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Posts Tagged ‘Hawthorne Wolfe’

Wolf junior Logan Martin is a threat inside and outside. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Brad Sherman has been waiting for this day for 15 months.

When he stepped off the court after a season-ending playoff loss to Mount Baker way back on February 8, 2020, the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball coach, like all those around him, had no idea what was just around the bend.

But now, after many twists and turns, he and his new team will take the court Tuesday in Mount Vernon, ready to kick off a pandemic-altered hoops season.

The Wolves are scheduled to play 12 games, instead of the normal 18-20, and will do so wearing masks.

After months of basketball being in limbo during the Age of Coronavirus, they’ll take what they can get.

“First off, I’m just extremely grateful that these boys are getting the season they’ve waited and worked for,” Sherman said. “Seeing them together as a team in our gym this past week has been the highlight of this school year.

“Just an awesome group to have the privilege of coaching.”

Much is different this time around, with Sherman’s coaching staff having added two of his fellow former CHS hoops legends in Hunter Smith and Greg White.

The younger Smith replaces his dad Chris, who stepped down as JV coach.

Rounding out the Wolf brain trust is longtime local hoops guru Randy Bottorff, who once coached Sherman when the current CHS head man was first starting off as a player.

The Wolf four-pack of coaches head up a program making its return to the 2B classification and the Northwest 2B/1B League after many years of matching up with 1A and 2A schools in various far-flung outposts.

“Feels like the right fit,” Sherman said. “These are other small schools from rural areas.

“They build their programs from the ground up. They do it like we do it,” he added. “I’m excited to be back where I truly think we belong.”

As he and the Wolves get a feel for new/old foes La Conner, Darrington, Friday Harbor, Orcas Island, Mount Vernon Christian, and Concrete, Sherman is prepared for a battle every night.

“This has traditionally been a very competitive basketball league,” he said. “Not prepared to take any team for granted.”

The players on the floor will be a new mix, as well, with nine of the 12 guys who scored during the 2019-2020 season graduating afterwards.

That doesn’t mean the Wolves will be without firepower, however.

Juniors Hawthorne Wolfe and Xavier Murdy lead the new-look squad, and both have excelled in their time in a CHS uniform.

Wolfe led Coupeville in scoring as a freshman, and was a bucket away from doing so again as a sophomore during a season in which he twice topped 30 points in a game.

With 410 career points — the most compiled by any CHS boy through their sophomore season — he sits at #55 on the school’s career scoring chart, which dates back to 1917.

Murdy, who came out all guns blazing after a late start to his sophomore campaign, is #186 on the all-time scoring list with 99 points.

Xavier Murdy can bring the heat offensively and defensively.

Xavier gave us a big boost at the guard spot when he came back from injury last season,” Sherman said. “He can do a lot for us out on the court – offensively as a scorer and ball handler, and defensively he’s going to be really tough.

Hawthorne is a returning starter for us who continues to work hard at his game. He’s a guy that’s just going to be really tough to defend on the perimeter with his skillset.”

Two other Wolves offer some experience, with senior Daniel Olson having popped for five varsity points prior to this year, while junior Grady Rickner made his varsity debut in that playoff finale with Mount Baker.

Other Wolves making the jump from JV include seniors TJ Rickner and Sage Downes, juniors Logan Martin, Cody Roberts, and Miles Davidson, and sophomore Alex Murdy.

Wolf seniors (l to r) TJ Rickner, Sage Downes, and Daniel Olson.

Freshman Logan Downes follows Wolfe’s trail in making varsity from day one, while fellow frosh Cole White and sophomore Jonathan Valenzuela are projected as swing players.

“We have a lot of guys making the jump this year; certainly could say positive things about each of them and what they bring to the table,” Sherman said.

It’s a team in transition, one whose strengths will be found in the heat of on-court action.

“Having not played a game in 15 months – and with a very different group on the floor than we had last season, I think that’s something we’re still evaluating,” Sherman said.

“Our backcourt should be really strong, and if we commit to team basketball I think we could be really tough offensively.

“Our ability to get to the rim and take guys off the dribble is something that I think could give teams a hard time.”

While no one would have chosen the pandemic life, it has hopefully helped mold the young Wolves into tougher players.

“I think the grit and resilience of this group is going to be something that serves us well down the stretch,” Sherman said. “The way they stuck with it this off-season, through setback after setback, gives me a lot of confidence in their ability to handle adversity.”

