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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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David King lays down some wisdom to his high-flying Wolf girls squad. (John Fisken photos)

   David King lays down some wisdom to his high-flying Wolf girls squad. (John Fisken photos)

JJ Johnson

JJ Johnson (far left) and his teammates plot strategy.

The path is there. You just have to follow it.

With the regular season officially in the books, the Coupeville High School basketball squads stand on the precipice of the postseason, the road to the Yakima SunDome and the state tourney stretching out in front of them.

The Wolf girls (15-4), having won their second consecutive 1A Olympic League title, sit a fair bit closer than the CHS boys (9-10), but both squads have their fates in their own hands.

For the girls, it will take two wins in three games to get to state, while the boys will need four victories, and have little margin for error in the early going.

As the #3 Olympic League seed, the boys will have to win back-to-back loser-out games to get to the double-elimination portion of districts.

First up is a home playoff rumble Thursday (7 PM tip) with Bellevue Christian (8-10), a squad they beat 53-50 on the road in the first weeks of the regular season.

Win again and they travel to Cascade Christian (9-8) Saturday.

Put together back-to-back victories and they’ll still need at least one win in two road games between Feb. 16-20 to advance to regionals, which is a loser-out game — with the victor punching their ticket to the eight-team state tourney.

The girls, having earned the #1 seed, already sit in the double-elimination portion of the districts brackets and are guaranteed at least two playoff games.

Coupeville’s first opponent will be one of three teams — Charles Wright (13-5), Port Townsend (7-12) or Vashon Island (7-13) — and that game will be at a neutral site (Sumner High School) Feb. 17.

Win and they’re regional-bound, with a spot in the district championship game Feb. 20 at Foss High School first, for seeding purposes mainly.

Lose their opener, and the Wolf girls return to Sumner Feb. 19 for a loser-out 3rd place game.

Advance to regionals through either route and the girls will get a winner-take-all game for the program’s first trip to state since the 2005-2006 season.

The Wolf boys last went to state in 1987-1988.

Time to make some new history.

To see the district brackets (and check my math), pop over to:

Girls: http://www.cascadeathletics.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=2&page=1&school=0&sport=12&tournament_id=1767

Boys: http://www.cascadeathletics.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=2&page=1&school=0&sport=3&tournament_id=1814

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Jordan Ford, seen here in an earlier game, scored a team-high 14 Thursday. (John Fisken photo)

   Jordan Ford, seen here in an earlier game, scored a team-high 14 Thursday. (John Fisken photo)

Mark your calendars.

The Coupeville High School boys’ basketball team will open the playoffs at home Feb. 11.

Having absorbed a 68-38 loss at Chimacum Thursday, the Wolves, now 8-10 overall, 3-5 in conference play, are officially the #3 seed out of the 1A Olympic League.

That means, after the regular-season finale at Klahowya Saturday, they host the #4 seed from the Nisqually League in a loser-out postseason game.

Most likely opponent? Bellevue Christian, who the Wolves beat 53-50 on the road in the third game of the season.

Win next Thursday and CHS advances to play the #2 seed from the Nisqually League (currently Cascade Christian) Feb. 13 for a chance to advance to the double-elimination round of districts.

To see the playoff bracket, hop over to: http://www.cascadeathletics.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=2&page=1&school=0&sport=3&tournament_id=1814

Coupeville entered play Thursday with a chance of still earning the league’s #2 playoff seed, but that slipped away early.

Chimacum seized the game with a 19-6 run in the first, stretched the lead to 14 at the half, then buried the Wolves with a 25-9 assault in the third quarter.

The win gives the Cowboys (6-2) a shot at repeating as league champs.

All they have to do is upend Port Townsend Saturday in the rubber match between the two schools.

Jordan Ford paced the Wolves Thursday, ringing up a team-high 14, while Risen Johnson knocked down six and Wiley Hesselgrave hit for five.

Dante Mitchell (4), Jared Helmstadter (4), JJ Johnson (2), Gabe Wynn (2) and DeAndre Mitchell (1) rounded out the scorers.

Helmstadter scored all of his points in the fourth, including hitting his first three-ball of the season.

Chimacum was led by James Porter, who went for 17 and Chris Bainbridge, who popped for 16.

4th quarter blues kill JV:

For three quarters life was brilliant for the Wolf young guns, but things fell apart in a hurry.

Up 18 entering the fourth quarter, Coupeville was steamrolled 31-6 over the final eight minutes and lost 55-48 to the host Cowboys.

The loss dropped the JV squad to 2-14 on the season.

The Wolves jumped out to a 13-7 lead after one, stretched the lead to eight at the half, then used a 14-4 surge in the third to seemingly put things on ice.

But it wasn’t to be, as Chimacum roared back to life after being listed as dead.

Kai Dickerson, who hadn’t scored a single point through three quarters, led the way with 12 in a torrid fourth.

Coupeville’s Brian Shank was the game’s leading scorer, throwing down 20 on his birthday, while Ty Eck dropped in 16.

Cameron Toomey-Stout knocked down seven, while Gabe Eck tickled the twines for five, as only four Wolves scored.

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Maddy (John Fisken photos)

Maddy Hilkey (left) and Sydney Autio get some fresh air. (John Fisken photos)

team

   The pride of Coupeville, ready to terrorize the freeways and ferries of Washington state.

Ally

How strong is Ally Roberts? She can get her window all the way down.

Payton

   Smiling non-stop for the camera is tough work. True story: almost every girl on the bus was asleep well before they reached the Clinton ferry.

menges

   Ashley Menges (left) and Lauren Rose, forever grateful to not be in class on a beautiful Thursday afternoon.

Katrina McGranahan is trapped in a glass case of emotion.

Katrina McGranahan, trapped in a glass case of emotion.

The bus can’t move until the camera is done.

That’s rule #1 for Wolf athletes, who are fond of their photo op time.

Well, and, of course, I’m smart enough to know photos = page hits, so it’s a win-win for all involved.

The pics above, courtesy John Fisken, capture the moments right before the CHS volleyball squad headed off to Puyallup Thursday for a district playoff match.

Giddiness. Excitement. Nervousness. Accomplishment. Pride.

It all swirled in the air as the Wolf spikers and their fans (CHS football coach Brett Smedley brought his class out to cheer on the departure of their schoolmates) celebrated the moment.

Win or lose, it was the kind of day, the kind of moment, these young women will remember long after their high school days are done.

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"Rally" Ally Roberts floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee. (John Fisken photos)

  “Rally Ally” Roberts floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee. (John Fisken photos)

Valen Trujillo charges down the line.

Valen Trujillo (2) charges down the line.

It was a swan song, yes, but it was a beautifully played one.

It may be hard to tell just from the score, but Thursday night, deep in the heart of Puyallup, the very-young Coupeville High School volleyball squad put together its best match of the season.

The only problem is, host Cascade Christian gave them absolutely no margin for error, whatsoever.

The Cougars, a hard-hitting squad with a roster heavy in senior snipers, rallied from a late first-set deficit and eliminated the Wolves from the district playoffs in straight sets.

The 25-20, 25-11, 25-12 victory propels Cascade Christian into the double-elimination final four Saturday, a step away from the state tourney, while Coupeville wrapped its season at 6-10.

That’s a huge step forward from last season, when the Wolves went 1-11 and missed the playoffs.

This year, with nine of 14 players who saw varsity action being freshmen or sophomores, CHS made huge strides under the direction of Breanne Smedley, Heidi Wyman and Ashley Herndon.

That was evident from the start Thursday, as the Wolves easily shrugged off any early jitters from being on their biggest stage.

Opening with a service blast off of the fingertips of senior co-captain Sydney Autio, the Wolves launched into an epic rally with their private school foes on the very first point of the night.

Keeping the ball alive several times with lunging hustle plays, Coupeville forced the Cougars into a huge error — one of their players flat-out whiffed on a potential spike — and claimed the early 1-0 lead.

Unfortunately, that would be just about the only error Cascade Christian would make all evening.

A very-efficient, seasoned squad, the Cougars rarely missed on serves or put-aways, handing Coupeville virtually no free points.

What the Wolves got, they earned the hard way.

And they did earn a lot in the early going, using their own power show to stake themselves to a 17-15 lead late in the set.

Sophomore Katrina McGranahan was on fire, soaring gracefully into the clouds on a number of plays, her long arms forming an impenetrable defensive fence as she controlled the net.

Joining her was the freshman phenom, Emma Smith, who made her second straight playoff start and celebrated getting her braces off earlier in the day by launching one spike for a winner that cracked off the Cougar logo on the floor and chipped off some serious paint.

Cascade Christian was nearly flawless on service return, but crafty Valen Trujillo flummoxed them at one point, dropping in a service ace that dropped neatly between two Cougars and skipped away at the last second.

McGranahan stuffed a kill, Ally Roberts lopped off a few arms with a put-away of her own and Kyla Briscoe dropped the hammer to push Coupeville to its two-point margin.

But then that whole “let’s play practically perfect” mode switched on for Cascade Christian and the Cougars rolled off a 10-3 run to close the opening set.

The hosts power, which came from a number of players, surfaced during the run, as the Cougars launched knee-shaking spikes from all directions, with most of the hits coming from several steps back from the net.

The final two sets were not as close, at least in terms of points scored, but they did feature a break-out performance from sophomore Hope Lodell.

She flew around like a woman possessed all match and drew raised eyebrows of approval from her coaches, who were looking to the future, and liking what they saw.

Coupeville also, as it has all season long, refused to bend, even when down.

Trujillo ran out of the gym and halfway into the parking lot (or at least it seemed that way) to keep the ball alive at one point, and the Wolves ended up winning a point that a fraction of a second before had seemed all but over.

Time and again, CHS surprised the Cougars, who improved to 12-4 with the win, and, to their credit, the Cascade Christian fans and players responded with a show of respect to the Wolves.

Though, let’s just say it, the Coupeville student section, led by guys like Brenden Gilbert and Zane Bundy, was much noisier and a lot more creative this season than their private school counterparts were Thursday.

But, the Cougars were classy, so let’s give ’em that.

As the clock ticked down on the season, and the high school careers for seniors McKenzie Bailey and Autio reached an end, there were some tears.

But they were the tears of warriors, young women who truly left it all on the court this season and just wanted one more chance to show how far they have traveled from the first point of the season to the last.

Win or lose, the Wolf spikers played with fury and precision, and their future has rarely looked as bright as it sparkles right now.

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