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Posts Tagged ‘Northwest League’

Chase Anderson moved from #13 to #10 on the CHS boys’ basketball career scoring chart Friday. (Julie Wheat photo)

They almost shook everything up.

Squaring off with Northwest 2B/1B League heavyweight Orcas Island Friday, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball squad overcame a substantial foul disparity and a second-quarter defensive letdown to push the Vikings to their limit.

But it wasn’t to be, as the visitors held on late to claim a 64-54 win and stay alive in the battle for a conference crown.

The loss drops Coupeville to 3-4 in league play, 6-9 overall, while Orcas gets to 6-1 in NWL action.

Brad Sherman’s squad heads to Mount Vernon Christian this coming Tuesday to face off with the league’s top team, before hosting last place La Conner Friday on Senior Night.

Friday’s fracas started with a brief road bump, as Orcas hit a pair of three-balls en route to claiming an early 10-2 lead.

After that it was Coupeville’s turn to get torrid behind the arc, as Chase Anderson drilled a pair of treys and Camden Glover splashed home another one across a two-minute span.

Closing the quarter on a 14-4 run, the Wolves claimed their first lead of the night at 16-14 thanks to some precision free throw shooting from Riley Lawless.

The CHS big man scored before actually playing a single second, as he replaced Anderson, who got crunched in the face while driving hard to the hoop.

With his teammate getting looked at in the locker room, then returning with an ice pack, Lawless inherited Anderson’s free throws.

He hit one, then promptly yanked down a rebound on the next play and earned two more charity shots of his own, both of which he drained.

Anderson returned to the lineup to start the second frame, and the Wolves ripped off three straight buckets to cap a 14-0 run and open a 22-14 lead.

The baskets came fast and furious, with Malachi Somes and Davin Houston banging home layups off of passes from Anderson and Carson Grove, respectively, before Anderson took a steal coast-to-coast.

But as suddenly as the offense began to flow, it stopped.

Taking advantage of a steady stream of foul calls on the Wolves, Orcas hit free throw after free throw and slow-crawled its way to its own 16-0 spurt, reclaiming the lead at 30-22.

The bleakness finally stopped as Anderson banked in a bucket a half-tick before the halftime buzzer, and the teams played a back-and-forth brawl in the third.

Glover and Anderson connected on three-balls on consecutive trips down the floor, but Coupeville could never quite regain the advantage.

From seven points down, the Wolves got back to within 41-38 by the end of the period, thanks to a jumper from Liam Blas and two more free throws from Lawless, but that was as close as CHS could get.

Blas rippled the nets on his own three-ball early in the fourth quarter, but Orcas responded with a 9-0 run to push the lead out to 52-41.

Down the stretch, the Wolves hung tough, cutting the deficit to 58-54 with under a minute to play, only to see the Vikings refuse to buckle.

Overall, Coupeville won the side battles, hitting seven treys to three by Orcas, while also shooting a higher percentage at the free throw line (9-12 vs. 16-23 for the Vikings).

Anderson led all scorers with 24 points, while Glover (11), Blas (5), Somes (5), Lawless (5), Grove (2), and Houston (2) also tallied points and Easton Green and Aiden O’Neill rounded out the rotation.

It was a historical night for Anderson, as he jumped from #13 to #10 on the CHS boys’ basketball career scoring chart for a program in its 109th season.

With 871 points and counting, he slid past Bill Jarrell (855), Arik Garthwaite (867), and Denny Clark (869), with the last of that trio having been a top 10 career scorer since 1964.

Heading into Tuesday’s tilt at MVC, Anderson is three points behind the #9 all-time scorer — his coach, Brad Sherman.

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Tenley Stuurmans (left) and Arianna Cunningham head up court. (Jackie Saia photo)

The Wolves have four games left to make their move.

After falling at Concrete Tuesday, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball team sits on the outside looking in when it comes to potential playoff berths.

Scout Smith’s squad currently sits at 1-5 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 4-10 overall, after absorbing a 50-32 loss to the soaring Lions.

That leaves Coupeville a game back of Friday Harbor in the chase for the fourth, and final, postseason slot for 2B teams.

Mount Vernon Christian (5-0, 12-2), La Conner (5-1, 10-5), Orcas Island (3-3, 7-8) and the Wolverines (2-4, 4-11) would currently advance, while 1B schools Concrete (4-1, 12-3) and Darrington (0-6, 4-9) are both guaranteed playoff invitations.

The Wolves can still make their own magic, with games left against Orcas, MVC, La Conner, and Friday Harbor remaining on the regular season schedule.

A win Tuesday would have helped, but Concrete, enjoying one of its best seasons in recent memory, proved to be too much.

The Lions hit the floor hot and never cooled off, jumping out to a 14-4 lead after one quarter of play, before pushing the margin to 33-8 at the half.

Coupeville found its shooting touch in the second half, putting together 13-11 and 11-6 runs across the third and fourth, respectively, but time ran out on the Wolves before they could mount a full comeback.

“Concrete was tough competition,” Scout Smith said. “They were active and aggressive on defense and could not miss on their shots.

“We tip our hats to them and put all focus on Orcas on Friday.”

Teagan Calkins and Tenley Stuurmans paced CHS with eight points apiece, while Haylee Armstrong (4), Danica Strong (3), Lexis Drake (3), Arianna Cunningham (2), Sydney Van Dyke (2), and Capri Anter (2) also scored.

Adeline Maynes and Kennedy O’Neill rounded out the rotation as all 10 Wolves saw the floor in the loss, with Calkins ripping down a team-high 15 rebounds and making off with three steals.

Stuurmans pilfered five steals, while she, Armstrong, and Strong each picked up a pair of assists.

With her four points, Armstrong moves into a three-way tie with Mia Farris and Marlys West for 50th place on the Wolf girls’ career scoring chart for a program launched in 1974. The trio all sit with 247 points.

 

No JV game:

Concrete only goes one team deep this season, so Coupeville’s young guns had the night off. They return to action Friday at home against Orcas Island.

Taylor Marrs waits for her moment in the spotlight. (Melanie Wolfe photo)

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Camden Glover, unstoppable in the paint. (Jackie Saia photo)

The climb continues.

Sparked by a dominant performance from Camden Glover, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball squad drilled host Concrete Tuesday night, continuing a recent rise up the standings.

With a 72-32 decimation of the Lions, Brad Sherman’s road warriors get to 3-3 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 6-8 overall.

Cresting at the right time, the Wolves have won five of their last eight games overall, and their last three against conference rivals.

The win lifts CHS into a three-way tie with Darrington (3-3, 9-6) and Friday Harbor (3-3, 3-13) for third place in the seven-team NWL.

Mount Vernon Christian (5-0, 11-4) and Orcas Island (5-1, 9-5) currently top the standings, with Concrete (1-4, 4-12) and La Conner (0-6, 0-15) bringing up the rear.

Easton Green stops ‘n pops. (Danica Strong photo)

Coupeville has four regular season games left on its schedule, all against league foes, starting with a home game Friday against Orcas Island.

The Wolves will enter play that night coming off a wire-to-wire win in Concrete.

With Glover and Chase Anderson combining to singe the nets for 15 points, CHS broke out to an 18-2 lead through one quarter of play, before steadily adding to the lead.

From 35-16 at the half, the Wolves pushed the advantage to 54-22 through three quarters, before rumbling in for the win.

Glover finished with a varsity career-high 28 points, all coming in the first three quarters, while Anderson banked in 14 in support.

Davin Houston (8), Riley Lawless (6), Malachi Somes (6), Carson Grove (4), Liam Blas (3), Easton Green (2), and Aiden O’Neill (1) all kept the scorebook keeper busy, while Nathan Coxsey rounded out the rotation.

With his 14 points, Anderson moves into a tie with Hunter Smith at #13 all-time on the CHS boys’ basketball scoring chart, which launched 109 seasons ago. The duo each have 847 points.

Up next is Bill Jarrell (855) and Arik Garthwaite (867), with Denny Clark (869) sitting at #10 and Anderson’s coach, one Brad Sherman, currently #9 at 874.

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“You want to touch my basketball??? I think not!!!!!!” (Jackie Saia photo)

The sprint to the end begins.

Coupeville High School basketball teams begin the run towards firming up playoff options and such with a pair of Northwest 2B/1B League clashes this coming week.

The Wolves travel to Concrete Tuesday, before playing host to Orcas Island Friday. After that, there are just three regular-season games left on the hoops schedule.

Where things currently sit as of Jan. 18:

 

Northwest League boys’ basketball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 5-0 11-4
Orcas Island 4-1 8-5
Darrington 3-2 9-5
Coupeville 2-3 5-8
Friday Harbor 2-3 2-13
Concrete 1-3 4-10
La Conner 0-5 0-14

 

Northwest League girls’ basketball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 5-0 12-1
La Conner 4-1 9-5
Concrete 3-1 9-3
Friday Harbor 2-3 4-10
Orcas Island 2-3 6-8
Coupeville 1-4 4-9
Darrington 0-5 4-8

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Chase Anderson scored a season-high 36 points Friday as Coupeville blew out a solid Darrington squad. (Melanie Wolfe photo)

Darrington came to town as high rollers. It exited as roadkill.

With the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball team playing its most complete game of the season Friday, the Wolves proved win/loss records can be deceptive.

While Brad Sherman’s squad is fighting to get back to .500 and the visiting Loggers carried a 9-4 record onto the floor, the game fully belonged to the home team, which led by as many as 34 points en route to a 75-57 victory.

With the win, its fourth in its last six games, Coupeville gets to 2-3 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 5-7 overall.

The Wolves also move from sixth to fourth in the seven-team NWL, and are third best among the 2B schools, with conference clashes on the schedule next week against Concrete and Orcas Island.

Before that CHS will get another stern test, hosting non-conference foe Napavine (10-3) Saturday, with tipoff set for 2:00 PM.

Fear will not be a factor, as the Wolves showed against Darrington, which began the night in second place in the Northwest League.

After exchanging early buckets, Coupeville seized the momentum with a 15-8 tear to close the first quarter with a 22-14 lead.

Senior sniper Aiden O’Neill, who knocked down five three-balls on the night, nailed back-to-back treys to kickstart the run, with Malachi Somes and Chase Anderson contributing buckets to keep things hopping.

Anderson, enjoying his best shooting performance of the season, went off for 12 points in the opening frame, then tossed in 15 more in the second quarter as CHS stretched the lead out to 45-26.

Slashing to the bucket for layups, spinning past defenders and leaving them grasping at air, or calmly converting free throws, the Wolf senior outscored Darrington by himself across the first 16 minutes.

Anderson’s final two points of the half came with no time left on the clock, after the refs issued a technical foul to a chippy Logger.

Darrington’s fans got loud in response, then quieted down just as quickly as both charity shots barely rippled the net as they gracefully dropped through.

Camden Glover fights through the defense. (Jackie Saia photo)

The third quarter was a master class for the Wolves, as senior big man Camden Glover began to rampage through the paint for buckets while Anderson and O’Neill continued to slice ‘n dice.

Coupeville moved the ball effectively, with precision passes setting up buckets, and very few CHS shots popping back out.

Davin Houston zipped an especially nice set-up pass into the hands of the waiting Glover on one play, while rough ‘n ready duo Liam Blas and Riley Lawless, playing like the rampaging forces of nature they are, threw Darrington players out of their way in pursuit of rebounds.

Up 70-37 after three quarters, Coupeville had the look of a team that could score 100, but Sherman smartly rested his starters in the fourth, keeping them as fresh as possible for Napavine on a fast turn-around.

Darrington came hard in the fourth quarter, closing the game on a 17-1 surge across the final six minutes, but it was academic at that point.

Anderson finished with a season-high 36 points in three quarters of action, cracked the 800-point club, and continued his march up the CHS boys’ basketball career scoring chart.

Now sitting with 813 points, the Wolf senior passed Hawthorne Wolfe (800) and Corey Cross (811) Friday to move into 14th place all-time for a program launched way back in 1917.

He had plenty of support against Darrington, as O’Neill rattled the rims for 17 points and Glover banked in 13.

Houston (4), Somes (4), and Lawless (1) rounded out the attack, with Easton Green, Nathan Coxsey, and Blas also seeing floor time for the Wolves.

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