Team, above all.
The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad is clicking on all cylinders, winning on great nights and less-than-flawless nights, for one huge reason.
They believe in each other.
All ten Wolves know their role, and they all take turns stepping up, and that’s why CHS is rolling and firmly atop the 1A Olympic League.
Tuesday night Coupeville wasn’t perfect (“We didn’t have our A game today,” said Wolf coach David King), but it hardly mattered as they held off host Port Townsend 45-34.
The team’s fifth straight win, it lifted the Wolves to 7-2 overall, 2-0 in league play.
Combined with a win by the Coupeville JV earlier in the night, the Wolf girls’ hoops programs are now a flawless 22-0 in the short year-plus history of the league.
Port Townsend sits at 1-1 for the current season, while Chimacum and Klahowya share the basement at 0-1.
Facing off with a scrappy RedHawks squad, the Wolves faced several obstacles, with the largest being seeing reigning league MVP Makana Stone planted on the bench for several long stretches.
With the high-scoring senior saddled with foul trouble, other players stepped up, however.
Sophomore point guard Mia Littlejohn put together her best scoring show of the season, dropping in a team-high 15, including a pair of long-range treys.
While she was sizzling on offense, junior ball-hawk Lauren Grove latched on to Port Townsend’s top threat, Kaitlyn Meek, and frustrated the RedHawk ace most of the evening.
After hanging tough in the first, Coupeville blew the game open with a 19-point second quarter, then closed things out with a strong performance in the fourth.
With Stone and rebounding ace Tiffany Briscoe shackled by the refs, everyone else stepped up, whether it was scoring or clamping down on defense.
Skyler Lawrence and Kyla Briscoe both shined in their time on the floor, while fellow swing players Lauren Rose and Allison Wenzel also saw key minutes.
When she was allowed on the floor, Stone tossed in 12 to back Littlejohn, while also snagging 13 rebounds and rejecting three shots.
Kailey Kellner popped for nine (and made off with three steals), freshman Lindsey Roberts came up huge with five points and seven boards and Tiffany Briscoe banged home four and hauled in seven caroms.
While there’s always room for improvement, King has never turned down a win.
And he realizes how big it can be for each player to realize they are a crucial piece in the puzzle.
“The girls are starting to see that they can step up and make things happen and realize that they don’t always have to rely on Makana,” he said. “That’s going to go a long way as we continue to strive to get better as individuals and as a team.”
































































