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CHS coach Brad Sherman is looking for some answers. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Game #2 shared too many characteristics with game #1.

Despite a late rally Friday, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball team came up short in Langley, falling 45-37 to South Whidbey.

The non-conference loss, which drops the Wolves to 0-2 on the young season, was marked by poor free throw shooting and having to spend most of the game playing from behind.

That was a bad combo against Mount Baker in the opener, and it was a bad combo again.

In both games Coupeville was aggressive and got to the free throw line far more often than its opponent, but then watched way too many charity shots slide off the rim.

The Wolves made just 15 of 30 from the stripe in the opener, and went 7-22 Friday in a game where those shots could have changed the outcome.

Relegated to playing in a ramshackle side establishment while South Whidbey continues to finish work on its destroyed-by-a-flood main gym, the Wolves came out cold against the Falcons.

Down 11-4 after one quarter, things got worse in the second frame, as the Falcons used a hail of three-balls from Cody Redford to build a 35-12 lead.

Something clicked coming out of halftime, however, as the Wolves went on an 18-7 run in the third.

Jack Porter went off for six of his team-high 12 in the frame, with Chase Anderson and Hurlee Bronec adding four apiece, and the lead was down to 42-30.

Clamping down on defense, Coupeville shaved off four more points from the deficit over the game’s final eight minutes but couldn’t find enough buckets of its own to get all the way back.

Chase Anderson and a Falcon battle for the opening tip. (Tammy Glover photo)

While Jack Porter’s 12 was tops, he got support from Hurlee Bronec (8), Camden Glover (5), Hunter Bronec (5), Anderson (4), Johnny Porter (2), and Landon Roberts (1).

With his bucket Johnny Porter becomes the 424th Wolf boy (across 108 seasons) who I’ve been able to document as having scored in a varsity game.

Malachi Somes and Carson Field both saw floor time as well for Coupeville, while Redford topped South Whidbey with 14 points.

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Coupeville’s seniors flex into a new season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Monday night was the Neapolitan ice cream of basketball games for the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball team.

By that I mean the Wolves non-conference rumble with visiting Mount Baker was divided into three distinctive sections, all with their own flavors.

Except, unlike said ice cream, which is pretty much nirvana thanks to a mix of vanilla, strawberry, and chocolate, the hardwood showdown between the Wolves and Mountaineers was sour, then sweet, then sour.

End result?

A 69-47 Coupeville loss which wasn’t really as lopsided as the score may read and yet was only really close for a matter of minutes.

Having lost nine seniors to graduation from last year’s Bi-District champs, the Wolf squad which debuted Monday is most definitely not the same one which made it to the 2024 state tourney.

Only three Wolves — Hunter Bronec, Chase Anderson, and Hurlee Bronec — return from that unit, while Baker has a team that is largely in place from a year ago.

And it showed in the early going, as the visitors jumped out to a back-breaking 15-0 lead.

Anderson and Hurlee Bronec finally broke the scoreless streak with back-to-back buckets, but Baker led 19-4 heading into the second period and seemed in control.

And that’s when we begin the sweetest portion of this dessert discussion, as the Wolves came out like a different team after the break.

With a big boost of energy from high-flying Jack Porter, and a gorgeous long-range three ball from big man Camden Glover, Coupeville went on a rampage.

Steadily chipping away at Baker’s lead, the Wolves got the deficit down to just 27-24 by halftime and did it with a well-crafted, explosive play.

Landon Roberts went on a ramble under the hoop, drew the defense to himself, then flicked a precision pass to Anderson, who was lurking out behind the three-point arc.

Catching and shooting the ball in one smooth motion, the Wolf junior capped the half and brought the assembled fans to their feet, awash in hope.

That hope lived large through most of the third quarter, as well.

Coupeville made it all the way back, claiming its first lead at 34-33 with just under four minutes to play in the frame, the go-ahead bucket splashing home off of the fingertips of a sky-walking Roberts.

Unfortunately, that would be the Wolves one, and only lead, of the night.

Baker regained the advantage, but CHS kept it close, and was still down just three with under a minute to go in the frame, before Baker rippled the net on six consecutive free throws.

In a bit of an oddity, those were actually the first charity shots the Mountaineers had taken in the game, and they would finish a perfect 7-7 at the line.

Coupeville, by contrast, went 15-30 on free throws and couldn’t capitalize, even with the visitors picking up two technical fouls along the way.

Trailing 47-39 after three, the Wolves cut it down to 50-43 on a strong bucket in the paint from Hunter Bronec.

But then the bottom fell out. The tale turned sour. The ice cream curdled. Or whatever metaphor you prefer.

Using a 19-4 run to end the game, Baker made the final score a bit deceptive, but also awfully decisive.

The new-look Wolves got scoring from six players, with three of those players recording their first varsity points.

Anderson topped Coupeville with 14 while Jack Porter knocked down 12 to lead the way.

