Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Northwest League’

Arianna Cunningham tiptoes her way to the bucket. (Jackie Saia photo)

Sunny day, rainy night. Sort of.

After a sun-drenched mid-January Friday on the prairie, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad went inside and promptly opened up the heavens, raining down nine three-balls on visiting Darrington.

Peppering the Loggers from every angle, while also playing rock-solid defense, the Wolves romped to a 58-25 win to get to 1-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 4-9 overall.

Coming hot on the heels of a non-conference win Monday at Auburn Adventist Academy, it gives Scout Smith’s hardcourt warriors their first back-to-back wins of the season.

“Shoot like this every game!” (Jackie Saia photo)

The Wolves will try and keep the good times going next week, with a road trip to Concrete Tuesday and a home clash Friday with Orcas Island.

If they come out firing on both ends of the floor like they did Friday, the win streak will only grow.

Coupeville opened the game by forcing a 24-second shot-clock violation on the Loggers first possession, and never looked back, blanking Darrington 15-0 across the first quarter.

Tenley Stuurmans opened the scoring, snagging a rebound and rolling through a mob of defenders to slap the ball back up and in, then the trey explosion began.

Wolf senior sniper Danica Strong, who netted six of her team’s nine three-balls, hit back-to-back longe-range shots, helped set up a jumper for fab frosh Kennedy O’Neill, then looped back around to splash home yet another three-ball.

With sparkplug Arianna Cunningham piling up rebounds and steals, the CHS defense was brutally efficient, with Darrington not scoring until more than a minute into the second quarter.

By that point, the visitors trailed 18-0 after Teagan Calkins opened the frame by knocking down the first of her three treys, and things were just heating up.

Haylee Armstrong and Calkins converted breakaway buckets off of steals, while Strong couldn’t miss from behind the arc, and the Wolves strolled into the halftime break up 29-10.

Just to drive the point home, CHS went on a second 18-0 run, this time to open the third quarter, with the Wolves pushing the lead all the way out to 37 points.

Darrington, fairly scrappy for only having seven active players on its roster, managed to keep Coupeville from triggering the running clock that comes with a 40-point deficit, but not by much.

The Wolves used all 10 of their players in the lopsided win, with everyone contributing.

Late in the game, O’Neill tickled the twines on a pair of picture-perfect jumpers — one set up by a pass from Sydney Van Dyke — while Capri Anter put on offensive rebound back up and in under extreme pressure.

Coupeville’s long-range gunners led the scoring attack, with Strong banking in a game-high 18 points and Calkins hot on her heels with 17 of her own.

O’Neill (6), Armstrong (5), Stuurmans (5), Adeline Maynes (2), Anter (2), Cunningham (2), and Lexis Drake (1) also scored, with Van Dyke crashing to the floor in pursuit of loose balls when she wasn’t setting up her teammates with artful passes.

It was a historical night for Calkins, with “The Red Dragon” moving into the top 30 scorers all-time for a CHS girls’ varsity hoops program which has been going since 1974.

With her performance Friday, she passes Kailey Kellner (339) and Tracy Taylor (350) and sits with 352 points.

 

No JV game:

Darrington only has one squad, so Alita Blouin’s team didn’t get a chance to play. Instead, they enthusiastically supported their varsity counterparts from the bleachers.

Coupeville’s young guns await their return to the hardwood. (Melanie Wolfe photo)

Read Full Post »

The fight for league dominance rages. (Julie Wheat photo)

The schedule is full to the brim.

As we wade into the heart of January, Northwest 2B/1B League basketball teams will stay busy, with 31 varsity games on the slate for next week.

Of those, 16 are conference clashes, which will bring things into focus a bit more.

Coupeville hits the road Monday to play non-conference foe Auburn Adventist Academy, before returning home Friday to host NWL rival Darrington.

Action continues Saturday, but just for the Wolf varsity boys, as they welcome non-league foe Napavine to town for a royal rumble.

As things heat up, here’s where everything sits through Jan. 11:

 

Northwest League boys’ basketball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 3-0 8-4
Orcas Island 3-0 7-3
Darrington 1-1 6-4
Friday Harbor 1-1 1-11
Coupeville 1-3 4-6
Concrete 0-2 3-8
La Conner 0-2 0-11

 

Northwest League girls’ basketball:

School League Overall
MV Christian 3-0 9-1
Concrete 2-0 8-2
La Conner 2-0 7-4
Friday Harbor 1-1 3-8
Orcas Island 1-2 5-6
Darrington 0-2 3-5
Coupeville 0-4 2-9

Read Full Post »

Kennedy O’Neill hits the floor ready to go. (Jackie Saia photo)

They made it rain but still got washed away.

The Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball squad nailed a season-high eight three-balls Friday night in La Conner, but ultimately couldn’t overcome a consistent, relentless Braves squad.

Despite the long-range barrage, the Wolves fell 60-44, dropping their record to 0-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 2-9 overall.

CHS will get a chance to bounce back next week, when it travels to Auburn Adventist Academy Monday before hosting Darrington Friday in a conference rumble.

Friday’s showdown in La Conner featured a lot of successful shots from behind the arc, with Teagan Calkins and Haylee Armstrong each splashing home a trio of treys, while Arianna Cunningham and Adeline Maynes netted a solo three-ball apiece.

The Braves countered by hitting from just about everywhere, racking up five three-balls of their own, and a whole lot of two-point field goals.

La Conner sharpshooters Faith Jenkins and Maeve McCormick each went off for 10 points in a single quarter to spark the hometown hardwood heroes, finishing the game with 24 and 15 points, respectively.

That allowed the Braves to take a narrow 9-7 lead after one quarter of play and stretch it out to 22-14 at the half and 42-31 through three frames.

Armstrong and Calkins paced Coupeville, scoring 13 points apiece, while Tenley Stuurmans added eight in support.

Maynes (3), Cunningham (3), Danica Strong (2), and Kennedy O’Neill (2) also scored for the Wolves, as all seven girls to hit the floor for Scout Smith’s team tallied points.

Read Full Post »

Liam Blas scored his first varsity points Friday night as Coupeville scorched La Conner. (Jackie Saia photos)

It was a good old-fashioned beatdown, in every way.

Squaring off with La Conner Friday night, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball squad skipped the three-ball, racking up one of its best offensive showings of the season while relying on two-point field goals and free throws.

Leading from start to finish, the Wolves romped to a 64-30 road win, capturing their third victory in their last four games.

It’s the third time this season Coupeville has put up 60+ points in a contest, and the first time they have done so without the three-ball.

Instead, the Wolves made 24 field goals and rippled the nets on 16 of 23 charity shots.

Brad Sherman’s squad is now 1-3 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 4-6 overall, with a busy week ahead.

The Wolves travel to Auburn Adventist Academy this coming Monday, before hosting Darrington Friday and Napavine Saturday.

They’ll head into that three-game stretch coming off of a solid team-wide performance, with eight of the 10 players who saw floor time at La Conner racking up points.

Coupeville blew out to a 19-6 lead by the first break, before really ramping things up with a 22-4 run in the second quarter.

Up 41-10 at the half, the Wolves got plenty of playing time for everyone in the second half, while coasting in with 13-10 and 10-10 performances across the game’s final two quarters.

Senior big man Camden Glover dominated, throwing down a game-high 18 points to pace CHS, while sweet-shooting sophomore Carson Grove netted 13 and senior Chase Anderson banked in 12.

Carson Grove drives to the bucket.

Aiden O’Neill (6), Liam Blas (5), Davin Houston (4), Malachi Somes (4), and Riley Lawless (2) also scored, with Nathan Coxsey and Easton Green rounding out the rotation.

On a night when the Wolves shared the scoring load across the board, three players achieved personal milestones.

Anderson, who now has 765 career points, slides past Hunter Hammer (755) into 18th place all-time for a CHS boys’ program which launched in 1917, and is hot on the heels of Barry Brown (769) and Jack Elzinga (770).

Meanwhile, Glover cracks the 200-point club and sits with 213.

And Blas, a sophomore who has been relentless on the boards for the Wolves, dropped in his first varsity points.

He’s the 433rd Coupeville boy who I’ve been able to document doing so, and with his five-point performance, already finds himself in a tie for #397 all-time.

Read Full Post »

Danica Strong scored a team-high 13 points Tuesday on her 18th birthday. (Photo courtesy Danette Beckley)

She was born for this.

While celebrating her 18th birthday Tuesday, Coupeville High School senior Danica Strong proved to be the deadliest shooter in a Wolf uniform, raining down a trio of three-balls en route to a team-high 13 points.

The game itself didn’t end the way her fans wanted, as an absolutely brutal 10-minute-plus stretch threw things off after a super-strong start, eventually sending CHS to a 63-48 loss to visiting Friday Harbor.

But, for those who wanted to witness Dakota’s big sis make the nets bounce, they got their money’s worth.

Tuesday’s tilt, the first home game of 2026, was a Jekyll ‘n Hyde affair which drops Coupeville to 0-3 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 2-8 overall.

When the Wolves were on the rampage, they impressed on both ends of the floor. But when the rim turned unforgiving, it made for a mountain of frustration.

The first quarter was a thing of beauty, to be sure, with Scout Smith’s squad flying from end to end, ripping down rebounds, terrorizing shooters, and knocking down buckets at a dizzying rate.

Haylee Armstrong opened things with a three-ball from the right side — part of a nine-point run by the Wolf junior in the opening frame — and CHS bolted out to a 23-14 lead by the first break.

Everything was dropping for Coupeville early on, whether it was from behind the arc, at the free throw line, or in the paint.

Strong slapped home a layup off of a strong entry pass from Teagan Calkins, while Adeline Maynes, Tenley Stuurmans, and Arianna Cunningham all drilled jumpers on the move, each basket generating a roar from the crowd.

Things slowed down a bit in the second quarter, with Friday Harbor pulling back within 28-27, but the Wolves had an answer, hitting three straight buckets to end the half on a positive note.

Freshman Kennedy O’Neill converted a basket off of another laser pass from Calkins, while Armstrong and Stuurmans provided back-to-back jumpers, and things were looking good.

Until they weren’t.

Coupeville’s shooting touch, which had been so flawless, suddenly went AWOL and stayed that way for quite some time.

Up 34-27 with seconds to go in the second quarter, the Wolves went without a field goal across the entire third frame and several minutes into the fourth, allowing Friday Harbor to crack open the game with a 27-1 tear.

What had been a romp unexpectedly turned into a 54-35 deficit, with the pain not broken until Strong rippled the nets on a three-ball to finally stop the bloodbath.

Coupeville played the final six minutes in much the same way it had handled business in the opening quarter, closing on a 13-9 mini-run, but it was too late to fully recover.

Strong finished with 13 points, while Armstrong (12), Stuurmans (9), Cunningham (5), O’Neill (4), Calkins (3), and Maynes (2) also scored, with Sydney Van Dyke chipping in on the defensive end of the floor.

While it wasn’t their birthdays, two Wolves hit personal career scoring milestones in the game.

Armstrong is the 66th CHS girl since 1974 to crack the 200-point club (she sits at #63 all-time with 205), while Stuurmans, a sophomore, joins the 150-point club with 152 and counting.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »