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   After beating Port Townsend in overtime during their first meeting, Dane Lucero and the Wolves had less luck Tuesday in a rematch. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Forget about tonight, on to the next game.

That was the mantra Tuesday as the Coupeville High School boys basketball squad headed home from Port Townsend.

A rough shooting night doomed them against a confident RedHawks team in a 55-27 loss, but, tomorrow is, as they say, another day.

Wednesday will put the Wolves, now 1-1 in Olympic League play, 3-8 overall, back in their home gym.

And, instead of Port Townsend (4-1, 7-5), the foe will be Chimacum (0-3, 0-7).

Sitting in a tie with Klahowya (1-1, 4-7) at the moment, Coupeville has a prime opportunity to claim sole possession of second-place in league play with a win against the downtrodden Cowboys.

To do so, the Wolves will need to play like they did in the first quarter Tuesday.

Just maybe not like they did in quarters two and three, and definitely not like they did in the final eight minutes.

Up 12-11 at the first break, with senior guard Hunter Smith already having tossed in nine, things seemed to be going swimmingly for CHS.

Then a lid dropped on the rim for the Wolves.

Outscored 15-4 in the second, things went downhill steadily from there for Coupeville.

A 19-11 RedHawk run in the third stretched the lead out to a comfortable margin for the home fans, before a 10-0 fourth quarter added a bit of salt to the wound for the Wolves.

There weren’t a whole lot of bright spots for CHS, but it did out-shoot its hosts at the free throw line, tossing in four of five freebies to Port Townsend’s 2-5 showing.

Smith paced the Wolves with 13, which lifts him to 670 for his career.

He passed Wade Ellsworth (659), Pat Bennett (659) and Foster Faris (668) Tuesday, moving into 20th place on the Wolf boys basketball career scoring chart.

Joey Lippo backed Smith with seven points, while Ethan Spark (5) and Hunter Downes (2) rounded out the somewhat-limited offensive attack.

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   Hunter Downes, here wrestling away a rebound in an earlier game, was a defensive demon Friday, coming up with a huge steal in the final 10 seconds of regulation. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Everything but the win.

Playing for only the second time in 16 days, the Coupeville High School boys basketball squad went to war with visiting North Mason Friday, coming within a play of upending their speed-demon 2A rivals.

But the Bulldogs, who were atrocious all night from the free throw line, were flawless in the one moment which mattered, holding on for a wild 63-61 win in overtime.

The non-conference loss drops Coupeville to 3-7, but the Wolves have an immediate chance to rebound, hosting Klahowya Saturday afternoon (3:45 varsity tip) in a key Olympic League clash.

Topple the Eagles and the Wolves will sit atop the league standings at 2-0.

Coupeville has faced a tough non-conference schedule, and, by and large, the Wolves have held up well.

Friday was no different as the Wolves bolted out to a big lead early, scrambled to pull off a miracle in the final 10 seconds of regulation, then almost pulled off a second miracle in the extra period.

Trailing by four with 25 seconds left in regulation, CHS improbably tied up the game thanks to one sure thing, and one huge surprise.

The sure thing was Hunter Smith attacking the basket, drawing a foul, then banking home a pair of free throws which softly snapped through the net.

The improbable came after the Wolves used back-to-back fouls to frustrate North Mason.

Coupeville had fouls to give, and the calls forced the Bulldogs to take the ball out of bounds both times. The second time, with eight seconds to play, the Wolves took advantage.

North Mason, rushing to beat a five-second call, threw a pass into the wrong thicket of arms, and Wolf defensive ace Hunter Downes read it perfectly.

The senior snared the ball off of the fingertips of a rival, spun and fed Smith for a breakaway layup to knot things at 53-53, sending his home fans into hysterics.

CHS then almost pulled off a true miracle, as Joey Lippo knocked the ball away on the next play, stole it and chucked up a prayer right before the final buzzer.

It wasn’t answered, however, and, for the second time this season, Coupeville went to overtime.

The extra four minutes weren’t as kind this time around as they were the first time during a win over Port Townsend, as North Mason hit back-to-back three-balls to start things off.

Suddenly down eight, with time running out, Ethan Spark did his best one-man impersonation of a scoring machine, hitting a trey and two free throws to pull Coupeville within 61-58.

Forced to foul, the Wolves sent Jha’mal Johnson to the line.

North Mason was just 7 of 18 at the charity stripe to that point, but Johnson was money, dropping in both shots to all but seal the win.

Spark nailed another long three-ball, his fifth of the game, but the Wolves couldn’t buy a foul at the end, poking at the North Mason players to no avail as the final six seconds ran off the clock.

The wild finale capped a game that went in spurts.

Coupeville opened on fire, rolling out to a 17-5 lead midway through the first quarter, with four different players knocking down buckets.

Smith and Lippo had six apiece in the opening run, with the latter netting three the easy way (a trey on the first shot of the game) and three the hard way (a bucket in the paint, followed by a free throw).

Toss in a three-ball from Spark and a short jumper from Kyle Rockwell, who was moving like a young Karl Malone, and things were humming for the Wolves.

Until they weren’t.

North Mason turned the tables from late in the first quarter until right before halftime, compiling its own 17-5 surge to knot things at 22-22.

That just meant it was Lippo time, again, as the senior, who was having the finest offensive night of his basketball career, tossed in another four, with his final layup sending CHS into the locker room up 27-23.

Coupeville’s Achilles heel has been the third quarter, and North Mason took advantage of a brief bit of Wolf sluggishness to run off nine straight points to open the quarter.

Spark finally stopped the bleeding with a silky jumper from the side five minutes into the quarter, and another three-the-hard-way from Lippo pulled the Wolves back within 37-33 headed to the fourth.

The final quarter was a donnybrook, with seven lead changes.

Downes, who would later come up with the game-defining steal and assist, had a put-back off of a rebound that was huge, while North Mason gunner Trey Fisher started hitting everything from everywhere.

Fisher, who didn’t score in the first half, finished with a game-high 22, with the majority of that coming in the fourth quarter and overtime.

Included in that were three straight eyebrow-raising shots, counting for seven points total, which he rained down immediately after a Spark three-ball gave Coupeville a 49-46 lead.

The Wolves spread much of their scoring among three players, with Spark hitting for 20, while Smith and Lippo chipped in with 18 apiece.

That was a career-high for Lippo, while Smith’s points raise his career total to 657.

He passed Jason McFadyen (654) Friday to move into 23rd on the CHS boys basketball career scoring chart.

Downes (3) and Rockwell (2) rounded out the scoring.

JV stumbles early:

Take away the first quarter, in which they dug themselves a 20-0 deficit, and the Wolf JV made a game of things.

But that opening eight minutes, where a full-court press shredded a lot of their resolve, made things hard, and CHS couldn’t get all the way back in a 58-28 loss.

The non-conference defeat drops the Wolf young guns to 1-8 on the season.

Coupeville, which didn’t get a shot off in the first three minutes of the game, finally broke through on the scoreboard on the opening shot of the second quarter.

Then promptly suffered another 13-1 run at the hands of the Bulldogs.

Pick the game up from the final minute of the second quarter through the end of regulation, and it was a 25-25 stalemate, though, with Mason Grove raining down five treys on his way to a team-high 15.

Jake Pease fought hard in the paint for six points, while Sages Downes (4), Koa Davison (2) and Jonathan Partida (1) rounded out the scoring.

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   You have to put the ball in the bucket to win basketball games. (Maddie Vondrak photo)

The calm before the storm.

The week surrounding Christmas is notoriously slow in the world of high school basketball, and 2017 was no exception.

Coupeville played just one game, having sat out the previous eight days, and now sits six days before its next game, thanks to New Year’s Day.

While both of the Wolf squads fell to non-conference foe Orcas Island, the boys loss was highlighted by Hunter Smith going off for a game-high 25 points.

Through the first nine games of the season, the senior guard is averaging 19.3 a game, which has allowed him to continue flying up the school’s career scoring chart.

Smith currently sits #24, and, if he continues at his current pace, could have a shot at breaking into the top 10 for both single-season and career scoring performances.

On the girls side of the ball, senior Mikayla Elfrank is out in front at a whisper below 10 points a night, with everyone hoping her ankle injury Friday was just a temporary setback.

Varsity scoring totals and league standings through Dec. 31:

Girls:

Mikayla Elfrank 99
Lindsey Roberts 67
Ema Smith 41
Kalia Littlejohn 38
Sarah Wright 38
Kyla Briscoe 28
Scout Smith 24
Chelsea Prescott 10
Allison Wenzel 3
Hannah Davidson 2

Boys:

Hunter Smith 174
Ethan Spark 87
Joey Lippo 26
Hunter Downes 21
Mason Grove 15
Jered Brown 14
Kyle Rockwell 11
Dane Lucero 5
Cameron Toomey-Stout 3
Gavin Knoblich 2
Ulrik Wells 2
Jacobi Pilgrim 1

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
Chimacum 2-0 5-5
Port Townsend 1-1 3-6
COUPEVILLE 0-1 2-8
Klahowya 0-1 2-6

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 1-0 3-6
Klahowya 1-0 4-6
Port Townsend 1-1 4-5
Chimacum 0-2 0-5

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   Coupeville sophomore Jered Brown netted five points Friday against Orcas Island. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

These are the days to learn lessons.

Working its way through a tough non-conference schedule, which includes a 69-53 home loss to Orcas Island Friday, the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball squad is preparing for the stretch run.

That’ll come when the Wolves return to the floor in 2018 — kicking things off Jan. 5-6 with back-to-back home games.

After going 3-6 in 2017, absorbing some dings against top-quality foes, CHS will close the regular season with eight Olympic League games in their final 11 contests.

Sitting in a first-place tie with Klahowya at 1-0, the Wolves, who should finally have a complete roster for the first time with the start of the new year, are ready to make a run.

Or, at least that’s the plan.

“Eight league games in front of us,” said first-year Coupeville coach Brad Sherman. “About to get real.”

When they clash with Klahowya, Port Townsend and Chimacum for playoff berths and a league title, the Wolves will be able to look back at games like the one they played Friday and build on what went right, while tweaking what went wrong.

In many ways, Coupeville didn’t lose as much as Orcas simply won.

The Vikings were a very-precise, very-sound, virtually error-free squad which shot a staggering percentage from the field, made every pass count and committed very few turnovers.

Trying to answer, the Wolves played a faster and looser game, and, when it worked, they made the nets jump. But, too many times they gave their seasoned foes extra opportunities.

“Orcas played a good game with a balanced scoring attack,” Sherman said. “I thought at times we got a little careless with the ball, so that’s an area we need to focus on.”

The game was much closer than the final score might indicate, as a game-clinching 12-0 Orcas run in the fourth quarter warped things a bit.

Coupeville never led in the game, but hung around within four to six points for most of the night.

The two teams traded blows early, with Orcas dropping in four successful bombs from behind the three-point arc in the first quarter.

CHS responded with a pair of its own treys, from Ethan Spark and Jered Brown, while Hunter Smith began to work on his game-high 25 points with a pair of artful runs at the bucket.

On the first one, the senior shooting star tiptoed through a mob of defenders in the paint, slapping home a layup over outstretched arms, while on the second one he committed, if not murder, at least manslaughter.

Isolated one-on-one against an Orcas defender, Smith abused the Viking so bad on the ensuing play, the kid’s dead ancestors at least three generations back will feel the shame tonight.

To say he broke both of the defender’s ankles, shredded his soul and made him burst out crying (on the inside at least) is an understatement.

Trailing just 19-16 at the first break, Coupeville went to the three-ball attack in the second quarter, while Orcas countered with a string of short, and very precise, jumpers in the paint.

Smith and Spark hit a pair of treys, with Smith going off for 10 points in the quarter, and the Wolves were down 37-32 at the half.

Orcas tried to pull away a bit in the third, stretching the lead into double digits for the first time, but several more buckets from Smith and a put-back by Hunter Downes kept things semi-reasonable.

Downes bucket came off of a rebound in which the scrappiest of all Wolves ripped the ball free with such force he nearly tore the arm off of an Orcas player’s body.

The sheer precision with which the Vikings played finally became too much to deal with in the fourth. A 12-0 run stretched the lead to 64-44, effectively ending things.

To their credit, the Wolves closed on a 9-5 tear, with Smith getting three the easy way (a long trey) and three the hard way (a slash to the bucket for a layup and the ensuing foul shot after getting hammered.)

His 25-point performance carried Smith past three more former Wolf greats.

Now sitting with 639 career points, he passed Wiley Hesselgrave (632), Kramer O’Keefe (636) and Rich Morris (637) Friday and sits #24 on the Wolf boys basketball all-time scoring list.

Spark knocked down 16 points, including four treys, to back Smith up, while Brown (5), Downes (4) and Mason Grove (3) chipped in to the scoring effort.

Dane Lucero, Gavin Knoblich and Ulrik Wells, whose rebounding was praised by Sherman, all saw floor times, as well.

JV sidelined:

While three of Coupeville’s four hoops teams played Friday, the Wolf JV boys sat, as Orcas was unable to field a second squad.

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   Allison Wenzel netted her first point this season in a win over Concrete. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Not much action, but it was all positive.

Coupeville only played a single foe on the basketball court this week, but both the Wolf girls and boys came away with solid non-conference wins over Concrete.

As winter break kicks off, a lack of games was a trend all across the Olympic League, as Port Townsend, Klahowya and Chimacum join CHS in biding their time.

Once we get past the start of the new year, things will ramp up in intensity, and the heart of the conference schedule will come to the forefront.

Until then, a look at the stat sheet shows four Wolves, senior Allison Wenzel and three newbies, netting their first points of the season against Concrete.

For sophomores Gavin Knoblich, Hannah Davidson and Ulrik Wells, those buckets also marked their first-ever varsity points.

Varsity scoring stats and league standings through Dec. 24:

Girls:

Mikayla Elfrank 90
Lindsey Roberts 58
Kalia Littlejohn 38
Ema Smith 34
Sarah Wright 30
Kyla Briscoe 25
Scout Smith 18
Chelsea Prescott 10
Hannah Davidson 2
Allison Wenzel 1

Boys:

Hunter Smith 149
Ethan Spark 71
Joey Lippo 26
Hunter Downes 17
Mason Grove 12
Kyle Rockwell 11
Jered Brown 9
Dane Lucero 5
Cameron Toomey-Stout 3
Gavin Knoblich 2
Ulrik Wells 2
Jacobi Pilgrim 1

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
Chimacum 2-0 4-3
Port Townsend 1-1 3-4
COUPEVILLE 0-1 2-7
Klahowya 0-1 2-6

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 1-0 3-5
Klahowya 1-0 2-6
Port Townsend 1-1 3-3
Chimacum 0-2 0-5

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