Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘playoffs’

Cole White popped for a career-high 23 points Monday to spark Coupeville to a playoff win on the road. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They possess many hands, and all of them are going to slap you upside the head.

The Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball players are dead set on getting back to the promised land, and they’re carving a trail of success, one well-timed knockout punch at a time.

Monday night the spotlight shone brightly on often unsung heroes like Cole White, Nick Guay, and Hurlee Bronec, as they sparked the Wolves to a 64-50 win in their District 1/2 playoff opener at Auburn Adventist Academy.

Playing on a funky court, with a wobbly rim on one end and a staircase to nowhere on the other, in a joint that resembles an old-school airport hangar, Coupeville overcame foul trouble and a slow start and now sits a win away from returning to the state tourney.

Coupeville, 16-5 after the win, hosts La Conner (15-6) Wednesday night at 7:00 PM in the Bi-District title game.

It’ll be the third meeting this season for the Northwest 2B/1B League co-champs, with the Braves taking game one 69-68, before the Wolves rebounded to claim the rematch 65-54.

The victor in meeting #3 earns a ticket to state, as Coupeville tries to get to the big dance for the second time in the last three years.

Auburn Adventist (17-4) and Northwest Christian of Lacey (6-11), which fell 74-29 to La Conner Monday, play at 5:15 Wednesday at CHS in a loser-out game.

The survivor of that rumble squares off Saturday with the title game loser for the second berth to state being offered to District 1/2 teams.

Monday’s tilt in Auburn began with rain slashing down outside, and the host Falcons banging away from long-range.

Back-to-back three-balls early helped the home team jump out to a 14-6 lead, and then Coupeville lost sophomore sparkplug Chase Anderson, who picked up three fouls in about four minutes.

Apparently, the hometown refs had shiny new whistles and wanted to try them out.

Four different Wolves eventually ended up with four fouls apiece, but none fouled out, and CHS made up for the foul disparity by winning the free-throw shooting contest.

With Anderson handcuffed to the bench, Coupeville coach Brad Sherman shuffled his lineup, and everything, and everybody, immediately clicked.

The Wolves closed the quarter on a 14-6 rampage, with four different players knocking down buckets.

Hurlee Bronec gets dynamic.

Guay and Logan Downes rippled the net with their own back-to-back treys, while White and Hurlee Bronec slapped home layups off of crisp passes from the ever-alert Downes.

Auburn hit a three-ball right before the buzzer to knot things up at 18-18 heading into the first break, before scoring off of a rebound to open the second frame.

That would be the last truly happy moment for the Falcons, however, as Coupeville immediately reclaimed the lead and never let it go the rest of the night.

A 14-0 surge, with White twice throwing down three-point plays the hard way, deflated Auburn, and it didn’t get easier from there for the hosts.

Downes also converted a three-point play on a slash to the bucket plus a free throw, as the Wolves caressed the net, converting all nine of their charity shots in the quarter.

Up 38-28 at the half, Coupeville let Auburn get a little taste of comeback fever in the third frame, but just a little.

The Falcons cut the deficit down to five thanks to their success from behind the arc, but then the Wolves handed the ball to Downes and let him go blow things up.

In four contests against Auburn Adventist over the past two seasons, the Wolf senior has rattled the rims for 40, 24, 30, and 24 points, and he seems to take great delight in ramming home the fatal dagger.

Downes closed the third by tossing in eight points during a 10-2 run, while flinging a note-perfect lob to White, who was tiptoeing through the paint, for the other score, and CHS was on its way.

The lead was 53-40 heading into the fourth quarter, and the Wolves shoved it all the way out to 18 late in the game.

Another 9-0 surge, this one fueled by seven points from the “can’t miss, won’t miss” White, pushed the game dangerously close to blowout country, before Auburn sliced a few points off the lead in the waning moments.

Nick Guay doesn’t fear your defense, fool.

Coupeville’s final bucket, coming on a swooping layup from Guay, was a milestone moment, as the lanky senior became the fourth active Wolf to crack the career 200-point club.

CHS got a solid one-two punch at the top of the scorebook, with Downes dropping in 24 and White banking in a career-best 23.

That pushes Downes to 476 points for the season, the third-best single-season effort put up by a Wolf boy across 107 campaigns.

The only guys ahead of him?

Jeff Stone, who scorched the nets for 644 in 1969-1970, and Downes himself, as he threw down 554 last year as a junior.

With his career night White continues to push for his own milestone moments.

He’s sitting with 389 points, good for #66 all-time on the CHS career scoring chart, and he and dad Greg (#33 at 604) are seven points shy of combining for a sweet 1,000.

Guay added nine Monday to get to 200, while the Battlin’ Bronec Brothers combined for six, with Hurlee sinking four and Hunter notching two points while terrorizing folks on defense.

Ryan Blouin, coming off his own career night a game ago, added a bucket this time while zipping passes left and right, and Wolf bangers William Davidson and Zane Oldenstadt provided lock-down defense in the paint.

And Chase Anderson?

Maybe next time the refs will stop calling ticky-tacky fouls, let him stay on the floor, and marvel at his hops when his butt isn’t super-glued to a chair.

One can only hope.

Read Full Post »

Chase Anderson is so shocked by District 2’s possibly un-American policy on cash money, he momentarily loses control of the basketball. (Jackie Saia photo)

Four teams enter, two teams claim a magic ticket.

The double-elimination District 1/2 boys’ basketball tourney kicks off Monday at various sites, before everyone converges in Coupeville to decide which teams will advance to the state tourney.

Thanks to (not) having the luck of the draw when Northwest 2B/1B League athletic directors did a pre-season seeding draw, Coupeville opens on the road against Auburn Adventist Academy.

Meanwhile, La Conner is at home, hosting Northwest Christian (Lacey), which beat Atlas Summit in a play-in game.

Monday’s winners advance to play for the Bi-District title, and the first state berth, Wednesday at CHS, while the losers square off in an elimination game the same night at the same location.

The team which comes up short in the title game plays the survivor of the loser-out affair for the second state tourney berth Saturday back in Coupeville.

Unless both teams in that game are from District 2, then they get to stay closer to home and the Wolf support crew gets the night off.

To see the bracket, pop over to:

https://www.wpanetwork.com/wiaa/brackets/tournament.php?act=view&tournament_id=4209

 

What do you need to know before tip-off Monday?

Well, since Coupeville’s first game is on the road at a District 2 site, don’t expect to pay cash to get in.

Having surrendered to their digital overlords, D2 only sells tickets through GoFan, with your phone being your ticket.

That means you pay processing fees on top of inflated playoff pricing.

Will there be further issues?

Possibly, as the site currently has the game listed at the wrong time (4:00 instead of 6:00 PM) and at the wrong location (Northwest Christian, instead of Auburn Adventist Academy).

https://gofan.co/event/1364248?schoolId=WA86276

 

Once you’re back in Cow Town, you’ll still have to pay a bit more than regular season prices, since it’s the playoffs, but cash will be welcome, and those pesky processing fees vanish into the ether.

Logan Downes crashes to the hoop. (Bailey Thule photo)

 

A look at the teams involved:

 

Auburn Adventist Academy

Season record: 17-3

League: 1B/2B SeaTac

Trips to state tourney: 2 (Most recent: 2023)

RPI ranking: #7

Results vs. bi-district foes: Beat Northwest Christian 86-59, lost to Coupeville 69-57

Coach: Hector Brito

Seniors: Zachary Ellis, Tom Lai, Bobby Osei-Bonsu, Jonathan Russell, Kobe Yoshitake

Mascot: Falcons

 

Coupeville

Season record: 15-5

League: Northwest 2B/1B League

Trips to state tourney: 6 (Most recent: 2022)

RPI ranking: #14

Results vs. bi-district foes: Beat AAA 69-57, lost to La Conner 69-68, beat La Conner 65-54

Coach: Brad Sherman

Seniors: Ryan Blouin, William Davidson, Logan Downes, Nick Guay, Timothy Nitta, Zane Oldenstadt, Mikey Robinett, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, Cole White

Mascot: Wolves

 

La Conner

Season record: 14-6

League: Northwest 2B/1B League

Trips to state tourney: 43 (Most recent: 2023)

RPI ranking: #17

Results vs. bi-district foes: Beat Coupeville 69-68, lost to Coupeville 65-54

Coach: Lance Lopez

Seniors: Logan Burks, Ivory Damien, Alfonso Sampson, Kenai Zimmerman

Mascot: Braves

 

Northwest Christian (Lacey)

Season record: 6-10

League: 1B/2B SeaTac

Trips to state tourney: 3 (Most recent – 2013)

RPI ranking: #45

Results vs. bi-district foes: Lost to AAA 86-59

Coach: Ben Lamb

Seniors: Kaden Lanham, Ryddis Robinson

Mascot: Wolverines

Zane Oldenstadt powers inside for a bucket. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Read Full Post »

Losers yap. Winners smile. Zane Oldenstadt is a winner. (Michelle Glass photo)

He who celebrates last, celebrates loudest.

Yappy Friday Harbor varsity boys’ hoops players acted like they won a state title when they claimed an early lead Friday night in Coupeville.

By the time they exited Cow Town? Those same Wolverines had a lot less to say, after being eliminated from playoff contention.

Celebrating Senior Night in style, a Coupeville squad which features nine 12th graders held firm while being poked, prodded, and verbally harassed, claiming a 56-52 win and keeping alive its own dream of winning a league title.

Now 6-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 14-5 overall, the Wolves are a half-game off of La Conner (6-0, 13-5) heading into a road trip to square off with those Braves on the mainland Feb. 6.

Friday’s win clinches a district playoff berth for CHS, but a win over La Conner, which it lost to by a single point the first time around, will give Coupeville at least a share of the NWL title.

Seeding for the four-team, double-elimination, two-teams-advance-to-state district tourney is still in flux, with La Conner also playing Friday Harbor in the regular-season finale Feb. 9.

If the Wolves and Braves finish with the same record, the latter of those teams gets the #1 seed thanks to a pre-season tiebreaker draw by league athletic directors.

But if La Conner loses its final two games, Coupeville snatches the #1 seed and hosts its district opener.

All other tourney games will be at CHS regardless, with the Wolves playing host.

Having clinched a trip to the playoffs, the Coupeville seniors are guaranteed of playing on their home floor again. Still, they made sure Senior Night counted.

It began with the program’s all-time leading scorer, Logan Downes, who was injured just moments into his team’s last game and sat out the majority of that non-conference clash at Chief Leschi.

Logan Downes catches a photo op with the future of the Wolf hoops program. (Angie Downes photo)

Beginning, and ending, Friday night with a walking boot on his left leg, the senior gunner played through the pain, and had the hot hand in the first quarter.

Pulling off his own tribute to Willis Reed (look it up on Wikipedia, teenagers), Downes knocked down a trio of three-balls, then slashed to the hoop for a bucket on a feed from Cole White to cap an 11-point performance in the game’s first seven minutes.

While Friday Harbor jumped out to an 11-6 lead, then prematurely celebrated, Coupeville chipped away at the lead.

White and William Davidson, whose fan club rocked personalized t-shirts, joined Downes in scoring in the opening frame, with the Wolves pulling back within 17-16 at the break.

Showcasing its depth, Brad Sherman’s squad turned to Nick Guay and Chase Anderson in the second quarter, with the lanky duo combining for 15 points as Coupeville used an 18-8 run to claim the lead for good.

Guay pushed the Wolves ahead, rippling the net on a silky sideline jumper, while Anderson, flying pell-mell end-to-end, slapped home a breakaway bucket to stake CHS to a 34-25 lead at the half.

Coupeville pushed its advantage out as far as 14 points in the second half, with Downes getting hot again and Anderson continuing to rampage like a wild beast, gloriously annoying Friday Harbor on seemingly every play.

The lead was at 48-36 heading into the fourth, with the Wolves still up 53-40 midway through the final frame.

But give Friday Harbor some credit — it is a resilient team and one always capable of making a run.

Which the Wolverines demonstrated one final time, carving the lead down to 55-51 late, with a little help from the refs.

The guys in the striped shirts ignored a blatant travel in the middle of the court on a play in which the visitors drained a three-ball, while allowing the yapping to progressively grow.

Anderson drilled a late jumper over the Friday Harbor defense, and Downes hit a key free throw in the final seconds, but the Wolverines got plenty of extra chances.

Despite Friday Harbor’s players endlessly bitching from opening tip to postgame discussion over whether losers get to stop at McDonald’s, it was the Wolves who had the game’s only technical foul called on them.

With five seconds to play and Coupeville up by five.

That set up a potential game-tying finish, but Friday Harbor choked, missing one of two free throws and failing to hit a three-ball at the buzzer.

Coupeville is going to the playoffs. Friday Harbor is not. (Michelle Glass photo)

Basking in the afterglow of the win, and punching their playoff ticket, any Wolf looking at the book would have seen the kind of balanced scoring which delights a coach.

Downes scraped out 19 while playing on one normal leg, and now sits at 1,213 for his career, while Anderson banked in 14.

White (8), Guay (7), Hunter Bronec (3), Ryan Blouin (3) — thanks to a killer fourth-quarter three-ball — and Davidson (2) also scored, with Zane Oldenstadt, Hurlee Bronec, and Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim hitting the boards with authority.

Read Full Post »

Skylar Parker works her way through the defense. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was there, then it was gone.

Playing without a key starter Friday night, the Coupeville High School varsity girls’ basketball team got a career-best performance from Madison McMillan, but lost the lead late, falling 36-30 to visiting Friday Harbor.

The loss, coming in the third straight game the Wolves have played without injured #2 scorer Mia Farris, drops the Wolves to 2-5 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 6-12 overall.

It also eliminates CHS from playoff contention, as Friday Harbor (4-3, 6-12) clinches the second and final 2B postseason berth from the NWL, joining La Conner (5-1, 12-6) in heading to the postseason.

Coupeville wraps its season with a non-conference clash with Orting Saturday, followed by a road trip to La Conner Feb. 6.

That will mark the end of the run for Wolf 12th graders Reese Wilkinson, Skylar Parker, and Kayla Arnold, who were honored Friday on Senior Night.

Kayla Arnold was one of three Wolf seniors honored Friday night.

With Farris back in uniform (but not playing) after two games in street clothes, the Wolves fell behind 5-0 early, then kicked things into gear.

Katie Marti banked in a runner to get Coupeville on the board, and she and her squad threw down 14 straight points to claim control of the game.

McMillan’s second bucket of the opening quarter staked CHS to an 11-5 lead at the first break, before Parker buried a three-ball off the glass to open the second frame.

The Wolf offense dried up for a bit after that, allowing Friday Harbor to pull back to within 16-13 at the half, but the Wolves maintained the lead into the final moments of the third quarter.

McMillan was a force all game, knocking down a jumper and turning a rebound into a putback in the third quarter to keep the visitors at bay, but then things broke bad.

Friday Harbor scored the final five points of the frame to force a 22-22 tie heading into the fourth, before the teams traded buckets to open the closing stretch.

Coupeville held its final lead at 28-26 after Lyla Stuurmans fed McMillan, who rolled strong to the hoop for her last basket of the night.

But the Wolves lost their most fearsome scoring weapon with a little under four minutes to play, with Marti fouling out and joining Farris on the bench.

CHS 9th grader Haylee Armstrong kept her squad within 32-30, draining a beauty of a jumper from the side, but in the end, it was the other team’s fab frosh who iced things.

Friday Harbor got Vera Schoultz the ball down low, and the five-foot-eleven tower of power responded, banking in the game-icing bucket and propelling her team to the playoffs.

McMillan didn’t go down without a fight, however, as the Wolf junior made the nets jump for a career-high 14 points in the loss.

Marti (8), Parker (4), Teagan Calkins (2), and Armstrong (2) also scored, with Jada Heaton, Wilkinson, Stuurmans, and Arnold seeing floor time for Megan Richter’s squad.

Read Full Post »

“Fear my cannon, fools!!” (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’re wearing purple and gold today but could be clad in black and red when it counts.

That’s the real reason I run photos from Oak Harbor Football and Cheer League games, because you never know which players will grow up to play high school ball in Coupeville.

Since there is no youth league in Cow Town, often future Wolves first suit up and hit the turf in Oak Town.

Case in point, current CHS senior Logan Downes, who is graduating after setting school single-game, single-season, and career touchdown passing marks.

Once upon a time as a young gunslinger he wore purple and gold, then graduated to better colors once he matured.

The current mix of players, who played Saturday at Wildcat Memorial Stadium in a pair of playoff games, are all free agents at this point.

And whether they hail from Coupeville or Oak Harbor, there’s still time for them (and their parents) to make the right choice for their high school days.

Make ’em Bow Down to Cow Town while being tutored by Wolf gridiron guru Bennett Richter and get featured on a regular basis here on Coupeville Sports.

Cause Oak Harbor doesn’t have a sports blog of its own.

Just sayin’, nudge, nudge.

Well, anyway, while you’re weighing your child’s best shot at sports immortality, pop over and see everything John Fisken shot at those Saturday games:

 

PeeWee:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/OH-Football-2023-2024/OHFCL-PeeWee-2023-11-05-vs-Getchell/

 

Seniors:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/OH-Football-2023-2024/OHFLC-Seniors-2023-11-05-vs-Ferndale/

 

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »