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Posts Tagged ‘Nick Laska’

Sweet treats for the winners. (Erin Coxsey photos)

It was some early March Madness.

Entering play as the #5 seed Saturday, Coupeville shocked the world, claiming the title at the Skagit Parks and Rec 8th grade SWISH boys’ basketball tourney.

After shredding South Whidbey, the Wolves took out the top two teams back-to-back.

Toppling #1 Snohomish in the semifinals sent it to the championship game, where Coupeville walloped #2 Conway by double-digits.

Kings of the gym.

The Wolves are coached by John Weston and Dustin Van Velkinburgh and feature six Coupeville players and two Oak Harbor netters.

The roster includes Carson Grove, Nick Laska, Khanor Jump, Chayse Van Velkinburgh, Nathan Niewald, Trenton Thule, Elijah Weston, and Bennet Esvelt.

Bringing home the trophy.

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Ready to protect home court advantage. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The future of Coupeville boys’ basketball is ready for its closeup.

The pics above and below, which come to us courtesy John Fisken, capture Wolf SWISH players on the same court where they hope to excel one day as high school hardwood heroes.

It’s a dynasty being built, one bucket at a time.

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Nick Laska led CMS basketball in scoring this season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Put the bus back in the barn and start getting ready for track season.

The Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball teams reached the end of the road Wednesday, vying with ultra-tough Lakewood on the road.

While the Wolves, who were without several players due to illness, dropped all three games, they finished strongly.

After the program went winless a year ago, coaches Alex Evans, RayLynn Ratcliff, and Jaylen Nitta combined to lead their squads to five victories in 2023.

While the 8th graders move on up to high school ball next season, a pack of feisty 6th and 7th graders will be back, and the next generation is already hankering to join them on the court.

Jaylen Nitta keeps a watchful eye on the young Wolves.

How things played out Wednesday:

 

Level 1:

CMS 8th grader Nick Laska capped a season in which he led all Wolf scorers, dropping in seven more against a stingy defense.

Kamden Ratcliff scorched the net with a three-ball to provide Coupeville’s only other points on the day.

Carson Grove, Nathan Niewald, Calvin Kappes, Khanor Jump, and Jackson Sollars also saw floor time for the Wolves, while Liam Lawson and Chayse Van Velkinburgh finished the campaign on the couch.

 

Level 2:

River Simpson, a hard-charging defensive dynamo, paced the Wolves with three points in the finale.

Joining him in the scorebook were Roger Merino-Martinez (2), Diesel Eck (2), Jump (1), and Jayden Little (1).

Lincoln Wagner, Xander Beaman, Treyshawn Stewart, Trent Thule, and Maverick Walling also pulled on the uniform and waged hardwood havoc for Coupeville.

 

Level 3:

Deacon Frost finished the season on a rampage, dumping in a game-high 16 points at Lakewood.

That carried him all the way to #3 on the scoring list, while Aiden Wheat hit a three-ball for the second-straight game.

Johnathan Jacobsen banked in a bucket and Jacob Lujan slipped a free throw through the net to complete the afternoon’s offensive output.

William Tierney, Simpson, Mario Martinez, Wagner, Beaman, and Jonah Weyl were also in action one more time.

Khanor Jump comes in hot.

 

Final individual scoring stats:

Nick Laska – 83
Chayse Van Velkinburgh – 51
Deacon Frost – 42
Johnathan Jacobsen – 30
Xander Beaman – 29
Diesel Eck – 25
Carson Grove – 24
Calvin Kappes – 22
Khanor Jump – 21
Roger Merino-Martinez – 18
Lincoln Wagner – 18
Kamden Ratcliff – 17
Jayden Little – 16
River Simpson – 14
Treyshawn Stewart – 10
Maverick Walling – 8
Aiden Wheat – 8
Nathan Niewald – 6
Jacob Lujan – 5
Trenton Thule – 4
William Tierney – 4
Mario Martinez – 2
Jonah Weyl – 2

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Carson Grove lines up a shot. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Buckets for nearly everyone.

With two more players recording their first points in the last round of games, we’re up to 20 Coupeville Middle School hoops players in the scoring column.

With three games left on the schedule, there’s still time for everyone to make a run for the top of the chart.

The Wolves host South Whidbey Dec. 11, travel to Langley Dec. 12 for a rematch, then leave the island Dec. 13 for the season finale at Lakewood.

Where things stand through Dec. 7:

 

Nick Laska – 40
Chayse Van Velkinburgh – 27
Johnathan Jacobsen – 22
Calvin Kappes – 19
Xander Beaman – 17
Carson Grove – 16
Diesel Eck – 15
Khanor Jump – 14
Jayden Little – 13
Kamden Ratcliff – 8
Lincoln Wagner – 8
Maverick Walling – 8
Roger Merino-Martinez – 6
Treyshawn Stewart – 5
Trenton Thule – 4
Nathan Niewald – 3
River Simpson – 3
Jacob Lujan – 2
Mario Martinez – 2
Jonah Weyl – 2

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Jackson Sollars heads up court. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Turks were tough.

Sultan remains one of the most consistent middle school boys’ basketball programs in the region, as shown once again Thursday afternoon.

Having traveled to Coupeville for a late-week rumble, the Turks swept all three games from their hosts – though one game came down to the final seconds.

How the day played out:

 

Level 3:

Things went in reverse order, with the second JV squad tipping off first, and producing the closest thing to a nail-biter seen all day.

In a truly bizarre game, Sultan hit a trio of three-balls in the first two minutes, then scored just a single basket over the next 19 minutes, only to get hot again at the end in a 19-15 win.

One, two, three, the low-level line drive treys found the bottom of the net and Sultan looked like it would run away with things.

But then everything changed.

Diesel Eck rolled hard to the hoop for a bucket to get Coupeville on the board, and the Wolves slowly chipped away at their deficit.

CMS scored three buckets off of rebounds in the second quarter, accounting for all the scoring, and slicing the lead down to 9-8 heading into the locker room.

Maverick Walling pushed Coupeville in front, hitting a short jumper off a pass from Johnathan Jacobsen to open the third, before Sultan finally found the bottom of the net again – this time on a jumper in the paint.

The Wolves responded, however, with Jacobsen cleaning the glass and banking home back-to-back buckets to send his team into the fourth quarter holding on to a 14-11 lead.

It wasn’t to be however, as Sultan nailed consecutive three-balls to open the final frame, before adding a putback off of an offensive board.

A free throw from Xander Beaman accounted for Coupeville’s lone fourth quarter point, with the clock madly running out as the players scrapped on the floor for loose balls in the final seconds.

Jacobsen paced the Wolves with six points, while Mario Martinez (2), Lincoln Wagner (2), Eck (2), Walling (2), and Beaman (1) also scored.

Aiden Wheat also nailed a bucket, but had it waved off as a foul was called on a teammate a fraction of a second before his shot sank through the net.

River Simpson, Jacob Lujan, and Deacon Frost rounded out the roster, showing scrappiness on the boards.

Ready to attack.

 

Level 2:

This was two games in one – before the press and after the press.

With Sultan allowed to bring a full-court defense to bear, the Turks ripped off a 20-0 run to open things.

Then, once was the press was suspended with a 20-point lead — a middle school rule — the two teams fought to a 15-15 stalemate in a game eventually won 35-15 by the Turks.

Jayden Little broke Sultan’s run with a free throw late in the second quarter, and then the power to the scoreboard promptly went out.

Once it came back on, the Turks pushed the lead out to 23-1 at the half and 27-1 midway through the third quarter.

Still playing hard, Coupeville pulled off the day’s best bucket at that moment, with Liam Lawson breaking ankles and dishing the rock to Eck, who smacked home a crowd-pleasing layup.

The Wolves brought intensity to their defensive effort in the waning minutes, with Treyshawn Stewart, Khanor Jump, and Eck registering blocks on Turk shots.

CMS picked up 10 of its 15 points in the fourth, with Roger Merino-Martinez slicing to the hoop to record three buckets in a couple minutes work.

His six points led the offensive attack, while Little (5), Eck (2), and Beaman (2) tallied points, and Jonah Weyl, Frost, and Trenton Thule also nabbed floor time.

 

Level 1:

The top teams went last, and a big second quarter run propelled Sultan to a 39-25 victory.

Take away an 18-4 Turk advantage in that frame and it was a 21-21 stalemate.

Coupeville stayed close early, heading to the first break down just 8-6, with Nick Laska banking home a second-chance ball, before draining a trey from the top.

The dam broke in the second frame, however, and it broke badly, with Sultan ripping off 12 straight points to open the quarter.

Down 26-10 at the half, Coupeville slipped a little further behind at 31-12 after three, before mounting its best run in the fourth.

With Laska and Chayse Van Velkinburgh taking turns raining down buckets, the Wolves won the frame 13-8, closing the game on a 7-0 surge.

The duo accounted for all of Coupeville’s scoring on the afternoon, with Laska pounding away for 15 and Van Velkinburgh slashing his way to 10.

Carson Grove, Calvin Kappes, Nathan Niewald, Jackson Sollars, Kamden Ratcliff, Lawson, and Jump also played for the Wolves.

 

What’s next:

After three straight games at home, the Wolves hit the road for two of their final three.

CMS travels to South Whidbey Dec. 4, then hosts a rematch with their neighbors Dec. 11, before closing the season Dec. 13 at Lakewood.

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