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Posts Tagged ‘Katie Marti’

Katie Marti (second from left) scored a team-high 13 points Friday night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They started so hot and ended so cold.

The Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad scorched host Friday Harbor for 15 first-quarter points Friday night, then struggled to scratch out 10 more the rest of the way.

Going six-plus minutes without scoring in the second, third, and fourth quarters, the Wolves eventually frittered away an 11-point lead, falling 30-25 in their conference opener.

The loss drops Coupeville to 2-3 overall, 0-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, and stings badly as it comes against one of the other two 2B schools in the seven-team conference.

That could have a major impact in the chase for a playoff berth.

For now, the Wolves get an immediate chance to bounce back, when they host South Whidbey in a non-conference clash Saturday.

JV tips at 5:15, varsity at 7:00, and the program’s 50th anniversary will be celebrated at halftime of the second contest.

Friday’s rumble started like a blowout, with everything going Coupeville’s way.

The Wolves claimed the lead at 4-2 on a bucket in the paint from Jada Heaton and would hold the advantage for almost the entire game.

Five different CHS players hit a field goal in the game’s opening frame, with Heaton coming back around to slap home a rebound with just two ticks left on the clock.

Up 15-6 at the first break, the Wolves added a quick pullup jumper from Katie Marti to open the second quarter, and then things turned bleak.

Coupeville only connected on three field goals, and no free throws, across the game’s final 23 minutes-plus.

Not that Friday Harbor came roaring back exactly, as the Wolverines were madly clanking shots left and right as well.

But slowly, painfully, the host Wolverines crawled back into the game.

Friday Harbor trimmed the lead to 17-10 at the half, then 22-20 through three quarters.

Mia Farris made off with a steal and slashed end-to-end for a breakaway bucket to open the third — snapping her team’s long dry spell — but then CHS went another six minutes-plus with no points.

With the lead slashed to 19-18, Marti knocked down a three-ball, then she repeated the feat to open the fourth, pushing her squad ahead 25-20.

And then Coupeville simply stopped scoring. Again.

Friday Harbor tied the game at 25-25 with a hair over three minutes to play, forcing the first stalemate since way back at 2-2.

From there, a steal, a lob inside for a layup, and one free throw after Coupeville was forced to foul five times in 12 seconds to stop the clock, set the final margin.

Wolf coach Megan Richter was philosophical afterwards.

“It’s a learning curve. We will get there,” she said.

“The nice thing is we are improving every game and that’s all a coach can ask for right now.”

Marti accounted for more than half of her team’s scoring, rattling the rims for a season-high 13, which pushes her one point away from joining the 100-point club.

Heaton and Farris added four apiece, Skylar Parker and Lyla Stuurmans each knocked down a bucket to round out the scoring, and Madison McMillan and Teagan Calkins were ferocious on the boards.

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Katie Marti has places to be, and ankles to break. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mia Farris is a killer in crunch time.

Refusing to let her team lose after it frittered away a 14-point second-half lead to a winless foe Wednesday, the Coupeville High School junior responded the only way possible.

By driving the length of the court, slicing between multiple defenders and nimbly slapping home a game-winning bucket with less than 10 seconds to play.

Simple.

Thanks to that basket, and a couple of other superb gut-check plays from her never-say-die teammates, Coupeville rebounded to hold off visiting Orcas Island 42-40.

The win, coming in a non-conference game against a Northwest 2B/1B League rival, lifts the Wolves to 2-2.

Up next is the real league opener Friday on Friday Harbor, then a home non-conference tilt Saturday against South Whidbey on the night when the Wolves celebrate their 50th anniversary.

Wednesday’s game, against an Orcas team now sitting at 0-6 on the season, shouldn’t have come down to the final moments.

But give the Vikings credit, for being scrappy, for hitting a few shots which looked dicey on the way up but beautiful on the way down through the net, and for not panicking when they fell behind 35-21 late in the third quarter.

Coupeville had just scored on three straight possessions, with Teagan Calkins and Jada Heaton sinking soft jumpers around two free throws from Lyla Stuurmans, and the rout seemed on.

Except then the Wolves forgot how to score for the next six minutes or so.

That allowed Orcas to close the third quarter on a 9-0 tear, with three buckets coming off of steals, before opening the final frame with a three-ball and a layup off of a pinpoint inbounds pass.

Suddenly the game was 35-35, the Vikings were seemingly in control, and all the air had sucked out of the CHS gym.

But also give the Wolves credit for not buckling in the moment.

Five juniors, one mission — beating you.

Skylar Parker drained a free throw to push Coupeville back ahead by a point, then she teamed with Farris on a give-and-go play that stretched the lead to 38-35 off a Farris jumper.

From there, things went punch-counterpunch-punch-some-more.

Orcas nailed a three-ball to force another tie, Stuurmans tiptoed through a pack of defenders to hit a driving jumper, then the Vikings cinched things back up at 40-40 on a lob and layup.

Cue Farris, who, small smile playing at the corner of her mouth, sliced ‘n diced Orcas and left all five players to bleed out as her driving layup settled through the bottom of the net.

The Vikings had one final chance to force overtime, and advanced the ball pell-mell up the court, only to run into a stiff wall of resistance.

With all five Wolves clamping down on their targets, Orcas was unable to get a shot off as the clock screamed down to 0:00, and the night ended on a positive note for hometown fans.

Much as it had started, as Coupeville opened the game with a 15-7 run in the first quarter.

Farris was wheeling and dealing early, dropping in seven points before the Orcas bus driver turned off the ignition out in the parking lot.

Marti and Parker were perfect complements, each nailing a three-ball from the right side of the floor, the better to let their shots fly from almost directly in front of the Orcas bench.

Coupeville kept pushing hard in the second frame, with Marti hitting another three-ball, this one off of a kickout pass from Reese Wilkinson, while Madison McMillan banged home a pair of buckets.

Farris led the Wolves with a game-high 11 points, while Marti chipped in with nine and McMillan rippled the nets for eight.

Stuurmans, Skylar Parker, and Heaton each banked in four, while Teagan Calkins hit her first varsity bucket to round out the scoring.

The sophomore becomes the 242nd Wolf girl to score in a varsity game across the last five decades.

Wilkinson, Brynn Parker, and Kayla Arnold also saw floor time for Megan Richter’s squad, to the delight of their fervent fan clubs.

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Lyla Stuurmans played strongly on both ends of the floor Saturday in Coupeville’s first win of the season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The crowd got rowdy, but the Wolves had sharper teeth.

Closing the game on a 19-2 run Saturday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad claimed its first victory of the season, thunking host Sultan 33-25.

The non-conference win, coming in a wild game that featured two technical fouls (and a Sultan fan being ejected from the gym), lifts the Wolves to 1-2.

It should also give Megan Richter’s team a confidence boost heading into a busy week.

Coupeville hosts Orcas Island next Wednesday, in a non-conference bout between Northwest 2B/1B League rivals.

After that comes a road trip Friday to Friday Harbor — which will count in the league standings — before a home showdown Saturday, Dec. 16 with South Whidbey.

That third game will also feature a 50th anniversary celebration for the CHS girls’ hoops program.

The road trip to Sultan got Coupeville back on the floor against a rival for the first time in a week, and the game was a memorable one from the get-go.

Operating their whistles at a merry pace, the three refs in attendance handed out techs to Coupeville (for aggressive defense) and Sultan (for naughty words), with the Turks top player fouling out less than three minutes into the third quarter.

Before that, the Wolves built a 9-4 lead in the first quarter behind big shots from sparkplug Katie Marti.

The junior point guard knocked down a three-ball from the right side, then hit a pullup jumper while boldly staring down the defense.

With some scoring help from her teammates, both from the field and at the free throw line, Marti and her crew were looking strong.

And then promptly went all eight minutes of the second quarter without hitting a single field goal.

Sultan, when its fans weren’t being given the heave-ho by refs who didn’t appreciate the chirping comin’ from the cheap seats, used a 12-3 surge to claim the halftime lead.

Mia Farris and Lyla Stuurmans both slipped charity shots through the net in the second frame, with CHS scoring leader Farris breaking her season-long streak of only scoring in the fourth quarter.

Mia Farris, about to make off with another steal.

But the Wolves were still down 16-12 at the break, and things got a little bleaker before they got beautiful.

Coupeville, still unable to hit a field goal through the first chunk of the third, fell behind 23-14 and desperately needed a spark.

At which point Farris revealed her alter ego, that of Superwoman.

Ripping a ball loose, the three-sport standout made off with a steal, fired up the jet pack she likely had hidden under her jersey, and roared away from the crowd.

Beating everyone to the other end of the floor, Keaton’s lil’ sis slapped home a layup to write another chapter in her family’s stellar hoops history and the entire game shifted.

Two free throws from Marti, then back-to-back jumpers from Marti and Farris capped an 8-0 run, pulling the Wolves within one at 23-22.

While Sultan countered with a bucket off a lob, that was the last point the Turks would get on this night.

Jada Heaton arched a pair of free throws through the twines to pull Coupeville within 25-24 heading into the fourth, and the final frame belonged to the Wolfpack.

Farris added six of her season-high 12 points in the fourth — keeping alive her status as the Wolf most likely to shank you in the game’s closing moments — and CHS pulled off a flawless 9-0 frame.

With the 50th anniversary celebration a week away, it was the kind of performance which reminds one of how much can change in a single game, and why stats matter.

With her 12-point burst, Farris passes 15 former Wolves on the career scoring chart, and the roll call covers memorable names like Courtney Boyd, Anya Leavell, Andilee Murphy, and Janiece Jenkins.

All have played a part in the success of the Coupeville hoops program, and the rise of one player brings reminders of the greatness which came before.

The Wolf juniors are a talented, tight-knit bunch.

The current Wolf squad is led by its juniors, with that five-pack accounting for all of Saturday’s scoring.

Marti dropped in nine points to back Farris, while McMillan (5), Stuurmans (4), and Heaton (3) also kept the scorekeeper busy.

Teagan Calkins, Skylar Parker, Reese Wilkinson, and Kayla Arnold also saw floor time for the Wolves, with Wilkinson hitting the boards with a savage fury.

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Chloe Marzocca earned JV team MVP honors for hustle plays like this. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

That’s a wrap.

Coupeville High School volleyball held its awards banquet Wednesday night, bringing an official end to the fall sports season.

The Wolves, who advanced to state for the first time since 2017, handed out awards and letters, looking ahead to next season while celebrating the accomplishments of this campaign.

Senior Grey Peabody earned MVP honors for the CHS varsity, while junior Chloe Marzocca was honored as the top JV player.

Coupeville made a run at the state tourney, and only graduates two from this lineup.

 

Other award winners:

 

Varsity:

 

Heart of a Wolf:

Issabel Johnson

 

Most Improved:

Teagan Calkins

 

Most Inspirational:

Issabel Johnson

 

Captains:

Mia Farris
Issabel Johnson
Grey Peabody

 

Four-Year Awards:

Issabel Johnson
Grey Peabody

 

JV:

 

Most Improved:

Capri Anter

 

Most Inspirational:

Lexis Drake

 

Varsity letter winners:

Taylor Brotemarkle
Teagan Calkins
Mia Farris
Jada Heaton
Issabel Johnson
Katie Marti
Madison McMillan
Grey Peabody
Lyla Stuurmans

 

Participation certificates:

Capri Anter
Haylee Armstrong
Carly Burt
Lexis Drake
Chloe Marzocca
Myra McDonald
Dakota Strong
Aby Wood

Carly Burt has a keen eye.

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Mia Farris, seen last season, led Coupeville in scoring during Monday’s season opener. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The offense is a work in progress.

There was times Monday when the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad really clicked during its season opener, but also a lot of moments where the Wolves looked like what they are.

A team which lost almost 80% of its offense to graduation and has to figure out how to generate buckets with basically an all-new starting lineup.

Unable to score back-to-back buckets at any point against host Mount Baker, the Wolves fell 52-21 against a team which rained down five shots from beyond the arc, and a whole lot of others from in close.

The game was knotted up at 2-2 early after Madison McMillan tore down a rebound, then powered her way right back up to bank the ball home over outstretched arms.

Unfortunately for Coupeville, it didn’t score again for six minutes plus, allowing Mount Baker to go on a game-busting 12-0 run.

McMillan finally stopped her team’s bleeding, nailing a pull-up jumper to close the first quarter, only to have the Mountaineers immediately respond with a 10-0 surge to open the second frame.

The Wolves eventually hit on a string of free throws, with Skylar Parker, Jada Heaton, and Katie Marti each rippling the net, but only knocked down one field goal in the quarter.

That came when Marti powered up court, going coast to coast to beat the buzzer and pull CHS within 28-9 at the half.

Coupeville picked up the offensive pace a bit after the break, notching six points in both the third and fourth, but Mount Baker controlled the boards and continued to stretch the lead.

Marti delivered a pair of beautiful passes to set up buckets, hitting Heaton with a long outlet heave, then threading the ball through the defense to find Lyla Stuurmans for a layup.

Wolf junior Mia Farris had the hot hand in the final frame, scoring all of her team-high six points in the waning minutes.

Marti rattled the rim for five points in support, while McMillan (4), Heaton (3), Stuurmans (2), and Parker (1) also scored.

Teagan Calkins and Kayla Arnold rounded out the Wolves to see floor time, with both making their varsity basketball debut for CHS.

Coupeville returns to action this Saturday, Dec. 2, when it hosts Toledo for varsity-only non-conference rumbles.

The girls tip off at 3:00, followed by the Wolf boys at 4:45.

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