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Posts Tagged ‘milestones’

Cory Whitmore preaches patience. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

He’s #1 with a spike.

With softball guru Kevin McGranahan’s departure, volleyball wizard Cory Whitmore is now the winningest active coach at Coupeville High School.

Even with the 2020 season cut in half by the pandemic, the court ace boasts an 88-43 mark during his time at CHS, with trips to the state tourney in 2017 and 2023.

Boys’ basketball head man Brad Sherman, who now doubles as the school’s athletic director, is #2 with 70 wins and counting.

After that it drops down to baseball coach Steve Hilborn and girls’ basketball leader Megan Richter, at 28 and 26 respectively.

Boys’ soccer top dog Robert Wood (16) and football signal caller Bennett Richter (9) are the only other active CHS coaches with victories.

McGranahan won 111 games before exiting this summer.

This will be the ninth season at the helm of the Wolf spiker program for Whitmore, who has posted a winning mark in each campaign.

His tally:

2016: 11-6
2017: 13-5
2018: 11-5
2019: 14-5
2020: 6-3
2021: 11-6
2022: 10-6
2023: 12-7

Not counting tournaments, Coupeville is slated to play 14 regular season matches, then hopes to have a long postseason run.

That leaves open a very real possibility Whitmore could crack triple-digit wins this fall, putting a little distance between himself and Sherman before basketball gears back up in the winter.

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Logan Downes lines up a free throw during his junior season. (Andrew Williams photo)

It’s the gold standard.

Across 107 seasons of Coupeville High School basketball, we’ve documented 762 different players — 416 boys and 246 girls — scoring in a varsity game.

Until today, only nine had topped the 1,000-point barrier.

Now, it’s double digits for the four-digit club.

Wolf senior Logan Downes became the sixth CHS boy, and tenth player overall in school history, to achieve hoops immortality, doing so Friday on a slash to the hoop as time ran down in the first quarter of a 72-30 rout at Darrington.

The silky sniper finished with 16 points in limited minutes and sits at 227 with half his senior season left to play.

The Wolves, now 8-2 on the current campaign, have 10 regular-season games still on the schedule (assuming a postponed South Whidbey clash is reinstated), then hopefully a long playoff run.

The look of a freshman who’s coming for all the records. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Downes scored 52 points as a freshman during a Covid-shortened season, then jumped to 172 the next year, helping CHS win a league title and advance to state.

As a junior, he torched the nets for 554 points, the second-best single-season performance in school history, trailing just Jeff Stone’s 644 in 1969-1970.

Downes is averaging 22.7 a night as a senior.

 

The CHS 1,000-point club:

Brianne King — 1,549
Novi Barron — 1,270
Makana Stone — 1,158
Jeff Stone — 1,137
Mike Bagby — 1,137
Randy Keefe — 1,088
Megan Smith — 1,042
Mike Criscoula — 1,031
Jeff Rhubottom — 1,012
Logan Downes — 1,005 and counting

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Through highs, lows, and a t-shirt — 11 years later the blog is still going.

Somehow, it keeps rolling along.

I’ve tried to quit a few times, gone through stretches where I was angry at the world, and other stretches where I was singing kumbaya.

And here we are at the crack o’ dawn on Aug. 15, 2023, a full 11 years since Coupeville Sports first appeared on the internet.

This is story #10,355, while story #1, published Aug. 15, 2012, was titled “Hark! Fall sports approach!!!”

Four exclamation points in the headline, no photo on the story, and names were not yet in bold.

Little did I know at the time that the Wolf freshmen just beginning their first high school practices would turn out to form one of the most-successful classes in the history of this blog.

The CHS Class of 2016, with Makana Stone, Lathom Kelley, Sylvia Hurlburt, Wiley Hesselgrave, and many more, can stand with any, and came of age as Coupeville Sports “matured.”

What began as an angry response to the Coupeville Examiner being sold to the Evil Empire (and hundreds of my bylined stories vanishing) over time became something more positive.

Most days.

I am proud that Coupeville Sports played a major role in the creation of the Wall of Fame in the CHS gym and sparked the 101-year anniversary for CHS boys’ basketball, which brought countless hoops legends back to their hometown.

Beloved coach Bob Barker stepping through the door, clad in the clothes he wore while guiding the Wolves to the program’s biggest success in the early ’70s, is my “Elvis is in the building” moment.

But I’ve also stumbled more than once.

