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Posts Tagged ‘JV’

   Wolf frosh Genna Wright snagged four rebounds and pilfered two steals Saturday at Meridian. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Just gonna put this out there — you score one point in the first 16 minutes of a high school basketball game, you’re not likely to win.

That being said, the Coupeville JV girls hoops squad picked up the scoring pace in the second half Saturday at Meridian, refusing to exit quietly.

While the host Trojans finished with a 45-13 win, the young Wolves, who are missing a chunk of players due to injuries and driver’s ed classes, still boast the best record by a CHS basketball team this winter.

Now 6-8, Coupeville’s second squad returns home Tuesday to play Klahowya in an Olympic League tussle.

Saturday, the Wolves fell behind 14-1 after one quarter and 25-1 at the halftime break, with a solitary free throw from Nicole Lester the only thing dropping for Coupeville.

CHS was much more competitive in the second half, tossing in five points in the third and seven in the fourth.

Ashlie Shank paced the Wolves with six points and two steals, while Maddie Hilkey (three points, six rebounds, two steals and two assists) and Mollie Bailey (three points, four boards) joined the fight.

Genna Wright (four boards and two steals), Lester (three boards, two steals), Tia Wurzrainer (two rebounds), Julia García Oñoro (a rebound and a steal) and Avalon Renninger (a blocked shot) also played.

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   Wolf freshman Mollie Bailey piled up four rebounds, a steal and a block Wednesday in a JV game which came down to the final minute. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

In a game full of swings, the final one went the wrong way.

Unable to hold on to a late lead Wednesday, the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball squad fell 27-23 in a very-psychical game on the road at Chimacum.

The loss drops the Wolf young guns to 2-2 in Olympic League play, 6-7 overall.

That they were still fighting for a win on the game’s final plays was an accomplishment in itself, as CHS was undermanned once again.

With several varsity players in question due to health concerns, three JV players — Ashlie Shank, Maddy Hilkey and Avalon Renninger — had their time carefully parceled out so they could swing up and join the first unit.

Since the Wolf JV only had eight in uniform to start the night, that left coach Amy King the task of being creative in putting together lineups.

It worked, mostly, as the Wolves hung tough in the first quarter, snatched the lead away in the second, then held on to the advantage until late in the game, when tired legs betrayed them a bit.

Not helping matters was a rival with a reputation for bringing the heat.

“We always know going to Chimacum is going to be a physical and rough game, and tonight was exactly that,” King said.

The Cowboys sprung a 1-3-1 trapping defense on the Wolves, but CHS responded strongly, getting good looks at the basket.

Unfortunately, not enough of those shots dropped.

Tia Wurzrainer carried Coupeville early, knocking down a lay up off of a steal and a “nice little jumper.”

With their own defense set to high intensity, the Wolves held Chimacum scoreless in the second quarter, using a 6-0 mini-run to turn an 8-4 deficit into a 10-8 lead at the half.

Wurzrainer was again the woman on the spot, dropping in a third bucket, while Avalon Renninger put a rebound back up and in to spur on her team.

Shank, smartly using what time she was afforded on JV, was a whirlwind, going off for a team-high eight points, nine rebounds and three steals.

Four of those points came on free throws, including three on the same trip.

Fouled while shooting a three-ball, Shank drilled all of her resulting freebies, repeating a rarity she had also accomplished the night before against Port Townsend.

In a game where both teams struggled at the line (Coupeville was a modest 7-16, while Chimacum was an ungodly 1-16), Shank was the exception.

She finished a flawless 4-4, while the other players on both teams combined to go 4-28.

Up by six headed down the stretch, the Wolves couldn’t keep it going, though, and the Cowboys used a final 13-3 run to steal the win away.

“Going into the fourth, I’m not sure what happened,” King said. “Our defense slowed down and we started to panic. We threw the ball away, threw up shots that weren’t needed and didn’t block out on rebounds.”

Wurzrainer finished with six points to back Shank’s eight, with Renninger (5), Nicole Lester (2), Mollie Bailey (1) and Genna Wright (1) also scoring.

Renninger hit the boards hard for nine rebounds, while Julia García Oñoro and Hilkey chipped in with two rebounds and an assist apiece.

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   Jonathan Partida and the Coupeville JV cruised to a victory Wednesday in front of their home fans. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They started the night with a bang.

Throwing down buckets from every direction Wednesday, with almost every player in uniform scoring, the Coupeville High School JV boys basketball team enjoyed a sweet rout, thrashing visiting Chimacum 47-20.

The lopsided victory snaps an eight-game losing skid dating back to Dec. 1, and lifts the Wolf young guns to 1-2 in Olympic League play, 2-9 overall.

While their record might not reflect it, Coupeville’s second team has been competitive almost every night out, with most games coming down to a handful of buckets.

That wasn’t the case against Chimacum, however, as the Wolves ran wild.

Jean Lund-Olsen slapped down back-to-back layups while flying 110 MPH through the paint to stake CHS to an 8-0 advantage, and the game was essentially over.

Up 14-3 after one quarter, the Wolves stretched the lead out to 28-5 by the halftime break, then sauntered home for the win.

At one point, Coupeville rolled up 20 consecutive points, during a stretch which started a minute into the second quarter and lasted until midway through the third.

What was most impressive was the Wolves desire to share the ball, as six different players scored during that run, and 11 of 13 Wolves tallied points during the game.

The prettiest basket came from Jacobi Pilgrim, who launched himself skyward in pursuit of a rebound right before the half.

Instead of hauling in the ball, the lanky sophomore swing player used his long reach to redirect the ball back up and in, angling it off the backboard for a bucket before returning to Earth.

Freshman gunner Daniel Olson led the offensive attack, raining down 11, while Lund-Olsen banked home eight and Mason Grove singed the nets for seven.

Jake Pease (4), Pilgrim (4), Koa Davison (3), Ulrik Wells (2), David Prescott (2), Sage Downes (2), Gavin Knoblich (2) and Alex Jimenez (2) also scored, while Jonathan Partida and Tucker Hall provided hustle and defense.

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   With a game-high 10 points Tuesday, Ashlie Shank outscored Port Townsend by herself in a 27-2 win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

So, so close.

Employing a withering defense Tuesday, the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball squad came within a single lucky shot of completely blanking visiting Port Townsend.

But, after a bounce here, a bounce there, a wild RedHawk shot found the bottom of the net two minutes into the fourth quarter, and the Wolves had to “settle” for just a 27-2 win.

The victory lifts Coupeville’s young guns to 2-1 in Olympic League play and evens their overall mark at 6-6, best of any of the four Wolf hoops squads this season.

The game was essentially over as soon as Nicole Lester slipped a free throw through the net two minutes into the game.

But, just in case that 1-0 lead wouldn’t hold up against the super-cold-shooting RedHawks, Mollie Bailey pulled up and netted a sweet jumper while on the move to seal the deal at 3-0.

From there, it was nothing but easy street for the Wolves, as they stretched the margin to 7-0 after one, 15-0 at the half and 22-0 after three quarters.

Port Townsend had at least two shots start to go down, then pop straight back up and out, as Coupeville’s mysterious invisible defender did her job superbly.

On offense, it was the Ashlie Shank show, as the Wolf guard rained down a game-high 10 points, while twice beating the clock.

Shank closed the second quarter by driving right up the middle against a fleeing defense as the clock ticked madly away, getting hammered on the arms on a buzzer-beating three-ball try.

While her trey didn’t drop, all three of her free throws whispered sweet nothings to the net as they softly slipped through.

Just to prove she truly has the heart of a killer lurking underneath her friendly exterior, Shank pulled up and splashed a jumper a half tick before the clock hit 0:00 in the third.

That rightly earned an appreciative nod and smile from her dad, Coupeville Schools Superintendent Dr. Jim Shank.

The Wolves spread their scoring out, with seven of the eight players in uniform scratching their names into the scoring column.

Lester hit five free-throws, while Maddy Hilkey (3), defensive beast Tia Wurzrainer (3), Bailey (2), Avalon Renninger (2) and Genna Wright (2) all tallied points.

Spanish sensation Julia García Oñoro came dangerously close to netting her first American basket.

While the ball wouldn’t drop for her, the foreign exchange hoops star, who is learning the game as she goes, provided hustle on defense and an enthusiastic welcome back to the bench for each of her teammates.

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   Avalon Renninger piled up six points and seven boards in two quarters Wednesday, sparking a Wolf JV win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Avalon Renninger is a game changer.

The sophomore supernova, who attacks the court with a mix of intensity and glee, was the spark the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball squad needed Wednesday night.

With Renninger providing a scoring and rebounding boost, plus quiet leadership, the Wolves broke open a close game in the fourth quarter, trouncing visiting Concrete 28-18.

The non-conference win, coming as the team heads into a nine-day break between games, lifts the CHS youngsters to 5-3 on the season.

In the early going Wednesday, Wolf coach Amy King had her doubts.

Despite preaching a mantra of “let’s come out strong” in her pre-game speech, she watched in silent horror as her players sputtered in the early going.

“Whistle blows, we get the ball and instantly turn it over,” King said. “They get the ball, score.

“We weren’t making good passes, the trap and defense we warned them about happened and we continually walked right into it.”

With leading scorer Chelsea Prescott jumping to varsity full-time, the JV squad will have to spread its offense out a bit more, and look for different players to step up at different times.

In the throes of a lackluster first quarter, the lone bright light came via Maddy Hilkey, who banked home both of Coupeville’s first two buckets.

Down 8-4 at the first break, the Wolves found their groove when Renninger took the court to start the second. As a swing player, she was only available for two quarters, but she used her time on the floor extremely well.

Avalon isn’t the tallest or quickest girl on the court, but she instills a calm to her teammates,” King said. “While there were still plenty of turnovers, there were also more rebounds, more help with the ball and a little more confidence, which is what was needed.

“The two quarters that Avalon played in, we outscored Concrete and those number say something.”

Following Renninger’s example, the rest of the Wolves elevated their defensive game against a rough and tumble (if we’re putting it nicely) Concrete squad full of rouges and rough-housers.

Kylie Chernikoff and Nicole Lester teamed up to control the boards, ripping down caroms left and right, while Tia Wurzrainer was a beast unto herself.

The sophomore guard, continuing to show the dedication to defense she brought to the soccer pitch in the fall, controlled a large part of the action, making off with six steals.

Wurzrainer also showed grace under pressure, hitting two free throws seconds after being leveled from behind by a two-handed shove into the back from a rival player.

Up by just four heading into the fourth quarter, the Wolves went into lock-down mode, holding Concrete to a single free throw over the final eight minutes of action.

Coupeville, still missing several players to nagging injuries, had eight players on its active roster, and all of them made solid contributions.

“Everyone got to come out for a breather during the game – but the battle ensued no matter who was in,” King said. “Everyone contributed and all the girls fought.

“They struggled, but never gave up and as a team they finished the night with a W.”

Hilkey and Renninger paced the Wolves with six points apiece, with Wurzrainer (5), Ashlie Shank (5), Chernikoff (4) and Mollie Bailey (2) also scoring.

Lester collected nine rebounds, three steals and three blocked shots, while Renninger snagged seven boards and Shank hauled down six.

Spanish sensation Julia García Oñoro racked up a rebound, a blocked shot and an assist as she continues to write her American success story.

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