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Posts Tagged ‘rebounding machine’

Xavier Murdy leads the CHS boys hoops squad in rebounds, assists, and steals. (Jackie Saia photo)

Xavier Murdy gets around.

The Coupeville High School junior has a motor which never quits, and a knack for doing all the small things which matter a lot on the basketball court.

As the Wolves kick off the second half of their pandemic-altered 12-game season with a trip Wednesday to La Conner, we take a look at the stats behind the game.

Murdy, who is also the team’s #2 scorer, leads CHS in offensive rebounds, total rebounds, assists, and steals.

Fellow junior Hawthorne Wolfe, who is averaging 24+ points a night, has snagged the most defensive rebounds, while senior TJ Rickner tops the team in blocked shots.

A look at team-wide stats in those categories, plus shooting totals for field goals, three-balls, and free throws through six games:

 

Player 2FG 3FG FT ORB DRB TRB Ast Stl Blk
D. Olson 8/23 1/4 4/8 4 11 15 9 4 1
A. Murdy 5/15 0/2 6/9 2 9 11 6 9 1
L. Downes 8/13 2/5 4/11 3 7 10 12 2
G. Rickner 15/27 4/9 10/19 9 12 21 12 4 1
H. Wolfe 25/50 19/51 36/49 5 29 34 14 13
C. Roberts 2/8 0/0 0/1 4 1 5 1 1
X. Murdy 16/29 4/20 8/13 34 27 61 21 16
L. Martin 4/13 1/13 2/3 4 15 19 8 6 2
C. White 1/5 0/0 0/0 2 1 3 1
S. Downes 6/22 0/2 5/7 8 9 17 2 5 1
T. Rickner 4/10 0/0 3/9 8 6 14 3
J. Valenzuela 2/3 1/1 0/0 1 1 2 2

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   Long before she had four kids, all of whom became CHS athletic stars, Marie (Grasser) Bagby was a rebounding machine. (Megan Hansen photo)

Marie Bagby is one of the most genuinely nice people you will ever meet.

It’s a trait she shared with her sister, Marlene Grasser, and one which filtered down into all four of her children.

But we’re here to talk about the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, and we’re here to discuss not Marie’s sweet nature, but her fire and drive on the basketball court.

That’s what carried her to great success as the first true modern-day girls basketball superstar at CHS, and it’s why she is being inducted (finally) into our little digital mecca.

After this, if you pop up to the top of the blog and look under the Legends tab, you’ll find her, enshrined under her maiden name, Marie Grasser, which means she and Marlene will always be paired.

For students at CHS today, the ones who see Marie on a daily basis as she works at the school, they know she’s a warm and welcoming presence and that she’s married to the ol’ ball coach himself, Ron Bagby.

They may even know her four children, April, Ashley, Mike and Jason, were all multi-sport stars who blazed across the campus, winning Athlete of the Year honors, setting records and carrying teams to state.

But what they probably don’t know is Marie was just as big a star in her day as any of her relatives.

In the days after Title IX, Coupeville High School finally powered up a girls basketball program, but it took until the FOURTH season before the squad got to practice in its own gym.

Seriously.

Prior to the 1977-1978 season (Marie’s sophomore year), the Wolf girls trekked out to Camp Casey, put their work in, then trekked back to campus to take showers.

As the Coupeville girls fought for respect, equality and some newspaper coverage (it wasn’t until the ’80s that articles started to expand past a size where you no longer needed a microscope to see them…), Marie was the program’s rock.

Players like Suzette Glover, Pam Jampsa and Kristan Hurlburt were among the early leaders in scoring, but #15 was a true two-way terror, scoring and hauling down an astonishing number of rebounds.

As I plow through the newspaper archives, one thing surfaces again and again in the truncated stories of the day — if there was a loose ball or a carom, Marie felt it belonged to her.

She pulled down 20 or more rebounds in a single game numerous times across her four-year career, with one game her junior season a particular standout.

Facing off with rough and tumble Concrete, Marie went off for 26 points and 28 rebounds, almost holding her own on the boards with the Lions, who mustered 31 rebounds as a team.

There have been some top-grade rebounding machines in Wolf uniforms over the years, from Sarah Mouw to Lexie Black to Makana Stone, but that 28 stands tall.

It’s the largest number for one game I’ve seen in my journey through the archives.

The early years of girls basketball at CHS were a tough road.

It took a decade before the Wolves posted a winning record and went to the playoffs, and longer before they made their first inroads at the state tourney.

But when you look back at the start of the program, it’s obvious — Marie Grasser was the spark that started things.

So today, for her superior skills on the court, for the talented children she gave her alma mater, for the classy way she approaches everything she does, we are very happy to welcome her into our little digital shrine.

It’s well deserved.

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Sarah Wright (John Fisken photos)

   Rebounding machine Sarah Wright is six-five when the hair braid is really workin’ overtime. (John Fisken photos)

Skyler

   Skyler Lawrence, having snagged a board, brings the ball up-court herself, deftly splitting the RedHawk defense.

Kailey

   Off the court, Kailey Kellner is as nice as they come. On the court, she will blow up a girl if necessary.

Shank

   Eyes always moving, Ashlie Shank, rebound in hand, looks for somewhere to get rid of the ball.

Sky bench

   Lawrence has a spirited discussion with stat keeper Nicole Lester (right) as Allison Wenzel (left) listens in. “I’m just saying, give me two rebounds on the play. I know where you live!”

Lrob

   Lindsey Roberts, playing just like her mamma, former CHS Athlete of the Year Sherry (Bonacci) Roberts, taught her.

Mia

Mia Littlejohn, about to drop the dagger.

Lrob

   When you’re undefeated in conference play and making a beeline for a second straight league title, there’s a lot to celebrate.

Their reputation precedes them.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squads are the beast (and the best) of the 1A Olympic League.

Over the first year-and-a-half of the four-team conference, the Wolves are 25-1 in league play, with just a narrow JV loss to Chimacum dotting the right side of the ledger.

Both CHS teams plowed Port Townsend Friday, plus they more than lived up to the other half of their job description — best photo subjects in the prep sports world.

The photos above are courtesy travelin’ photo man John Fisken.

To see more (and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

Varsity:  http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=10446&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

JV: http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=10444&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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