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Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith contemplates a future in which his school will have increased playoff opportunities. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Get comfortable, cause no one is going anywhere.

The Washington Interscholastic Activities Association finalized its classification numbers Sunday for the 2024-2028 cycle, and the seven-team Northwest 2B/1B League won’t be affected at all.

Well, a little bit, but in a pro-Coupeville way.

The Wolves, Friday Harbor, and La Conner remain as 2B schools, while Mount Vernon Christian and Orcas Island go from 1B to 2B.

Darrington and Concrete remain as 1B institutions.

With the NWL going from a league where 1B schools held the edge at 4-3, to one where 2B schools now dominate 5-2, will increase playoff opportunities in most sports for the bigger schools.

So, a positive for Coupeville, which has the largest student body in the league.

Now, the change won’t affect football, as MVC and Orcas don’t practice the dark arts of the gridiron, but God’s Chosen Sport — basketball — will definitely benefit.

When setting numbers, the WIAA takes into consideration each school’s free and reduced lunches, though it calls that “Direct Cert” now.

If a school has a rate greater than the state average of 34%, its enrollment number is reduced, with a cap at 40%.

Two NWL schools — La Conner and Concrete — had their numbers adjusted for this reason.

Schools with an adjusted student body of 1-104 land in 1B, with 105-224 calling 2B home.

Going forward, there are 54 schools in 2B and 105 in 1B.

For those that care, the other numbers are 60 schools in 4A, 73 in 3A, 63 in 2A, and 55 in 1A.

Whidbey Island’s two other schools, Oak Harbor (1,179.88 students) and South Whidbey (273.63) remain 3A and 1A schools in the next cycle.

Where NWL schools currently sit:

Coupeville — 192.50
Friday Harbor — 185.63
Mount Vernon Christian — 134.63
Orcas Island — 123.00
La Conner — 108.36 adjusted from 129.00
Concrete — 87.31 adjusted from 93.88
Darrington — 85.38

The next classification cycle begins in August and runs through the 2027-2028 school year, assuring current Coupeville Middle School 8th graders will be 2B athletes for the entirety of their high school careers.

 

To crunch all the numbers, pop over to:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/10QWzZeJ2LOeHhIMS3waPTz7SXEAXWWHxuUXJ2qI4RAw/edit#gid=0

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Skylar Parker weaves into the lane as Mia Farris drops the hammer on a too-slow foe. (Parker Hammons photo)

Tension mounts.

Another week in the books, and the end of the regular season looms for Northwest 2B/1B League basketball teams.

Coupeville sits with 15 games played, and five more on the schedule, meaning the upcoming week will be a busy one.

The Wolf boys, battling for league supremacy with La Conner and Mount Vernon Christian, welcome Concrete to town Tuesday, then wrap the week with a pair of non-conference tilts.

South Whidbey travels to Cow Town Wednesday for a makeup game, before Brad Sherman’s squad hops on the bus Saturday to go play Chief Leschi in Puyallup.

For the Wolf girls, it’s a two-game week, as Megan Richter’s team hosts Concrete and travels to Chief Leschi.

As we count down the minutes until tipoff, where things sit through Jan. 21:

 

Northwest League boys’ basketball:

School League Overall
La Conner 4-0 11-5
MV Christian 6-1 6-10
Coupeville 4-1 11-4
Orcas Island 3-3 6-9
Concrete 1-4 6-9
Friday Harbor 0-3 4-9
Darrington 0-6 4-10

 

Northwest League girls’ basketball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 7-0 14-4
La Conner 4-0 10-5
Darrington 2-4 7-8
Friday Harbor 1-2 3-10
Orcas Island 2-4 3-11
Concrete 1-4 7-7
Coupeville 1-4 5-10

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Chase Anderson flies in for another breakaway bucket. (Jackie Saia photos)

Let the hate flow through you, but channel that anger.

Finding the balance between the light and the dark sides of the basketball force Friday, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball players kept their composure under extreme stress and captured a statement win.

Holding off a rough-and-ready Mount Vernon Christian squad 54-51, the Wolves overcame questionable calls and frequent blows to assorted body parts, handing the Hurricanes their first conference loss of the season.

The win, a huge bounce back after a last-second loss to La Conner, lifts CHS to 4-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 11-3 overall.

It also keeps the Wolves right in the mix for a league title, as they chase the Braves (4-0, 11-5) — who they reunite with in La Conner Feb. 6 — and MVC (6-1, 6-10).

Friday’s win was a testament to team play, as Coupeville got something from everyone on the floor.

The ‘Canes made a point of trying to stifle Wolf senior Logan Downes, who entered the night needing 36 points to become the #1 scorer in CHS boys’ basketball history, clamping down on him at every turn.

Or just hitting him repeatedly around the head and shoulders, or anywhere their slap-happy fingers could reach.

Downes responded by finding other ways to set up his team for success, soaring for rebounds, firing floor-length passes to a galloping Chase Anderson, and taking offensive charges.

Teammates like Nick Guay and William Davidson stepped up with huge buckets, then, as the defense slipped a bit here and there, Downes twisted himself into a pretzel to knock down buckets to deflate the ‘Canes at crunch time.

The first quarter was a rock ’em, sock’ em extravaganza, knotted up at 9-9 after eight torrid minutes.

Cole White and Ryan Blouin sacrificed their tail bones, absorbing body blows and drawing offensive fouls on their rivals, while Hunter Bronec fought like a wild man down in the mosh pit that was the paint.

A three-ball off of White’s slender fingertips caressed the net to force the tie, then Downes finally got a sliver of room in which to operate in the second quarter.

He went off for nine points in the frame, with Blouin and White adding daggers, and CHS clung to a 22-21 lead at the half, after a hasty conference at the scorer’s table confirmed the score.

MVC pulled ahead for the final time at 28-26 early in the third quarter, before Coupeville made its move.

A 12-3 run to end the frame included a silky three-ball from Downes and back-to-back big plays from Coupeville’s often unsung role players.

Guay, taking off like a rocket, hauled in a long outlet pass, banking in the ball while being battered in living color, pulling off a three-point play the (very) hard way.

Then it was time for Mr. Twinkle Toes to dance the dance of his people, as Davidson, among the spriest of big men, twirled through the paint, lofting in a soft lil’ jumper to make it 38-31.

Brad Sherman draws up a top-secret play.

The final frame was a donnybrook, with Coupeville getting the lead up to nine, but no higher, while MVC kept making mini runs at tying things up.

Downes banked in nine more points in crunch time, but it was Anderson with the freeze-frame shot to the solar plexus.

Having been body-slammed off the floor, before having his foot ripped off his body at another moment, the slender sophomore was a walking, (always) talking full body bruise.

But, like Muhammad Ali rope-a-dopin’ fools into submission before knocking their heads off, Anderson ignored his aches and pains in the final minute, going airborne and throwing down an eye-popping shot while sliding through a slender space in the defense made for a gnat.

MVC drained a late trey to cut the margin to three but couldn’t buy a miracle at the buzzer as all five Wolves sold out on defense, forcing an awkward heave in the general direction of the rim as time expired.

Wolf coach Brad Sherman gave 10 players floor time in the win, with seven of them scoring.

Downes finished with a gutsy 25, and heads into a Saturday home game with Neah Bay sitting with 1,127 points, needing 11 to pass Jeff Stone and Mike Bagby.

Anderson banked in 11 in support, with Bronec (6), White (5), Guay (3), Blouin (2), and Davidson (2) also tallying points.

Hurlee Bronec, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, and Zane Oldenstadt also saw action for CHS, crashing the boards with intensity.

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Katie Marti is coming for all your records before the next family barbecue. (Coupeville High School Yearbook Staff photo)

Katie Marti is halfway home to having all the family bragging rights, female division.

Banking in a trio of three-balls Friday night against Mount Vernon Christian, the Wolf junior moved into a tie with Aunt Aimee (Messner) Bishop on the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball career scoring chart.

Katie, now sitting with 168 points, already passed Aunt Rose Marti (57) and mom Christi Messner (125), with Cousin Breeanna Messner (235) and Aunt Judy Marti (545) still ahead.

And, since I said “female division,” that means we’re not worrying about dad Frank Marti or any of Katie’s many uncles and male cousins.

At least at the moment.

While Katie’s offensive explosion, all of which came in the first quarter, wasn’t enough to totally derail a very-good MVC squad, it does provide a positive from a 68-24 loss.

The defeat, coming against the #3 team in 1B, drops Coupeville to 1-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 5-9 overall.

Up next is a Saturday rumble at home with the #1 team in 1B, Neah Bay.

Will the Red Devils leave their starters in and continue to shoot three-balls two minutes deep into the fourth quarter, like the Hurricanes did?

Only time will tell.

Perhaps MVC, flustered a bit by Marti’s assault from behind the arc, felt the need to pour it on late to appease a chattering fan base which loudly protested a ref’s call while ahead by 40.

In a game in which those same officials in black and white gave Coupeville exactly zero free throw attempts, I’m sure that one pro-Wolf call must have chilled Hurricane fans to the bone.

Marti, with no help from the refs, even when she was being tweaked, twisted, and tossed about while standing two inches in front of them, kept things close early with her treys.

The first one cut the margin to 4-3, the second one sliced the lead to 10-6, and the third one, an improbable bank shot from an odd angle, snipped the deficit to 12-9.

After that, Mount Vernon used its superior speed and height, plus a little friendly help from the rules crew, to pull away.

Up 18-9 at the first break, the ‘Canes stretched the margin out to 39-18 at the half.

It could have been worse, but Wolf gunner Mia Farris went off for nine points in the second quarter, including the best shot of the night.

With the clock racing to 0:00 as the locker room beckoned, the Wolf junior threw her hands up in frustration, with the ball going along for the ride.

It hung in the air for a very long second, stuck its tongue out at the visiting fans, then splashed home for three points as the Wolves went bonkers.

Things took a downturn after that, with MVC ripping off 23 straight points to open the third quarter, setting off a running clock.

Making things (slightly) better was the sight of one ref being hit twice, once by each team.

Coupeville scrapper Teagan Calkins knocked the ball off the official’s face at close range, before a Hurricane ballhandler drilled a pass off the dude’s knee.

At least we hope it was his knee…

Teagan Calkins, dreaming about throwing the ball off someone’s face. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

CHS coach Megan Richter gave floor time to 11 players, with Farris (13), Marti (9), and Calkins (2) combining to handle all the scoring.

Madison McMillan, Haylee Armstrong, Brynn Parker, Jada Heaton, Kayla Arnold, Reese Wilkinson, Skylar Parker, and Lyla Stuurmans also went into the trenches, fighting for rebounds and eyeballing the refs.

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“Tell me all about it when I wake up.” (Charlotte Young photo)

It was a beautiful brawl in Cow Town.

And while the good guys lost on points (or one point) this time out, it was far from a KO.

Stung by a furious finish from visiting La Conner Tuesday, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball team fell 69-68 in a game decided in the final, frantic seconds.

The loss drops the Wolves to 3-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 10-3 overall, and, for the moment, slips them to third place in the standings.

But CHS gets another crack at La Conner (3-0, 10-5), and hosts league leader Mount Vernon Christian (6-0, 6-9) Friday, offering a quick chance to throw things asunder.

The Wolves still have seven games left on the regular season schedule, with four of those being conference rumbles.

While a league title would look nice on the wall, it’s the three-team battle between La Conner, Friday Harbor, and Coupeville which decides which two 2B schools advance to the playoffs.

With Tuesday’s win, the Braves are 2-0, while the Wolves sit at 1-1. Having lost to both those teams, the Wolverines bring up the rear at 0-2.

CHS closes the regular season with a home game against Friday Harbor Feb. 2, then travels to La Conner Feb. 6, before their two rivals mix it up one more time Feb. 9.

Tuesday’s tilt was a wild one, starting one way, taking a drastic detour, then morphing into a non-stop hail of punches being thrown in every direction.

Take just the first quarter and Coupeville was a million miles better than La Conner.

The Wolves came out super aggressive on defense, and threw the fear of God into their arch-rivals, forcing great gobs of turnovers, and using them to set up a fast-paced layup line.

With Chase Andeson and Cole White flying down the floor and hauling in outlet passes from Logan Downes, who was in full-on quarterback mode, Coupeville stormed out to a 12-2 lead, stretched it to 18-4, then headed to the bench up 21-9.

Little worked for the Braves in the opening eight minutes, as their press failed, their offense stalled out, and they looked three steps too slow.

That, unfortunately, was deceptive, as La Conner rediscovered its mojo in the second frame.

A trio of three-balls splashing home helped the Braves, who suddenly got much quicker, and much better at controlling the ball.

Down 16, La Conner stormed all the way back to take the lead before the half.

One second, the Braves were trailing 25-9, the next they were up 33-30 as the teams went to the locker room.

Fifteen straight points to end the half, then a pullup jumper to open the third, made the visitors (and their fans) a bit feisty.

Logan Downes, on his way to one of many buckets. (Parker Hammons photo)

Re-enter Downes, who snatched the ball away and went on his own tear.

Dropping in 14 points in the third quarter, the Wolf senior couldn’t be stopped, scoring in a multitude of ways.

Step back and he nailed a three-ball in your face. Come up on him, and he slashed around you, careening to the basket.

La Conner hung tough but fueled by Downes assault on the basket, the Wolves regained the lead at 50-48 heading into the fourth.

And looked like they were going to pull away.

Another three-ball from Downes, who hit eight treys in the game, plus a breakaway bucket for Anderson — off a Downes pass — pushed the lead to 57-50.

But this was a game of ebbs and flows, and La Conner struck right back, using an 11-2 surge to move back in front at 61-59.

Bam! Bam!

Downes ripped off back-to-back three-balls, CHS reemerged with a 65-61 lead, and both coaches were reaching for the heart medicine.

La Conner, with an assist from the refs, who fouled out Wolf gunners Ryan Blouin and Cole White to reduce Coupeville’s weapons at crunch time, had one final surge, however.

While Ivory Damien and Brayden Pedroza went off for 27 and 24 points, respectively, it was CJ Edwards who delivered the kill shots.

The quicksilver Brave popped a short jumper in the paint to push his squad ahead 67-65, then ignored the wailing of the hometown crowd to ice the game with a pair of late free throws.

Downes banked home a three-ball on the run to cut the final margin from 69-65 to 69-68, but time ran out on the Wolves.

Coupeville got points from seven different players, with their leader tying his season-high with 36 points.

It’s the third-straight 30+ game for Downes, and his sixth of the season.

He’s averaging 24.9 a night and continues to hit major milestones almost every time out.

Downes, who has 1,102 points heading into Friday’s clash with MVC, is now #3 on the all-time CHS boys’ career scoring chart, which spans 107 seasons.

Having passed ’70s wild man Randy Keefe (1,088) Tuesday, he’s just 36 points from knocking off Jeff Stone and Mike Bagby, who sit atop the throne tied with 1,137 points.

After that comes the top three scorers in school history — Wolf female stars Brianne King (1,549), Novi Barron (1,270), and Makana Stone (1,158).

Anderson, moving quickly up the career chart as just a sophomore, banked in 12 points Tuesday in support of Downes, while White (8), Nick Guay (5), Ryan Blouin (3), Zane Oldenstadt (2), and Hunter Bronec (2) also scored.

William Davidson, Hurlee Bronec, and Timothy Nitta also saw floor time for Brad Sherman’s squad.

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