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Posts Tagged ‘Madison McMillan’

Katie Marti, always ready to get scrappy. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The second half was way rougher than the first.

Squaring off with a hot-shooting, hotter-rebounding Forks squad Tuesday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad hung tough for 16 minutes on its home floor.

But then the basket stopped accepting Wolf shots, and things went South in a hurry.

Scoring only four points across the game’s final two quarters, Coupeville saw a 10-point game turn into a 56-20 loss.

Now 3-4 after absorbing the non-conference defeat, the Wolves get an immediate chance to turn things around, playing games the next two days.

Coupeville travels East for clashes with Cle Elum Wednesday and Kittitas Thursday, then is off until Jan. 5.

Facing off with Forks, the Wolves ran into a solid, fundamentally-sound squad which hit the boards with passion and rattled the rims on seven successful three-balls.

In the early going, CHS stayed close next to some inspired shot making of its own.

Madison McMillan put the Wolves on the board with maybe the most sensational shot anyone on the team has hit this season.

Slicing between two defenders, the junior guard hit a running bank shot that got up over the defender’s outstretched arms and back down through the net before she even had time to call “Glass!”

It was a thing of sublime beauty, and added to buckets by Jada Heaton and Katie Marti, it kept the Spartans on their toes.

Down 18-7 at the first break, Coupeville played their visitors virtually even in the second quarter, winning that eight-minute scrimmage 9-8.

Marti had the hottest hand in the frame, banking in a three-ball, before coming back around to score off of a rebound.

That carom came off of her own shot, as she followed the path of the ball, scooting beneath the rim and catching the comebacker off the glass as if she had passed it to herself.

While the Wolves were still trailing as they headed in for halftime, the deficit was just 26-16 and it still felt very manageable.

Jada Heaton fights for a loose ball.

But, after trading buckets to open the third, with Mia Farris drilling a long jumper just a step or two inside the three-point line, Coupeville’s offense vanished.

From that point on Forks ran off 28 unanswered points, hitting four of their three-balls during the explosion and making the final score look much worse to a casual observer who hadn’t seen the rest of the game.

McMillan popped a jumper with several ticks left on the clock to end the Forks run and provide the game’s final bucket, but the previous 15 minutes had been a killer.

Marti paced the Wolves with a team-high seven points, while McMillan (6), Heaton (5), and Farris (2) rounded out the attack.

Lyla Stuurmans, Reese Wilkinson, Teagan Calkins, Bryley Gilbert, and Kayla Arnold also saw floor time, with Arnold earning sustained whoops of excitement from her fan club in the student section.

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Former Coupeville High School girls’ basketball coaches Bob Barker and Phyllis Textor returned to the gym they once ruled. (Danette Beckley photo)

They rose to the moment.

Playing in front of a packed house on the night when Coupeville celebrated 50 years of high school girls’ basketball, the current varsity squad delivered a statement win.

Bouncing back strongly after a tough loss on Friday Harbor a night before, the Wolves built a big first-half lead Saturday, then coasted in for a 32-20 win over visiting South Whidbey.

The non-conference victory, coming against its next-door neighbors, lifts CHS to 3-3 on the season.

The anniversary night drew a substantial crowd, highlighted by numerous former coaches, players, and support staff.

Then the current Wolves went out and kept scorekeeper June Mazdra busy, as she works her way through a 30th season of keeping the books flawless.

Coupeville closed the first quarter on a 9-0 tear, with five of those points coming off the red-hot fingers of Mia Farris, to claim an 11-3 advantage at the first break.

Things continued in a most pleasant manner after that, as the Wolves swapped opening buckets with the Falcons in the second frame, then scored the final 10 points of the half.

Lyla Stuurmans, following in the footsteps of a torrid JV performance from lil’ sis Tenley, made the net keep jumping.

A steal and breakaway bucket sent an electric jolt through the packed throng, while a long jumper torched the net on its way down to stake the Wolves to a 23-5 lead at the half.

Coupeville honored its top 15 career scorers during an extended break, then brought out a fair portion of the 1999-2000 team, which owns the first state tourney win of any Wolf girls’ squad.

After that, former coaches and players on hand gathered at center court for a group photo, with old school roundball gurus such as Phyllis Textor, Bob Barker, and Bill Evans joined by more recent coaches such as Willie Smith, Greg Oldham, Geoff Kappes, and David and Amy King.

Current Wolves (left to right) Lyla Stuurmans, Mia Farris, Jada Heaton, and Madison McMillan have won three of their last four games. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Once back on the court, the current Wolves put the ball back into the hands of Farris, with the junior gunner slashing to the hoop for multiple layups.

The biggest roar in the late going came for Katie Marti, whose late aunt Judy — still the single-game scoring record holder for the CHS girls — was honored at halftime.

Attacking with giddy glee and wrestling the ball away from a frazzled Falcon, Christi Messner’s wild child brought her million family members to their feet.

While hopefully earning a smile of approval from former Wolf Jodi (Christensen) Crimmins, back in the stands in the gym where she used to terrorize rival players with her own mad dog defensive style.

As former players and coaches united, some for the first time in years, Madeline (Strasburg) Dixon’s adorable mini-me happily bounced around the gym where his mom once slayed South Whidbey with a half-court buzzer beater.

While there was no need of late-game heroics this time around, Farris and McMillan made a splendid duo, going off for 11 and 10 points respectively.

Marti added five, and with 104 points and counting, is the 110th Wolf girl to crack triple digits in the last 50 years.

She’s also just 22 points away from passing mom on the career scoring chart, for those keeping track of such stuff.

Stuurmans (4) and Teagan Calkins (2) rounded out the scoring attack, with Reese Wilkinson, Kayla Arnold, and Jada Heaton also seeing floor time for the Wolves.

Coupeville returns to action Tuesday with a home game against non-conference foe Forks, then hits the road to travel over the mountains for a pair of holiday tournament-style bouts against Cle Elum and Kittitas.

After that, they’re off until early January.

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One of the Battlin’ Bronec Brothers waits for someone to get open. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Every point counts, even the missing ones.

We’re one week into a new season of Coupeville High School basketball, so it’s time for our first look at individual scoring stats for the Wolves.

The varsity boys have the most games in the books, while the JV girls are haunted by a missing 16 minutes of stats.

Let the numbers fall where they may.

 

Varsity – Girls
(2 games)

Madison McMillan – 12
Mia Farris – 10
Katie Marti – 10
Lyla Stuurmans – 4
Jada Heaton – 3
Skylar Parker – 2

 

JV – Girls
(1 game)

Teagan Calkins – 9
Bryley Gilbert – 5
Capri Anter – 2
Haylee Armstrong – 2

**Missing 26 points​​**

 

Varsity – Boys
(3 games)

Logan Downes – 58
Cole White  33
Ryan Blouin  25
Nick Guay – 8
Chase Anderson – 4
William Davidson – 4
Hunter Bronec – 3
Hurlee Bronec – 3

 

JV – Boys
(2 games)

Jack Porter – 20
Camden Glover – 18
Aiden O’Neill – 15
Johnny Porter – 15
Landon Roberts – 10
Davin Houston – 6
Jayden McManus – 6
Riley Lawless – 5

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Madison McMillan led Coupeville in scoring Saturday night. (Kaitlyn Leavell photo)

The basket stopped accepting Coupeville’s offerings in the final minutes.

After waging a tense tussle with Toledo for three-plus quarters Saturday, the Wolf varsity girls’ basketball squad went cold late, allowing the Riverhawks to storm their way to a non-conference victory.

The visitors closed on a 17-2 run across the game’s final six minutes, turning a five-point advantage into a 40-20 win.

The loss drops a rebuilding Coupeville squad to 0-2 on the season.

Megan Richter’s squad will have six days to work on its shooting touch, not returning to action against a rival until a trip to Sultan next Saturday, Dec. 9.

Saturday’s rumble, coming against a largely unknown foe, was a close, and low-scoring affair for much of the afternoon.

Madison McMillan drilled a quick shot mere seconds into play to stake CHS to a 2-0 lead, but the Wolves hit a wall after that.

Coupeville’s next bucket didn’t come until right before the end of the first quarter, courtesy a jumper from the side by Lyla Stuurmans, cutting the lead to 8-4.

The second quarter was an equal opportunity freeze-out, as the teams combined to hit six free throws … and not a single field goal.

Skylar Parker and Katie Marti connected on shots from the charity stripe, but CHS was down 11-7 at the half.

Things picked up in the third frame, though mainly for Toledo.

McMillan banked in a pair of buckets — one on a slash to the basket, the other off of an offensive rebound — but the visitors swished the game’s only three-ball as they pushed the advantage out to 21-14 heading into the fourth.

The Wolves, who played inspired defense for stretches of the game, cut the margin down to 23-18 after back-to-back buckets from Mia Farris and McMillan.

Farris made off with a steal, hitting the jets and sliding past a pursuing defender on a charge to the hoop, while McMillan knocked down a note-perfect pullup jumper.

But that was where it ended for Coupeville, at the moment where McMillan’s field goal dropped through the net and hit the hardwood.

Ramping up its attack, Toledo suddenly broke through and in a big way, raining down a series of buckets to pull away.

Farris sweetly swished a pair of free throws late, but Coupeville couldn’t get a shot from the field to drop in the game’s final minutes, mirroring its earlier struggles.

McMillan paced the Wolves with a season-high eight points, while Marti added five in support of her fellow junior.

Farris (4), Stuurmans (2), and Parker (1) also scored, while Jada Heaton, Teagan Calkins, Kayla Arnold, and Reese Wilkinson also saw floor time.

It was the varsity debut for the latter two of that group.

And in an intriguing side note, Farris, who is tied for #2 on the team in scoring with 10 points across the first two games, has notched all of her points in the fourth quarter this season.

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Madison McMillan (left) and Mia Farris worship each other’s athletic talent. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

OK, now we’re finished.

With the first high school basketball games six days away, today marks the final photo essay featuring fall sports.

Really this time.

And the spikers were the final Coupeville High School athletes to be playing, so it’s sort of fitting they account for the last batch of pics.

Taylor Brotemarkle dares you to. (Jackie Saia photo)

The monumental moment when the Wolves took down the Evil Empire. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Grey Peabody is not amused by your shenanigans. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sniper supreme Lyla Stuurmans accepts the other team’s request to spray them with wicked kills. (Jackie Saia photo)

Wolf coach Ashley Menges fondly remembers that one time she got 17 floor burns in a match during her playing days. “Knee pads? Knee pads weaken your soul, ladies!!” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“No knee pads? Dang, Smashley is hardcore!” (Photo by JohnPhotos.net)

“We love our knee pads!!” (Jackie Saia photo)

There are some new sheriffs in town, and they’re going to shoot you down. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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