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Posts Tagged ‘Liam Lawson’

Ayden Warren clamps down on defense. (Jackie Saia photo)

They’re our best hope.

Night in and night out this winter, the JV boys’ basketball squad has been the most-successful hoops team at Coupeville High School.

That proved true once again Friday, as the Wolves used an impressive defensive stand in the second half to overcome a slow start and grab a 35-28 win over visiting Orcas Island.

With the victory, the CHS young guns have won five of their last six and get to 6-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 7-6 overall.

That puts them as the only one of Coupeville’s four high school basketball teams to currently be posting a winning record.

With three games left on the schedule, the Wolves also get a chance for revenge, as they travel to Mount Vernon Christian Tuesday to face the only league team to topple them so far.

Friday’s rumble did not start all that positively for Coupeville, as Orcas Island jumped out to a 14-4 lead by the first break.

After that, however, the Wolves begin to find their rhythm.

Four different CHS players hit a bucket during an 8-8 stalemate in the second quarter, before Coupeville used an 8-6 mini-run in the third to cut the deficit back to 28-20.

The fourth quarter? Time to get savage.

With Jayden McManus running wild, pouring in 11 of his team-high 15 points in the final frame, the Wolves pulled a 15-0 shutout across the game’s final eight minutes to snag the victory.

Six CHS players scored, with Khanor Jump (6), Nathan Coxsey (4), Josh Stockdale (4), Liam Lawson (4), and Chris Zenz (2) providing plenty of support for McManus.

Brian Thompson, Ayden Warren, and Trent Thule rounded out the rotation for the Wolves.

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Liam Lawson, draining game winners and taking names. (Julie Wheat photo)

It’s in his DNA.

Coupeville High School freshman Liam Lawson comes from a family full of cold-blooded hardwood assassins, and he’s more than ready to keep the tradition alive.

Drilling a pair of fourth-quarter three-balls Tuesday, including the game winner with just a few ticks left on the clock, Lawson sparked the Wolf JV boys’ basketball team to a 37-34 win over visiting Friday Harbor to create the first great prairie athletic memory of 2026.

The win, Coupeville’s only one in four contests against the Wolverines on this day, lifts the CHS young guns to 2-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 3-5 overall.

It also writes another successful chapter in a tale which has warmed the hearts of Central Whidbey hoops fans for years.

Back in the day, it was Liam’s mom, “Killer Kassie” (Lawson) O’Neil who dined, more than once, on the sweet, sweet tears of the private school prima donnas, shafting King’s with multiple buzzer-beaters.

Equally dangerous were aunts Katie Smith and Kayla Lawson, and great-grandpa Dale Sherman wasn’t too shabby himself.

Jump forward to 2026, and the game was knotted at 34-34 with the ball in the hands of the Wolves and the clock ticking down.

Enter Liam, who hit nothing but the bottom of the net, setting off a (somewhat) premature celebration, as CHS coaches implored their players to stop hugging and get back on defense as the buzzer hadn’t yet sounded.

Friday Harbor didn’t have an answer, however, and the win was assured, capping a game in which CHS led at every major juncture.

Lawson and Jayden McManus combined to net 10 points in the first quarter as Coupeville built a 13-10 lead, and the Wolves stretched their advantage to 25-15 by the half.

The final 16 minutes were a bit more of an adventure, as Friday Harbor sliced the deficit back to 31-25 through three quarters, before forcing the late tie.

McManus finished with a team-high 14 points, while Lawson rattled the rims for 12.

Khanor Jump (6), Josh Stockdale (4), and Brian Thompson (1) also scored, with Trent Thule, Ayden Warren, and Chris Zenz rounding out the rotation.

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Nathan Coxsey drills a jumper during warmups. (Jackie Saia photo)

Time to knock the rust off.

Back in action after a nearly three-week gap between games due to the holidays, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball team hit the floor Saturday a long way from home.

Playing Morton-White Pass in a non-conference bout, the Wolves mostly held their own, but couldn’t quite get past their hosts, falling 52-42.

The loss drops CHS to 2-5 on the season, with a home game Tuesday against league rival Friday Harbor next up on the schedule.

The Wolves shooting touch sputtered a bit in the early going Saturday, with the visitors falling behind 14-8 at the first break.

From there, Coupeville hung tough, staying within 22-16 at the half and 37-26 through three quarters.

With Khanor Jump leading the way in the fourth, the Wolves closed with their best offensive effort of the day in the final frame, a good omen for the days ahead.

CHS got points from five players, with Josh Stockdale scoring in all four quarters as he racked up a team-high 13 points.

Liam Lawson (10), Nathan Coxsey (8), Jump (8), and Ayden Warren (3) also kept the scorebook keeper busy, with Trent Thule, Chris Zenz, and Brian Thompson rounding out the rotation.

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Carson Grove, seen here last season, rained down 11 points in a wild one Thursday night. (Parker Hammons photo)

You don’t see that every day.

Playing in prime-time Thursday, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball team hooked up with visiting Forks in a raucous rumble which featured … deep breath …

A full-scale, punches-thrown fight which crashed into the scorer’s table and revived memories of the rough-and-tumble world of 1990’s high school hoops.

One team accidentally scoring for the other.

A ref spending more time getting sassy, lecturing assistant coaches on both benches, than he did in stopping said fight, coming to a skidding stop and staying well out of range of the fisticuffs.

The Wolves rallying from 15 down.

The game coming down to the final millisecond, ending with a 37-36 win for Forks and a dismissive hand wave from the conflict-averse official as he fled the gym, likely ankling for a warm cup of tea to calm his frazzled nerves.

So, basically, as one coach said, “The most JV of all JV games.”

The second units went second for once, with the varsity playing first, in case Forks had to leave early to catch a ferry and return to their far-away land of rain and gloom.

They did not, which was just as well, since the JV game delivered more than its share of plot twists, eyebrow raisers, and WTF moments.

In the beginning, it was all Forks, all the time, as the Spartans built a 10-2 lead after one quarter, then stretched the advantage out to 19-4 midway through the second after banking in a three-ball that was shot from somewhere down around the ferry dock.

The Wolves were struggling but finally got the spark they seemed to need thanks to a Forks player losing his mind.

It started simple and ended complex.

A Coupeville player lobbed a pass over the soon-to-go-nuclear Spartan in the far corner, then headed back up court. There was the briefest of ticky-tacky collisions.

However, moments later, the Forks player charged down half the length of the floor and, arms swinging, launched an attack, with the Wolf defending himself and winning on the scorecard.

Personally, it reminded me of a game in 1993 when an Oak Harbor girl slugged a particularly obnoxious Everett rival, and the night ended with local police escorting a bus out of town.

It was a different time, certainly, highlighted by the refs back then actually jumping into the fray.

Thursday there were three officials on the floor, yet only one attempted to physically stop the fight, as the other two went into a full retreat, leaving coaches to bring things to an end.

For a moment, it seemed like the game might be called on the spot, but then, other than the two players being ejected, everyone basically looked the other way and pretended none of it just happened.

Things continued to be a bit rough-and-tumble from there, but the focus quickly shifted from cheap shots to made shots.

Coupeville closed the first half on an 8-0 … well, we can’t exactly call it a run when six of those points came via free throws … but it changed the tone of things.

Back within 19-12 at the half, the Wolves got the deficit down to five in the third, watched it creep back up to nine, then put together a charge to take control for a bit.

Three-balls from Carson Grove, Trent Thule, and Liam Lawson fired up the scoreboard operator, while Khanor Jump and Josh Stockdale rampaged on defense.

And then in the middle of a particularly frantic scramble, Forks forgot which basket it was trying to score on, with a Spartan knocking down a pretty, pretty layup … on the basket he was supposed to be defending.

The gift bucket gave Coupeville its first lead of the game, and the Wolves went to the bench at the end of the third up 32-30.

But after combining for 31 points in the third quarter, the two teams rattled the rims for just 11 more in the fourth.

Grove rolled past his defender and popped a short jumper to knot things up at 35-35, before Jump nailed a free throw to cap the scoring, but Forks made off with one last bucket in the paint in between those two events to set the final score.

Coupeville had a chance to steal the game at the end, but the clock ran out on them, evening its early season record at 1-1.

Grove had the hot hand, popping for a team-high 11 points, while Stockdale (9), Lawson (5), Jump (3), Thule (3), Ayden Warren (2), and Brian Thompson (1) also scored, with Jayden McManus, Chris Zenz, and Nathan Coxsey seeing floor time for the Wolves.

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Liam Lawson banked in 12 points in his high school hoops debut. (Photo courtesy Fern Photography)

One for the Wolves!

Opening night was a bit rough overall for the Coupeville High School basketball squads Tuesday, but the JV boys’ team more than held up its end of the bargain.

Getting 12 points each from fab frosh Liam Lawson and junior big man Jayden McManus, the Wolves led from start to finish against visiting South Whidbey, romping to a 44-32 win.

Fresh off the non-conference victory, the hardwood heroes will get right back at it Thursday, hosting Forks and looking to get to 2-0 on the season.

With coaches Jon Roberts and Craig Anderson calling the shots, the Wolf JV jumped on the Falcons fast, roaring out to a 13-3 lead after one quarter of play.

Five different CHS players scored in that opening frame, and Coupeville remained hot, stretching the lead to 24-9 at the half and 31-18 through three.

Lawson and McManus both scored in all four quarters, while Josh Stockdale (8), Nathan Coxsey (7), Carson Grove (4), and Khanor Jump (1) also tallied points for the Wolves.

Trent Thule, Chris Zenz, and Ayden Warren rounded out the active roster in game #1, all bringing hustle to their time on the hardwood.

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