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Posts Tagged ‘La Conner’

Kyla Briscoe put up eight points and eight boards Friday. (John Fisken photo)

Kyla Briscoe put up eight points and eight boards Friday. (John Fisken photo)

They needed every body.

Down to just seven players with rebounding machine Tiffany Briscoe sidelined with an injury, the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad was super-thin Friday night in La Conner.

So, despite being super sick, sophomore spark plug Lauren Grove reached down and pulled off her best Michael Jordan impression, playing through the haze and almost helping the Wolves pull off a stunner.

Grove’s eight points, two rebounds, two steals, one block performance, coming in the muggy gym from Hell, got her brownie points from her coach, even if CHS eventually fell 43-40.

“These girls are pushing themselves,” Wolf coach Amy King said. “Lauren had to be taken out more often to give her a chance to hydrate. I know she shouldn’t have been at this game, but this is how tough she is.

Kailey (Kellner) had to come out once because the air was so thick she just couldn’t catch her breath,” she added. “I appreciate their dedication and hard work.

“They are communicating more and really have bonded as a team. We would have loved to have taken that game, but had to find the positive in making a comeback, playing better in the second half and knowing we gave it all we had.”

Kellner was lights-out awesome, pumping in a team-high 11, while snagging 15 rebounds and making off with three steals.

As bothersome as the heat was, she never blinked.

Kailey had a lot of rebounds, but her best of the night was in the second half of the fourth quarter,” King said. “Every time we took a shot and it didn’t go in, there were three La Conner girls and Kailey.

Kailey’s hand went up higher and brought the ball down very strong before she would take it back up. She fought for everything.”

Despite the heat and a short bench, Coupeville (5-4 on the season) got out to an early lead, before La Conner went to the long ball to shake things up.

With three different Braves banging home treys in a short time span, La Conner used a 19-12 surge in the second quarter to build a 27-21 halftime lead.

Things got better for Coupeville in the second half, but time just ran away from the Wolves in the end.

“We did a lot of good things in the second half. Our energy picked up, our offenses ran better and our defense got more aggressive,” King said. “At one point, Brisa (Herrera) just grabbed the ball out of the hands of her opponent and made a great pass to her teammate.

“I love things like that.”

With Lauren Rose, Kyla Briscoe, Grove and Kellner anticipating passes and Allison Wenzel and Skyler Lawrence dominating inside, the Wolves were a scrappy, if overheated, team in the late stages of the game.

Skyler directed on defense the whole game,” King said. “She is such a tough player; she talked the whole night, got in great position for open shots and at one point drove the ball up the court as no guards were open.

Allison played great defense, stretching her hand above her opponents so no shots could be taken,” she added. “She was scrappy on rebounds and got her basket on a rebound put back.”

While Kellner and Grove topped the stat sheet, every one of the seven Wolves in action put up nice numbers.

Briscoe netted eight points and eight rebounds, while Rose popped for six, snagged three boards and pilfered two steals.

Lawrence (four points, seven rebounds), Wenzel (three points, four rebounds) and Herrera (three rebounds) all chipped in with stellar effort.

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Makana Stone has averaged 15.1 points per game through the first half of the season. (John Fisken photo)

   Makana Stone has averaged 15.1 points per game through the first half of the season. (John Fisken photo)

When they are on, they are as strong as they come. But when they are off, yikes…

The roller-coaster ride that is the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad continued Friday, but the plunge into the abyss wasn’t a pleasant one this time around.

Shredded by an undefeated La Conner team, the Wolves suffered their first true blowout loss of the season, falling 63-31.

The non-conference loss snapped a two-game winning streak and dropped CHS to 6-4.

With eight of its final 10 regular season games against 1A Olympic League rivals Port Townsend, Chimacum and Klahowya — teams with a combined record of 2-23 — Coupeville is primed to make a second-half run and possibly claim its first championship banner in a decade plus.

If…

“Maybe hearing and reading the hype about how good we should be has allowed us to be complacent,” said Coupeville coach David King. “At times I think the team has fallen into a sense of we are supposed to be good, so we don’t have to work hard and we will just go play and win.

“After the game we discussed what we need to do to get out of the rut we are in,” he added. “Wynter (Thorne) said we weren’t playing natural, not playing to our potential and forcing things. Julia (Myers) said we can’t just talk about improving and playing better, we need to go out and do it.

“The whole team agreed with Wynter and Julia. We also talked about going into practice and pushing each other to get better.”

Key number one will be getting back to sharing the ball. Normally a strong-passing team, the Wolves recorded a paltry four assists against La Conner.

That lack of ball movement blunted Coupeville’s advantage on the boards, where they hauled in 29 caroms. Makana Stone paced the way with 11, including five on the offensive end.

The Wolves looked like they would make a game of it in the early going, with Stone feeding Myers for the game-opening bucket.

Tied at six, things were looking good. Then, the Braves, who entered the contest at 8-0, exploded and the Wolves, who struggled mightily against a soft press, fell back, hard.

Racing out to a 37-13 halftime lead, La Conner had Coupeville so frazzled that the Wolves had more turnovers than points in the first half.

“Turnovers are really hurting us right now,” King said. “We can’t continue this trend moving forward. If we do we will see the same results like we did in this game.”

The Wolves rallied in the fourth quarter, the only time they played the Braves straight up.

“The fourth was our best quarter of the night,” King said. “We moved the ball well offensively, our defense was tough and almost matched La Conner point for point.

“In the second half we did a better job of holding onto the ball and lowered our turnover quantity,” he added. “Better but not good enough to compete with better teams like the Braves.”

Stone paced the Wolves with 13, while Kacie Kiel popped for six and the duo of Hailey Hammer and Myers dropped in four apiece. Monica Vidoni added three and McKenzie Bailey tickled the twine for a free throw.

Coupeville, which ended the game with two players (Madeline Strasburg and Thorne) on the bench with tweaked knees, gets a golden opportunity to get good right away.

Port Townsend (0-8, 0-1) comes to Whidbey Tuesday to kick off the second half. JV tips at 3:30 PM, varsity at 5:15.

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Wiley Hesselgrave pumped in a team-high 10 Friday. (John Fisken photo)

Wiley Hesselgrave pumped in a team-high 10 Friday. (John Fisken photo)

“We could just never quite get over that hump.”

Despite playing host La Conner even for three of four quarters, one bad bump in the road derailed the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad Friday night.

Take away a 17-6 second quarter and the Wolves win by one. Add that back in and the Wolves fell 46-36.

The non-conference loss dropped Coupeville to 3-6 as it prepares to move into 1A Olympic League play.

The Wolves (0-1 in conference) play eight of their final 10 regular season games against league rivals Port Townsend, Chimacum and Klahowya.

First up is winless Port Townsend, which hosts CHS Tuesday night.

If the Wolves can cut down on “questionable fouls and missing a lot of easy layups,” not to mention turnovers — they had 18 against the Braves — things should turn upwards, said coach Anthony Smith.

Cold shooting also hurt them against La Conner, with Coupeville hitting on 13-43 from the field and 8-19 at the line.

Trailing in the latter stages, the Wolves had little choice but to foul, but the Braves, who went to the line 14 times in the fourth quarter, drained most of their charity stripe shots.

The team’s top two scorers on the season, junior Wiley Hesselgrave and senior Aaron Trumbull, both hit for 10 to pace Coupeville.

Dalton Martin added seven, while Risen Johnson (3), Joel Walstad (2), Matt Shank (2) and Aaron Curtin rounded out the scoring attack.

Shank hauled in nine boards, Curtin snatched seven caroms and made off with three steals and Walstad chipped in with six boards and two steals.

JV falls short:

Down eight at the half, the young Wolves “didn’t show up for the second half” and lost big.

“I have to get better consistency from the squad,” said Wolf JV coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh. “Played tough D in the first, the kind a coach could be proud of.”

Two highlights for Coupeville (2-6) were the continued rise of DeAndre Mitchell, who torched La Conner for 15 points and the play of the Wolf bench.

Over the game’s final four minutes, that unit outscored La Conner 7-4.

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Joel Walstad will lead the Wolves into a new league this season. (John Fisken photos)

   Already a varsity vet as a kicker, Joel Walstad is stepping up as the team’s starting QB this season. (John Fisken photo)

Wolf coach Tony Maggio (00) talks to his team during Friday's scrimmage in La Conner. (Shawn Walstad photo)

   Wolf coach Tony Maggio (00) talks to his team during Friday’s three-team scrimmage in La Conner. (Shawn Walstad photo)

Joel Walstad was on point.

The Coupeville High School senior is just seven days away from making his first-ever regular season start as a varsity quarterback and he looked strong in his warm-up.

Playing in a three-team scrimmage Friday in La Conner, Walstad threw for two touchdowns and sophomore Gabe Wynn ran for another as the Wolves blitzed their hosts.

Both of Walstad’s scoring strikes went into the arms of senior Josh Bayne.

Wynn, returning to the gridiron after spending his freshman year playing tennis, ripped off a 40-yard run to the end zone for his score.

Walstad wasn’t the only Wolf QB to hit the highlight reel, as freshman Hunter Downes also connected with Mitchell Carroll on a 20 yard-plus heave.

The afternoon scrimmage, which also involved Burlington-Edison, gave all three teams a chance to iron out the kinks as they prepare for opening night next Friday, Sept. 5.

The Wolves will host Island neighbor South Whidbey in a battle for ownership of The Bucket.

While it’s now a non-conference game, with Coupeville having hopped from the 1A/2A Cascade Conference to the 1A Olympic League, the local rivalry aspect marks the game as a huge one.

Based on what he saw Friday, and in the team’s opening week-and-a-half of practice, CHS coach Tony Maggio is pleased with where the Wolves are.

“Kids gave a great effort, we threw the ball well against La Conner,” Maggio said. “Our defense allowed only one touchdown each game; overall a great job.

“We will be ready for South Whidbey on Friday!”

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With the graduation of Jake Tumblin, Josh Bayne will carry the rushing load for CHS. (John Fisken photos)

Josh Bayne is days away from breaking off some big runs. (John Fisken photos)

Matt Shank prepares to defend his turf.

Matt Shank will help anchor the Wolf lines.

A little tuneup.

With the start of fall practice just two days away, and opening night against South Whidbey set for Sept. 5, the Coupeville High School football squad wants to get as much time on the field as possible.

To help achieve that, the Wolves have picked up a second jamboree, to be played in La Conner 1 PM Friday, Aug. 29.

Burlington-Edison will join CHS and the host Braves.

The event will be open to players who have eight full practices in, and individual players will be limited to 40 total snaps.

Like all jamborees, the event will be run without clock or score-keeping and is intended to give the three schools a chance to work out kinks prior to the start of the regular season.

Fans and parents are welcome.

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