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Wolves Tenley Stuurmans (left), Haylee Armstrong (center), and Capri Anter dream of their own state tourney success. (Photo courtesy Sarah Stuurmans)

Big stage, big performance.

The Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team played in front of its largest crowd of the season Saturday night, by a lot, and rose to the occasion.

With the gym crammed for the 50th anniversary of the CHS hoops program, Kassie O’Neil’s squad heard a lot of cheers, and probably missed some nice comments from former coaches in the crowd.

And while they lost 41-37 to a visiting South Whidbey squad led by a 21-point performance from freshman Jada Balora, the Wolves delivered their best show of the season.

“They played so well tonight,” O’Neil said. “They’re getting better each game and it’s been such a joy to watch them grow into a cohesive team.”

While South Whidbey has three freshmen and seven sophomores on its JV, Coupeville counters with three freshmen and six 8th graders.

Though considerably younger than their foe, the Wolves, now 1-4 after the non-conference loss, came out strong as a steady stream of fans poured into the gym.

Fab frosh Haylee Armstrong had the hot hand early, banking in back-to-back rebounds for quick buckets as CHS built an 11-7 lead after one quarter of play.

Things slowed a bit for the Wolves in the second quarter, as Balora, who somehow is NOT a varsity swing player (which boggles the mind, frankly) pumped in 12 points during a 17-4 Falcon run.

Trailing 24-15 at the half, Coupeville regrouped in the second half, with 8th grader Tenley Stuurmans rising to the moment, draining one sweet jumper after another.

Lyla’s lil’ sis poured in 14 of her team-high 16 after the break, as the Wolves won the third and fourth 12-10 and 10-7 respectively.

CHS got all the way back, knotting up the game at 34-34 midway through the fourth, but ultimately couldn’t stop Balora and friends on this night.

Still, the rabidly pro-Coupeville crowd went wild for Stuurmans knocking down a three-ball, then slicing to the hoop for two well-executed buckets.

Equally enthralling to the fans, many of them seeing this pack of Wolves play for the first time, was the hustle and willingness to dive for loose balls demonstrated by the young guns.

Armstrong finished with nine to back up Stuurmans and her 16, while Bryley Gilbert popped for five, including a three-ball of her own.

Chelsi Stevens (2), Capri Anter (2), Lexis Drake (2), and Adie Maynes (1) also scored, with Drake hitting a particularly picture-perfect jumper.

8th graders Ari Cunningham, Taylor Marrs, and Ava Lucero rounded out the rotation on a night when the next generation of Wolf hoops stars shone brightly in front of their predecessors.

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Future Miriam’s Espresso barista supreme Stephanie (Bonacci) Blas was once a (really nice) terror on the hardwood. (Photos courtesy Sherry Bonacci)

Anniversaries bring out the scrapbooks and long-stored boxes of photos.

As Coupeville High School prepares to celebrate 50 years of girls’ basketball Saturday night, many former players and coaches are going down memory lane.

The pics above and below capture a wide variety of hoops stars, from the ’00s back to the ’80s.

Aimee (Messner) Bishop gets a good hold on Cheryl (Pangburn) Rafert back in the day.

This ferry actually runs on schedule.

CHS coach Bob Barker keeps a watchful eye on his ballhawks.

Longtime coach, AD, and administrator Phyllis Textor (blue shirt) is among those expected to return to their old stomping grounds Saturday night.

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When Katie Marti, the furious fireball of her generation, takes the floor Saturday night, she will not walk alone.

Four other fellow juniors are expected to start alongside her as Coupeville clashes with South Whidbey in a non-conference girls’ basketball game.

Mia Farris, Jada Heaton, Madison McMillan, and Lyla “The Franchise” Stuurmans are all bright, talented young women, as tightknit a group as I have seen come through the Wolf program.

But Marti, maybe even more than the other four in that group, or the other members of the current CHS varsity and JV teams, carries history with her.

When she crashes through the paint, when she blows up the defense and runs away, laughing to herself at the beautiful destruction left behind, she adds another link in the chain.

Her mom, Christi Messner, was a hardwood scrapper, and will be on the mic Saturday as Coupeville girls’ basketball celebrates its 50th anniversary.

Katie’s cousin, Breeanna Messner, was a legit big-timer with the ball in her hands, while aunts Aimee (Messner) Bishop, Rose Marti, and the late Judy Marti also did the uniform proud.

As Saturday’s celebration unfolds, Aunt Judy, along with Marlene Grasser, Novi Barron, Carol (Estes) Thacker, Deb Whittaker, Val Arnold, and others no longer with us, will not be forgotten.

Their exploits will be remembered, their accomplishments hailed, their place in history forever etched in our minds and hearts.

I left the Whidbey News-Times months before Novi arrived in the CHS gym, and never saw her play as I vanished into the world of mussel rafts, and then, thank the heavens, video stores.

But every time current CHS coach Megan (Smith) Richter talks about what it was like as a young girl to see Novi take complete command of the floor, she is alive for me.

It is a similar feeling when former girls’ hoops guru/current CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith looks back on the time he had with her.

He may be slick, but there’s a well of emotion under the goodtime grin, and it’s built on countless hours in the gym, of helping to guide blossoming stars and watching them become a team.

Of being something more than just themselves, of being something which lives forever.

Hearing that Novi’s siblings will be there Saturday, to honor their sister, and to hear what she meant to others, is why we do these anniversary events.

Marie (Bagby) Grasser, the first star girl’s player in school history, is expected to stand for her lil’ sis, as are a literal ton of her former teammates.

And with Judy Marti? How many bodies can the CHS gym hold, because when the Marti clan arrives in full force, we may need extra bleachers.

Saturday’s event is a celebration, a tribute to those who overcame morons who told them their uteruses would fall out if they ran past halfcourt, who shipped them off to unheated gyms to practice in the early days.

We remember those who came before us, who built the program, like Arnold, the first CHS varsity coach, and Bill Evans, her JV coach, who is expected to be there tonight.

We support those who are sacrificing time away from their Instagrams and Be Reals to collect floor burns in the here and now.

And we lay the path for the little girls wearing shorts that go down to their shoes as they take their first dribbles, because they will keep this thing going.

Basketball is not life, maybe, but it is the best parts.

It is dedication, hard work, joy, pain, accomplishment, and sometimes sheer brilliance all wrapped into a series of moments which will stay with you forever.

No matter how your hoops life played out, as an athlete, coach, support staff member, or fan, I hope that you are in that gym tonight.

You will be glad you made the choice to say yes.

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The Wolves prepare to pounce. (Michelle Armstrong photo)

They got the gang back together.

A game after loaning out Haylee Armstrong and Bryley Gilbert to help Orcas Island field a full team, the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team was back at full force Friday night.

And with 11 players in uniform, the very-young Wolves, who have six 8th graders on the roster, gave host Friday Harbor a serious run for its money.

Getting stronger and stronger as the game unfolded, the CHS hardwood warriors almost caught their rival at the end before falling 36-32.

The loss leaves Coupeville at 0-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 1-3 overall heading into a home game Saturday against South Whidbey.

With the Falcons unable to field full boys’ teams for this weekend, the JV girls get to play in the main gym at 5:15 PM, with the varsity following at 7:00.

The 50th anniversary of the Wolf hoops program will be celebrated at halftime of the varsity game.

Kassie O’Neil’s JV players, many of whom will one day play at the upper level, hung tough during a low-scoring first quarter Friday, heading to the break down just 6-4.

While a bump in the second frame stretched the deficit out to 18-9, the Wolves hacked away at the lead after halftime.

Coupeville trimmed the margin down to 24-17 through three quarters, then went off for almost half of their points while winning the fourth 15-12.

Armstrong paced the Wolves, ringing up eight of her team-high 14 points in the final minutes, while Taylor Marrs and Gilbert each chipped in with four.

Tenley Stuurmans (3), Adie Maynes (3), Lexis Drake (2), and Brynn Parker (2) also tallied points, with Capri Anter, Ava Lucero, Chelsi Stevens, and Ari Cunningham rounding out the rotation.

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Katie Marti (second from left) scored a team-high 13 points Friday night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They started so hot and ended so cold.

The Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad scorched host Friday Harbor for 15 first-quarter points Friday night, then struggled to scratch out 10 more the rest of the way.

Going six-plus minutes without scoring in the second, third, and fourth quarters, the Wolves eventually frittered away an 11-point lead, falling 30-25 in their conference opener.

The loss drops Coupeville to 2-3 overall, 0-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, and stings badly as it comes against one of the other two 2B schools in the seven-team conference.

That could have a major impact in the chase for a playoff berth.

For now, the Wolves get an immediate chance to bounce back, when they host South Whidbey in a non-conference clash Saturday.

JV tips at 5:15, varsity at 7:00, and the program’s 50th anniversary will be celebrated at halftime of the second contest.

Friday’s rumble started like a blowout, with everything going Coupeville’s way.

The Wolves claimed the lead at 4-2 on a bucket in the paint from Jada Heaton and would hold the advantage for almost the entire game.

Five different CHS players hit a field goal in the game’s opening frame, with Heaton coming back around to slap home a rebound with just two ticks left on the clock.

Up 15-6 at the first break, the Wolves added a quick pullup jumper from Katie Marti to open the second quarter, and then things turned bleak.

Coupeville only connected on three field goals, and no free throws, across the game’s final 23 minutes-plus.

Not that Friday Harbor came roaring back exactly, as the Wolverines were madly clanking shots left and right as well.

But slowly, painfully, the host Wolverines crawled back into the game.

Friday Harbor trimmed the lead to 17-10 at the half, then 22-20 through three quarters.

Mia Farris made off with a steal and slashed end-to-end for a breakaway bucket to open the third — snapping her team’s long dry spell — but then CHS went another six minutes-plus with no points.

With the lead slashed to 19-18, Marti knocked down a three-ball, then she repeated the feat to open the fourth, pushing her squad ahead 25-20.

And then Coupeville simply stopped scoring. Again.

Friday Harbor tied the game at 25-25 with a hair over three minutes to play, forcing the first stalemate since way back at 2-2.

From there, a steal, a lob inside for a layup, and one free throw after Coupeville was forced to foul five times in 12 seconds to stop the clock, set the final margin.

Wolf coach Megan Richter was philosophical afterwards.

“It’s a learning curve. We will get there,” she said.

“The nice thing is we are improving every game and that’s all a coach can ask for right now.”

Marti accounted for more than half of her team’s scoring, rattling the rims for a season-high 13, which pushes her one point away from joining the 100-point club.

Heaton and Farris added four apiece, Skylar Parker and Lyla Stuurmans each knocked down a bucket to round out the scoring, and Madison McMillan and Teagan Calkins were ferocious on the boards.

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