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Posts Tagged ‘North Sound Conference’

Nick Armstrong, seen during football season, scored six points Friday as Coupeville’s C-Team basketball squad battled South Whidbey. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Every time out, a positive.

A fairly-inexperienced band of Coupeville High School boys C-Team basketball players continue to show improvement, and Friday’s trip to Langley was no exception.

While the young Wolves fell 56-28 to host South Whidbey, it was one of their best offensive performances of the season.

Plus, a huge chunk of the points came from two guys who haven’t had much chance to put the ball in the hoop this season, always a good sign.

Friday night it was time for Nick Armstrong and Coen Killian to shine, and the duo came through, dropping in a season-high six points apiece.

Add a team-high eight points for go-go guard Dominic Coffman, six for inside enforcer Ben Smith — back in action after a sustained bout with illness — and two for Brayden Coatney, and the offensive attack was nicely-balanced.

While they didn’t score Friday, Coupeville also got strong work from Ty Hamilton, Caleb Sonntag, Josh Upchurch, and Alex Wasik.

The Wolf young guns are set to see tons of floor time this coming week, unless Mother Nature rears her vindictive head.

The C-Team hosts Cedar Park Christian Monday, travels to King’s Tuesday and CPC Friday, then plays a doubleheader in Granite Falls next Saturday.

The Wolves will face-off with both the host Tigers and Sultan that day.

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Senior sharpshooter Scout Smith rattled the rims for 13 Friday as Coupeville bounced arch-rival South Whidbey. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They were a two-woman wrecking crew.

Outscoring South Whidbey by themselves Friday, Scout Smith and birthday girl Chelsea Prescott torched the nets for 13 points apiece, lifting the Coupeville High School varsity girls hoops squad to a major rivalry win.

Getting stronger as the night went on, the Wolves rolled to a 34-25 road win in Langley, improving to 3-1 in North Sound Conference action.

Now 8-3 overall, Coupeville won by clamping down on defense, hitting some key three-balls, and overcoming another shaky night at the free throw line.

The Wolves connected on just 3-12 at the charity stripe, continuing a season-long struggle, but made up for it in every other facet of the game.

On the day she celebrated her 17th birthday, Prescott had the hot hand early, banking in five points in the opening quarter to stake CHS to a 10-8 lead.

From there, the Wolves steadily pulled away, using 10-4 and 10-6 surges across the next two frames to build a 30-18 lead heading into the fourth.

Prescott continued to bang away on the offensive end, while her senior running mate found life fun behind the three-point arc.

Smith drained a pair of three-balls in the second quarter, then came back for another trey in the third, offering up something South Whidbey had no answers for on this night.

With their twin 13-point efforts, both of Coupeville’s shooting stars continue to climb up the CHS girls hoops career scoring chart, which covers 1974-2020.

Smith, now with 239 points, jumps from #50 to #46, passing Mikayla Elfrank (227), Ema Smith (228), Hilary Kortuem (231), and Breeanna Messner (235).

Prescott, just a junior, has tallied 224 points as a high school player, and is on the cusp of also breaking into the Top 50.

She moved from #54 to #51 Friday, elbowing past Beth Mouw (216), Lisa Roehl (216), and Annette Jameson (223).

Coupeville also got scoring from Avalon Renninger (4), Maddie Georges (2), and Hannah Davidson (2) Friday, while Carolyn Lhamon, Izzy Wells, Tia Wurzrainer, and Kylie Van Velkinburgh saw floor time.

Renninger reached a milestone of her own, as her final point of the night, a third-quarter free throw, was the 100th of her career.

Friday’s win kicked off a five-game road trip for the Wolves, who are scheduled to play three times next week.

CHS travels to Granite Falls Monday, Cedar Park Christian Friday, and Port Townsend Saturday.

The first and third games are make-up games after snow and wind, respectively, got in the way the first time around.

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Jered Brown tossed in seven points Friday as Coupeville battled Island rival South Whidbey. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Throw out the first three minutes and it was a battle royal.

Recovering strongly after a brutal opening, the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball squad played host South Whidbey even over the game’s final 29 minutes Friday night.

Unfortunately, that early 14-0 deficit proved to be the difference in a 64-50 loss.

The road defeat drops the Wolves to 1-2 in North Sound Conference action, 4-7 overall, while the high-flying Falcons soar to 3-1, 11-3.

Back in a live game for the first time in seven days, after snow prevented it from playing earlier in the week, Coupeville stumbled badly coming out of the tip-off.

With more turnovers (four) than shot attempts (one) in the first 180 seconds, the Wolves had no answers for the tall, quick Falcons.

Once CHS coach Brad Sherman got his players locked-in, however, they proved capable of holding their own.

With Mason Grove and Sean Toomey-Stout combining for nine points, the Wolves closed the first quarter on an 11-9 mini-surge.

Coupeville’s shooting went ice-cold for a stretch in the second frame, allowing South Whidbey to stretch the margin from 23-11 after one to 38-18 at the half, but there was hope.

Grove rained down a pair of three-balls in both the third and fourth quarters, and the Wolves used 18-15 and 14-11 runs across the final two quarters to shave away at the lead.

The Wolf senior had a hot touch from behind the arc all night, hitting at least one three-ball in every quarter as he rang up seven treys on his way to a team-best 23 points.

But while one CHS player torched the nets, the host Falcons got big-time scoring from a pair of players, with Carson Wrightson and Sterling Patton banking in 23 apiece to tie Grove for game-high honors.

While his one-man shooting show ultimately couldn’t save Coupeville, Grove notched a personal milestone, cracking the Top 100 on his school’s boys basketball career scoring chart.

With his 23 points, he passed 12 former Wolf greats Friday, including Tyler King, Aaron Curtin, and Brian Fakkema.

Grove sits with 291 points, tied with Risen Johnson at #96 for a Coupeville hoops program currently in its 103rd season.

Xavier Murdy and Jered Brown were Grove’s primary back-ups Friday, both dropping in seven points, including a three-ball apiece.

Koa Davison (6), Sean Toomey-Stout (5), and Jacobi Pilgrim (2) also scored for Coupeville, with Jean Lund-Olsen, Hawthorne Wolfe, and Gavin Knoblich seeing floor time.

Thanks to weather make-ups, Coupeville has a busy week ahead.

The Wolf boys host Cedar Park Christian Monday, travel to King’s Tuesday, get a road-rematch with CPC Friday, then host Port Townsend Saturday.

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Avalon Renninger wheels and deals. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Now, we’re in the thick of it.

With winter break firmly in the rear view mirror — though maybe not winter itself — the basketball race is heating up.

Both Coupeville High School varsity hoops squads currently sit in third place in the six-team North Sound Conference, with plenty of games left to play.

The week ahead offers both Wolf squads a pair of games, weather permitting.

The CHS girls are scheduled to travel to Granite Falls Tuesday, then take a shorter trip down Island Friday to face next door neighbor South Whidbey.

Meanwhile the Coupeville boys get to spend the entire week on The Rock, with Cedar Park Christian set to come to town Tuesday, followed by a Friday trip to Langley with the girls.

As we prep for those games, and the possibility Mother Nature might once again mess around with the plans of basketball fans, a look at where things currently sit:

 

North Sound Conference girls basketball:

School League Overall
CPC-Bothell 4-0 10-4
King’s 1-0 9-2
Coupeville 2-1 7-3
South Whidbey 2-2 7-7
Granite Falls 0-3 2-11
Sultan 0-3 3-7

 

North Sound Conference boys basketball:

School League Overall
King’s 3-0 7-7
South Whidbey 2-1 10-3
Coupeville 1-1 4-6
CPC-Bothell 2-2 7-6
Granite Falls 1-3 3-9
Sultan 1-3 2-10

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Freshman Maddie Georges scored 13 points Friday night as Coupeville’s varsity nipped Sultan in a wild one. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Bend, but don’t break.

Showing some serious intestinal fortitude Friday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team made big plays at crucial moments.

Shots which had to go in, went in. Defensive stops which had to be made, were made.

And with that, the Wolves head into the weekend happy, having held on to capture a 31-28 gut-wrencher of a win against visiting Sultan.

The victory lifts Coupeville to 2-1 in North Sound Conference play, 7-3 overall.

This was the kind of game which can give a coach some extra grey hairs. Though, if you win, you can sort of live with that.

The Wolves rode the rollercoaster Friday, jumping out to a big lead, giving it all back, then stepping up to deny Sultan in the fourth quarter for the second time this season.

In the early going, things looked fairly eazy-breezy.

Sultan did drain a long shot from the top of the key, beating the buzzer by half a second, to open the game, then went on to hold a 4-2 lead.

But the Wolves responded in style, using a 14-0 run which started with a first quarter Maddie Georges layup and ended with a second quarter Tia Wurzrainer layup to blow things wide open.

Coupeville was frustrating the Turks with nasty defense, getting out and running, and almost always finishing strongly.

Maybe not at the free throw line, where it missed its first six attempts, but everywhere else.

Whether it was Chelsea Prescott slashing through the middle to convert a layup off of a dart of a pass from Hannah Davidson, or Georges hitting from long range, everything was going in for the Wolves.

One of three freshmen on the Wolf varsity, Georges hit a pair of three-balls during the run, and was so quick about it, she actually beat her coach.

In between the treys, Fox sent a sub to check in and replace his fab frosh.

But while the other Wolf crouched by the table, waiting for a stoppage in play so she could check in, Georges went flying by, snagged a pass and nailed a leaning three-pointer, making sure to maximize her floor time.

Up 16-4 after the surge, Coupeville took a small step back after that, but got another long jumper from Georges as soon as she reentered the game, and went to the break up 20-12.

But if things were dandy in the first half, they got a bit desperate later.

While everything had been dropping for the Wolves during the first two quarters, the rim got downright rude in the third quarter, rejecting shot after shot by Coupeville.

Given new life, Sultan crawled back to within 20-19 and was mere ticks of the clock away from pulling off the bagel job in the frame.

But wait, remember those fab frosh I mentioned? Cause they’re here to save the day.

Carolyn Lhamon, with a Sultan player hanging off of each of her arms, out-wrestled the world for the biggest offensive rebound of the game, then flicked the ball out to the shooter with the magic touch.

Some call her Mad Dog. Some call her The Wall.

It doesn’t matter, because Georges blocks out all noise on the floor, even the hollering of her boisterous fan section.

Stone-cold killers are just that way.

Lhamon’s pass on her fingertips, Georges slid forward and calmly reigned holy terror on the Turks, flipping the net skyward with her third three-ball of the night and calming her coach’s angina.

For a moment, at least.

It probably came right back, as Sultan scored the first three buckets of the fourth quarter to erase the 23-19 lead Georges had given Coupeville.

Trailing for the first time in what seemed like forever, the Wolves were down 25-23, the basket had once again closed up shop on their side of the floor, and things might have seemed dire.

But … plot twist.

A team which was having little luck at the free throw line recaptured its mojo and reclaimed the game thanks to turning a weakness into a strength.

Prescott drained a freebie, before senior leaders Avalon Renninger and Scout Smith each went 2-for-2 during back-to-back trips to the charity stripe.

Surprise. Surprise.

Things still got pushed to the final moments, however, as the teams traded buckets, with Coupeville’s coming off of a short banker from Davidson, before a Sultan free throw made life tense at 30-28.

Worse still, the Turks had the ball in their hands with 19 seconds to play, thanks to a questionable call on a play where Renninger was drilled in the face, only to have the ref whistle traveling and not a foul.

Sultan’s momentary joy was short-lived, however, as Smith picked off the inbounds pass, sliding around her rival to yank the lob out of mid-air.

That set up one more free throw from Renninger, and then a final defensive gem to seal the deal.

With the Turks down by three and scrambling to get the ball up court, Georges emulated Smith, her point guard mentor, by making off with the ball and setting off a celebration on her bench.

At which point the Coupeville coaching staff started to breathe again.

Georges led the scoring attack with 13, Prescott (7), Wurzrainer (4), Renninger (3), Smith (2), and Davidson (2) also scored, while Lhamon, Izzy Wells, Kylie Van Velkinburgh, and Audrianna Shaw chipped in with hustle and grit.

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