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Posts Tagged ‘Makana Stone’

Makana

   Signed, sealed and delivered. Makana Stone is off to play college ball at Whitman. (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

Eileen and Josh

   Eileen and Josh Stone smile the smile of parents who are getting help paying for college.

Kings

   Proud CHS coaches Amy and David King drop by to congratulate their beloved team leader.

Maka

Makana is joined by a pack of friends on her big day.

Walla Walla, there’s a Wolf coming your way.

Coupeville High School senior Makana Stone signed a letter of intent Friday to play basketball on scholarship at Whitman College.

“I chose Whitman because they are a successful and small liberal arts college, both academically and athletically,” Stone said. “I’m very excited to be able to receive a top-notch education and be able to play the sport I love at the collegiate level.

“I’m excited knowing through self avocation, focus, and hard work that Whitman is the place I will be most successful!”

The Missionaries boast a top-level NCAA D-III athletic program, with their women’s basketball team currently ranked #21 in the nation.

Whitman is 15-4 overall, 8-3 in Northwest Conference play.

Stone’s high school coach, David King, has seen her blossom on and off the court over the past four years, and is thrilled for her to have the opportunity to play at a higher level.

“Whitman College is getting a motivated and talented player. That’s just the basketball side of things,” he said. “She is an even better person and she will fit into any environment and connect well with her coaches and teammates. They are lucky to have her.

“I’m very excited for her and the opportunity at the next level,” King added. “I’m looking forward to watching her skills grow and be the best player she can at the college level.

“I believe with the athletic ability and talent she has, she will be successful for Whitman.”

Stone, a highly-focused, standout scholar as well as a basketball, track and soccer star, will have a chance to attend a stellar private liberal arts college.

The school, which was founded in 1859 as a seminary before becoming a four-year college in 1883, offers 45 majors and 32 minors, with a student/faculty ratio of just 9:1.

During her time at Coupeville, Stone has been a four-year starter on the basketball squad.

She recently passed 1,000 points for her career (joining former Wolf Brianne King in that rare club) and has 900+ rebounds and 200+ steals in her career.

Stone has led her squad to back-to-back 1A Olympic League titles as a junior and senior, and was tabbed as the league’s MVP last season.

Currently averaging 19 points a game for Coupeville (14-4 overall, 8-0 in league), with a double-double every time out this season, she would seem to be an absolute slam-dunk to repeat that honor.

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Lindsey Roberts (John Fisken photo)

   Lindsey Roberts was one of seven Wolves to score Tuesday as Coupeville ran its league mark to 7-0. (John Fisken photo)

Getting a little something from everyone on the roster Tuesday night, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad rolled past host Port Townsend 51-39.

The victory, the team’s fourth straight, lifted the Wolves to 13-4 overall, 7-0 in league play.

Having clinched its second straight 1A Olympic League title a game before, Tuesday was about maintaining momentum (and keeping their almost two-year unbeaten run in league play alive).

They did both, though not without a few hiccups in the early going.

“We struggled out of the gate on defense, a trend that has become all too familiar lately,” said CHS coach David King. “We allowed the RedHawks to get open jump shots or get to the basket.”

When they had the ball themselves, the Wolves attacked the basket, drawing fouls and putting several key Port Townsend players in foul trouble early.

The only problem is, Coupeville, which has been shooting free throws strongly of late, didn’t do so Tuesday, at least in the first quarter.

Clinging to a slim 11-10 lead after the first eight minutes, the Wolves found their groove after the break, throwing down 20 in the second quarter.

Coupeville spread its offense out, getting huge buckets from Tiffany Briscoe (“she came out strong at the beginning to get us going offensively”) Mia Littlejohn and Lindsey Roberts.

With Port Townsend forced to focus on more than one player, that opened up the game and Makana Stone immediately made them pay, throwing down 10 of her game-high 22 in the game-busting second quarter.

Up by 11 at the half, Coupeville cruised home with the win.

While he was happy his team didn’t give anything back, King would have liked to have seen a bit more of a killer attitude after halftime.

“At times we are battling ourselves and play slower than we should be,” he said. “We need to work on playing aggressive the whole game and not play in spurts.”

One aspect he was especially happy with was his team’s effort on the boards.

“Our rebounding effort tonight was so much better than the last time we played Port Townsend; that was great to see,” King said. “We also are sharing the ball well, with 7 of 10 players getting in the scoring column.”

Littlejohn drained nine to go with Stone’s 22, while Roberts, Tiffany Briscoe and Kailey Kellner all had five apiece. Lauren Grove banked home three and Allison Wenzel dropped in a bucket to round out the scoring.

Stone snatched 14 rebounds and blocked four shots, while Kellner had five rebounds and four assists. Grove dealt out three assists and rejected two shots.

Kyla Briscoe, Lauren Rose and Skyler Lawrence all saw floor time as well, with Rose snaring a rebound.

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(Amy King photo)

   Top of the world, ma! 60% of Coupeville’s varsity roster celebrates a league title. (David King photo)

Clear space on the gym wall for another banner.

Staying undefeated all-time in 1A Olympic League play, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad drilled host Klahowya 49-33 Friday to clinch a second straight league title.

The win lifted the Wolves to 12-4 overall, 6-0 in league play.

Regardless of how it does next week, when it closes the regular season with three games in five days, Coupeville will carry a #1 seed into the West Central District 3 tournament and start off in the double-elimination round.

The Wolves are guaranteed at least two playoff games, both of which will be on the road, with the first coming Feb. 17 at Sumner High School.

Win at least one of those and they advance to regionals.

To see the brackets, jump to: http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1767&sport=12

Friday night was all about taking care of business, and the Wolves showed up early (two hours or so), ready to liven up the quietest gym in the league.

While coach David King felt his squad was a little slow to get firing, Coupeville still led from opening tip to final buzzer.

“Our offense was flat in the first quarter, but you couldn’t tell by the score,” he said. “We played more side to side instead of attacking the basket.

“We did have great ball movement for the whole game and got some greats shots up,” King added. “We knocked down our open jumpers all game. We also did a good job of attacking the offensive boards for some put-backs.”

With big buckets from captains Kailey Kellner, Mia Littlejohn and Makana Stone to spark things, the Wolves surged out to a 15-10 lead after one, then stretched it to 30-20 at the break.

Klahowya stayed fairly close by bombing away from outside, while also converting on virtually all of its free-throw attempts in the first half.

The third quarter, though, signaled a sea change, as the Wolves came out of the break on fire.

“The start of the third was a whole different team,” King said. “Our movement on offense got better and our defensive effort really picked up.

“This game we got back to what makes us successful on offense,” he added. “Smart passes, moving the ball, and passing up a shot to get it to a teammate that has a better shot opportunity.

“When we move the ball like this it gets everyone involved.”

While Stone continued her torrid rampage across the land, tossing in a team-high 26 a game after she blistered the nets for 28, Coupeville’s continued good fortune depends on sharing the load between shooters.

“We have been working on taking the ball to the basket and not settling. We did that,” King said. “For us to be successful, others need to shoot and not rely on Makana; tonight we did that.”

He praised Kellner, who hit a couple of three-balls, Lindsey Roberts and Littlejohn for knocking down jumpers at key moments and a particular play that showcased the team’s ball movement skills.

On that one, Littlejohn had the ball at the top of the key and Tiffany Briscoe was on the low block.

There were defenders between the duo, but the sophomore point guard “found an opening between them and made one of the best passes all year,” setting up Briscoe for a bench-rousing bucket.

Stone “rose to the occasion when we needed a boost and provided sparks throughout the game,” on her way to 26 points, 19 rebounds and three blocks.

Kellner (8), Littlejohn (5), Roberts (4) Tiffany Briscoe (3) and Kyla Briscoe (3) also scored, while Lauren Grove had four rebounds and a team-high five assists.

Kyla Briscoe snared five boards, Littlejohn doled out four assists and swing players Allison Wenzel (one steal), Lauren Rose (one rebound) and Skyler Lawrence (two rebounds) all saw floor time in the fourth quarter.

As Coupeville heads down the stretch, pursuing a 9-0 league mark for the second straight year, King likes what he sees, while remaining very interested in how high his squad can fly.

“The great thing about this young team, that isn’t so young anymore, they are hungry and aren’t finished yet,” he said. “We still have work to do, but I’m very proud of this team.”

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Makana Stone lines up the free throw that would result in her 1,000th career point. (John Fisken photo)

   Makana Stone lines up the free throw that would result in her 1,000th career point. (John Fisken photo)

Makana Stone made history, then she and her teammates took care of business.

Throwing down a season-high 28 points Tuesday, including the 1,000th point of her stellar prep hoop career, the Coupeville High School senior lit the fire that launched the Wolves to a 48-34 thrashing of visiting Chimacum.

The conference victory lifted Coupeville to 11-4 overall, 5-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

With three of the league’s four teams making it to the postseason, the Wolves officially clinched a playoff spot.

It also moved them one victory away from clinching back-to-back league titles.

They have a three game lead on Port Townsend (2-3) and Klahowya (2-3) with four to play, while Chimacum drops into the cellar at 1-4.

Win Friday night on the road at Klahowya and Coupeville would be four up on the Eagles with three to play.

Even if Port Townsend beats Chimacum that night to get to 3-3, if the Wolves win, they would be three up on the RedHawks with three to play — and they own the tiebreaker.

Tuesday, the Wolves hit the floor amped up.

Backed by an enuthisastic audience, Stone, who needed 22 to crack the 1,000 point barrier, threw  down the game’s first six points and they came on a variety of wicked moves.

First she backed her defender down in the paint, then twirled and banked home a jumper.

Next came a little runner, then she pilfered the ball and beat the crowd all the way down the floor for an emphatic lay-in.

The steal was important, as well, as she needed four to break 200 for her career, to go with the 800+ rebounds she had already snagged.

She finished with seven pickpocket jobs, more than hitting her target.

With Stone dominating — she also capped the first quarter by slashing to the basket and taking a gorgeous entry pass from Kyla Briscoe for another layup — Coupeville had Chimacum on its heels.

Add Mia Littlejohn and Kailey Kellner launching three-balls, and everywhere the Cowboys looked, someone in red and white was throwing down a basket.

Coupeville used a 16-0 run to take a narrow 9-7 lead and pad it out to 25-7, essentially ending the game midway through the second quarter.

Stone had 19 by the halftime break, and, when she wasn’t scoring, she was returning the favor to Briscoe, feeding the Wolf sophomore with her own perfect set-up for a layup.

“I feel like we came out focused and with energy tonight,” said Coupeville coach David King. “Makana set the tone early and often in the first half.

“I was very happy with the focus we had in the first half,” he added. “We moved the ball well and got open shots throughout. We also rebounded better than our previous two games. So that’s a positive.”

The Wolves were stung a bit by their go-go-go style, picking up more fouls than King might have liked to have seen.

“The energy we had was a blessing but also got us in trouble on the defensive end,” he said.

The second half was more of an even battle, as the Cowboys hung around a bit thanks to Coupeville playing a bit wild and loose.

“For some reason offensively in the second half we went away from what was working for us,” King said. “We allowed Chimacum to stay in the game with fouls and turnovers.

“We need to shore up our defense and minimize the turnovers.”

Still, Coupeville thoroughly controlled the boards, winning that battle 46-21.

“Rebounding was outstanding. Everyone contributed,” King said. “Lauren Grove did a great job diving in and picking up some big offensive rebounds, and Lindsey (Roberts) and Kailey got some timely rebounds.

The moment everyone had been waiting for came at the 2:25 mark of the third quarter.

Stone, laser-focused on the game and (seemingly) oblivious to her loud ‘n proud fan section, led by former teammate Kacie Kiel, dropped in a free-throw to crack four digits.

In a nice twist, the moment was called live by PA announcer Randy King, whose daughter Brianne also topped the 1,000 point mark during her days as a Wolf hoops star.

After letting Chimacum slide back within 10 early in the fourth, Coupeville put the game on ice with an 8-0 run that stretched the lead out to 48-30.

One of those buckets came on a soft, arcing jumper from Skyler Lawrence, a swing player who made a big impact in her fourth quarter cameo.

On the very next play down the floor, Lawrence whipped a pass between two defenders, dropping the ball right on to the fingertips of Allison Wenzel, her partner in crime on the Wolf bench.

Unfortunately, a Chimacum finger poked the ball at just the wrong moment, spoiling Wenzel’s layup attempt.

As the duo sprinted back on defense, they exchanged smiles and a little light ribbing.

Stone added 16 rebounds and two blocks to go with her 28 points, while Littlejohn put together an eight point, eight rebound, four assist evening.

Kellner drained six, snatched seven boards and dealt out three assists while Roberts, Lawrence and Kyla Briscoe rounded out the scoring with a bucket apiece.

Roberts snagged six rebounds, with Grove and Tiffany Briscoe hauling down four each. Grove and Kyla Briscoe each had two assists.

As Coupeville moves forward, King knows his team, which has never lost in league play (14-0 over the past two seasons) remains the hunted.

“We realize that the other other three teams are coming for us every game,” he said. “That means we have to be at the top of our game; tonight we did that.

“We did a lot of things well tonight.”

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Makana

   Makana Stone, a teammate above all else. (John Fisken, Amy King and Kristin Hurlburt photos)

Having talent is one thing. Having the grace to know how to wield that talent is something else entirely.

For the past four years, Makana Stone has given Wolf fans every thing we could hope for from one of our prep athletes.

She is immensely skilled, yes, and has pulled off plays on the soccer pitch, the basketball court and the track oval that have made our jaws scrape the floor.

Tuesday night, when the Wolves host Chimacum in a hoops doubleheader (boys varsity 3:45/girls 5:30), likely the next-to-last home game of her career, she is set to pass some significant milestones.

These are marks Stone has accomplished through hard work, dedication, grit, raw skills and being able to work with any and all teammates.

If it was up to her she would likely flick away the attention, but so few Coupeville players have hit these marks they need to be noted.

Having already snatched the 800th rebound of her career earlier this season, Makana sits just four steals from 200 and 22 points away from 1,000.

But Makana has always, first and foremost, been a team player.

Time and again, I see her reach out, offer a pat on the head, a word, a smile.

She treats starters and scrubs the same, and the love is returned back to her in equal measure.

As a young athlete she meshed with veterans such as Bessie Walstad and Breeanna Messner, and now, as a senior, she has risen gracefully to be a leader to youngsters like Lindsey Roberts and Lauren Rose.

When she talks about her teammates, past and present, Stone positively glows.

I wouldn’t be so close without the help of my teammates throughout the years, especially this year and last.

The main problem that girls have once they step onto the court is confidence, and I didn’t have that confidence my freshman and sophomore year, but I’ve found my confidence this year and last because of the support from my team.

I stopped worrying about what I was doing wrong and started worrying about what I needed to do to do my part on the team for us to get the W.

While I still am not as confident of a basketball player as I’d like to be, a lot of my accomplishments come from the confidence I’ve acquired from the support of my team from last year — Kacie, Julia, Hailey, Madeline, Monica, Wynter, McKenzie, Mia and Kailey and this year — Kailey, Mia, Lauren and Lauren, Tiffany, Lindsey, Kyla, Skyler and Allison.

I couldn’t/can’t reach 1,000 points without my team!

Have you ever heard of the acronym Together Everyone Achieves More? I’ll just leave you with that.

It is easy to jabber on and on about her accomplishments (as I frequently do), but Stone deflects praise on to others as effortlessly as she swats shots into the third row of bleachers.

She has put up with my hyperventilating for four years and still smiles when she says hi, and I appreciate that.

Makana had a truly lovely spirit as a young child, and that has never changed for a moment as she has grown.

Her play, and her spirit, put her in the upper echelon with past Wolf hoops legends like Brianne King, Marlene Grasser, Novi Barron, Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby and Megan Smith.

Stone will rightfully be remembered as one of the best to ever pull on the red and white at CHS.

But that will happen for two reasons — her numbers and the way she has carried herself.

You can be a great player and be despised. Or you can be a great player and be loved.

Makana chose the second path and has embraced her teammates every step of the way. They became better because of her and she became better because of them.

She has never asked us for the spotlight, but, as one, we choose to send it her way.

Tuesday night, we acknowledge her milestones, yes, but we cheer because of the young woman she is now, and has always been.

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