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Posts Tagged ‘Nicole Laxton’

Nicole Laxton, the smile that never stopped. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Heart, above all else.

In the end, we appreciate talent, we respect it, we acknowledge it.

But we love heart.

I’m not going to tell you Nicole Laxton is the most talented athlete I have ever seen play. If I did, she would roll her eyes, shake her head and walk off, giggling.

But I will tell you she has as much heart, and radiates as much joy, as any Wolf I have ever written about. And that is the stone cold truth.

Nicole, a 2019 Coupeville High School grad who played four years of basketball and softball for the red and black, exists in a special place.

She, like Jae LeVine or Jared Helmstadter before her, approached every game, every practice, every road trip, as if it was a gift.

Nicole was the smile that never stopped.

Not even when she smacked her head on a sharp piece of wood jutting out of the back of the CHS softball dugout.

Not even when she was drilled for the 10,412th time by a wayward pitch, as she was the greatest ball magnet the sport has ever seen.

And not even when I would quietly holler “Charge the mound!!” after every time she collected another fastball to the thigh or ankle or quad.

“I can’t do that, don’t be silly!!,” Nicole would say, rolling her eyes at me, her smile covering the pain arcing through her body.

And then she would hobble down to first base, reassure CHS assistant coach Ron Wright she was just fine and dandy, and he should stop worrying so much, before stealing second, punctuating it with a ferocious flop/dive under the tag.

Nicole hit a couple big baskets on the hardwood and smacked a crucial hit or two as the Wolf softball team returned to state this spring, punching its ticket for the first time in five seasons.

But she wasn’t about the stats.

She was all about bouncing on the bag at second, covered head to toe in prairie dust, cheeks pink in the sun, shooting finger guns at the dugout while giggling as they roared for her steal.

She was about ending up on the basketball court, sprawled out, ball held in her arms like a vise, as she out-wrestled four rivals for possession of a rebound.

And she was about the road trips.

Giggling on the bus about wearing her grandma’s slippers with her softball uniform.

Hanging out on the ferry with her friends, and, occasionally, dishing “the tea” to gathered reporters in a hushed whisper, complete with side eye and arched eyebrow.

Athletes come and go, walking the hallways at CHS and occupying the courts, fields, and diamonds.

Then, one day, they’re gone, on to hopefully bigger and better things in their life.

While many blur together after awhile — even the talented ones — there are a select few who remain vibrant in our memories long after they take off the Wolf uniform for the final time.

Nicole is one of those select few.

Her life hasn’t always been the easiest, but she has endured and prospered, tackling every obstacle with an open heart and a welcoming smile.

Seeing her play was a treat. Knowing her in “real life,” even more so.

I will remember Nicole, of that I have no doubt.

Induction into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame arrives for a lot of reasons.

Talent, stats, titles, medals, they carry many into my mythical little hall of digital wonders.

But not all legends are built the same way.

Nicole, if she never recorded a hit, never sank a basket, would still be here. Her character, her spirit, her heart, is what assured her enshrinement.

After this, when you look at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab, you’ll find Miss Laxton right where she belongs.

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Lindsey Roberts (left) and Ema Smith were two of the three Wolf hoops stars honored Tuesday on Senior Night. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It didn’t go the way they might have hoped.

Run ragged Tuesday by a King’s team with state title aspirations, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team got crunched on Senior Night.

Even on an evening when their six-foot freshman prodigy wasn’t at the top of her game, the visiting Knights had an answer for everything the Wolves tried, exiting the gym with a 59-11 win.

The loss, coming after Coupeville put up its fewest points in any game this season, drops CHS to 5-4 in North Sound Conference play, 7-9 overall.

The Wolves, who are guaranteed to be the #3 seed from their league when the double-elimination district playoffs start Feb. 4, close the regular season Friday at Granite Falls.

Things got off to a nice start Tuesday when Coupeville honored seniors Nicole Laxton, Lindsey Roberts, and Ema Smith before tip-off.

After the ball was tossed up in the air, however, things got much tougher.

King’s features frosh phenom Jada Wynn, who played in the junior NBA world tournament before attending a single day of high school.

On this night, though, she took a back seat, picking up four fouls, including an offensive charge after Wolf freshman Ja’Kenya Hoskins stood her ground, and scored “just” 10 points.

The Knights, a deep, talented, polished team, merely shrugged, with sophomores Claire Gallagher and Mia Flor tossing in 17 and 12 respectively.

Coupeville, as a team, didn’t crack double digits until the next-to-last play of the third quarter, then went scoreless in the fourth.

Down 8-0 in the early going, but dodging bullets as King’s had some shooting issues of its own, at least for a bit, the Wolves finally got on the scoreboard six minutes into the game.

The first bucket came courtesy Ema Smith, and it gave her 201 points for her prep career, making her just the 55th Wolf girl to top that mark since the modern program began in 1974.

Unfortunately for CHS, that was its only basket of any kind for quite a bit.

By the time Hannah Davidson swooped in, snatched a rebound and went back up strong for a second-chance bucket, the game was 21-2 in favor of King’s and slipping away quickly.

To make sure to drive the point home, the Knights followed up Davidson’s put-back by nailing back-to-back three-balls, two of the eight treys they hit on the evening.

A 27-7 halftime deficit ballooned badly after the halftime break, as King’s, continuing to play with its customary take-no-prisoners style, went on a 25-4 romp in the third.

Two buckets from Roberts, one off a nice dish by Scout Smith, gave CHS fans some brief respite, but, ultimately, it was a game the Wolves will do well to quickly scrub from their brain pans.

But, just because it was a one-sided affair doesn’t mean there weren’t a few bright spots.

Coupeville coach David King praised the play of Roberts, who had to fight through a constant wave of defenders, as well as Davidson’s work on the boards, and defensive dynamo Tia Wurzrainer’s scrappiness while still contesting passes in the late going.

Roberts finished with four points Tuesday, lifting her to 422 for her career.

She needs just two more buckets to pass Cassidi Rosenkrance (423), Mika Hosek (424), and Sarah Powell (425) and become the #20 scorer in program history.

Chelsea Prescott added three free-throws in support of Roberts, with Davidson and Ema Smith providing the night’s other buckets.

Roberts had a team-best eight rebounds, Avalon Renninger yanked down five boards and doled out three assists, with Scout Smith collecting five boards, two blocks and a steal.

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Nicole Laxton has knocked down six points across the first two games of the season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

No undefeated teams.

That’s a guarantee, as all 12 North Sound Conference basketball teams have taken at least one loss after the first week of the season.

In fact, the early non-conference schedule has not been kind, with NSC girls teams combining to go 2-11, while the boys are 1-10.

Heck, even the King’s girls and their all-world freshman are sitting at 0-2, after absorbing losses to Moses Lake and Cashmere.

But we plow ahead, with another week full of games set to unfold.

Coupeville’s hoops squads have three games in the next six days, with road trips Monday to Sequim and Saturday to Orcas Island, wrapped around a home doubleheader Wednesday with Friday Harbor.

Onward and upward, ever in pursuit of a few more wins.

 

North Sound Conference girls basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 0-0 0-2
CPC-Bothell 0-0 1-1
Granite Falls 0-0 0-2
King’s 0-0 0-2
South Whidbey 0-0 0-2
Sultan 0-0 1-2

 


North Sound Conference boys basketball:

School League Overall
COUPEVILLE 0-0 0-2
CPC-Bothell 0-0 0-1
Granite Falls 0-0 0-2
King’s 0-0 0-1
South Whidbey 0-0 1-2
Sultan 0-0 0-2

 

CHS girls basketball varsity scoring:

Chelsea Prescott – 16
Scout Smith – 9
Avalon Renninger – 8
Lindsey Roberts – 8
Hannah Davidson – 6
Nicole Laxton – 6
Anya Leavell – 2
Izzy Wells – 2
Tia Wurzrainer – 2
Mollie Bailey
Ja’Kenya Hoskins
Ema Smith

 

CHS boys basketball varsity scoring:

Sean Toomey-Stout – 19
Hawthorne Wolfe – 15
Ulrik Wells – 11
Koa Davison – 7
Jered Brown – 3
Mason Grove – 3
Gavin Knoblich – 2
Jacobi Pilgrim – 1
Dane Lucero
Jean Lund-Olsen

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   Chelsea Prescott struck out nine Friday as Coupeville’s JV softball squad thumped Concrete’s varsity. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Chelsea Prescott already knows how to crack Concrete.

The Coupeville High School freshman made her high school softball debut Friday, and blitzed the visiting Lions, using her arm and bat to propel the Wolf JV to a 9-2 win over Concrete’s varsity.

Flinging mad heat all game long, Prescott, who will see a fair amount of time as a varsity player once that squad finally kicks off its season, whiffed nine and retired another five batters on bouncers back to the mound.

She was only hit hard once, maybe twice, and teamed up with freshman catcher Mollie Bailey, her former Little League teammate, to blitz Concrete at every step.

The Wolf JV, which got to make its Opening Day splash a day before the varsity travels to South Whidbey for its opener, controlled every aspect of the game.

On defense, Coral Caveness and Melia Welling came up with laser throws from short and third, respectively, while Coupeville’s hitters spread the love around from the top of the lineup to the bottom.

Prescott whacked a pair of singles to spark the Wolf attack, but it was Nicole Laxton and Caveness who had the biggest base-knocks.

With the bases loaded in the bottom of the first, courtesy Bailey walking before Prescott and Welling were plunked, Laxton sauntered to the plate ready to get rowdy.

Hefting her bat, a small smile playing at the corners of her mouth as varsity catcher Sarah Wright kept up a steady stream of positive chatter from the bench, Laxton found her pitch and made Concrete’s pitcher weep silent tears of despair.

Ripping the hide off the ball, she sent a low, screaming shot down the left field line, plating two runners and effectively ending the game in one sweet swing.

Coupeville tacked on another run a batter later, with Welling beating a throw home after Marenna Rebischke-Smith got on base when the Concrete catcher failed to catch a third strike.

The Wolves stretched their lead to 5-0 in the second inning, netting two runs thanks to smart base-running.

Thora Iverson, who got aboard on a walk, scampered home on a passed ball, before Bailey psyched out Concrete’s first-baseman on a stop-and-go move between third and home.

Coming halfway down the line, the one true Photo Bomb Queen faked like she was headed back to third, then, when her frazzled rival paused for a split-second, suddenly spun and shot home.

Faked out of her shoes by a prime-time bit of Bailey magic, the Lion fielder was slow on her throw, and Bailey was quick on her slide under the tag, making for pure kismet.

Coupeville had a runner gunned down at the plate in the third, then hit a two-inning dry spell at the plate, giving Concrete a chance to crawl to back within 5-2.

That would be the last gasp from the Lions, however, as Prescott continued to heat up on the mound, and the Wolf bats recovered at a crucial moment.

Blowing the doors off the barn, the Wolves exploded for four runs in the bottom of the sixth to put an exclamation point on things.

Chloe Wheeler led off with a walk, stole second, got to third when Concrete was slow to respond, then strolled home after Caveness crunched an RBI double to deep center field.

From there it was a hail of runs, as Prescott and Laxton each stroked an RBI single and Rebischke-Smith brought the game’s final run around on a hard-hit grounder to the right side.

Coupeville collected six hits on the afternoon, with Bailey, Caveness, Prescott, Jenna Dickson and Laxton leading the hit parade.

Ivy Leedy came within an inch or two of joining them, but her wicked liner back up the middle in the fifth was snagged in a reflexive move by the Concrete pitcher, who was just trying to keep from taking a softball to the noggin.

Prescott’s nine K’s were spread out nicely, with the Wolf hurler ringing up at least one batter in six of seven innings.

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