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Posts Tagged ‘Nick Laska’

Diesel Eck lets a free throw fly. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Learn, live, move on to the next challenge.

Facing off with one of the better hoops’ programs in the Cascade League Tuesday, the Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball teams spent much of the afternoon playing catch-up.

And while the Wolves couldn’t beat visiting Northshore Christian Academy, they did find some strong moments to build upon.

How the day played out:

 

Level 1:

NSC dominated play in the early going, before Coupeville showed improvement once the running clock kicked in during a 41-9 loss.

The visitors spent much of the first half slashing inside for easy buckets, building a 30-0 lead to start things.

Coupeville finally got on the board when Nick Laska elevated and drained a three-ball on the final scoring play of the half.

Immediately afterward, teammate Kamden Ratcliff pulled off the defensive play of the game, winning a battle on the floor for a ball.

In doing so, he took the NSC player to the floor, hard, went up and over him while still holding onto the ball, and showcased some major grit which bodes well for the future.

While the clock madly ticked away after the break, Coupeville held its own in the third quarter, with Carson Grove muscling his way in for back-to-back buckets and Laska turning an offensive rebound into a basket.

For the game, Laska finished with five points, while Grove popped for four.

Calvin Kappes, Ratcliff, Chayse Van Velkinburgh, Khanor Jump, Jackson Sollars, Nathan Niewald, and Liam Lawson also saw action for Alex Evans’ crew.

 

Lincoln Wagner elevates on defense.

 

Level 2:

The sequel played out a lot like the first game, with Coupeville falling behind big early, showing some solid fight in the latter stages, and losing 40-12.

Khanor Jump was the lone Wolf to score through the first three quarters, racking up eight points on a pair of buckets where he rolled hard to the hoop, and a handful of free throws.

He also rejected an NSC shot, while Treyshawn Stewart picked up a block of his own, but in a much louder way.

Losing control of the ball, he chased down the would-be thief, went airborne, and spiked the kid’s shot attempt off the back wall.

It was a thing of raw beauty, danger and anger mixed together, and proof Stewart has as much promise as any player currently wearing a CMS uniform.

Diesel Eck slipped a free throw through the net early in the fourth quarter to break Jump’s streak of scoring all of Coupeville’s points, before Stewart resurfaced.

Launching a three-ball from deep, he made the net sing a sweet song, his trey hitting pay dirt and causing the Wolf fans to scream loudly.

Though, to be honest, the middle school girls in attendance were plenty loud all game long, upholding a proud tradition of CMS hoops fans peeling the paint off the gym walls with their vocal renditions.

In addition to the three Wolves who scored, Jayden Little, River Simpson, Trent Thule, Jonah Weyl, Aiden Wheat, Johnathan Jacobsen, Xander Beaman, Maverick Walling, Lincoln Wagner, Deacon Frost, Jacob Lujan, and Mario Martinez also saw floor time.

 

Wolf ace Aiden Wheat keeps a watchful eye on the pesky paparazzi.

 

Level 3:

NSC is the only school in the league to field just two teams, and not three, preventing Wolf fans from sitting on the rock-hard CMS bleachers for another hour.

Call it a win for our fannies.

 

Up next:

Coupeville hosts Sultan Thursday, with tipoff at 3:15 PM.

Level 3 plays first, followed by Level 2, with Level 1 capping things.

After that, the Wolves travel to South Whidbey Dec. 4, host that same foe Dec. 11, then travel to Lakewood Dec. 13 for the finale.

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Calvin Kappes leaves the defense flatfooted. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Everyone is a threat to score.

With three games in the books, the Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball teams have seen 18 different players ring up a bucket or better.

The race for top honors is an intense one, as well, with seven players in double digits, and only four points separating the #4 scorer from the #1 offensive weapon.

With two games ahead next week — home affairs with Northshore Christian (Tuesday, Nov. 28) and Sultan (Nov. 30) — look for the numbers to keep shifting.

Where individual point totals stand through Nov. 24:

 

Nick Laska – 20
Calvin Kappes – 19
Chayse Van Velkinburgh – 17
Johnathan Jacobsen – 16
Xander Beaman – 14
Carson Grove – 12
Diesel Eck – 10
Jayden Little – 8
Kamden Ratcliff – 8
Khanor Jump – 6
Lincoln Wagner – 6
Maverick Walling – 6
Trenton Thule – 4
Nathan Niewald – 3
River Simpson – 3
Jacob Lujan – 2
Treyshawn Stewart – 2
Jonah Weyl – 2

Nick Laska, with Carson Grove running behind him, gets the offense flowing.

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Nick Laska elevates to win the tip. (RayLynn Ratcliff photos)

Sometimes you hit the road, and sometimes it hits back.

Thursday afternoon gave the Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball teams what will likely be their toughest test of the season.

Making the trek to Shoreline to square off with ritzy private school sports juggernaut King’s Junior High, the young Wolves absorbed three losses.

But they also survived and return home with the battle scars to prove their growth.

Next up is a three-game homestand, with Granite Falls kicking things off with a Nov. 21 trip to Cow Town.

After that, Northshore Christian (Nov. 28) and Sultan (Nov. 30) swing by the CMS gym, with the Wolves not getting on a bus again until December rolls around.

CMS hoops coach Alex Evans sets up a play.

 

How Thursday played out:

 

Level 1:

Coupeville popped a trio of three-balls through the bottom of the net, but could do little to stop a deep, talented King’s squad.

Chayse Van Velkinburgh rippled the nets for two of the three Wolf shots from behind the arc, with Nick Laska also dropping a trey.

Carson Grove rounded out Coupeville’s scoring with an old-fashioned, but very effective, two-point bucket, while Liam Lawson, Kamden Ratcliff, Calvin Kappes, Nathan Niewald, Khanor Jump, and Trenton Thule were also in uniform.

 

Level 2:

Kappes was the high scorer for the day for CMS, rattling the rim for a team-best 10 points, while Diesel Eck provided some fuel with four points of his own.

Buckets from Thule — his first of the season — and Jump filled up the scoring column for the Wolves.

Deacon Frost, Maverick Walling, Aiden Wheat, River Simpson, Xander Beaman, and Lincoln Wagner were also on hand to scrap with the Knights.

 

Level 3:

Jonathan Jacobsen banked in four points to pace the Wolves, with Wagner (2), Walling (2), and Simpson (1) also scoring.

A mysterious bucket, not credited to a specific CMS player, drifted towards the bottom of the scorebook, meaning we’ll never truly know who was responsible for all of Coupeville’s scoring this season.

I, for one, will likely lose some sleep over the matter.

But I can tell you Beaman, Jacob Lujan, Wheat, Frost, Eck, and Mario Martinez were also in uniform for the hardwood clash, so that might be enough to get us through the night.

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6th grader Tamsin Ward won two events at her first middle school track meet. (Jon Gabelein photo)

Edmund Kunz sends the shot put flying far away. (Jon Gabelein photo)

It didn’t take Tamsin Ward long to catch people’s attention.

Competing in her first middle school track meet Wednesday, the Coupeville 6th grader captured wins in both the 100 and shot put.

Besting fields of 38 and 14 athletes, respectively, Ward helped spark the CMS 6th/7th grade girls to a team win as well.

The young Wolves finished with 90 points to host South Whidbey’s 77, while Granite Falls and Northshore Christian Academy brought up the rear.

Coupeville finished 2nd in the boys 6th/7th grade team rumble, led by wins from 7th grader Nick Laska in the shot put and discus.

The Wolf 8th grade girls finished 3rd, while the CMS 8th grade boys were 4th in their battle.

Ward and Laska’s double victories led the way as Coupeville won nine events.

7th graders Marin Winger (400), Lillian Ketterling (discus), Shiloh Sandlin (800), and Roger Merino-Martinez (200) also captured the top rung on the ladder, while a girls 4 x 200 squad made up of 7th graders Niella Bryan, Denali Kalwies, Amelia Crowder, and Lisette Bentabou hit the tape first.

With the first meet of the season in the books, CMS coaches were flying high afterwards.

“The team did amazing!” Amber Wyman said. “There were some tears, scrapes and lots of nerves, but these athletes came to compete!

“I am so proud of all they accomplished.”

That was a feeling shared by Jon Gabelein.

“It was a great first meet with lots of top-notch performances!” he said.

“While some athletes may have been nervous about getting out there on week one, they can now take their first PR and generate improvements throughout the season.”

CMS hosts its next two meets, which are set for May 4 and 10.

Kennedy O’Neill (far right) prepares to leave her foes choking on her dust. (Amber Wyman photo)

 

Wednesday’s results:

 

GIRLS:

 

8th grade:

100 — Tirsit Cannon (3rd) 15.34; Natalie Perera (11th) 17.42

200 — Kayla Crane (3rd) 37.01

100 Hurdles — Lexis Drake (5th) 23.54

4 x 100 Relay — Cannon, Drake, Crane, Lydia Price (3rd) 1:07.68

Long Jump — Drake (9th) 10-00; Perera (14th) 7-11

 

6th/7th grade:

100 — Tamsin Ward (1st) 14.11; Willow Leedy-Bonifas (4th) 15.08; Laken Simpson (5th) 15.16; Isabella De Souza Oliveira Mc Fetridge (7th) 15.37; Amayia Curry (9th) 16.11; Niella Bryan (21st) 17.53; Lisette Bentabou (26th) 18.09; Denali Kalwies (27th) 18.10; Maci Wofford (33rd) 19.10; Kaleah Matros (34th) 19.47

