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Posts Tagged ‘Madeline Strasburg’

Kacie Kiel (left) and Julia Myers open every game with a chest bump, and it seems to . (John Fisken photos)

   Kacie Kiel (left) and Julia Myers open every game with a chest bump, and then go kick some fanny. (John Fisken photos)

elbow

   Myers demonstrates her elbow-friendly style of defense to Madeline Strasburg (center) and Wynter Thorne.

"Youse talkin' to me? I don't see anyone else here

  “Youse talkin’ to me?” Maddie Big Time teaches McKenzie Bailey how to be a bad-ass.

Makana

   Makana Stone (hugging Bailey) has accounted for 36% of Coupeville’s offense, pouring in 321 points in 19 games.

Domination.

It’s the name of the game for the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad, which has zipped to a 14-5 record (the best mark the program has seen in a decade) in 2014-2015.

A few numbers:

The Wolves have outscored their opponents 900-705 this season, which means they’re winning by 10+ points a game, with averages of 47.4 on offense and 37.1 on defense.

Step into the Olympic League, where Coupeville is 8-0, and the spread is even more severe.

When facing Chimacum, Klahowya and Port Townsend, the Wolves have won every game by at least 15 points, with 34 and 33-point wins to their credit.

Bouncing their rivals 427-246 (53.3 against 30.8), they are laying down the law.

And, with the Wolf JV girls also a spotless 8-0 in league play, that law is this:

Wolves rule. Everyone else drools.

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Senior Kacie Kiel (right) embraces Makana Stone during the post-game celebration. (Amy King photos)

Senior Kacie Kiel (right) embraces Makana Stone during the post-game celebration. (Amy King photos)

The best basketball team this school has seen in years.

The best basketball team this school has seen in years.

It wasn’t the prettiest win of the season, but, frankly, who cares?

Long after the particulars of Friday night are forgotten, what will loom large is this — a splendid six-pack of seniors who wore the red and black with great pride exited the Coupeville High School gym heads high (even when a rival player slapped one of them in the face during post-game handshakes), winners to the end.

Riding a season-best 27-point performance from junior Makana Stone, the Wolves crunched visiting Chimacum 53-38 to nab their sixth straight win and improve to 14-5 overall, 8-0 in Olympic League play.

There is much of the season left to go — a regular season finale at Klahowya Monday, then it’s on to the playoffs — but this night was the final time Kacie Kiel, Madeline Strasburg, Monica Vidoni, Hailey Hammer, Julia Myers and Wynter Thorne would play in front of their home fans.

Senior Nights are tricky things, full of emotion. Teams can come out sky high or awash in tears.

Playing a team they had routed twice already, the Wolves struggled a bit to find a groove.

But, they were also good enough when it mattered that the occasional shakiness, while not good for Wolf coach David King’s mental health, wasn’t fatal.

Chimacum hit a three-pointer to open the second quarter, cutting Coupeville’s tenuous lead to 14-12.

Instead of panicking, the Wolves put together their best run of the night, a 12-0 surge that all but sealed the deal.

It began with a bang as Kiel drilled a jumper after Stone snatched a rebound and fed her the ball, then Coupeville essentially pulled off a six-point play.

Once again proving the hype is real, Strasburg morphed into her Maddie Big Time alter ego.

Picking the pocket of a Chimacum player, she then ran down the hapless Cowboy, using her shoulder to knock her rival a good five feet as she crashed hard to the basket.

When she was rightfully rewarded with two free throws, as the defender was clearly moving, the Chimacum coach about swallowed his tongue, turning bright red as he let loose at the refs.

Now, it’s true the reffing crew at this affair was frankly God awful all night, but, this time, they were correct (and also a bit touchy, as they levied a technical on the hyperventilating Cowboy head man).

After Strasburg dropped in all four of her free throws (two for the foul, two for the T), Coupeville retained the ball, with Stone absolutely blowing up her defender to cap a six-point surge in about 1.4 seconds.

From that point on, two trends developed.

One, the refs would get worse and worse and … wait for it … worse.

At one point the game’s worst ref spent 20 seconds laughing and pointing to an acquaintance in the crowd, then turned and immediately called a foul on a play HE DIDN’T EVEN SEE.

Two, every time the Cowboys started to make a push, the Wolves would pull it together long enough to blunt any runs.

Mia Littlejohn made off with a dandy steal where she kept the ball alive by hitting it off the ref in her way (the crowd roars!), Julia Myers dropped some severe side eye as Chimacum’s interior players got progressively nastier with their elbows and Stone was her usual awe-inspiring self.

She finished with 15 rebounds, three assists, three steals and four explosive blocks to go with her scoring bonanza, before exiting with two minutes to play.

Kiel added eight points and three assists, Strasburg pumped in seven points and made off with four steals and Myers dropped in six while snatching nine boards.

Vidoni (2), McKenzie Bailey (1), Littlejohn (1) and Hammer (1) rounded out the scoring, with Hammer also hauling in eight rebounds and thunking a Cowboy in the face nice and solidly on a blocked shot attempt.

Her smile as the ref whistled her for the foul was worth the price of admission.

It is moments like that which will be remembered, and these Wolves, the seniors and their young running mates, have provided Coupeville fans with a ton of them.

From here on out, Killer and Elbows and Maddie Big Time and the whole electrifying crew will take their high-wire act on the road for the remainder of the season.

As they go, Wolf Nation, as one, says simply, “Thank you.”

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trio

   Stylish seniors (l to r) Hailey Hammer, Madeline Strasburg and Julia Myers, dressed for success. (John Fisken photos)

duo

Myers and Kacie Kiel have a pose-off. It was a tie.

(John Fisken photos)

   “These hands are deadly weapons, Kace. Can’t always control ’em. Totally justified if I start slapping people for no reason. Just sayin’…”

Madeline Strasburg is a little late arriving for the photo shoot.

Madeline Strasburg is a little late arriving for the second half of the photo shoot…

"A camera

“A camera? Well, I never…”

hallway

Wynter Thorne (second from left) shuts down Strasburg, as she, Monica Vidoni (middle) and the other seniors get ready to unleash a little kung fu fightin’.

kung fu

“Bruce Lee ain’t got nothin’ on us!!”

pose off

“Big finish girls! Bring it home!!”

Aiden

  The team’s #1 fan, sophomore Aiden Crimmins, overcome by the excitement of the photo shoot, has to be carried away.

The best there’s ever been?

Possibly.

The six seniors who lead this year’s Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad are talented, successful and full of shenanigans.

On the court, they have busted out a 13-5 record (7-0 in Olympic League play), the most wins by a Wolf girls’ hoops teams in a decade.

Along the way, they also clinched the program’s first league title since 2002.

Off the court, they take it to another level entirely.

Super comfortable in front of the camera, the six-pack (Hailey Hammer, Julia Myers, Kacie Kiel, Monica Vidoni, Wynter Thorne and Madeline Strasburg) are always willing to go the extra mile for a photo op.

The day they depart will be a sad, sad day for those of us who like to draft off their good will and get a lot of page hits in return.

Friday night they will take their final bow at home, with Senior Night against Chimacum (5:15 tip).

We may never see their like again, but we did enjoy their time at Coupeville.

Thank you, ladies, for being you.

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CHS coach David King and his six-pack of talented seniors. Back (l to r) Madeline Strasburg, Julia Myers. Front: Hailey Hammer, Julia Myers, Kacie Kiel, Monica Vidoni. (John Fisken photo)

CHS coach David King and his six-pack of talented seniors. Back (l to r) Madeline Strasburg, Wynter Thorne. Front: Hailey Hammer, Julia Myers, Kacie Kiel, Monica Vidoni. (John Fisken photos)

Kiel

Kiel gets her game face on.

It wasn’t perfect, maybe, but it was sweet.

Bounced across the hall and forced to play in the much-smaller middle school gym due to an equipment malfunction, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad rolled to its fifth straight win Tuesday night.

While a slow start was troublesome (perhaps a bit of a letdown after clinching a league title in their last game), the red-hot Wolves eventually strung together enough high-wattage plays to stroll past visiting Port Townsend 53-35.

Even better, the key plays came from multiple girls, as one Wolf after another stepped up to help their squad improve to 13-5 overall, 7-0 in Olympic League play.

Julia Myers, she of the famous defensive-minded elbows, stepped up to drop three consecutive baskets at a key moment in the third, each shot more impressive than the one before.

Not to be outdone, freshman phenom Mia Littlejohn blunted another Port Townsend run with a softly arcing three-point bomb from the left side that barely rippled the net as it dropped from high above in the skies.

Then there was the deadly twin terrors, Makana Stone and Madeline Strasburg, both too fleet of feet for any Port Townsend girl to catch.

Stone was a beast (as usual) on the boards, hauling down 12 (seven on the offensive end) to go with her game-high 20 points, while Strasburg stung the Redhawks in an unexpected manner.

Normally a high-powered scorer herself, Maddie Big Time morphed into Steve Nash (in his prime) on this night, dishing out nine assists and setting her teammates up with a variety of dazzling passes.

Maddi, with her assists, really was outstanding,” said CHS coach David King.

Their ability to pull out big plays, to clamp down on defense when required, to kick it into a new gear when the moment called for it, made up for stretches of so-so play from the Wolves.

They snatched the lead right out of the gate, with Myers banging home a quick jumper after the graceful Stone won yet another game-opening tip, and never relinquished the lead.

But they did allow Port Townsend to stay around a big longer than expected.

The Redhawks, a young, two-win team that has improved greatly as the season has worn on, stayed within 14-11 after one and were still hanging around, down by five, with a minute to go in the half.

It was then that the most unsung, and perhaps most valuable player of the night, pulled off the best play, hands down, of the entire evening.

Senior Wynter Thorne, the ultimate hard-working role player, twisted herself around two Redhawks, snatching a rebound off of a missed Wolf free throw.

Snagging it with one hand, she immediately went back up, banging it home for what would be a game-busting bucket.

Wynter came in off the bench and provided us with a huge spark,” King said. “I’ve challenged the reserves that when they come into a game they need to pick up their play and play as hard as the one they are replacing. Or better yet, outplay them.

“She really brought it tonight with her all around hustle and play.”

Scoring the final six points in the half, with Myers and Stone adding back-to-back jumpers, Coupeville finally pushed its lead into double digits at 30-19.

From there they stretched it out to 20 in the second half, and, while they didn’t completely crush their foes, the Wolves did keep alive their streak of winning every league game this season by 15+ points.

Coupeville got strong stats across the board, with Stone adding five steals and a block to her double-double.

Myers dropped in 14 and snagged six boards, Thorne banked home eight and grabbed three caroms and Hailey Hammer had four points and three rebounds.

Littlejohn (three points, three steals, two blocks), Monica Vidoni (two points, three boards) and Kacie Kiel (two points, three assists) rounded out the stat sheet.

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Seniors

Wolf seniors, back row (l to r) Madeline Strasburg, Monica Vidoni, Julia Myers, Matt Shank, Wynter Thorne, Joel Walstad, Hailey Hammer. Front: Isaac Vargas, Aaron Trumbull, Kacie Kiel, Aaron Curtin. (Vail photo, courtesy Madeline Strasburg)

2015, going out like a boss.

With both of the Coupeville High School basketball teams enjoying their most successful season in years, a big part of the credit goes to the school’s senior class.

Six girls and five boys have two home games left in this hoops season. After that, it’s on the road for the playoffs for the girls and (hopefully) the boys.

The girls’ squad will honor their seniors before a home game against Chimacum Feb. 6, with the boys taking their final bow against Klahowya Feb. 9.

Until then, bask in the glow of a one-time look at the entire bunch together on the court they have owned for the past four years.

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