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Reese Wilkinson scored a season-high five points Tuesday in a loss to Sedro-Woolley. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Take away one cold-shooting quarter, and the game was a barn burner.

Unfortunately for the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball team, that one bad stretch doomed them Tuesday night during a rumble with visiting Sedro-Woolley.

The Wolves were outscored 13-1 in the second frame by the Cubs, and that was the difference in a 48-35 loss.

Despite falling to 2-7 with the non-conference defeat, Coupeville’s JV squad held up well playing a rival from a much-larger school.

The 2B Wolves went nearly basket-for-basket with 2A Sedro-Woolley over the opening eight minutes, trailing just 12-10 at the first break.

Coupeville spread its offense out in the early going, with five different players dropping in points and the team closing the quarter on a 7-2 run.

Desi Ramirez-Vasquez kicked off the rally by draining a bank shot off the glass, catching the pass and letting go of her shot in one fluid motion.

After that, big buckets from Madison McMillan and Skylar Parker — the first on a power move in the paint, the second coming off of a steal and breakaway — pulled the Wolves to the edge of a tie.

But then the rim turned brutally unforgiving for Coupeville, which didn’t hit another field goal for almost 12 minutes of on-court action.

A free throw from Brooklyn Thayer was the lone saving grace for the Wolves in the second quarter, and a beautiful three-ball from Parker finally snapped the dry spell deep into the third frame.

Trailing 33-18 headed into the final quarter, CHS suddenly found its rhythm, making the nets jump for 17 points over the final eight minutes of play.

Sedro ultimately held the Wolves at bay, but Katie Marti, McMillan, and Reese Wilkinson kept the visiting coach on the edge of her seat until the final buzzer.

Katie Marti sparked the Wolves on both ends of the floor.

Eight of nine players to see floor time scored for Coupeville, with Thayer (7), Parker (6), Marti (6), and McMillan (6) leading the way.

Wilkinson banked in five points, Kayla Arnold (2), Ramirez-Vasquez (2), and Mia Farris (1) scratched their name in the scoring column, and Bryley Gilbert brought intensity on defense.

The young Wolves have three games left on their schedule, with a Feb. 4 road trip to Friday Harbor next up for Greg Turcott’s squad.

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Lyla Stuurmans and Co. played hard Saturday but fell at Oak Harbor. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Tough start, better finish.

Missing four key players Saturday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team struggled in the first half at Oak Harbor, before finishing strongly.

Unfortunately, the 2B Wolves, who only had seven players hit the floor, couldn’t complete the comeback against their 3A neighbors and fell 54-33.

The non-conference loss, coming in a game thrown together at virtually the last moment, drops Coupeville to 6-5.

The Wolves return to the floor Tuesday, hosting 2A Sedro-Woolley in another game recently added to the schedule.

After that comes a three-game stretch which will determine Coupeville’s playoff fate.

The Wolves travel to Friday Harbor Feb. 4, trek to La Conner Feb. 10, then host Friday Harbor on Senior Night Feb. 12

Two of the three 2B schools in the seven-team Northwest 2B/1B League make the postseason, and powerhouse La Conner (3-0 overall against Coupeville and Friday Harbor) has (almost) clinched the #1 seed.

The Wolves, who are 0-1 in the three-team mini-rumble, sit a half-game up on Friday Harbor (0-2) in the pursuit of the #2 seed.

Whichever of the two schools gets that second slot faces Auburn Adventist in a loser-out district playoff game in Coupeville Feb. 15.

Win there, and you play in the district title game Feb. 17 — also at CHS — with both teams in that game earning trips to the state tourney.

While the next two weeks will determine if Coupeville’s girls can get to the big dance for the first time since 2016, Saturday’s game was a chance to go toe-to-toe with the biggest school on Whidbey Island.

Putting nine girls into the scoring column — led by 13 points from Heidy Hurtado — Oak Harbor jumped on the undermanned Wolves, however.

Up 19-6 by the first break, the Wildcats stretched their lead out to 36-14 at halftime.

Coupeville put together its best run in the third quarter, with freshmen Savina Wells and Lyla Stuurmans knocking down three-balls during a 10-4 surge.

As she reflected on the game, and the strong effort put out by the players she had in uniform, CHS coach Megan Smith was philosophical about things.

“Lots of turnovers in the first half really hurt us,” she said. “Made some adjustments at halftime and came out much stronger in the second half.

“Put up a good fight, but it was just too late into the game to turn it on,” Smith added. “Good learning game though.”

Junior gunner Maddie Georges tied Hurtado for game-high honors, flipping the nets on four treys as she rolled up 13 points of her own.

Savina Wells backed her up with nine points, including a perfect six-for-six performance at the free throw line, while Stuurmans added her three-ball.

Everyone who played for Coupeville scored Saturday, with Nezi Keiper, Izzy Wells, Audrianna Shaw, and Carolyn Lhamon each netting a bucket.

 

No JV game:

Saturday’s Island rivalry matchup was varsity only, with Coupeville’s second squad taking the night off.

With another solid game Saturday, Maddie Georges moves into 55th place on the CHS girls career scoring chart.

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Izzy Wells denies you. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Two schools, four teams, one Island, one photographer.

Wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken stayed busy Saturday, clicking away as Coupeville High School hosted South Whidbey in a pair of girls basketball games.

The Falcons claimed the JV contest, while the Wolves rebounded to come out on top in the varsity tilt, all set to the tune of the click of the camera.

To see everything Fisken snapped, and possibly purchase some glossy mementos for Aunt Ruth and Uncle Roberto down in Boca, pop over to:

 

Coupeville:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2021-2022/GBB-2022-01-22-vs-South-Whidbey/

 

South Whidbey:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/South-Whidbey-HS/GBB-2022-01-22-South-Whidbey-at-Coupeville/

 

Brooklyn Thayer lays claim to the basketball.

Gwen Gustafson drills the bottom out of the net.

Reese Wilkinson loses her defender.

Savina Wells has a present for the hoop.

Heading out of bounds, Falcon ace Hadley Eager saves the play by alertly throwing the ball off of Lyla Stuurmans.

Mia Farris delivers another bucket.

Coach Greg Turcott (red shirt) plots outs strategy for the Wolf JV.

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Izzy Wells banked in 11 points in a big win Saturday afternoon. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville High School Athletic Director Willie Smith provides quality entertainment for his grandkids. (Cory Whitmore photo)

Third quarter for the win!

Busting open a tie ball game Saturday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball squad hit the jets, scorched the net and ran away from visiting South Whidbey.

Closing the third frame on a torrid 15-4 run, with mad bomber Maddie Georges nailing back-to-back three-balls, the Wolves broke open a tense game on their way to a 48-38 win.

Despite playing with just seven players, and that included a JV ace participating in just her second varsity contest, Coupeville finished the week with a pair of wins.

Now 6-4 after the non-conference victory over South Whidbey, the Wolves are off for a week, not returning to action until they travel to Oak Harbor next Saturday, Jan. 29.

That game is a recent addition to the schedule and will lead into a final three-game stretch of league clashes against Friday Harbor, La Conner, then Friday Harbor again.

The hope is to return as many of the missing players as possible back to the lineup next week, but nothing is set in stone during the Age of Coronavirus.

Saturday marked the return of Izzy and Savina Wells, and the sisters gave Coupeville a big burst of energy — plus a combined 18 points, which is pretty dang nice.

A game between two fairly evenly matched teams, Saturday’s rumble went back and forth for the first 17 minutes or so.

The Falcons got on the board first, thanks to some free throws, while Wolf junior Gwen Gustafson sank the first field goal of the game thanks to a picture-perfect jumper on the move.

The first of a trio of three-balls from Georges pinned Coupeville to an early 5-2 lead, while the Wolves closed the opening quarter with a nice series of plays.

Carolyn Lhamon lowered her shoulder, knocked her defender into the cheap seats, and slapped home a layup, before the Wells sisters turned into the Wonder Twins.

Savina Wells came from behind to soundly reject a Falcon shot, kickstarting a breakaway which finished with Izzy Wells beating the crowd to the hoop at the other end.

Things weren’t going to be easy, however, as a narrow 11-9 lead after one became a 23-23 tie at the half.

