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Posts Tagged ‘Island rivalry’

Johnny Porter walked twice Saturday as Coupeville battled South Whidbey. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Perfection isn’t easy.

The Coupeville High School JV baseball team entered play Saturday undefeated on the young season but stumbled for the first time.

Falling 10-3 at South Whidbey in a non-conference rumble, the Wolf young guns see their record slip to 2-1.

The host Falcons jumped on the scoreboard early and often, scoring in each of the first four innings.

Two runs in the bottom of the first, followed by a single tally in the second, then two more in the third stretched South Whidbey’s advantage to 5-1, before Coupeville pushed across two runs in the top of the fourth to cut things to 5-3.

Unfortunately, South Whidbey put together its best offensive surge of the game in the bottom half of that frame, doubling its output with a five-run rally.

Coupeville relief ace Coop Cooper kept the Falcons at bay after that, tossing two scoreless innings while whiffing a pair of hitters.

But there was no late-game rally for the Wolves, as they couldn’t come up with a hit across the final three innings, and also had a runner picked off of first base after walking.

On the day CHS tallied six hits, with Aiden O’Neill, Zane Oldenstadt, Landon Roberts, Camden Glover, Marcelo Gebhard, and Cooper each collecting a base-knock.

The Wolf JV returns to action Apr. 4, when it travels the other direction on Whidbey, heading to Oak Harbor.

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Sophie Martin whacks a tennis ball on a much-drier day. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mother Nature said no, ma’am.

With rain falling all day Thursday, Coupeville High School’s season-opening home girls tennis match against South Whidbey has been postponed.

It will be rescheduled at a later date, said CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith.

For now, the Wolves turn their eyes (and rackets) to Mar. 23, when they’re set to travel to Oak Harbor — weather willing.

Vivian Farris works on her forehand.

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Lyla Stuurmans and Co. played hard Saturday but fell at Oak Harbor. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Tough start, better finish.

Missing four key players Saturday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team struggled in the first half at Oak Harbor, before finishing strongly.

Unfortunately, the 2B Wolves, who only had seven players hit the floor, couldn’t complete the comeback against their 3A neighbors and fell 54-33.

The non-conference loss, coming in a game thrown together at virtually the last moment, drops Coupeville to 6-5.

The Wolves return to the floor Tuesday, hosting 2A Sedro-Woolley in another game recently added to the schedule.

After that comes a three-game stretch which will determine Coupeville’s playoff fate.

The Wolves travel to Friday Harbor Feb. 4, trek to La Conner Feb. 10, then host Friday Harbor on Senior Night Feb. 12

Two of the three 2B schools in the seven-team Northwest 2B/1B League make the postseason, and powerhouse La Conner (3-0 overall against Coupeville and Friday Harbor) has (almost) clinched the #1 seed.

The Wolves, who are 0-1 in the three-team mini-rumble, sit a half-game up on Friday Harbor (0-2) in the pursuit of the #2 seed.

Whichever of the two schools gets that second slot faces Auburn Adventist in a loser-out district playoff game in Coupeville Feb. 15.

Win there, and you play in the district title game Feb. 17 — also at CHS — with both teams in that game earning trips to the state tourney.

While the next two weeks will determine if Coupeville’s girls can get to the big dance for the first time since 2016, Saturday’s game was a chance to go toe-to-toe with the biggest school on Whidbey Island.

Putting nine girls into the scoring column — led by 13 points from Heidy Hurtado — Oak Harbor jumped on the undermanned Wolves, however.

Up 19-6 by the first break, the Wildcats stretched their lead out to 36-14 at halftime.

Coupeville put together its best run in the third quarter, with freshmen Savina Wells and Lyla Stuurmans knocking down three-balls during a 10-4 surge.

As she reflected on the game, and the strong effort put out by the players she had in uniform, CHS coach Megan Smith was philosophical about things.

“Lots of turnovers in the first half really hurt us,” she said. “Made some adjustments at halftime and came out much stronger in the second half.

“Put up a good fight, but it was just too late into the game to turn it on,” Smith added. “Good learning game though.”

Junior gunner Maddie Georges tied Hurtado for game-high honors, flipping the nets on four treys as she rolled up 13 points of her own.

Savina Wells backed her up with nine points, including a perfect six-for-six performance at the free throw line, while Stuurmans added her three-ball.

Everyone who played for Coupeville scored Saturday, with Nezi Keiper, Izzy Wells, Audrianna Shaw, and Carolyn Lhamon each netting a bucket.

 

No JV game:

Saturday’s Island rivalry matchup was varsity only, with Coupeville’s second squad taking the night off.

With another solid game Saturday, Maddie Georges moves into 55th place on the CHS girls career scoring chart.

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Coupeville’s girls basketball teams get an early start on the holiday break, after Saturday’s trip to Langley was postponed. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Suddenly, Saturday is open.

Hours after the Coupeville High School boys basketball team postponed both of its weekend games, the Wolf girls have done the same with one half of their planned back-to-back.

While the CHS girls, unlike their male counterparts, still play tonight at Mount Vernon Christian, Saturday’s trip to Langley to face South Whidbey is off the board … for now.

“We will look to reschedule at a later date,” said Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith.

That means, for now at least, when the Wolves finish Friday’s tilts, the plan is for no more games until Jan. 4.

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Dylan Robinett tallied his first points of the basketball season Wednesday afternoon. (Jackie Saia photo)

Strong to the end.

Playing their next-to-last games Wednesday, the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball teams put on a show in Langley.

The Wolf varsity won, completing a home-and-away season sweep of the Cougars, while the Coupeville JV played its best game of the season.

How the day played out:

 

Varsity:

Camden Glover has been on a tear of late, and the Wolf 8th grader remained red-hot as he spurred his squad to a 44-26 win.

The victory lifts Coupeville to 3-4 heading into its finale Thursday at King’s.

When the Wolves arrive in Shoreline, they’ll be featuring Glover, who has been a wrecking ball unleashed while dropping 19, 20, and 20 points across his last three games.

Wednesday, Stevie Glover’s eldest child poured in seven of his points in the second quarter, while saving the best for last, with an eight-point rampage in the game’s final frame.

Chase Anderson banked in eight points in support of Camden, with Aiden O’Neill kissin’ the glass for seven.

Jayden McManus (7) and Malachi Somes (2) rounded out the offense, with Easton Green helping anchor the Wolf defense.

 

JV:

You’re killing me, Smalls. You’re killing me.

And in this case, Smalls is an unnamed Langley 6th grader who will never, ever replace June Mazdra as Whidbey Island’s go-to scorekeeper.

Cause he’s the dude who managed to record less than 50% of Coupeville’s points on the day the Wolves very-green second unit put together its best offensive showing of the season.

It’s like you’re driving a stake through my freakin’ stat-obsessed heart, Smalls!!

Anyways.

Bouncing back from a rough outing against Langley back in the season opener, Coupeville made coach Jon Roberts sit up and take notice, pushing the Cougars to the wire in a 26-23 loss.

“They played lights out,” said the veteran roundball sage. “Bench was going nuts!”

Now, we’d love to tell you where all 23 of those Coupeville points came from. But we can’t, thanks to Smalls.

Perhaps he was daydreaming about Keanu Reeves going airborne once again, what with a new Matrix movie arriving in just seven days.

In that case, I understand. Kinda.

What there was of a “book” shows Riley Lawless and Carson Grove banging away for four points apiece, and Dylan Robinett droppin’ in his first bucket of the season.

Which is 10 points, with 13 points forever lost to the wind.

Dang it, Smalls, you had one job. And you did not understand the assignment.

Our mystery pencil scratcher — who didn’t do a whole lot of scratching — did record who saw floor time.

My bet? Some of them probably scored, too.

For now, props to Captain Teuscher, Jacob Schooley, Jonah WeylBeckett GreenMax OhmeGeorge SpearMatthew Kuzma, Mahkai Myles, Jackson Waterbury, Ethan Walling, Joshua Stockdale, and Kenny Jacobsen.

May you find a more-prepared scorekeeper Thursday in Shoreline.

 

Plot twist!!:

After a review of the book by many people, it appears all 23 points may be present.

Just placed in unusual spots.

Smalls, dealing with 17 Wolf players and only 15 slots in the book, put Mahkai Myles and Jacob Schooley “off the board,” and their buckets are drifting in a different time zone.

Also, what seemed like a smudge at first may be a bucket for George Spear.

Having looked at a blown-up version of the book, I still disagree with there being two buckets down by Schooley’s name, but, perhaps I just need better glasses.

I await our next go-around, Smalls. I may have underestimated your powers.

The book in question.

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