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Wolf JV hoops stars cheer on their middle school counterparts Monday. A day later the high school players roared to their own huge win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Maybe they just won’t come back home.

Thanks to a quirk in the schedule, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball team hasn’t played a game in its own gym this season, yet is a sterling 3-1.

The latest victory came at Granite Falls Tuesday night, as the Wolves broke open a close game early and romped to a 59-33 triumph.

The third straight non-conference win for the young guns, it sends them to Friday Harbor this Friday for the Northwest 2B/1B League opener riding an emotional high.

And then, and then only, the Wolves finally get their first home game Saturday, when they clash with archrival South Whidbey.

Tuesday’s tilt in Granite was close for about two, maybe three minutes.

The host Tigers actually led at 6-4, and then the tsunami hit and washed away the Tigers.

Johnny Porter and Camden Glover rolled hard to the hoop on back-to-back plays, and the Wolves closed the first quarter on an 11-2 tear, basically ending things on the spot.

Key to Coupeville’s success was the way its players shared the rock.

Then add in a whole bunch of intangibles, and things were looking good for the guys in red and black.

“We had very good ball movement, shared well, spread the wealth, crashed the boards good, shot 90% at the free throw line and everyone got minutes,” said CHS coach Jon Roberts.

“In my book it was a good day.”

Once they had the advantage, the Wolves poured it on, zipping the ball around the horn, looking for the hot hand, and never allowing Granite to have a moment of peace.

Another run, this one 10-0 in the latter half of the second quarter, featured buckets from Riley Lawless, Camden Glover, and Davin Houston, as CHS dominated in the paint.

Setting the table was Landon Roberts, who slashed through the defense, then dropped picture-perfect lobs into the waiting fingers of his big men.

Up 29-13 at the break, Coupeville continued to hammer away at its hapless foes.

Aiden O’Neill spun his defender around like a top, then slashed past him for a bucket, while Jack and Johnny Porter were twin titans of terror, converting offensive rebounds into easy put-backs.

The Wolves kept the flow going throughout the fourth, whether it was Houston and Lawless knocking down buckets, or Malachi Somes, Makai Myles, and Easton Green harassing Tiger ballhandlers into frequent mistakes.

Landon Roberts put the final nail into the coffin, picking off a pass and using his long legs to fly coast to coast to beat the buzzer by half a beat with a game-ending layup.

Coupeville spread its offense around, with Johnny Porter popping for a game-high 13 points, and Jack Porter slapping home 10.

Landon Roberts, Glover, and Lawless had eight apiece, with Houston (6), Green (4), and O’Neill (2) rounding out the attack.

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Aiden O’Neill (grey hoodie) and Johnny Porter (black hoodie) combined to score 20 Saturday in a road win. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It all started with defense.

Clamping down on Sultan’s shooters Saturday, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad ran away with a 52-40 win.

The non-conference road victory lifts the Wolves to 2-1 heading into a busy week.

Coupeville’s young guns travel to Granite Falls (Tuesday) and Friday Harbor (Friday), before finally getting their first home game of the season Saturday, Dec. 16 against South Whidbey.

The Wolves have proven adept at staring down rowdy road crowds, and they did it again in Sultan.

Trailing 13-11 after the opening quarter, CHS surged in the second frame.

Getting nine points from the Porter twins (Johnny nipping Jack 5-4), the Wolves used an 11-3 run to claim the lead for good.

Up 22-16 at the half, Coupeville put together its strongest offensive run in the third, pushing the advantage all the way out to 39-24.

Four different Wolves banged home points in the quarter, with Aiden O’Neill leading the way with six.

Flexin’ on fools.

While Sultan stayed competitive in the final frame, the Turks never had a chance to rally, as Landon Roberts and crew closed out things strongly in crunch time.

CHS co-coaches Jon Roberts and Craig Anderson liked a lot of what they saw, though there are areas the Wolves still need to work on.

“We played a good pressure defense game,” Jon Roberts said. “It was scrappy and wild at times.”

Coupeville spread its scoring out, with eight players recording points.

Jack Porter knocked down a team-high 13, with O’Neill (12), Landon Roberts (9), Johnny Porter (8), Camden Glover (4), Easton Green (2), Makai Myles (2), and Riley Lawless (2) also scoring.

It was the first buckets for Myles and Green.

Malachi Somes, Davin Houston, and Jayden McManus also saw floor time for Coupeville.

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Davin Houston (left) and Aiden O’Neill (center) had big games Wednesday in Seattle. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was close for a hot second.

OK, maybe two seconds.

And then the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad flipped a switch, lit the jets, and ran their hosts off the floor while playing Wednesday night at The Bush School in Seattle.

For one brief moment, the Wolves trailed 6-5 in the early going, and then, wham, bam, go put some ice on your dome, as CHS romped to a 54-20 victory.

The non-conference win, coming against a 1A foe, lifts Coupeville’s JV to 1-1 on the season.

The Wolf young guns will largely be fans this Saturday when their varsity counterparts host Toledo — though a couple of guys will swing up to join the #1 team — not returning to action as a team until Dec. 9, when they travel to Sultan.

Thanks to Toledo not having a second unit, new JV coaches Craig Anderson and Jon Roberts will coach their first five games on the road.

Which just gives them, and their team, a chance to use the out of town run to get everything in sync before they make their home debut.

Wednesday night the Wolves struck first, with Aiden O’Neill going coast to coast to get the scoreboard up and going, before Bush crawled back into the game.

The host Blazers only held the advantage for about the length of time needed for Coupeville to bring the ball up court once, however.

Jack Porter pulled off a three-point play the hard way, banging his way inside for a bucket and free throw, and the Wolves were off to the races.

Up 11-6 at the first break, CHS poured it on in the second frame, stretching its advantage out to 27-10 by the half.

O’Neill was a fireball, picking off passes, careening in for buckets, and teaming up with Landon Roberts to pile up a ton of assists.

If Bush had any grand plans to mount a comeback, those plans died on the white board.

Jack and Johnny Porter were twin terrors on the boards in the third quarter, while Camden Glover pounded the ball down low.

The best scoring play may have come when freshman Davin Houston made off with a steal and hit Roberts in stride for the breakaway bucket.

The fourth quarter was nothing but good times, as Coupeville romped to a 14-0 run across the final eight minutes.

Capping things off was a three-ball from O’Neill, the ball launching from the parking lot and splashing home for an emphatic exclamation point to the game.

For their part, Coupeville’s coaching duo, who moved up from the middle school program to helm the JV, celebrated their first high school win with a couple small nods to each other.

“We got off to a good start, played tough D, and shared the ball as allowed,” Jon Roberts said.

“Got some playing time in with a few who didn’t get much or any at Mt Baker. Good win for the squad.”

Jack Porter paced the Wolves with a game-high 14 points, while Johnny Porter threw down 11 in support.

O’Neill (9), Jayden McManus (6), Houston (6), Glover (4), Roberts (2), and Riley Lawless (2) joined the offensive attack, with Sage Arends also seeing floor time.

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“You want another game? I’m working on it.” (Jackie Saia photo)

Chase won the chase. Maybe.

As we hit Monday, there is still a chance the Coupeville High School football team will pick up a tenth game, adding a matchup with another school also sitting on the outside of the playoffs.

So, until final word comes from Wolf coach Bennett Richter, we can’t say for sure the season is 100% done.

With that in the back of our minds, a look at season-to-date scoring stats for CHS shows sophomore Chase Anderson leading the way.

He sits alone atop four scoring categories, while being tied for the fifth.

Chase Anderson sprints off to do some damage. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

Scoring stats through Oct. 30:

 

Touchdowns:

Chase Anderson – 7
Aiden O’Neill – 6
Jack Porter – 4
Hunter Bronec – 3
Logan Downes – 3
Mikey Robinett – 3
Adrian Cunningham – 2
Davin Houston – 2
Peyton Caveness – 1
Johnny Porter – 1
Malachi Somes – 1

 

PATs:

Anderson – 19
Downes – 2

 

Field Goals:

Anderson – 1

 

Conversions:

Anderson – 1
Bronec – 1
O’Neill – 1

 

Points:

Anderson – 66
O’Neill – 38
Ja. Porter – 24
Bronec – 20
Downes – 20
Robinett – 18
Cunningham – 12
Houston – 12
Caveness – 6
Jo. Porter – 6
Somes – 6

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Freshman quarterback Matthew Gilbert saw extensive playing time in the fourth quarter Friday night. (Andrew Williams photo)

It was Friday the 13th after all.

In between the action and the falling rain drops, there were highlights for Coupeville High School football fans, from the announcement of Homecoming royalty to freshly cooked hot dogs and birthday sing-a-longs.

On the field, however, things turned fairly grim during a game in which the refs slowed things down to a crawl to throw 10,047 flags, and visiting Forks proved that when it spells class, it sometimes drops the C and L.

The Wolves were missing multiple key senior starters on offense, including quarterback Logan Downes, who is battling tonsillitis.

Logan Downes can’t feel his face. (Angie Downes photo)

Meanwhile the Spartans chose to leave their primary weapons in until the game’s final seconds, merrily racing the clock to pad stats in a lopsided 67-9 win.

The non-conference loss drops Coupeville to 1-6 on the season but hope lives.

The final two regular season games pit the Wolves against Northwest 2B/1B League rivals La Conner and Friday Harbor, and CHS can still claim a share of the league title and punch a return ticket to state.

To do so, Coupeville, which is 1-1 in conference action, needs to beat the Braves (0-3 in league, 1-5 overall) and Wolverines (3-0, 4-2).

The first game is on the road Oct. 20, the second in Cow Town on Senior Night Oct. 27.

Sweep those two tilts and the Wolves finish in a tie with Friday Harbor at 3-1, with the teams splitting their two-game season series.

That would set up a tiebreaker mini game, with the winner advancing to the state tourney.

But that’s still a way off.

Friday night brought a strong Forks team to town, carrying a 5-1 record and a #6 ranking in the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association RPI rankings.

And yet it took the Spartans a bit to pull away, as a scrappy Coupeville team led by sophomore QB Chase Anderson, making his first start under center in place of Downes, hung tough.

Forks signal caller Emmanuel Hernandez, just a freshman, ripped off a 36-yard scoring run three minutes into the game to stake the visitors to an early lead, but the Wolves countered.

Chewing up six-plus minutes of clock, Anderson and his crew methodically moved downfield, with the slippery sophomore scrambling out of danger three times to keep the drive alive.

Anderson’s biggest burst was a 19-yard bolt to the right side, weaving and bobbing, daring anyone to tackle him, then ducking under the outstretched arms of would-be tacklers.

Mixing in a couple of passes to Jack Porter, Hunter Bronec, and Malachi Somes, the Wolf QB proved to be a killer with his arm as well as his feet, but penalties finally stalled out Coupeville.

Facing a fourth-and-15, CHS coach Bennett Richter put the ball on Anderson’s toe, and he blasted his first field goal of the season, a 33-yard bomb into the twilight.

Casey Masters (holding helmet) and other Wolf linemen gave it their all against Forks. (Jackie Saia photo)

Forks scored again before the looooooong first quarter ended, with Brody Lausche rumbling in from 10 yards out for the first of his five TD’s, but Coupeville again had an answer.

Anderson connected with Bronec on a pass by accident to open the second quarter, as the ball hit another receiver’s arms and popped up into the air only to be snagged by the lanky junior.

Very next play, a 29-yard heave into the night air landed on the fingertips of Jack Porter for his third score of the season.

It was Anderson’s first TD pass this year, and the second of his prep career.

While a two-point conversion run was snuffed out just short of the line, Coupeville was down just 14-9 at that point, with almost three full quarters left to play.

Unfortunately, Porter’s trip to the end zone was the last time the Wolves would score on this evening. At least if you believe the refs.

A 73-yard bolt to freedom by Hernandez made the score 20-9 in favor of Forks, but a muffed snap on the PAT attempt spurred hope.

Even down 28-9, after a short scoring run by Lausche and a successful conversion attempt, the Wolves seemed like they would make it a battle royal.

Anderson lofted a pass over the defense, dropping the ball into Porter’s hands, and several big steps later, the Coupeville speed demon had broken off an 80-yard TD pass play.

Except…

A lonely flag sat nestled in the grass, and after a prolonged conversation among the refs — perhaps wondering who had misplaced their rule book and bifocal glasses — the zebras overturned the touchdown, driving a stake through the heart of Wolf Nation.

From that point on, Coupeville’s offensive attack deflated, while Forks went on a rampage, ramming in an additional six touchdowns.

Five scores came on the ground, while another was courtesy of a blocked punt, the ball plucked off the ground by Walker Wheeler, who strolled in for a quick six.

With the lead cracking the 40-point barrier, a running clock went into action, and the Spartans answer was to hunker down with their starters and keep battering away.

Hernandez scored his third touchdown of the night very late in the fourth, sweeping in behind most of the same guys blocking for him back at the start of the game.

While Coupeville didn’t score over the game’s final 35 minutes, it did get several strong kickoff returns from Davin Houston and Aiden O’Neill, plus a blocked PAT by Adrian Cunningham.

If there is a sour taste to Forks willingness to run up the score, there is an answer.

Take care of business the next two weeks, get back to the state playoffs, and maybe earn a rematch with the Spartans.

This time with the full lineup in place.

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