Roberts (7), Hurlee Bronec (7), Hunter Bronec (4), and Glover (3) kept scorekeeper June Mazdra busy, while Carson Field, Johnny Porter, Malachi Somes, and Easton Green also hit the floor.

The Wolves get two chances to bounce back this week, with a road trip to South Whidbey Friday, Dec. 6, followed by a home game Saturday against Clallam Bay.

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Marquette Cunningham, on his way to being named an All-League player. (Bailey Thule photos)

One final honor for a pack of Wolves.

With three Coupeville High School players selected on both sides of the ball, seven players from the 2024 gridiron squad landed All-League status when coaches voted.

Among the seven schools in the Northwest 2B/1B League, Orcas Island and Mount Vernon Christian don’t play football, while La Conner, Concrete, and Darrington are currently competing as eight-man teams.

That leaves Coupeville and Friday Harbor as the only 11-man units.

From that talent pool, Wolf quarterback Chase Anderson, who scored a team-high 99 points, was tabbed as the league’s Offensive MVP.

Joining him as First-Team picks on the offensive side of the ball were receiver Jack Porter, tight end Hunter Bronec, and linemen Marcelo Gebhard and Riley Lawless.

Wolf running back Johnny Porter was tabbed for honorable mention status.

Wolf seniors Marcelo Gebhard (54), Hunter Bronec (34), and Jack Porter earned recognition for stellar seasons.

On defense, Anderson (defensive back), Jack Porter (lineman), and linebackers Gebhard, Marquette Cunningham, and Johnny Porter were First-Team picks.

Lawless is a sophomore, Anderson and Cunningham are juniors, while Gebhard, Bronec, and the Porter twins are seniors.

Coupeville, which finished 5-4 overall, 1-1 in league play, also earned the team sportsmanship award.

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Junior quarterback Chase Anderson led his team in scoring, racking up 99 points this season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The gear is turned in, and the final page turned.

The Coupeville High School football team capped a successful season Friday with a dessert banquet, handing out awards and letters.

The 2B Wolves went 5-4 while playing five of their nine games against 1A foes.

That included a Homecoming win over Friday Harbor, and a comeback for the ages on the road against Cedar Park Christian-Bothell.

And it’s off to the races.

In contention for a state playoff berth until the final week, Coupeville loses a solid pack of seniors but can return many of their key players next season.

With only two Northwest 2B/1B League schools playing 11-man football — three others play eight-man while two don’t participate at all — coaches opted not to name an All-Conference squad.

But here’s what CHS head man Bennett Richter and his staff handed out:

 

Offensive MVP:

Chase Anderson

 

Defensive MVP:

Marcelo Gebhard

 

Way of the Wolf:

Jack Porter

 

Scout Team Player of the Year:

Gabe Smith

 

Four-Year Players:

Hunter Bronec
Jack Porter
Johnny Porter

 

Captains:

Chase Anderson
Marcelo Gebhard
Jack Porter
Johnny Porter

 

Varsity letter winners:

Chase Anderson
Liam Blas
Hunter Bronec
Jayme Carranza
Nathan Coxsey
Marquette Cunningham
Marcelo Gebhard
Camden Glover
Easton Green
Davin Houston
Riley Lawless
Aiden O’Neill
Jack Porter
Johnny Porter
Zander Pulliam
Gabe Smith
Jackson Sollars
Malachi Somes
Ira Volpentesta
Ayden Warren
Jonah Weyl

 

Participation certificates:

Richmond Bandong
Ryan Beaston
Matthew Campbell (Manager)
Zechariah Hammond
Chance Hart
Khanor Jump
Zach Millay
Keegan Ramos-Kalwies
Nikolas Rogers
Jude Swankie

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Jack Porter hauls in a pass. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

These stats will go past nine.

Having finished the regular season at 5-4 overall, 1-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, the Coupeville High School football team is off to La Conner Monday for a half-game tiebreaker with Friday Harbor.

That mini game, set for a 5:30 PM kickoff, will decide the league champ and award one team a playoff berth, with the winner hosting a team from District 4 for a spot in the state tourney.

As the Wolves prep for that clash, here’s a look at where season scoring stats sit at the moment:

 

Touchdowns:

Chase Anderson – 12
Jack Porter – 8
Davin Houston – 5
Johnny Porter – 4
Liam Blas – 2
Hunter Bronec – 2
Marquette Cunningham – 2
Richmond Bandong – 1

 

Conversions:

Anderson — 2
Blas — 1
Cunningham – 1
Houston – 1
Ja. Porter – 1

 

PATs:

Anderson — 17

 

Field Goals:

Anderson – 2

 

Points:

Anderson — 99
Ja. Porter – 50
Houston — 32
Jo. Porter – 24
Blas – 14
Cunningham — 14
Bronec – 12
Bandong – 6

Marquette Cunningham streaks for the endzone.

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