of a scramble for a loose ball — having been the one to knock the ball free in the first place — and recovered it while being blasted to the floor again.

Bouncing down court, the ever-giddy one grabbed the ball from the ref, and with no fanfare or wasted time, swished both of her free throws to give the Wolves a lead they would not relinquish.

Coupeville had started the game strongly, with Maya Toomey-Stout draining an eye-popping three-ball from the corner that she banked off the glass.

With Shank on a rampage — she dropped six of her team-high nine in the opening quarter — the Wolves ran to an early lead, then built on it later with strong inside play.

Nicole Lester dropped in a pair of buckets to fuel an 8-0 run in the second quarter, the first coming off of a rebound, the second on a picture-perfect play where she relentlessly backed down her defender in the paint.

The Wolves spread out their scoring, with seven of 11 players scratching their names in the scoring column.

Shank had four steals to go with her nine points, while Toomey-Stout rattled home five points and Lester and Wright banked in four apiece.

Powers (3), Ema Smith (2) and Avalon Renninger (2) rounded out the scoring, while Scout Smith ran the point and the three-headed beast of Maddy Hilkey, Tia Wurzrainer and Emma Mathusek harassed the Eagles on defense.

Lester led the Wolves on the boards, collecting seven caroms.

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Gavin Knoblich (John Fisken photo)

   Gavin Knoblich (44) and Ulrik Wells (5), seen here in an earlier game, both put in strong efforts on the boards Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

If you didn’t show up early Friday, you missed the show.

By the time Coupeville and visiting Chimacum were done playing their JV boys’ basketball game, we saw a little bit of everything.

A missing ref, frequent technical fouls, an epic number of missed free throws, a triumphant return from the injured list by CHS big man Koa Davison, and, unfortunately, a close loss for the Wolves.

Clanking 19 shots from the charity stripe (it shot just 12 of 31), Coupeville let one slip away, falling 50-43 to the chippy Cowboys.

Before they did, the Wolves got to witness the two-man ref crew (official #3 showed up an hour late) whistle three technical fouls, all for fairly unexpected reasons.

Chimacum got two — the first for a player who forget to remove studs from his ears before taking the court, the second for delay of game for repeatedly rolling the ball away from Coupeville and the refs after made baskets.

The Wolves were teed up when a defender made inadvertent, and incidental, contact with a Cowboy inbounding the ball.

Why a warning wasn’t issued before jumping to awarding Chimacum free throws remains a good question, and one the refs had no desire to answer.

When the two squads were allowed to actually play, it was a tightly-contested game, with neither side holding more than a two-point lead until late in the third.

With Davison back in action and dominating in the paint, Coupeville had opportunity to break things open, but could not buy a break at the free throw line.

That enabled Chimacum to pull away late, hitting back-to-back three-balls to stretch the lead out to nine at 44-35.

The Wolves responded, however, getting points from three different players during an 8-2 surge that pulled them back within a three-ball with 45 seconds to play.

Mason Grove kicked off the late run, burying a trey from the right side, before Jered Brown slid a pair of free throws through the twines.

Another freebie from Davison and a pull-up jumper in traffic off of Brown’s fingertips cut the lead to 46-43, but Chimacum held on, dropping in two final buckets to stretch the final deficit out to seven.

Davison, back after having leg issues, led the way with 13, while Sean Toomey-Stout hit a variety of shots to collect 10.

Grove (9), Brown (8), Gavin Knoblich (2) and Ulrik Wells (1) rounded out the scoring, while, for the first time in a long time, the Wolf bench was packed.

Aiden Juras, Nikolai Lyngra, Elliott Johnson, Tucker Hall and Kyle Rockwell all saw floor time, with Rockwell being a genuine beast on the boards.

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Ulrik Wells dropped in four points Tuesday to help power the Coupeville JV to a win at Concrete. (John Fisken photo)

   Ulrik Wells dropped in four points Tuesday to help power the Coupeville JV to a win at Concrete. (John Fisken photo)

Never skipped a beat.

Playing without three of their four tallest players Tuesday, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad turned to the three-ball and knocked off host Concrete 40-36.

The win, which snaps a brief two-game skid, lifts the Wolves to 5-4 headed into Christmas break.

Coupeville played without big men Kyle Rockwell, Koa Davison and Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim, but sharpshooter Mason Grove picked up the offensive slack.

Raining down 17 points, including four treys, he kept the Wolves alive early, then put them over the top later.

Concrete actually led 16-11 after the first quarter, with Grove (6) and Sean Toomey-Stout (5) accounting for all the CHS points.

The second quarter saw an immediate change, as the Wolves clamped down on defense, using a 12-2 surge to snatch the lead away for good.

Jered Brown hit a pair of shots, but it was Grove who wielded the biggest dagger, rolling up another eight points with treys #3 and #4 and a pair of free throws.

From there, Coupeville coasted home for the win, icing the game with strong work at the free-throw stripe.

“It wasn’t pretty, but we got the job done,” said CHS coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh. “Got good minutes from Tucker Hall, Nikolai Lyngra, Dawson Houston and Elliott Johnson.”

Toomey-Stout hit for nine to back up Grove’s 17, while Brown knocked down seven.

Ulrik Wells, Coupeville’s only active big man, powered inside for four and Jean Lund-Olsen came up with all three of his points down the stretch.

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Wynter Thorne (John Fisken photo)

   Wynter Thorne knocked down 26 straight shots two seasons ago, winning Coupeville’s last free throw shooting contest. (John Fisken photo)

Who’s the new Wynter Thorne?

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad is reviving its free throw shoot-a-thon fundraiser, and all the current Wolves are chasing her legacy.

In the event, which runs the week starting Dec. 26, each Wolf player, varsity and JV, will shoot 100 free throws.

Players are busy hitting up family, friends, fans and strangers alike, seeking either a flat donation or a pledge to pay a certain amount per made shot.

The money raised helps replenish team funds, allowing for purchase of new equipment and travel to events like the Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic.

With its focus on improving free throw shooting, always a key component to a successful hoops squad, it’s also a teaching tool hidden inside a fun team-wide competition.

The last time the Wolves held this fundraiser was two seasons back.

Thorne, then a senior, torched the nets, hitting 26 consecutive shots at one point.

She finished at 78-100, edging Kacie Kiel (76) and Makana Stone (75) for the title.

If you’re interested in donating or pledging and don’t have access to a current player, you can do so by reaching out to CHS coach David King at dking@coupeville.k12.wa.us.

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Clockwise from top left are Sarah (Mouw) Samuels, Brad Sherman, Bob Rea and Brad Miller.

   Clockwise from top left are Sarah (Mouw) Samuels, Brad Sherman, Bob Rea and Brad Miller.

There have been talented athletes and big moments in the history of Central Whidbey sports, but few reached the levels achieved by those who make up the 55th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Two athletes who ruled over multiple sports, and two moments when nothing short of perfection was achieved, make up today’s honorees.

So welcome into these hallowed digital walls Sarah (Mouw) Samuels, Brad Miller, the afternoon Bob Rea whiffed 27 batters in one game and the night the Wolves boys’ basketball squad made all 22 of its free throw attempts.

After this, you’ll find them atop the blog, living under the Legends tab with their brethren.

We’re kicking things off with Rea, who is already in the Hall as an athlete.

Today, he goes in for the day in 1964 when he set a Coupeville High School baseball record which has remained untouched for 50+ years.

Facing off with Darrington on its home field, Rea went the distance in a wild 16-inning affair, setting down 27 Loggers before collapsing back onto the school bus with a 2-1 victory under his belt.

Ray Cook, who notched 21 K’s in a 1976 game, seems to be the only other Wolf to have topped the 20-strikeout mark in a game, and if you let a modern-day pitcher throw 16 innings, the coach would probably be fired for “abuse.”

So, I’m pretty sure Rea’s marks may stay untouched for another 52 years.

While his performance was largely a one-man show (though he still needed his teammates to score, eventually), our second moment enshrined in the Hall today was a true team effort.

In the 20 years Randy King coached boys hoops at CHS (1991-2011), he had three nights when his team was flawless at the charity stripe.

One team was 2-2, another 4-4 and then, on Jan. 3, 2003, four Wolves combined to go 22-22 at a time when Coupeville needed every single point.

Trailing host Friday Harbor by six entering the fourth, the Wolves ripped off 27 points, 15 on free throws, to rally for a 63-58 win.

Casey Clark led the way, going 11-11 (the only player to hit double digits in made free throws in a single game during King’s tenure), with eight of those coming down the stretch.

Nearly matching him was Brad Sherman, who hit all seven free throws he attempted in the fourth.

Mike Bagby and Brian Fakkema had each tickled the twines for two freebies apiece earlier in the game to wrap up the best night at the line in modern Wolf history.

Afterwards, in typical understated King fashion, his response to the papers was simply “That’s a pretty good performance.”

Indeed.

Our third inductee, Miller, was a master of the big moment, a rampaging beast in three sports.

Big and bald (he often sported a shaved head when I was covering his exploits), the 1995 CHS grad scored 526 points on the hardwood, while hauling down a considerable number of rebounds.

He was the team’s leading scorer as a junior, number two as a senior and, along with fellow Hall o’ Famer Gabe McMurray, formed one of the most potent one-two combos the Wolves have ever had.

Put him on the baseball diamond and he was one of the few modern-era players capable of making a run at Rea and Cook as a strikeout fiend.

Miller whiffed 19, 18 and 14 in different games, while also leading the team at the plate, where he topped the Wolves in hits as both a junior and senior.

Samuels had a lot less time at CHS than any of her fellow inductees, as she and her family moved to Whidbey from Iowa in 2001, just in time to start her senior year.

That year, though, she put together a run that stands with anyone to ever wear the red and black.

A First-Team All-League pick in all three of her sports (volleyball, basketball, softball), she was a Northwest League Co-MVP in softball and helped carry all three of her squads to state.

Volleyball won a league title (the last time Wolf spikers have done that), finished second at tri-districts, then made a run at state, while basketball (6th in 1A) and softball (3rd in 1A) achieved the best results in program history.

With Samuels meshing her considerable skill-set with classmates Ashley (Ellsworth-Bagby) Heilig and Tracy (Taylor) Corona, the hoops squad rolled to two straight wins to open the state tourney.

While they hit a roadblock after that, the 2001-2002 squad remains the only Wolf hoops team to reach the state semifinals.

As good as she was in volleyball and basketball, Samuels saved her best for last.

On the softball diamond, she joined a program which was making the jump from slow-pitch to fast-pitch and she promptly put together the best individual season ever achieved by a Wolf slugger, before or since.

Samuels led CHS in batting, doubles, triples, home runs and RBIs, while going 22-2 on the mound for a team that finished 24-3.

After years of lackluster performances, the Wolf softballers won the only league title in program history, then swept to four wins in five games at state, falling only to nine-time state champ Adna.

Now that’s domination.

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