Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Lauren Rose’

The Mouse has left the house, as Wolf sophomore Lauren Rose and her teammates hit the softball diamond. (John Fisken photos)

   The Mouse has left the house, as sophomore third baseman Lauren Rose and her teammates hit the softball diamond. (John Fisken photos)

Aiden Crimmins debates whether to steal a base, or wait for his hamstrings to warm up first.

   Aiden Crimmins debates whether to steal a base, or wait for his hamstrings to warm up first.

Zane Bundy

Soccer sensation Zane Bundy, scorin’ goals and rockin’ stylish head gear.

Lauren Grove

   Mere moments ago Lauren Grove was flying around a basketball court. Now she’s taken her mad hops outdoors.

CJ Smith

CJ Smith, setting the style standard on the diamond.

softball

   South Whidbey’s loss is Coupeville’s gain, as Mikayla Elfrank brings her skill set to Wolf Nation. 

Dalton Martin

   Dalton Martin, who finished 5th at state in the discus last year, works on fine-tuning his throwing motion.

Emma Smith

  Freshman phenom Emma Smith puts her whole body and soul into launching the shot put.

The weather is fluctuating (as usual) but the enthusiasm is not being dampened.

Coupeville High School athletes officially slid into a new season Monday, with the first day of practice for spring sports.

Basketballs are put away (for the most part) and the focus is now on tennis, soccer, baseball, track and softball, with the Wolves plowing through the beginning of two weeks of prep work before they start playing games that count again.

Wandering around outside Thursday, travelin’ photo man John Fisken snapped pics of four of those sports in action for us, and we’ll try and catch up to tennis as soon as possible.

For now, marinate in your first glimpses of spring, in all its athletic glory.

Read Full Post »

Lauren Rose (JOhn Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose paced the Wolf JV Thursday with seven points, two rebounds and two steals. (John Fisken photo)

JV is more about improvement than wins and losses.

Now, there is no doubt Coupeville roundball guru Amy King enjoys the former more than the latter (she was thrilled to go 14-5 last year), but the highlights of her season don’t always come from the scoreboard.

So, while this year’s young Wolves (7-10 overall, 5-3 in league play) fell 40-34 at Chimacum Thursday, she mourned the loss but came away happy with slices of the game.

King makes sure every one of her players scores during the season, so when Brisa Herrera, who has missed several games with illness, notched a free throw in the first quarter, that was one bright moment.

“The first (free throw) dropped and we all went nuts,” King said.

The second moment was seeing the continued development of one of her freshman who are brand new to the sport.

“Watching Maddy (Hilkey) play, it is hard to believe she has never played basketball before,” King said. “She was driving to the basket, taking the shots, playing tough defense and ended the night with a big bag of ice on her knee!”

And Hilkey wasn’t the only frosh who caught her coach’s eye.

Nicole (Lester) was so aggressive! Where did this girl come from?,” King said with a smile. “She found herself at the free throw line twice – fun to watch her come alive.”

The game itself was a wild one, as the two teams battered each other — often for real, as Chimacum prides itself on being a, shall we say, “scrappy” squad.

Tied at eight after the first quarter, the Wolves hit a cold spell in the second and watched as the Cowboys ran wild to the tune of 15-6.

“We got out-played. Made a lot of weak or bad passes allowing Chimacum easy steals and lay ups,” King said.

The Cowboys repeatedly sent one player flying up behind the Coupeville ball-handler, something the Wolves didn’t deal well with, even as their coaches warned them again and again.

A bit of tough talk at halftime lit a fire under the Wolves, who emerged in the second half much more in control.

“The third quarter was much better defense and steadier on offense. Fighting more for the ball, going strong after rebounds and out-scoring them like we knew we could,” King said.

Ashlie Shank and Allison Wenzel “were everywhere,” Sarah Wright “was moving around helping out anywhere needed” and Hilkey and Lauren Rose put considerable pressure on Chimacum’s ball-handlers.

Down by six with eight minutes to play, Coupeville played aggressively, throwing on a full-court press, but couldn’t quite catch the Cowboys.

Brittany Powers was a major force in the fourth, playing like “a crazy spider monkey,” which brought a smile to her coach’s face.

“She mauled a girl, stopping her from dribbling, then not giving her any room to breathe, let alone keep the ball,” King said. “The Chimacum girls aren’t exactly “clean” players and our girls were just tired of not getting some of the foul calls.

“Pushing calls and all their contact went unnoticed, so we dished some of that out as well.”

Powers ended the game with a bright red arm after being smacked on a play where the ref went conveniently blind, but she and her teammates made their coach proud.

“The girls gave everything they had – left it all on the court,” King said. “The energy and effort, attitude and fight they gave in that last half was awesome and just a good end to the game, regardless of the score.”

Rose paced the Wolves with seven points, while Wright and Lester dropped in five apiece.

Skyler Lawrence (4), Wenzel (4), Kyla Briscoe (3), Powers (3), Shank (2) and Herrera (1) all chipped in.

Coupeville snagged 40 rebounds and made off with 27 steals, as all 11 Wolves hauled down at least one board, from Wright (7) to Lindsey Laxton (1).

Powers pilfered six steals, with Shank hot on her heels with five.

Read Full Post »

Lauren Rose (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose, seen here in an earlier game, was one of three Wolves to hit for eight Friday in a Wolf JV win.  (John Fisken photo)

Mouse was back in the house, and all was right.

Back after missing time with an illness, spark-plug Lauren Rose threw down five of her team-high eight points in the first quarter Friday, sparking the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad to a runaway win on its home court.

The 36-22 victory over a scrappy Port Townsend team lifted the young Wolves to 5-8 overall, 3-1 in 1A Olympic League play.

For a second, the game was a close one, as the two rivals exchanged opening baskets.

Wolf freshman Sarah Wright went down low for a hard-earned bucket in the paint, before the most popular visiting player in all the land, Port Townsend’s always-smiling Amelia Breithaupt, threw down a running hook shot to answer.

After that, it was all Coupeville, all the time, until coach Amy King called off the attack late in the third.

The Wolves blew the game open with an 11-0 run after Breithaupt’s bucket, with Skyler Lawrence banging home three baskets around a pair of scores from Rose.

The crafty sophomore ace put a rebound back up and in, then drilled a three-ball from somewhere out in the parking lot.

CHS continued to push the pace, with different players showing a hot hand, eventually stretching the lead out to 32-8 late in the third.

From that point on, the Wolves went into clock-eating mode, working on plays.

Rose shared scoring honors with Lawrence and Wenzel, as each of the swing players scored eight points apiece. Wright and Maddy Hilkey rounded out the attack, each dropping in six.

Two of Hilkey’s points came when she swished a pair at the free-throw line, which is notable because there were so few visits to the charity stripe on the night.

Between the JV and varsity games, Coupeville owned a 5-0 advantage on made free throws Friday, with the JV sinking three of those.

Wright paced the Wolves on the boards, snatching 14, while Lawrence and Ashlie Shank had four apiece.

Hilkey pilfered four steals, with Brittany Powers and Nicole Lester making off with two apiece.

Read Full Post »

Lauren Rose, seen here playing defense, was (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Lauren Rose, seen here playing defense, was all about the offense Saturday, scorching the nets for a career-high 17 in a win. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Lauren Rose doesn’t have time to bleed.

The Wolf spark-plug, a woman of many nicknames (“Mouse,” “Keebler Elf”) and much talent, bounced right back from a recent injury and spent much of Saturday inflicting pain on others.

Raining down a career-high 17, the super sophomore lifted the Coupeville High School JV girls’ hoops squad to a thrilling 34-32 win over visiting Mount Vernon Christian.

The win, the second in the last three games for the young Wolves, lifted them to 4-6 heading into a nine-day break.

That will give Rose a chance to heal up, though hopefully not cool down.

Lauren made a statement tonight with her game,” said CHS coach Amy King. “Still playing with a wrapped ankle, she led the team — directing on offense, finding open lanes to drive through, as well as hitting a much-needed three.

