Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Mia Littlejohn’

Hunter Downes

   Junior Hunter Downes is #5 on the scoring chart for the Wolf boys. (John Fisken photos)

Mikayla Elfrank

   Mikayla Elfrank, here tracking down a runaway ball, is the #3 scoring threat for the CHS girls team.

History seems to be repeating itself.

While we’re only a few games into the season, the Coupeville girls and Chimacum boys, both two-time defending champs, sit atop the current 1A Olympic League basketball standings.

Of course, with all four teams having seven or eight league games left on their schedule, anything is still possible.

Tuesday night brings Coupeville vs. Klahowya and Port Townsend vs. Chimacum, girls and boys, another chapter in the still-to-be-written story of the hoops season.

Here’s where things stand through Monday:

Olympic League girls basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 1-0 3-2
Port Townsend 1-0 2-1
Chimacum 0-1 3-2
Klahowya 0-1 2-2

Olympic League boys basketball:

School League Overall
Chimacum 1-0 1-4
Port Townsend 1-0 2-0
Klahowya 1-1 2-4
COUPEVILLE 0-2 0-5

And scoring stats for Coupeville’s varsity players:

Girls:

Mia Littlejohn – 40
Kailey Kellner – 36
Mikayla Elfrank – 29
Lauren Rose – 18
Lindsey Roberts – 15
Tiffany Briscoe – 12
Kalia Littlejohn – 7
Lauren Grove – 6
Allison Wenzel – 2
Sarah Wright – 2
Kyla Briscoe
Charlotte Langille

Boys:

Hunter Smith – 65
Gabe Wynn – 41
Brian Shank – 33
Ethan Spark – 24
Hunter Downes – 6
Jered Brown – 5
Steven Cope – 4
Ariah Bepler – 3
Cameron Toomey-Stout – 3
Joey Lippo – 2
Kyle Rockwell

Read Full Post »

Lauren Rose (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose hit a long trey Saturday night, one of the highlights in a tough loss to Island rival South Whidbey. (John Fisken photo)

And you will know South Whidbey by the trail of trash it leaves behind.

The Falcon varsity girls basketball players are tall, strong, veteran players, very consistent in running their offense, and completely, utterly incapable of picking up after themselves.

Those are the two conclusions one could draw after watching them pick apart host Coupeville 43-29 Saturday, and then watching them depart the gym leaving a never-ending pile of discarded drink bottles all over the CHS gym floor.

At least when King’s or ATM smack someone around, their players stop to throw their own trash away on the way out the door.

So, let’s give South Whidbey credit for their on-court performance, and arch an eyebrow at their lack of social graces.

The Falcons were certainly consistent in the flow of the game, hammering the ball inside to their post players, then draining treys if they couldn’t get an easy bucket.

Catching Coupeville on a night when a lot wasn’t clicking for the Wolves, South Whidbey dominated the first half, then coasted home after the break for the non-conference win.

Wolf point guard Mia Littlejohn got CHS on the board first, muscling her way into the paint before banking a runner off the glass, but then the Falcons took over.

Three separate three-balls, one from the right side, one from the left, and one from the top, sparked a 14-2 tear and put Coupeville on its heels.

Unable to put together back-to-back scores until a late stand in the fourth quarter, the Wolves had little answer for their visitors in the first half and trailed 25-11 at the break.

The second half was a little different story, as the two squads battled even, but CHS couldn’t get over the hump.

Lauren Rose nailed a very long trey late in the third to get Coupeville within 12, but South Whidbey rolled off nine straight points to end one quarter and begin the next, building its biggest lead of the night.

The Wolves, who fought hard all night — CHS coach David King praised the grit and hustle of Allison Wenzel and Tiffany Briscoe for diving for loose balls and battling for rebounds — finally put together a run in the game’s final five minutes.

With four different players scoring, the Wolves closed the night on an 11-4 run.

Mikayla Elfrank capped things by turning a pair of steals into breakaway buckets against her former school.

Mia Littlejohn paced the Wolves with 10 points, while Lindsey Roberts (4), Elfrank (4), Kalia Littlejohn (3), Rose (3), Kailey Kellner (2), Lauren Grove (2) and Sarah Wright (1) also scored.

Charlotte Langille and Kyle Briscoe also saw floor time for Coupeville.

The Wolves, now 3-2 on the season, are scheduled to play their next six games on the road, starting with a 1A Olympic League game at Klahowya Tuesday.

Read Full Post »

Mia Littlejohn, seen here during fall ball, had a team-high 13 Wednesday in Coupeville's win. (John Fisken photo)

   Mia Littlejohn, seen here during fall ball, had a team-high 13 points Wednesday in Coupeville’s win. (John Fisken photo)

A win is a beautiful thing.

Whether it’s by one point or 50 points, you put a W in the book, especially at home, and any little issues get swept to the side in the soft afterglow.

Case in point, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad, which wasn’t perfect all game Wednesday, but was pretty close when it mattered.

Holding visiting Chimacum to just a single field goal over the final 12-minutes-plus, the Wolves broke open a tie game and ran away with a 41-28 victory in the 1A Olympic League opener for both schools.

The win, the third straight for Coupeville, lifts it to 3-1 overall, 1-0 in league play.

The Wolves also kept alive the second-longest winning streak in league history, improving to 19-0 in conference games dating back to the Olympic League’s debut in 2014.

Only Klahowya girls’ soccer has a longer active streak, having gone 20-0 over three complete fall seasons.

Coupeville, which trailed by five points midway through the second quarter, put the game on ice by thoroughly dominating the final quarter and a half.

Mikayla Elfrank broke a 22-22 tie when she slipped a pair of free throws through the twines with a little over four minutes left in the third, and then the Wolf defense got rabid.

Holding Chimacum without a field goal until a meaningless layup in the final 10 seconds of the game, CHS closed the game on a 19-6 tear, with five Wolves sharing the scoring load.

Tiffany Briscoe knocked down two more shots from the charity stripe, before Elfrank turned a mid-air steal into a breakaway bucket to close the third.

After that, the fourth was a prime example of five players meshing as one, as the Wolves forced a string of turnovers and turned them into easy buckets.

Lauren Grove made off with back-to-back steals, dishing to Lauren Rose and Elfrank for buckets, then was instantly rewarded for her team-first approach.

On the next play back court mate Mia Littlejohn bull-rushed a Chimacum ball-handler, picked her pocket, hip-checked the Cowboy into the third row of seats and flung a note-perfect pass to Grove for a breakaway lay-in of her own.

The play put a decisive stamp on the game, set off the Wolf bench into hysterics and capped a stellar night for Littlejohn.

The junior point guard tossed in a game-high 13, including three treys, made off with four steals, snatched two rebounds and handed out two assists.

Her three-ball timing was nearly flawless, with the first one banking off the backboard, the middle one tying the game heading into halftime and the final bomb pushing the lead into double digits.

Coupeville had opened the game strongly, hitting its first three shots en route to an early 7-2 lead.

Kailey Kellner drained a three-ball from the right corner on the game’s first play, before Briscoe aggressively went to the basket for back-to-back buckets off of set-ups from Littlejohn.

Then the Wolves hit their only down stretch of the night, as suddenly nothing would stay in the basket.

Balls rolled around, popped out and took weird spins, while Chimacum used a 10-0 surge to take its biggest lead of the game.

A trey from Littlejohn and a put-back off of a rebound by Kellner got the Wolves back on track, but they needed another three-ball right before the break to tie things up at 18-18 heading to the locker room.

While in there, CHS coach David King has a discussion with his team about its defensive effort and whatever he said, things clicked.

“We had a lot better energy level in the second half,” King said.

A switch from a zone to a man-to-man defense greatly frustrated Chimacum, and pesky Wolf defenders like Kyla Briscoe and Kalia Littlejohn helped the starters drive the Cowboy ball-handers batty.

When they weren’t getting actual steals, the Wolves forced several turnovers along the sideline as Chimacum players frequently panicked when double-teamed.

Coupeville spread its offense among six players, with Mia Littlejohn’s 13 backed by nine from Kellner and six apiece from Elfrank and Tiffany Briscoe.

Rose knocked down five and Grove added a bucket to round out the scoring.

Kellner snatched a team-high eight rebounds, while Elfrank nabbed six. Grove had four assists to top the team.

Coupeville’s JV team sat out the night, as Chimacum was unable to field a second squad thanks to injuries and ineligible players.

Read Full Post »

Mia Littlejohn (John Fisken photos)

   Wolf junior Mia Littlejohn is sharing 1A Olympic League girls soccer MVP honors. (John Fisken photo)

Sage Renninger

Sage Renninger flashes her All-Conference award. (Sherry Roberts photos)

Lindsey Roberts (left) and Lauren Grove.

Lindsey Roberts (left) and Lauren Grove share their moment.

Share and share alike.

After much back-and-forth, 1A Olympic League girls soccer coaches decided to honor Coupeville junior Mia Littlejohn and Klahowya senior Emily Peters as co-MVP’s.

Littlejohn scorched the nets for a school-record 27 goals this season, lifting the Wolves to their first winning season in program history.

The MVP award marks the second time she’s been honored by the league, as she was a First-Team selection as a sophomore.

Peters, who will be playing soccer on scholarship at the University of Montana next year, paced Klahowya to its third-straight league title and its eighth consecutive trip to state.

The Eagles fell in the first round to eventual state champ Overlake.

Three other Coupeville players were also named to the All-Conference team.

It was the first selection for sophomore defender Lindsey Roberts, junior midfielder Sage Renninger and senior goaltender Lauren Grove.

Read Full Post »

Lauren Grove is one of four seniors on the CHS girls' hoops squad. (John Fisken photos)

   Lauren Grove is one of four seniors on the CHS girls’ basketball squad. (John Fisken photos)

9 of 11

Of the 11 girls who went to state last year, nine return this season.

Kailey Kellner

Kailey Kellner is Coupeville’s top returning scorer.

The bigger the success, the bigger the target on your back.

It’s a fact Coupeville High School girls’ basketball coach David King fully embraces.

“This year games will be battles every time teams meet,” he said. “It’s going to come down to who can execute and play their game.”

The Wolves are the undisputed queens of the 1A Olympic League, having gone a perfect 18-0 in varsity games on their way to back-to-back league titles.

Last year, they went a step further, knocking off Seattle Christian in a playoff game and advancing to the regional round of the state tourney for the first time in a decade.

But, with that success, and the departure of two-time league MVP Makana Stone, who piled up 1000+ points and rebounds during her stellar four-year run, teams will be gunning for Coupeville every night.

“At the beginning of the season we will need to find our way and continue to find our identity as a team without Makana,” King said. “The players have been working very hard since last season, realizing they are talented and can be a very good team.

“Now with the success and experience of last year, along with the success of the fall teams, we are ready to play as one and continue that success.”

While Stone’s graduation leaves a huge hole, she was last year’s only senior, allowing the Wolves to enter this season with considerable depth.

Nine of the 11 players who were on the roster for their state game against Cashmere return (senior Skyler Lawrence has shifted to being a team manager as she deals with a shoulder injury) and the Wolves have picked up three valuable newcomers.

Junior wing Mikayla Elfrank, sophomore point guard Kalia Littlejohn and senior post Charlotte Langille, a newcomer to CHS, are all back on the court after taking last season off.

They’ll vie for playing time with returning seniors Kailey Kellner, Lauren Grove and Tiffany Briscoe, juniors Mia Littlejohn, Lauren Rose, Kyla Briscoe and Allison Wenzel and sophomores Lindsey Roberts and Sarah Wright.

Kellner (147 points) and Mia Littlejohn (146) were Coupeville’s #2 and #3 scorers during last year’s 16-6 run.

While he doesn’t necessarily expect anyone on this season’s squad to match the 427 points Stone threw down as a senior, King feels secure that he can get contributions from everyone on the roster.

“From top to bottom the drop off, if any, will be very minimal to who starts or who comes off the bench,” he said. “We have 7-9 players that could legitimately be a starter.

“We are athletic and have both speed and quickness,” King added. “We are competitive and understand to be successful it’s team ball over ‘me’ ball.”

As always, the round-ball guru is preaching hard work on defense will pay off with easier opportunities on offense.

“We have been a good defensive team over the years,” King said “This year we are looking to increase our effort and intensity to a higher level.

“It all starts with a willingness to buy into the defensive end and we have that.”

Coupeville has also been hard at work on its shooting, with 16 of its 24 players attending a recent clinic run by King’s High School coach Dan Taylor.

“We have already seen an improvement and confidence in our shooting drills,” King said. “It was good to have the younger players there from middle school as well.”

The Wolves have also been working on gaining an ability to break pressure defenses, an important factor if the program wants to continue its recent upward trend.

“Maintaining our composure is something we are shooting for,” King said. “When we play our game and dictate the pace, we play confident and overall have a better game.”

Goal #1 is to defend the league title.

To do so, they’ll have to get past Port Townsend, Klahowya and Chimacum, all of which should be as strong or stronger than last season.

After that, the Wolves want to make another run at districts and return to state, but this time come away victorious, reigniting the success the program had at the big dance in the early-to-mid 2000s.

King talked with assistant coach (and wife) Amy in the off-season and the duo set up a plan to help both the Wolf players and themselves continue their ascent.

“We have, in the past, evaluated ourselves as coaches,” David King said. “But this summer we took a closer look at who we are and what adjustments we needed to make to take the next step forward in helping our players and program.

“What we are asking of the players, I am asking of myself and of Amy as coaches.

“Each one of us, players and coaches, need to compete each day and be willing to put the team first,” he added. “If we do that, it is going to be a successful season.”

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »