Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Mia Littlejohn’

Lauren Rose (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Rose will not be denied. (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Bayne

Lauren Bayne holds up well under pressure.

The joint was jumpin’.

Backed up by a foot-stomping, lung-busting, “D-FENSE!!!”-screaming gym full of their classmates, the Coupeville Middle School 8th grade varsity put a beat-down on visiting Granite Falls Monday.

Having moved up to the high school gym for their home finale, the Wolves got a taste of the floor they will play on next year as freshmen and they reveled in it. Holding the Tigers scoreless until midway through the second quarter, Coupeville romped to a 33-17 victory.

The gym was packed, with the entire population of CMS spending the last half hour of their school day watching classmates like Katrina McGranahan and Payton Aparicio play, and the youthful fans made their presence felt.

Face paint, signs and sustained screaming that never waned, they came loud and proud.

Buoyed by the support, the Wolves stormed out to a 6-0 lead after one quarter, with only a couple of narrow misses keeping it from being a far bigger blowout.

Lauren Rose, Mia Littlejohn and McGranahan each hit a bucket, with Littlejohn’s coming on a steal where she streaked the length of the court, then juked the last defender out of her high tops at the end and calmly banked the ball over the girl’s head and off the glass with a gentle plop.

Not only did Granite Falls not score in the opening quarter, they didn’t have a single shot come remotely close to getting in the hoop.

Too often, they simply lost control under pressure from speedy Wolves like Lauren Bayne, and spent most of their time chasing after Coupeville fast breaks.

The Tigers finally broke through, only to have the Wolves quickly respond each time.

Kyla Briscoe hit back-to-back buckets to blunt one Granite Falls rally, while the duo of Littlejohn and McGranahan controlled the second half, working an outside-inside game.

The pair combined to outscore the visitors by themselves, with Littlejohn dropping in a game-high 13, including a three-point bomb, and McGranahan pounding away inside for 10 more.

Bayne and Briscoe popped for four apiece and Rose tossed in a bucket to round out the scoring.

After the beautiful start, the afternoon’s final three games didn’t go quite as well, though all had their moments.

8th grade JV: Abby Parker beat the buzzer with a running layup, set up by a steal and pass from Shelby Montoya, to salvage a 4-4 tie.

Yes, a tie, as middle school JV teams don’t play overtime. This is not soccer and the rule blows, frankly.

7th grade JV: Montoya scored Coupeville’s only bucket in an 8-2 loss.

7th grade varsity: A wild rally fell just short for the Wolves.

Trailing 12-7 midway through the fourth, Coupeville ripped off six straight to retake the lead.

Lindsey Roberts hit back-to-back pressure-packed buckets in front of parents (and former CHS hoops stars) Jon and Sherry Roberts, before Hope Lodell drilled the go-ahead jumper.

Unfortunately, that was the last gasp for the Wolves, as Granite put together a free-throw, a gorgeous running hook shot and a third-chance rebound to claim a 17-13 win.

Roberts paced Coupeville with eight points, while Kalia Littlejohn (3) and Lodell (2) rounded out the scorers. Sarah Wright controlled the boards all game for the Wolves.

Read Full Post »

Mia Littlejohn is about to break both your ankles, on the same play.

Mia Littlejohn is about to break both your ankles, on the same play. (John Fisken photo)

Mia celebrates a soccer trophy in 2011. (Photo courtesy Dawn Hesselgrave)

Littlejohn celebrates a soccer trophy in 2011. (Photo courtesy Dawn Hesselgrave)

“I have played basketball ever since I can remember.”

Leaving a trail of broken ankles behind her, as she bobs and weaves, stutter-steps and then blows past foes with a nasty cross-over, Coupeville Middle School 8th grader Mia Littlejohn is a gym rat, through and through.

She plays other sports, such as select soccer, but it’s hoops that she lives for, and hoops where she’s making a name for herself, even at a young age.

“I will never stop playing basketball, even if it kills me,” Littlejohn said. “I will continue to play AAU ball if possible and mom allows and cannot wait to play with Makana (Stone), Julia (Myers) and the other high school players .

“It will be awesome!”

Following in the footsteps of older brother Zepher Loesch, a former CHS roundball star, she is usually the most electrifying player on the court.

“I started playing after watching Zepher play and seeing how much fun it was,” Littlejohn said. “I decided that I wanted to play too.  Basketball was my brother’s passion and it has become mine, too.

“I live to play guard and wing because there is a lot of action and I get to drive the basket,” she added. “I enjoy the action and aggressiveness, the want for the ball.  I like to be on the wing so once that you get the ball you can head fake it then drive, putting you ahead of the person who was guarding you.”

A point guard who can score as well as pass, Littlejohn realizes the importance of setting up her teammates “(I want to assist each of my teammates to score 30 points — 15 baskets — for the season”) while never being afraid of putting up the ball herself.

“My strength is driving to the basket, giving direction, and getting around people while going up the court,” she said. “All you have to do is look and lean one way, but quickly change and go the opposite direction.

“I need to look out because once I “suck in the defense” over to me, than everybody else (my teammates) is open.”

A virtual year-round player — she has done time with a Mukilteo AAU feeder team, a Snohomish AAU team and the Oak Harbor Catz travel squad — Littlejohn wants to tweak some parts of her game. Little things that can change the outcome of a game.

“I definitely have to work on free throws, those can make or break games,” she said.

Away from the court, she enjoys PE and math, helping her mom, Dawn Hesselgrave, cook and art projects. She also does volunteer work with younger sister Kalia.

A big fan of the movie “Frozen” (“It is really funny”), she favors old school beats from the likes of KISS, AC/DC, Journey and The Scorpions.

“I rock like my mom!”

Like virtually all successful young athletes, she has benefited from a strong support group, not only for rides to practice but for inspiration along the way.

She credits step-brother Wiley Hesselgrave (“He has the best aggressive defense I have ever seen”), CMS teammate Lauren Rose (“Such a good friend”) and Loesch (“The one who inspired me to even play. He was always popping up three’s and it was so exciting to watch him play ball”) as her personal heroes.

The backbone of the family, however, remains her parents.

“My mom is the person who has, and does take me to all my practices over the years, and my dad (Mark Hesselgrave) has started helping with off-Island AAU practices these past two years,” Littlejohn said. “I love them so much for encouraging me to play sports.”

Read Full Post »

Waiting for a teammate to get open.

Lauren Rose had a hot hand early Monday, swishing three sweet first-half jumpers. (John Fisken photo)

Mia Littlejohn was on fire Monday.

Hitting shots from all angles, including a long three-point bomb from the left side one second after a horrified voice from the stands boomed out “No! She’s not ready for that!!” (spoiler: she was), the Coupeville Middle School eighth grader rained down 18 points against visiting Northshore.

That would have been enough to force overtime on her own.

But, with five other Wolves scoring and every player up and down the roster mixing hustle with grit, Coupeville ran away from a much bigger foe, pounding them 33-18.

In warmups, the visitors from Everett looked more dangerous than they turned out to be. With a roster that looked more like a high school squad, they cut an imposing figure.

Then Littlejohn, Lauren Rose and Co. quickly cut them down to size.

Combining for all 11 of their team’s first half points, with Rose scorching the net with three beautiful jumpers from the right side, the duo staked Coupeville to an 11-8 halftime lead.

Northshore, which had actually cut into the lead with the final two baskets in the first half, put a rebound back up and in and seemed to make it a game at 11-10.

Kyla Briscoe’s fingertips had other ideas, however.

Out-jumping a defender, Briscoe hauled down a rebound and spun right back to the hoop for a quick bucket, kicking off a game-busting 12-2 run.

The Wolves mixed inside plays from Sage Renninger with Littlejohn outrunning and outgunning Northshore defenders who found themselves two steps behind the speedy guard as she bolted from one end of the court to the other.

One second she was there, the next she was past them, flying at the hoop with single-minded intensity.

Setting her up was the three-headed rebounding machine of Renninger, Briscoe and Katrina McGranahan, who controlled the boards and kicked off numerous second chances.

McGranahan was a beast on defense as well, shutting down Northshore’s bigs and proudly using all of her five fouls to maximum effect before leaving the game to a well-deserved ovation from her bench.

Coupeville closed like pros, shredding the Northshore defense with long inbound passes flung by softball sensation McGranahan. Littlejohn and Rose consistently broke free to net the lobs, and a frustrated visiting squad had to frequently foul to stop breakaway layups.

The Wolves took advantage, netting six free throws as they slammed the door shut with a game-closing 10-1 surge.

Littlejohn (18) and Rose (6) led the scoring chart, while Renninger (3), McGranahan (2), Briscoe (2) and Payton Aparicio (2) rounded out the scorers.

7th grade varsity falls: One bad quarter killed the CMS 7th grade squad, as a 13-2 second quarter deficit was the difference in a 34-20 loss.

Coupeville’s best run came midway through the third quarter until late in the fourth, when they launched a 14-5 rally to trim the lead from 19 back to 10.

Kalia Littlejohn popped for six of her team-high 11 during the run, while Sarah Wright and Hope Lodell each banged home a pair of buckets.

Wright tallied five for the game and dominated on the boards, ripping rebounds free and refusing to surrender the ball once she had her hands anywhere near it.

Soaring in the fourth quarter, Lodell swished a sweet runner off of an inbounds play, netted an assist on a pass to a cutting Littlejohn, then put a rebound back up and in for her second basket.

Read Full Post »

Two of Coupeville's best -- eighth graders Katrina McGranahan (left) and Hope Lodell. (Justine McGranahan photo)

    Two of Coupeville’s better young athletes — eighth graders Katrina McGranahan (left) and Hope Lodell. (Justine McGranahan photo)

The benches will be full.

With 29 girls turning out for the first day of practice Tuesday — and the strong possibility more players will show up during the first week — the Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball programs look strong.

Strong enough that head coaches Bob Martin (7th grade) and Brett Smedley (8th) have received approval for an assistant coach to help out.

Martin was thrilled with the early numbers (“We’ve had a great turnout and Brett and I have seen progression”) and plans to push for the middle school players to help out their high school counterparts when the Coupeville Boys & Girls Club starts holding basketball clinics.

The rosters (as of now):

7th Graders:

Veronica Crownover
Tommy Cruz Herrera
Kendra Deshong
Madeline Hilkey
Hannah Ivanhoe
Estefanny Liquidano
Kalia Littlejohn
Katherine Morales
Lindsey Roberts
Ashlie Shank
Emma Smith
Sarah Wright

8th Graders:

Payton Aparicio
Lauren Bayne
Kyla Briscoe
Brisa Cruz Herrera
Hayley Dauphinais
Mia Littlejohn
Hope Lodell
Katrina McGranahan
Shelby Montoya
Abagail Parker
Sage Renninger
Addison Rasmussen
Lauren Rose
Brittany Sass-Powers
Ashley Smith
Kameryn St Onge
Allison Wenzel   

Read Full Post »

Mia Littlejohn devours the souls of her basketball opponents with the same ferocity she eats hot dogs. (Melissa Losey photo)

  Mia Littlejohn devours the souls of her basketball opponents with the same ferocity she eats hot dogs. (Melissa Losey photo)

Sisters Mia (right) and Kalia Littlejohn battle it out. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Sisters Mia (right) and Kalia Littlejohn battle it out. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

The most electrifying basketball player in Coupeville starts a new season today.

Hey, there are some very good hoops hotshots on the rosters of the local high school squads. But none of them play with the reckless abandon, the I-just-stepped-off-a-playground-in-Jersey style of Mia Littlejohn.

The Coupeville Middle School eighth-grader, younger sister of former Wolf star Zepher Loesch, is just one of many players expected to turn out when CMS kicks off its girls’ basketball season Tuesday.

But she gets the headline because she’s, well, a headliner.

Dribbling between her legs, weaving in and out of traffic, sometimes in control, sometimes not, she would have been worth the price of admission last season — if they charged admission for middle school sports.

But don’t worry. This is not 100% about one player.

As soon as CMS coaches Bob Martin (7th) and Brett Smedley (8th) have something resembling rosters, we will get all the girls’ names up here.

Until then, start counting down the days until the first tip-off.

The schedule:

Thursday, Feb. 13 Langley
Tuesday, Feb. 18 @ Granite Falls
Monday, Feb. 24 Northshore
Wednesday, Feb. 26 @ Sultan
Monday, March 3 @ Lakewood
Wednesday, March 5 King’s
Monday, March 10 Granite Falls
Wednesday, March 12 @ Langley

P.S. — Schedules have been known to change. For up-to-the-minute results, check http://coupeville.tandemcal.com/.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »