Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Hawthorne Wolfe’

Coupeville’s Sean Toomey-Stout tossed in seven points Monday at Sequim. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Closer and closer, but just not there yet.

The Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball squad has played three games this season, and cut their deficit in each outing.

Now they just need a win.

Attempt #3 went well for 16 minutes, as the Wolves carried a six-point lead in at the break Monday at Sequim, but a cold-shooting second half ultimately doomed them.

Only down by one after three quarters, Coupeville was outscored 14-7 by their hosts and fell 38-30.

The non-conference loss drops CHS to 0-3 on the season, but opportunity lurks, as the Wolves have two more games this week.

“We’ll get there,” said Coupeville coach Brad Sherman. “Just need to get our offense rolling. Shots will start to fall.”

Defense was the name of the game in the first half, as the Wolves held Sequim to single digits, heading to the locker room up 15-9.

After a 5-5 stalemate in the first, Coupeville rode the sweet shooting touch of Hawthorne Wolfe in the second frame.

A pair of buckets and a pair of free throws gave the fab frosh six in the quarter, letting him outscore his rivals by himself.

Unfortunately, while the Wolves doubled their output, scoring another 15 points after the break, Sequim ripped off 29, winning the quarter battles 15-8 and 14-7.

The hosts nailed five of their seven three-point bombs in the second half, and with Coupeville’s lone trey coming courtesy Wolfe in the fourth quarter, that tipped the scales a bit.

Both teams were fairly even at the free-throw line, as Sequim hit 5-7 and CHS finished 5-9.

Wolfe led Coupeville in scoring for the second time in three games, pouring in 11, while junior Sean Toomey-Stout banked home seven in support.

With 26 points apiece, the duo are tied atop the season scoring chart.

Ulrik Wells and Jered Brown added four points apiece in support, while Gavin Knoblich swished a pair of free throws and senior captain Dane Lucero knocked down his first bucket of the season.

Coupeville, which also gave floor time to Mason Grove, Jacobi Pilgrim, Jean Lund-Olsen and Koa Davison, has played teams from three separate classifications, and will soon make it four.

Oak Harbor is 3A, The Bush School 1A and Sequim 2A, while the next two foes, Friday Harbor and Orcas Island, hail from 2B.

Read Full Post »

Freshman Hawthorne Wolfe went for a team-high nine points Wednesday as Coupeville boys basketball opened a new season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s been 3,264 days since Coupeville and Oak Harbor played a varsity high school boys basketball game, and some things have changed.

Back on Dec. 21, 2009, the Wolves had a high-flying, veteran-heavy squad which finished the season 16-5, with one of those wins a 66-61 toppling of their Island neighbors.

Jump forward nine years, and this time the Wildcats boasted experience (and a lot of speed), with a roster stacked to the brim with battle-hardened seniors in 11 of 12 roster slots.

Meanwhile, CHS hit opening night with just one senior, only two returning full-time varsity players, and four of its nine active players making their varsity debut.

So, not a total surprise the large 3A school drilled the ultra-small 1A school Wednesday to the tune of 79-31.

But, while the final score might sting in the moment, the night was not a total loss for Coupeville.

For one thing, it was just one game in an 18-game schedule, a non-conference bout at that, and, hopefully, chock full of lessons for a new-look Wolf squad.

“That’s the beauty of basketball season; it’s not like football, where we have to wait a week to play again,” said CHS coach Brad Sherman. “We can have short memories, take some things in to work on at practice the next two days, then get out there and play (against fellow 1A school Bush) Saturday afternoon.”

Oak Harbor, which was led by the wicked fast Dorian Hardin and the three-ball-flinging Terrell Crumpton, blew out to a 17-0 lead, picking apart the young Wolves with withering defense.

Coupeville didn’t stop the bleeding until Wolf big man Ulrik Wells banked home a free throw late in the opening quarter, followed by a trey from the top off the fingertips of point guard Jered Brown.

The Wildcats seized control by using their press to force turnovers, while holding the Wolves without back-to-back scores for much of the game.

The only small CHS run came midway through the second, when it used four free throws and a Wells jumper in the paint that rattled around for an eternity before plopping through the net, to go on a 6-0 mini-surge.

The ‘Cats, by contrast, put together a second rampage, opening the second half on a 16-0 tear, ending any minor hopes of a Wolf comeback.

“We knew it would be a tough game, facing a very athletic opponent,” Sherman said. “We struggled with their pressure, just trying to do a little too much.

“We will work on executing our break like we know we can,” he added. “It’s a first game, early in the season; against a team like that, you expect some bumps and that’s OK – as long as we are learning and getting better each week.”

Learning is the key word, as three of Coupeville’s top four scorers on the night – Hawthorne Wolfe, Sean Toomey-Stout and Koa Davison, were making their varsity basketball debut.

Toomey-Stout, a football phenom who sat out his sophomore basketball season while recuperating from an injury, gave the Wolves an injection of toughness, while Davison teamed with Wells to provide CHS with some pop in the paint.

The night’s brightest spot, however, might be Wolfe, Coupeville’s floppy-haired, three-ball-spraying, bobbin’ and weavin’ answer to “Pistol” Pete Maravich.

He’s only a freshman, and showed it at times Wednesday, but the upside on this one is huge.

Wolfe splashed a pair of balls from behind the three-point arc on his way to a team-high nine points, but he also had a pair of sweet set-up passes, picking up assists on buckets by Brown and Davison.

Better still, he proved to be a scrapper, hitting the floor frequently and refusing to be bullied by the older Wildcats when there was a battle for a loose ball or re-directed rebound.

That was a trait also demonstrated by his older teammates, with Dane Lucero and Jacobi Pilgrim banging down in the pits and Mason Grove and Jean Lund-Olsen doing their best to disrupt Oak Harbor’s blazing guards.

Toomey-Stout rattled home seven points to back Wolfe’s nine, with Wells (6), Davison (5), Brown (3) and Pilgrim (1) also tallying points in June Mazdra’s score book.

Hardin and Crumpton each went for 17 to pace Oak Harbor, while Haven Brown popped for 13.

Sophomore Matt Kelley, the lone non-senior on the ‘Cat roster and a former Coupeville athlete through middle school, slipped a single, solitary, free throw through the twines.

Along with the loss, Coupeville took a physical hit, or rather two, as Gavin Knoblich rolled his ankle in warm-ups and Brown took a substantial shot to the chest in an area where he had previously had surgery.

One limped back to the bench before tip-off, while the other spent most of the second half with an ice pack wrapped to his chest, and neither’s status is 100% clear for Saturday’s game.

Whomever is ready and able to go against Bush will come out ready for a scrap, though, which pleases their coach.

“Lots of basketball games ahead,” Sherman said. “I really was proud of the guys. They could have put their heads down and quit, they never did that.

“They worked dang hard and left the locker room tonight ready to get back at it tomorrow,” he added. “Says a lot about their character and desire to grow as a team.”

 

JV:

For a moment, an upset seemed on the horizon. Then the rim turned unforgiving.

Unable to buy a bucket for an agonizingly long time, with shot after shot slithering back out of the bucket, the Wolf second unit saw an 8-3 lead turn into a 43-22 loss.

In the first couple of minutes, however, things were peachy, as freshman Logan Martin hit a gorgeous turnaround jumper to start the season, before Daniel Olson and Grady Rickner splashed three-balls from the back reaches of the parking lot.

Then nothing would drop, near or far.

A couple of treys mixed with some fast-break points off of steals helped Oak Harbor run off 17 consecutive points to end the first quarter, and the damage was done.

The rim wasn’t much more forgiving in the second quarter, as a Cody Roberts free throw and a Tucker Hall put-back off of an offensive rebound was all CHS could muster in the second quarter.

The second half was much more competitive, as the teams plowed through an increasingly rough-and-tumble affair.

With plenty of elbows flying and some fiery words exchanged after fouls, the two squads went toe-to-toe, and mouth-to-mouth, with Coupeville winning the third quarter scoring battle and hanging tough in the fourth.

Olson, who was handcuffed to the bench by early foul trouble, rebounded to score seven of his team-high 10 points in the second half.

Hall tossed in four in support, while Grady Rickner (3), Martin (2), TJ Rickner (2) and Roberts (1) also scored.

Sage Downes, Miles Davidson, Alex Jimenez and Chris Ruck rounded out the opening night roster, with Jimenez acquitting himself nicely when running the point under constant pressure.

 

C-Team:

The night’s biggest mismatch, as a very inexperienced Wolf team faced a Wildcat unit which has played together as a group for some time.

Wanting to build a winning attitude from the ground floor, Oak Harbor coaches elected to keep all their freshmen together on one team, regardless of talent level, and it’s a group to keep an eye on.

On opening night, the ‘Cats rolled to a 63-16 win, dropping seven treys and running away with the game early.

Shawn Day and Gage McLeod paced Oak Harbor with 16 points apiece, with the sweet-shooting Day singing the net for four three-balls.

Coupeville got scoring from five of the seven players on the roster, with Jaylen Nitta, Ben Smith and Brayden Coatney leading the way with four points apiece.

Jonathan Partida and Chris Cernick each added a bucket, while Andrew Aparicio and DJ Stadler also saw floor time for the Wolves.

While it was a rough opener, veteran coach Scott Fox is in it for the long haul, as are his players.

“Oak Harbor has played together for five years and it showed. They looked real good today,” he said. “We have kids who have never played basketball before and played well at times. It’s going to get better from here.”

Read Full Post »

Hawthorne Wolfe glides in for a bucket. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolfe, here streaking for home, was a key player on a Babe Ruth team which finished 2nd at state and advanced to regionals this summer.

Talent? Check.

Hard work and commitment? Check and check.

Hawthorne Wolfe is that rare young athlete who checks all the boxes, and his appearance in a Coupeville High School uniform this coming year is highly-anticipated.

On the basketball court, he’s a three ball-droppin’ terror who can also wheel and deal with the ball, while on the baseball diamond, Wolfe brings a slick glove, hot bat and fleet feet to the lineup.

During his middle school days, Wolfe also played football, but, for the moment at least, he’s stepping off the gridiron to focus on his other two sports.

While he shines in all his sporting endeavors, the fast-rising young star hails hoops as his favorite pastime.

“It’s a team sport and at times can be individual,” Wolfe explained. “It’s also fast-paced, as well as fun.”

On a CMS team where all five starters felt comfortable firing up balls from behind the three-point arc, Wolfe was the deadliest last season.

Operating like NBA stars such as Steph Curry, or future CHS teammate Mason Grove, Wolfe has already showcased an often uncanny ability to get his shot off quickly, and from any angle.

Shooting on the move, while going either direction, he often proved deadliest when putting up balls in the flow of action.

Give him time to spot up and it was even more likely to result in a taste of splash city.

The commitment factor came into play vividly after one game, when, unhappy with his performance (despite leading Coupeville to a win), he ran laps around the gym.

A slight chuckle came from one of his coaches as Wolfe, not satisfied with his initial self-administered punishment, decided to double his running.

Commitment like that carried over to many of his teammates, and the middle school hoops team was a tightly-knit, successful squad.

Now, as Wolfe and most of his teammates prepare to swap out CMS uniforms for ones which read CHS, that sense of commitment continues to burn brightly.

“I want to hopefully go to state in all sports,” Wolfe said. “And, if possible, which I think it is, win state and so on.”

Away from the court or diamond, he’s fond of playing video games and spends a fair amount of time “watching sports or going to sporting events with my dad or family.”

When he’s in uniform himself, or working to get ready, Wolfe strives to mesh his skills with his teammates, well aware a solid team can go further than just a single athlete.

“It shows that you can work with others well and you get to have fun playing sports competitively,” he said. “I think I’m a good teammate; I mean, I recommend asking some of my teammates first.”

While he always wants to keep the competitive fires raging, Wolfe is also on a mission to find proper balance.

“I would like to work on not getting frustrated at things I shouldn’t get frustrated at,” he said with a small smile.

Whether dropping in treys from long distance, or slaving away over school work, Wolfe has a deep appreciation for his support crew.

“Well, obviously my parents and grandparents and all my coaches have been great on helping me,” he said. “I can’t think of one who hasn’t.

“But when it comes to teammates, I would say Caleb Meyer, just cause me and him are always competitive,” Wolfe added. “He helps me, I help him, and we strive to be great together, whether it’s in the gym or outside.”

Read Full Post »

Daniel Olson fires the ball in during warm-ups. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Teamwork at its finest.

   Xavier Murdy comes up firing from behind the plate for Coupeville’s Babe Ruth baseball squad.

The brain trust, hard at work.

“Just try and throw it past me, bud, just try…”

Cody Roberts brings the heat.

The (very bright) future of Wolf softball.

Hawthorne Wolfe sets off a dust storm as he slides in with a run.

He wanders here, he wanders there, camera always at the ready.

Tuesday night the sound of ball hitting bat drew John Fisken to the Coupeville High School ball fields, where he snapped the pics seen above.

The photos capture two Central Whidbey Little League teams, a Babe Ruth squad in action against Anacortes and Majors softball players and coaches in their down time.

Read Full Post »

   Gabe Shaw played strongly in two games Wednesday afternoon. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net) 

One was over quickly, one came down to the final shot.

The two Coupeville Middle School boys basketball squads closed out their final appearance on their home court Wednesday in very different fashions.

The Wolf JV fell 59-25 to visiting Sequim, while the CMS varsity came within a final, desperate three-point bomb of upending their rivals in a wild 53-50 battle royal.

Both Coupeville teams wrap the season with a trip to Port Angeles Thursday to face ginormous Stevens.

Varsity:

Not a good game for those with heart conditions.

It started with a bang — Logan Martin hitting a rain of shots as Coupeville jumped out to a 9-0 lead — got dicey in the second half, then turned crazy in the final quarter, as the teams combined for almost 40% of the night’s points in the final eight minutes.

In the early going, everything was one smooth groove for the Wolves.

Martin took, and hit, the first three shots, a fall-away jumper, a soft fader and a three-ball from the left side, before Hawthorne Wolfe did his best ballerina imitation, snaring a rebound and twirling between defenders to lay the ball back up and in.

Even after Sequim finally got untracked on the offensive end, CMS had a quick answer.

Wolfe netted a pair of treys to cap the first quarter and Martin came back to end the half by banking a shot high off the glass.

As his bucket dropped through, the Wolves headed to the locker room up 23-16 and in control of things.

It didn’t last, though.

Coupeville’s shooting touch vanished for a quarter, and Sequim took advantage, using an 18-7 run in the third to take the lead for the first time.

Cody Roberts had a sweet running bucket, set up by a long airmail pass from Wolfe, but the Wolves struggled at the free throw line and, for the first time all night, started losing the war on the boards.

Trailing 34-30 as the fourth quarter dawned, Coupeville rallied to tie things at 38 when Wolfe splashed home his second three-ball of the quarter, and fifth of the game.

But, as quickly as the tie came, it went away.

In the matter of maybe a minute and a half, even if it felt more like two seconds, Sequim seemingly blew the game wide open.

A pair of three-balls later, a 9-1 surge by the visitors pushed the Wolf deficit to 47-39.

Game over and … X-Man has launched!

Xavier Murdy drilled back-to-back treys of his own to give Coupeville hope, then Aiden Burdge went and got crazy to light the fuse on the home crowd.

First he nailed a three-ball from the top with 32 seconds left, before picking the pocket of a Sequim ball-handler and feeding Caleb Meyer for a layup with 22 ticks to play.

Back within 51-50, the Wolves came with an aggressive look on defense, but couldn’t get the steal and had to foul to stop the clock.

To the delight of the three (loud) Sequim fans in attendance, the visitors tuned out the din of the local supporters and dropped both freebies through the net to force CMS to find a miracle.

And the Wolves almost did.

Wolfe got a good look at the bucket, and his three-ball from the left side hit the rim once, popped up, hit it a second time, swirled around and then, to the wails of his rabid fans, ricocheted away.

At which point, Sequim’s bench players rushed the court like it was Game 7 of the NBA finals, celebrating a come-from-behind win which gave them a split this season with Coupeville’s 8th graders.

The loss snaps a five-game winning streak for the CMS varsity, and they sit at 6-3 heading into their finale.

Wolfe finished with a game-high 17, while Martin banged home 11.

Murdy (8), Meyer (7), Burdge (5), Roberts (2) and Gabe Shaw rounded out the very-thin Wolf roster, while Sequim had a deep enough bench to sub in five at a time.

JV:

There was a moment when this game seemed like it would be a back-and forth affair. Then that evaporated.

Damon Stadler tore down a rebound, pounded the ball the length of the court and slapped home a layup a minute into the second quarter, pulling the Wolves within 9-8.

Part of a 9-3 run which featured scores from Isaiah BittnerShaw and Burdge — the latter coming on a swooping steal of an in-bounds pass — it positioned CMS well.

And then the much-more polished Sequim 7th grade squad struck, and struck hard.

Throwing down 11 straight points, then adding another seven after Wolf guard Alex Murdy briefly stopped the bleeding with a bank shot, the visitors put the game out of reach well before the halftime break.

Coupeville had a couple of quality plays in the late going, with Dominic “The Destroyer” Coffman drilling a three-ball and Tony Garcia rambling through the paint for a bucket on a nice spin move, but there were no comebacks on this afternoon.

The Wolves spread their offense around, with nine different players getting in on the fun.

Bittner, Murdy and Stadler led the way with four apiece, while Coffman (3), Burdge (2), Garcia (2), Shaw (2), Alex Wasik (2) and Ty Hamilton (2) also scored.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »