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Posts Tagged ‘Orcas Island’

Risen Johnson scored five of his 16 points in the decisive fourth quarter Wednesday. (John Fisken photos)

   Risen Johnson scored five of his 16 points in the decisive fourth quarter Wednesday. (John Fisken photos)

Jordan Ford

   Jordan Ford (5), has been a busy bee on the boards all season. Wednesday was no different.

It started as a rout and ended as a thriller.

But it ended as a win, and that was what mattered the most.

Trying to give coach Anthony Smith heart palpitations, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad frittered away a 19-point lead Wednesday, then reached down deep and found a bit of magic in the final moments to pull out a 74-71 win over visiting Orcas Island.

The non-conference win, which lifted the Wolves to 2-3 headed into their first 1A Olympic League game Friday at Klahowya (0-5), left Smith tapping his chest, but wearing a huge smile while doing so.

“It was a battle of wills and our guys really didn’t want to lose,” he said. “That’s what we preach to them in our program — play for each other, trust each other, trust the team, and it was good to see our guys believe in that tonight.”

The game was decided in a pressure-packed final 100 seconds, as both teams swung for the fences, tempers flared and Jordan Ford authored another chapter in his family’s long, impressive CHS athletic legacy.

A technical foul for a flying cuss word gave Orcas a chance to take the lead for the first time in the game with 1:37 to play, but the Vikings could only put in one of two free throws as the Wolf fans hit truly impressive decibel levels.

That knotted the score at 67 — the only tie in the game — but Coupeville responded by attacking, and hard.

Wiley Hesselgrave charged up floor and exploded right up the gut, shredding three defenders for what seemed like it would be a go-ahead layup.

Only problem is, the ball refused to go down, rolling around, then popping back off the rim at the last second.

Enter Ford, son, grandson, nephew and cousin of former Wolf greats, who is getting to play his senior year back in Cow Town after a family move.

Having the game of his life — he finished with a team-high 22, with most of his buckets coming on second-chance balls — Ford out-leaped an Orcas player, snared the rim-out and went right back up for the bucket.

Tack on two free throws from Hesselgrave on Coupeville’s next possession and the Wolves were back up by four, but not out of the woods.

Orcas packaged a pair of superb jumpers around a slashing layup from Wolf guard Risen Johnson to get within a bucket, then had a chance to tie or win on the game’s final possession.

A Viking drove hard to the hoop, but lost the handle on the ball and Ford snatched it away and went down in a crush of players.

As the horn sounded, the Orcas shooter lay face-down on the floor, hitting his hands repeatedly on the hardwood, while the Wolf players started to sprint off to a group celebration.

Only to be stopped by the refs, who put .8 of a second back on the clock and sent Ford to the charity stripe to shoot two for being mauled in the final scrum.

He calmly netted the first, and, while missing the second, sent the ball hard enough off the rim Orcas had no shot at a full-court miracle three-ball to tie.

Cue the second wave of celebration, this one for real.

The cardiac special of a finish capped what for a long time looked like it would be a runaway win.

Coupeville came out running from the opening tip, tossing in shots from every angle, and dropped 27 points in the first eight minutes alone.

Hesselgrave led the way with nine in the opening quarter, including scoring seven in a span of about 15 seconds.

The senior standout drilled a pull-up trey, stole the ball and crashed in for a layup, then banked in a runner off of a pass from Ford.

And, while his run was remarkable, it didn’t even include the best play of the quarter.

That came courtesy Johnson, who, while on a full sprint, launched a shovel pass that covered half the court, then dropped on a dime into the outstretched hands of Ryan Griggs, who banged it home.

Johnson almost pulled off the same brilliant move a second time later in the game, but the ball curled upwards at the last second, instead of downwards, and ricocheted off of the face of the intended target.

That slight miscue was one of the few times the Wolves really made an error.

Even when Orcas got back in the game with a 25-point third quarter, it was because the Vikings raised their level of play, not that Coupeville took a step back.

Ford banged home seven in the third and Griggs roared through the paint for two key early buckets as the Wolves kept the pressure on even as the Vikings suddenly seemed to be hitting everything they put up.

Clinging to a two-point lead entering the fourth, the Wolves found their groove again, using a 9-4 run to stretch the lead back out.

Orcas’ response? A 9-2 surge of their own to set up the frantic final 100 seconds.

Coupeville got its most balanced scoring of the season in the win, with Ford (22), Hesselgrave (20), Johnson (16) and Griggs (12) all breaking into double digits.

Gabe Wynn and DeAndre Mitchell added two apiece, while Desmond Bell and Jared Helmstadter didn’t score, but both provided quality minutes for a Wolf squad that could only go eight deep on the night due to injuries to Hunter Smith and Dante Mitchell.

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(Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Makana Stone (left) and Mia Littlejohn, seen here in an earlier game, were still jumping with joy Wednesday. (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

Kailey Kellner

Kailey Kellner, just here to drop treys and take names.

Kailey Kellner has a new nickname.

After watching the Coupeville High School junior drop six three-point bombs on visiting Orcas Island Wednesday — with the net barely rippling on any of them — Wolf fans started referring to her as “Stephanie Curry.”

With Kellner banging away for 20, the perfect complement to Makana Stone’s game-high 24, CHS cruised to a win in much the same style that Steph Curry and the Golden State Warriors are doing on a daily basis in the NBA.

On a night when they and their fans honored the memory and legacy of the late, great hoops sensation Marlene Grasser, this year’s squad rolled to a 52-38 non-conference win that wasn’t even remotely close.

Coupeville actually led by 27 early in the fourth quarter, before taking the foot off the gas pedal a bit.

Now 3-2, with both their losses being one-bucket defeats to stellar squads, the Wolves look strong as they head into the first game in defense of their 1A Olympic League crown.

Coupeville hosts Klahowya (0-5) this Friday (varsity 5:15, JV 7:00).

The Wolves hit the floor Wednesday looking in mid-season form as they rolled out to a 9-0 lead before Orcas knew what hit them.

Kellner kicked the opening run off by drilling a trey from the right side, then capped it with a three-ball from the left side.

The net never moved on either shot, and a small smile begin to creep across her face as Kellner was hollered at non-stop by her fan club’s most enthusiastic boosters, Kacie Kiel and Sydney Autio.

She added another jumper on her way to an eight-point first quarter, Lauren Grove drained a looooooong jumper and Mia Littlejohn dropped in a beauty of a runner as the Wolves went to the first break up 15-7.

Not content to sit on the lead, Coupeville busted things wide open in the second as the Wolves handed the ball to their rampaging force of nature, the zen-like (but maybe not always) Stone.

With the senior scoring 12 in the quarter with a variety of dazzling moves, Coupeville stretched the lead out to 21, then put a punctuation mark on things.

Fighting for a rebound, Stone, who was being mercilessly hacked, poked and prodded every time she touched the ball, ripped the ball away with enough force she sent a rival player airborne, depositing her several feet away on her butt.

The home crowd, especially players from the Wolf boys’ squad, went crazy, stomping and cheering in support of her.

And, while an overly touchy-feely ref whistled a technical on the last player you might expect to get one, a valuable lesson was imparted.

The number of times Orcas players tried to get rough with Stone after that? Less than zero.

Stone, for her part, walked away, regained her composure and returned to hurting the Vikings in her normal fashion — one bucket at a time — dropping in 13 of her 24 after the technical.

And Kellner?

She couldn’t stop if she tried, hitting treys in all four quarters. The only thing that finally cooled her off was being put on the bench to give the Wolf reserves some playing time.

Even then she rocked back and forth in her chair, with the look of a gunfighter who wanted to drop in a three-ball while seated just to prove she could do it.

On this night, few, if any, would have bet against her making the trick shot.

Coupeville was relentless, opening the fourth with a 7-1 run to push the lead all the way out to 52-25, before Orcas salvaged some self-respect in the late going.

Littlejohn banged away for six and Grove added a bucket in support of the big two, while Tiffany Briscoe was an animal in the trenches, fighting for rebounds (she had seven) and loose balls.

Stone hauled down 19 rebounds, pilfered four steals and dealt out four assists, while Littlejohn matched her with four assists of her own.

Lindsey Roberts, Kyla Briscoe, Lauren Rose, Allison Wenzel and Skyler Lawrence all saw floor time as well.

Roberts, the freshman daughter of Grasser’s teammate, Sherry (Bonacci) Roberts, played strong full-court defense, hustling just like her mom and Marlene once did on the very same floor.

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Marlene Grasser with her great niece. (Photo courtesy Ashley Heilig)

Marlene Grasser with her great niece, Mia. (Photos courtesy Ashley Heilig)

A sensational athlete and a better person.

A sensational athlete and a better person.

Coupeville High School will pay tribute to Marlene Grasser during tonight’s basketball doubleheader.

The Wolves are scheduled to play Orcas Island, with the girls varsity game at 3:30, followed by the boys at 5.

Grasser, a two-time CHS Female Athlete of the Year and one of the most beloved, influential athletes to ever wear a Coupeville uniform, passed away this week after a two-year battle with cancer.

A 1987 grad, she was 46.

During her days as a Wolf, Grasser starred in volleyball, basketball, softball and track, then went on to play volleyball in college.

She was inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame in a class that included three of her contemporaries, Jennie (Cross) Prince, Aimee (Messner) Bishop and Sherry (Bonacci) Roberts, as well as brother-in-law Ron Bagby.

Grasser was that rarity, an athlete who influenced generations of other athletes in her home town, and will continue to do so.

A little taste of the vast outpouring of love which has been directed to her family:

Sherry (Bonacci) Roberts):

Marlene was my athletic role model. She was such an amazing and gifted athlete and one of the nicest people ever.

She always helped me and encouraged me to strive for excellence and become the best I could be.

Emily (Vracin) Kosderka:

Growing up, I admired Marlene SO MUCH–I wanted to be her.

I didn’t even really get to know her, but she was a stud female athlete and a great person — that was enough for me.

I’m so sorry to hear this news and my thoughts and prayers go out to all of her family and friends.

Joli (Smith) Bartell:

This breaks my heart. I think I was about in junior high when I started growing a huge love of playing sports thanks to a few people I watched and looked up to, including Marlene Grasser.

I am pretty sure she was my babysitter when I was little!

I will never forget that name when I think of the greats in CHS sports.

My thoughts and prayers to her friends and family.

Suzan Georges:

I will share this with my 10 year old who has played in the SWISH team for two years now.

Our condolences and prayers go out to all the family!

Her memory and words will live on through Coupeville’s future athletes.

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Kenzi

   Kenzi LaRue and Co. kept their eye on the ball Friday night. (John Fisken photos)

team

Heidi Wyman’s talented band of young guns.

Speed kills.

Playing quickly and efficiently, the Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad whipped visiting Orcas Island so fast Friday night they still had time to be fans.

Playing in one gym while the Wolf varsity played in another, the young guns dismantled the Vikings 25-8, 25-16, 25-22, then jumped across the hall to scream and holler.

“They finished Orcas quick enough to cheer on the varsity!,” said Wolf JV coach Heidi Wyman. “It’s great to be part of a team and a town that supports each other so well.

“These young ladies are loud on the bench, pick each other up when they get down, and celebrate each other’s successes selflessly,” she added. “It’s scary when you get that kind of chemistry. It’s gonna be an awesome season!”

The win, coming after a 10-day layoff, was the second straight for the JV squad, lifting them to 2-2 on the still-young season.

They did it with a mix of precision serving (25 aces) and big hitting (15 kills).

“Offensively aggressive all night!,” said a proud coach.

Freshman phenom Maddy Hilkey captured player of the game honors with 14 serving aces and four kills.

“She passes any ball that comes her way with grace and accuracy,” Wyman said.

Also soaring high were the deadly duo of Kameryn St Onge, who rattled home six kills, and Nicole Lester, who led the Wolves with an 89% success rate at the service stripe.

Kameryn is deadly whenever she gets a chance to attack the ball,” Wyman said. “Having a left-handed setter that can sky the way she does is just awesome to watch.

Nicole is so great,” she added. “When the team needs someone to put a serve in, she finds a way to make it happen.”

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Kalia Littlejohn punched home two more goals Friday, giving her six in six games. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Kalia Littlejohn (right) punched home two more goals Friday, giving her six in six games. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

A lock-down defense and an explosive offense are a beautiful combination.

With total control of both sides of the ball Friday night, the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad romped to a 5-0 non-conference win over visiting Orcas Island.

The victory, coming in the team’s first game after an eight-day break, evened the Wolves record at 2-2-2.

CHS spread its offense around, with Kalia Littlejohn leading the way. The freshman punched the ball in twice to run her team-best total to six goals in six games.

Big sis Mia Littlejohn tacked on her fourth goal of the season, while Sage Renninger and Jenn Spark each connected for their second.

Spark’s goal came off of a penalty kick, set up when teammate Kirsten Pelroy was roughed up on a play in the box.

“Our ever-ready energy bunny, Kirsten, drew a foul and, of course Jennifer crushed the free look and it was a wrap,” said Coupeville coach Troy Cowan.

“Overall, the team played well and we are really starting to come together,” he added. “Really proud of our intensity in practice, the girls are starting to figure it out. The harder we work in practice the easier the game comes to them; it’s magical!!!”

While the goal scorers get the headlines, Cowan also shone his spotlight brightly on his role players.

“I want to commend our bench players, they all played hard and have really contributed to the team success,” he said. “They are as responsible for our success and those goals as the girls that scored them!!”

While the Wolves rained down goals, their defense, anchored by goalie Lauren Grove, was on point.

“As usual, our rookie goalie was lights out!,” Cowan said. “Can’t say enough good things about Lauren Grove, she is amazing!!!

“Defense was on lock-down, ’nuff said!”

While Coupeville pounded Orcas on the field, the Wolves made sure the Vikings, who had a long trip ahead of them, didn’t go home empty-handed.

The Littlejohn’s mom, Dawn Hesselgrave, initiated a plan to feed all the Orcas players from both the soccer and volleyball squads, who had traveled to Whidbey together.

“Tonight’s MVP, no question,” Cowan said. “Dawn came to me over a month ago with this idea and she took the bull by the horn and got the job done!!!

“Not only did this incredible woman demonstrate outstanding sportsmanship to our Lady Wolves, she embodies attributes of sainthood!!,” he added. “What an amazing gesture of kindness and act of love and all on behalf of our young Lady Wolves.

“It gives me great pride and honor to call Dawn my friend, team mom and tonight’s match MVP. Thank you, Dawn!”

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