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Posts Tagged ‘Makana Stone’

"Give me the ball, dude! Give me the rock!! I am so on fire I can score with my eyes shut!!" (John Fisken photo)

   Maddie Big Time (with water bottle) is feeling it. “Give me the ball, dude! Give me the rock!! I am so on fire I can score with my eyes shut!!” (John Fisken photos)

celebrate

The Wolf bench (or part of it, at least) celebrates.

David King’s favorite number is 13.

So, how perfect was it that the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball coach was up on his feet near the end of the game Friday night, still shouting words of wisdom while trying to stay composed and not grin in an unseemly manner as his team snapped a school’s 13-year dry spell.

Crushing visiting Klahowya 51-32 in a game they controlled from opening tip to final buzzer, the Wolves won for the sixth time in their last seven games and officially clinched the inaugural 1A Olympic League title.

Now 12-5 overall, 6-0 in league play, this Coupeville squad accomplished something no other Wolf hoops squad, girls or boys, has done since 2002.

And they did it with fire and passion, ten girls working as one nearly flawless unit.

Seven Wolves scored and every player made an impact on a night they will remember for a very long time.

There was a crackle in the air 45 minutes before tip-off, as senior Madeline Strasburg stormed from one end of the court to the other, slamming the ball against the hardwood, spinning around her teammates like a tornado unleashed.

Then the game tipped off and the tornado opened a can of whup-ass.

Throwing down 10 points in the opening quarter, including two three-point bombs and a line drive pull-up jumper that went down so hot it melted the net, Maddie Big Time presented a new wrinkle to Klahowya.

Injured and operating as an unpaid assistant coach the first time these teams met — a Coupeville win on the road in Dec. — Strasburg has the hop back in her step and the fire re-lit in her gut, and the frazzled Eagles were not prepared for her.

Toss in the fact nearly every shot was dropping for the Wolves in the opening eight minutes, and the game was all but decided at 20-3 by the time the first break came around.

Hailey Hammer banked home six points in support of Strasburg, while Julia Myers and Kacie Kiel each popped long jumpers from the side, as Coupeville dominated without getting a single point from its leading scorer.

That changed, in a hurry, when Makana Stone seized control of the middle chunk of the game.

Throwing down buckets left and right, the quicksilver junior poured in 23 points over the middle two quarters, scoring all but two of Coupeville’s points during that stretch.

Between Kacie Kiel snagging a ball out of the air and banking it home early in the second quarter and Strasburg hitting a free throw to open the fourth, Stone scored 22 consecutive Wolf points.

Her best play — and there were plenty to choose from — came when she snagged a rebound, turned and airmailed it the length of the court to a teammate out in front of the break.

But wait. There’s more.

The teammate, trying to veer around a scrambling defender, rolled the potential layup off the rim.

At which point Stone came flying through the paint untouched, having taken off at a dead sprint after throwing the outlet pass and covered the entire floor while the play unfolded, yanked the ball free and put the rebound home.

Jaws are still on the ground and may not be reattached for several days.

While the slam dunk choice for Olympic League MVP had her usual high-quality night, adding 13 rebounds, four assists and three steals to her two-quarter scoring explosion spectacular, every one of her teammates had their moments in the spotlight.

Monica Vidoni fought like a wild woman in the paint, hauling down six boards and forcing the Eagles to take most of their shots from the outside.

Wynter Thorne and McKenzie Bailey were aggressive ball-hawks, swing player Kailey Kellner dropped in a dead-eye three-pointer and freshman Mia Littlejohn swished a gorgeous little tear drop runner while elevating through the paint.

Hammer’s court presence and smarts, Kiel’s scrappiness and sheer joy at running the court, Myers’ defensive enforcement and the two-headed scoring juggernaut of Stone and Strasburg just put the cherry on top of the cake.

And, not to be forgotten, the wonder team of CHS coaches David and Amy King, who in less than three full seasons, have turned the Wolf girls into THE premier hoops program on Whidbey Island.

Together, ten young women playing as one, and the two coaches who have gotten them to buy into that idea, reached up to hoops heaven Friday night.

There are more games to come — three regular season games and pursuit of a perfect league mark — then entrance into the playoffs as a #1 seed.

Friday night was only a step on the journey, not the ultimate destination.

But what a sweet, sweet step it was for a team, a school, a town that hasn’t made that step in a very, very long time.

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Makana Stone (John Fisken photo)

Makana Stone threw down an 18-point, 7-rebound, 7-steal performance Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

The team of destiny is seizing its moment.

Sparked by a game-high 18 points from Makana Stone, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team drilled host Chimacum 46-22 Tuesday night, moving within sight of its first league title since 2002.

The victory, the team’s seventh in its last nine games, lifted the Wolves to 11-5 overall, 5-0 in Olympic League play.

Combined with Klahowya’s 44-43 loss to previously winless Port Townsend, it gives Coupeville a two-game lead with four to play.

Win Friday at home against Klahowya (3-2) and the Wolves clinch the title.

They would have a three-game lead with three to play and having already beaten the Eagles once, would own the tiebreaker.

Chimacum and Port Townsend are 1-4 and both have already lost twice to Coupeville.

The aggressive Wolves jumped all over their hosts Tuesday, rattling the Cowboys with pressure on their ball-handlers. Speeding up the game, Coupeville bolted out to a 15-2 lead after one quarter.

“Took control from the beginning,” Wolf coach David King said. “Solid defense and getting some easy buckets put us out front.”

Stone roared with a quick seven points in the first eight minutes, while three other teammates chipped in on the offensive explosion.

Madeline Strasburg arced in a dagger of a three-point bomb, while Julia Myers banged home another three points and Monica Vidoni dropped in a bucket of her own.

While Coupeville was hitting its shots, it was the defense that broke Chimacum’s spirit in the early going.

The Cowboys went the entire first half without a field goal, managing just a pair of free throws, as the Wolves rolled into the locker room up 25-2.

Stone dropped in another four points in the second quarter, while freshman point guard Mia Littlejohn broke off the best play in her team’s second run.

Mia had a steal midway through the period, took the ball up the middle and scored on a runner in the key,” King said. “Mia had a productive game. She had other opportunities to score, but didn’t get the ball to drop.

“She had a good defensive game, finished with three steals and a very nice block on a jump shot.”

With a large lead, the Wolves started to coast a bit in the second half, a trait which King would like to see them lose.

“Coming out of halftime, we seemed to be going through the motions and struggled,” he said. “We just didn’t play solid on both ends. Turnovers, and not making the basic play hurt us. We also stopped moving the ball on the offensive end.”

Coupeville picked it back up in the fourth, led by Hailey Hammer, who went for all eight of her points in the quarter.

While he was happy with the win, King would like to see his squad maintain its focus for 32 minutes.

“We need to tighten things up on both ends of the court,” he said. “We can’t continue to have these lapses during the game when we aren’t playing good defense, or our offense becomes predictable.

“I was pleased with our effort in the first half, but would have liked to see us bring that same energy in the second half.”

Coupeville controlled the boards to a 30-15 tune, with Stone snatching seven and Hammer hauling in six.

Myers (eight points), Strasburg (five points, four rebounds, two steals), Littlejohn (three points, three steals), Kacie Kiel (two points, two steals) and Wynter Thorne (four rebounds) all filled up the stat sheet, while Stone tossed in seven steals and two blocks to go with her team highs in points and rebounds.

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Julia Myers has poured in 33 over the past two games to vault into second on the girls' scoring list. (John Fisken photos)

   Julia Myers has poured in 33 over the past two games to vault into second on the girls’ scoring list. (John Fisken photos)

Aaron Trumbull

Aaron Trumbull works hard for two of his 116 points.

Numbers don’t tell you everything, but they are a start.

Pull out the biggest number — the number of points each Coupeville High School varsity basketball player has scored this season –and you can see at least one thing.

Makana Stone can put the rock in the bucket.

The junior is, by far and away, the leading scorer, boy or girl, averaging 15.5 per game. That’s more than four points ahead of Wiley Hesselgrave, the next highest at 11.2.

Of course, just seeing one number doesn’t tell you who’s been injured (Madeline Strasburg is 6th in scoring, but missed the first half of the season, while Dalton Martin is currently 8th, but was much higher before injuries ended his season), which can skew numbers.

And, of course, points are not the only thing which decide a basketball game. Rebounds, defensive intensity, the ability to maintain composure under fire, heart — all have a huge impact.

But points are the big, shiny number, so that’s what we’re looking at this morning, as the Wolves prepare for a road doubleheader at Chimacum.

If nothing else, it’s a place to start.

So, here you go — the glossiest of all stats (with the caveat that these are unofficial numbers compiled by me as the season has played out):

GIRLS:

Makana Stone — 233
Julia Myers — 101
Kacie Kiel — 82
Hailey Hammer — 61
Monica Vidoni — 61
Madeline Strasburg — 58
Wynter Thorne — 46
Mia Littlejohn — 35
McKenzie Bailey — 16
Kailey Kellner — 4

BOYS:

Wiley Hesselgrave — 157
Aaron Trumbull — 116
Joel Walstad — 92
Aaron Curtin — 90
Ryan Griggs — 74
Risen Johnson — 57
CJ Smith — 49
Dalton Martin — 47
Matt Shank — 37
Gabe Wynn — 24
Jared Helmstadter — 2
DeAndre Mitchell — 2
Hunter Smith — 1

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Only a fool gets between Hailey Hammer and the basket. (John Fisken photo)

Only a fool gets between Hailey Hammer (34) and the basket. (John Fisken photo)

It wasn’t a pretty game, but style points aren’t everything.

When the scoreboard clicked over to all zeroes Friday night, all that mattered was the final score. And that was beautiful.

Overcoming a rough first half, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team ended up blasting host Port Townsend 58-35 to maintain its hold on first place in the Olympic League.

Now 10-5 overall, 4-0 in conference play, the Wolves are a game up on Klahowya (3-1), while Chimacum (1-3) and Port Townsend (0-4) round out the standings.

The victory, while not always a smooth one, marked the fifth time this season CHS has won back-to-back games.

Though, for a bit, that seemed to be in a bit of danger.

Facing an 0-13 Redhawk squad desperate for a breakthrough and much improved from earlier in the season, the depleted Wolves (spark-plug Wynter Thorne was home with tonsillitis) got a tougher fight than maybe was expected.

Though some of that might have been self-inflicted.

“It was a battle from the opening tip until late in the fourth,” said Wolf coach David King. “We weren’t playing our brand of defense like we had shown the three quarters against Mount Vernon Christian and the whole game vs. Chimacum.

“We wanted to play aggressive man, but stay away from the stupid fouls,” he added. “We just couldn’t get into a good rhythm in the first on the defensive end.”

With its top two scorers, Makana Stone and Julia Myers, hampered by early foul trouble, the Wolves had to drop out of man coverage and go to a zone. Once they did that, Redhawk freshman Kaitlyn Meek, who hit for 20, picked them apart a bit.

“Port Townsend came ready to play and showed no fear,” King said.

The Redhawks actually took the lead at 13-11 early in the second quarter, before Coupeville countered with a show of pure power from post Monica Vidoni.

The senior sprang off the bench and dominated in the paint, pumping home all eight of her points in the quarter.

Twice Vidoni rolled hard to the hoop, threw down the field goal, forced Port Townsend to foul her and went to the line where she calmly completed the three-point play.

On a 14-point run, the Wolves looked like they were breaking the game wide open.

Only the pesky Redhawks wouldn’t go away, scoring the final six points in the half to narrow the lead back to 25-19 at the break.

Having won by 33 the first time the schools clashed, Coupeville needed a spark to get back to that style of play. They found it in the locker room.

“The players took to heart what we needed to fix coming out for the third,” King said. “They upped their defensive effort and returned to the man defense that gets us steals and fast breaks.

“Players were flying around, anticipating passes and tipping or stealing them.”

Back on the court, Myers dominated the third (pumping in eight points) and Stone shredded Townsend’s last bit of resistance in the fourth (dropping nine in the quarter before fouling out).

Coupeville pulled off two coach-pleasing plays in the fourth, both involving Stone.

On the first Hailey Hammer made “a sweeeeeeeeet pass” around a defender that perfectly hit Stone in stride for an easy bucket, while the second was a moment where practice paid off.

Having snagged a board, Stone was pinned under the basket. Instead of kicking it out, she followed King’s lessons and “took one power dribble, backed up and powered the ball up over two defenders for the basket.”

Julia and Hailey went crazy on the bench,” King said. “I’m pretty sure I turned to anyone who would listen to me and I said, did you see that, we have been working on that exact move!”

Up and down the roster, Wolves made plays that pleased their coach.

McKenzie Bailey had “a great feed” that set Vidoni up for one of her baskets, while Mia Littlejohn, who “has been working hard on her shot,” stepped up and knocked down a sweet 15-foot jumper from the wing.

While Coupeville couldn’t completely slow down Meek, King did move noted ball-hawk Kacie Kiel over to cover her in the second half and the feisty senior “did a good job defensively.”

While the Redhawks were scrappier than expected, and the refs questionable at best (at one point issuing a what-the-heck unsportsmanlike warning to Coupeville because a defender dared to put up a hand in front of her rival’s face while playing her straight up), the Wolves persevered.

“Port Townsend gave us a fight, but at the end of the day, we fought back and kept fighting and working as a team,” King said. “There isn’t any quit with this team and even though we struggled at times, I’m very happy with the effort we are getting every day.”

Stone, even limited by fouls, threw down 20 points, snatched seven boards, doled out three assists and made off with three steals to pace the Wolves.

Myers (12 points), Vidoni (eight points), Hammer (eight points, seven rebounds, two assists, two blocks), Madeline Strasburg (five points, four assists), Kiel (two points, eight rebounds, five assists, three steals), Littlejohn (two points) and Kailey Kellner (one point) all chipped in, as well.

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Julia Myers, drainin' jumpers all night long. (John Fisken photo)

Julia Myers, offensive juggernaut. (John Fisken photo)

Julia Myers can use her world-famous elbows for something other than clearing out space in the paint and reprimanding pesky foes who try to snatch rebounds away from her.

Wednesday night, playing in front of a loud, very pro-Judy crowd, the Coupeville High School senior cocked those elbows and drained shot after shot.

By the time she was done, plopped on the bench with a mile-wide smile on her face, she had racked up a season-high 21, sparking the Wolves to a 63-29 romp over visiting Chimacum.

The victory gave CHS (9-5) seven wins in its last ten games and improved it to a perfect 3-0 in Olympic League play.

Hot in pursuit of the program’s first league title since 2002, the Wolves have six games left, with two each against Port Townsend, Klahowya and Chimacum.

After the first go-round, they have outscored their league mates 166-84.

A huge part of that margin came in the first quarter Wednesday, as Coupeville threw down 18 straight points en route to a 23-2 lead.

Six different players rattled down points in the quarter, with Myers tossing in seven points to lead the way.

Holding Chimacum without a field goal in the quarter — the Cowboys went nearly 11 minutes into the game before finally hitting a short jumper — CHS attacked relentlessly.

Moving the ball crisply, looking for the open shooter and being ruthless ball-hawks on defense, the Wolves frazzled Chimacum to its very last nerve, then shoved the Cowboys over the edge.

Whether it was Madeline Strasburg powering up the sidelines on breakaways, tangling up a Chimacum defender’s feet as she cut back at the last second, or Makana Stone grazing the gym ceiling pulling down one of her 15 rebounds, the women in red and black were everywhere.

And they never let up, stretching the lead out to 62-21 midway through the fourth quarter.

Hailey Hammer fought hard for back-to-back buckets inside, then Myers ripped a rebound loose and popped it back in to push herself over the 20-point barrier.

Moments later, freshman Mia Littlejohn juked a defender out of her high tops and slashed hard to the hoop for a bucket, triggering a running clock when the Wolves went up by 40.

Chimacum put together its only sustained run, closing the game on a small 8-1 surge — the only time all night that the Cowboys hit from the field on consecutive possessions — to slightly narrow the gap.

While never fully satisfied — what coach ever is? — Wolf hoops guru David King was pleased with much of what he saw unfold on the court.

After hailing Myers breakout offensive performance and Stone’s high-flying acrobatics, he called out two role players for their performance.

Wynter (Thorne) played really, really well tonight, I thought. Hustled and fought for everything,” King said. “Hailey had a bounce pass to set up Julia for a basket that was just beautiful. She is such a smart player for us out there on the court.”

Stone backed up Myers on the offensive end, tossing in 14, while Hammer and Strasburg dropped in eight apiece. Kacie Kiel (4), Thorne (3), Littlejohn (3) and Monica Vidoni (2) rounded out the scorers.

McKenzie Bailey and Kailey Kellner didn’t have a chance to join the scoring parade, but both made an impact on defense, rattling Chimacum ball-handlers (and maybe a few of their teeth).

Hammer had six boards and four assists, while Vidoni helped anchor the defense with five rebounds and three blocked shots.

Myers and Thorne both snagged five boards apiece.

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