“She just seemed to be everywhere, stealing, driving, cutting and taking shots when open. Lauren really did a nice job of leading the team,” she added. “This is her best game this season. You could see her confidence growing and it was so nice watching her take over the game.”

Rose got a fair amount of help, with freshman Sarah Wright providing the defensive muscle to complement the offense.

She hauled down a game-high 11 rebounds, rejected a shot and sparked her teammates all night.

“It seemed like Sarah was everywhere all game long,” King said. “She is very strong with the ball, rebounding, dribbling up the floor and driving to the basket.

“On inbound plays under our basket, she is seeing the defense and placing herself in the perfect position for an easy pass and shot.”

With Wright’s energy and Rose’s hot hand leading the way, Coupeville held the lead from start to finish, stretching it out to nine at one point before a late Hurricane rally.

The fourth quarter went back and forth, with the Wolves refusing to relinquish the game.

Back within a bucket with 27 seconds left on the clock, Mount Vernon opted not to foul and try for a steal instead, but Rose played smartly and flawlessly dribbled out the game.

“I think overall, this is the strongest our team has looked for the majority of the game,” King said. “Everyone did something great.

“We had several give-and-go plays that resulted in either a lay up, short jumper or foul,” she added. “The big thing that makes me so happy, is that these girls are starting to recognize gaps in the defense or creating a play or shot out of something we have gone over in practice.”

When Rose wasn’t draining buckets, the Wolves got scoring from five different players, led by Wright with eight.

Ema Smith banged home four, while Nicole Lester (2), Skyler Lawrence (2) and Allison Wenzel (1) all chipped in.

It was Lester’s first basket of the season, and the freshman scored off of a put-back on a rebound, causing “the gym to erupt.”

Wenzel (5) and Lawrence (4) combined to snag nine rebounds, while Lindsey Laxton (3), Smith (3), Ashlie Shank (2), Lester (2) and Maddy Hilkey (1) all worked the boards.

Rose made off with four steals, Brittany Powers pilfered another pair and Brisa Herrera “asserted herself on defense with a really strong grip; nobody was going to take it (the ball).”

Read Full Post »

Skyler Lawrence tossed in a team-high nine points at Sequim. (John Fisken photo)

   Skyler Lawrence tossed in a team-high nine points at Sequim. (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Rose

   Lauren Rose (22) re-injured her ankle Wednesday, one of four Wolves to be hurt during Coupeville’s JV game.

The Mouse was not in the house for very long.

And by the end of the game, a lot of her teammates were gone, as well.

Injuries were the story of the night Wednesday for the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad, which got beat up pretty good en route to a 32-13 loss at Sequim.

The non-conference defeat dropped the Wolf young guns to 3-6.

Actual pain hurt worse than any mental pain from a loss, however, as scrappy swing player Lauren “Mouse” Rose went down with an ankle injury in the first quarter.

After that, Brittany Powers took an elbow to the mouth, resulting in a chipped tooth, and sisters Nicole Lester (finger) and Lindsey Laxton (ankle) joined her in the team’s ever-expanding MASH unit.

In between the pain and the agony and the “stop hitting me in the face!!” moments, the Wolves got a big performance from Skyler Lawrence, who went for five of her team-high nine in the final quarter.

Skyler was kind of our saving grace,” said Coupeville coach Amy King. “She helped bring the ball up the court on press break and was just as strong with the ball.”

While the Wolves struggled to overcome Sequim’s man defense and full-court press — which resulted in a fair amount of steals — King was pleased with the effort her young prodigies displayed.

“The girls played as aggressive as they could,” she said. “Now a few days off the bus and getting some practices in, then hopefully ending our week with some good play on Saturday.”

Sarah Wright and Kyla Briscoe each sank a bucket to provide back-up for Lawrence on the offensive end, while the duo combined for nine rebounds (six and three, respectively).

Rose and Maddy Hilkey made off with two steals apiece, while Ema Smith (two boards), Allison Wenzel (one rebound), Brisa Herrera (one rebound) and Ashlie Shank (one steal) all saw quality floor time.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »