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(Amy King photo)

   CHS hoops stars (l to r) Lauren Rose, Makana Stone, Lauren Grove and Kailey Kellner play for one of 16 teams to still have a shot at a 1A state title. (Amy King photo)

It’s Makana vs. Makenna.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad will face off with District 6’s #1 team, Cashmere, in the regional round of the state hoops tourney.

The Wolves (16-5), the #3 seed from District 3, will play the Bulldogs (15-7) Saturday, Feb. 27 at Wenatchee High School.

Tip-off is 4 PM.

That means the Wolves get to travel 163.7 miles (one way), double what they did for districts, while Cashmere will head just 11.6 miles up the road for the game.

Tickets (good for all day) will be $11 for adults and $8 for students (ages 5-11 and 12-18 with a middle school/high school ASB) and senior citizens (62 and over).

Children under five get in for free, so someone should think about putting together a preschool rooter bus of pro-Wolf fans to rock the joint.

Win and Coupeville, which is in the middle of its best postseason run since 2006, books a stay at the Yakima SunDome Mar. 3-5 for the eight-team, double-elimination portion of the state tourney.

To get there, the Wolves will have to beat a school which has finished third at state the past two seasons.

Cashmere’s only losses in six games at state over the past two years have come at the hands of the teams that went on to win the state title.

In 2013-2014 it was Lynden Christian, while King’s toppled the Bulldogs in 2014-2015.

Playing in the Caribou Trail League, a four-team conference in Eastern Washington that includes Chelan, Omak and Cascade, Cashmere went 8-1 in league play this season.

They have three players averaging between 12 and 14 points — 6-foot-1 junior post Abbie Johnson, 5-8 sophomore guard Cami Knishka and 5-9 senior guard Makenna Faulkner.

Coupeville counters with 5-11 senior post Makana Stone, who has had a double-double every game while throwing down 19.6 points a night, and a very stingy defense.

The Wolves, who are scoring 43.1 a game, are surrendering just 32.9.

Cashmere averages 54.2 on offense and 38.6 on defense.

When the two squads did lose this season, it came against top-level competition.

None of Coupeville’s losses were by more than eight points (they also lost by 2, 3, 4 and 4), and two of those teams (Bellevue Christian and Charles Wright Academy) also advanced to regionals.

Cashmere absorbed three double-digit losses in its seven defeats, but faced a brutal schedule.

Two losses came against 2A schools (Ephrata and East Valley of Spokane), three against 1A schools (Chelan, Zillah and Granger) and two against 2B schools (undefeated Okanogan and Mabton).

Five of those seven schools made it to regionals, with only Ephrata and Chelan having been eliminated.

This will be the 20th state playoff game in Coupeville girls hoops history (the Wolves are 7-12 all-time) and the 23rd for Cashmere (12-10), but the first time they have faced each other.

The two schools have a connection through Randy King.

Currently the head track coach at CHS (he did a 20-year stint as Wolf boys’ basketball coach from 1991-2011), King was the assistant coach on the Cashmere boys’ hoops squad that won the 1980 state title.

To see the regional draw, pop over to:

http://www.wiaa.com/Brackets/T1213.pdf

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Monica Vidoni, repping Rainy River.

Former Wolf Monica Vidoni, now reppin’ Rainy River. (Photo courtesy Vidoni)

The regular season is in the books. Now comes the playoffs.

Former Coupeville High School basketball player Monica Vidoni and her Rainy River Community College women’s basketball squad will play in the Region 13B tourney next weekend.

The Voyageurs finished the regular season at 15-10 overall, 9-5 in Minnesota College Athletic Conference play.

They tied with Mesabi Range and Itasca for second place, but will be seeded fourth in the postseason.

That puts them up against top seed Northland, which is ranked third in the country, in a loser-out game Saturday, Feb. 27 in Thief River Falls, Minnesota.

Pull off the upset and they play the winner of Mesabi and Itasca Feb. 28 for a berth in the NJCAA national tournament in New York Mar. 12-14.

During her freshman season Vidoni, who is also playing volleyball and softball at the college, saw action in 19 games.

She’s scored 16 points, snatched 24 rebounds, rejected three shots and pilfered two steals while racking up 118 minutes of floor time.

During her time at CHS Vidoni was a three-sport athlete and was on the Wolf softball team which went to state in 2014.

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Mia Littlejohn

   Kalia Littlejohn gazes adoringly at big sis Mia, after the sophomore helped spark Coupeville to a huge playoff win Friday night. (Photo courtesy Kalia Littlejohn)

(Amy King photo)

16-5 and off to regionals for the first time in a decade. (Amy King photo)

They screamed. They wept tears of joy. They grabbed each other in bear hugs and twirled around.

And that was just the moms.

Waves of joy and elation swept out of the locker room and across the floor at Sumner High School Friday night, as the Coupeville High school girls’ basketball squad and its substantial rooting contingent celebrated the program’s epic 49-33 district playoff thrashing of Seattle Christian.

Payback to the team that knocked CHS out of the postseason in an overtime thriller last season, the victory lifted the Wolves to 16-5 and propelled them to regionals for the first time in a decade.

Now one of just 16 teams left with a shot at a 1A state title, Coupeville will return to action either Friday, Feb. 26 or Saturday, Feb. 27.

The foe and place of battle will be revealed after district play wraps up Saturday.

Regionals will be a loser-out affair, with the winner hitting the road to Yakima Mar. 3-5 for the eight-team, double-elimination state tourney.

If the Wolves play like they did Friday night, anything is possible in the coming game(s).

After being roughed up by a physical Charles Wright squad in a four-point loss in their opening game at districts Wednesday, Coupeville showed, without a doubt, they had taken the lessons learned to heart.

With five girls firing as one, regardless of which players were on the floor, the Wolves were aggressive, they were ball-hawks, they racked up a steady diet of bruises from hitting the floor in pursuit of loose balls and rebounds, and they frankly weren’t takin’ no crap from no one.

“I’m so impressed with the game these players put together tonight!,” said exhausted but elated CHS coach David King as his players whooped and hollered in the muggy gym.

With their leader stalking the sidelines all night, the young Wolves responded to his pleas, listened to his instruction and made their mentor proud.

And it all started with defense.

In-your-face, take-the-ball-away-and-knock-their-butt-on-the-floor defense.

“We brought our A+ game and had our best defensive game all year,” King said.

“I need to start by spotlighting Lauren Grove and the outstanding defensive effort all game on #15,” he added. “That was one of the most impressive defensive efforts I’ve seen at a high school girls basketball game.”

Seattle Christian, which loves to drop the three-ball, found themselves constantly besieged by the Wolves, who rarely let the Warriors get an uncontested shot off.

“The whole team was outstanding,” King said. “We made a strategic move and instead of putting Makana (Stone) on one of their best offensive players we moved Kailey (Kellner) into that spot. All game Kailey frustrated and held #33 in check.

“It doesn’t end there. Kyla (Briscoe) took turns on both players and didn’t miss a beat and matched the intensity that the other two had on defense.

“Not to be outdone, Makana, Tiffany (Briscoe), Lindsey (Roberts) and Mia (Littlejohn) brought the defensive effort with great help defense that really made us play defense as one.”

Coupeville’s defense made up for an unforgiving basket on the offensive end in the first quarter.

The Wolves got shots, decent shots, a whole lot of shots in fact, but as the minutes started to add up and the ball found even more creative ways to rattle out, pop loose and skitter away from the rim, it would have been easy to panic.

But not on this night.

Stone finally got Coupeville on the board when she soared over two players, snatched a carom and put the rebound back up and in with just 17 seconds left in the opening quarter.

Trailing only 6-2 heading into the second, saved by their scrappiness on defense, the Wolves finally unleashed the beast.

Littlejohn split the defense with a scorching pass to Stone for a layup to kick off the second, then Coupeville claimed the lead for good with an 8-0 run midway through the quarter.

Once they were ahead, the Wolves started to put the hammer down, led by their sophomore point guard, who was at her feisty best.

Bobbing and weaving, barking at opposing players and verbally spurring on her teammates, Littlejohn went for seven of her nine points in a four-minute stretch, capping it with a cold-blooded trey from the top with just five ticks on the clock.

Her dagger (and the yelling of the Coupeville moms) punched a hole right through the heart of the scattered Seattle Christian fans, who started off mild and got quiet really, really fast when faced with the power of Whidbey-cultivated lungs.

If the Warriors thought they were still in the game, that changed in a hurry after halftime.

Stone strode from the locker room, all but dropping her cape James Brown style, and went on a rampage, tossing down 12 points in the third, each basket more explosive than the one before it.

Midway through the quarter she spun past a befuddled defender, who was left looking one way while Stone went the other way, and banked home her 400th point of the season.

Now sitting with 412 points in 21 games (19.6 a night), she joins Brianne King as the only Wolf female hoops stars to score that much in a single season.

She wasn’t the only weapon firing in the third, though, as Littlejohn stormed end to end for a bucket and Kellner came crashing through the paint twice for hard-earned buckets.

The junior sharpshooter, always dangerous from the corners, played like a beast in the paint, her braids flying behind her as she used and abused the Warriors.

Never relenting, the Wolf defense stayed ramped-up in the fourth, forcing Seattle Christian to take unbalanced shots. And then, each time, two to three CHS girls hit the boards in unison, a direct contrast to Wednesday.

With eight of the ten girls on the roster seeing floor time (Skyler Lawrence made her playoff debut while Lauren Rose and Allison Wenzel were raucous on the bench in support), Coupeville overcame not really being fully healthy.

Tiffany is and has been playing on a sprained ankle and was solid on defense,” King said. “Lindsey has been battling being sick all week, hasn’t complained once.

“And every time I called on her to check in she was ready.”

Stone made it 21-for-21 this season with double-doubles, racking up 24 points and 20 rebounds, while Kellner was a killer, throwing down 12, snagging 10 boards and dealing out five assists.

Littlejohn popped for nine, snatched five boards, dealt out three assists, drove Seattle Christian’s ball-handlers to distraction and danced in the locker room afterwards as her teammates played drums on the lockers.

Grove rounded out the offensive assault with four points, while she (6) and Kyla Briscoe (5) accounted for another 11 rebounds as Coupeville thoroughly dominated the glass.

With 13 assists to just 11 turnovers (“our passing game was good all game”), the Wolves put together their most complete game at the biggest moment possible.

The win was the first-ever playoff victory for a basketball team from the 1A Olympic League, which was a combined 0-15 in girls and boys postseason action in its first two seasons.

Now, with a week to prepare for another battle, Coupeville coaches David and Amy King, who will celebrate their 30th wedding anniversary at practice Monday, have time to get their players healthy, while basking (a bit) in the afterglow.

“This was a true team effort from top to bottom!,” David King said. “Every player was engaged the whole game and wouldn’t settle for anything other than a win.

“I’m so impressed!”

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(Amy King photo)

   The Wolves arrived early, but were forced to cool their heels due to the host site’s team holding a practice — in the one gym on campus. (Amy King photos)

dab

While they waited, they posed for a photo or two hundred.

So far this postseason the 1A Olympic League is 0-6 against the Nisqually League.

The closest anyone from the four-team conference, girls or boys, has come to toppling their big city rivals came Wednesday, when the Coupeville girls roared back in the fourth quarter to nearly erase a 15-point deficit before falling 52-48 to Charles Wright Academy.

The loss dropped the Wolves to 15-5, but they will get a second crack at playoff hoops Friday, when they will return to their new home away from home, Sumner High School.

Coupeville will face Seattle Christian (10-7) at 7:45 PM in a loser-out District 3 game.

Win and they will be one of the final 16 1A girls teams still alive for a state title and will advance to regionals the next weekend.

To do so, the Wolves will need to learn a valuable lesson from Wednesday’s game — Olympic League refs have NOT prepared conference teams for playoff basketball.

It is a simple fact — if Coupeville played during the regular season like Charles Wright did Wednesday, their starting five would have fouled out of every league game.

Probably mid-way through the first half.

Coming from a league where jump balls and ticky-tacky fouls are often called with a startling frequency, the Wolves found themselves face-to-face with a foe who routinely initiated considerably more contact then they are used to, and refs who had little issue with it.

One example: Kailey Kellner scrambled back on defense and planted herself in front of oncoming Tarriers four times, absorbing the collision.

In Olympic League play, it would have likely been four offensive fouls.

Against Charles Wright, Kellner herself was whistled three times for the foul, only garnering the charge on her fourth and final attempt.

Knocked around on the boards — even when they were able to hold on to the ball, the Wolves were routinely roughed-up — and offered few chances at turnovers thanks to strong ball-handling by Charles Wright, Coupeville had trouble finding a reliable rhythm.

The Wolves did start with a bang, dropping in the game’s first five points (a Makana Stone put-back off of a rebound and a gorgeous three-ball from the left side from Kellner).

Three straight buckets from Stone, on which she showed off her superior speed and slashing ability, staked Coupeville to an 11-6 lead, its biggest of the night.

Charles Wright immediately responded, however, knotting things up at 11 before the Wolves capped the first quarter with their best offensive play of the evening.

Racing the clock, Mia Littlejohn shot up the side, dished the ball to Kyla Briscoe, then pumped her fist as Briscoe zinged the ball inside to a cutting Kellner for a lay-in a half a tick before the buzzer.

Up 13-11 heading into the second, Coupeville started to have more trouble stringing together baskets and fell behind midway through the quarter.

Another nothing-but-net trey from Kellner pulled the Wolves to within 21-20, but the Tarriers used a 5-2 run to take a four-point lead in at the half.

As close as the first half was, the third quarter was a disaster in almost every way.

With CWA inflicting major damage on the boards, shoving the younger Wolves out of their way on almost every play, and being allowed to do it, the Tarriers stretched their lead out to 15.

14 of Charles Wright’s 21 points in the third came via rebound put-backs, and they also dropped in several free-throws, something the Wolves never had a chance to match.

Coupeville shot just one free throw on the night — and missed it — while the Tarriers successfully banked home 13.

The lone bright spot in the third was Littlejohn, who started taking the ball right at the hoop, throwing down runners on four consecutive Wolf possessions.

As the fourth quarter began, with things bleak, CHS coach David King challenged his players, daring them to step up and show some grit.

And they almost pulled off a miracle.

Finally showing the rough-house style they are capable of playing, the Wolves held Charles Wright without a field goal in the fourth, slashing the lead all the way down to 50-48 with 46 seconds to play.

A 14-3 run that started with a Littlejohn three-ball ended with a Kellner trey and the Tarriers finally seemed to be cracking.

Coupeville, with all five girls firing at top gear, came within a sliver of forcing a shot clock violation on the next possession, only to have two fluky moments blunt the superior effort.

First, CWA got the shot off, with the ball leaving the shooter’s fingertips right before the buzzer, and, when the shot hit the iron, it took a weird bounce and shot straight down to the floor, where the Tarriers snatched it back away.

Forced to foul, Coupeville needed Charles Wright to miss at least one of the free throws. Which it did.

But, once again, the Tarriers found a way to corral the rebound, absorb another foul and hit one last free throw.

In the end, the Wolves, after fighting back so intensely, were never able to take a shot themselves over the final 46.5 seconds, an agonizing way to end a gutsy comeback.

Stone led Coupeville with 20 points, 15 rebounds and six blocks.

Heading into Friday, she has 388 points in 20 games (19.4 per game), which gives her the third-best single-season scoring total in Wolf girls hoops history.

Kellner knocked down 13 while Littlejohn popped for 11 and dealt out six assists. Lauren Grove and Lindsey Roberts each added a bucket during the fourth-quarter rally.

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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf sophomore Hunter Smith slices to the hoop for two of his team-high 14 Thursday in a home playoff loss. (John Fisken photo)

It wasn’t for lack of effort.

The Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad hit the floor Thursday with intensity ramped up to the roof, matched visiting Bellevue Christian bucket for bucket for a half, then got picked apart by a precision-passing, precision-shooting squad.

What was a 27-27 battle royal at the half ended with the Vikings running away with a 64-45 playoff win.

Bellevue Christian, now 9-10 on the year, advances on in the district tourney to play at Cascade Christian Saturday, while the Wolves (9-11) see their season end.

The game was the final one in the red and white for eight Coupeville seniors.

The longest-tenured of those guys, Wiley Hesselgrave, who has played varsity ball all four seasons, opened the scoring for the Wolves, slashing to the hoop for a layup to tie the game at 2-2 in the early seconds of action.

After a Bellevue three-ball on which the net never moved — a theme that recurred far too often as the Vikings were dead-eye shooters all night — Coupeville put together its best run of the night.

Kicked off by a crowd-pleasing block from Hesselgrave, who caught a Viking from behind on a breakaway and snuffed out his shot at the last second, the Wolves ripped off a 13-4 surge.

It started with Risen Johnson twirling, ballet-style, through the air, shedding defenders as he dropped a runner off the glass, and ended with Hesselgrave nailing a pull-up trey from the top.

Four Wolves scorched the nets during the run, with Dante Mitchell and Hunter Smith joining Johnson and Hesselgrave, and Coupeville looked loose, confident and ready to run away with the game.

But then, just as quickly, the switch got flipped the other way, as Bellevue scored the final five points of the first and 10 of the first 12 in the second to reclaim the lead at 24-17.

With his team starting to buckle around him, Smith, the super sophomore who will be one of only two varsity players eligible to return next year (along with junior Gabe Wynn), decided to take matters into his own hands.

Four straight trips down the floor the serene, smooth floor commander took control, putting the Vikings on their heels, then knocking down shots over their heads as they fell back.

A fall-back jumper, a coast-to-coast romp off of a rebound, a pull-up jumper and then a running layup, on a play in which Hesselgrave poked the ball free, knocked it to Johnson, then watched as Risen launched a half-court heave that dropped onto Smith’s fingertips as he zipped to the basket.

At this point, the two teams, who had played a very-close 53-50 game early in the season (Coupeville won that non-conference tilt), were like boxers, bobbing and weaving, punching and counter-punching.

And they kept it up right to the halftime buzzer, with Bellevue knocking down another three-ball in which the net barely rippled, followed by Coupeville’s JJ Johnson popping in a little jumper to knot things at 27.

With the crowd abuzz, the game had the look of a classic in the making.

Unfortunately, that ended about 45 seconds into the third quarter.

Coupeville struck first, with Hesselgrave sweeping under the hoop and laying it up and in to draw first blood.

Though no one knew it at the time, it would be the final points the Wolf star would score as a prep baller.

When things turned, they did so quickly.

It started with a free throw, then back-to-back buckets off of rebounds, another free throw, a steal and a breakaway bucket, then three straight shots on which Bellevue’s six-foot-six Joe Lampkin shot from about two inches from the basket.

By the time JJ Johnson stopped the bleeding with a pair of free throws, Bellevue had run off 14 consecutive points and desperation was setting in.

Things didn’t get much better as Bellevue capped the third with another bank shot from Lampkin, who led all scorers with 26, then immediately opened the fourth with another flawless trey from the corner.

The Vikings stretched the lead out to 15, Coupeville chipped away a bit, then Bellevue put the hammer down with another 12-0 surge to stake themselves to their biggest lead of the night at 64-41.

With the game lost, the Wolves took a look at the future, giving junior Brian Shank and freshman Ty Eck their varsity debuts in the fourth quarter.

Shank and senior Jared Helmstadter, two hard workers whose motors never stop humming, combined on the season’s final bucket, with the older player knocking down a jumper off of a pass from his successor.

While the end result wasn’t what he wanted to see, Coupeville coach Anthony Smith walked away from the final game of his fifth season head held high.

“I’m very disappointed for my seniors, they’ve put in a lot of hard work in practice, at open gyms, and we just came up short,” he said. “It’s been my pleasure to coach them.

“I have nothing but respect for these guys,” Anthony Smith added. “They’ve become an extended family and have always had each others backs all the way.”

Hunter Smith tallied 14 to pace the Wolves, while Hesselgrave knocked down nine to claim the team’s season scoring title.

“Gonna miss Wiley,” Anthony Smith said. “Every practice, every road trip, every game, I knew I could count on that guy.”

JJ Johnson rattled the rims for eight, Wynn and Risen Johnson netted four apiece and Helmstadter, Jordan Ford and Dante Mitchell all dropped in a bucket.

DeAndre Mitchell and Desmond Bell joined the pack of seniors playing their final game.

As he watched the players exit, Anthony Smith looked down for a moment, then looked back up, determination glinting in his eye.

“We start a new season tomorrow! See who wants to put the work in. It’ll be up to them and what they want to do, but we’ll be back.”

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