One which bothers me to this day was when CHS soccer coach Gary Manker unexpectedly passed away.

I rushed to get the news out, and, in doing so, stepped on the feelings of his family, taking away their chance to deal with the loss in private.

As someone who spent one summer attending back-to-back-to-back funerals for his dad, grandmother, and great aunt, I should have been more considerate.

While I have been blessed to be able to use photos from countless camera clicking members of Wolf Nation, Coupeville Sports is essentially a one-man operation.

I write it, I edit it, I choose what to run, and what not to run.

Sometimes I’m right, and sometimes I’m wrong. Every day is a new chance to soar, or to screw it all up.

There are more photos these days, and less exclamation points, than in the early moments of the blog, though the background layout largely remains the same in 2023 as it was in 2012.

That’s because I think my theme, while probably a bit outdated — WordPress retired it years ago, but I’m nothing if not stubborn — is fairly clean.

It offers an easy-to-read look with no pop-up ads cluttering things, which I detest.

And, 11 years and 10,355 articles later, it’s as free to read today as it was in its infancy.

Web sites which have pay walls can bite my pale white rump.

Of course, not charging a fee is a big part of why I don’t have an indoor/outdoor swimming pool with a waterfall in the middle connecting the two halves.

But I get by, thanks to the goodwill of the community.

If you want to support me typing on the shores of Penn Cove at 2:00 AM on a computer powered by a hamster running on a treadmill, there are several ways.

 

You can use PayPal:

https://paypal.me/DavidSvien?country.x=US&locale.x=en_US

 

You can Venmo me under @David-Svien at:

https://account.venmo.com/

 

You can snail mail me at 165 Sherman, Coupeville, WA, 98239 or cram money (or blueberries) into my hands, mobster-style, at a Wolf game.

Hopefully the blueberries are still inside a plastic container, and not just a hot mess of sticky sort-of jam…

Or you can just keep reading for free, for as long as this thing keeps going.

You do you, and I’ll keep pounding away on the keyboard. It’s (mostly) worked so far.

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CHS volleyball coach Cory Whitmore directs practice. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One second, you’re the new guy. The next, you’re the grizzled vet.

Well, calling Coupeville High School volleyball coach Cory Whitmore a “grizzled vet” might be a bit extreme — the man is still pretty young.

But while the Wolf guru is only in his (very early) 30’s, he’s kicking off his seventh year at the helm of the CHS spiker program.

And he’s having quite a run.

The former three-sport high school athlete has posted six consecutive winning seasons, the longest active streak for a Coupeville coach.

Whitmore is one up on Wolf softball coach Kevin McGranahan, who has an ongoing five-year run of success.

Entering the 2022 season, CHS volleyball has recorded double-digit wins in five of the past six seasons, with only the pandemic throwing a wrench into things when the 2020 campaign was cut to just nine matches.

Whitmore’s run of success, which includes taking the 2017 squad to the state tourney:

2016: 11-6
2017: 13-5
2018: 11-5
2019: 14-5
2020: 6-3
2021: 11-6

That puts him at 66-30, which means he’s got some milestones coming up fast.

Barring any unforeseen suspensions for bouncing a clipboard off of an official’s noggin, Whitmore will hit 100 matches Sept. 13, when the Wolves travel to Bothell to face Cedar Park Christian.

Not counting appearances at tournaments — which are their own thing — Coupeville has 15 matches on the regular-season schedule.

Based on prior success, that should mean win #75 has a high probability of arriving this season as well.

Tell Whitmore any of this, however, and he’ll just quietly smile and deftly change the focus of the conversation back onto his players.

He’s built a strong program by focusing on team goals and is not one to toot his own horn.

Which is why I’m here to be Whitmore’s shameless hype man — I’ll go buy one of those horns that sounds like a semi-truck goin’ off, if necessary.

Consider yourself warned.

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Makana Stone lines up the free throw that would result in her 1,000th career point. (John Fisken photo)

   Makana Stone lines up the free throw that would result in her 1,000th career point. (John Fisken photo)

Makana Stone made history, then she and her teammates took care of business.

Throwing down a season-high 28 points Tuesday, including the 1,000th point of her stellar prep hoop career, the Coupeville High School senior lit the fire that launched the Wolves to a 48-34 thrashing of visiting Chimacum.

The conference victory lifted Coupeville to 11-4 overall, 5-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

With three of the league’s four teams making it to the postseason, the Wolves officially clinched a playoff spot.

It also moved them one victory away from clinching back-to-back league titles.

They have a three game lead on Port Townsend (2-3) and Klahowya (2-3) with four to play, while Chimacum drops into the cellar at 1-4.

Win Friday night on the road at Klahowya and Coupeville would be four up on the Eagles with three to play.

Even if Port Townsend beats Chimacum that night to get to 3-3, if the Wolves win, they would be three up on the RedHawks with three to play — and they own the tiebreaker.

Tuesday, the Wolves hit the floor amped up.

Backed by an enuthisastic audience, Stone, who needed 22 to crack the 1,000 point barrier, threw  down the game’s first six points and they came on a variety of wicked moves.

First she backed her defender down in the paint, then twirled and banked home a jumper.

Next came a little runner, then she pilfered the ball and beat the crowd all the way down the floor for an emphatic lay-in.

The steal was important, as well, as she needed four to break 200 for her career, to go with the 800+ rebounds she had already snagged.

She finished with seven pickpocket jobs, more than hitting her target.

With Stone dominating — she also capped the first quarter by slashing to the basket and taking a gorgeous entry pass from Kyla Briscoe for another layup — Coupeville had Chimacum on its heels.

Add Mia Littlejohn and Kailey Kellner launching three-balls, and everywhere the Cowboys looked, someone in red and white was throwing down a basket.

Coupeville used a 16-0 run to take a narrow 9-7 lead and pad it out to 25-7, essentially ending the game midway through the second quarter.

Stone had 19 by the halftime break, and, when she wasn’t scoring, she was returning the favor to Briscoe, feeding the Wolf sophomore with her own perfect set-up for a layup.

“I feel like we came out focused and with energy tonight,” said Coupeville coach David King. “Makana set the tone early and often in the first half.

“I was very happy with the focus we had in the first half,” he added. “We moved the ball well and got open shots throughout. We also rebounded better than our previous two games. So that’s a positive.”

The Wolves were stung a bit by their go-go-go style, picking up more fouls than King might have liked to have seen.

“The energy we had was a blessing but also got us in trouble on the defensive end,” he said.

The second half was more of an even battle, as the Cowboys hung around a bit thanks to Coupeville playing a bit wild and loose.

“For some reason offensively in the second half we went away from what was working for us,” King said. “We allowed Chimacum to stay in the game with fouls and turnovers.

“We need to shore up our defense and minimize the turnovers.”

Still, Coupeville thoroughly controlled the boards, winning that battle 46-21.

“Rebounding was outstanding. Everyone contributed,” King said. “Lauren Grove did a great job diving in and picking up some big offensive rebounds, and Lindsey (Roberts) and Kailey got some timely rebounds.

The moment everyone had been waiting for came at the 2:25 mark of the third quarter.

Stone, laser-focused on the game and (seemingly) oblivious to her loud ‘n proud fan section, led by former teammate Kacie Kiel, dropped in a free-throw to crack four digits.

In a nice twist, the moment was called live by PA announcer Randy King, whose daughter Brianne also topped the 1,000 point mark during her days as a Wolf hoops star.

After letting Chimacum slide back within 10 early in the fourth, Coupeville put the game on ice with an 8-0 run that stretched the lead out to 48-30.

One of those buckets came on a soft, arcing jumper from Skyler Lawrence, a swing player who made a big impact in her fourth quarter cameo.

On the very next play down the floor, Lawrence whipped a pass between two defenders, dropping the ball right on to the fingertips of Allison Wenzel, her partner in crime on the Wolf bench.

Unfortunately, a Chimacum finger poked the ball at just the wrong moment, spoiling Wenzel’s layup attempt.

As the duo sprinted back on defense, they exchanged smiles and a little light ribbing.

Stone added 16 rebounds and two blocks to go with her 28 points, while Littlejohn put together an eight point, eight rebound, four assist evening.

Kellner drained six, snatched seven boards and dealt out three assists while Roberts, Lawrence and Kyla Briscoe rounded out the scoring with a bucket apiece.

Roberts snagged six rebounds, with Grove and Tiffany Briscoe hauling down four each. Grove and Kyla Briscoe each had two assists.

As Coupeville moves forward, King knows his team, which has never lost in league play (14-0 over the past two seasons) remains the hunted.

“We realize that the other other three teams are coming for us every game,” he said. “That means we have to be at the top of our game; tonight we did that.

“We did a lot of things well tonight.”

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