Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Hawthorne Wolfe’

Hawthorne Wolfe scorched Darrington for 32 points Friday, netting eight shots from behind the three-point arc. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hawthorne Wolfe fears no gym.

Ignoring all the urban legends about Darrington’s old-school facility, which looks like it could have been used in Hoosiers, the Coupeville High School junior lit the joint up Friday night.

Odd backboards or not, Wolfe outdueled the Loggers, dropping in a game-high 32 points, including netting eight three-balls, pacing CHS to a 64-51 win.

Coming 24 hours after the Wolves fell on a last-second bucket to La Conner, the victory lifts Coupeville to 3-3 at the halfway point of a pandemic-altered season.

Channeling coaches who have mentored him — hardwood gurus like Willie Smith and David King — current Wolf head man Brad Sherman was reflective in his postgame comments.

While he is still somewhat haunted by trying to shoot at Darrington during his own otherwise stellar playing days, Sherman was pleased with how the current generation responded.

“Obviously games like last night can take a lot out of you emotionally,” he said. “So today’s test was really to see how quickly we could bounce back on the road.

“And our guys came out, played hard, and did what was needed to get the W today. Have to be proud of that!”

It was a solid team effort, with all nine Coupeville players who hit the floor scoring.

But it was the Wolf named Wolfe, the bobbin’ and weavin’, smooth-talkin’ and sweet-shootin’ Hawk who captured the spotlight.

Dueling with Darrington’s Caleb Rivera, who went off for 27 points and five treys of his own, Wolfe was electric from long range.

He netted a trio of three-balls in the first quarter, tossed in two more in the second frame, then popped for yet another three in the third.

Is that a single-game record for CHS shooters?

Likely, but I’m not 100% sure.

Sherman netted six treys in a game while playing for the Wolves in the early 2000’s, and Gabe Wynn and Mason Grove both swished seven in 2017 games.

Grove once hit 10 three-balls against Port Townsend, but that came in a JV game, so Wolfe’s eight may very well be a CHS varsity record.

Either way, Wolfe’s big bombs were huge, with Xavier Murdy and Logan Downes each adding a single three-ball as Coupeville picked up 30 of its 64 points while shooting from the parking lot.

The game itself was close, especially in the early going, as Coupeville led just 13-12 at the end of the first quarter.

Wolfe already had 11 at that point, and he and his teammates stretched the lead out to 34-26 at the half, then 52-39 after three quarters.

The fourth quarter played out to a 12-12 stalemate, clinching the win for CHS, with six different Wolves scoring in the final frame.

Wolfe’s 32 was his second-best work of the season, trailing just the 38 he dropped on Mount Vernon Christian in the season opener.

Continuing his torrid tour through the 104-year history of CHS boys basketball, the floppy-haired Dairy Queen employee jumped Friday from a tie for #43 on the program’s all-time scoring list to #37.

With 558 points and counting, Wolfe leap-frogs Brad Miller (526), Jerry Zylstra (527), Denny Zylstra (538), Marc Bissett (549), Jim Syreen (550), Roy Marti (551), and Randy Duggan (552).

Xavier Murdy, a force on both ends of the floor, chipped in with nine points Friday, and is now just a bucket off of 150 career points.

Freshman Logan Downes (7), TJ Rickner (4), Sage Downes (3), Alex Murdy (3), Logan Martin (2), Daniel Olson (2), and Grady Rickner (2) scored as Sherman’s crew all contributed.

In this compressed season, next week will be huge for Coupeville, as it plays three games in four days.

The Wolves get a rematch with La Conner, this time on the road, next Wednesday, June 2.

Then they host MVC June 3, before traveling to Orcas Island June 5.

 

JV stays home:

There was no second game for the Wolf boys Friday, though Darrington is currently scheduled to play a JV game the second time these schools meet.

Read Full Post »

Coupeville junior Hawthorne Wolfe is the 48th CHS boy in 104 years to crack the 500-point scoring club. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hawk got historical, then he got off the floor.

Coupeville High School junior Hawthorne Wolfe cracked the 500-point career scoring club Tuesday, then he and the other starters handed the game over to their teammates.

Jumping out to a 31-2 lead after one quarter, with Wolfe and Grady Rickner each tossing in 10 points, CHS eventually coasted in with a resounding 71-17 thumping of visiting Concrete.

The win evens Coupeville’s record at 2-2 heading into another home game Thursday, with La Conner set to visit Whidbey.

Everything was dropping for the Wolves Tuesday, especially in the early going.

Xavier Murdy, Logan Martin, and Wolfe all hit three-balls, as seven different Coupeville players got into the scoring column in the first quarter.

With the game already all but decided just eight minutes in, Coupeville coach Brad Sherman went deep on his bench, getting all 12 players a chance to score.

The Wolves pushed the lead out to 47-6 at the half, then the starters took a seat and let their backups play most of the second half.

That allowed the scoring to be spread out all the way across the scorebook, keeping June Mazdra and her well-sharpened pencils busy.

Grady Rickner paced Coupeville with a game-high 15 points, while Wolfe’s 12 points all came in the first half.

That was enough to lift him to 504 points, making him the 48th CHS boy in the 104-year history of the program to crack the exclusive club.

Wolfe passes Jason Bagby (499) and David Lortz (502), moving into 47th place on the career scoring chart.

Xavier Murdy added nine points in support of his Class of 2022 teammates, with Logan Downes and Jonathan Valenzuela adding seven apiece.

Alex Murdy (5), Daniel Olson (4), TJ Rickner (3), Martin (3), Cole White (2), Cody Roberts (2), and Sage Downes (2) rounded out the explosive offensive barrage.

It was the first varsity points for Valenzuela and White, who joins dad Greg on the Wolf boys career scoring chart.

With Cole’s bucket, the CHS assistant coach father-freshman son duo now have a combined 606 varsity points to their credit.

Coupeville had a strong shooting performance in every aspect of the game, hitting 13 of 17 from the free-throw line, while six different players nailed a three-ball.

Raining down treys were Valenzuela, Logan Downes, Wolfe, Grady Rickner, Xavier Murdy, and Martin.

 

JV grabs some pine time: 

Concrete only goes one team deep, with a thin roster at that, so the younger Wolves had the night off.

Read Full Post »

Audrianna Shaw leads all varsity girls in scoring. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Jonathan Valenzuela has torched the nets for the JV boys.

It’s the easy stat, it’s the sexy stat.

Rebounds, steals, the number of times you draw an offensive charge — all important to basketball success.

But putting the ball in the bucket is ultimately what the game revolves around.

Plus, it’s the stat I can track the best as four separate Coupeville High School hoops squads play out their season.

So, here you go, Wolf scoring stats through games of May 22:

 

Varsity Girls
(3 games):

Audrianna Shaw – 26
Maddie Georges – 16
Izzy Wells – 14
Carolyn Lhamon – 10
Savina Wells – 10
Kylie Van Velkinburgh – 7
Gwen Gustafson – 3
Ryanne Knoblich – 2
Lyla Stuurmans – 2

 

Varsity Boys
(3 games):

Hawthorne Wolfe 82
Xavier Murdy 25
Grady Rickner 22
Daniel Olson 14
Logan Downes 10
Alex Murdy 10
Logan Martin 6
Sage Downes 4
Cody Roberts 2
TJ Rickner 1

 

JV Girls
(2 games):

Lyla Stuurmans – 22
Madison McMillan – 18
Jessenia Camarena – 9
Katie Marti – 4
Skylar Parker – 4
Morgan Stevens – 1

 

JV Boys
(3 games):

Jonathan Valenzuela – 36
Cole White – 22
Dominic Coffman – 20
Nick Guay – 15
William Davidson – 8
Zane Oldenstadt – 8
Mikey Robinett – 4
Ryan Blouin – 2
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim – 2

Read Full Post »

Daniel Olson and company waged a war Saturday, coming up just short at the end. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

All you can ask for is a chance to win it at the end.

Some shots go in, some pop back out – it’s the story of basketball since the first time someone heaved a ball at a peach basket.

But after fighting back from an 11-point deficit on the road Saturday, the Coupeville High School varsity boys hoops squad got the look it wanted, which is a moral victory at least.

Unfortunately, what could have been a buzzer-beater rimmed out, as they sometimes do, letting host Friday Harbor escape with a gut-clenching 52-51 win.

The loss drops Coupeville to 1-2 on the season, though with a few small things going in the opposite direction, the Wolves are 3-0 at this point.

As he endured an endless wait for a ferry home, Wolf coach Brad Sherman retained his inner calmness.

“I’m not too worried about the record after the first week,” he said.

“If we can put together four quarters with the heart and tenacity we just saw from our guys in that second half, and clean up the boards a little, we are in a really good place down the stretch.”

Playing at Friday Harbor against a team which also entered the day at 1-1, the Wolves stayed close for a quarter, then hit a roadblock in the second eight-minute span.

Down just 11-10 entering the second quarter, Coupeville was outscored 18-8 in the frame, falling behind 29-18 at the break.

The third quarter was a completely different story, however, thanks to Hawthorne Wolfe’s hot hand, as he rained down 10 points to spark a 17-7 surge.

Sophomore Alex Murdy came off the bench to play big-time defense, helping shut down Friday Harbor’s main weapons, and the rally was on.

The fourth quarter was a war, Hagler and Hearns peppering each other with body blows, only this time it was Hawk and Xavier Murdy going toe-to-toe with Dylan Roberson and Kyson Jackson.

The Coupeville main men outscored their Friday Harbor counterparts 16-8 in the final stage, but the Wolverines managed to find just enough scoring from other folks to hold on to their one-point lead through the final buzzer.

Wolfe finished with a game-high 24, and has rung up 82 through the first three games of the season.

With Coupeville’s next two games at home — May 25 against Concrete and May 27 against La Conner — the CHS junior, with 492 career points, is on target to crack the 500-point club in front of his fans.

Xavier Murdy knocked down 12 points Saturday to back Wolfe, while Alex Murdy (5), Daniel Olson (4), Logan Downes (3), and Grady Rickner (3) also scored.

Logan Martin, Sage Downes, and TJ Rickner all saw floor time, as well.

Read Full Post »

Hawthorne Wolfe rippled the nets for 38 points Tuesday, most by a Coupeville player since the 2003-2004 season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They waited. And they worked. Then they worked some more.

When the moment finally arrived Tuesday, when the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball squad reclaimed the court for the first time in 465 days, the Wolves were ready.

Given a chance to play again, Hawthorne Wolfe, Xavier Murdy, and Co. made the night memorable, raining down pain on host Mount Vernon Christian in an action-packed 72-63 win.

The victory opens a new season and a new story for Coupeville, which is returning to the Northwest 2B/1B League after a long absence.

And that first welcome back featured Wolfe, the sharp-shooting guard who lives and breathes, and probably dreams, hoops, going bonkers.

Scoring all 20 of Coupeville’s second quarter points, the junior torched the joint for 38 points, the most by a Wolf since Allen Black banked in 39 against Concrete during the 2003-2004 season.

It was just 10 points off the 48 points scored by Jeff Stone against Darrington in 1970’s district title game, a school record which has stood untouched for 51 years.

The third 30-point game of his prep career, Tuesday’s performance lifts Wolfe from #55 to #50 on the CHS boys career scoring chart, which dates back to 1917.

With 448 points and counting, he passes Mason Grove (414), Caleb Powell (421), Tony Ford (432), Del O’Shell (440), and Gary Hammons (443).

Next up are Frank Marti (462) and Sean Dillon (469), with Stone and Mike Bagby tied at #1 with 1,137 points apiece.

Wolfe got off to a decent start Tuesday, rattling home nine points in the first quarter, with Xavier Murdy adding five, and Alex Murdy and Daniel Olson each dropping in a bucket during an 18-14 run.

But the second quarter belonged to Hawk, who scored from all angles, outpacing MVC 20-13 by himself to stake Coupeville to a 38-27 halftime lead.

Wolfe drained three treys, three two-point buckets, and five free throws during his second-quarter assault on the rim, then turned the spotlight over to fellow junior Grady Rickner.

After a brief cameo in a playoff game at the end of his sophomore season, this was Rickner’s varsity coming-out party and he responded, scorching the Hurricane defense for 10 points in the third quarter.

MVC managed to cut the margin down to single-digits thanks to a 14-10 advantage in the frame, however, and the fourth quarter was a back-and-forth battle.

Coupeville never blinked, with Wolfe tacking on another nine points down the stretch, with Olson, Logan Martin, Xavier Murdy, and Grady Rickner all scoring in the fourth.

“It was a good game. MVC was tough, and physical. Proud of our guys resilience tonight,” said Coupeville coach Brad Sherman. “Every time MVC started to make a run, somebody stepped up and made a big play.

“Was really great to see our guys come together as a team, keep composed when it was needed late, and pull out the league win,” he added. “After the long break, certainly a nice way to start.”

Wolfe’s 38 points were backed by Grady Rickner (12), Xavier Murdy (8), Olson (8), Martin (4), and Alex Murdy (2), while Sage Downes, TJ Rickner, and freshman Logan Downes all saw floor time.

With his first four varsity points, Logan Martin becomes the 394th Coupeville boy to score in a varsity game, and the second in his family.

Older brother Dalton tallied 47 points in the 2014-2015 season.

Coupeville returns to action Thursday with a home match-up against Orcas Island, which is 2-0 after beating Concrete and Friday Harbor.

There will be no fans at that game, per the request of the Orcas School District.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »