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Posts Tagged ‘Matthew Kelley’

Matthew Kelley, who played for Coupeville for many years, lofts a jumper Saturday as Oak Harbor and South Whidbey clash. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

John Fisken was bored, so now I have to be nice to the two high schools not in Coupeville.

While Central Whidbey’s high-flying boys basketball players were blasting Orcas Island Saturday and moving into first-place in the Northwest 2B/1B League, Whidbey’s other hoops squads squared off back at home.

In the end, 3A Oak Harbor came away with the non-conference win in Langley, bouncing 1A South Whidbey 60-41.

With the win, the Wildcats improve to 2-7, while the Falcons slip to 3-4.

Coupeville, in case you weren’t aware, is 6-3, but won’t get a chance to play either of its two next-door neighbors as it’s playing a league-only schedule this year.

The photos above and below are courtesy Fisken, and I never say no to the offer of pics, so here you go.

To see everything he snapped, and perhaps buy some presents for the family, pop over to:

 

Oak Harbor:

BBB 2021-06-05 at South Whidbey – John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

South Whidbey:

BBB 2021-06-05 South Whidbey vs Oak Harbor – John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

Jacob Ng comes in hot.

“Knock, knock, I have a delivery. Spoiler, it’s two points for me.”

Luke Rookstool floats in the danger zone.

Kelley goes Dikembe Mutombo on a Falcon.

Elijah Dixon looks for a way out of a sticky situation.

Killer shoes, killer game.

Sterling Patton yanks down a rebound while Kelley admires his work on the glass.

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Freshman Hawthorne Wolfe went for a team-high nine points Wednesday as Coupeville boys basketball opened a new season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s been 3,264 days since Coupeville and Oak Harbor played a varsity high school boys basketball game, and some things have changed.

Back on Dec. 21, 2009, the Wolves had a high-flying, veteran-heavy squad which finished the season 16-5, with one of those wins a 66-61 toppling of their Island neighbors.

Jump forward nine years, and this time the Wildcats boasted experience (and a lot of speed), with a roster stacked to the brim with battle-hardened seniors in 11 of 12 roster slots.

Meanwhile, CHS hit opening night with just one senior, only two returning full-time varsity players, and four of its nine active players making their varsity debut.

So, not a total surprise the large 3A school drilled the ultra-small 1A school Wednesday to the tune of 79-31.

But, while the final score might sting in the moment, the night was not a total loss for Coupeville.

For one thing, it was just one game in an 18-game schedule, a non-conference bout at that, and, hopefully, chock full of lessons for a new-look Wolf squad.

“That’s the beauty of basketball season; it’s not like football, where we have to wait a week to play again,” said CHS coach Brad Sherman. “We can have short memories, take some things in to work on at practice the next two days, then get out there and play (against fellow 1A school Bush) Saturday afternoon.”

Oak Harbor, which was led by the wicked fast Dorian Hardin and the three-ball-flinging Terrell Crumpton, blew out to a 17-0 lead, picking apart the young Wolves with withering defense.

Coupeville didn’t stop the bleeding until Wolf big man Ulrik Wells banked home a free throw late in the opening quarter, followed by a trey from the top off the fingertips of point guard Jered Brown.

The Wildcats seized control by using their press to force turnovers, while holding the Wolves without back-to-back scores for much of the game.

The only small CHS run came midway through the second, when it used four free throws and a Wells jumper in the paint that rattled around for an eternity before plopping through the net, to go on a 6-0 mini-surge.

The ‘Cats, by contrast, put together a second rampage, opening the second half on a 16-0 tear, ending any minor hopes of a Wolf comeback.

“We knew it would be a tough game, facing a very athletic opponent,” Sherman said. “We struggled with their pressure, just trying to do a little too much.

“We will work on executing our break like we know we can,” he added. “It’s a first game, early in the season; against a team like that, you expect some bumps and that’s OK – as long as we are learning and getting better each week.”

Learning is the key word, as three of Coupeville’s top four scorers on the night – Hawthorne Wolfe, Sean Toomey-Stout and Koa Davison, were making their varsity basketball debut.

Toomey-Stout, a football phenom who sat out his sophomore basketball season while recuperating from an injury, gave the Wolves an injection of toughness, while Davison teamed with Wells to provide CHS with some pop in the paint.

The night’s brightest spot, however, might be Wolfe, Coupeville’s floppy-haired, three-ball-spraying, bobbin’ and weavin’ answer to “Pistol” Pete Maravich.

He’s only a freshman, and showed it at times Wednesday, but the upside on this one is huge.

Wolfe splashed a pair of balls from behind the three-point arc on his way to a team-high nine points, but he also had a pair of sweet set-up passes, picking up assists on buckets by Brown and Davison.

Better still, he proved to be a scrapper, hitting the floor frequently and refusing to be bullied by the older Wildcats when there was a battle for a loose ball or re-directed rebound.

That was a trait also demonstrated by his older teammates, with Dane Lucero and Jacobi Pilgrim banging down in the pits and Mason Grove and Jean Lund-Olsen doing their best to disrupt Oak Harbor’s blazing guards.

Toomey-Stout rattled home seven points to back Wolfe’s nine, with Wells (6), Davison (5), Brown (3) and Pilgrim (1) also tallying points in June Mazdra’s score book.

Hardin and Crumpton each went for 17 to pace Oak Harbor, while Haven Brown popped for 13.

Sophomore Matt Kelley, the lone non-senior on the ‘Cat roster and a former Coupeville athlete through middle school, slipped a single, solitary, free throw through the twines.

Along with the loss, Coupeville took a physical hit, or rather two, as Gavin Knoblich rolled his ankle in warm-ups and Brown took a substantial shot to the chest in an area where he had previously had surgery.

One limped back to the bench before tip-off, while the other spent most of the second half with an ice pack wrapped to his chest, and neither’s status is 100% clear for Saturday’s game.

Whomever is ready and able to go against Bush will come out ready for a scrap, though, which pleases their coach.

“Lots of basketball games ahead,” Sherman said. “I really was proud of the guys. They could have put their heads down and quit, they never did that.

“They worked dang hard and left the locker room tonight ready to get back at it tomorrow,” he added. “Says a lot about their character and desire to grow as a team.”

 

JV:

For a moment, an upset seemed on the horizon. Then the rim turned unforgiving.

Unable to buy a bucket for an agonizingly long time, with shot after shot slithering back out of the bucket, the Wolf second unit saw an 8-3 lead turn into a 43-22 loss.

In the first couple of minutes, however, things were peachy, as freshman Logan Martin hit a gorgeous turnaround jumper to start the season, before Daniel Olson and Grady Rickner splashed three-balls from the back reaches of the parking lot.

Then nothing would drop, near or far.

A couple of treys mixed with some fast-break points off of steals helped Oak Harbor run off 17 consecutive points to end the first quarter, and the damage was done.

The rim wasn’t much more forgiving in the second quarter, as a Cody Roberts free throw and a Tucker Hall put-back off of an offensive rebound was all CHS could muster in the second quarter.

The second half was much more competitive, as the teams plowed through an increasingly rough-and-tumble affair.

With plenty of elbows flying and some fiery words exchanged after fouls, the two squads went toe-to-toe, and mouth-to-mouth, with Coupeville winning the third quarter scoring battle and hanging tough in the fourth.

Olson, who was handcuffed to the bench by early foul trouble, rebounded to score seven of his team-high 10 points in the second half.

Hall tossed in four in support, while Grady Rickner (3), Martin (2), TJ Rickner (2) and Roberts (1) also scored.

Sage Downes, Miles Davidson, Alex Jimenez and Chris Ruck rounded out the opening night roster, with Jimenez acquitting himself nicely when running the point under constant pressure.

 

C-Team:

The night’s biggest mismatch, as a very inexperienced Wolf team faced a Wildcat unit which has played together as a group for some time.

Wanting to build a winning attitude from the ground floor, Oak Harbor coaches elected to keep all their freshmen together on one team, regardless of talent level, and it’s a group to keep an eye on.

On opening night, the ‘Cats rolled to a 63-16 win, dropping seven treys and running away with the game early.

Shawn Day and Gage McLeod paced Oak Harbor with 16 points apiece, with the sweet-shooting Day singing the net for four three-balls.

Coupeville got scoring from five of the seven players on the roster, with Jaylen Nitta, Ben Smith and Brayden Coatney leading the way with four points apiece.

Jonathan Partida and Chris Cernick each added a bucket, while Andrew Aparicio and DJ Stadler also saw floor time for the Wolves.

While it was a rough opener, veteran coach Scott Fox is in it for the long haul, as are his players.

“Oak Harbor has played together for five years and it showed. They looked real good today,” he said. “We have kids who have never played basketball before and played well at times. It’s going to get better from here.”

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Ja'Tarya Hoskins, seen here during practice, set a PR in the 75 meter hurdles Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Ja’Tarya Hoskins, seen here during practice, set a PR in the 75 meter hurdles Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

CMS coaches Elizabeth Bitting and Bob Martin plot strategy. (Pat Kelley photos)

CMS coaches Elizabeth Bitting and Bob Martin plot strategy. (Pat Kelley photo)

Sean Toomey-Stout (in red) and Nick Wielandt work on their relay hand-offs. (Fisken photo)

   Sean Toomey-Stout (in red) and Nick Wielandt work on their relay hand-offs. (Fisken photo)

(Pat Kelley photo)

   Relay runners (l to r) Tia Wurzrainer, Zoe Trujillo and Avalon Renninger warm up. (Kelley photo)

Cresting right at the end.

That’s what the Coupeville Middle School track and field team is doing, notching tons of PRs as they head towards the finish line of the season.

Competing at a three-team meet in Port Angeles Tuesday, the Wolves compiled an astounding 35 personal bests as they prepped for the season finale.

That comes Wednesday, May 25, when CMS travels to Sequim for the league meet.

For now, they can bask in the afterglow of a strong afternoon on the oval and in the field, where Jillian Mayne (long jump, javelin, shot put) and Matthew Kelley (long jump, discus, high jump) paced the squad with three PRs apiece.

Complete CMS results:

GIRLS:

60 — Mallory Kortuem 8.95 *PR*, Ja’Tarya Hoskins 9.18; Cassidy Moody 9.30; Lily Zustiak 9.76; Raven Vick 9.89; Helen Sinclair 10.98

100 — Kortuem 14.05; Morgan Pease 14.64; Natalie Hollrigel 15.13; Mica Shipley 15.20 *PR*; Ashleigh Battaglia 15.80 *PR*; Zustiak 15.84; Vick 15.98; Mikaela Labrador 16.18; Sinclair 17.42

200 — Lucy Sandahl 31.66; Labrador 33.35 *PR*; Zoe Trujillo 33.78 *PR*

400 — Sandahl 1:13.08; Trujillo 1:18

800 — Pease 2:46.93 *PR*; Tia Wurzrainer 3:00.43

75 hurdles — Hoskins 14.42 *PR*; Moody 14.66; Battaglia 15.98

200 hurdles — Kortuem 32.59

4 x 100 relay  — Hoskins, Kortuem, Moody, Sandahl 56.72; Hollrigel, Pease, Avalon Renninger, Wurzrainer 59.49

4 x 200 relay — Hollrigel, Renninger, Trujillo, Wurzrainer 2:06.50

Shot Put — Pease 30-3.5 *PR*; Jillian Mayne 21-8.5 *PR*

Discus — Renninger 64-08.50 *PR*; Battaglia 59-11 *PR*; Shipley 19-06

Javelin — Vick 69-04; Mayne 68-00 *PR*; Trujillo 63-00; Labrador 51-04; Sinclair 42-10

High Jump — Moody 4-8 *PR*; Hoskins 4-2 *PR*

Long Jump — Battaglia 10-11.5, Shipley 10-06; Mayne 10-01 *PR*; Sinclair 7-7

BOYS:

60 — Sean Toomey-Stout 8.02; Nick Wielandt 8.47; Jaylen Nitta 8.83; Ethan Clavette 8.98; Sage Downes 9.05; Ben Smith 10.03

100 — Jean Lund-Olsen 12.51 *PR*; Toomey-Stout 12.71; Jake Mitten 13.51; Wielandt 13.51; Clavette 14.01; Downes 14.30; Smith 16.13; James Mayne 16.68 *PR*; Trevor Bell 17.31; Tryston Ford 18.80; Ricky Rebischke-Smith 19.79

200 — Mitten 26.62 *PR*; Wielandt 28.28; Nitta 30.44; Thane Peterson 30.55; Chris Cernick 32.31; Zach Ginnings 34.92 *PR*; Mayne 40.00

400 — Peterson 1:07

800 — Koa Davison 2:29 *PR*; TJ Rickner 3:07.17

1600 — Aram Leyva 5:27.50; James Wood 5:44.60; Tucker Hall 5:44.60; Sam Wynn 6:02; Rickner 6:14.10

75 hurdles — Lund-Olsen 13.25 *PR*; Cernick 14.48 *PR*

200 hurdles — Cernick 33.60 *PR*; Smith 40.22

4 x 100 relay — Lund-Olsen, Toomey-Stout, Nitta, Weilandt 52.20

4 x 200 relay — Downes, Mason Grove, Nitta, Peterson 2:01.02

Shot Put — Bell 25-01; Tian Yu 21-06; Ginnings 18-04.5 *PR*, Ford 18-04; Rebischke-Smith 18-02.5

Discus — Peterson 96-10; Matthew Kelley 80-01 *PR*; Grove 65-08 *PR*; Clavette 54-03; Ford 52-04; Bell 47-00;  Rebischke-Smith 42-09 *PR*; Yu 40-00 *PR*

Javelin — Hall 101-03 *PR*; Ginnings 67-01; Bell 53-00; Ford 52-10; Rebischke-Smith 47-00 *PR*; Yu 45-08

High Jump — Kelley 4-10 *PR*; Mitten 4-08 *PR*; Grove 4-04

Long Jump — Toomey-Stout 16-07; Downes 14-02; Kelley 14-01 *PR*, Wynn 12-03 *PR*, Smith 11-05 *PR*; Ginnings 10-00

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Daniel Olson and Coupeville's 7th grade SWISH squad are 3-0 after a win Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

   Daniel Olson and Coupeville’s 7th grade SWISH squad are 3-0 after a win Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

On top of the world.

Or at least on top of the standings, which is where the Coupeville 7th grade boys’ SWISH squad finds itself after nipping the Mount Vernon Mayhem 28-25 Saturday afternoon.

The win lifted the Wolves to a crisp 3-0 and puts them in a first-place tie with Lakewood atop a 15-team league.

Coupeville, which actually has a mix of seventh and sixth graders (and one precocious fourth grader) on its roster, led from start to finish.

Running a high-speed offense that frazzled the bigger Mayhem, the Wolves closed the first quarter on a 10-2 run.

From there they stretched the gap out to 16-6 at the half and 24-14 after three.

With Coupeville running in its young players for much of the fourth quarter, Mt. Vernon made a run to get back in the game, but the Wolf starters returned to close things out at the free-throw line.

Jake Mitten sparked the attack with 12 points and 13 rebounds, while Matthew Kelley filled up the stat sheet with seven points, nine boards, five assists, two steals and a blocked shot.

Daniel Olson banged home six points in support, with Hawthorne Wolfe (2) and Sage Downes (1) rounding out the scorers.

Downes snatched six rebounds, while Connor Barton (4), Wolfe (3), Caleb Meyer (2) and Dakota Eck (1) helped out on the boards.

Wolfe and Barton had two steals apiece, with Downes doling out a pair of assists.

Coupeville returns to action next Saturday, Feb. 6, when it plays the Lake City Gold at Cascade Middle School.

Two other Wolf SWISH squads are also hard at work this season:

8th grade:

Next year’s freshmen, coached by Dakota Brown and Jake Prosser, are playing in a hyper-competitive AA division.

“It’s proving to be a difficult league,” Brown said. “The team has the talent and potential to compete, but needs to find that extra gear and desire to win.

“Rebounds, and defense are key to having success for us!”

4th/5th grade:

Under the guidance of former CHS star Greg White, the youngest squad is 2-2 and had a bye this weekend.

“The kids are really learning a lot but they are very new to competitive b-ball,” White said. “They have a lot of promise, so hopefully we’ll be seeing a lot of good things from them in the future.”

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Matthew Kelley (John Fisken photos)

Matthew Kelley lets fly. (John Fisken photos)

Boom!

Matthew Kelley plunged the dagger in big-time Saturday, as he and his Coupeville SWISH 7th grade boys’ basketball squad pulled off a rally in the final seconds to stun arch-rival South Whidbey.

Kelley scored the game’s final five points, including a buzzer-beating three-ball, to lift the Wolves to a 24-21 win.

The victory improved Coupeville to 2-0 heading into a showdown next weekend with a very strong Mount Vernon Mayhem squad.

After leading for much of the game Saturday, the Wolves fell behind at the worst possible moment.

Down 21-19 with 36 seconds to play, they needed big plays and got them.

Michael Laska, the mighty mite, ripped down a rebound to give the ball back to Coupeville.

After Kelley dropped a quick runner in the key to knot things at 21, the Wolves pressed on the ensuing in-bounds play and disrupted South Whidbey on back-to-back chances.

On the first one, Sage Downes knocked the ball out of bounds.

On the second one, the Falcons threw the ball away, the basketball zinging over the head of a player who turned and clasped his head in frustration.

With the ball in their hands and five ticks on the clock, Coupeville gave the ball to Kelley and he charged straight up-court.

South Whidbey went back on its heels and Kelley went straight up and drilled the wide-open trey, looking a whole lot like Wolf legend Ian Smith when he did the same thing in a high school varsity game at Langley five years ago.

Both shots were game-winners and both shots induced tears in Falcon Nation — a beautiful combo for Wolf fans everywhere.

Kelley paced Coupeville with 13 while Jake Mitten dropped in six.

Hawthorne Wolfe and Daniel Olson added a bucket apiece while Connor Barton rounded out the scoring with a free-throw.

“The boys all played strong,” said Coupeville coach Pat Kelley. “We were just really off until the very end, when it mattered most.”

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