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Ja’Tarya Hoskins celebrates lil’ sis Ja’Kenya Saturday during Coupeville’s Senior Night festivities for girls basketball. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“As a senior you realize how fast time flies.”

The words come from Abby Mulholland, but they echo those often said by Coupeville High School hoops stars as they watch their final moments on the hardwood zing by.

Mulholland and her fellow 12th graders — players Ja’Kenya Hoskins, Audrianna Shaw and Izzy Wells, as well as managers Mckenna Somes and Leni Raduenz — were honored Saturday before the regular season girls basketball finale.

Also noted was Wolf cheerleader Samantha Streitler.

In between the hugs and tears, the plushie bears and the balloons, and before the Wolves dropped a whumping on visiting Friday Harbor to collect a playoff berth, Coupeville’s elder stateswomen shared their love for each other and the CHS program.

“I’ve played for Coupeville my entire career and I have loved every single team that I’ve been lucky enough to be a part of,” Shaw said.

“So thank you to all my teammates, old or new, for being by my side and helping me and the team succeed.”

Audrianna Shaw

Abby Mulholland

Mckenna Somes (middle, back row)

Izzy Wells (#12)

Leni Raduenz

Ja’Kenya Hoskins (#14)

Bear … with us. It’s Senior Night.

CHS coach Megan Smith joins the celebration.

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Mikey Robinett leaves sprawled defenders in his wake. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Skylar Parker fires a pass to an open shooter.

Scoring is the name of the game.

Rebounds, defensive hustle, setting screens — all the little things which help a basketball team win.

But ultimately, it’s the side with the most points on the scoreboard that wins the contest.

With that in mind, we take a gander at season-to-date scoring stats for Coupeville High School players.

PS — A combination of postponed games and some rival schools not having JV teams means the four Wolf squads have all played a different number of bouts.

 

Varsity girls
(6 games):

Audrianna Shaw – 65
Maddie Georges – 46
Izzy Wells – 32
Savina Wells – 22
Carolyn Lhamon – 20
Gwen Gustafson – 16
Abby Mulholland – 15
Alita Blouin – 11
Lyla Stuurmans – 11
Ja’Kenya Hoskins – 10
Nezi Keiper – 7

 

Varsity boys
(5 games):

Hawthorne Wolfe – 67
Caleb Meyer – 61
Alex Murdy – 52
Logan Downes – 50
Xavier Murdy – 48
Grady Rickner – 33
Logan Martin – 20
Cole White – 19
Jonathan Valenzuela – 6
Dominic Coffman – 4
Zane Oldenstadt – 2

 

JV girls
(4 games):

Madison McMillan – 28
Katie Marti – 19
Gwen Gustafson – 16
Lyla Stuurmans – 8
Skylar Parker – 6
Desi Ramirez-Vasquez – 6
Bryley Gilbert – 5
Kayla Arnold – 4
Brooklyn Thayer – 4
Mia Farris – 3
Nezi Keiper – 3
Edie Bittner – 2
Reese Wilkinson – 2

 

JV boys
(3 games):

Ryan Blouin – 18
Hunter Bronec – 18
Nick Guay – 15
Mikey Robinett – 12
Zane Oldenstadt – 10
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim – 6
Jack Porter – 4
Landon Roberts – 4
William Davidson – 3
Johnny Porter – 2

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Izzy Wells was one of nine Wolves to score Friday in a 57-9 win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They started strong, then finished even stronger.

Sparked by a mad dog defense which forced turnover after turnover, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team decimated visiting Darrington Friday night.

By the time things were done, the Wolves, who held the Loggers to just a single point in the second half, waltzed away with a 57-9 win in their Northwest 2B/1B League opener.

Coupeville improves to 1-0 in conference action, 2-1 overall, with another NWL clash set for Saturday.

The Wolves travel to Orcas Island for an afternoon game, their first road trip of the season.

The CHS girls actually play their next four games away from home, not returning to their own gym until Jan. 4.

So, before they went, the Wolves decided to dazzle local fans with one of the most dominant performances the program has delivered in recent times.

Nine of 10 players in uniform scored, with six of them tallying at least eight points apiece.

The buckets started dropping almost right from the tip, with Wolf point guard Maddie Georges flippin’ the net on a three-ball from the left side to kick things off.

Freshman Savina Wells, who used her long arms to pilfer numerous passes against a frazzled Darrington squad, immediately followed up with a steal and breakaway bucket, and the rout was on.

The Loggers didn’t get on the board until almost midway through the opening period, and the Wolves cruised to the first break up 12-4.

Georges rippled the nets with a second three-ball, this one from the corner, while Izzy Wells slapped home a layup after all four other Wolves touched the ball — sending the orb flying around the arc.

In between the buckets, which included Abby Mulholland’s first varsity basket, there was also a little intrigue.

Coupeville was whistled for a technical foul for having a uniform number incorrectly entered in the book, and while Darrington missed both free throws, CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith had a huge smile afterwards.

The man who turned Wolf girls basketball into a powerhouse in the ’90s is now an interested spectator as daughter Megan Smith works her first season as head coach of the varsity team.

Wife Cherie, who was Willie’s assistant back in the day, has returned to the bench to work with their daughter, and pops was giddy after seeing his progeny earn her first T.

“Took me eight games to get one! Only took her three!!” he said with a huge grin, then strolled off happily humming to himself.

Back on the court, Megan’s team could do virtually no wrong after the inadvertent tech.

A 14-0 run to end the second frame pushed the halftime margin to 28-8, with the buckets set up by a stern defensive push.

Georges was wheeling and dealing, playing give and go with Lyla Stuurmans, then driving and dishing, the ball slipping past defenders and landing right on teammate Gwen Gustafson’s waiting fingertips.

If Darrington had a few happy moments in the first half, the Loggers had zip to be grateful about after halftime.

Coupeville ripped off 21 straight points to open the second half, gave up a single free throw, then tossed in another eight points as a running clock raced to 0:00.

Nearly all the Wolves took turns handling the scoring load, with the fab frosh netting the two prettiest late-game buckets.

Stuurmans rolled hard against the defense, knocking down a sweet running hook shot, while Savina Wells drilled the bottom out of the net on a long jumper which was a centimeter away from being a three-ball.

In the end, the scoring was extremely balanced for the Wolves.

A defensive buzzsaw who crackles with energy when on the floor, Stuurmans can also make the nets jump, and with 10 points Friday, she beat Darrington by herself.

Shaw and Mulholland were right on her heels, banking in nine apiece, while Georges, Gustafson, and Savina Wells each went off for eight.

Carolyn Lhamon (2), Izzy Wells (2), and Ja’Kenya Hoskins (1) rounded out the offensive attack, while freshman Katie Marti made her varsity hoops debut.

Each of the Wolves hit the boards hard, but Hoskins was a particular delight on this night, ripping balls free, shredding the very psyche of her rivals, leaving them to wallow in an everlasting puddle of tears.

 

JV has night off:

Darrington only goes one team deep, so the Coupeville JV were just fans Friday night.

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Audrianna Shaw pumped in nine points Saturday as Coupeville squared off with Forks. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

This time, the late-game rally fell short.

Three days after upending Granite Falls, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team looked like it was on a repeat course Saturday.

Playing their strongest ball late in the third quarter, the Wolves stormed back and put the fear of God into visiting Forks.

But perhaps the Spartans are atheists, as they drilled a three-ball at the buzzer, then clamped down in the fourth frame en route to a 53-42 win.

The non-conference loss evens Coupeville’s early-season record at 1-1, with the first Northwest 2B/1B League game on tap for next Friday, Dec. 10.

Facing a hard-nosed, rebound-happy Forks team which featured a rampaging force of nature in the middle named Kyra Neel, the Wolves struggled at times to hold their own on the boards.

By the end of the game, CHS point guard Maddie Georges had fouled out, with her final whistle coming on a phantom offensive charge.

Meanwhile, glass cleaners Carolyn Lhamon and Savina Wells were in foul trouble most of the game, as they tried to combat Neel, who crashed through the paint with a wild glee.

Forks repeatedly gave itself second and third chances, thanks to its players patrolling the boards with intensity, and that made life tough for Coupeville.

The Wolves responded by drilling their share of outside shots, with Izzy Wells a particular highlight as she drained a series of jumpers under pressure.

Georges knocked down an early three-ball, while Audrianna Shaw beat the pack to the hoop on a breakaway, and CHS trailed just 17-15 at the first break.

Shaw’s bucket was set up by a smart move by Savina Wells.

A long rebound landed in front of her, and, instead of pulling the ball in, the fab frosh reached past a rival to poke the ball, redirecting it on the fly to her teammate, who immediately made the defense pay.

While Coupeville continued to make smart plays, its offense dried up a bit in the second quarter, allowing Forks to stretch the margin out to 11 points.

Between a second three-ball off the fiery fingers of Georges and a soft jumper late from Savina Wells, the Wolves couldn’t get a shot to drop for nearly six minutes in the frame.

CHS fixed that coming out of the break, however, with Shaw slapping home a layup off of a dish from Georges.

A 6-0 run late in the third, with Gwen Gustafson, Lhamon, and Shaw scoring, pulled the Wolves to within 36-34, sparking hopes of a comeback win.

Forks was visibly frustrated at that point, as well.

Their otherwise-unflappable point guard was whistled for a technical foul after she hit the floor, then popped up and blatantly tried to hip-check Coupeville’s Lyla Stuurmans into the stands smack dab in front of the ref.

The Spartan floor leader was having trouble dealing with the defensive heat being brought by the Wolf fab frosh, who calmly smiled and strolled away in the aftermath.

Everything was breaking Coupeville’s way. And then, it wasn’t.

With the clock running down, Forks guard Janessa Ramos tossed up a prayer from the right side, and had it answered, her three-ball banking off the glass and through the net just as the buzzer sounded.

A dagger, it sucked a fair amount of air out of the gym, and made Coupeville’s fourth quarter prospects suddenly a little dimmer.

Cue the rampaging Neel, who owned the glass in the final stages, with the Wolves unable to put back-to-back buckets together at any point during the game’s final eight-minute stretch.

The loss of Georges, Coupeville’s deadliest long-range markswoman, barely a minute into the final frame, hurt badly.

That she was sidelined by a foul which simply never happened, called by a ref out of place, didn’t help to make the punch-out any easier to digest.

Coupeville kept fighting until the end, even getting Neel to foul out in the final seconds, but it was too late by that point.

Izzy Wells paced the Wolves with a team-high 14 points, while Shaw and Georges knocked down nine apiece in support.

Lhamon (5), Savina Wells (3), and Gustafson (2) also scored, while Ja’Kenya Hoskins, Stuurmans, Abby Mulholland, and Nezi Keiper all saw solid floor time.

Wolf coach Megan Smith responds to a positive play.

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Senior Izzy Wells leads a strong group of returning players for the CHS girls basketball program. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Megan Smith is more than a little fired-up.

The #4 scorer in Coupeville High School girls basketball history makes her debut as the Wolf varsity coach this coming Wednesday, and the hardwood legend is rarin’ to go.

“I don’t know if you can tell … but I am beyond excited for this season,” Smith said with a huge smile. “As a first-year head coach, I could not have asked for a better bunch of girls.

“We are going to be a force to be reckoned with this year!”

Megan Smith, who torched the CHS gym nets between 2006-2010, now sits in the same chair her dad, Willie Smith, once owned during his own run as head coach of the Wolf girls hoops program.

After coaching the Coupeville JV the past two seasons, Megan Smith replaces Scott Fox, who stepped down to focus on his health.

With no seniors playing during last year’s pandemic-altered hoops campaign, the new coach inherits a roster of veterans – a team where even the youngsters already have varsity experience.

“We have everyone returning from last year, since we did not lose any seniors, and that’s going to be huge for us!,” Smith said.

With her players already knowing each other, and having worked together on the floor in games, the Wolves are already a well-oiled unit.

“Our biggest strength of this team is the chemistry they have with each other,” Smith said. “This is year two of playing together and not losing anyone.

“They have really meshed well; you can absolutely see it on the court during practice,” she added. “They are so positive and encouraging to each other, all while pushing themselves and others to get better every day.

“I have watched their confidence in each other and themselves grow every day, and that’s such a huge aspect of being a great team!”

Senior Audrianna Shaw, who led the Wolves in scoring during a shortened 12-game season last time out, and junior point guard Maddie Georges lead the returning players.

Joining them to form the core of the team are seniors Ja’Kenya Hoskins, Izzy Wells, and Abby Mulholland, and juniors Carolyn Lhamon, Nezi Keiper, and Gwen Gustafson.

Maddie and Audri are going to be two big players for us, both as leaders and scorers,” Smith said. “They have really come into this season ready to roll.

Izzy and Carolyn have really taken over and will be big for us when it comes to rebounding and being a threat down low.”

Post players Keiper and Mulholland both return after not playing last year, helping add crucial depth to the squad.

Abby, Ja’Kenya, Nezi, and Gwen will all see good minutes this year too, and will be able to help keep the intensity of our game up,” Smith said. “I’m really excited for this team!”

Another bright spot is offered up by an especially-strong class of freshmen, with three 9th graders expected to earn varsity playing time.

Katie Marti will swing between varsity and JV, while Lyla Stuurmans and Savina Wells are actually back for year two of what could be a five-year run of high school varsity excellence.

Savina Wells was a starter as an 8th grader, and is back for more this season.

The younger Wells sister was the #2 scorer for Coupeville as an 8th grader, while showing a willingness to mix it up with older players down low.

Meanwhile, the ever-springy Stuurmans was a standout on defense, constantly disrupting other team’s attempts to advance the ball with quick hands and a nicely feisty attitude.

“Both Savina and Lyla have improved greatly, with such a huge eagerness to learn and get better,” Smith said. “Savina is going to be a threat that teams will have to respect both outside and inside the key.

Lyla is a natural leader, and will be able to add a lot of hustle and control on the court.

Katie kind of came out of nowhere. She brings a different, lighter kind of energy to the game, eager to learn, and will be a big player for this program.”

As always, the seven-team Northwest 2B/1B League presents some major obstacles, with every opponent dangerous on a given night.

La Conner, which carries over several players from its state championship-winning volleyball squad, is the favorite, while Mount Vernon Christian is always strong.

“Both teams will be a challenge, but I think we are up for it!,” Smith said. “Our goal for this season is to be competitors in every game, no matter who they are.

“Our schedule contains some tough teams, but we know that we have the team to keep up with them all,” she added. “We want to play our game and come out on top.”

With that in mind, Smith and new Wolf JV coach Greg Turcott have been preaching confidence and commitment.

“We have been working a lot at being scorers first, being less worried about making a mistake, and just playing the game we play in practice,” Smith said.

“We talk a lot about how you play in games like you practice and have been keeping the tempo of our practices intense and fast.”

For now, three days out from opening night and a non-conference matchup with Granite Falls, the Wolves are just ready to get after it. To get out on the floor and see what they can accomplish.

“I think our biggest area needing work is just our experience,” Smith said. “Even though our chemistry is great, we are pretty young when it comes to varsity playing experience.

“The more we play, the better we will get and I can’t wait to see where we end up!”

Senior Ja’Kenya Hoskins wants to go out with a bang.

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