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Posts Tagged ‘Larry Bird’

Logan Downes hit six three-balls Saturday while torching the nets for a career-high 33 points. (Andrew Williams photo)

He pulled a Larry Bird.

Matching the uniform number of the former NBA great, Coupeville High School junior Logan Downes threw down a career-high 33 points Saturday in Forks, sparking the Wolf varsity to a huge win.

Pulling out a 52-46 non-conference victory despite not scoring as a team in the second quarter, CHS gets to 3-4 on the season.

Now, the Wolves, who played three games in the last four days, are off for a week-plus, not returning to action until they hit a tournament in Eastern Washington Dec. 27-28.

When they head to Wenatchee for that two-game tilt, Brad Sherman’s squad will carry positive mojo from Saturday’s win.

Facing a fellow 2B team for the first time this season, and an always tough one at that, the Wolves headed to Forks coming off a fairly lackluster performance against Sedro-Woolley two days earlier.

And Coupeville responded in style.

Coming out of the gate strongly, with Downes tossing in 13 points in the opening frame, the Wolves roared out to a 21-8 advantage.

Only to see the rim turn harsh on them, denying each and every Coupeville shot in an agonizing eight-minute span.

The Wolf defense saved them, however, as they held Forks to a fairly modest nine points in the second quarter, and still clung to a 21-17 lead at the half.

If Sherman was worried, the ever-calm hoops guru didn’t show it, and his players responded, with Downes dropping another 13 points in the third quarter.

Wolf coach Brad Sherman, back in Forks for the first time since he was a teenager. (Morgan White photo)

Ryan Blouin nailed a long three-ball to help out, keeping Coupeville ahead 37-35 heading into the final frame, before the Wolves closed like champs.

Cole White, Jonathan Valenzuela, Downes, and freshman Chase Anderson got big buckets down the stretch, with the Wolves also netting all four of their free throw attempts in the fourth.

Downes 33-point performance, fueled by six three-balls, is the most by a CHS player since Hawthorne Wolfe netted 38 twice during the 2020-2021 season.

The school single-game record of 48 was set by Jeff Stone in 1970, back before you got an extra point for hitting a shot from behind the arc.

Downes began Saturday’s game as the #79 scorer all-time in the 106-year history of Wolf boys’ basketball and finished it at #67.

He passed 12 former CHS players in one day, including highlight-reel dudes like Robin Larson, Ethan Spark, Glenn Losey, and JD Wilcox, and sits with 374 career points and counting.

Coupeville got scoring from seven other players Saturday, with White (4), Valenzuela (4), Blouin (3), Nick Guay (2), Dominic Coffman (2), Alex Murdy (2) and Anderson (2) getting their names in the book.

William Davidson and Zane Oldenstadt battled like beasts on the boards, with Coupeville once again proving it can go toe-to-toe with rough ‘n tumble foes.

The Wolf defense clamps down. (Morgan White photo)

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Today marks 33 years of fare-free service. (Photo property Island Transit)

The buses have been running longer than I’ve lived on Whidbey Island.

My family moved here in 1989, but Island Transit has been offering fare-free service since 1987.

In fact, today, Tuesday, December 1, 2020, marks a complete 33-year run of getting passengers where they need to be, without them having to fumble through their pockets for change.

And since 33 is the magic number — the one my favorite player, Larry Bird, wore during his NBA career — that makes it even better

On Island Transit’s first day  in ’87, it transported 161 riders.

In 2019, that number had risen to 860,811 rides across Whidbey and Camano Islands, accomplished via buses, paratransit vehicles, and vanpools.

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(Photo courtesy June Mazdra)

  Hyperbole alert. It’s the greatest team (in any sport) in Coupeville High School history — the record-setting 1969-1970 boys’ basketball squad. (Photo courtesy June Mazdra)

Now, if this whole Hall of Fame thing was happening in real life, and there were plaques or busts being handed out by local civic leaders, these guys would have been the first inductees.

But Coupeville High School’s athletic history lies largely covered in cobwebs, and it took me some time to track down info.

Having done that finally, we can, with the 33rd class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, welcome the “Greatest Team in Any Sport in the History of the Town” to these hallowed digital walls.

From this point on, the 11 players, coach and two managers who made up the 1969-1970 CHS boys’ basketball team will be found at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

And, if efforts in the coming weeks pay off and championship banners from the past rise in the CHS gym, their legacy will once again loom large over their school’s current basketball court.

Now, I am prone to hyperbole, yes.

The use of the double exclamation points in most headlines is testament to that.

But I will be danged if there has ever been a better team in the history of Cow Town, in any sport.

No, they didn’t earn a state tourney banner (losing two hard-fought games to extremely tough competition), but, as they romped to a 20-4 record, they hurt teams in a way no other Wolf squad ever has before or since.

Ripping through an 18-2 regular season (with two four-point losses to perennial powerhouse La Conner), Coupeville threw down 100+ points FOUR times, with what has to be a school-record 114 against Watson-Groen.

Now, let’s stop a moment and remember our history.

If you’re a young gun, this will seem a foreign concept to you, but in ’69’-’70, they scored all those points WITHOUT the benefit of a three-point line.

Jeff Stone, Corey Cross and Co. could have put the ball up from beyond the half-court circle and it still would have counted for just two points, and yet those Wolves scored like no other team in the history of the school.

Plus, you know, short shorts, which supposedly can cause circulation problems (and cold thighs), so they overcame that, as well.

In the postseason, they knocked off Skykomish and Darrington for a district title, something no Whidbey Island school (much less just Coupeville) had ever done before.

Facing off with Darrington, Stone rained down 48 points, a number which has stood untouched for almost 50 years.

The future Oak Harbor High School teacher/coach/Athletic Director tickled the twines for 644 points as a senior (also a school record — by a mile), accounting for almost a third of his team’s point total.

Overall, the ’69-’70 Wolves outscored their foes 1,836-1,155 over 24 games. That divides out to 76.5-48.1, which means they won, on average, by nearly 30 points a game.

At a school which had little to no prior reputation in the prep sports world, that squad sent shock waves through the state and kicked off a very successful run by the boys’ hoops program which lasted well through the ’70s.

Four more trips to state by CHS boys’ hoops squad, two of whom won a game while there, have followed that first visit, but none topped the guys who set the path.

If I accomplish nothing else during my time at Coupeville Sports, we will see league and district title banners raised in the CHS gym for the ’69’-70 squad, and it will happen while the players are still here to see it happen.

For the moment, I offer this, induction into my little digital Hall.

Inducted, together, as a team. As the greatest team to ever wear the red and white.

Bob Barker (coach)
Pat Brown
Corey Cross
Tim Leese
Ralph Lindsay
Glenn Losey
Mike Mallo
Pat O’Grady
Tim Quenzer
Jeff Stone
Randy Stone
Jim Syreen
Bob Mueller
(manager)
Geoff Stone
(manager)

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Oh yes, please do look right into the flash as it goes off. That's super smart, that is...

   Oh yes, please do look right into the flash as it goes off, David. That’s super smart, that is…

My fingers are ready for their close-up, Mr. DeMille.

My fingers are ready for their close-up, Mr. DeMille.

We’re at a crossroads.

Admittedly, one of my own making, but still a crossroads.

We’re 33 months into the experiment that is Coupeville Sports (the three-year anniversary would be Aug. 15), which is a good sign, since #33 was the number worn by the greatest clutch athlete in the history of all known sporting events, one Larry Bird.

In that time, I have produced 3,148 articles (no, seriously), made a lot of people happy, pissed a few others off and revived my own interest in journalism (or whatever you want to call this here thing I’m doing now).

I have toned down (a bit) the anti-Canadian Evil Empire rhetoric and found (most days) a middle ground where we can ardently support Cow Town while not branding every other town’s school as the Antichrist.

As I see it, the Whidbey News-Times, Whidbey Examiner and South Whidbey Record (and their Canuck financiers) are the old-school dad in the comfortable chair, peering over the top of their print edition of the newspaper and calmly giving you the news, when it suits them to do so.

Myself?

I’m the hyperventilating, jacked-out-of-his-gourd-on-sugar kid who has crawled to the top of the fence and is screaming “Hey, guess what just happened?!?!?” at all hours of the day and night.

I have no deadlines and unlimited space (I just paid $79 to upgrade my storage capabilities, thank you) and I’m quite willing to write at 2:17 in the AM.

The response was been electrifying, far beyond anything that I ever received during my days at those aforementioned newspapers.

My readership numbers have far surpassed what I expected, and the interaction has made a huge difference in my life.

But this is where the crossroads comes in.

I am not funded by David Black, a kajillionaire who owns 300+ papers and (probably) 17 yachts, like the Whidbey newspapers are.

Though, if he’s interested, I’m not that hard to contact, I come fairly cheap and I’ve mellowed (a bit).

During the entire run of Coupeville Sports I have been working as a dishwasher/onion slicer at Christopher’s on Whidbey to pay my limited bills.

That means I write around my real job, and, thankfully, owner/chef Andreas Wurzrainer has been incredibly good about making it possible for me to cover as many home events in person as possible.

But now, as of the end of this month, I am leaving that job. For real, this time.

There are many reasons why, but the primary reason has nothing to do with the particular restaurant and all to do with the type of job itself.

Having turned 44 a week-and-a-half ago, I can’t keep doing a job that leaves me feeling 10 years older every morning.

My one semi-marketable talent — writing — is being made harder by the daily beating my body, primarily my fingers, is taking.

The buzz in my hands, the pinched nerves, the mussel shell slashes that are an accepted part of working with shellfish — they all went away when I took a two-month break last summer, and I’m hoping for an encore.

I’m not 17 anymore, and there are a lot of 17-year-olds who would probably be quite happy to show off their indestructible digits by taking my job. Go for it — they’ll pay you and feed you and keep you toasty warm all summer.

You’ll never be cold in a professional kitchen, that’s for sure.

And what of me, as my fingers come back to life (we hope)?

I either go one of two ways — get a different “real” job and continue to juggle things while still writing or simply do Coupeville Sports and nothing else.

A “real” job has more stability, but there is the very real possibility that a new employer would not be as accommodating as Andreas has been.

It might become much harder to cover things in person, and when I can do that, I can drop in stuff like Carson Risner’s mom holding him down and feeding him breakfast burritos before his baseball playoff game or Wolf softball coach Deanna Rafferty offering her players free candy if they could get a 1-2-3 inning.

Those little details, and my (often) shameless willingness to sprinkle them willy-nilly through my articles, is a huge part of what sets me apart from the newspapers.

You can get the scores from both of us.

Because I can obsess over small stuff, run a trillion photos with often less-than-factual cut-lines and write endless features on the last kid on the JV bench (cause, dangnab it, they deserve a story too!), I can weave a town-wide tapestry for which the newspapers simply don’t have the time, space or desire.

A new “real” job may make that much harder.

The other option is for me to make just enough to cover basic bills like rent.

I don’t have (or want) a cell phone, Netflix, fancy car or any costly booze ‘n cigs ‘n uncut heroin addictions to fund.

If a healthy amount of my readers were willing to forgo one Starbucks coffee and use the Donate button on the top right side of this page to pledge $5 to keep it going, we’d be set.

Not that you have to limit yourself to $5, heavens no…

So, we’ll see what happens. My intentions are to keep Coupeville Sports going strong, but I need to save my fingers as well.

I’d like to be able to still type when I’m 45.

I am in it for the long haul and will never, EVER put up a pay wall like the newspapers have, but, going forward, you, my readers, will have a large say in how I am able to run my renegade blog.

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Kailey Kellner

Kailey Kellner

It’s kind of fitting that it’s pouring rain today.

Why, you ask?

It’s Kailey Kellner’s birthday, and few, if any, Wolves have her uncanny ability to make it rain buckets on the basketball court.

A tireless worker who scrambles back on defense and is constantly making off with steals, tips and rebounds to set up her offensive game, Kellner is a blossoming talent.

The leading scorer on the Coupeville JV girls’ squad (by a lot) she bounced up to varsity this year and immediately made an impact, draining the first shot she took at that level — a stone-cold three-point bomb in the face of the defense that would have made Larry Bird crack a smile.

Kellner has slipped in and become such a part of the fabric of CHS sports — whether as a player or a fan — that it’s almost hard to remember the easy-going young woman with the quiet smile is still a relative newcomer to the area.

It was just last school year that she and her family arrived from England, part way into the hoops season.

Moving to a new town, any town, is never easy. Making the jump from country to country makes the transition an even bigger one.

Kellner, though, slipped right in, making friends and doing whatever she could to become a solid part of Wolf Nation.

Whether on the basketball court, or doing all the behind the scenes work with last year’s Wolf softball squad as they broke a 12-year drought and went to state, Kailey has been a wonderful addition to the local sports scene.

She’s only a sophomore, which means we have two more years of watching her continue to evolve into the superstar she was born to be. And the amazing person that completes the other half of the picture.

Happy birthday, Miss Kellner.

Two years ago, we had no idea who you were. Now, we couldn’t think of Wolf sports without you being a vital, vibrant part of it all.

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