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Posts Tagged ‘Port Townsend’

Emma Smith

   Emma Smith and CHS volleyball won a league title in the fall, picking up eight conference wins along the way. (John Fisken photos)

Jakobi Baumann

   Jakobi Baumann was part of a Wolf tennis team which successfully defended its league title.

The champ is staggered, down, but not necessarily out.

Winter was rough for Klahowya, which got just two league wins combined from its varsity boys and girls basketball squads, thanks in large part to a combination of injuries and bad luck.

That’s allowed Coupeville to surge ahead in the standings at the two-thirds point of the 2016-2017 school year, boasting the most combined varsity team wins of any 1A Olympic League school.

If the Wolves can hold fast through the spring — where they are the defending league champs in baseball and girls tennis — they would unseat the Eagles, who have ruled the roost in the league’s first two years.

To get these totals, I look at 10 of the 11 sports in which Coupeville vies with its conference rivals.

That means skipping track, which is the only one of the 11 not to be a true head-to-head team sport.

Track is an individual sport conducted in the guise of a team sport, with meets typically involving a jumble of schools from different classifications. Any attempt at keeping track of a team win-loss record is a waste of time.

And this is Coupeville Sports, so if the Wolves don’t field a team (wrestling, swim, gymnastics), it would be equally pointless for me to consider that sport.

So, what I do look at is regular season league varsity wins in football, volleyball, girls and boys soccer, girls and boys tennis, girls and boys basketball, baseball and softball.

A season-by season comparison:

2014-2015:

Klahowya 52 wins/5 league titles
Coupeville 40/2
Chimacum 23/2
Port Townsend 20/1

2015-2016:

Klahowya 45/3
Coupeville 42/4
Chimacum 26/2
Port Townsend 22/1

2016-2017 (fall and winter):

Coupeville 32/3
Klahowya 24/1
Port Townsend 22/1
Chimacum 13/-

All-time:

Klahowya 121/9
Coupeville 114/9
Port Townsend 64/3
Chimacum 62/4

Now first, if you’re counting football, volleyball, girls soccer, boys tennis and girls and boys basketball, you might think I missed a title this year.

I didn’t, though, as the Olympic League united with the Nisqually League for football, and when the 8-team gridiron conglomerate anointed its champ, the crown went to outsider Cascade Christian.

Looking at the numbers, here’s what I see happening over the first two-and-two-thirds years of our conference.

In the early going Klahowya, which is the second-largest 1A school in the state with 445 students in the last WIAA classification count, got off to a strong start.

To the surprise of probably many, Coupeville, which is the smallest school in the league (227 students to PT’s 278 and Chimacum’s 250) hung tough, then quickly realized it could do more than just that.

While KSS has nearly double the student body of CHS, after years of facing down large 2A schools and private school powerhouses in the Cascade Conference, any fear factor evaporated quickly.

In year two, every other school’s win numbers went up, at Klahowya’s expense.

Plus, in a huge psychological boost, Coupeville doubled its league titles in year two, repeating in girls basketball and tennis, while taking baseball and boys tennis away from the Eagles.

That trend is continuing in year three, as boys tennis and girls basketball repeated (the hoops squad is 27-0 all-time in league play), while volleyball snatched another title away from Klahowya.

As we head into the spring, Coupeville’s greatest strength is girls tennis, which has swept titles in both years, going 11-0 in league play.

Klahowya can counter with boys soccer, also a two-time champ, and 12-0 all-time.

The two sports which could decide things are the ones played on the diamond.

Chimacum is a two-time defending softball champ, but the Eagles have the league’s best player in standout junior hurler Amber Bumbalough.

The Wolves, who got off to a great start last year, then spiraled a bit at the end, boast a lineup stacked with young talent like Katrina McGranahan, Hope Lodell, Sarah Wright and Lauren Rose.

Baseball went to Klahowya in year one, then Coupeville surprised in year two.

The Wolves lost key players to graduation in CJ Smith and Cole Payne, while Port Townsend, which went win-less in 2016, is seeing a noticeable uptick in all boys sports across the board this year.

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Wolf gunner Kailey Kellner tries out her Senior Night present from her teammates. (Amy King photo)

Wolf gunner Kailey Kellner tries out her Senior Night present from her teammates. (Amy King photos)

27-0 in Olympic League play.

27-0 in Olympic League play.

This is no small thing.

For three years, night in and night out, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball program has overcome every obstacle, found a winning formula and set a standard of the highest order.

Using a brutally-efficient run in the second quarter to bust things open Saturday night, the Wolves bounced Port Townsend 41-31 on Senior Night to put a cap (for now) on the best run the 1A Olympic League has seen in any sport.

With the win, Coupeville heads into the postseason at 15-4, having finished off a third-consecutive 9-0 season in league play.

Their 27-0 mark in league games dwarfs Klahowya girls (20-0) and boys soccer (12-0) and Coupeville girls tennis (11-0) among the four varsity programs which have never fallen since the league debuted in 2014.

The Wolves will have 10 days off, before hitting the road to open the district playoffs.

