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Posts Tagged ‘Lyla Stuurmans’

“The Franchise” gets some quality time with “The Chosen One.” (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

How much traffic can Coupeville Sports handle??

Combining Lyla “The Franchise” Stuurmans, international art star Avery Parker, the rough ‘n rowdy Sherman boys, and multiple pics of Adeline “The Chosen One” Richter into one story??

Why, I’ll be raking in those sweet, sweet page hits for days at this rate.

It’s almost like I’m channeling ‘Joliet’ Jake Blues here.

“YES! YES! JESUS H. TAP-DANCING CHRIST… I HAVE SEEN THE LIGHT!”

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Jada Heaton heads off to rough up some folks. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The offense went back into the deep freeze.

A season-long struggle to mount a consistent offensive attack resurfaced Friday night for the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad, sending it to a narrow league loss on icy Orcas Island.

Poor shooting in the second half, and a subpar performance at the free throw line, doomed the Wolves, who squandered a nine-point halftime lead before falling 31-26.

The defeat, coming to an Orcas team it beat earlier this season in a “non-conference” game, drops Coupeville to 1-2 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 5-7 overall.

Failing to sweep the Vikings also stings for the Wolves as next week may be their biggest challenge of the season.

Always tough La Conner, league leader Mount Vernon Christian, and state juggernaut Neah Bay are all slated to visit Cow Town over a five-day period between Jan. 16-20.

If the Wolves want to survive, and thrive, against a murderer’s row of hardcourt assassins, they will need to generate some offense.

Or at least more than they did on Orcas.

Up 19-10 at the break, CHS was outscored 21-7 over the game’s final 16 minutes.

Not helping things was a disparity at the charity stripe.

While the Wolves got to the line more than the Vikings, they slid most of their shots off the rim, finishing 2-10 while Orcas was a perfect 4-4 on free shots.

Three of those misses came as the game slipped away in the fourth quarter.

Coupeville was still hanging on, by a thread, up 23-22 after three frames, but was outscored 9-3 in the fourth.

That was a change from earlier in the night, when the Wolves were popping their shots.

Snipers (l to r) Mia Farris, Katie Marti, and Lyla Stuurmans combined to score 22 of Coupeville’s 26 points Friday night. (Jackie Saia photo)

Up 6-4 after a defensive-minded opening quarter, Coupeville used a 13-6 run in the second to build a solid lead.

Lyla Stuurmans and Katie Marti were a superb wham-bam duo in the frame, combining for nine points to outscore Orcas by themselves.

Both Stuurmans and Mia Farris netted a three-ball apiece, as they tallied 10 and seven points in the game to lead the Wolves.

Marti knocked down five, while Teagan Calkins and Madison McMillan each chipped in with a bucket to round out the attack.

 

No JV game:

Orcas started the season with a partial JV squad, but time has whittled its numbers down, and the Vikings called off the remainder of the second squad’s season.

That left Coupeville’s young guns without a game Friday, but they’ll get back at it next week with a pair of home games.

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Lyla Stuurmans and her crew put together a strong offensive performance Friday in Darrington. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The offense was en fuego.

Kicking off 2024 in grand fashion, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball team poured in a season-high Friday, thrashing host Darrington 57-14.

The victory lifts the Wolves to 1-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 4-6 overall, and could be a huge confidence builder going into the second half of the season.

Coupeville has been inspired on defense at times, but struggled to generate consistent offense, scoring 25 or fewer points in six of its first nine games.

Something changed Friday, and in a big way, as the Wolves opened the game on a 25-0 tear, then closed it on another 25-0 run.

Everyone was dialed in, with nine different players scoring, including Reese Wilkinson and Kayla Arnold notching their first varsity points.

In the early going it was Lyla Stuurmans with the hot hand, burying a pair of silky jumpers before scampering back on defense to harass and terrorize anyone foolish enough to wander into her part of the court.

A steal and breakaway bucket for Katie Marti stretched the first quarter lead out to 9-0, then it was time for Mia the Magnificent to take center stage.

Mixing in free throws with jumpers, steals with rebounds, Mia Farris poured in nine points in the final three minutes of the opening frame, powering CHS to a 23-0 lead at the first break.

Megan Richter discusses strategy. “The ball … put it in the basket.”

Now, the Wolves did calm down for a bit after that, but just for a bit.

Stuurmans went coast to coast to open the second quarter, before Darrington finally netted its first bucket 10.5 minutes into the game.

Once they finally unlocked the riddle of the rim, the Loggers hung tough, trailing 30-7 at the half, before getting the lead down to 32-14 after a run to open the third quarter.

Super sophomore Teagan Calkins, who spent the night crashing hard to the hoop, brought an end to Darrington’s brief comeback hopes however, swishing a free throw and kicking off the game’s second 25-0 tear.

Katie Marti closed the third with a three-ball from the side, followed by an out of control run up the middle where the ball bounced high off the rim, looked around at the crowd for a moment or two, then somehow caught just the right angle and slid through the net as the Wolves went bonkers.

The fourth quarter was all Wolves, with Calkins, Farris, and Marti taking turns dropping daggers.

Wilkinson, a hard-working defensive dynamo, got her reward late, popping in her first varsity basket off of a rebound and dish from Farris, before team sparkplug Jada Heaton closed things with her own putback.

Marti led all scorers, raining down 17 as she broke a tie with mom Christi Messner on the CHS girls career scoring chart.

The fiery one got plenty of help, with Farris slipping 15 points through the net, while Calkins hit a varsity career-high eight.

That burst of offense carried Mia the Magnificent to entrance into the 100-point club for her high school varsity preps career.

Stuurmans (6), Haylee Armstrong (3), Wilkinson (2), Arnold (2), Madison McMillan (2), and Heaton (2) rounded out the season-best explosion at the points factory.

Skylar Parker, Bryley Gilbert, and Brynn Parker also saw floor times for the Wolves, who return home Monday to face non-conference foe Auburn Adventist Academy.

 

No JV game:

Darrington is not fielding a second team this season, so Kassie O’Neil’s squad had the night off.

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Bryley Gilbert scored her first varsity points Thursday in Ellensburg. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s a mixed bag.

On the one hand, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad got scoring from seven players Thursday, including a first timer.

On the other hand, the Wolves missed a lot of shots, continuing a season-long trend, during a 58-24 loss to Kittitas in a game played at Central Washington University in Ellensburg.

The non-conference defeat sends Megan Richter’s squad into the holiday break at 3-6, with questions to be answered.

A Wolf team trying to find a consistent flow on offense gets two weeks to sharpen its collective shot-making skills before a return to action.

That will come Jan. 5, when Coupeville travels to Darrington to kick off the 2024 portion of the schedule.

While the Wolves were swept in back-to-back games during their Eastern Washington journey, there were bright spots.

Freshman Haylee Armstrong made her varsity debut Wednesday, scored her first bucket the same night, then came back around to lead CHS in scoring a night later.

With nine points across two games, she’s already proving she deserves to play at this level.

The Wolves also welcomed a new player to the sisterhood Thursday, as junior Bryley Gilbert became the 244th girl to score in a varsity game in the 50 years the program has been active.

While the newcomers got their moment in the spotlight, the veterans also had stretches where they played superb ball on the trip.

Katie Marti, for one, reached a personal milestone of her own Thursday, tying mom Christi Messner on the career scoring chart.

If the fiery heartbeat of the Wolves were to suddenly retire — not something anyone wants to see, mind you — she’d finish with 125 points, equal to her mom.

Though, technically, since Marti comes before Messner alphabetically, Katie is actually ahead of her Madre.

Still, it would be better for the feisty point guard to keep on pulling on the Wolf uniform for another season-and-a-half and leave mamacita firmly in the rearview mirror.

Reese Wilkinson, always scrappy on the defensive end of the floor.

And there was one more personal milestone reached on the trip, as Lyla Stuurmans cracked the 150-point club by dropping a three-ball in the first quarter against Kittitas.

When Jada Heaton followed the trey up by converting a bucket off of an offensive rebound moments later, the Wolves were looking good, trailing just 9-5.

Kittitas swished its own three-point bomb to close out the opening quarter, then stretched the lead to 20-6 in the second frame, before the Wolves made their best sustained run of the game.

Madison McMillan drilled a three-ball through the bottom of the net, followed by two Stuurmans free throws to get the margin down under ten, and hopes of a comeback soared.

But it wasn’t to be, as Coupeville failed to hit back-to-back scores during the remainder of the game, allowing the Coyotes to steadily pull away.

Armstrong came up big in the second half, racking up all of her team-high seven points after the break.

A three-ball wedged between a pair of rebound put-backs showcased the varied talents of the young gun, while Marti chipped in with a pair of buckets — one on a slash inside, the other on a long jumper.

With the clock winding down, Gilbert rose up and let fly, rippling the net to become a made woman.

Stuurmans finished with five points to back up Armstrong’s seven, while Marti (4), McMillan (3), Heaton (2), Gilbert (2), and Mia Farris (1) rounded out the attack.

Reese Wilkinson, Kayla Arnold, and Teagan Calkins also saw floor time for the Wolves, bringing hustle and defensive grit.

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Three of these four kids are current Coupeville hoops stars. The other one? Likely only the FBI knows where he is now. (Photos courtesy Morgan White)

Every basketball journey begins with that first step, and first shot.

Today’s photos take us back a couple years, or a full decade, to capture some of today’s biggest Coupeville stars at the start of their hoops careers.

From Wolf stalwarts like Lyla Stuurmans and Cole White, plus that one kid who possibly vanished into the witness relocation program and was never seen again, this is where it all began.

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