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Posts Tagged ‘Hawthorne Wolfe’

   CMS 8th grader Caleb Meyer has his own personal cheerleader, big sis Mckenzie. (Photos courtesy Mckenzie Meyer)

   Wolves Cody Roberts (21), Meyer and Hawthorne Wolfe (1) line up for the start of a new season.

Ready to tackle anything that gets in their way. (Bob Martin photo)

After this, everything counts.

The Coupeville Middle School football team got the butterflies out Saturday, traveling to Sequim for a season-opening jamboree.

Next up on the schedule is the first official game, which arrives next Thursday, Sept. 21.

It’s a home game, the opponent is Chimacum, and kickoff is set for 3:45 PM.

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Hawthorne Wolfe (John Fisken photos)

   Hawthorne Wolfe, seen here in an earlier game, dropped in 14 Monday for the CMS 7th graders. (John Fisken photo)

The big dog was gone, but his schoolmates still howled.

A game after scorching Forks for 26 points, Coupeville Middle School hoops sensation Caleb Meyer was a world away Monday — visiting his mother’s family in New Zealand.

Without their rampaging beast in the paint, the CMS 7th graders put up a strong fight, but fell 55-36 to host Port Townsend.

Meanwhile, Coupeville’s 8th graders put together their most complete game of the season, but were nipped 35-30.

The losses dropped the CMS 7th graders to 2-2 and the 8th graders to 0-4 on the season.

The younger squad got another big game from their other lethal scoring weapon — fleet-footed gunner Hawthorne Wolfe — as he hit for a team-high 14, including a pair of three-balls.

Coupeville put up most of its offense in the first half, scoring 24 before the break, then hit a cold stretch with their shooting touch.

Still, they spread the scoring wealth around, with seven other players joining Wolfe in the scoring column.

Connor Barton drained six, Cody Roberts and Logan Martin knocked down four apiece and Aiden Burdge, Xavier Murdy, Gabe Shaw and Grady Rickner each added a bucket.

Jonathan Carroll and Logan Wertz also saw floor time for CMS.

In the eighth grade game, Jake Mitten made his own run at matching Meyer’s season-high, scoring in all four quarters as he tallied 20 of his team’s 30 points.

After banking home a bucket in the first, he accounted for all seven of Coupeville’s second quarter points, then tallied 11 more in the second half.

Daniel Olson and Sage Downes backed Mitten, both hitting for five. Olson’s points all came in the first quarter, while Downes capped his run with a fourth quarter trey.

Ben Smith (playing on his birthday), Dakota Eck and Alex Jimenez rounded out what is a very thin 8th grade roster.

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Caleb

   Caleb Meyer celebrates with big sis Mckenzie after scoring 26 in a wild win Thursday night. (Frank Meyer photo)

They saved the best for last.

The Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball program played three games Thursday against visiting Forks, and games one and two were lopsided losses.

But then the 7th grade varsity took the floor, and things took a radical turn.

Storming back from a big early deficit, then not buckling in the final moments as waves of emotion surged on first one side, then the other, of the gym, the Wolves pulled out a heart-stopping 54-51 win.

The victory lifts the 7th graders to 2-1 on the season, and marks the biggest single-game scoring display put down by a Wolf this winter, high school or middle school player.

That came courtesy Caleb Meyer, who scored Coupeville’s final five points en route to a 26-point night.

With CMS clinging to a 49-48 lead, Meyer powered in between two defenders to bank home a bucket, then added three free-throws in the final seconds to blunt a miracle three-ball from Forks.

The Spartans actually had a chance to force overtime, but Coupeville’s defense hung tough, played exactly the way longtime hoops guru Randy King drew it up, and was rewarded when the game’s final shot — a heave from half-court — went wide right.

That capped a sometimes-bizarre game in which CMS fell behind by eight points after just two minutes.

As quickly as they had disintegrated, the Wolves pulled themselves back together, though, closing the first quarter on a 14-2 tear.

Meyer threw down four baskets during the surge, while Coupeville shredded the Forks defense with pinpoint passing.

Grady Rickner was channeling John Stockton in his prime, feeding Xavier Murdy on a quick cut for a bucket, then whipping a laser pass to Meyer for two more on the very next possession.

Trying to top that, the Wolves bounced the ball around like they were playing pinball the next time down the floor.

Hawthorne Wolfe picked a pass out of mid-air, spun up court, fed Murdy, then the Wolf post dropped a pass over his shoulder to a rampaging Meyer, causing jaws to drop along the Forks bench in tribute.

Up 16-12 after one, the Wolves stretched it out to 30-20 at the half.

The highlight came when Meyer pumped home three straight buckets without having to cross mid-court on defense.

Two steals turned into layups, packaged around a loose ball that took a perfect bounce off a shoe right into Meyer’s waiting hands.

Without a moment’s hesitation, the curly-haired grandson of former Videoville owners Frank and Miriam Meyer took a step and sank a running one-hander off the glass.

Forks wasn’t dead, however, and the Spartans regrouped to score more in the third quarter (23) than they had in the entire first half.

With Meyer, Murdy and Wolfe all in serious foul trouble, and a very thin bench, the Wolves headed into the fourth trailing 43-39 and looking like they might crack.

Course, they were just bluffing.

Logan Martin and Cody Roberts bought King valuable time, ably filling in for the guys with four fouls, then Coupeville’s defense won the game.

Wolfe picked off back-to-back passes, hitting the jets and turning both into breakaway layups, then CMS took the lead for good by getting back to the pinball passing attack.

Meyer found Roberts, who was cutting inside, for a bucket, before Connor Barton pulled off the prettiest play of the night on a give-and-go that he capped by banking the ball home over his shoulder while sliding through the paint.

Another Wolfe steal, this one kicked out to Murdy for a layup, broke Forks collective back, before Meyer closed things out with his furious final five (points).

His 26, which edges the 23 scored by Wolf freshman Jered Brown in a high school JV game Wednesday as the season’s biggest offensive display, was backed by Wolfe, who drained 15.

Barton knocked down six, Murdy banked in five and Roberts added a bucket to round out the scoring.

8th grade varsity:

Jake Mitten dropped in a gorgeous jumper in the final seconds of the first quarter, pulling Coupeville within 10-8 as the teams went to the first break.

Then things fell apart, hard.

Unable to deal with Forks full-court press, which was headed up by a quicksilver guard with very fast hands, or the Spartans considerable size advantage, the Wolves splinted in the second quarter.

A 24-1 surge left Coupeville crippled, and it never recovered, falling 71-30.

Forks had three high school-sized front court players, and the Spartans dominated the glass relentlessly.

On ONE possession they pulled down FIVE consecutive offensive rebounds.

While Forks shooting touch from close range wasn’t as impressive as its glass game, you get that many rebounds, one has to drop … eventually.

The Wolves rallied a bit in the second half, making things much more competitive, with Mitten and Sage Downes finishing with 12 points apiece.

Daniel Olson knocked down four free throws, Dakota Eck sank a bucket and Ben Smith and Alex Jimenez brought intensity and fight on the defensive side of the ball.

7th grade JV:

A bad first quarter (22-2) doomed the Wolves, as they fell 58-28.

Gabe Shaw paced the Wolves with eight, while Martin and Aiden Burdge each hit for seven, with Burdge netting a long three-ball.

Roberts (4) and Miles Davidson (2) also tallied points.

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Hawthorne Wolfe, seen here in his SWISH days, scored 17 in his middle school hoops debut. (Pat Kelley photo)

   Hawthorne Wolfe, seen here in his SWISH days, scored 17 in his middle school hoops debut. (Pat Kelley photo)

Aiden Burdge

   Aiden Burdge, who turned three steals into six points, poses with part of his fan club. (Photo courtesy Kiara Burdge)

The game changed in a flash.

For the first 10 minutes Thursday, Coupeville and Sequim’s 7th grade boys’ basketball squads were content to exchange body blows in a tightly-contested contest.

Then Hawthorne Wolfe, with his electric shooting touch, came off the CMS bench and the somewhat-annoying visiting fans got really, really quiet in a big hurry.

With Wolfe going off for a game-high 17, including 12 straight at one point in the third, Coupeville stretched a two-point lead to 17, then sauntered home with a 47-41 opening night victory.

CMS coach Randy King, battling illness, had virtually no voice by the end.

The Wolf fans were in a similar condition, but their vocal straining came from screaming like banshees as Wolfe slid dagger after dagger through the net.

When he first hit the court, Coupeville was clinging to a 10-8 lead, benefiting greatly from the solid inside work of Caleb Meyer and Xavier Murdy.

Meyer, who would have been the heir to the Videoville throne if video stores were still paying me to watch movies, took the ball to the hoop with polished aggression all night.

His running mate is Mr. Clean, since Murdy pulled down every last rebound within a ten-mile radius, helping CMS to get out and run and then get multiple chances on the offensive end.

Once Wolfe slipped onto the court, the flow changed, as the quicksilver one darted in front of a pass, picked it clean, then outran a pack of Sequim players for a swooping layup.

He nailed the first of his three treys two plays later, and the Wolves went to the locker room up 19-17 after Connor Barton beat the defense and the buzzer with a gorgeous drive through the paint.

Whatever the two teams drank at halftime put an extra kick in their step, as the schools combined to score 37 points in a wild third quarter.

Barton, Meyer and Grady Rickner knocked down buckets, then Wolfe hit like TNT.

He ripped off 12 straight CMS points, doubling Sequim’s output in the same time period, and his offensive show was far from one-dimensional.

A three-ball from the left, a swooping layin off a pass from Murdy, a steal that led to a breakaway bucket, a little runner in the paint and then the coup de grâce.

Coupeville beat Sequim’s full-court press as Barton heaved the ball down the line while on the move.

For a second, the ball seemed intent on flying over Wolfe’s head for a turnover, but he snagged it over his shoulder, whirled, put the ball once on the floor, then drilled a trey.

As the fans were just beginning to comprehend what they had seen, another CMS player went on his own run, as Rickner knocked down three straight shots to officially slay Sequim.

Two more buckets from Meyer to kick off the fourth stretched the lead out to 47-30, before Sequim chipped away at the deficit with a late run.

While Wolfe’s 17-point middle school debut is one for the ages, Coupeville got something from everyone on the floor.

Meyer banged home 10, Rickner hit for eight, Murdy swished six, Barton tinkled the twines for four and Cody Roberts had two on a nifty give-and-go.

Logan Martin was the lone Wolf not to score, but he hauled down a ton of rebounds, made crisp passes and was a stalwart on defense for Coupeville.

JV almost pulls off a miracle:

The CMS 7th grade JV, facing a Sequim squad that was a mix of 7th and 8th graders, scored the game’s final seven points, but time ran out on them in a 22-19 loss.

Down by 10 and dealing with a running clock, as the visitors inched closer and closer to the door with plans to dash off to the ferry, Coupeville made an inspired late stand.

Daniel Barajas, Aiden Burdge and Gabe Shaw hit back-to-back-to-back buckets, with Shaw’s coming off a steal by Jonathan Carroll, before Barajas netted a free throw.

Coupeville then forced a turnover, but the ball got loose and rolled away.

As the running clock madly ticked down, the young Wolves, not realizing how little time was left (and the reduced-to-a-whisper King being unable to scream above the crowd) never got the ball back in play in time to heave a desperation three-point shot.

Barajas paced CMS with seven, while Burdge drained six, with all three of his buckets coming off of steals.

Shaw dropped in four and Miles Davidson, the game’s leading rebounder, knocked down a basket to round out the scoring.

Carroll, Tony Garcia, Logan Wertz and Joseph Starr also saw floor time for the Wolves.

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