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Posts Tagged ‘Granite Falls’

“Why yes, Katie. I do think you should go wreck some fools.” (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Call ’em second-half killers.

Breaking open a close game Wednesday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad held visiting Granite Falls scoreless for 10 minutes coming out of the halftime break.

Sparked by that defensive stand, the Wolves turned a six-point lead into a resounding 43-21 win over the Tigers, kicking off the new year in style.

The non-conference victory, coming in Coupeville’s first game in 18 days, lifts it to 4-3 on the season and gives the Wolves momentum heading into their league schedule.

First up is Orcas Island, which visits Whidbey Island Friday, followed by Mount Vernon Christian (Jan. 10) and Darrington (Jan. 13), as CHS opens the new year with four straight home clashes.

The matchup against Granite started a bit slowly, as both teams struggled to find their shooting touch in the early going.

Balls spun back off the rim, took weird bounces, and generally refused to play fair, though Coupeville had a little bit better touch.

Alita Blouin slashed past her defender to slap home a game-opening layup, while Lyla Stuurmans snatched a loose ball off the floor and went coast-to-coast to stake the Wolves to an 8-3 lead at the first break.

“You, Stuurmans. I like the cut of your jib! Go score me some points!!”

Attacking the ballhandler, often smothering them with two defenders madly poking at the ball, the Wolves frustrated Granite, and picked up most of their early offense off of turnovers.

Stuurmans, bobbing and weaving and bedeviling anyone foolish enough to dribble near her, hit a pair of second-quarter jumpers to lead the CHS offense.

The first of those shots was one of the most gorgeous of the season, as the Wolf sophomore spun a rival around, stopped ‘n popped, the ball kicking through the bottom of the net with a happy lil’ sigh.

Maddie Georges delivered a dagger, taking a kick-out from Blouin, and splashing home a three-ball, and Coupeville was content to carry a 17-11 lead into the break.

Maybe because the Wolves could sense what was coming — a 10-minute span of utter domination.

Granite went scoreless in the third quarter, then crawled nearly two minutes into the fourth before finally breaking its drought thanks to a rare free throw.

During that time, Coupeville rang up 15 straight points, stretching the lead all the way out to 32-11 and effectively ending the game.

Five different Wolves dropped buckets during the game-busting tear, while everyone on the floor hit the boards (and the floor) with intensity.

None more so than Gwen Gustafson, who launched herself airborne in pursuit of a ball which was madly skipping away, fully intent on bouncing out the gym door and going for an evening stroll.

Gwen Gustafson comes in like a wrecking ball.

Instead, the scrappy Wolf senior bounced off the hardwood, flung her arms out as she skidded face-first towards the rapidly approaching wall, and somehow, against all the rules of science, pulled off the save of the century.

Her breath gently crossing the endline, but not her body, Gustafson corralled the ball while hugging the floor, flipped it towards Georges, then watched as her teammate zipped a pass into the paint to a trailing Ryanne Knoblich.

Who promptly drained a sizzlin’ lil’ turnaround jumper, plopping the cherry on top of the sundae.

It was the biggest, and buzziest, play of the night, but not the only one which brought a smile to Wolf coach Megan Richter’s face.

A few seconds later, Georges backpedaled, planted, and absorbed the pain, drawing an offensive charging foul on an out-of-control Granite player.

Then there was Stuurmans, turning another steal into another breakaway bucket.

Georges rolling to the hoop for a lil’ runner which allowed her to become just the 36th Wolf girl to crack the 300-point club for a program which started in 1974.

Katie Marti getting nicely intense on defense, while teammate Jada Heaton egged her on with a big smile.

Plenty of prime moments to choose from, as Coupeville coasted in for the win.

Granite did finally find some semblance of a shooting touch late in the fourth, briefly cutting its deficit to 14 points.

The answer?

Blouin three-ball. Georges three-ball. And yet another Blouin three-ball.

Coupeville might have had a frosty night at the free-throw line, netting just 3-20 as a team, but the Wolves made up for it from long, and medium range.

Blouin paced CHS with a game-high 12 points, with Stuurmans banking in 10 and Georges tallying nine.

Knoblich (5), Gustafson (3), Marti (2), and defensive dynamo Mia Farris (2) also scored, as Coupeville spread the offensive load.

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Wolf hoops stars Reese Wilkinson (45) and Kierra Thayer (32) battle for control of the paint. (Jackie Saia photo)

Welcome to the Carlota Marcos-Cabrillo experience.

The Coupeville High School foreign exchange student entered Christmas break as a cheerleader and emerged from it a fully formed basketball sensation.

Making her hardwood debut for the Wolf JV Wednesday, Marcos-Cabrillo threw down a team-high 11 points, sparking Kassie O’Neil’s squad to a 39-36 win over visiting Granite Falls.

The non-conference win, coming in Coupeville’s first girls’ hoops game since Dec. 17, lifts the Wolves to 3-3 on the season.

Next up for the young guns is a home game Friday against Orcas Island, in what will be the team’s first league clash.

Wednesday’s return to the floor was a tense, back-and-forth affair capped by Marcos-Cabrillo going off for back-to-back breakaway buckets, followed by Liza Zustiak proving her chops as a stone-cold killer.

The Wolf freshman nailed a long pullup jumper, her feet just inside the three-point arc, staking the Wolves to a 39-34 lead they wouldn’t relinquish.

While Granite Falls did tickle the twines for a pair of free throws with 15 seconds to play, the Tigers could get no closer thanks to a ferocious Wolf defense.

Teagan Calkins went airborne to pick off a pass, and multiple Coupeville players slammed into the floor to fight over a loose ball as the clock madly ticked away.

Given a final chance to tie, thanks to a questionable decision by the refs, Granite Falls bounced its one, and only, three-ball attempt of the night off the top of the backboard.

The furious finale arrived some two hours after a surprise opener, with Marcos-Cabrillo trading her cheerleader outfit for a basketball jersey, joining the hardwood starting five to the great delight of her former cheer teammates.

Carlota Marcos-Cabrillo made her Coupeville basketball debut Wednesday, and immediately wowed Wolf Nation. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville fell behind early, trailing 6-0 until Madison McMillan and Kierra Thayer got rolling.

The duo combined for all the buckets during a 10-0 run, changing the flow of the game.

With McMillan crashing hard through the paint en route to three baskets, and Thayer using her long arms to snatch a pair of offensive boards and put them back up and in, the Wolves were on the move.

Marcos-Cabrillo netted her first points as a Wolf on a steal and breakaway bucket, but Granite Falls refused to go down easy.

The Tigers actually regained the lead at 14-12 right before the end of the first quarter, before Coupeville once again went on a tear.

The Wolves opened the second quarter on an 8-0 run, with McMillan, Reese Wilkinson, Calkins, and Jada Heaton all scoring, and never gave the lead back.

Granite hung around, staying within 24-22 at the half, and tying the game at 30-30 with under a minute to play in the third quarter.

But sparked by their defense, whether it was Kassidy Upchurch pulling down multiple rebounds or Kayla Arnold and Desi Ramirez-Vasquez frustrating Tiger ballhandlers, the Wolves had an answer at every turn.

CHS closed the third quarter with an exclamation point, as Thayer fired a half-court outlet pass onto the fingertips of a rumblin’ McMillan, who sliced ‘n diced the defense for a layup.

The ball hit glass, then dropped sweetly through mere moments before the buzzer sang the song of its people, setting off a celebration down the Wolf bench.

The good times continued from there, with Marcos-Cabrillo and Zustiak sticking in the final daggers for a win fueled by rock-solid effort from every player on the active roster.

McMillan banked in 10 to go with Marcos-Cabrillo’s 11-point debut, while Thayer (6), Heaton (4), Calkins (4), Zustiak (2), and Wilkinson (2) also scored.

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Liam Lawson and his CMS basketball teammates had an eventful trip to Granite Falls. (Kassie O’Neil photo)

Strange things happen on the road.

Monday’s trip to the wilds of Granite Falls offered a bit of everything for the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball teams.

Up to, and including, a freakin’ TIE, which should be illegal on the hardwood.

This isn’t soccer, and Cascade League rules makers need to pull their heads out of their collective tushes, but more on that later in this story.

How the day played out for the Wolves:

 

Level 1:

Coupeville scored big early, then lost its shooting touch and fell 37-34 in a thriller which came down to the final moments.

Jayden McManus was rock-solid for the Wolves, banging away for a game-high 16 points, with half of that coming during the opening quarter.

Speedy point guard Chayse Van Velkinburgh added seven for CMS, including rippling the net on a three-ball from the parking lot, while Riley Lawless (5), Davin Houston (4), and Dylan Robinett (2) also scored.

Joshua Stockdale, Mahkai Myles, and Carson Grove also saw floor time for the Wolves, with Myles making his season debut.

 

Level 2:

Things start to go wonky here.

Unable to overcome a withering press, Coupeville put up some points but couldn’t keep up with Granite in a 39-17 loss.

Who scored for the Wolves?

We’ll probably never know, as the scorebook remains a work of mystery, with no scoring totals recorded for the game.

Which means every player in the game can go home and tell their parents they shot the lights out, and mom and pops can only nod as they slowly back out of the room.

“Sure honey, whatever you say.”

Anyways, we do know Hunter Atteberry, Liam Lawson, Nathan Niewald, Roger Merino-Martinez, Cyrus Sparacio, Charles Hart, Robinett, Kenneth Jacobsen, Jacob Barajas, and Sage Arends were listed on the roster.

So, that’s a start.

 

Level 3:

“The shocker of the night!”

CMS coach Jon Roberts had to sit down and collect his thoughts after Roger Merino-Martinez, in his second game of the season, decided to morph into Damian Lillard.

Raining down shots from every part of the gym, the Wolf 7th grader scorched the nets for 21 points in a 27-27 tie.

“Whether he was stealing the ball and making a layup or taking a confident 12-footer, Roger was the man!” Roberts said.

“Plus, Cyrus did a good job of feeding him and creating shots himself.”

Sparacio chipped in with four points, while Kenneth Jacobsen knocked down a bucket.

Zach Blitch, Jacob Meadors, Johnathan Jacobsen, Barajas, and Khanor Jump also saw floor time for the Wolves, who, against all conventional wisdom, never got to play overtime.

That’s because Cascade League rules allow extra periods only for Level 1 basketball games and say any ties in Level 2 and 3 games should be decided with a rousing moment of rock, paper, scissors.

Seriously. I’m not making that part up.

No, seriously…

Somewhere, retired NBA legend Dikembe Mutombo is shaking his finger at the camera, saying “No, no, no!!!” the way he used to do after blocking a shot and ripping his foe’s very soul from their chest.

 

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Frankie Tenore and Co. do not get to ride the bus all day and night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

No hacking and coughing for you.

Tuesday’s Coupeville High School girls soccer road trip was cancelled, thanks to poor air quality in Granite Falls.

It’s the latest in a string of contests preempted in Washington state by smoke from forest fires.

No definitive word on whether the non-conference game will be rescheduled, though odds are not great with the end of the regular season in sight, and both schools putting a priority on playing league games first.

For now, Coupeville’s booters head back to the practice field, with their next and possibly final clash set for next Tuesday, Oct. 25.

The Wolves host La Conner at 4 PM in the first half of a home doubleheader.

Senior Night festivities for both the CHS girls and boys will be held between games, before Coupeville’s boys face off with the Braves.

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CMS spiker coach Cris Matochi continues to build a strong program. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Joining Matochi is Coupeville alumni Raven Vick (right), and, occasionally, her sister Willow.

Check another box on the list.

The Coupeville Middle School volleyball teams hit the road for the first time this season, surviving a visit Thursday to the wilds of Granite Falls.

The Wolves opened the season with three straight tilts at home, and now get the flip side, not playing on Whidbey again until Oct. 24.

The tale of the road trip:

 

Varsity:

Using a new player rotation, the Wolves pushed a high-class Granite squad to the limit before falling 25-23, 25-23.

CMS then rebounded to claim a third practice set 15-13.

The loss evens Coupeville’s record at 2-2 at the halfway point of its eight-match season.

Even in defeat, Wolf coaches Cris Matochi and Raven Vick came away pleased with a lot of what they saw on the floor.

“They played really well and everyone got a chance to have good contacts with the ball,” Vick said.

Coupeville was strong when serving, with Adeline Maynes “having long runs at the line every time she served.”

Tenley Stuurmans was also on fire, opening the second set with a six-point run on serve.

Vick praised the play of Lexis Drake, who “had some great passes and consistent serving,” and Haylee Armstrong, who “had many opportunities to hit the ball and had consistent passing.”

Rhylin (Price) and Capri (Anter) chipped in with good passing and serving as well,” Vick added.

 

JV:

Granite claimed the match 25-6, 25-11, but Coupeville roared back to claim a third set 16-14.

The Wolves, now 1-3 on the campaign, got a season-best performance from 6th grader KeeArya Brown.

KeeArya was on fire tonight with her passing and did well on serving,” Vick said. “She passed 80% of the balls and they were fantastic.”

Alexis Hewitt chipped in with stellar work at the service stripe, and the young Wolves continue to show growth and desire.

“They all played really hard and had good effort,” Vick said. “We struggled with setting up the second ball and that’s what failed us, but they picked it up in the last set to take the win.

“Everyone did their part and they played well.”

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