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Posts Tagged ‘Mt. Baker’

Jordan Ford (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf senior Jordan Ford shoots a free throw in an earlier game. Take this photo, repeat it 82 times and you’ll know what Monday felt like. (John Fisken photo)

Well, that was one foul affair.

Literally.

Somewhere in there was some decent action and a lot of heart, but, by the time things were done Monday, all that anyone will probably remember of the Coupeville vs. Mt. Baker boys’ basketball game was the constant screech of a referee whistle.

By the time the three blind mice in black and white were done, they had whistled an astonishing 58 fouls, created a mind-boggling 83 free throw attempts and sapped the will of all involved.

And then some.

Mount Baker, which had jumped out to a 20-1 lead, then withstood a furious Wolf comeback, eventually departed with an 81-59 non-conference victory.

Coupeville, while absorbing a loss that dropped them to 1-3, showed great resolve in pulling itself out of a huge hole and fighting back into the game, even cutting the lead to single digits at one point.

The refs? The stink they left behind will take days to get out of the gym.

By the end, players from both teams were openly laughing at calls, united by disbelief.

After the game, as veteran coaches looked at the stats, all they could do was laugh, cry and sigh at the same time.

Was there any basketball actually played?

A little, but you would get three seconds of ball for every whistle, it seemed.

Coupeville, which started with nine players (starter Hunter Smith is out with a back injury), had six at the end — and four of those six were sitting on four fouls, a whistle away from being bounced.

Ryan Griggs and Gabe Wynn had already fouled out, while Baker had three guys disqualified, and the Wolves also lost Dante Mitchell to a knee injury.

The real MVP was ace stat keeper June Mazdra, who stayed on top of everything as the Wolves went 30 of 47 at the line and Baker swished 20 of 36.

While a lot of really questionable calls went against Coupeville, they actually committed less fouls, with the Mountaineers “winning” that category 31-27.

The game played around the fouls, you ask?

It started badly. Really badly. Then got a lot better before sputtering out a bit at the end.

Mount Baker rolled in with a much taller team, led by 6-foot-10 Timothy Soares, and Coupeville came out tentative, slow and overwhelmed.

Down 20-1 after a series of steals and quick buckets stung them, the Wolves were put on notice by coach Anthony Smith, who could be heard repeatedly telling them “You’re playing scared!!”

Coming out of that timeout, a flame was lit under their rears, and they responded, despite having to play much of the first half without leading scorer Wiley Hesselgrave, who was stuck on the bench with foul trouble.

Risen Johnson exploded for a quick steal and pull-up jumper, Ryan Griggs banged home seven points in the final three minutes of the quarter and the Wolves became a different team.

In between the non-stop fouls, they cut the lead all the way back to eight at one point, and outscored Baker 45-36 from the mid-point of the first quarter to the end of the third quarter.

They did it by getting mad and aggressive, and the Wolves blunted the height advantage during that stretch by fighting like wild beasts unleashed.

Front court mashers Griggs and Jordan Ford, who both gave away more than a few inches to their rivals, crashed the boards with a cold fury, going right back up, and sometimes through, their foes.

Both showed a knack for converting at the free throw stripe (Ford dropped in nine, while Griggs netted six), and Johnson, who measures in at five-foot-six, brought the fans to their feet when he blocked a shot by a player eight inches taller.

With Hesselgrave back in the game — he netted eight in the third, including a pair of three-point bombs — the Wolves were on the charge headed into the fourth.

Then the refs, feeling left out and lonely since they had gone 17 seconds without calling a foul, brought a screeching halt to any mild momentum that might have been building up.

What could have been an exciting finale turned into an interminable conga line to the charity stripe, with Baker netting half of their free throws in the final quarter.

With the lead stretched back out, and the refs still calling fouls, Ford provided a nice final punch, stealing the ball and barreling into the paint like a bull running through the streets of Pamplona.

Knocking down three scrambling defenders in one move, he successfully drew a foul, stopping the clock with 2.1 seconds to play.

Cause the only way this game could possibly end was with a pair of free throws.

After that, all that was left was for Mazdra to get carpal tunnel from adding everything up.

Johnson paced the Wolves with 16, while Ford dropped a season-high 13 and Hesselgrave netted 12, all in the second half.

Griggs banged home eight before over-zealous refs KO’d him, DeAndre Mitchell tossed in four and Wynn, Jared Helmstadter and Desmond Bell each added a basket.

JV hurt by height:

Luke Merriman went off for 14, including four three-point balls, but the young Wolves couldn’t overcome a Baker JV squad that featured players who were 6-foot-9 and 6-foot-7.

Gabe Eck added six, Ariah Bepler and Andre Avila popped for two apiece and Ty Eck slipped a free throw through the twine in a 62-25 loss.

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Kailey Kellner scored a team-high 11 Monday in her team's loss. (John Fisken photo)

Kailey Kellner had a deadly shooting touch Monday, scoring a team-high 11. (John Fisken photo)

There were huge chunks of the game that felt like a win.

And while that wasn’t reflected on the scoreboard — where the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team fell 32-17 to visiting Mt. Baker Monday to drop to 2-2 — it doesn’t make it any less true.

If you were looking, there were major positives.

Wolf sophomore Kailey Kellner continues to grow into a team leader, scoring all her team’s points until midway through the third.

Refusing to bend to aggressive Mountaineer defenders, she pounded the ball inside, then popped outside and drilled long-distance jumpers on her way to an 11-point performance.

Fellow sophomore and feisty spark-plug Lauren Grove made her presence felt when she elevated and rejected a Mt. Baker shot while on the run.

Coming from behind the shooter while zooming like the track star she is, Grove got nothing but ball, a fact everyone but the ref acknowledged.

Keeping alive a night-long trend, he whistled her for a foul. Then looked guilty.

With a non-stop series of tweets, it looked like the Wolves would lose most of their seven players before halftime, yet somehow avoided that fate.

In a bit of a surprise, the refs later swallowed their whistles and only one player (Kellner) fouled out, and not until the game’s final minute.

That came during Coupeville’s best defensive stand.

Trailing 28-12 entering the fourth, the Wolves refused to crumple, holding Baker scoreless for almost six full minutes.

With Kellner, Grove, Kyla Briscoe, Tiffany Briscoe, Brisa Herrera and (especially) Allison Wenzel getting chippy and fighting for loose balls, Mattea Miller capped the stand with a superb sacrifice.

Frantically back-pedaling to get ahead of a Mountaineer fast break, she snapped into position at the last possible second, held her ground and got leveled by an out-of-control dribbler to successfully draw the charge.

The collision rocked her off her feet but as the ref whistled an offensive foul, Miller let a smile smile play on her lips. But just for a second and then she was all business again, as usual.

More proof that, even in a loss, the Wolf young guns are a team to be respected.

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Freshman Mia Littlejohn popped for a varsity career-high nine points Monday. (John Fisken photo)

  Freshman Mia Littlejohn popped for a varsity career-high nine points Monday. (John Fisken photo)

The two-woman game worked pretty well for Mt. Baker.

With Emily Brandland dropping 24 and Emily Yost adding 22, the Mountaineer duo outscored host Coupeville by themselves Monday night.

Toss in a few points from the supporting cast and superb control of the game by speedy point guard Kylee Engholm and what had been a deadlocked girls’ basketball game at the half turned into a semi-rout by the end, with Mt. Baker strolling back to the bus with a 59-44 win.

The non-conference loss dropped the Wolf girls to 2-2.

Coupeville will have three days of practice to right their ship before traveling to Klahowya (0-3) Friday night for their first 1A Olympic League game.

The Wolves looked impressive at times in the first half, using a 14-5 run in the second quarter (in which seven different players scored a bucket) to take a 21-17 lead.

After Mt. Baker surged back into the lead, Coupeville forced a 23-23 deadlock by barely beating the halftime buzzer.

Monica Vidoni took a pass in the paint, drew defenders to her and dumped the ball backwards at the last second to teammate Julia Myers, who came flying up the gut for a gorgeous layup.

The play caught the Mountaineers by surprise and brought the vocal local fans to their feet.

Unfortunately, the euphoria didn’t last long once the second half kicked off.

After trading buckets to kick the third quarter off, the two teams suddenly veered in opposite directions.

Mt. Baker started running the same plays over and over, successfully, while Coupeville fell off the edge of a cliff with a deadly mix of turnovers, shots that popped back out or dropped off the rim and a serious lack of rebounding.

An 11-2 third-quarter run by the visitors put a hurtin’ on the Wolves.

When they responded with back-to-back buckets from Kacie Kiel and Mia Littlejohn, the Mountaineers blunted the run with a successful three-pointer that was launched one step away from having the shooter out in the parking lot.

CHS, powered by Wynter Thorne, who popped for six in the fourth, tried repeatedly to cut Baker’s lead.

It didn’t work, however, as the closest the Wolves would get was eight, and the Mountaineers responded to that with a game closing 7-0 spurt of their own.

Stone paced Coupeville with 11, while plucky freshman Littlejohn hit for a varsity career-high nine.

Thorne banked in eight, the trio of Vidoni, Kiel and Myers knocked down four apiece while Hailey Hammer and McKenzie Bailey rounded out the scoring attack with a bucket each.

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Kacie Kiel and her Wolf teammates are gearing up for a playoff run. (John Fisken photo)

Kacie Kiel and her Wolf teammates are gearing up for a playoff run. (John Fisken photo)

The road to a 1A state title starts in Deming.

Now, of course, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team (8-10) still has two regular season games to play.

The Wolves host Granite Falls Friday, then travel to Everett to play King’s Saturday in their final league game as a member of the 1A/2A Cascade Conference.

But, with a district playoff berth stamped, CHS can also look ahead a bit at where and when they will play their postseason action.

With the bracket for District 1’s eight-team tourney finalized, Coupeville is locked in as the #2 seed out of the Cascade Conference, and #5 overall.

That means the Wolves will start the double-elimination tourney in Deming Tuesday, Feb. 11, facing off with the Northwest Conference’s #3 team, Mount Baker.

The Mountaineers are 10-9 and close out their regular season against Bellingham Friday.

Win Tuesday, and the Wolves would likely play Lynden Christian (16-3), the #1 overall seed, in the semifinals Thursday, Feb. 13. If they did, they would hit the road again, as the higher seed hosts.

If it loses, however, Coupeville’s second game could be at home. Barring a major upset, Meridian (4-15), the #8 seed, would travel to Whidbey Island for that game, also on Feb. 13.

The Wolves have already hosted, and beaten, the Trojans, bouncing them 46-34 way back on Dec. 7.

Depending on how the tourney plays out, Coupeville could also host a playoff game Friday, Feb. 14, but, most of all, just wants to be still playing Saturday, Feb. 15, when the district championship and third-place games tip-off at Mountlake Terrace High School.

The top four finishers all claim spots at tri-districts, which runs Feb. 18-22. After that are regionals and then the state tourney.

The district bracket:

http://www.wiaadistrict1.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=1&page=1&school=0&sport=12&tournament_id=1088

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