No matter how many games are on the schedule, or when and how they’ll be played, Coupeville’s coach is approaching the new season much as he has his previous ones on the bench.

“No different than any other season. While ultimately we are just extremely grateful for the chance to play, the approach and mindset doesn’t change,” Sherman said. “We don’t want to treat this as an “unusual” season.

“It’s a season, and we plan to prepare, compete, and work our tails off to try and go win basketball games,” he added. “We want to make a strong statement as we enter the new league and this year is an opportunity to do that.”

To do so, the Wolves need to be prepared every time out, and be willing to stretch themselves to meet all challenges.

“An honest commitment to all of the little things that make a complete basketball team (is important),” Sherman said. “We need to take pride in our defensive effort every time we touch the floor.

“We need to be tough, aggressive, and able to trust that every one of our teammates is in a good position behind us.”

The CHS coaches came away from early practices pleased with their player’s effort and commitment. Now, the key is to translate that to in-game success.

“We saw some really good things this first week and I’m proud of the way the guys are starting to come together defensively,” Sherman said.

“On the boards, we cannot win games if we don’t commit to being the better rebounding team on the court every night.

“Short season or not, we just ask for an attitude of excellence in all the little things – a mindset of getting a little bit better every single day.”

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Logan Martin slashes to the hoop Monday during the first day of high school basketball practice. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Basketball is back.

Thanks to the pandemic, games are being played in spring/early summer this time around, instead of winter, but it’s important to note — they are going to be played.

Both the Coupeville High School girls and boys hoops programs have 12-game schedules (down from the normal 18-20), with the first live action on the road May 18 in Mount Vernon.

Home openers are set for May 20, with Orcas Island the foe, and the season runs through June 17.

The pics above and below, capturing the first day of practice for the Wolf boys, come to us courtesy John Fisken.

To see his work from other sports, pop over to:

John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

Ryan Blouin debates his options.

Hawthorne Wolfe visualizes tossing the ball over his shoulder and hitting absolutely nothing but net.

Xavier Murdy rambles to the hoop.

“See the basket, be the basket.”

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Hawthorne Wolfe socked a double, one of Coupeville’s four hits Friday afternoon. (Morgan White photo)

They’re still the gold standard.

Friday Harbor High School is the big dog of Northwest 2B/1B League baseball, a point driven home by the Wolverines ten-running visiting Coupeville Friday afternoon.

Scoring in every inning, with nearly half their runs coming with two outs, the hosts waxed the Wolves 11-1 in a game mercy-ruled in the fifth inning.

With the win, Friday Harbor improves to 4-0, while second-place Coupeville slips to 3-2, with both losses having come against the league leaders.

CHS will get right back at it, with a road doubleheader at Orcas Island next Tuesday, and it still has two more games scheduled against the Wolverines late in this pandemic-shortened season.

Playing on a gusty early-spring afternoon, with a few rain drops streaking the cameras Friday Harbor used to stream the contest, Coupeville didn’t look all that bad.

But Friday Harbor took advantage of every small miscue, while playing fairly-flawless defense behind solid pitching.

An RBI double into the gap and a long sac fly in the bottom of the first staked the Wolverines to an early 2-0 lead, and they steadily extended the margin.

Friday Harbor tacked on just a solitary run in the second, as Wolf hurler Cody Roberts escaped danger with a couple of big strikeouts, but a breakdown in the third was fatal.

With two on and two out, Roberts pumped a third strike past a flailing Wolverine slugger, but the wind caught the ball at the last second and sent it skittering far away from catcher Sage Sharp’s glove.

Given second life, Friday Harbor took advantage, plating three runners after the weather-related mishap and effectively busting the game open.

Coupeville snagged its lone run in the top of the fourth, thanks to Jonathan Valenzuela and Daniel Olson connecting on back-to-back base-knocks around a couple of steals from the former.

Friday Harbor’s announcing crew on the stream struggled mightily with Peyton Caveness and Hawthorne Wolfe’s names — calling the latter “Hank” at one point, but reserved their mightiest tongue twisting for Valenzuela.

Which is just sad.

He has the EXACT SAME LAST NAME as one of the most famous modern-era Major League Baseball players.

A man who played 17 years, went to six All-Star games, won a World Series, and is the only player to ever win Cy Young and Rookie of the Year honors in the same season.

You might have heard of him — Fernando Valenzuela was, and still is, a beloved legend in two countries.

And that last name ain’t that hard to pronounce.

Anyways, back on the blustery diamond, Friday Harbor escaped in the fourth thanks to a double play, before tacking on a solo run in their half of the inning, then four more in the fifth to end things.

Roberts and Olson, who came on in relief in the third, combined to fan five Wolverine hitters, while Wolfe, Xavier Murdy, Valenzuela, and Olson each had a hit for the CHS offense.

The big bop was a two-out double to left-center in the third from Wolfe, but unfortunately, Coupeville’s speedy leadoff hitter was left stranded.

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Hawthorne Wolfe trots home with one of Coupeville’s many runs Friday afternoon. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

How’d he get on base? A flawless bunt and some nimble running.

Sage Sharp stands tall behind the plate.

Xavier Murdy rakes.

The scoreboard was poppin’, and so were the cameras.

As the Coupeville High School baseball team ran away with a pair of lopsided wins over visiting La Conner Friday afternoon, wanderin’ camera clicker John Fisken worked the fences.

While he was only with us for two innings or so, before Oak Harbor duty called him away, he gave us a collection of pics to remember him by.

To see everything he snapped before departing, pop over to:

BB 2021-03-12 vs LaConner – John’s Photos

PS — If you buy pics, he’s more likely to come back. It’s the great circle of life.

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After COVID-19 stole a season from him, Hawthorne Wolfe returns to the baseball diamond. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

New coach, new league, new schedule.

Everything is a little different for the Coupeville High School baseball squad as it gets ready for its first games since 2019.

The pandemic erased prep sports last spring, then coach Chris Smith departed Whidbey Island after the graduation of his youngest child.

Now, Will Thayer steps into the dugout as the head man and his first Wolf team is scheduled to play a pared-down, conference-only slate of games.

That will give Coupeville a strong introduction to their new foes, at least, as CHS moves from 1A to 2B, returning to its old stomping grounds in the Northwest 2B/1B League.

While the schedule seems to shift each day, as of Thursday the Wolves are set to play fellow 2B schools Friday Harbor (4) and La Conner (3) the most, with a single game against 1B rivals Darrington, Mount Vernon Christian, and Concrete.

Orcas Island (1B) opted not to play spring sports as long as its students were not back in class, while Chimacum (2B) is slated to join the NWL for the 2021-2022 school year.

Having a chance to go toe-to-toe with Friday Harbor should give Thayer and his crew a solid idea of where they fit in the new hierarchy.

“Perennial power in this league seems to be Friday Harbor; they are a very well-coached team and consistently at the top of their league,” Thayer said. “This is our first year in this league and we will have to learn the teams on the fly.

“It is kind of nice being a first-year coach in a new league so I can learn with the team,” he added. “We will be able to measure ourselves against our league for the first time together.”

With the unexpected gap year, the Wolf roster has seen a fairly large turnover.

Of the 15 players listed on the roster posted on the league web site, only four have ever played in a CHS baseball game — senior Daniel Olson and juniors Hawthorne Wolfe, Cody Roberts, and Sage Sharp.

Olson and Roberts provide a one-two combo at the top of the pitching staff, while Wolfe is back to hit leadoff and prowl center field.

Cody Roberts joins Daniel Olson at the top of Coupeville’s pitching rotation. (Photo by Karen Carlson)

Three sort-of newcomers, all with plenty of hardball experience, are expected to have immediate impacts, as well.

Xavier Murdy, a junior, joins Olson and Wolfe as a team captain, while sophomores Scott Hilborn and Jonathan Valenzuela will start at shortstop and third base, respectively.

“We are anchored on the left side of our infield,” Thayer said. “This will be their first year of high school baseball and they have proven themselves ready to rise to the occasion and lead us in to the future.”

Murdy spent his freshman year on the soccer pitch, but with the move from 1A to 2B, boys soccer slides from spring to fall.

Rounding out the preseason roster are junior Miles Davidson, sophomore Coen Killian, and a pack of freshmen — Nathan Ginnings, Cole White, Nick Guay, Andrew Williams, Seth Woollet, and Zane Oldenstadt.

It’s a group which will have to learn on the fly.

“Just coming together as a team, as we haven’t had much time to bond as a tight group; but every practice we become a tighter group,” Thayer said.

“We are learning from each other as we go in a very short time.”

However the lineup eventually breaks down, Thayer is excited to get on the field.

“Our goal for this season is to compete for a league title,” he said. “Since there is no state tournament this year, our team goal is league title, and let everyone know that we are a state-worthy team next season.

“We are a very young team so our future is very exciting, and I believe we will be in contention for league and state for the foreseeable future.”

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