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Posts Tagged ‘Kennedy O’Neill’

Brooklyn Pope springs into action. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The tide is turning.

After years of being bashed about by King’s, the Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball program acquitted itself quite nicely Thursday afternoon.

Winning two of three games against the visiting Knights, the Wolves continue to play strongly as the season reaches the halfway point.

How the day played out:

 

Level 3:

Thursdays are reverse day, with games going 3-2-1, instead of 1-2-3, and that helped Coupeville get off to a blazing start.

Sort of.

The Wolves actually failed to score in the first quarter of the day’s opening rumble, but so did King’s, leaving things frozen at 0-0 seven minutes into play.

After that, the defenses cracked a bit, or the shots got a little more precise, with CMS eventually rallying for a nail-biting 18-16 win.

The victory lifts the Wolves to 2-1 on the campaign.

While the ball wasn’t staying in the bucket in the early going, that was partially because the hometown squad was playing inspired defense.

Kaleigha Millison pulled off a snappy hustle play, tiptoeing down the sideline as she grabbed a runaway ball and flipped it back over her head to keep the action flowing.

Meanwhile Brooklyn Pope shut down the Knights on the boards, snagging rebounds left and right, while teammate Claire Lachnit was like a bumblebee, madly buzzing from side to side, chasing down every Knight who dared to touch the ball.

Bouncing off the floor at a steady rate, Lachnit proved surprisingly resilient as well, popping up and charging back into action while shaking various body parts to restore feeling.

If her coaches thought about pulling the plucky ballhawk from the game to slow her rate of bruises, they relented as each time she flashed a huge smile, her joy overshadowing any pain.

Coupeville finally got on the board thanks to Cassandra Powers, who nailed a turnaround jumper, and with some big buckets from Pope, the Wolves rolled into halftime tied 6-6 with King’s.

Twice CMS snatched the lead in the third, only to have the Knights convert three straight offensive rebound putbacks to stake themselves to a 14-10 lead heading into the final frame.

King’s popped for one more bucket to open the fourth, then the Wolves clamped down, holding their foes scoreless for the final six minutes.

That gave Pope, Powers, and Millison time to chip away at the lead, with the winning bucket coming off of a rebound with less than a minute to play.

The Knights had the ball in their hands at the end but couldn’t get the tying bucket as Coupeville came full tilt on defense, setting off a huge celebration among CMS students in the stands.

Pope, who was a powerhouse all game, finished with a game-high 12 points, with Powers knocking down four and Millison rounding out things with a bucket.

Emma Cushman, precise point guard Cameron Van Dyke, Zayne Roos, Selah Rivera, Zariyah Allen, and the turbo-charged Lachnit also saw floor time for the Wolves.

 

Isabella de Souza Oliveira Mc Fetridge looks for an open teammate.

Level 2:

Coupeville blew the doors off the gym in the early going, then quietly added to their lead quarter by quarter in a 28-14 romp.

The victory lifts the Wolves to a stellar 3-1.

This one was briefly tied 2-2 about a minute into play, before CMS went on a tear to build a 12-4 lead by the first break.

Kennedy O’Neill, slashing hard to the hoop, pestering King’s ballhandlers until they didn’t know which way to turn, and flying down the floor like a missile, brought the main pain.

She peppered the net for six of her team-best 12 points in the first quarter, while also pulling off the best basketball IQ play of the day.

After being mugged while slapping home a breakaway layup, O’Neill had a chance to make it a three-point play the hard way with a free throw.

When her charity shot rolled off the rim and bounced free, nine players and both refs stood stock still, as if a second free throw was coming. Which it wasn’t.

Breaking the frozen portrait, O’Neill alertly shot forward, snagged the live ball and put it back up, showing at least one person in the gym knew the rules inside out.

The Wolves stretched the lead out to 18-8 by the half, with Amiaya Curry drilling a particularly gorgeous jumper.

It came on a play where the Wolf guard came strolling up to the key at the speed Matthew McConaughey drawls his dialogue, then suddenly lunged forward and drove home the exclamation point.

“Alright, alright … alright,” indeed.

The overall scoring was bit muted after the halftime break, but the Wolves pushed the margin out to 24-12 through three quarters before holding King’s scoreless for the first six minutes and 56 seconds of the seven-minute final frame.

O’Neill, who leads all Wolf scorers this season, netted 12 more points to lead the way, while Willow Leedy-Bonifas and Sophia Batterman both added four apiece.

Rhylin Price, Amelia Crowder, Allison Powers, and Curry all scored a bucket, with Sage Stavros, Isabella de Souza Oliveira Mc Fetridge, and Elizabeth Marshall bringing the fire on the defensive end of the floor.

 

Ari Cunningham dives for a loose ball.

Level 1:

A vintage King’s team, populated with three-ball shooters who all had mad hops, brutal speed, and the ability to attack the rim with both hands, proved to be too much for the Wolves in the finale.

The Knights cracked the game open with a 19-0 run midway through the first quarter and romped to a 48-18 win.

The loss drops the Wolves, who played King’s straight up in the second and fourth quarters, to 1-3 on the season.

CMS 8th grader Adie Maynes nailed a driving jumper to knot things up at 2-2, then the visitors went to work.

An Ava Lucero free throw at the very tail end of the opening quarter stopped King’s huge surge, but a 21-3 deficit heading into the break proved to be too much to overcome.

Tenley Stuurmans fired up the Wolves in the second quarter, scoring five points and loudly rejecting a Knights shot during a defensive stand, while Sydney Van Dyke netted a note-perfect jumper from the top of the key.

But while CMS won the quarter (7-6) it still trailed 27-10 at the half, and a 15-2 King’s run in the third sealed the deal.

Down by 30, the Wolves faced a running clock in the fourth quarter but played the visitors to a 6-6 standstill.

Lillian Ketterling, who fought valiantly all game while being smacked and poked, hit a layup, while Stuurmans continued to work hard down in the paint.

She finished with a team-high 11 points, with Maynes (2), Van Dyke (2), Ketterling (2), and Lucero (1) also netting points.

Olivia Hall, Taylor Marrs, Laken Simpson, Tamsin Ward, Marin Winger, and Ari Cunningham rounded out the active roster.

A portion of Coupeville’s bright basketball future.

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Perfect shooting form equals points in the book. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Every point captured for posterity.

We’re three games into the eight-game Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball season, and it’s anyone’s guess who will emerge as the scoring champ.

So far 22 different Wolves have rattled the rim for at least one point, with new additions each time out.

After big performances Tuesday against Northshore Christian Academy, Kennedy O’Neill and Adie Maynes have moved to the front of the list.

But there’s still plenty of season left to play, keeping stats geeks glued to their computers.

Where we stand through Feb. 21:

 

Kennedy O’Neill – 29
Adie Maynes – 25
Willow Leedy-Bonifas – 14
Brooklyn Pope – 14
Tenley Stuurmans – 13
Kaleigha Millison – 12
Lillian Ketterling – 10
Amelia Crowder – 8
Sydney Van Dyke – 8
Ari Cunningham – 7
Emma Cushman – 7
Cassandra Powers – 6
Rhylin Price – 6
Olivia Hall – 4
Ava Lucero – 4
Allison Powers – 4
Tamsin Ward – 4
Sophia Batterman – 2
Amaiya Curry – 2
Isabella de Souza Oliveira Mc Fetridge – 2
Elizabeth Marshall – 2
Sage Stavros – 1

“You’re a scoring machine, Kennedy! Unleash the beast!!”

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Sydney Van Dyke pushes the ball up court. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a clean sweep.

Despite missing several key players, the Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball squads hit the road with a vengeance Tuesday, sweeping a pair of games from Northshore Christian Academy.

The victories were crafted with solid team-wide play and sparked by offensive explosions from a pair of promising young snipers.

How the day played out:

 

Level 1:

Adie Maynes went bonkers.

After scoring a single bucket across the first two games of the season, the CMS 8th grader erupted for a game-high 23 in Everett, outscoring her rivals by herself.

The Wolves top squad recorded its first win of the campaign, heading home with a lopsided 41-18 win.

Five different Coupeville players scored, but it was Maynes who was the … main attraction.

She rattled home six points in the opening frame, went off for eight more in both the second and third quarters, then closed her day with a free throw in the fourth.

Lillian Ketterling knocked down six points to back up Maynes, with Olivia Hall, Sydney Van Dyke, and Ava Lucero all banking in four to round things out.

Tamsin Ward, Marin Winger, Laken Simpson, Chelsi Stevens, and Taylor Marrs rounded out the highly efficient roster.

Lillian Ketterling eyeballs the defense.

 

Level 2:

Another romp, as Kennedy O’Neill scorched the nets for a team-best 16 points during a 28-6 blowout.

The victory lifts the Wolves to 2-1 on the season.

Like Maynes, O’Neill tallied points in every frame, but she saved her biggest burst for last.

After going for two, four, and three across the first three quarters, she rippled the nets for seven more to close out the game.

Amelia Crowder and Allison Powers rang up four points apiece, with Isabella de Souza Oliveira Mc Fetridge (2), Sage Stavros (1), and Ward (1) also scoring.

Sophia Batterman, Winger, and Elizabeth Marshall also saw floor time for the Wolves.

 

Level 3:

Northshore is the only Cascade League school not to field a third squad, so the Wolves stayed home and played an intra-squad scrimmage against Coupeville’s #4 team.

 

Up next:

Three straight home games are on tap, with CMS welcoming King’s (Feb. 22), Lakewood (Feb. 27), and Sultan (Feb. 29) to Whidbey in the near future.

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Kennedy O’Neill makes a deposit. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

All in all, a successful road trip.

The Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball teams trekked to the wilds of Granite Falls Tuesday, returning home with two victories and a competitive loss.

Holding up well on their opening bus ride of the season, the Wolves nabbed their first wins, while getting two more players into the scoring column.

How the day played out:

 

Level 1:

Coupeville’s varsity finished strongly, but early offensive woes doomed it in a 30-16 loss.

Now 0-2 on the season, the Wolves scraped out just seven points across the first three quarters of play, before closing on a 9-8 run in the fourth quarter.

Tamsin Ward nailed a three-ball to get CMS on the board, but her squad trailed 4-3 at the first break and 12-5 at the half.

A 10-2 surge by Granite in the third sealed the deal for the hosts.

The fourth belonged to Tenley Stuurmans, however, as the Wolf 8th grader pounded away for seven of her team-high 10 points.

Ward (3), Sydney Van Dyke (2), and Lillian Ketterling (1) also scored, with Ari Cunningham, Olivia Hall, Adie Maynes, Laken Simpson, and Chelsi Stevens seeing floor time.

Wolf defensive ace Willow Leedy-Bonifas gives her rival nowhere to go.

 

Level 2:

Four different Wolves tallied points in the fourth quarter, propelling CMS to a come-from-behind 24-20 win.

Coupeville, now 1-1 on the campaign, trailed 5-4 after one, recovered to slide ahead 10-7 at the half, then retreated a bit, finding itself down 18-16 heading into the final frame.

That was when the Wolves clamped down on defense, closing things on an 8-2 tear, with Amelia Crowder, Elizabeth Marshall, Rhylin Price, and Amaiya Curry all scoring for the victors.

Kennedy O’Neill had the hottest hand on the afternoon, rippling the twines for eight points, while Willow Leedy-Bonifas netted six and Price banked in four.

Marshall (2), Crowder (2), and Curry (2) rounded out the offensive attack, with Sage Stavros, Allison Powers, Sophia Batterman, and Isabella de Souza Oliveira Mc Fetridge bringing hustle on the defensive end of the floor.

 

Level 3:

Another strong close-out for Coupeville, with the Wolves evening their record at 1-1 thanks to a strong second half performance during a 21-16 win.

Down 4-2 after one, and 8-7 at the half, CMS rallied to finish the game with 8-6 and 6-2 runs across the final two quarters of play.

Brooklyn Pope made the net pop, scoring all eight of her points after halftime, while Emma Cushman rattled the rim for five.

Cassandra Powers and Kaleigha Millison chipped in with four apiece, while Zariyah Allen, Cameron Van Dyke, Selah Rivera, Annaliese Powers, Claire Lachnit, and Zayne Roos rounded out the roster.

 

Up next:

The Wolves travel to Everett Feb. 20 to square off with Northshore Christian Academy, before returning home for three straight rumbles in the CMS gym.

Coupeville hosts King’s, Lakewood, and Sultan on Feb. 22, 27, and 29 respectively.

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Kennedy O’Neill soars to glory.

No more meets, but a few photos left to deal with.

The Coupeville Middle School track and field team wrapped its season last week with the Cascade League Championships, and today we offer up the remaining pics we had still stashed away.

The action photos are from Wolf Mom Ana Oliveira, the coach portraits snapped by John Fisken.

Ready to launch.

Wolf coach Amber Wyman guided her team to a strong finish.

Feel the burn.

A jumper comes in hot.

Devon Wyman cruises on by.

Jon Gabelein, track guru.

Up, up, and away.

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