200 — Hyley Farrell (2nd) 31.82; Olivia Hall (4th) 34.45; Anmarie Solis (5th) 34.91; Sage Stavros (10th) 36.50; Savannah Niewald (16th) 38.70; Camilla Wolfe (17th) 40.00

400 — Marin Winger (1st) 1:21.41; S. Niewald (4th) 1:35.29; Lily Fisher (5th) 1:42.15

800 — Lillian Ketterling (2nd) 3:07.40; Devon Wyman (7th) 3:47.24

1600 — Tenley Stuurmans (2nd) 6:44.30; Mikayla Wagner (3rd) 6:55.05; Rebekah Dangerfield (5th) 7:25.06

100 Hurdles — Stuurmans (3rd) 20.18; Elizabeth Marshall (9th) 21.80; Kennedy O’Neill (10th) 21.80; Amelia Crowder (16th) 24.72; Arianna Cunningham (19th) 26.36; Wyman (24th) 30.84; Fisher (25th) 32.82

4 x 100 Relay — Hall, Wagner, Winger, Simpson (2nd) 1:03.93; Cunningham, Leedy-Bonifas, Curry, Taylor Marrs (3rd) 1:04.67

4 x 200 Relay — Bryan, Kalwies, Cunningham, Bentabou (1st) 2:29.37; Farrell, O’Neill, E. Marshall, Stavros (2nd) 2:33.61

Shot Put — Ward (1st) 24-08.50; Marrs (2nd) 22-00.50; Bentabou (3rd) 20-07; Winger (4th) 20-02.50; Simpson (5th) 19-07.25; Matros (10th) 15-03.50; Wofford (10th) 15-03.50; E. Marshall (12th) 14-11

Discus — Ketterling (1st) 50-05; Cunningham (2nd) 46-00; Marrs (3rd) 43-09; Matros (10th) 30-04; Wofford (12th) 27-01; Kalwies (13th) 26-03

Long Jump — Leedy-Bonifas (2nd) 12-06; Ward (4th) 12-02; Stuurmans (5th) 12-02; Mc Fetridge (7th) 12-01; Farrell (8th) 12-00; Cunningham (14th) 10-08; O’Neill (15th) 10-07.50; Wagner (19th) 9-11; Ketterling (23rd) 9-04.50; S. Niewald (27th) 8-11; Wyman (27th) 8-11; Stavros (30th) 8-08; Solis (35th) 7-11; Dangerfield (35th) 7-11; Wolfe (41st) 6-09

The Wolf boys, ready to rumble on the oval. (Amber Wyman photo)

 

BOYS:

 

8th grade:

100 — Davin Houston (7th) 12.97; Kenneth Jacobsen (12th) 13.45; Captain Teuscher (25th) 15.47; Ethan Walling (26th) 15.66; Zach Blitch (29th) 17.64

1600 — K. Jacobsen (2nd) 5:42.04

110 Hurdles — Axel Marshall (5th) 21.16

Shot Put — K. Jacobsen (3rd) 26-08.75; Teuscher (9th) 19-08; Blitch (10th) 17-06

Discus — Blitch (12th) 57-01; A. Marshall (14th) 51-00

Long Jump — Houston (2nd) 16-08; Teuscher (13th) 11-09

 

6th/7th grade:

100 — Carson Grove (2nd) 14.54; Jonathan Jacobsen (13th) 15.74; Collin Mirabile (17th) 16.11; Benji Wertz (21st) 16.74; Ossian Merkel (28th) 17.37

200 — Roger Merino-Martinez (1st) 28.87; Beckett Green (4th) 30.57

800 — Shilo Sandlin (1st) 2:38.22

1600 — Nathan Niewald (4th) 6:20.71; Brantley Campbell (8th) 6:52.19; Edmund Kunz (10th) 7:11.73; Diego Gonzalez (12th) 7:45.65

100 Hurdles — Campbell (6th) 21.97

Shot Put — Nick Laska (1st) 28-01; Green (5th) 23-10; Mirabile (7th) 22-06.50; Sandlin (9th) 20-04.75; Wertz (16th) 14-09.50; Kunz (17th) 13-00.50

Discus — Laska (1st) 79-00; Grove (3rd) 70-01; Gonzalez (22nd) 33-03

High Jump — J. Jacobsen (2nd) 4-02; Wyatt Fitch-Marron (4th) 3-08

Long Jump — Merino-Martinez (2nd) 14-04; N. Niewald (3rd) 13-05; Campbell (6th) 12-08; Grove (7th) 12-07; Sandlin (9th) 12-03; Kunz (17th) 10-09; Merkel (30th) 7-10; Gonzalez (33rd) 6-04

Is every kid at CMS on the track team? Possibly. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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