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When he's not raining down goal on the soccer pitch, Andre Avila is raining down new beats. (John Fisken photo)

   When he’s not raining down goals on the soccer pitch, Andre Avila is raining down new beats. (John Fisken photo)

Andre Avila’s musical career continues to soar upwards.

The Coupeville High School senior, currently midway through his soccer season, dropped a second hip-hop track on SoundCloud this week.

This time around, the song is called Whippin the Sauce and features support work by fellow CHS basketball players Risen Johnson and JJ Johnson.

It’s a follow-up to Trending, which featured fellow Wolf athlete Valen Trujillo, and hit back in March.

Avila records as Young Dre.

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Risen Johnson did what he could Tuesday, scoring 16 points in a tough loss. (John Fisken photo)

   Risen Johnson did what he could Tuesday, scoring 16 points in a tough loss. (John Fisken photo)

There are bad nights, and then there are nights where you walk away and say, “Nope, never gonna watch the tape of this one ever again.”

Trapped in a perfect storm Tuesday night, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad went down hard.

And while the 80-36 loss to visiting Port Townsend doesn’t erase their playoff berth — that’s already locked into place — it did give their coach cause for concern.

After a long pause, Anthony Smith merely shook his head and declared that no, he didn’t have a single positive thing to say about what he had just witnessed.

Now 8-9 overall, 3-4 in league play, the Wolves sit in third-place in the 1A Olympic League, two games behind Chimacum (5-2) and three back of Port Townsend (6-1) with two left to play.

Coupeville travels to Chimacum Thursday, then closes the regular season Saturday at Klahowya (0-7).

If the Wolves recover and sweep both, while the Cowboys also lose their finale against Port Townsend, Coupeville will finish tied with Chimacum, but take the league’s #2 seed based on a head-to-head tiebreaker.

That would give them a loser-out home playoff game Feb. 13. Win and they advance to the double-elimination portion of districts.

Otherwise, they will be the #3 seed, host a postseason tilt Feb. 11 and have to win back-to-back loser-out games to get to double elimination.

Playing on Senior Night, the Wolves could not catch a break Tuesday night.

Port Townsend played about as flawlessly as humanly possible, running play after play to perfection. They shot extremely well, especially from long-range, but also got every roll and bounce possible.

By the third or fourth time the RedHawks banked home a miracle shot, you knew this was not going to be a night Wolf faithful would remember with great glee.

Coupeville, on the other hand, kicked off the game with back-to-back turnovers and never settled down.

When the Wolves did get anything going, they couldn’t get a basket to drop no matter what angle they came from.

Balls popped back out, took odd bounces off the rim or broke the laws of physics every time CHS got an attempt in the air.

Two free throws from Risen Johnson and an emphatic blocked shot by Dante Mitchell actually staked Coupeville to a 2-0 lead, but things immediately took a bad u-turn.

Port Townsend rolled off 14 straight points before DeAndre Mitchell took a rebound back up for the first Wolf bucket of the evening.

From there, the RedHawks stretched the lead out to 17 at the half (31-14), then got really good, and really lucky, in a wild third quarter.

Raining down 33 points over an eight-minute stretch, Port Townsend hit four three-balls in the third, and missed a fifth by just a sliver.

That shot, however, still went in, as the RedHawk shooting it from a millimeter inside the line somehow got the ball to drop while being gang-tackled by a pair of Wolves.

He then bounced to his feet, a bit unsteadily maybe, and sank the ensuing free-throw to get three the hard way.

Coupeville actually put up its best offensive show in the third, with Johnson zipping to and fro for 12 of his squad’s 18 in the quarter.

But, when you have your best run and still get outscored by 15 in the quarter, there’s a strong chance you’re not going to win.

The Wolves went without a field goal in the fourth — they had only four during the first, second and fourth quarters combined — getting four free-throws from Jared Helmstadter.

Seniors Beauman Davis and Andre Avila made their varsity debuts in the fourth, with Avila, the smallest guy on the court, soaring between the redwoods to snag a rebound.

Johnson paced Coupeville with 16, while Jordan Ford banged down five.

Wiley Hesselgrave (4), Helmstadter (4), Hunter Smith (3), DeAndre Mitchell (2) and Desmond Bell (2) also scored.

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Hunter Smith (3), seen here in an earlier game, poured in 16 Tuesday, one of three Wolves to break double digits. (John Fisken photo)

   Hunter Smith (3), seen here in an earlier game, poured in 16 Tuesday, one of three Wolves to break double digits. (John Fisken photo)

Never turn your back on a Wolf.

Chimacum may be the defending 1A Olympic League boys’ basketball champs, but Coupeville is coming for that title.

There is no doubt about that.

Throwing down a 27-point fourth quarter Tuesday night, in which six different players scored, the Wolves rallied for a 72-65 road win that has sent reverberations through the league standings.

The third straight win for a suddenly-jelling CHS squad, it lifted Coupeville to 7-6 overall, 2-1 in league play.

A win Friday night at Port Townsend (5-8, 3-0) and the Wolves will be tied for first place with five games to play.

