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Posts Tagged ‘Kailey Kellner’

Gabe

Gabe Wynn fires from behind the arc. (John Fisken photo)

opne gym

   A pack of Wolf girls pauses for a moment during a recent open gym. (Amy Briscoe photo)

Risen Johnson

Risen Johnson gets ready to rumble. (John Fisken photo)

Can you hear it?

Shoes squeaking on the floor? Leather slapping against hardwood?

It’s the sound of basketball, and it’s picking up momentum every day.

The first day of practice for Coupeville High School is Monday, Nov. 16, just six short days away.

Already though, potential Wolf hoops hotshots have been showing up for informal open gyms and beginning work on fine-tuning their games.

Established stars. Young guns with something to prove. They’re all out there, making a name for themselves.

And, there’s still time to show up for an open gym if you haven’t already.

There’s one Tuesday night from 4:30-6:00 and one Wednesday from 3-5.

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Lauren Grove (John Fisken photo)

   A day after wrapping her high school soccer season, Lauren Grove, seen here in an earlier game, was back hard at work on the court. (John Fisken photo)

(Amy King photo)

  Roundball guru Sherry Roberts (red shirt) fires up her troops. (Amy King photo)

Let’s mix it up.

Bringing an end to the fall ball season Sunday, Coupeville High School girls’ basketball players had a wild day.

First they got a win without taking the court, after Bellingham failed to show for the opener of what was supposed to be a doubleheader.

With time on their hands, and anxious to see some action, the Wolves instead teamed up with Sedro-Woolley, which was low on players.

With five Cubs and (eventually) six Wolves operating as a joint hoops squad, they held off a feisty, deep Anacortes squad, running and gunning to a 47-41 win.

Despite a few hurdles — neither team knew the others style of play for one — Sedroville clicked well, with the Wolves shining on the boards and clamping down on defense.

Junior gunner Kailey Kellner was money in the bank, banging away for 10 points, including a long-range trey.

She kept it easy on the statskeeper elsewhere, putting down a three under steals, assists and rebounds.

Mia Littlejohn (six points), Lindsey Roberts (five points, two rebounds), Lauren Grove (four points, two rebounds), Kalia Littlejohn (two points, three rebounds) and Sarah Wright (two rebounds and a steal she took coast-to-coast) rounded out the Wolf contingent.

After a brief break, the Wolves ended the day by facing off with their temporary teammates, pushing 2A Sedro to the end in a narrow 26-18 loss.

Coupeville was stellar on defense in the first half, but came out cold on offense after halftime. Battling through tired legs, the Wolves went scoreless for the first five minutes.

Taking a moment to regroup, and fired up by some words of wisdom from coaches Sherry Roberts and Aimee Bishop, CHS emerged from a timeout much more aggressive and rallied throughout the remaining time on the clock.

Kellner hit the boards like the reincarnation of Dennis Rodman, the Littlejohn sisters and Grove turned up the heat in the back court and the Wolves got steal-happy in the waning moments.

While it wasn’t quite enough to complete the comeback, the second-half surge greatly pleased Coupeville coaches and fans alike.

Mia Littlejohn paced the Wolves in the finale, popping for eight points, snaring three boards and pilfering two steals.

Kellner (six points, six rebounds, five steals), Grove (two points, four rebounds), Roberts (two points, seven rebounds), Kalia Littlejohn (four rebounds, two steals) and Wright (five rebounds) all chipped in as well.

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Makana Stone (john Fisken photos)

   Hours after reigning over the Homecoming dance, Makana Stone poured in 42 points during a fall ball doubleheader Sunday. (John Fisken photos)

Kailey Kellner

   Wolf marksman Kailey Kellner was on point, tallying eight points and 15 boards over two razor-thin losses.

Imagine if they weren’t tired.

Coming off of Homecoming week, and, just hours before, the dance itself, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team found itself playing a fall ball doubleheader Sunday.

And, despite runnin’ and gunnin’ on tired feet, and with little sleep, the Wolves almost pulled off back-to-back wins against tough competition.

In the end, Coupeville couldn’t quite get over the last hurdle, falling 25-24 to potential future playoff foe Mount Baker and 38-36 to 3A Marysville-Pilchuck.

Overcoming their tiredness to put together their best afternoon of ball so far in league play, the Wolves were patient on offense, battled for rebounds, scrambled after loose balls and showed a great deal of poise.

Reigning 1A Olympic League MVP Makana Stone, the CHS Homecoming Queen, had herself an afternoon to pace the attack.

She opened with 14 points and 13 rebounds against Mount Baker, then got epic against the Tomahawks, jamming home a game-high 28, snatching 14 boards and rejecting a pair of shots.

Her predominately young teammates provided able support, led by Kailey Kellner, who tallied eight points, 15 rebounds and two assists on the day.

The Wolves also got contributions from Sarah Wright (five points, five rebounds), Lauren Grove (two points, four rebounds, three steals, three assists) and Mia Littlejohn (two points, three rebounds, three steals, two assists).

Freshmen Lindsey Roberts (one point, eight rebounds) and Kalia Littlejohn (three rebounds) rounded out the CHS attack.

While Stone was en fuego for most of the afternoon, her teammates all had their moments when they stepped up and snatched the spotlight, as well.

Grove made off with a ball, beat the defense down the floor on a one-woman breakaway, heard the mob coming and calmly slammed on the brakes and went to the left hand for the bucket.

Kellner pulled off a sparkling give-and-go with Stone for a bucket, Wright hit the boards like a wild woman and three of the Wolves teamed up for a defensive gem late in the second game.

With a full-court press on, Kalia Littlejohn drove the player with the ball to the sideline, where big sis Mia and running mate Grove were waiting.

Trapped, the Marysville player stepped out of bounds, turning the ball over, just as Wolf coaches Sherry Roberts and Aimee Bishop had written it up.

Coupeville returns to Skagit county one more time, with a final fall ball doubleheader Nov. 1.

Practice for the high school season, when the Wolves will defend their league title, officially starts Nov. 16.

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Makana Stone (John Fisken photos)

   Makana Stone paced Coupeville with 17 rebounds in Sunday’s doubleheader. (John Fisken photos)

Kailey Kellner (third

   Kailey Kellner (second from right) provides some vocal support in a game earlier this season.

Fall ball isn’t really about wins and losses.

Well, every basketball team wants to grab as many victories as possible, and a depleted Coupeville High School girls’ squad didn’t get that done Sunday, but putting in work, in all its forms, is what truly matters.

The off-season sport, with CHS coaches David and Amy King merely interested spectators while former Wolf legends Sherry Roberts, Brittany Black and Kacie Kiel call the coaching shots, is a chance for returning players and newcomers to mesh.

Hopefully.

With only five players available to suit up for much of Sunday’s doubleheader — a 31-19 loss to 3A Mount Vernon and a 39-12 loss to perennial postseason rival Meridian — the Wolves hung close, then ran out of gas against teams with deeper benches.

Foul trouble stung, as well.

Coupeville tacked on two late-arriving players midway through the day, but then had two starters foul out almost immediately, negating the surge in roster size.

With no subs early against Mount Vernon, the Wolves spread out on offense and played a patient style, which worked for a time.

But with tired legs (being out of season, several of the players are pulling double time with their fall sports teams) betraying them, Coupeville struggled in the second half.

The game against Meridian was similar, though with seven players available, all of whom snatched at least one rebound, tiredness was less of a factor.

The twin-bill, filled with big highs and big lows, captured the work-in-progress Wolves in all their glory.

While Coupeville is the defending 1A Olympic League champs, they lost six players to graduation.

The returning stars will need to mesh with a talented, but raw, pack of freshmen who have yet to play a second in an actual high school game.

One of those 9th graders, Sarah Wright, showed strong movement with (and without) the ball, drawing praise from hoops gurus in the crowd.

The consensus was she’s a hard-working fireball ready to explode.

Wolf senior Makana Stone, the Olympic League MVP last year, paced Coupeville with 17 rebounds across the two games.

Lauren Grove (8), Kailey Kellner (7), Wright (6), Mia Littlejohn (3), Lindsey Roberts (3) and Kalia Littlejohn (3) all chipped in on the boards, while Grove, Roberts and Stone collected blocks, as well.

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Makana Stone (left) and Kailey Kellner (Amy King photo)

  Makana Stone (left) and Kailey Kellner, on the road and livin’ the hoops star life in Vegas. (Amy King photo)

Lindsey Roberts motors up-court during her 8th grade season. (John Fisken photos)

   Lindsey Roberts motors up-court during her 8th grade season. (John Fisken photos)

Do not trifle with Sarah Wright (33) when she has her hands on a rebound. It will not end well for you.

   Do not trifle with Sarah Wright (33) when she has her hands on a rebound. It will not end well for you.

Wherever there is a hoop, there will be a Wolf.

It may be the off-season, but Coupeville High School’s basketball players are busy criss-crossing the state (and the country) in pursuit of sharpening their hoops skills.

Fresh off a team camp, four Wolf girls paired off and hit the hard court for more action.

Freshmen Lindsey Roberts and Sarah Wright went to a camp at Western Washington University, while senior Makana Stone and junior Kailey Kellner are busy with a select squad based out of Everett.

For the fab frosh, who hope to make an immediate splash with the defending 1A Olympic League champion CHS girls’ basketball squad, the camp was a big push in the right direction.

“They worked on individual skills, along with playing many games,” said CHS coach David King. “It’s always great to see players get the extra time at camps during the off-season.

“Having freshman dedicated and wanting to put in the work to get better is great,” he added. “Hopefully we can build on that and if it works out next summer have more players attend as well.”

It was Roberts second trip to the camp, while the ever-busy Wright carved out some time to make her camp debut.

Stone, last year’s Olympic League MVP, and Kellner, who revived memories of Larry Bird with her long-range sniping, have been bouncing all across the USA with their seven-player select team.

After hitting a tourney in Oregon, they went on to Chicago for another, and are currently in Las Vegas.

King and wife/assistant coach/photographer Amy are on vacation in Vegas, which gave them a chance to watch their star players in action as they pulled away in the second half for a win Friday.

“Getting that exposure with playing against teams and players that are just as talented and athletic is outstanding,” King said. “It would be great for more players to jump on the select teams in the future to get more basketball during the off-season.”

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