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Savina Wells became the first 8th grade girl to score in a CHS varsity basketball game Thursday, and ended the night as her team’s top scorer. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

No fans, but plenty of history.

Savina Wells, playing alongside big sis Izzy, achieved at least three things Thursday no Coupeville 8th grade girl has ever done on a basketball court.

Playing a key role as the Wolf hoops squad fell 41-38 to visiting Orcas Island in an empty-gym thriller, the younger Wells became the 231st Wolf girl to score in a CHS varsity basketball game since the program launched in 1974.

More importantly in terms of history, she became the first to do so while still in middle school, in a game in which she both started and led her team in scoring with eight points.

Which already puts Savina Wells, active middle schooler, in an eight-way tie for #190 on the CHS girls varsity career scoring chart.

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves, as chart topper Brianne King — with 1,549 career points — is still feeling pretty comfortable atop her perch tonight.

In between the history, Thursday’s rumble with Orcas Island, which was played with no fans per a request from the visitors, was a back-and-forth affair in which Coupeville’s young players almost pulled off a great win.

Of the nine Wolves to see the floor, four were sophomores, four were juniors, and Savina Wells … well, you heard.

Coupeville was missing two of its veterans, with juniors Anya Leavell and Ja’Kenya Hoskins sidelined, but it got big efforts from everyone in uniform.

“We’re very young, but have great potential,” said Wolf coach Scott Fox. “We’ll have some growing pains and we’re learning as we go. A few breaks here and there and we get the win today.

“I’m very proud of the kid’s effort,” he added. “Izzy was a monster on the boards, and Audri (Shaw) and Maddie (Georges) got our defense really going.”

Trailing by seven headed into the fourth quarter, the Wolves put some snap into their game, and came within one semi-questionable call of having a chance to win the game at the buzzer.

Georges drilled a three-ball to open the quarter, off of a rebound and feed from fellow sophomore Gwen Gustafson, only to see Orcas respond with back-to-back buckets.

Shrugging it off, the Wolves closed with a 10-3 run in which five different players scored for Coupeville.

Savina Wells got it started, taking the ball off a press break and swooping to the hoop for a running layup.

Big sis Izzy slapped home a second-chance bucket off of an offensive rebound, followed by a sweet lil’ jumper in traffic from Kylie Van Velkinburgh, and suddenly Orcas was sweating.

Shaw bolted up the middle, sucked the defense to her, then sliced around a defender and scooped the ball high off the glass, while Carolyn Lhamon, who was a two-way warrior all day, stepped up and drilled the bottom out of the net.

Orcas had answers, though, and a pull-up jumper with 30 ticks to play kept them up one.

Coming hard on defense, all five Wolves crashing, arms flying every which way, Coupeville got the break it needed, then had it yanked away.

The ball popped loose in the middle of a mad scrum, with Izzy Wells gaining control.

But, as she did, a pile of players plowed into her body, causing her to lurch maybe a half of a step.

Instead of calling a foul, or letting the play run its natural course, the refs of the day opted to call a traveling violation on Coupeville.

Which would have elicited some howls of protest if there were fans in the stands.

I considered throwing my notebook at the nearest ref, but am trying to pick on refs less these days and opted not to.

But I thought about it.

Back on the floor, the possibly (I said possibly!) unfair exchange of possession allowed Orcas to dribble away a few seconds before drawing a foul.

Two free throws later — always easier to shoot when the visiting team isn’t facing a wall of sound from hyped-up local fans — CHS needed a three-ball to force overtime, and had to start on its own end-line with just two seconds left.

If the Wolves had hit that shot, this story would have long ago gone in a different direction. Which it didn’t.

But take nothing away from Coupeville, which may be 0-2, but is primed for future success.

The Wolves showed they can dominate, closing the second quarter on a 13-3 run to take a 19-14 lead into the halftime break.

That streak featured six different CHS players tallying a point or better, with Savina Wells leading the way with a pair of impressive buckets.

On the first, she took the ball, rolled hard to her left and her defender crumbled as she blew by her.

On the second, reacting like a free safety, Wells suddenly shot forward, picked off a pass in mid-air, then beat the pack to the hoop at the other end, softly kissing the ball off the glass for an elegant bucket.

The other Wolf young guns were clickin’ as well, with Gustafson slicing ‘n dicing her defender on a quick move in the paint, while Georges savagely stole a ball, then flipped a note-perfect pass to a streaking Shaw for a layup.

The third quarter was a bit rough for Coupeville, but the Wolves did have one stellar play, on which a Georges pass hit Lhamon’s fingertips, and was redirected to Izzy Wells for a bucket.

Seven of the nine Wolves to play scored, with Savina Wells (8), Lhamon (7), Georges (7), Shaw (6), and Izzy Wells (6) leading the way.

With her performance against Orcas, Georges moves within four points of becoming the 101st Wolf girl to join the 100-point scoring club.

Van Velkinburgh and Gustafson rounded out the scoring attack, with a bucket apiece, Ryanne Knoblich and Morgan Stevens played scrappy defense, and 8th grader Lyla Stuurmans rocked the joint while cheering on her teammates.

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Coupeville 8th grader Madison McMillan, playing on the high school JV team, led her squad in scoring in their season opener. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Say hello to the next generation, early.

Unlike a lot of other Northwest 2B/1B League schools, Coupeville High School is fielding two girls basketball squads this season.

With program numbers down, the Wolves salvaged their JV team by allowing 8th graders to play high school ball, and more than half the girls in uniform Thursday were middle school students by day, high school hoops hotshots by night.

And the (truly) young guns held up well, accounting for two-thirds of their team’s points in a closer-than-it-sounds 35-24 loss to visiting Orcas Island.

Coupeville was within a point through the first two quarters, and trailed by just three heading into the fourth, but that final frame stung, with the older Vikings closing on a 12-4 tear.

Coaching her team in a game for the first time in 15 months, Wolf JV hoops guru Megan Smith was realistic with her expectations, and pleased with much of what she saw.

“We had some really good moments of greatness and some of not so much,” she said. “We are super young with not a lot of players that have experience, and that’s okay, we just have some more work to do is all.

“It was good to see them out on the court and actually playing the game!”

With true high schooler Jessenia Camarena leading the way in the early going, the Wolves trailed just 8-7 after one quarter and 16-15 at the halftime break.

Masks in place and no fans in the gym, per Orcas School District request, Coupeville hung tough, exiting the third quarter down just 23-20.

Madison McMillan paced the Wolves with a team-high eight points in her high school hoops debut, while Camarena banged home seven, Lyla Stuurmans knocked down six, Katie Marti flipped in a bucket, and Morgan Stevens swished a free throw.

McMillan, Stuurmans, and Marti, along with fellow Wolf hoopsters Pamela Morrell, Bryley Gilbert, and Kassidy Upchurch, are all 8th graders.

Also seeing floor time for Smith’s squad were Reese Wilkinson, Skylar Parker, and Desi Ramirez.

With Orcas Island and Friday Harbor the only other NWL teams fielding a girls JV squad this season, Coupeville’s second team will play just four games, while other Wolf teams get 10-12 contests.

One of those comes up quick, however, as CHS travels to Friday Harbor this Saturday.

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Coupeville sophomore Gwen Gustafson scored her first varsity point Tuesday night. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a tough way to kick off a new season.

With a very young roster, including two middle school-aged players, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball squad had trouble keeping up with one of the dominant hoops programs in its new league.

Mount Vernon Christian has played 23 games at the state tourney over the past seven seasons, bringing home top-six banners four times.

So it wasn’t too much of a surprise that the Hurricanes battered the Wolves Tuesday night in both team’s season openers, winning 54-14 on their home floor.

For second-year CHS coach Scott Fox, who lost five of his top seven scorers from a season ago, it was a rough, but maybe necessary learning lesson.

“It wasn’t pretty, but we now know the areas to improve on,” he said.

“There’s a reason MVC has gone to the state tournament often and it starts with their aggression,” Fox added. “We showed our youth tonight and there were times two 8th graders were in the lineup.”

Those CMS students, Lyla Stuurmans and Savina Wells, became the first middle school athletes to play in a CHS varsity girls basketball game, and they represent a bright future for Wolf hoops — just one which will have to learn under fire.

One of the team’s few returning veterans, junior Audrianna Shaw, led Coupeville on opening night, pounding away for a team-high eight points.

Audri was our bright spot,” Fox said.

She was joined in the scoring column by Maddie Georges, who knocked down three points, Izzy Wells, who banked in a bucket, and Gwen Gustafson, who drained a free throw.

Gustafson, making her varsity hoops debut, becomes the 230th Wolf girl to score since the program began in 1974, and the second in her immediate family.

Big sis Amanda Fabrizi, a 2014 grad, is #36 on the all-time CHS girls scoring chart, having scorched the nets for 299 points in her prep career.

Ja’Kenya Hoskins

Tuesday’s game also marked the return of Ja’Kenya Hoskins.

After playing on varsity as a freshman, she missed her entire sophomore campaign thanks to a busted ankle suffered during a school dodgeball tourney.

Hoskins, an absolute ray of sunshine in the world, even if she’s too young to know what Videoville was, deserves all the praise for maintaining a supremely-positive attitude during her down time.

Ja’Kenya is a wrecking ball on the court, and pure class off it, and everything is at least a little bit better knowing her family gets to watch her play her favorite sport again.

 

No JV Game:

MVC doesn’t have a second squad this season, so Coupeville’s JV will make its debut Thursday at home against Orcas Island.

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Lyla Stuurmans kicks off a collection of girls hoops pics. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Basketball is upon us.

A compressed pandemic-era hoops season kicks off Tuesday, with the Coupeville High School girls starting a 12-game campaign on the road in Mount Vernon.

After that, the games fly fast and furious, with the season finale set for June 17.

As you prep for a month of hardwood action, an early look at the players wearing Wolf uniforms.

Audrianna Shaw

The JV flexes some muscle.

Katie Marti

Mckenna Somes

CHS hoops coaches Megan Smith and Scott Fox.

Skylar Parker

The new-look Wolf varsity.

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Megan Smith will coach four games, and not 12. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One schedule is not like the other three.

The Coupeville High School JV girls basketball squad took a major hit Thursday, with their schedule shaved from 12 games to four.

The adjustment is because only three of the seven Northwest 2B/1B League schools will field a second girls hoops squad this season.

Coupeville is joined by Orcas Island and Friday Harbor, but La Conner, Darrington, Concrete, and Mount Vernon Christian will have just a varsity team for girls games.

As of the typing of this story, all seven schools will have boys and girls varsity teams.

Six of seven plan to play boys JV, with Concrete opting out, leaving the Coupeville young guns with a 10-game slate.

For the Wolf JV girls, the new schedule means they will only play once in front of their home fans.

That’s because no fans, varsity or JV, are allowed at the Orcas Island games, per the request of the Orcas School District.

 

The revamped girls JV schedule:

Thur-May 20 — Orcas Island — (5:00)
Sat-May 22 — @ Friday Harbor — (1:00)
Sat-June 5 — @ Orcas Island — (5:00)
Tues-June 8 — Friday Harbor — (5:00)

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