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Posts Tagged ‘Makana Stone’

Some people are star athletes. Others are good at taking photos. Only a few can do both. Kacie Kiel, American Badass, ladies and gentlemen. (John Fisken photos)

Call her Killer. (John Fisken photos)

Wynter Thorne, one-ninth of the only undefeated tea in the 1A Olympic League. (John Fisken photos)

Wynter Thorne, one-ninth of the only undefeated team in the 1A Olympic League.

Now, one game into a season may be a little early to plan on hanging any new league championship banners in the Coupeville High School gym.

That being said, there are eight varsity teams playing basketball in the 1A Olympic League this winter, and only one still has a chance to go undefeated.

The Wolf girls’ hoops squad, courtesy of their 47-23 demolition of Island rival South Whidbey, are a shiny 1-0 heading into a home duel Friday night with Darrington.

The other seven squads? A combined 0-10.

The Coupeville boys as well as the Klahowya boys and girls are all 0-2, while the Chimacum and Port Townsend boys and girls are all 0-1.

The non-conference losses have ranged from a two-point defeat to a 30-point blowout, and they all are, as we said, non-conference.

League title banners will be decided when the four schools tussle with each other. Coupeville will play its new league mates three times apiece this season.

So, you can take the measured, calm, sage-like route and say, what will be, will be.

Or you can point to the CHS girls — rampaging force of nature Makana Stone, explosive dynamo Maddie Big Time, Kacie “Killer” Kiel, Julia “Elbows” Myers and Co. — and scream, “BEST IN THE FREAKIN’ LEAGUE, BABY!!”

Calm. Composed. Always…

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Makana Stone is fast and she's coming to steal all your rebounds. (John Fisken photos)

   Makana Stone is fast and she’s coming to steal all your rebounds. (John Fisken photos)

McKenzie

McKenzie Bailey works on her defensive stance under the gaze of Wolf coach David King. Bailey and Co. brought the defensive heat big-time Tuesday.

A trip to the state tourney begins one step at a time.

It’s a goal the senior-dominated Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad has talked about all off-season, during voluntary workouts and “fall ball” games.

The Wolves had the best record of any of the Island’s six varsity hoops teams last year, but they want more this season.

Like last spring’s CHS softball team, which broke a 12-year drought, they want to go back to the big dance.

And they looked like it Tuesday, opening their season with an emphatic 47-23 demolition of arch-rival South Whidbey on its home court.

Sparked by a monster game from junior Makana Stone, who scored 17 and ripped down 18 boards, the Wolves savaged the Falcons at every step.

Even better, they did it as a well-balanced team.

Stone was the centerpiece, but everyone did their thing, with eight of nine players scoring and eight of nine garnering at least one assist.

“We have talked as a team leading up to last night about being patient on offense and moving the ball,” Coupeville coach David King said. “I told the players after the game, this is probably the most patient team I have coached in a game offensively.

“We stayed spread, moved the ball and stayed within our strengths. By doing this we had many open shots,” he added. “Defense is still our strong suit and overall we didn’t disappoint. Once we made the adjustments in the low block we minimized the shots they got down low.”

The Wolves actually stumbled right out of the gate, committing turnovers on their first two possessions, before settling down.

Senior Hailey Hammer pumped home Coupeville’s first bucket of the season after getting “a great seal on her defender in the post.”

Smartly reading the play, Stone fired a pass over the top to her teammate, setting her up for an easy layup.

After that, it was off to the races, with five players scoring in the opening eight minutes and CHS jumping out to a 12-4 lead.

With the entire team sharing the ball and looking for the hot hand, Coupeville continued to stretch its lead.

Julia Myers netted a pair of sweet jumpers to spark things.

Despite an uptick in fouls (Hammer spent most of the second quarter locked to the bench), the Wolves surged to a 23-10 lead at the break, then broke South Whidbey’s spirit for good in the third.

Using stellar defense to overcome a brief bout of sluggishness on the offensive end of the court, the Wolves throttled South Whidbey 17-3 in the third.

Leading the charge was Stone, who scored nine of her game-high 17 in the quarter. Most of her buckets came off of offensive rebounds, as the silky smooth one flew high in the rafters, pulling down every last available carom.

King emerged happy with where his team was, and pleased with the effort he saw from one through nine. While there are a few things to tweak — no coach is ever 100% happy — he was pretty close.

“It was good to get our non-starters extra time (at the end),” King said. “Monica (Vidoni), Wynter (Thorne), McKenzie (Bailey) and Mia (Littlejohn) played well for us when called upon throughout the night.

“Each contributed in the win to go along with picking up where the starters (Stone, Myers, Hammer, Kacie Kiel and Madeline Strasburg) left off.”

Myers popped for eight to back Stone, while Vidoni (5), Hammer (4), Kiel (4), Thorne (4), Littlejohn (3) and Strasburg (2) rounded out the scoring chart.

With home games Friday (Darrington), Saturday (Bellevue Christian) and next Monday (Mount Baker) it’s time to make a statement. But first, a little fine-tuning.

“We have some work to do to continue to grow and get better. Blocking out is an area that hurt us and not being strong with the ball against a defender,” King said. “The players are working to see the floor and take advantage of what the defense is giving them and that reflected in our assists we had.

“The girls should be happy with the outcome and how well they played in this game,” he added. “Now it’s back to work tonight at practice and look to get better.”

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You can run from Makana Stone, but she's still going to catch you. (John Fisken photos)

   You can run from Makana Stone, but she’s still going to catch you. (John Fisken photos)

"No, I don't think my elbow is supposed to bend this way, coach..."

“No, I don’t think my elbow is supposed to bend this way, coach…”

Makana Stone is a superstar, in more ways than one.

Hands down the best athlete at Coupeville High School, male or female, the Wolf junior is also a prime example of how a person can combine grace, humility, warmth and book smarts with award-winning talent.

She remains one of the most genuinely likeable, friendly, caring people you will ever meet, and is probably blushing right now.

Not one to toot her own horn, Stone has gotten taller, quicker and more explosive as she has grown up, but the shy, sweet little girl I first met when she was but a preschooler is still there.

When you cover small town sports, it’s easy to find yourself silently rooting for these kids to succeed.

Journalists are supposed to operate at a distance from their subjects, but hey, there are some in the badly-fading newspaper industry who desperately want you to believe bloggers aren’t journalists, so I guess I’m not bound by all that.

And I always root for Makana.

She is the gold standard for Wolf student/athletes, the heir to Breanna Messner and Nick Streubel, both when she’s competing and when she’s just operating in real life.

By the time she’s done, she will likely own 93.4% of the CHS track and field records (and probably a couple of state titles), but it’s basketball where she is at her most electrifying.

Makana can outrun, out-jump and out-thrill just about anyone on the hard-court.

She was a First-Team All-Cascade Conference player as a sophomore while bumping elbows with the best King’s, ATM and the big 2A schools could throw at her.

Now, as she and her teammates head into the 1A Olympic League, this is her moment to shine.

Stone has already been a dominant player; now, it’s her time to rise up and truly become phenomenal.

She skipped soccer this fall, choosing to work on basketball and play with Coupeville’s “fall ball” squad. That came on the heels of playing with a traveling hoops squad that crisscrossed the USA this summer.

As she prepared to head into the opening day of practice Monday, Stone offered up these thoughts on the season ahead:

I am so ready for basketball to start!

I’ve been so excited and have been waiting to play with this upcoming team since our last game last year.

I feel like we are capable of anything we set our minds to. And I feel like this is our year to make it to state!

My goal for this season is to be an asset on the team and tear it up on the court both on offense and defense.

We’ve got a really good group of returners from last year and a handful of new girls that are bringing skill to the court and will be exciting to play with.

It’s gonna be a season to remember!

Make it so.

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Wynter Thorne (left) works on her game during an open gym. (John Fisken photos)

  Wynter Thorne (left) works on her game during an open gym. (John Fisken photos)

(John Fisken photo)

   Julia Myers (far left), Monica Vidoni (42) and Madeline Strasburg return for their senior season, while Amanda Fabrizi (far right) has left for college.

“As a team, our goals are set high.”

With much of the core of last year’s squad — the winningest of Whidbey’s six high school hoops squads — back for another go-round, this time bolstered by what could be an impressive freshman class, Coupeville High School girls’ basketball coach David King is optimistic.

“We can do some good things this season; it starts with every player dedicating each day to get better as a team and to improve their individual game,” King said. “Our goals, from my perspective, are to compete every game and play hard from the start of each game until the final horn at the end of a game.

“I believe we can finish in one of the top two spots in our league. Getting a home court play-off game is something we are striving for,” he added. “And we coach and play to get to state.”

A year ago, the Wolves won 10 games, including a thrilling home playoff victory over Meridian.

Now, they are primed to kick off their first season in the new 1A Olympic League.

King’s and ATM are gone from the schedule, and Coupeville will play three games against each of its new rivals — Port Townsend, Klahowya and Chimacum.

How that will play out is one of the great unknowns.

“There’s always a learning curve for a team that moves into a new league,” King said. “If we put the effort and work in up front and run our defense and offense like we should, then we will fit right in with this new league.

“We are excited to see how we do against more 1A teams, even though I will miss playing against the bigger schools in the Cascade Conference.”

On paper Klahowya is probably the team to beat, since it’s the biggest school by far and is coming off an especially strong fall season. Of course, the games are played on the court and not on paper.

“I always believe in our team and what we can accomplish,” King said. “Klahowya seems to have done well in both soccer and volleyball, so they may be the team to beat. Port Townsend and Chimacum had good athletes on soccer and volleyball as well.

“I think after we get through a game with each team, then we will have a better idea on who the team to beat would be.”

For now, he and assistant coach Amy King will focus on their own team, one that lost only two players (Breeanna Messner and Amanda Fabrizi) to graduation.

However, those two were battle-tested captains who had started playing for the Kings before high school. Who will step up and take the mantle of leadership is a prime question.

“Both Breeanna and Amanda are going to be hard to replace. They understood what I wanted out of them as players and what we as a team needed to do to get to where we wanted to be as a team,” King said. “Replacing the five years of experience we had together on the basketball court is tough.

“However, we have some very capable players to step in and fill the roles,” he added. “Kacie (Kiel) has been a huge driving force with the off-season open gyms and with the fall team. I expect her to continue to take on a leadership role.

Makana (Stone) gained experience playing on a club team that traveled to Chicago, Tennessee and California to play against some very good competition. She will be able to draw on these experiences and help guide our program through the learning and playing against tougher competition. Maddie (Strasburg) has been a vocal leader since she stepped onto the court as a freshman; I don’t see this changing with her.

“I have seen a maturity in the other seniors and some underclassmen,” he added. “I can see others emerging as leaders as the season progresses.”

Coupeville returns seven players with varsity experience, led by Stone, a First-Team All-Cascade Conference player as a sophomore.

The lightning-quick junior, a two-way terror who “will see time at all five positions,” will be joined by seniors Kiel (point guard/wing), Strasburg (point guard), Julia Myers (post), Hailey Hammer (post), Monica Vidoni (post) and Wynter Thorne (post/wing).

Along with Messner and Fabrizi, two other varsity players from 2013-2014 have vanished from the roster (McKayla Bailey is injured and Carlie Rosenkrance moved), opening spots up for what could be an intense battle.

“Every player has an opportunity to prove why they should be on the varsity team,” King said. “They have to show this not just during the first week during tryouts, but each and every day throughout the season.

“This is based on the following: attitude, team first, give 100% effort every day, be defensive minded, willingness to learn, make the necessary adjustments to improve your game and, of course, skill.”

Junior McKenzie Bailey and sophomores Lauren Grove and Kailey Kellner are expected to be among the leading contenders for other varsity slots, but, as with the start of any new season, there is always an air of excitement hanging over who might emerge from the heat of battle.

And one of the most intriguing story-lines could emerge from the freshman class and how quickly those players develop.

“There are six incoming freshman that show potential and are athletic,” King said. “Each has something to bring and help improve our program. It will be good to see how they improve over the season against high school competition.”

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Wolf football player Isaac Vargas leads the cheering section for his school's volleyball squad. (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf football player Isaac Vargas leads the cheering section for his school’s volleyball squad. (John Fisken photos)

Makana Stone (left) and Mattea Miller are big fans of spiker Kacie Kiel.

  Makana Stone (left) and Mattea Miller are big fans of spikers Kacie Kiel and Hailey Hammer.

Joel Walstad (with flag) and Gabe Wynn come charging out of the locker room ready to cheer.

Joel Walstad (with flag), Gabe Wynn and Zane Bundy (in hat) are pumped up.

Coupeville Middle School athletes get in on the action.

Coupeville Middle School athletes run wild in the gym hallways.

Freshmen Katrina McGranahan (left) and Skyy Lippo are all smiles during a CHS football game.

Freshmen Katrina McGranahan (left) and Skyy Lippo are all smiles during a CHS football game.

Cole Payne, seconds before attacking the paparazzi.

Cole Payne, seconds before attacking the paparazzi.

When Uriel Liquidano (right) is back in town, all the girls come runnin'.

When Uriel Liquidano (right) is back in town, all the girls come runnin’.

Former Male Athlete of the Year winner Danny Savalza plays us out.

Former CHS Male Athlete of the Year winner Danny Savalza plays us out.

Fall sports are a wrap, but there are a bunch of photos still lingering out there, waiting to be deployed.

This collection of John Fisken pics capture Wolf athletes doubling as fans, showing up to support their classmates, who then later return the favor.

It’s the circle of life, Wolf Nation style.

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