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Posts Tagged ‘Jake Mitten’

Xavier Murdy

   Xavier Murdy scored eight points and was a relentless beast on the boards Thursday for the CMS 7th graders. (John Fisken photos)

Dakota Eck

Dakota Eck wanders in among the tall trees.

Daniel Olson

Daniel Olson can taste the three-balls droppin’.

Connor Barton

Connor Barton wheels and deals under the ever-watchful eye of the ref.

Caleb Meyer

Caleb Meyer prepares to seize the moment.

Alex Jimenez

One on four? No big deal for Alex Jimenez.

It’s more about surviving than thriving.

Whenever Coupeville Middle School faces off with Stevens, the Wolves find themselves in a deep hole from the start.

Their foe is a fairly ginormous institution which feeds 2A Port Angeles High School (which has a student body four times the size of Coupeville High School).

With a much larger base of students to draw from, Stevens has a decided advantage, and it generally shows on the scoreboard.

Thursday was no different, as Coupeville put up a strong fight in its home finale, but dropped both games.

The Wolf 7th graders stayed within single digits for much of the first half, put together a stellar third quarter, but still fell 63-40.

Meanwhile, across the hall, the CMS 8th graders suffered through a cold-shooting first quarter and never recovered, losing 65-33.

The losses drop the Wolves to 5-4 and 2-7 respectively headed into their final game of the season, a rescheduled road contest at Sequim next Thursday.

Coupeville’s 8th graders fell behind 16-2 after the opening eight minutes and spent the rest of the game playing catch-up.

Jake Mitten poured in 14 of his team-high 16 in the middle two quarters, while Sage Downes knocked down eight points.

Daniel Olson (5) and Dakota Eck (4) rounded out the scoring attack, while Ben Smith and Alex Jimenez also saw floor time.

The Wolf 7th graders got on the board first in their game, with Xavier Murdy pounding home a rebound, and they stayed close in the early going.

Murdy, who was relentless on the boards, knocked down seven points in the early going, capping it with a layup off of a crisp pass from Logan Martin, and CMS was within six at the break, 18-12.

Stevens ability to run in five fresh players at a time began to wear on Coupeville after that, though.

A 12-4 run to end the half sent the Wolves into the locker room trailing by 13, and they were never able to fully recover.

The closest Coupeville got after that was 10, after a gorgeous three-ball from the left side off of Cody Roberts fingertips late in the third quarter.

Stevens blunted the charge, however, taking advantage of crisp passes and quick cuts to ring up a series of buckets in the paint.

Two bright spots for CMS came in the late going, as Connor Barton and Aiden Burdge pulled off sweet moves that left Stevens gobsmacked.

Barton shot up the middle, peeled off three defenders and knocked down a bucket while being hammered, then added the ensuing free throw for three the hard way.

Burdge upped the difficulty factor, charging into the fray and banking a ball high off the glass after getting it off barely over his defender’s outstretched arms.

Coupeville got points from seven of the 12 players to see action, with Caleb Meyer (11), Barton (8) and Murdy (8) leading the way.

Roberts (5), Grady Rickner (4), Martin (2) and Burdge (2) also tallied points, while Hawthorne Wolfe, Logan Wertz, Jonathan Carroll, Gabe Shaw and Tony Garcia also hit the floor.

To see more photos from the game (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/20162017-Coupeville-BB/MS-BBB/20170119-vs-Stevens/

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Sage Downes (John Fisken photo)

   Sage Downes pumped in 13 Thursday, as the CMS 8th graders rolled to a huge win. (John Fisken photo)

Two gyms, two teams in perfect harmony.

Heading into the holiday break on a huge high, the Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball squads shellacked visiting Chimacum Thursday in games where teamwork was the key word of the day.

The 7th grade Wolves, getting buckets from all 11 players who saw action, strolled to a 55-28 win, while the 8th graders, powered by a season-high 31 from Jake Mitten, crushed the Cowboys 57-29.

The victory was the first of the season for the older CMS team (now 1-4), while the young guns improved to 3-2 and remain a spotless 3-0 in games played in their own gym.

Coupeville won’t return to action until Jan. 5, taking a full three-week sabbatical from games at the halfway point of its 10-game season.

The CMS 7th graders were missing top scorer Caleb Meyer, on a family trip to New Zealand, but everyone (and I mean EVERYONE) stepped up to plug the holes.

The Wolves came out aggressive, flustering the Cowboy ball-handlers behind Connor “Fastest Arms in the West” Barton, repeatedly making off with steals that they turned into breakaway buckets.

In fact, the only thing which kept the score halfway close (for a bit, at least) was CMS got a little too excited and slapped a string of running lay-ins off the glass too hard.

If the Wolves had found their groove just a hair earlier, the first quarter lead wouldn’t have been a modest 11-6.

Barton spiked the game’s opening bucket in 1.2 seconds, sliding through a pair of Cowboys to snatch the opening tip.

Once the orb was on his fingertips, he jammed the gas pedal through the floor, shot to the hoop and slapped home a wicked bank-shot that buckled the Chimacum coach’s knees.

The Cowboy head man didn’t have much better luck after that, as Barton and Hawthorne Wolfe were relentless on D, picking pockets and feeding their teammates for breakaway buckets.

The few times Chimacum was able to scramble back and set up on defense, the Wolves used their tall trees (Logan Martin, Xavier Murdy and Cody Roberts) to score inside.

Roberts tossed in a soft hook in the paint that brought back memories of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (at least to fans older than Roberts), while Martin, channeling the advice dad Bob gave him pre-game, went hard at the hoop on a consistent basis.

His best bucket came midway through the second.

Grady Rickner stripped the ball, spun, fired ahead to rampaging ball o’ fire Aiden Burdge, then pumped his fist in agreement as Burdge dropped a picture-perfect pass into Martin’s hands for a running lay-up.

Murdy and Rickner controlled the third — slender assassin Murdy channeling prime-of-his-career Dennis Rodman on the boards, while his teammate slashed to the hoop for six of his team-high 10.

Chimacum had no quit, hitting a truly spectacular (and pretty dang lucky) three-ball from the parking lot to kick off the fourth, but Coupeville never bent.

With a loose ball bouncing into the back court, Burdge sent older sister Kylie into (restrained) hysterics, winning a 1-on-1 race to the orb.

Grabbing it with one hand, while on the move, he shifted the ball to his other hand in the time it took him to take one extra-large hop, and knocked the runner down, making his siblings’ trip home from college an extra-special one.

Everything was clicking in the game’s final minutes, with Daniel Barajas operating the point while working the ball like a yo-yo and the Wolves continuing to set up almost every bucket with a well-placed pass.

With 10 of his 11 active players in the scoring column, CHS coach Randy King put his arm around Jonathan Carroll while the two stood along the sideline.

Looking down at the young gunner, with the eyes that had lit a fire under so many Wolves in the past 25+ years blazing (at a relatively soft temperature) King nodded his head.

“Go get me a bucket, son,” is what I’m imagining he said.

In reality, the gym was too loud to pick up his words, but the intent was undeniable.

Boom.

Barajas whipped a pass to Carroll, who spun, and promptly melted the minds of all gathered by not only hitting the basket, but knocking down a gorgeous bank-shot from well outside his normal range.

The gym went bonkers, Carroll elevated in the air like older brother Mitchell doing the high jump and King softly arched his eyebrows and nodded — which for him is tantamount to a screaming fit of hysterics.

By the time scorekeeper-to-the-stars McKenzie Bailey was done tallying up all the buckets, Rickner finished as high man with 10.

Hot on his heels was Barton (9), Martin (8), Murdy (6), Wolfe (4), Burdge (4), Barajas (4) and Gabe Shaw (4).

Roberts, Logan Wertz and Carroll rounded out the Wolf attack with a bucket apiece.

Mitten can’t be stopped:

Playing at the same time in the big gym, the 8th graders pounded the ball inside to their big weapon, and the nephew of former CHS hoops legend Jason McFadyen responded with a vengeance.

Hitting from all angles, Mitten scorched the twine for 13 in the first minutes, as the Wolves roared out to a 17-5 margin at the first break.

Coupeville didn’t let up, outscoring the Cowboys 30-8 across the second and third quarter, decisively plowing their foes, who boasted a bench twice the size of CMS.

Mitten’s 31 were the most scored by any Wolf this season, middle or high school, boy or girl, while Sage Downes swished 13 to back him up.

Daniel Olson banked home five, Alex Jimenez knocked in three, Ben Smith and Dakota Eck each swooped in for a bucket and Tian Yu swished a free throw for his first point of the season.

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Dakota Eck (John Fisken photos)

   Dakota Eck picks up a full head of steam en route to a 30-yard run. (John Fisken photos)

run

Wolf quarterback Cade Golden, just out for a relaxing stroll.

Jake Mitten

   Jake Mitten fools the defense on the PAT, suddenly rolling out and finding Golden for the conversion.

tackle

   Jacob Kendall (21) and Ben Smith (1) lead a fired-up pack of Wolves as they haul down a wayward Cowboy.

Trystan Ford

Trystan Ford dares you to try and get through the line when he’s blocking.

Cheridan and Deb

   Football moms Cheridan Eck (left) and Deb Smith brave the gusty winds to watch their sons play.

Jesus

Jesus Garcia-Partida is cold, wet and ready to play for another three hours.

Wertz

Logan Wertz prepares to drop “The Stunner” on Chimacum’s QB.

The wind was howling, the pads were popping and the camera was clicking.

Wandering paparazzi John Fisken ended up down in Cow Town Wednesday and snapped away as Coupeville and Chimacum staged an overtime thriller on the gridiron.

The pics above are courtesy him.

To see more (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/FB-20161026-Coupeville-MS-vs-C/

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Jake Mitten, seen here in an earlier game, scored four touchdowns Wednesday in an overtime thriller. (John Fisken photo)

   Jake Mitten, seen here in an earlier game, scored four touchdowns Wednesday in an overtime thriller. (John Fisken photo)

It was a thriller that kept you guessing until the final play.

A rainy day turned halfway nice, if predictably windy, Wednesday afternoon, allowing Coupeville and Chimacum ample opportunity to wage a knock-down, drag-out middle school battle on the gridiron.

By the time it was done, with the visiting Cowboys pulling out a 35-34 thriller in overtime, there had been something for everyone.

Big pass plays, last second escapes, even a Wolf coach wiping out on the muddy sideline and crashing into the team bench.

The game ended when Chimacum’s line shoved Coupeville’s defense back into the end zone on an extra point conversion run, giving the Cowboys the slimmest of margins.

With the game knotted at 28-28, after Chimacum had pulled off a fourth-down miracle with under a minute to play in the fourth quarter to force the extra period, the two squads took turns trying to punch the ball in from the 10-yard line.

The Wolves had the ball first in OT and hammered the ball in on fourth and goal, with Jake Mitten plunging around the right side for his fourth score of the afternoon.

But, on the ensuing extra point attempt, the Wolves couldn’t get the snap down for kicker Sage Downes and Chimacum players swarmed through the line to smush holder Dakota Eck.

With the ball in their own hands, the Cowboys took one play to score a touchdown — on a run up the middle — and one play to end things, ramming home the game’s final point behind a cloud of dust.

The frantic overtime action capped a game with five lead changes, and a miracle at the end of regulation.

Coupeville had gone ahead 28-20 with three-and-a-half minutes to play thanks to a three-yard scoring run from Mitten and a successful PAT kick from Downes.

Middle school football rewards teams with two for a kick and one for a run or pass on extra point plays — the opposite of high school action — and with Chimacum down by eight and going into the wind, things looked good for the Wolves.

The Cowboys had two miracles (a big one and a very important small one) still in their pocket, however.

First, they slipped a tiny, but quick receiver behind the defense on fourth-and-everything from the 30-yard line, and his TD reception with 47 seconds to play pulled Chimacum to 28-26.

Then, despite kicking into the wind, a burly Cowboy drove the ball through the uprights — by the slimmest of margins — to knot things up.

Somehow, despite there being less than a minute to play in regulation, both teams got the ball back before the buzzer sounded.

Coupeville went four and out and gave Chimacum the ball with 15 seconds to play, then dodged a bullet when Cade Golden tipped away a potential game-winning pass.

With regulation run down, and a ferry awaiting the Cowboys, there was serious discussion at midfield on whether to call the game a tie.

To the delight of players on both sides, and the surprise of onlookers who have grown accustomed to middle school games not being allowed overtime action, the refs shut off the clock and let the teams decide the game on the field.

While Coupeville would have liked to have held on for the win, the Wolf coaches were thrilled to see two similarly-sized schools get a chance to go at it, with neither side backing down.

“They played with their hearts and for each other; loving it!!!,” said CMS head coach Bob Martin. “It was a good day!”

The Wolves stung Chimacum several times, starting with their opening drive.

After watching the Cowboys eat up nearly seven minutes of clock while marching to a touchdown after taking the kick-off, Coupeville responded with its own score in less than 75 seconds.

Eck broke free for a 31-yard sprint to daylight, then Golden hooked up with Mitten on a 25-yard pass play to put CMS on the doorstep.

From there, it was all Ben Smith, as he took a hand-off and scampered around the left side for a two-yard touchdown run.

Mitten dropped a perfect conversion pass into Golden’s waiting arms for the extra point and the Wolves were up 7-6 and off to the races.

Coupeville’s next two touchdowns came through the air, with Golden flinging the ball into the overcast sky and Mitten hauling it in, then churning away for extra yardage.

The first went 32 yards, the second 75 yards.

In between Golden picked off a Cowboy pass — the only turnover in a very cleanly played game.

Thanks to weather issues that erased a game from earlier in the season, the two teams will reunite in a week, this time at Chimacum.

The Nov. 2 clash will bring the middle school football campaign to an end.

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"What's that I taste? Oh yes, sweet, sweet victory." (Deb Smith photos)

“What’s that I taste? Oh yes, sweet, sweet victory.” (Deb Smith photos)

Wolf fans

Wolf fans enjoy the balmy Port Townsend weather.

Bob Martin

CMS coach Bob Martin (red shirt, middle) rallies his troops.

wolves

“Water tastes nice, victory even better!”

“It was “that” game, the one you wish you could duplicate throughout the season.”

As he basked in an improbable, but highly satisfying, rout of host Port Townsend, Coupeville Middle School football coach Bob Martin was almost downright giddy.

Almost.

Former Marine Corps drill sergeants don’t do full-on giddy. Even when their out-manned team rises up and thrashes their foe 52-13.

So, maybe not giddy, but definitely pleased.

“Yes, we need to work on tackling, but once those young players figured out they could do it, you couldn’t stop them,” Martin said “Yes, our hard work beat their talent!

“They had big kids and you could tell our boys were intimidated, but that wore off quickly.”

Despite hitting the gridiron Wednesday with just 14 active players, the Wolves seized control of the game early and never looked back.

Coupeville took a 14-13 lead, stretched it out to 30-13 at halftime, and continued to pour it on in the second half, scoring from all directions.

Wolf quarterback Cade Golden lit up the skies, completing 12 of 17 passes for 180 yards and four touchdowns, while Jake Mitten and Dakota Eck tallied three touchdowns apiece.

Mitten, who rushed for 80 yards, scored twice on passes from Golden and once on a run, while also finding time to kick four field goals.

Eck was a two-way threat, rumbling for 72 yards, scoring twice on offense and pulling off the play of the game on defense for touchdown #3.

With Port Townsend threatening to score, the CMS 8th grader swooped in, stripped the ball at the two-yard line, then sprinted 98 yards the other way for a game-busting score.

Coupeville’s defense was strong (Miles Davidson and Ben Smith recovered fumbles while Alex Jimenez had a “great bone-crushing tackle while on kickoff – stopped the kid in his tracks!”) and its offense even stronger.

When Mitten and Eck weren’t lugging the ball, Smith (42 yards rushing) and Gabe Shaw (28 and a touchdown) both stepped up and helped shoulder the load.

The key to a successful day was the team’s line (Tian Yu, Davidson, Shaw, Smith, Sage Downes and Logan Wertz), which shoved Port Townsend back time and again.

“Can’t do anything without them,” Martin said. “They’re figuring it out, gaining confidence every day. It’s great to see!”

With just 14 active players, everyone chipped in, and Coupeville also got contributions from Dylan Estes, Damon Stadler, Trystan Ford and Jacob Kendall.

The team-wide effort was best summed up by assistant coach Michael Golden, who surveyed the winning Wolves and delivered the line of the night.

“They played their hearts out!”

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