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Freshman Maddie Georges scored 13 points Friday night as Coupeville’s varsity nipped Sultan in a wild one. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Bend, but don’t break.

Showing some serious intestinal fortitude Friday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team made big plays at crucial moments.

Shots which had to go in, went in. Defensive stops which had to be made, were made.

And with that, the Wolves head into the weekend happy, having held on to capture a 31-28 gut-wrencher of a win against visiting Sultan.

The victory lifts Coupeville to 2-1 in North Sound Conference play, 7-3 overall.

This was the kind of game which can give a coach some extra grey hairs. Though, if you win, you can sort of live with that.

The Wolves rode the rollercoaster Friday, jumping out to a big lead, giving it all back, then stepping up to deny Sultan in the fourth quarter for the second time this season.

In the early going, things looked fairly eazy-breezy.

Sultan did drain a long shot from the top of the key, beating the buzzer by half a second, to open the game, then went on to hold a 4-2 lead.

But the Wolves responded in style, using a 14-0 run which started with a first quarter Maddie Georges layup and ended with a second quarter Tia Wurzrainer layup to blow things wide open.

Coupeville was frustrating the Turks with nasty defense, getting out and running, and almost always finishing strongly.

Maybe not at the free throw line, where it missed its first six attempts, but everywhere else.

Whether it was Chelsea Prescott slashing through the middle to convert a layup off of a dart of a pass from Hannah Davidson, or Georges hitting from long range, everything was going in for the Wolves.

One of three freshmen on the Wolf varsity, Georges hit a pair of three-balls during the run, and was so quick about it, she actually beat her coach.

In between the treys, Fox sent a sub to check in and replace his fab frosh.

But while the other Wolf crouched by the table, waiting for a stoppage in play so she could check in, Georges went flying by, snagged a pass and nailed a leaning three-pointer, making sure to maximize her floor time.

Up 16-4 after the surge, Coupeville took a small step back after that, but got another long jumper from Georges as soon as she reentered the game, and went to the break up 20-12.

But if things were dandy in the first half, they got a bit desperate later.

While everything had been dropping for the Wolves during the first two quarters, the rim got downright rude in the third quarter, rejecting shot after shot by Coupeville.

Given new life, Sultan crawled back to within 20-19 and was mere ticks of the clock away from pulling off the bagel job in the frame.

But wait, remember those fab frosh I mentioned? Cause they’re here to save the day.

Carolyn Lhamon, with a Sultan player hanging off of each of her arms, out-wrestled the world for the biggest offensive rebound of the game, then flicked the ball out to the shooter with the magic touch.

Some call her Mad Dog. Some call her The Wall.

It doesn’t matter, because Georges blocks out all noise on the floor, even the hollering of her boisterous fan section.

Stone-cold killers are just that way.

Lhamon’s pass on her fingertips, Georges slid forward and calmly reigned holy terror on the Turks, flipping the net skyward with her third three-ball of the night and calming her coach’s angina.

For a moment, at least.

It probably came right back, as Sultan scored the first three buckets of the fourth quarter to erase the 23-19 lead Georges had given Coupeville.

Trailing for the first time in what seemed like forever, the Wolves were down 25-23, the basket had once again closed up shop on their side of the floor, and things might have seemed dire.

But … plot twist.

A team which was having little luck at the free throw line recaptured its mojo and reclaimed the game thanks to turning a weakness into a strength.

Prescott drained a freebie, before senior leaders Avalon Renninger and Scout Smith each went 2-for-2 during back-to-back trips to the charity stripe.

Surprise. Surprise.

Things still got pushed to the final moments, however, as the teams traded buckets, with Coupeville’s coming off of a short banker from Davidson, before a Sultan free throw made life tense at 30-28.

Worse still, the Turks had the ball in their hands with 19 seconds to play, thanks to a questionable call on a play where Renninger was drilled in the face, only to have the ref whistle traveling and not a foul.

Sultan’s momentary joy was short-lived, however, as Smith picked off the inbounds pass, sliding around her rival to yank the lob out of mid-air.

That set up one more free throw from Renninger, and then a final defensive gem to seal the deal.

With the Turks down by three and scrambling to get the ball up court, Georges emulated Smith, her point guard mentor, by making off with the ball and setting off a celebration on her bench.

At which point the Coupeville coaching staff started to breathe again.

Georges led the scoring attack with 13, Prescott (7), Wurzrainer (4), Renninger (3), Smith (2), and Davidson (2) also scored, while Lhamon, Izzy Wells, Kylie Van Velkinburgh, and Audrianna Shaw chipped in with hustle and grit.

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With a win Friday, Morgan Stevens and the Coupeville JV girls are 6-2 on the season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They let them hang around for a bit.

But just a bit.

Putting the game away with a strong surge across the second and third quarters Friday, the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball team buried visiting Sultan 33-15.

With the win, the Wolves earn a season sweep of the Turks, while surging to a flawless 3-0 in North Sound Conference action, 6-2 overall.

Now, like their varsity counterparts, the JV girls won’t play in front of their home fans for almost three weeks.

Both girls programs have five straight games on the road ahead of them, not returning to the Coupeville gym until January 31, when Granite Falls comes to The Rock.

Friday night the Wolves came out a bit slowly, settling for a 5-5 tie at the first break.

After that, it was Turk crunchin’ time, as Coupeville used 9-2 and 15-3 runs across the next two periods to break things open.

CHS coach Megan Smith spread the offensive love around, with Alita Blouin and Ryanne Knoblich carrying most of the load in the second quarter, before Gwen Gustafson and Jessenia Camarena began to heat up in the third frame.

Blouin finished the game atop a very-balanced scoring attack, rattling the rims for eight points, while Camarena, Knoblich and Gustafson knocked down six apiece.

Savana Allen (4), Morgan Stevens (2), and Ella Colwell (1) also scored, while Claire Mayne, Abby Mulholland, and Heidi Meyers all played strongly on defense for the Wolves.

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Chelsea Prescott emerges victorious from a wild scrum. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Alita Blouin sizes up a free throw.

Mollie Bailey looks for an opening in the defense.

Heidi Meyers offers tips to CHS coach Scott Fox.

Gwen Gustafson, a second before she starts breakin’ ankles.

Audrianna Shaw clamps down on defense.

Hannah Davidson rolls hard to the hoop.

The Wolf varsity, ready to rock ‘n roll.

The nets were on fire, and so was the cameraman.

Wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken worked the sidelines at Tuesday’s Coupeville High School girls basketball games, as both he and the Wolves got back into the flow of the season.

The pics above are courtesy him, but are just the start of what he shot.

To see all the snaps, and perhaps ponder buying some glossies for presents, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2019-2020/GBB-2020-01-07-vs-CPC/

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Hannah Davidson was a defensive dynamo Tuesday as Coupeville scrapped with Cedar Park Christian. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“Put this one on me. Put it on the coach and not the girls.”

A lot of things conspired to trip up the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team Tuesday night, as it fell 51-35 to visiting Cedar Park Christian.

Battling for sole possession of first place in the North Sound Conference, the Wolves looked at times, especially in the first half, like a team which was a bit rusty coming off a 16-day break.

At other times, such as when the Wolves played the Eagles to a tie in the second half, Coupeville looked very good.

Even with the loss, the Wolves still boast a 6-3 record, and are 1-1 in league play, with a long way to go.

Cedar Park (3-0, 9-4) may have the early edge, but the Eagles (and Wolves) have yet to face King’s, and will meet again Jan. 24 in Bothell.

For first-year CHS coach Scott Fox, the night had genuine moments of success.

“The second-half effort was much better,” he said. “We were coming off a long break and they jumped on us early, but we fought hard.

“I liked our effort in getting to the basket, and that we didn’t back down,” Fox added. “We need to eliminate some mental mistakes, but they’re things we can work on.”

Coupeville came in knowing it wanted to do its best to slow down defending league MVP Irena Korolenko.

Based on film study, where her support crew clanked its fair share of shots, Fox felt confident in essentially daring the other Eagles to beat Coupeville.

You play the odds, and sometimes the odds come back to bite you, as Cedar Park dropped four treys during a 19-9 first quarter, with Korolenko accounting for only one of those three-balls.

“That’s on me … I must have watched the wrong film,” Fox said with a small chuckle.

Korolenko opened the game with a three-ball from the top of the arc, netted another trey early in the second quarter, then coasted home with six free throws as she finished with a fairly-quiet 12 points.

But her presence was invaluable for the Eagles, whether it was her ability to quickly bring the ball up-court, preventing Coupeville from trapping, her quick, efficient passing, or her rock-solid defense.

Sparked by their quietly-lethal team leader, the other Cedar Park players all filled their assigned roles, making it hard for the Wolves to find too many cracks in their collective games.

Coupeville hung tough, trailing just 19-11 after Avalon Renninger slashed inside for a bucket to open the second quarter.

But then came the one time the Wolves truly sputtered all night, with the Eagles reeling off 11 straight points to go up by double-digits.

After that, CHS made inroads, fought with intensity, and scrapped to the end, but never got the lead back down under 13 at any point.

Chelsea Prescott, showing no fear, went hard at the heart of the Eagle defense again and again, picking up eight of her team-high 12 points at the free-throw line.

Unfortunately, she was one of the few Wolves to find a rhythm at the charity stripe, as Coupeville struggled to a 13-31 performance on freebies.

CHS closed the game on a 9-5 surge, started by freshman Maddie Georges drilling a jumper to end the third, and capped by senior Hannah Davidson netting a soft runner a tick before the game’s final buzzer.

Prescott’s 12-point performance, her best showing of the season, carried her past a personal milestone, as well.

With a third-quarter free throw, the Wolf junior became the 57th player in Coupeville girls basketball history, which stretches from 1974-2020, to reach 200 career points.

Now sitting with 204 and counting, Prescott passed former greats Kim Warder (193), Julia Myers (202), and Pam Jampsa (202) Tuesday, and is #55 all-time.

Senior Scout Smith also achieved a bit of Wolf hoops history, notching her 224th point to slide past Annette Jameson and become the 50th best scorer in program history.

Smith tallied three points Tuesday, while Renninger and Davidson banked in six apiece.

Izzy Wells (3), Georges (3), and Tia Wurzrainer (2) also scored, with Anya Leavell, Carolyn Lhamon, Mollie Bailey, Audrianna Shaw, and Kylie Van Velkinburgh seeing floor time.

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Heidi Meyers and the Coupeville JV girls are 5-2 after thumping Cedar Park Christian Tuesday night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This was a good ol’ beat-down.

Introduce balanced scoring. Add in a ball-hawking, lock-down defense. Then let the bodies hit the floor.

Controlling the game from opening tip to final bucket Tuesday, the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball team drilled visiting Cedar Park Christian.

At 39-23, with the visitors trimming five points off the deficit in the final moments, the score might not immediately jump out to you as a rout.

But it most assuredly was.

Now 2-0 in North Sound Conference play, 5-2 overall, the JV girls were methodical and ruthless against their private school rivals.

The Wolves jumped on the board quickly, with Alita Blouin and Ella Colwell running a note-perfect give-and-go in which The Assassin slashed through the defense like a living machete carving her way through the jungle underbrush.

Very next play, and almost a repeat, with Colwell delivering a perfectly-placed pass, and Blouin crashing to the hoop for another bucket.

The only difference in the plays, on round two, Blouin knocked her defender onto the floor as she slashed by, but did it so confidently the ref just nodded, as if to silently say, “I see you. I fear you. I got nothin’ to say on the matter.”

Playing with confidence, the Wolves jumped all over CPC on defense in the early going, turning a game-opening 8-0 run into an 18-6 lead by the half.

The Eagles got few shots off in the first half, with Morgan Stevens ripping balls loose, Colwell dominating in the paint, and the trio of Blouin, Ryanne Knoblich, and Gwen Gustafson harassing rival ballhandlers into frequent turnovers.

Cedar Park finally got on the scoreboard, but it took the visitors six minutes plus to do so.

And, as soon as the Eagles found a brief spark of life, the Wolves savaged all their hopes and dreams.

Coupeville kicked off a 10-2 run in the second quarter with a play in which three different Wolves meshed their individual talents for the good of the team.

Colwell yanked down a rebound, pivoted and hit Blouin, who promptly took a step and launched a long pass which carried over the heads of the scrambling defenders and dropped onto Gustafson’s finger tips.

Weaving through two final Eagles, Gustafson slapped home the layup, then later came back around to pull off almost the same play, but this time off of a Knoblich half-court heave.

Not every Wolf scored, but every one on the floor contributed, whether it was Claire Mayne and Heidi Meyers scrambling on defense, or Natalie Castano and Jessenia Camarena getting physical with the over-matched Eagles.

Castano delivered a hearty hip check which planted a CPC player into the third row of the bleachers, while Camarena rose up above the masses to soundly reject an Eagle shot and bring a smile to coach Megan Smith’s face.

CHS put the game on ice in the third quarter, closing the frame with an 11-2 surge in which Knoblich and Colwell combined for nine points.

Both Wolves picked up their buckets by going hard to the hoop and daring Cedar Park to stop them.

Spoiler alert: the Eagles didn’t have a prayer of doing so.

Knoblich’s best score came on a ferocious drive up the middle of the lane, where she banged home the bucket while absorbing multiple blows which awarded her an ensuing free throw, as well.

Colwell stood tall all game, closing the third and fourth quarters with baskets on which she simply overpowered shorter players down low, abusing them to the delight of her vocal fan club.

The Wolf sophomore center finished with a game-high 10 points, while Gustafson (9), Knoblich (8), Blouin (7), Camarena (3), and Stevens (2) all joined in on the offensive explosion.

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