Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Island rivalry win’

Izzy Wells banked in 11 points in a big win Saturday afternoon. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville High School Athletic Director Willie Smith provides quality entertainment for his grandkids. (Cory Whitmore photo)

Third quarter for the win!

Busting open a tie ball game Saturday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball squad hit the jets, scorched the net and ran away from visiting South Whidbey.

Closing the third frame on a torrid 15-4 run, with mad bomber Maddie Georges nailing back-to-back three-balls, the Wolves broke open a tense game on their way to a 48-38 win.

Despite playing with just seven players, and that included a JV ace participating in just her second varsity contest, Coupeville finished the week with a pair of wins.

Now 6-4 after the non-conference victory over South Whidbey, the Wolves are off for a week, not returning to action until they travel to Oak Harbor next Saturday, Jan. 29.

That game is a recent addition to the schedule and will lead into a final three-game stretch of league clashes against Friday Harbor, La Conner, then Friday Harbor again.

The hope is to return as many of the missing players as possible back to the lineup next week, but nothing is set in stone during the Age of Coronavirus.

Saturday marked the return of Izzy and Savina Wells, and the sisters gave Coupeville a big burst of energy — plus a combined 18 points, which is pretty dang nice.

A game between two fairly evenly matched teams, Saturday’s rumble went back and forth for the first 17 minutes or so.

The Falcons got on the board first, thanks to some free throws, while Wolf junior Gwen Gustafson sank the first field goal of the game thanks to a picture-perfect jumper on the move.

The first of a trio of three-balls from Georges pinned Coupeville to an early 5-2 lead, while the Wolves closed the opening quarter with a nice series of plays.

Carolyn Lhamon lowered her shoulder, knocked her defender into the cheap seats, and slapped home a layup, before the Wells sisters turned into the Wonder Twins.

Savina Wells came from behind to soundly reject a Falcon shot, kickstarting a breakaway which finished with Izzy Wells beating the crowd to the hoop at the other end.

Things weren’t going to be easy, however, as a narrow 11-9 lead after one became a 23-23 tie at the half.

There were five ties and five lead changes in the second quarter before Lhamon closed the half by crashing right up the middle, dodging two defenders and lofting in a swooping layup as her mom yelled “Way to go, Tiny!”

That came on the heels of well-executed buckets from Izzy Wells — off of a crisp inbounds pass from Lyla Stuurmans — and one on which Stuurmans rumbled down the baseline, daring any Falcon to stop her as she rampaged to the hoop.

Spoiler: they didn’t.

After exchanging points to open the third, the game hung in the balance, and that’s when Coupeville, to a woman, stepped forward and seized all the momentum.

Lhamon popped a jumper which hit the bottom of the net just as the shot clock buzzer wailed, and that set off a game-busting 7-0 run.

While South Whidbey scratched its way back to 32-29 with the clock ticking down in the third, the Wolves closed on another tear — this one 8-0 — to seal the deal.

Savina Wells, ignoring Falcon benchwarmers trying to ruffle her concentration by drumming on the floor, arched in a pair of free throws, then Georges got deadly.

Her first three-ball beat the shot clock buzzer by .00001 of a second, while also banking in off the glass, while her final trey gave her exactly 200 points as a varsity hoops player.

The fourth quarter was a hotly contested affair, but Coupeville held on, pushing the lead out to 45-31 on a three-ball from Savina Wells, before closing things with a defensive gem.

Georges, who led all scorers with 13 points, scrambled back on defense, cut off an incoming Falcon, firmly planted herself and took a knee to the chest as the ref made the offensive charging call with an emphatic fist punch.

That left the fiery Wolf junior with her biggest grin of the game, one matched by CHS coach Megan Smith.

While she takes considerable pride in her defensive work, Georges also reached an offensive milestone by scoring her 200th point.

She’s the 58th Wolf girl to reach that mark in the history of the CHS girls hoops program, which dates back to 1974.

And Georges wasn’t the only Coupeville player to make some history Saturday, as Izzy Wells and Carolyn Lhamon, who each scored 11, passed the 150 and 100-point marks, respectively.

The elder Wells has 158 and counting, while Lhamon has recorded 102 career points.

Savina Wells dropped in seven points, Gustafson rattled the rim for four, Stuurmans added a bucket, and freshman Mia Farris had a busy day, playing both JV and varsity.

Read Full Post »

Alex Murdy is a key part of a Coupeville varsity which sits at 11-0. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Quality beats quantity.

Coupeville is the smallest of the three Whidbey Island high schools, but its varsity boys basketball team is the undisputed king of the Rock for the 2021-2022 season.

Having already polished off 3A Oak Harbor, the 2B Wolves went to Langley Saturday and smacked 1A South Whidbey to the merry tune of 74-38.

The non-conference victory caps a torrid week for Coupeville, in which it won four times in five days to run its record to 11-0.

Not always knowing from day to day which players will be on the floor during the test-three-times-a-week stage of the Age of Coronavirus, the Wolves have adapted.

A key player is missing, another steps up.

And they all attack with savage glee on defense, a key part of a run which has left Coupeville as the only unbeaten boys team left standing in the 2B classification.

A huge test awaits next Thursday, Jan. 27, when Coupeville travels to Mount Vernon Christian, but Saturday was all about getting some revenge on the next-door neighbors.

There was no Kody Newman to save the Falcons this time. No Lewis Pope.

Instead, after a relatively close opening quarter, in which sophomore Logan Downes poured in nine points during a 22-13 surge, the Wolves took the Falcons apart piece by piece.

A 25-6 run in the second frame, fueled by three-balls off the fingertips of Logan Martin and Downes, stretched the lead out to 47-19.

After that, Coupeville was methodical, putting together a 19-8 advantage in the third quarter, with Xavier Murdy dropping in nine points, before coasting in for the win.

Downes paced the Wolves with a game-high 18, while the X-Man was right behind him with 17.

Logan Downes has been strong on both ends of the floor as a sophomore.

Grady Rickner banked in 12, Caleb Meyer knocked down 11, Martin rippled the nets for six on a pair of treys, and the duo of Hawthorne Wolfe and Alex Murdy rounded out the attack with five apiece.

Also seeing floor time for Coupeville were Hunter Bronec and Dominic Coffman.

The two teams were nearly flawless at the free throw line in the game, combining to drain 26 of 27 freebie shots.

The Wolves were a perfect 16-16 — including Xavier Murdy hitting a pair of technical foul shots after South Whidbey was whistled for being overly yappy — while the Falcons finished 10-11.

Read Full Post »

Playing in a Coupeville uniform for the first time since 8th grade, Caleb Meyer came up huge in an epic win over Oak Harbor. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They could have broken.

In other seasons, they probably would have broken.

But not this team, not this year.

Kicking off a new campaign with a bang, the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball squad withstood a gut-wrenching 12-0 run by visiting Oak Harbor at the start of the third quarter Wednesday, then roared back to stun its visitors.

With multiple Wolves dropping haymakers in front of the largest crowd to cram the CHS gym in likely a decade, Coupeville came all the way back to stuff their next-door neighbors 70-64.

Which means that yes, a lil’ 2B school just spanked a much-larger 3A program, and the Wildcats are never going to hear the end of it.

Last time this happened, when Ian Smith and Hunter Hammer were running wild in Wolf uniforms, Oak Harbor didn’t play Coupeville on the hardwood again for nearly 10 seasons.

In the crowd Wednesday, all the first-graders from Wolf Nation could be heard yelling, “We’ve got next!,” while everyone else hopes OHHS officials are willing to lick their wounds and keep the renewed rivalry going.

Three years ago, when this year’s Coupeville seniors were freshmen, the two schools met for the first time in forever, and the Wildcats ran away with a lopsided win.

The next year, Oak Harbor escaped with a two-point win in overtime, then Covid erased all non-conference games last season.

Enter senior season for Xavier Murdy, Grady Rickner, Logan Martin, and Hawthorne Wolfe, the one CHS player to be on the floor for that 2018 varsity loss.

Oh yes, and add one more senior to that group, with the return of Caleb Meyer, who departed Coupeville after 8th grade, and returned Wednesday to drive a stake through the heart of Oak Harbor fans.

The curly-haired lil’ kid who once hung out at his grandmother’s movie mecca, Videoville, is now a curly-haired man, though still with a grin as big as any.

Back on the floor with the guys he grew up with, Meyer shot off the bench like a rocket unleashed during pre-game introductions, then did much of his team’s ball-handling, holding up extremely well under heavy pressure from the Wildcats.

But what will be remembered most is his play in the fourth quarter, as he pumped in 13 of his team-high 19 points, including 11 in a game-busting 13-3 run.

Having survived Oak Harbor’s third-quarter surge, thanks to a collection of big shots from ice-water-in-his-veins sophomore Logan Downes, the Wolves trailed 50-45 heading into the final frame.

That was better than 43-33 after the Wildcats hit four consecutive three-balls coming out of the halftime break, but there was still work to be done.

Perfect time for a little teleplay I like to call Caleb Meyer: Man of Destiny.

A three-point play the hard way, set up by an Xavier Murdy dish.

A runner in the paint, the ball arcing and dropping from the heavens.

A steal and breakaway.

Toss in four free throws, as Meyer was lights-out at the charity stripe all night, and Oak Harbor had little answer for the rampaging Wolf.

The few times the ball left his hands, Coupeville still hit pay-dirt, with Alex Murdy, Xavier Murdy, and Downes draining key buckets, and a banged-up Wolfe swishing key free throws in the waning moments.

The crowd, which mostly listened to CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith and kept its collective face masks pulled up, was bonkers, especially when Oak Harbor melted down, its coaching staff earning a game-capping technical foul for backtalk.

Though the mere fact the refs could hear the sass over the roar of the crowd was sort of amazing.

The furious finale, with Coupeville closing on a 25-14 run in the fourth, capped a thrilling brawl between two teams who brought everything they had to the floor.

Wolfe airmailed home a pair of three-balls in the opening quarter, with Xavier Murdy hitting one of his own, though Oak Harbor clung to a 16-15 lead headed to the break.

Coupeville flipped the script in the second frame, forcing a 31-31 tie at the half by closing on a 10-5 tear.

Meyer dropped in six of those points, with one bucket coming after Xavier Murdy made a phenomenal save on a ball headed out of bounds.

Several Oak Harbor players in the vicinity screeched to a halt, only to see X-Man hurtle past them, bound towards the back wall, and somehow redirect the ball in the millisecond before he crashed out of bounds.

Wolf sophomore Cole White was maybe a little less awe-inspiring, yet still came up almost as big in the moment, stealing the ball away as the ‘Cats stormed down court in a bid to break the tie right before the buzzer.

Riding the wave of excitement, the Wolves opened the third quarter with Meyer drawing a charge on an out-of-control foe, before Wolfe got electric, tip-toeing through the paint for a dipsy-do bucket.

And then disaster struck.

One, two, three, four times, the ball went airborne and Oak Harbor found nothing but the bottom of the net.

The home section of the crowd was stunned. The refs were even a little stunned.

The overflow Wildcat student section was, appropriately, loud ‘n proud.

Though no worries, as by night’s end, they had a whole lot less to be happy about.

But you know who wasn’t stunned? The Wolf players.

Huddled around coach Brad Sherman, Coupeville’s hardwood heroes all showed the same body language.

Heads were up. Ears were open. No pouting, no panic.

Hitting the floor with the same intensity they had before the tsunami hit, the Wolves kept coming.

Downes dropped a trey from the right side, then swished another from the left side just to even things out, before slapping home a layup off of an Xavier Murdy steal.

X-Man swished his own runner in the paint, then Alex Murdy nailed a turnaround jumper, sending their 10,837 family members in the stands into delirium.

That set up the sweet finale, and while 1-0 is just a start for a team with big dreams, it was more than enough to bring a smile to Sherman’s face.

“That was nice. Very nice. A true team win.”

A perfect choice of words, as the scorebook revealed.

While Oak Harbor senior Gage McLeod led all scorers with 21 points, it was Coupeville’s balanced attack which carried the day.

Meyer finished with 19, as four Wolves finished with double-digit scoring.

Wolfe rattled the rims for 16, moving from #24 to #21 on the CHS boys career scoring chart.

With 680 points and counting, he passes Coupeville hoops legends Foster Faris (668), Virgil Roehl (674), and Gavin Keohane (677), and moves within eight points of catching Chris Good (688).

The same Good who once ran the floor alongside Wolfe’s current coach, Sherman.

The circle of life, forever playing out across 105 seasons of CHS basketball.

Downes banked in 14 Wednesday, Xavier Murdy knocked down 11, while Grady Rickner and Alex Murdy rounded out the attack with five points each.

Coupeville got big performances from everyone on the floor, with White showing off nimble fingers on defense, and Logan Martin hitting the boards with intensity.

Meanwhile, Dominic Coffman, Jonathan Valenzuela, and Zane Oldenstadt kept the Wolf bench rockin’ as their teammates etched a win for the ages.

Read Full Post »

Gwen Gustafson had five kills and seven digs Monday as Coupeville knocked off South Whidbey. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

We own you. We still own you.

The Coupeville High School JV volleyball players are a bit like Aaron Rodgers, and they proved it Monday, rallying to win big in Langley.

Pulling out a three-set thriller, the Wolves completed a season sweep of arch-rival South Whidbey, knocking off the Falcons both at home and on the road.

The 25-17, 23-25, 16-14 win in its rival’s gym lifts Coupeville’s JV to 10-2 on the season, best record of any fall sports team in Cow Town.

Now comes the epic test, as the Wolves head home to host La Conner Tuesday.

The Braves JV hasn’t lost a Northwest 2B/1B League contest in 20-plus seasons, but Coupeville is just scrappy enough to believe in the dream.

For the moment, the young Wolves can bask in showing off their grit in Langley.

Most of its matches have been straight-sets sweep this season, so having to dig down deep for the victory is solid proof Coupeville can win in different ways.

That makes for a happy coach.

“It went well!,” said Wolf JV taskmaster Ashley Menges. “We were slow to start with energy and focus, but once we settled in it was a good match!

“This was really one of our first tests this season, which showed who my competitors are and how much they wanted it” she added.

“It was a good start to the week.”

Monday stats:

Taylor Brotemarkle — 11 assists, 4 aces
Mia Farris — 2 kills, 3 aces
Gwen Gustafson — 5 kills, 7 digs
Jada Heaton — 2 kills, 1 solo block
Issabel Johnson — 7 digs
Katie Marti — 3 kills, 1 dig, 6 assists, 1 ace, 1 block assist
Madison McMillan — 7 kills, 6 digs, 3 aces
Grey Peabody — 1 kill, 1 block assist
Aby Wood — 1 kill, 1 dig

Madison McMillan — a star is born.

Read Full Post »

A Coupeville hitter turns on the ball Tuesday during the first baseball game of the summer. (Photo courtesy Jon Roberts)

Play … ball?

While they wait for word on the fate of school sports during a pandemic, Coupeville baseball players returned to the diamond Tuesday for what coaches termed a “pick up” game.

The first of two games planned with next-door neighbor South Whidbey (the second is set for Thursday), the contest ended with a nail-biter of a 2-1 win for the Wolves.

Coupeville came from behind to knot things up, then pushed across the eventual winning run in the top of the seventh, and final, inning.

A Camden Glover sac fly to right plated Johnny Valenzuela with the go-ahead score, then Scott Hilborn, the third Wolf pitcher of the night, shut down South Whidbey in the bottom half of the inning to ice the win.

Hilborn, “looking ever much like Mariano Rivera,” according to Coupeville coach Jon Roberts, set down his rivals 1-2-3.

After forcing an infield out, the Wolf reliever closed the game with back-to-back strikeouts.

Coupeville set South Whidbey players on their heels thanks to a trio of top-notch hurlers, with starter Chase Anderson teaming up with relief aces Valenzuela and Hilborn to notch 9 K’s.

Anderson and Valenzuela each put in three innings apiece on the hill, with Valenzuela topping all Wolf pitchers with four strikeouts.

South Whidbey actually eked out the first run of the game, sending a runner around the bath-paths in the bottom of the first inning, but after that, Coupeville’s hurlers were in full lock-down mode.

The Wolves scratched out a run of their own in the top of the second, then the two squads remained deadlocked until the seventh.

Coupeville’s first run came courtesy Valenzuela, who singled, stole second and third, then streaked home when South Whidbey’s catcher lost the ball on what should have been a third strike.

From there, it was a defensive-minded stalemate, with the Wolves twice stranding a runner at third.

Coupeville finally found that elusive run in the seventh, thanks to walks to Valenzuela and Landon Roberts (who was plunked by a wayward pitch), which set Glover up for his heroics.

Jon Roberts, who has been waiting all summer to see his team in action, was happy for the game and happy for the victory, but interested in seeing his players continue to improve during difficult times.

“The win was great, but the game showed some areas that need serious work,” he said. “Batting will be a focus of the team. The number of strikeouts was way too high. We will be hitting the cages and trying to solve this issue.

“Besides that, it was great to be back on the field competing! You just gotta love baseball!”

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »