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“I’m staying down here on the floor where it’s safe!” (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a sweet Valentine’s Day massacre.

Scrappy Northwest Christian out of Lacey hung around for a bit Tuesday night, then the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball team unleashed a tsunami of buckets.

Closing the third quarter on a 23-0 run, and finishing the game itself on a 38-6 tear, the Wolves ran their guests off the floor to a 64-26 tune.

The playoff win lifts Coupeville to 14-7 on the season, a record Brad Sherman’s squad will carry back onto their home floor Thursday, when they play for a second-straight bi-district title and trip to state.

That game, set for a 7 PM tipoff, will be against Northwest 2B/1B League rival La Conner (10-12), which toppled District 2’s top seed, Auburn Adventist Academy, 57-53.

NWC (9-10) and AAA (16-4) also play Thursday in a loser-out game, with the winner advancing to play the title game loser Saturday for the second ticket to state awarded to District 1/2 this time around.

Coupeville, which went 34 years between trips to the state tourney, and 52 between district titles, now stands on the cusp of repeating both major achievements barely a year later.

The Wolf boys’ hoops program has only advanced to the big dance in consecutive seasons once, achieving the feat during the 1974-1975 and 1975-1976 seasons.

Tuesday’s tilt featured one team which was clearly dominant in every way — but had trouble getting the ball to stay in the hoop for the first 18 or so minutes — and one team which refused to go away.

Coupeville got on the board first, with senior Dominic Coffman crashing hard to the hoop to deliver a ball sent his way by Alex Murdy.

Next trip down the floor, same exact play. MurdyCoffman-bucket.

Tack on a rumble through the paint from Logan Downes and a Murdy free throw, and the Wolves staked themselves to a quick 7-2 lead.

Then the rim turned unforgiving, as Wolf shot after shot found increasingly creative ways of popping back out of the net, allowing Northwest Christian to sneak out to a 12-9 lead at the first break.

The final NWC bucket was a particular dagger, the ball caressing the glass and dropping through the net a millisecond before the shot clock sounded.

But, as Coupeville assistant coach Greg White told the Wolves as they came to the bench, “We’re not out of this! At all!!”

He was right, with the Wolves — sparked by a feisty defense spearheaded by Murdy at his shot-blocking, havoc-creating best — opening the second frame on a 10-0 run.

The first two of those buckets were courtesy fab frosh Chase Anderson, who made off with steals, outran his foe to the rim for a layup, then immediately got right back up in the grill of the man he had just embarrassed.

Murdy, delivering perhaps his best all-around performance of the season, was zipping passes left and right, the ball finding the waiting fingers of Downes and Cole White.

NWC briefly stopped Coupeville’s flow with a three-ball and free throw, but bam, right back at it, with another 7-0 mini-run to send the Wolves to the half up 26-16.

If there was one thing slightly troubling onlookers, it was this — the lead could have already been 20-25 at that point, if the rim had been just a bit more receptive.

But even during the good times of the second quarter, a surprising number of shots refused to go down and came back up.

Sort of like what happened with one overhyped young fan, who discovered yes, you can become a prairie folk hero by barfin’ all over your section of the stands.

“Don’t look behind you. If you didn’t see it, it didn’t happen.”

Coupeville’s inconsistent first half shot making may have given NWC a glimmer of hope, and the visitors actually cut the lead back to 26-20 early in the third quarter.

At which point the Wolves got mad and did something about it.

Slapped, poked, prodded, and whacked upside the head one too many times, Murdy proved he was a lover, and not a fighter.

As in a lover of destroying the souls of anyone in a NWC uniform.

Murdy, eyes boring lasers through the hapless dudes caught in his range of vision, unleashed in the second half.

He scored 14 of his 17 points starting at that 26-20 mark, but the way he did it was especially brutally beautiful.

Instead of simply blocking a shot, Murdy ripped time and space apart as he elevated to punch away the ball right as it left his foe’s hands.

In doing so, he sent the ball on a direct line to Downes, who snatched it up and was off for a breakaway bucket to put salt in the wound.

But the coldest Murdy Moment came on the first play of the fourth quarter, as he ripped a ball free, shot down floor, then suddenly jumped back and rained down a three-ball right in a guy’s face.

The crowd, which included former teammates, went wild, while the Wolf senior had a look on his face which could probably get Netflix to pony up some big cash for him to star in their next serial killer flick.

Once Coupeville went bonkers, it never stopped.

A 23-0 run to close the third quarter, with five different Wolves scoring, blew the lead out to 49-20, with CHS promptly scoring 12 of the first 13 points in the fourth as well.

Hard-working big man Zane Oldenstadt provided the final crowd-pleasers, throwing down back-to-back buckets like he had suddenly been injected with the DNA of Nikola Jokić.

Or Hakeem Olajuwon for true hoops scholars.

A look at the postgame scorebook reveals the kind of share-the-love scoring Brad Sherman enjoys seeing staring back at him.

Three Wolves were in double figures, with eight tallying points.

Downes led the way with 18, followed by Murdy with 17, and White with 10, while Anderson (6), Nick Guay (4), Coffman (4), Oldenstadt (4), and Jonathan Valenzuela (1) all kept Hall of Fame scorekeeper June Mazdra busy.

William Davidson, Jermiah Copeland, Ryan Blouin, and Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim also saw floor time in the win, as Sherman used all 12 players on his postseason roster.

The postgame celebration threatens to get out of hand.

While it was a true team effort, a dedicated stats hound such as me can’t let the moment go without mentioning one milestone.

With his 18 points, Downes becomes just the second Wolf player, boy or girl, to score 500 points in a single season.

The Coupeville junior is at 504 and counting, trailing just Jeff Stone, who rained down a still awe-inspiring 644 back in 1969-1970.

Career-wise, Downes rises to 728, moving past Tom Sahli (719) to claim #20 on the all-time CHS boys scoring chart for a program launched in 1917.

Maybe.

While the 728 for Downes is documented and stamped, Sahli, who faced down NBA legend Elgin Baylor in college, is the only major Wolf hoops star for whom we don’t have a concrete career point total.

Sahli’s 719 is based on his junior and senior seasons, but any numbers from his sophomore campaign in 1951-1952 remain missing — the Holy Grail for my Indiana Jones-style hoops obsession.

So, maybe put a small asterisk next to Downes and the other 19 guys still ahead of him on the chart, in the hope we can one day give Sahli his full due.

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The Wolves run to playoff success. (Bailey Thule photo)

“These girls are not ready to stop playing.”

The Coupeville High School girls’ varsity basketball squad, led by their Fab Five seniors, won their second-straight loser-out game, bouncing visiting Auburn Adventist Academy 39-29 Monday in the bi-district opener.

Now 10-10, Megan Richter’s pack of scrappy ballhawks return to their home floor Wednesday to face either La Conner (17-4) or Northwest Christian of Lacey (7-7) for the tourney title and the lone berth to state being awarded to girls’ teams in Districts 1/2.

The Braves and Wolverines were also supposed to play Monday, but their game was bumped to Tuesday after high winds affected the Port Townsend ferry, stranding NWC on the mainland.

La Conner and NWC’s girls now play Tuesday at 7 PM, bumping the boys’ playoff game between Coupeville and NWC from 6:45 up to 5:15.

Having endured a tiebreaker game to earn their playoff ticket, Coupeville’s girls were playing for the third time in four days when they took the floor Monday night.

But the Wolves were also playing at home for the first time in a week, they were wearing their snazzy black uniforms, and the fan base — including several former Wolf coaches — was solidly on their side.

And they responded in style, jumping on Auburn quickly and leading from first bucket to final buzzer.

Springy sophomore Lyla Stuurmans, who drove the Falcon ballhandlers batty all game on defense, knocked down a running layup off of a long pass from Maddie Georges, and things were underway.

An early three-ball from Alita Blouin, and another breakaway bucket from Stuurmans staked Coupeville to an early 9-2 lead, though the Falcons fought back.

Hitting the first of its five treys, Auburn sliced the lead back down to 9-7 heading into the final minute of the opening frame, setting up a potential back-and-forth brawl.

But the Wolves responded, and quickly, with Georges burying a three-ball of her own, before coming back around to fuel yet another Stuurmans layup with a precision half-court pass.

Toss in a free throw off the fingers of Mia Farris, and CHS was up 15-7 at the first break and in control.

Not that Auburn gave in, however, as the Falcons fought for every loose ball and rebound, slicing its deficit back to four points right before halftime.

To which Georges, a four-year varsity vet, said, “Not my gym, not tonight,” banking home a three-ball which beat the buzzer by .000000002 of a second.

“I will make them cry. I promise you that!” (Bailey Thule photo)

The well-timed bomb from Georges sent Coupeville to the break leading 24-17, and the Wolves pushed their lead into double digits early in the third quarter.

Ryanne Knoblich knocked down back-to-back buckets, one off of a rebound, the other set up by a Carolyn Lhamon kick-out pass, before Gwen Gustafson started rainin’ baskets from mid-range, putting the cherry on the sundae.

Auburn rattled home a pair of three-balls in the fourth quarter, but otherwise could not get anything going, while Coupeville milked the clock and eased home with the win.

Six of eight Wolves to see the floor Monday scored, led by Blouin, who popped for a game-high 11 points.

Alita Blouin, knockin’ down buckets and takin’ names. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Georges (9), Knoblich (8), Stuurmans (6), Gustafson (4), and Farris (1) also scored, while Lhamon and Katie Marti dominated on the boards.

Several Wolves hit personal milestones in the playoff win, led by Georges, who moves past Shawna West (388) and lands at #25 on the CHS girls all-time scoring list.

The fiery, yet composed, Wolf point guard, sits with 393 career points, while Blouin became the 61st Wolf girl to crack the 200-point club since the program launched in 1974.

She’s collected 204 points — tying her with Izzy Wells at #58 all-time — while playing in just 22 games.

Injuries limited Blouin to two games through her junior year, but she’s bounced back to start all 20 contests during her senior season.

Lastly, Stuurmans, just a sophomore, cracked the 125-point club.

With 130 and counting, she passes two former players with a direct connection to this year’s team — Christi Messner (125) and Kayla Lawson (124).

Messner is the mom of Stuurman’s fellow sophomore, Katie Marti, and was on the PA system Monday night, while Lawson is the sister of current Wolf JV coach Kassie O’Neil.

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Wolf seniors (l to r) Dominic Coffman, Alex Murdy, Jermiah Copeland, and Jonathan Valenzuela were honored Tuesday night. (Morgan White photo)

Level one achievement, unlocked.

Playing aggressive, often-inspired team defense Tuesday, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball squad polished off visiting La Conner 60-47.

That keeps the Wolves undefeated against fellow 2B schools and lifts them to 13-6 overall heading into Friday’s regular-season finale at Friday Harbor.

Winners of 11 of its last 13 games, Coupeville also clinches the #1 playoff seed from District 1 with the win over the Braves.

That guarantees the Wolves will play all their games in the bi-district tourney on their home floor, as they seek to punch a ticket to state in back-to-back seasons for only the second time in program history.

Coupeville hosts Northwest Christian (Lacey), the #2 seed from District 2, Feb. 14, while D-1 #2 La Conner hits the road the same night to face D-2 #1 Auburn Adventist Academy.

The winners play at CHS Feb. 16 for the bi-district title and a state berth.

The losers of the opening games wage a loser-out affair, also at CHS Feb. 16, with the winner of that rumble advancing to a game Feb. 18 against the title game loser for District 1/2’s second state tourney ticket.

Which is a long way to getting around to the fact Coupeville controls its own destiny from here on out, with home cookin’ and rabid Wolf Nation fans within easy reach.

Advance to state, as CHS did last season, breaking a 34-year dry spell, and the Wolves will match the run when both the 1974-1975 and 1975-1976 teams made it to the big dance.

La Conner, as expected, put up a hard fight Tuesday night, but couldn’t quite recreate the same magic it showed in a one-point loss to the Wolves earlier this season.

The first quarter was a donnybrook, however, with Coupeville overcoming a six-point deficit to knot things up at 17-17 thanks to back-to-back three-balls from Logan Downes and Cole White.

CHS senior Jonathan Valenzuela, who gutted the Braves with a buzzer-beating bomb last time, banked in another trey this time out, while Alex Murdy and Dominic Coffman keyed a hyped-up Wolf defense.

Freshman Chase Anderson soon joined the shut-down brigade, coming on to harass, irritate, and thoroughly chafe any La Conner gunner who touched the ball.

Scrappy beyond his years, and also capable of tossing down a bank shot under duress on offense, “The Magic Man” was the secret ingredient in Wolf coach Brad Sherman’s defensive gumbo, and he drove several Braves batty.

Which is awesome.

The game remained a war of attrition through much of the second quarter, with four ties and several lead changes, before Coupeville made its move.

Coffman, hanging high in the air, yanked a loose ball away and put it back up and in to stake the Wolves to a 28-26 lead and the home team would never trail again after that.

Downes drilled the bottom out of the net on a three-ball right before halftime to make it 32-27, then slipped a free throw through the net with less than a second left in the third to keep CHS up 44-38.

In between, Coupeville got gut-check baskets from White and Murdy, as the Wolves responded in style each time La Conner tried to pull even.

Still, no one was feeling safe as the fourth quarter began, until CHS dropped a couple of haymakers.

Valenzuela banked in a jumper to open the final frame, cracking the 100-point club for his varsity career, but it was a 10-2 run midway through the quarter which allowed Brad Sherman to finally exhale.

Six of the points in that tear came off of the fingers of White, channeling the spirit of dad Greg as he went hard to the hoop for repeat buckets.

Valenzuela and Downes set up their teammate with precision passes, while Anderson, still magnificently chafing the Braves, drew a charging foul which knocked the last bit of wind out of La Conner’s sails.

Logan Downes makes it rain. (Bailey Thule photo)

Coupeville spread its scoring out between six shooters, with Downes popping for a game-high 27 points and White rippling the nets for 15.

Valenzuela (7), Murdy (5), Anderson (4), and Coffman (2) also wrote their names in the scorebook, with Nick Guay and Jermiah Copeland earning floor time.

While the win, the chance to nab a top playoff seed, and the defensive effort were the big stories, two Wolves also made some personal history.

Valenzuela finished the night with 103 career points, becoming the fifth active Wolf boy to crack triple-digits, while Downes continues to throw down numbers rarely seen in the 106-year history of Coupeville basketball.

The junior gunner heads into the regular-season finale with 457 points this season, and 681 for his career.

Only Jeff Stone (644 in 1969-1970) and Jeff Rhubottom (459 in 1977-1978) have scored more in a single season.

Career-wise, Downes performance Tuesday pushes him past Wolf legends Jason McFadyen (654), Wade Ellsworth (659), Pat Bennett (659), Foster Faris (668), Virgil Roehl (674), and Gavin Keohane (677), and places him #22 all-time for a program launched in 1917.

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Maddie Georges rumbles in the paint. (Morgan White photo)

The mission is simple.

Hit the road this Friday, Island-hop from Whidbey to Friday Harbor, and win the regular-season finale.

Do that, and the Coupeville High School girls’ varsity basketball team is playoff-bound, with the bi-district tourney on their home floor.

However, if the hosts win Friday, the Wolves and Wolverines will immediately turn around and play a tiebreaker game Saturday at a neutral location.

Whichever team comes out on top in the battle for the #2 playoff seed from District 1, it will face District 2’s Auburn Adventist Academy in a loser-out game Feb. 13.

La Conner, the D-1 #1, plays D-2 #2 Northwest Christian (Lacey) in the nightcap of a playoff doubleheader.

The winners Feb. 13 face-off Feb. 15 for the bi-district title and a berth to the state tourney.

The Braves clinched District 1’s top seed thanks to a 48-22 win over Coupeville Tuesday night, hitting 10 three-balls to ease past the feisty Wolves.

The loss drops CHS to 8-9 heading into its regular-season finale.

Playing on Senior Night Tuesday, the Wolves honored the Fab Five — Maddie Georges, Carolyn Lhamon, Gwen Gustafson, Alita Blouin, and Ryanne Knoblich, and were stung by a slow start.

La Conner hit a trio of three-balls in the first quarter, building a 15-2 lead by the first break, and that put Coupeville in catch-up mode the rest of the night.

Knoblich came dangerously close to getting some of those points back, dropping her own three-ball at the buzzer, but the ball departed her fingertips after the buzzer clanged, forcing the refs to wave off the still-splendid shot.

After that, the rims turned fairly unforgiving, with La Conner using mini 6-3 and 9-3 runs across the second and third quarter, respectively, to push its lead out to 30-8.

All of the Braves points in those frames came via three-balls, and the one which stung the most was the one which found the bottom of the net with just a half-second left in the first half.

But, after struggling to score against the Northwest 2B/1B League leaders in the game’s first 24 minutes, the Wolves found their shooting touch late, banking home 14 fourth-quarter points.

It started with Blouin swooping to the hoop for a three-point play the hard way — flipping a shot up with her left hand while being hammered about the neck and shoulders.

Knoblich ended things with a pullup jumper in the paint, and in between those two buckets, Georges put on a sweet shooting display.

The fiery Wolf point guard slashed to the basket for a pair of buckets, hit a short jumper off an inbounds pass, and banked home a three-ball off the glass while staring daggers at her would-be defender.

The late-game rush gave Georges a team-high 13 points on the night and bumped her two slots up on the Wolf girls career scoring chart.

With 357 points and counting, she passes big-timers Tracy Taylor (350) and Amy Mouw (353) and sits #28 all-time for a program launched back in 1974.

Blouin tossed in six points in support of her running mate, while Knoblich (2) and sophomore Mia Farris (1) rounded out the scoring attack.

Katie Marti, Lyla Stuurmans, Gustafson, Skylar Parker, Jada Heaton, Madison McMillan, and Lhamon also saw floor time for Megan Richter’s squad.

Defensive dynamos Gwen Gustafson (left) and Lyla Stuurmans harass the ballhandler. (Bailey Thule photo)

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Whatcha gonna do when the Wolves come for you?  (Bailey Thule photo)

The round robin decides everything.

While Coupeville High School basketball teams, and their closest rivals, can play up to 20 regular season games, only four of those rumbles dictate playoff participation.

The Northwest 2B/1B League currently houses four 1B schools — Darrington, Orcas Island, Concrete, and Mount Vernon Christian — and three 2B institutions — Coupeville, La Conner, and Friday Harbor.

When the postseason arrives, 2B and 1B split off and go their own ways.

For basketball, all four 1B schools make the playoffs, which began Thursday.

When it comes to 2B hoops, however, you have to be top two to get the call, since there are a lot less 2B schools in the region, making for a smaller postseason tourney.

Those two NWL teams, repping District 1, pair off with District 2’s Auburn Adventist Academy and Northwest Christian (Lacey), at bi-districts Feb. 13-18.

That event, held at Coupeville High School, offers two tickets to state for the boys this year and one for the girls.

D1/2 will get two state berths for the girls next year. Allegedly.

With that in mind, La Conner swept a pair of home games from Friday Harbor on Friday night, which officially clinches three of the four playoff berths.

On the boys’ side, Coupeville and La Conner are in, while Friday Harbor is eliminated after the Wolverines blew a 20-point lead and fell 59-57 to the Braves.

On the girls’ side, La Conner is in after a 65-18 romp, with Coupeville and Friday Harbor still fighting for the other spot.

Seeding is still up for grabs on both sides, however.

Coupeville closes the regular season next week, hosting La Conner Tuesday, Feb. 7, before island-hopping to Friday Harbor Feb. 10.

The Wolf boys clinch the #1 seed with a win in that first game.

Meanwhile, Coupeville’s girls need to sweep both games next week to have a shot at being #1 but need just a victory over Friday Harbor — who they beat 47-27 first time around — to claim the #2 seed.

If there any ties, teams will play a tiebreaker game, at a neutral site, Saturday, Feb. 11.

 

Where the round-robin sits heading into the final week:

 

Boys basketball:

School Vs. 2B
Coupeville 2-0
La Conner 2-1
Friday Harbor 0-3

 

Girls basketball:

School Vs. 2B
La Conner 3-0
Coupeville 1-1
Friday Harbor 0-3

 

Bi-district brackets:

Boyshttp://www.nw1a2bathletics.com/m2/tourn.php?act=vt&tid=3810

Girlshttp://www.nw1a2bathletics.com/m2/tourn.php?act=vt&tid=3809

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