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Posts Tagged ‘Nooksack Valley’

Jean Lund-Olsen, celebrating his 18th birthday Saturday, got the game’s biggest cheer when he scored on a breakaway in the fourth quarter. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One bad quarter crippled the Wolves Saturday afternoon.

But it was how the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball team bounced back which won the approval of its coach.

While CHS couldn’t fully overcome the effects of a 26-7 deficit at the first break, it did play visiting Nooksack Valley virtually even the rest of the game in a 71-48 loss.

The non-conference defeat sends the Wolves into the winter break with a 3-5 record and a lot of positives.

Having 12 days off between games may enable Coupeville to get back some of its injured and sick players — front court warriors Koa Davison, Gavin Knoblich, and Xavier Murdy sat out Saturday — while fine-tuning its game plan.

When they return, the Wolves travel to Chimacum Jan. 3 for a final non-league tilt, then wade into North Sound Conference play.

Saturday Coupeville opened with a crowd-pleasing play, getting a thunderous blocked shot from mop-topped big man Ulrik Wells in the opening moments.

Then, Nooksack went to work.

With the win on Whidbey, the Pioneers are 6-1 this season, with their only loss to 3A Ferndale, and they showed why, running their offense efficiently while dictating the flow of the game on defense.

Coupeville struggled to score in the opening quarter, with a put-back from Wells its lone basket during an opening 16-2 surge from the visitors.

A Hawthorne Wolfe free throw tossed a pebble in the way of Nooksack’s careening SUV, then a Mason Grove jumper and an inside bucket by Jacobi Pilgrim gave CHS a bit of hope.

With the refs calling everything, and then some, a foul-heavy game had already established a herky-jerky rhythm before the first quarter drug to an end.

Saddled with three quick-fire fouls, some more questionable than others, Sean Toomey-Stout, the beating heart of Coupeville’s defense, ended up handcuffed to the bench for much of the first half.

Grove soon followed him off the court, but, at the very least, the refs were quite content to call a lot of fouls on both teams, so numerous Pioneers also quickly discovered the joy of sitting.

That set up a second quarter which was a brawl, as both teams exchanged scoring plays one after another, with neither squad able to string together consecutive buckets over eight minutes which felt like eight hours.

Grove nailed a three-ball from the left side, while Tucker Hall had the best basket of the frame, slashing hard to the hoop where he found a pass from Wells awaiting him, setting up a wham-bam layup for the hard-working senior role player.

Hall did a little bit of everything in his time on the floor Saturday, twice drawing offensive charges on Pioneers flying in hot and out of control as they neared the hoop.

Actually, it arguably should have been three times, but the one call the refs didn’t give to Hall was the one where he bounced off the back wall after absorbing the blow.

Popping up a bit tenderly, he shook his head and smiled, getting congratulatory pats from his teammates, who all had better vision than the dude in the stripes.

Other than a brief lapse late in the third, when the Wolves took a quick snooze and allowed Nooksack to rip off a 14-0 run in approximately 12.3 seconds, Coupeville played strongly through the final three quarters.

Toomey-Stout, back on the floor, made a sensational airborne, one-handed save on a ball headed for the wall to open the third quarter.

Not only did he prevent a Wolf turnover, but the ever-springy one actually picked up an assist on the play, redirecting the ball right onto the fingertips of a waiting Jacobi Pilgrim, who slapped the rock home.

Even in a losing cause, Coupeville scrapped and fought in the game’s waning minutes, closing things on a 16-6 run.

A three-ball from Wolfe snapped out the bottom of the net, Grove snatched a rebound, slid sideways and netted a jumper on the move, and Jean Lund-Olsen got some birthday love.

The CHS senior, celebrating his 18th birthday, swished a free throw to get into the scoring column, before capping things with a driving layup on a breakaway, bringing the Wolf student section to hysterics.

Wolfe and Grove led the attack, finishing with 13 and 10 points, respectively, while Pilgrim (8), Wells (6), Jered Brown (6), Lund-Olsen (3), and Hall (2) also scored.

Toomey-Stout, pulling down a ton o’ rebounds (when the refs let him rumble) and Daniel Olson rounded out the active roster.

With 13 points Saturday, Wolfe reaches a major personal milestone, cracking the Top 100 on the CHS boys career scoring chart, which stretches back 103 seasons.

The sophomore guard has tallied 285 points in a hair under 1.5 seasons, and now sits #98 all-time.

He passed Alex Evans (272), Zepher Loesch (274), Boom Phomvongkoth (275), Kit Manzanares (275), Terry Roberts (277), Keith Jameson (277), and Mike Mallo (282) Saturday.

Grove, a senior, is making his own run up the chart, and with 249 points, is now #114 all-time.

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Scout Smith scored 12 points Saturday to pace Coupeville’s varsity in a brawl with Nooksack Valley. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Survive playing against the best, and you will likely prosper.

Saturday afternoon wasn’t exactly fun for the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball squad, but it should help prepare them for the road ahead.

Playing against a very-dangerous Nooksack Valley team, the Wolves battled almost evenly on the scoreboard in the second half, but couldn’t overcome an early deficit and fell 52-30 on their home floor.

The non-conference loss snaps a five-game winning streak and sends Coupeville into winter break carrying a 6-2 record on the season.

When the Wolves return to action Jan. 3, they’ll travel to Chimacum for one more non-league tune-up, before playing their final eight regular season games against North Sound Conference foes.

CHS, at 1-0 in league play, is currently tied with Cedar Park Christian atop the six-team conference standings.

Saturday’s game, coming against a top-notch 1A school which lives and thrives in a brutal 1A/2A/3A mega-conference, was always going to be one of the toughest games on Coupeville’s schedule.

But, like the saying goes, you have to beat the best to be the best.

Or, in this case, go toe-to-toe (and chest-to-chest) with the best to get better.

The chests in question belonged to Wolf freshman guard Maddie Georges and the poor Pioneer she obliterated on the game’s best play.

Senior point guard Scout Smith had the ball for Coupeville, and was looking for a slice of daylight to make a dash to the hoop.

Enter Georges, who delivered “The Screen o’ Death,” giving her older teammate room to rumble.

Some screens are half-hearted. Some screens are held for .00002 of a second, then forgotten about. Some screens arrive too late.

This screen, set by a scrappy frosh, was none of those things.

Georges slid into place and held fast, absorbing the collision and dropping the incoming, oblivious Pioneer flat on her butt, sending her sliding several feet across the shiny hardwood.

In a game which Coupeville lost, in a game against very strong competition, it was plays like that one, maybe only noticed by a handful of viewers, which speak the loudest.

Combine that with some smart, explosive scoring moves by seasoned pros SmithChelsea Prescott, and Avalon Renninger, and there was a lot to like about how the Wolves played.

The only problem is, Nooksack is a battle-hardened team which jumps on every mistake, no matter how small, and can turn one error into two or three quick buckets before the tide can be stemmed.

And that’s hard to counter.

Case in point, the first quarter, as Coupeville fell behind 6-0, then got a jolt to the nervous system when Izzy Wells came amblin’ up court, slid to the outside and drained a beauty of a three-ball from the left side.

The ball had barely finished rippling through the net, with the crowd’s screams still rising, and BAM, Nooksack answered with a three-ball of its own, followed by a steal and some ensuing free throws.

Wells slapped home a layup, off of Coupeville breaking the Pioneer press, but then WHAM, Nooksack stole an inbounds pass, turning the interception into a layup in one silky-smooth motion.

That was the tone of the game – the Wolves worked hard, pulled off a solid play, only to be gutted as Nooksack answered with an immediate hail of points.

Smith scorched the net for a three-ball from the side with just a few ticks left on the clock in the first quarter, but the Pioneers answered with their own trey to close the frame, then ran off 10 straight points to open the second.

Nooksack’s final bucket during that game-busting surge came off of a steal and breakaway, pushing the lead out to 26-8, but it also marked the end of the Pioneer domination.

From that moment on, the Wolves buckled down, and held their own over the final 2.5 quarters, hanging within 26-22 over the final 20 minutes.

Prescott stood tall, draining several pull-up jumpers with arms in her face, while Smith threw down three consecutive buckets during a 6-0 run of her own in the third quarter.

The middle one of that trio of baskets joined George’s “Screen o’ Death” as the other standout play of the game.

Looking for someone to inbound the ball to, Prescott suddenly reared back and, recalling her days as a baseball star in little league, hucked a full-court pass.

Out ahead of the defense, Smith never broke stride, hauling in the pass like older brother’s Hunter and CJ once did on the gridiron, before curving back inside and pounding home the layup.

Toss in a pretty dang gorgeous curling layup from Renninger, quality work on the boards from elbow-flingin’ freshman Carolyn Lhamon, and nice hustle from all involved, and the Wolves have little reason to hang their heads.

Coupeville is a good team, potentially a very good one, and it just ran into a well-seasoned, strongly-coached squad which should hold its own in their juggernaut of a league.

A loss is a loss, but some are better than others, and this very much lands in the category of a “good” loss.

Smith paced the Wolves with a team-high 12 points, taking her career total to 221 and counting.

She passed Linda Cheshier (210), Lisa Roehl (216), and Beth Mouw (216) on the all-time Wolf girls scoring chart, and is a bucket shy of tying Annette Jameson (223) for 50th place with a program which started in 1974.

Smith is not the only CHS player on the cusp of getting historical, however.

Prescott banged home seven to back her up, and, with 192 career points, is close to cracking the 200-point barrier herself.

Renninger and Wells rounded out Saturday’s scoring attack, with six and five points, respectively, while Anya Leavell, Mollie Bailey, Hannah Davidson, Georges, Lhamon, Audrianna Shaw, and Kylie Van Velkinburgh also saw floor time.

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Daniel Olson tossed in six points Saturday as Coupeville’s JV battled Nooksack Valley. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was like the steady pitter-patter of rain hitting the roof.

Nooksack Valley kept dropping shots Saturday night, a basket here, a basket there, and steadily pulled away from host Coupeville in a boys JV bout.

By the time the game was done, the Wolves had taken a rare ding on the ol’ win/loss record, falling 55-26 to the visiting Pioneers.

With the defeat, Coupeville’s JV heads into winter break sitting at 4-3 on the season.

The Wolves are off for 12 days, not playing again until Jan. 3, when they travel to Chimacum for another non-league match-up.

After that, the CHS boys move into North Sound Conference play, with the remainder of the schedule against their main rivals.

Saturday’s tilt was relatively close through one quarter, as the Wolves, behind seven points from Sage Downes, trailed just 16-9.

That changed a little too quickly for Coupeville’s liking, as Nooksack used a 13-3 tear in the second frame to stretch the halftime margin out to 29-12.

After that, the Pioneers continued to methodically pound away at their hosts, using 14-8 and 12-6 advantages over the final two quarters to set the final score.

Downes paced the Wolves, netting a team-high 12 points, while Daniel Olson backed him up with six.

Grady Rickner (3), Cody Roberts (3), and Miles Davidson (2) rounded out the scorers, while Alex Jimenez, Logan Martin, Andrew Aparicio, and TJ Rickner all saw floor time for CHS.

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Coupeville freshman Miles Davidson made his debut in goal Saturday, teaming with Dewitt Cole and Michael Langille to stifle Nooksack Valley in a 9-1 win. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Derek Leyva (left), celebrating with Alex Jimenez, knocked in four goals, giving him 30 for his prep career.

For a moment, it seemed like it would be a nail-biter.

But it was a very short moment.

Breaking an early tie at Nooksack Valley Saturday, the Coupeville High School boys soccer squad rained down eight straight goals and romped to a 9-1 win.

The non-conference victory evens the early-season record at 2-2, as the Wolves prepare to head into league play.

CHS plays its next four games against North Sound Conference foes, with the first two bouts on its home turf.

The Wolves host King’s (1-1-1) Tuesday, Mar. 19, before Sultan (0-2) arrives on Whidbey Friday, Mar. 22.

Saturday’s game was Coupeville’s second-straight road game against a team from the 1A/2A/3A Northwest Conference, and this one went a lot better.

After falling 4-0 to Meridian two days before, the Wolves peppered Nooksack’s goalie from all angles, filling up the back of the net.

Up 5-1 at the half, with the only Pioneer goal coming off of a “power shot to the opposite corner from the attack line,” Coupeville’s back line was playing large and in charge.

“Defense had a great first half,” said CHS assistant coach Robert Wood. “(Wolf goaltender) Dewitt (Cole) made a superb effort diving and got a finger on it, but it was just one of those shots.”

The Wolves stayed on the attack after the break, smacking home another four goals and sending Coupeville head coach Kyle Nelson to the bus with a big smile on his face.

“The one goal we conceded was early in the game,” he said. “No looking back from there.”

Coupeville’s cousin connection sparked the offensive explosion, with Derek Leyva rattling the net for a season-best four goals, while Aram Leyva popped in a pair of scores.

The duo have combined for 11 goals through four games, with Derek back in front 6-5 in the scoring chase.

His final score of the afternoon was the 30th of his short career, after he scored a school single-season record 24 in his debut as a sophomore last year.

Saturday’s explosion pulls him within 15 of his other cousin, Abraham Leyva, who holds the CHS career mark of 45 goals.

Sage Downes added his third goal of the season, while also collecting three assists, and Chris Cernick and James Wood rounded out the scoring with a goal apiece.

Derek Leyva racked up two assists, while Sam Wynn added another sweet set-up which resulted in a teammate scoring.

The Wolf coaching staff was appropriately pumped after the big road win.

“Finally playing as a team the way game demands,” Robert Wood said. “Really good showing by everyone.”

After working with the team’s goaltenders, the assistant coach was especially pleased to see the team’s backups, Miles Davidson and Micheal Langille, get quality time in net, giving Cole a chance to rest on the sideline.

The young duo swapped 10-minute sessions in the net, both holding Nooksack scoreless.

Davidson took a kick to the face, but the scrappy Wolf lived to tell about it.

“They both put practice sessions directly into game experience,” Robert Wood said. “Superb effort and focus and application from both.”

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Freshman Kiara Contreras, an Energizer Rabbit in a Wolf uniform, had a sensational blocked shot Saturday for the Coupeville JV hoops squad. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It wasn’t the prettiest of games, but we’re not going to focus on that for very long.

Instead, if you keep reading, we have the world debut of a poem by a hoops coach, written while camped in a bouncing bus on the back-roads of America.

Yeah, you’re not getting that in the Seattle Times, now, are you?

But first, a few quick notes.

Yes, Nooksack Valley, using a full lineup of varsity swing players, beat the Coupeville High School JV girls basketball squad 54-24 Saturday.

With the non-conference loss, the Wolf young guns head into a 12-day break between games sporting a solid 4-4 record.

If you’re looking for statistical highlights, we have Kylie Van Velkinburgh, dropping a team-high seven points and snatching three rebounds, and Izzy Wells, going for six and nine.

Anya Leavell (5), Audrianna Shaw (2), Kiara Contreras (2), Abby Mulholland (1), and Morgan Stevens (1) also scored, while Ja’Kenya Hoskins tore down six boards.

Shaw and Mollie Bailey each dealt out two assists, while Contreras, the Energizer Bunny in a Wolf uniform, delivered the night’s loudest play.

Chasing down a Nooksack player from behind, the CHS guard sprinted from half court, went airborne, then rejected the Pioneer shot from behind at the very last second, LeBron James-style.

“She (Kiara) brought the most energy as always,” said Coupeville coach Amy King. “Everyone else took the court and did what they could do. Move the ball, help their teammates, play the best defense they could.”

And now on to the world-exclusive, as King, the Bard of the Hardwood, delivers a poem to send us into winter break.

Amy started writing her poem when we got on the bus and before we made our stop for food,” said CHS varsity coach (and proud husband) David King. “Less than 30 minutes. What a talent she has.”

 

A long trip up North,
No, not to North Pole
The Grinch is named Nooksack
We got in a hole

The game was a tough one
We did what we could
We were getting down on ourselves
But still did some good

They had one defender
Always harassing the guard
We found ways around it
But made it too hard

They stole like the Grinch would
They laughed as they shot
Their coach strayed out of his box
And finally got caught.

We weren’t watching the score
Though their book got it wrong
Thanks to Heidi and Nicole
For keeping it strong

The game was the normal
Back and forth fight
And every girl on our team
Did all they could for the night

Audri, Mollie, Kiara and
Anya led us up top
Ja’Kenya, Abby, Morgan
Izzy, Kylie pulled out all the stops

Kiara had a shot block
Surely heard from outside,
And Izzy, a spin move,
Her defender along for the ride.

Towards the end it was noticed
Their #12 needed to score
We would not let that happen
So we defended her more

So the Grinch got the win
But we put up a fight
We get to go eat now
And to all a good night

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