Coupeville travels to Bellarmine Prep High School Feb. 14 to face a yet-to-be-determined foe. Win or lose, they head right back Feb. 16 and (possibly) Feb. 18.

They need two playoff wins to return to the state tourney.

To see their path, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2187&sport=12

The regular season finale wasn’t a complete romp, as Port Townsend came out aggressively in the first quarter, building an 8-5 lead.

Coupeville responded by inserting junior fireball Mikayla Elfrank into the lineup, and things took a quick turn in favor of the Wolves.

She made an immediate impact, draining a three-ball from the top of the arc on her first trip down the floor, then added a runner off of a beautiful set-up pass from Mia Littlejohn.

With the game tied at 10-10 at the first break, Elfrank grabbed a quick swig of water, then broke the game open with one wild play.

Shooting the gap between two RedHawks, she went airborne, speared a pass on the second quarter’s first play and beat the pack all the way to the other end for a layup that meant far more than just two points.

Port Townsend looked like they had been rocked on the play, and they didn’t recover, as the Wolf defense ramped up the pressure.

A three-ball from Kalia Littlejohn, after a back-and-forth with teammate Kailey Kellner bought her shooting room, followed by another trey off of Elfrank’s fingertips and the Wolves were on a 16-2 tear.

Coupeville hit five three-point bombs in the first half, with Kellner’s second one set up by another superb pass from Mia Littlejohn, who was electric while running the point.

She had a season-high seven assists, but would have topped double figures if her teammates hadn’t been a bit cold with their shooting touch in the early going.

Mia Littlejohn sliced ‘n diced her way through the RedHawk defense all night, putting the ball into the hands of Tiffany Briscoe, Lindsey Roberts and Co. with panache.

When Mia wasn’t threading the needle, lil’ sis Kalia was emulating her, firing a wicked dish over the top of the crowd to a cutting Kellner for a key third-quarter bucket.

Once Coupeville stretched the lead to double digits, it held it there almost without fail.

The RedHawks cut the deficit to eight for half a second near the end of the third quarter, only to have Coupeville score on the next three plays to stretch things back out.

Along with their stingy defense, which included holding Port Townsend gunner Kaitlyn Meek to a measly 10 points, the Wolves hit the boards like wild animals.

Almost every time the ball skipped off the rim, the first thing you saw was the long, graceful arms of Roberts reaching up to the heavens to snatch the ball.

The sophomore sensation finished with a game-high 13 boards, eight of those on the offensive glass.

She had help, too, as Elfrank snatched nine caroms and Kellner made off with five. Coupeville had 35 rebounds, 20 of those coming off of their own missed shots.

CHS spread out its offense, with Elfrank and Kellner hitting for 11 apiece. Roberts (7), Mia Littlejohn (5), Briscoe (4) and Kalia Littlejohn (3) also connected.

It was the final home game for seniors Briscoe, Kellner, Lauren Grove (who pilfered four steals while harassing Meek) and manager Skyler Lawrence.

Before the game started, Wolf JV star Nicole Lester delivered a soaring rendition of the national anthem that earned a well-deserved round of applause.

JV left stranded:

For the fourth and final time this season, a league foe cancelled on the Wolf young guns, bringing their season to a close at 11-3 overall, 5-0 in conference play.

Both Port Townsend and Chimacum bailed on two of three scheduled JV games this season due to trouble keeping a full roster.

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Steven Cope and his Wolf teammates will get a home playoff game next Thursday. (john Fisken photo)

   Steven Cope and his Wolf teammates will get a home playoff game next Thursday. (John Fisken photo)

Crisis averted.

The Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad couldn’t upend league champ Port Townsend Saturday, but thanks to Chimacum knocking off Klahowya, the Wolves are officially playoff-bound.

CHS ran into a hot-shooting RedHawk team in the regular season finale and fell 82-55, dropping to 3-6 in Olympic League play, 3-16 overall.

Port Townsend finished 9-0, 15-4.

If Klahowya had won, there would have been a three-way tie at 3-6, which would have meant a one-night, three-team mini-playoff to decide the league’s #2 and #3 playoff seeds.

That’s not necessary now as Chimacum (4-5, 4-13) and Coupeville are in, while Klahowya (2-7, 4-15) is done.

The Wolves will host the #4 team from the Nisqually League (most likely Bellevue Christian) next Thursday, Feb. 9 in a loser-out district playoff game.

Win that and CHS hits the road Feb. 11 for another loser-out game, that one at the home of the Nisqually’s #2 squad.

To see the playoff bracket, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2186&sport=3

Saturday night the Wolves got off to a slow start, trailing 23-9 after one quarter, and never recovered.

Port Townsend shared the scoring load, with four different players hitting for 16 or more and Detrius Kelsall banging home a game-high 23.

The RedHawk junior scorched the nets with six three-balls, propelling his team to a season-best scoring performance on their Senior Night.

Coupeville put together its best offensive performance in the second quarter, when Hunter Smith tossed in 11 of the Wolves 17 points.

He finished with a team-high 21, cresting the 300-point barrier in the third quarter. Smith has 303 points (15.9 a night) heading into the postseason.

Ethan Spark chipped in with 14, eight of those coming in a third-quarter explosion, while Joey Lippo (6), Brian Shank (6), Cameron Toomey-Stout (4) and Gabe Wynn (4) rounded out the scoring attack.

Rough start dooms JV :

The second half belonged to Coupeville, but a terrible first quarter (16-5 in favor of the RedHawks) put the Wolves in too deep a hole to dig out.

The 46-31 loss dropped the young guns final record to 7-12 overall, 2-7 in league play.

Freshman Mason Grove knocked down a trio of three-balls as he went for a team-high 13, while Kyle Rockwell and Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim banked home five apiece.

Ulrik Wells (4), Jean Lund-Olsen (2) and Nikolai Lyngra (2) all chipped in.

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Connor Barton, here playing defense in an earlier game, was part of a 7th grade squad that beat four of five league foes this season. (John Fisken photos)

   Connor Barton (20), here playing defense, was part of a 7th grade squad that beat four of five league foes this season. (John Fisken photos)

Aiden Burdge

Aiden Burdge was a scrappy ball-hawk whenever on the floor.

Daniel Olson

Daniel Olson fights for two.

Jake Mitten

Jake Mitten flies the friendly skies.

They were done, then they weren’t done after all, and now they’re really done.

The Coupeville Middle School boys basketball schedule took a series of twists and turns at the end of the season, but it all worked out in the end, with the Wolves getting a 10th game Monday in Port Townsend.

The CMS 7th graders took advantage, drilling Blue Heron 50-34, clinching a winning season at 6-4. The younger Wolves beat four of five teams in their league this season.

Playing with a much-thinner roster (they tipped off Monday with six players and finished with three, thanks to foul trouble) the CMS 8th graders stayed close for a half, but fell 50-35.

The older group finished the season 2-8.

Monday’s 7th grade game was decided in the third quarter, when the Wolves savaged their hosts 18-5.

Clinging to a 20-17 lead coming out of the halftime break, Coupeville immediately jumped on its foes, with balanced scoring from Xavier Murdy (six in the quarter), Hawthorne Wolfe (5) and Caleb Meyer (5).

Wolfe led the attack all night, finishing with a game-high 16, while Murdy tallied a season-best 14 and Meyer pounded home nine.

Logan Martin banked in six, Connor Barton tickled the twines for five and Tony Garcia, Aiden Burdge, Logan Wertz, Jonathan Carroll and Cody Roberts all saw floor time.

The 8th graders stayed within 20-14 in the first half, but the third quarter killed their hopes. Outscored 18-11, they faded down the stretch as, one by one, they lost bodies.

Jake Mitten closed out his middle school career with 14, while Daniel Olson (9), Sage Downes (7) and Dakota Eck (5) also scored.

Ben Smith and Alex Jimenez will join that foursome in making the jump to high school hoops next year.

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Ashlie Shank (John Fisken photo)

   Ashlie Shank scored six points and hauled in seven rebounds Friday night in a 25-point Wolf JV win. (John Fisken photo)

Scout Smith 14, Port Townsend 7.

Sparked by its rampaging freshman guard, the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball squad romped to a runaway win Friday night at Port Townsend.

Toss in 18 points from Smith’s teammates and the final tally was 32-7 in favor of the Wolves.

The conference victory lifts the CHS young guns to 7-3 overall, 3-0 in Olympic League play.

Just getting on the floor was a win for the Wolf JV, which had two previous games cancelled when Chimacum and Port Townsend were unable to pull together enough players to compete.

Friday night the RedHawks put two seniors and a junior on the floor as part of a six-player roster, and Smith and Co. promptly ran them out of the gym.

It all started with defense, where the Wolves shut down both of Port Townsend’s tall players.

The three-headed beast of Scout Smith, Maya Toomey-Stout and Emma Mathusek shut down the passing lanes, while Ashlie Shank, Ema Smith and Nicole Lester took turns matching up with the RedHawks post players.

The Wolves held Port Townsend scoreless through the first eight minutes — a feat the CHS varsity would match later in the night — and was never threatened.

Scout Smith and Shank spent much of the night sniping away on outside shots, as the Wolves controlled the offensive flow.

“Our offense was fast but fairly patient with girls taking shots whenever open,” said Coupeville coach Amy King. “It was great to see that kind of aggressive play.”

Scout Smith brought her bench to its feet with a pair of back-to-back steals, while everyone chipped in, often by trying out something new.

Tia (Wurzrainer) came up with several fourth quarter rebounds, passing the ball out to her teammates,” King said. “Avalon (Renninger) helped us out by playing point guard in the fourth and Maya stepped in as post at the end of the game.”

Shank drew a special heapin’ of praise.

“It was a full team win but a standout for me was Ashlie,King said. “Her leadership on defense was huge, and her being able to shut down the taller post caused extra heartache for Port Townsend.

“She was aggressive on offense as well as on defense.”

Scout Smith’s 14 paced the attack, while Shank chipped in with six. Lester (4), Mathusek (4), Ema Smith (2) and Renninger (2) also put their names in the scoring column.

Lester and Shank ripped down seven boards apiece, while Maddy Hilkey picked up two boards and two steals.

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