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Posts Tagged ‘Friday Harbor’

Desmond Bell

  Desmond Bell scored nine Wednesday, including a three-pointer that sparked a Wolf rally. (John Fisken photo)

“I’m liking the energy we are getting from the bench. Guys are excited to play and it shows.”

While his squad lost Wednesday in a game that was scheduled at the last second, Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh can see the positives.

“We are beginning to figure some things out,” he said. “Just need to find our stride earlier in games. At points this season, when we click and play well together, as we are capable of, we have been scary.”

The Wolves cut a 21-point deficit to six at one point against visiting Friday Harbor, but also had stretches that were less pleasant.

A slow start and a bad finish combined to send CHS to a 61-39 loss.

The game was a late pick-up for the young Wolves (now 1-5), who had an opening on their schedule since an earlier varsity opponent, Darrington, didn’t have a second team.

Friday Harbor’s two girls’ teams were already scheduled to come to Whidbey, so the Wolverine JV boys hitched a ride with them.

With little time to plan for the game, Coupeville came out cold.

One of the team’s leading scorers, DeAndre Mitchell, got in early foul trouble and spent much of the first half attached to the bench.

In his place, the Wolves got a big boost from freshman Hunter Downes, who “came in and gave us great energy off the bench.”

With Downes on the floor, Coupeville cut a 9-1 deficit to 13-8 by the end of the first quarter.

Hunter Smith nailed a running floater a tick before the buzzer to send his squad into the opening break on a positive note.

Unfortunately, things soured quickly as the Wolves went on a tear of missed layups, repeatedly shooting themselves in the foot after getting solid looks at the basket.

Things worsened as CHS came out of the halftime break with little spark, letting Friday Harbor stretch out its lead past the 20-point barrier.

After a Van Velkinburgh timeout, the Wolves finally seemed to wake up.

Desmond Bell stroked a three-point bomb from the corner to kick things off and Coupeville immediately stole the in-bounds pass on the next play, scoring another quick bucket.

The Wolves cut their deficit back to six, but Friday Harbor survived, nailing a trey to blunt the run.

Down by 10 with 90 seconds to play, Coupeville cleared its bench and the visitors closed the game on a 12-0 run.

Smith paced the Wolves with 14 points, four rebounds, three steals and three assists, while Bell racked up nine points, four boards and two steals.

When he was able to stay on the court, DeAndre Mitchell was effective, pumping in eight points and snatching seven boards.

Dante Mitchell (five points, six boards), Brian Shank (one point, six boards) and Downes (two points, three boards and “countless floor burns”) all chipped in, as well.

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David King (John Fisken photo)

  This photo was shot at a different game, but CHS coach David King wore this expression most of the game Wednesday. (John Fisken photo)

If Saturday was the party, Wednesday was the hangover.

Playing more like a team already on vacation and less like a team returning to the court after pulling off the biggest come-from-behind victory in recent memory, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad laid an egg against visiting Friday Harbor.

All the positive energy from the weekend upset of 2A Sequim oozed out the gym door as the Wolves staggered through a listless 24-19 non-conference loss that dropped their record to 4-3.

It wasn’t so much that they played badly as they just didn’t do anything all that right.

In a game devoid of excitement — Friday Harbor played like a team quite willing to be rolled, only to find the Wolves surprisingly toothless on this night — the victor was the team who played just slightly less uninspired.

Even after suffering through a seven-minute scoreless stretch in the second half, while getting off precious few shots as they routinely made one pass too many and seemed to have no one willing to step up, CHS had a shot at the end.

Putting together what passed for a rally, the Wolves scored five straight midway through the fourth to cut the lead to 19-18.

Julia Myers banked in a bucket off of an in-bounds pass, Kacie Kiel swished a short jumper and Makana Stone slid a free-throw through the twine.

But, after her second charity stripe shot slid around the rim before falling off at the last second — a team-wide issue as Coupeville shot less than 20% from the field in the game — the Wolves offense was done.

Friday Harbor rolled in a desperation three-point bomb, followed by a basket off of an inside cut, to stretch the lead back out and the Wolves answered with … nothing.

Over the final minute — the time where they had played so brilliantly against Sequim — they came up empty.

Back-to-back shots hit nothing but air, never even grazing the rim, and Coupeville coach David King, who was poised to call timeouts after buckets to set up a defensive plan, could do little but softly shake his head.

The sputter at the end matched the flow of the entire game, as the two squads combined for an apathetic performance that was odd considering both teams entered the game with winning records.

The first half started muted and stayed that way, with the teams tied at four after one and Coupeville clinging to a 10-8 lead at the half.

A lone highlight came from Myers, who, showing why she is a defensive dynamo, rose up and rejected a Friday Harbor shot with not one, but both, hands.

The booming no-no-no briefly sent a surge through the crowd and her team, but then, as soon as it surfaced, it was gone.

Neither team could do anything in the third quarter, going three-and-a-half minutes into the half without adding a single point to the scoreboard.

Friday Harbor finally flipped a switch, running off an 8-0 stretch to essentially put the game on ice.

Coupeville didn’t score until the 1:02 mark in the quarter, and then only when McKenzie Bailey had a prayer answered when she banked in a three-pointer from the side.

Stone, who entered the game averaging almost 16 points a game, paced the Wolves with six, while snagging 12 rebounds. She also had three blocks and three steals.

The rest of Coupeville’s limited offensive attack came from Hailey Hammer (4), Bailey (3), Myers (2), Kiel (2) and Monica Vidoni (2).

Myers had eight rebounds while Kiel collected three assists.

The Wolves will get a chance to rediscover their spark Friday, when they travel to Orcas Island for a non-conference game. After that, they are off until Dec. 29, when Vashon Island visits Whidbey.

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Valen Trujillo, seen here last season, hasn't changed her style of play at all. (John Fisken photo)

   Valen Trujillo, seen here last season, hasn’t changed her aggressive, electrifying style of play at all. (John Fisken photo)

If volleyball wins and losses were measured by who has the most floor burns, Coupeville would have been a straight-up winner Thursday night.

With Valen Trujillo and Kacie Kiel leading the charge — diving, sliding and skidding madly in pursuit of every loose ball — the Wolves refused to go down easily against visiting Friday Harbor. But, in the end, they did go down.

Despite fighting off eight match points, six in an epic third set in which it came back for the win, CHS eventually fell 25-10, 25-14, 31-33, 25-18.

The non-conference loss dropped the Wolves to 0-2 on the season.

They now have a full week off before their next match — a road trip to Orcas Island Sept. 18 — which should give the Wolf players time to heal bruised and bashed knees, thighs and elbows.

The biggest body blows came in the third set, when down two sets and trailing 8-3, Coupeville decided to get scrappy.

A picture-perfect tip for a winner from Kiel started the rally, and then big hustle plays from Sydney Autio and Trujillo, withering spikes from Hailey Hammer and precision serving from Miranda Engle started to pile up on one another in a most pleasing fashion.

The set became a battle royal, with 15 ties and stretched well beyond the usual race to 25 points.

Friday Harbor, after trailing 22-17, rallied to take its first match point at 24-23, but the Wolves refused to break. Over the next 10 minutes, they fought off match point six times, the last at 31-30.

Coupeville claimed the final three points, with Kiel serving out the set and punctuating things with a spike that exploded off the court and sent her dad, Steve, into a fit of glee.

His joyful screams of “that’s my baby girl!!” could be heard down around La Conner.

Still riding an emotional high off of the marathon third set, the Wolves jumped out to a 5-3 lead in the fourth, then unraveled a bit.

Unable to overcome a strong net game by a tall Friday Harbor squad, which frequently stuffed Coupeville’s best efforts at putaways, the Wolves let the momentary lead slip away.

But, even at the end, they didn’t go easy.

Junior McKenzie Bailey had three winners in a four-point stretch, elevating and dominating, as Coupeville fought off two more match points before finally running out of steam.

For the match, Hammer collected nine kills and four service aces, while Kiel had 13 digs, four kills and two blocks and Bailey had four kills and one block.

Trujillo had 13 digs, Autio nine assists and Engle two service aces.

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Aaron Wright and the Wolves are postseason bound after all. (John Fisken photo)

Aaron Wright and the Wolves are postseason bound after all. (John Fisken photo)

Playoffs? Yes, we are talking playoffs.

Thanks to a wrinkle in the agreement between District 1 athletic director’s, the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer team is postseason bound after all.

The Wolves (5-8-2) wrap their regular season with Senior Night Monday against King’s, and that was supposed to be it.

With three 1A schools playing in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, the top two teams were guaranteed playoff spots, and Coupeville was edged out for those berths by South Whidbey and King’s.

BUT … Friday Harbor WOULD have been the #6 seed out of the Northwest Conference, only the Wolves went 1-0-1 against them in non-conference play.

And, the way the rules are written, CHS then gets to steal away Friday Harbor’s playoff berth.

So, the Wolves live on and will travel to Mount Baker Wednesday, May 7 (4 PM kickoff) to face off with the NWC’s #1 squad.

“It’s a great opportunity for us,” said CHS coach Kyle Nelson. “From everything I can find out about Mount Baker, we should match up well with them.”

It’s a loser-out game and if Coupeville wins, they advance on to play May 9 and possibly May 10.

Four of the eight teams from districts will advance on to tri-districts.

A playoff bracket can be found here (Wolves will be NWC #6):

http://www.cascadeathletics.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=2&page=1&school=0&sport=9&tournament_id=1254

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Allie Hanigan is a crisp 5-2 as Coupeville's #1 single splayer this season. (John Fisken photo)

  Allie Hanigan is a crisp 5-2 as Coupeville’s #1 singles player this season. (John Fisken photo)

The rivalry still rages.

Even as more Cascade Conference foes picked up tennis the last two seasons, Coupeville’s most enduring battle has been with non-conference opponent Friday Harbor.

The two schools have gone back and forth for years, and nothing looks like that is going to change anytime soon.

Monday, it was the host Wolverines time to pull out a barn-burner, nipping Coupeville 3-2 to avenge a loss on Whidbey back in March.

Now 3-4 on the season, CHS has a busy week ahead of it, weather permitting, as the Wolves host South Whidbey Tuesday, travel to Granite Falls Wednesday, then host Lakewood Thursday.

Complete Monday results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Allie Hanigan beat Yasmin Sarah 6-1, 1-6, 10-7

“It was a weird match, to say the least,” said CHS coach Ken Stange. “I don’t quite know what happened to Allie in the second set, but she was able to pull out the third set tiebreaker.

“It’s not easy coming back from losing a 6-1 set,” he added. “Allie is my toughest player, and she never gives in.”

It was the third straight win for Hanigan (5-2 on the year), who earned Player of the Match honors.

2nd Singles — Sydney Autio lost to Roxanne Bormann 6-1, 6-0

Autio, who has been playing doubles after missing the first chunk of the season with an injury, stepped in for Jacki Ginnings, who was ill.

Sydney is developing a singles game,” Stange said. “She could be a formidable opponent next season. She has all the basic tools in her tennis toolbox. We just have to finish putting it all together.”

1st Doubles — Sydney Aparicio/Samantha Martin lost to Maddy Marinkovich/Ashton Timmons 6-1, 7-5

“Tough match for my 1’s,” Stange said. “Considering that neither had played a regular season varsity match before the start of this season, they are both developing improved games.”

2nd Doubles — Wynter Thorne/McKenzie Bailey lost to Meagan Anderson/Kendall Calvert 6-3, 6-3

3rd Doubles — Micky LeVine/Valen Trujillo beat Sophie Dillery/Summer Fox 6-1, 5-1 (match called a game short due to ferry)

“This was a fun little match,” Stange said. “Valen and Micky are a pair of Energizer bunnies, so to speak.

“They were flying around the court, chasing down loose balls. The other team didn’t even know what hit them!”

JV:

4th Doubles — Ana Luvera/Ivy Luvera beat Samantha Hopkins/Morgan Timmons 6-4

5th Doubles — Haleigh Deasy/Jazmine Franklin beat Zoe Kromer/Sydney Wilson 6-1

6th Doubles — Bree Daigneault/McKenzie Bailey (CHS) beat Crystal Gao/Isabel Brown 6-0

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