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Posts Tagged ‘Kyla Briscoe’

Amy King

Wolf freshmen Kyla Briscoe (top) and Lauren Rose get up to pre-game shenanigans. (Amy King photos)

ta da

When Wolves attack.

From class to crass.

A game after the undermanned Port Townsend JV showed themselves to be the kind of plucky, big-hearted young women rival fans would root for, Chimacum arrived on Whidbey Friday and left a far different impression.

The end result was the same, a huge win for a red-hot Coupeville JV girls’ squad, which, despite suiting only six players, romped to a 48-13 win.

The victory, the team’s seventh straight, lifted the young Wolves to 13-5 overall, 8-0 in Olympic League play.

And yet, what will be talked about is that rarity of rarities — a full-blown ejection in a JV basketball game.

On a night when three separate Chimacum teams would receive at least one technical foul, the cherry on top of the sundae came courtesy of an overly-touchy Cowboy.

After a fourth-quarter battle for a rebound, Wolf freshman Allison Wenzel gained control of the ball.

With the play dead, a Cowboy approached the surprised Wenzel and, using both hands, shoved her hard enough in the face and chest that the refs immediately booted the offender from the game.

“The girl got up in Allison’s face. Allison stood her ground, we got the free throws and the ball back,” said Coupeville coach Amy King. “Don’t mess with one Wolf, because we take care of each other.

“The rest of the game was full of steals and great basketball. Our team stepped up and played a great quarter.”

Coupeville responded by drilling Chimacum in the game and not starting a full-blown brawl, something parents appreciated.

“It’s nice to know our kids don’t play like that. Makes me proud,” said Susan Wenzel.

Apart from the WWE action, the game was decided with an 18-0 second quarter run from the Wolves.

The surge came after a lackluster first quarter that ended with Coupeville clinging to a 4-3 lead. The moment prompted a rare chewing out of her team from the normally serene King.

The fiery oratory lit a spark under the Wolves.

“What was said worked, as we came out more focused, did a better job on offense and just started stealing the ball and getting fast breaks off our press,” King said. “The girls took their time, moved the ball around well and just played more like they can.”

Coupeville attacked in a frenzy over the final three quarters with “more passes up court than I’ve seen in a game.”

Lauren Grove and Kyla Briscoe were relentless, working their “anticipation magic” and converting steal after steal, with Lauren Rose leading the break, flying down the court after every steal and rebound.

Grove was on fire all game long, banging home a season-high 15, while filling up the stat sheet with six rebounds, five steals and a block.

Kyla Briscoe added a double-double with 10 points and 11 rebounds, barely missing a triple double with seven steals.

Tiffany Briscoe (eight points, nine rebounds, three steals), Rose (seven points, three rebounds, five steals), Kailey Kellner (six points, eight boards, two steals) and Wenzel (two points, nine boards, two blocks) rounded out the roster on the evening.

As the Wolf JV nears the end of its magical season — they close play on the road at Klahowya Monday — King has a mix of emotions.

“Last home game and making their parents proud. Classy group of amazing young women,” she said. “It is sad the season is almost done.”

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Lauren Rose (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Rose is showing five fingers, one for each victory in Coupeville’s current winning streak. (John Fisken photos)

Skyler Lawrence sparked the Wolves with 11 points and seven boards Friday.

Skyler Lawrence sparked the Wolves with 11 points and seven boards Friday.

ABC. Always be closing.

While it’s very possible none of the eight young women on the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team have every heard of, much less seen, the 1992 salesmen-going-crazy film  “Glengarry Glen Ross,” they lived out its credo Friday night.

Refusing to buckle after visiting Klahowya used a 12-2 fourth quarter run to snatch away the lead, the Wolves pulled off a flawless final minute to net their fifth straight win.

Closing on a 7-1 surge, with two buckets coming off of steals and another off of a ferocious offensive rebound, CHS snagged a frantic 40-35 win that would have left Wolf coach Amy King hoarse, if she wasn’t already losing her voice to a cold.

Now a shiny 11-5 overall, 6-0 in Olympic League play, Coupeville got the win by remaining composed, remaining focused and being stone-cold, bad-ass assassins.

When your nine-point lead slips away and the clock won’t run out fast enough to save you, most teams would crumble.

Not the Wolves.

A 31-22 lead turned into a 34-33 deficit in a mere heartbeat, the game seemingly slipping away.

Then Coupeville slammed the brakes on. Hard.

Kailey Kellner shredded two defenders to snag an offensive rebound, putting it back up and in to reclaim the lead, before steals by Lauren Rose and Tiffany Briscoe broke Klahowya’s back.

Rose fed Kyla Briscoe, who banged home a layup.

With Coupeville pressing the ball-handler, the Eagles panicked, allowing Tiffany Briscoe to go airborne on the next play, pick off a pass Richard Sherman-style, and find Kellner for the punctuation mark.

The final 60 seconds mirrored the way the first half had ended.

After struggling out of the gate — the JV played second Friday and it seemed to throw both teams off a bit in the opening minutes — Coupeville closed the half on a 10-3 run to take a 17-16 lead in at the half.

Lauren Grove banked home a jumper, then cut inside and took a pass from Skyler Lawrence for a quick layup, while Lawrence scored six during the run.

The final bucket was a marvel of passing, as the Wolves whipped the ball around the perimeter before Lawrence banked home a shot over two defenders that left her fingers a mere micro-second before the buzzer sounded.

With Kellner, the team’s leading scorer, slowed a bit by illness, Lawrence stepped up to fill the gap, dropping in a team-high 11 points.

She got plenty of support, as Kyla Briscoe (8), Grove (6), Tiffany Briscoe (5), Kellner (5, all in the game’s final minute), Rose (4) and Allison Wenzel (1) all chipped in.

Brisa Herrera was the lone Wolf to not make the scoring column, but the freshman was a feisty fighter in the rebounding pit.

While she saved her scoring for crunch time, Kellner did snag 10 boards and make off with three steals. Grove and Lawrence each hauled in seven boards.

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Tiffany

   Tiffany Briscoe makes dang sure no one is taking this rebound away from her. (John Fisken photos)

Kyla

Lil’ sis can fight, too. Kyla Briscoe goes to battle.

Brisa

Brisa Herrera struggles for control of the ball.

Mattea

   Mattea Miller slides into position, ready to offer a bit of rejection to the Baker shooter.

KK

You can jab all you want. Kailey Kellner is not moving.

Lauren

Lauren Grove: “Yes, I got the ball, and no, you do not need to know how.”

Allison

Allison Wenzel stops ‘n pops.

team

   The young Wolves listen to hoops wisdom from CHS coaches Amy (in black) and David King.

Elbows were thrown.

Monday’s tussle between the JV girls’ hoops squads of Coupeville and Mount Baker was a physical one.

The visiting Mountaineers were aggressive, and, once a few Wolves got over their initial trepidation, it became a push-and-shove-and-bounce-folks-off-the-hardwood event.

Working the sidelines to catch all the intensity was photo man John Fisken, who provides the pics residing above.

To see more, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=7431&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

Purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes.

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Makana (John Fisken photos)

  “Oh, I don’t think so!!” Makana Stone does NOT surrender any potential rebounds, but thanks for asking. (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Grove

Lauren Grove (3) gets mugged in broad daylight and yet the refs see nothing. NOTHING, I said.

Kyla Briscoe, ready for basketball or a limbo contest, whichever comes first.

Kyla Briscoe, ready for basketball or a limbo contest, whichever comes first.

CHS coach David King imparts wisdom to Stone.

CHS basketball guru David King imparts hoops wisdom to Stone.

Kacie

Kacie Kiel dances up the court.

Mattea

Mattea Miller (center), caught in the middle of a scrum.

Kailey

Kailey Kellner (42) can out-rebound any two of your girls.

Julia Myers, always classy.

  Julia Myers holds her breath until someone takes her picture. Being an irrepressible camera-magnet, she only had to wait 1.3 seconds for it to happen.

Best team in the conference.

Even after a tough, one-point loss to Bellevue Christian Saturday, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team is the only one of the eight teams in the 1A Olympic League with a winning record.

In fact, at 2-1, they have twice as many wins as the other seven squads do combined.

The Coupeville boys (1-3) are the only other team to even have a win, with Klahowya, Chimacum and Port Townsend’s boys and girls squads a combined 0-11 in non-conference play so far.

To celebrate, some spiffy new John Fisken pics of the Wolf girls in action.

Want to see more? Hop over to:

Varsity — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=7403&league=21&page_name=photo_store&school=24&school_year=2014-15&sport=0

JV — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=7402&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

And remember, purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes.

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Mattea Miller (John Fisken photos)

   Mattea Miller flies the friendly skies for two of her game-high 18. (John Fisken photos)

Wolf super fans Abby Parker (left) and Hope Lodell master the art of wordplay.

Wolf super fans Abby Parker (left) and Hope Lodell master the art of wordplay.

The odds were not in their favor.

Suiting up just six players, while visiting Bellevue Christian had a full bench and a six-foot-one starter who towered above her foes, the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team was at a disadvantage Saturday.

Or were they?

Powered by a scorching hot Mattea Miller, who pumped in a team-high 18 from every direction, the scrappy Wolves ran the Vikings off the court early, then held on for a wild 32-30 win in overtime.

The victory, the second in less than 24 hours, lifted CHS to 2-1. Imagine what they might do when they get back all their players.

Primed to stop the BC ceiling scraper, Wolf defenders Kailey Kellner and Allison Wenzel teamed up to largely shut her down.

Kailey and Allison did a great job keeping her from getting the ball or being able to do much with it,” said Wolf coach Amy King.

Coupeville broke open the game early, surging to a 13-5 lead at the break, before eventually showing the effects of tired legs.

Knowing the Wolves had no depth, Bellevue kept the pace of the game fast in an effort to rattle them.

“They were really smart to press us the whole game except the first quarter and play us man the entire game,” King said. “They knew we had a short bench and took advantage of that.

“Overall we did a good job breaking the press but struggled on offense,” she added. “The girls were tired and that showed often. But they played with heart and determination.”

After inching back into the game, Bellevue sent it into OT with a last-second shot that was a prayer answered.

“The battle in the fourth quarter went back and forth; we had the lead and watched it dwindle,” King said. “They had a girl who kept putting up shots, ending with 20 points. We had several girls try to defend her.

“Some of her shots were just thrown up towards the basket like the one that tied the game,” she added. “It was a bullet that danced on the rim long enough to drop.”

Not flustered (or hiding it well) the tired Wolves reached down deep in the extra period.

Miller, who snatched 13 boards and two steals to go with her offensive display, scored five in the overtime, including a game-clinching free throw.

Kyla Briscoe started things off, sinking a shot from the weak side, then Tator stepped up and went all Michael Jordan on the Vikings.

Mattea played smooth like always but got more aggressive on her shot,” King said. “It was nice to see her reading passes and getting the fast break lay up.”

Key to the win was another strong performance on the boards for the aggressive Wolves.

Kellner hauled down 18, to go with eight steals and three blocks, while Briscoe matched Miller with 13. Wenzel got her hands on another 11.

While Miller had the hot shooting touch, four of her five teammates also chipped into the scoring effort. Lauren Grove popped for five, Kellner banged home four, Wenzel netted three and Briscoe saved her bucket for OT.

With her squad the only one of the four Wolf teams that netted a win Saturday, King was justifiably proud of her starting five and plucky reserve Brisa Herrera.

“Excited for the girls with this win,” she said. “They worked so hard and as a team. Wolf pride at its finest!”

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