There were five ties and five lead changes in the second quarter before Lhamon closed the half by crashing right up the middle, dodging two defenders and lofting in a swooping layup as her mom yelled “Way to go, Tiny!”

That came on the heels of well-executed buckets from Izzy Wells — off of a crisp inbounds pass from Lyla Stuurmans — and one on which Stuurmans rumbled down the baseline, daring any Falcon to stop her as she rampaged to the hoop.

Spoiler: they didn’t.

After exchanging points to open the third, the game hung in the balance, and that’s when Coupeville, to a woman, stepped forward and seized all the momentum.

Lhamon popped a jumper which hit the bottom of the net just as the shot clock buzzer wailed, and that set off a game-busting 7-0 run.

While South Whidbey scratched its way back to 32-29 with the clock ticking down in the third, the Wolves closed on another tear — this one 8-0 — to seal the deal.

Savina Wells, ignoring Falcon benchwarmers trying to ruffle her concentration by drumming on the floor, arched in a pair of free throws, then Georges got deadly.

Her first three-ball beat the shot clock buzzer by .00001 of a second, while also banking in off the glass, while her final trey gave her exactly 200 points as a varsity hoops player.

The fourth quarter was a hotly contested affair, but Coupeville held on, pushing the lead out to 45-31 on a three-ball from Savina Wells, before closing things with a defensive gem.

Georges, who led all scorers with 13 points, scrambled back on defense, cut off an incoming Falcon, firmly planted herself and took a knee to the chest as the ref made the offensive charging call with an emphatic fist punch.

That left the fiery Wolf junior with her biggest grin of the game, one matched by CHS coach Megan Smith.

While she takes considerable pride in her defensive work, Georges also reached an offensive milestone by scoring her 200th point.

She’s the 58th Wolf girl to reach that mark in the history of the CHS girls hoops program, which dates back to 1974.

And Georges wasn’t the only Coupeville player to make some history Saturday, as Izzy Wells and Carolyn Lhamon, who each scored 11, passed the 150 and 100-point marks, respectively.

The elder Wells has 158 and counting, while Lhamon has recorded 102 career points.

Savina Wells dropped in seven points, Gustafson rattled the rim for four, Stuurmans added a bucket, and freshman Mia Farris had a busy day, playing both JV and varsity.

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Jada Heaton brought hustle and energy to the floor Saturday afternoon. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Jada Heaton is a wrecking ball.

And that’s a good thing. A very good thing.

When the Coupeville High School freshman is on the floor for the Wolf JV girls basketball squad, she’s always hustling, always working, always poking balls away and scrambling after rebounds.

That kind of effort, which was also shown by her teammates Saturday afternoon, makes a loss easier to take.

Yes, the young Wolves, who were missing several players including leading scorer Madison McMillan, fell 40-17 to visiting South Whidbey, dropping their record to 2-6.

But the non-conference defeat to their next-door neighbors is tempered a bit by the growth shown by the Wolves.

Coupeville may have played its best ball in the game’s final two minutes — punctuated by Skylar Parker draining a gorgeous bank shot off the glass — and that fierce fight in a game long-since decided is a huge positive.

Give the South Whidbey JV credit.

The Falcons played with crisp precision and picked apart the defense with strong passes.

But the Wolves kept on the attack, even after falling behind 16-5 after one quarter of play.

The visitors scored 12 of those 16 points in the paint, lobbing the ball over the defense, while also yanking down more than their fair share of rebounds.

Coupeville held its own in the second quarter, winning the frame 6-5 behind a pair of buckets from sparkplug Katie Marti and a silky-smooth slash up the middle by Mia Farris.

But the basket refused to play nicely with the Wolves after that, as they were held to just free throws in the second half until Parker made her highlight reel-worthy shot.

Heaton and Co. continued to put out extra energy on defense, however, with Brooklyn Thayer coming up big on the boards.

Marti topped the scorebook for the Wolves with five points, with Thayer (4), Farris (3), Kayla Arnold (2), Parker (2), and Heaton (1) also scoring.

The active Wolf roster was rounded out by Edie Bittner and Reese Wilkinson, with the former getting a big roar from her cheering section after coming up strongly on the defensive end of the floor.

Kayla Arnold lets fly.

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