Chimacum (3-11, 1-2) would claim the league’s third and final playoff berth right now, while Klahowya (1-13, 0-3) would be on the outside looking in.

The Cowboys and Eagles also face off Friday.

Playing in the opening game of a doubleheader Tuesday, the Coupeville boys battled basket for basket with Chimacum for the first three quarters. But they couldn’t quite get over the hump.

Down 14-12 after one, they trailed 31-27 at the half and 49-44 after three.

Maybe.

If that’s true, Coupeville’s 27-16 performance in the fourth should have given them a 71-65 win, and that’s what the scoring totals in the book reflect.

But the Chimacum scoreboard operator, and both coaches, are hanging their hats on 72-65, so we’ll just have to accept a point got lost somewhere.

Either way, the Wolves closed like a team with its eyes locked firmly on the prize.

Silky-smooth senior guard Risen Johnson poured in eight of his team-high 18 in the final quarter, and Coupeville, a streaky team when it comes to hitting free throws, was a sizzling 8 of 11 at crunch time.

Jordan Ford came up big as well, with six in the fourth, while Hunter Smith chipped in with five and Wiley Hesselgrave netted all four of his points at the end.

Coupeville continues to be a very well-balanced squad, with three players in a virtual dead-heat for the team scoring lead.

Hesselgrave, at 156 points on the season, is narrowly ahead of Johnson and Ford, who are tied with 151.

Smith, who missed a chunk of the season with an injury, continues to heat up as he gets his legs back under himself.

He hit for 16 on the night, coming on the heels of a 19-point performance against Stevenson Friday.

Ford (14), DeAndre Mitchell (7), Gabe Wynn (4), Dante Mitchell (4), Hesselgrave (4), JJ Johnson (3) and Desmond Bell (1) rounded out the scorers.

The missing point? We’ll never know, but hey, when you win, who cares?

JV falls short:

Missing three players, including two starters, the Wolf young guns hung with Chimacum for most of the first half, but went cold in the second half, falling 68-35.

The loss dropped the JV to 2-9 overall, 0-3 in league play.

The Wolves got all of their scoring from three players, with Brian Shank leading the way with 17.

Ty Eck added 13, including three treys, while Ariah Bepler netted five.

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Risen Johnson

   The power of the man bun compels you. Risen Johnson scored five of his team-high 15 in the fourth quarter Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

The answer was loud and clear.

After a three-game stretch in which the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad struggled, Wolf coaches challenged their players.

To unite as a team. To buy into their roles. To commit to each other. To get back to how they had opened the season.

Saturday, the players responded, and they did so as one.

It wasn’t just that they won, holding off visiting Mount Vernon Christian in a 69-68 non-conference thriller.

That was big, yes, and it brought Coupeville back to 5-6 on the season.

But more than merely winning, it was how they won. As a true team.

“Everybody stepped up, and everybody stepped up when we needed them to,” said Coupeville coach Anthony Smith. “We found a way to win, a way to get back to how we were before.”

The Wolves could have fractured on this night, and badly.

Up 53-45 after JJ Johnson swooped to the hoop for a bucket to open the fourth, Coupeville hit its only rough stretch of the night.

Taking advantage, the Hurricanes reeled off 10 straight, with a pair of three-balls which were true daggers, as one came off of an in-bounds play and another on a really long rebound that skittered right through the hands of several Wolves.

Suddenly trailing by two, CHS needed a big emotional burst and it got it thanks to teamwork.

Wiley Hesselgrave, who fought like a savage yet had a grin on his face most of the night, came up with a loose ball, spun and dropped the ball into the hands of a flying Dante Mitchell.

Without a trace of hesitation, the lanky senior put the ball on the floor once, snatched it back and shot past his defender for a running layup.

Cue an explosion of joy which ripped through the pro-Wolf crowd and a fist pump of approval from Hesselgrave.

That knotted the game at 55, while setting up an absolute war that played out over the final three-and-a-half minutes.

The two teams exchanged buckets like heavyweight boxers standing in the middle of the ring, slugging it out, daring the other guy to back down, but secretly happy when they didn’t.

A thunderous right — Hesselgrave tearing a rebound out of a Hurricane’s hands and drilling a jumper while three guys landed on top of him.

Then a series of jabs to the spleen —Risen Johnson spinning down the baseline, shedding defenders on his way to three points the hard way; Jordan Ford banking in a bucket off of a bullet pass from Risen Johnson that slid and curved through a maze of rival arms.

Each time Mount Vernon responded with their own nerves-of-steel play, until Coupeville finally broke its will.

Trailing 66-65 with 1:04 to go, the Wolves got a pair of free throws from Hunter Smith to snatch back the lead, then held the Hurricanes scoreless for 62 of the final 64 seconds.

Risen Johnson worked an absolutely textbook give-and-go with Hesselgrave, getting the ball back and hitting a runner while laying the ball up backwards over his head to put CHS up by three.

The Hurricanes went for the tie, missed and got a reprieve when a ref called Risen Johnson for traveling after he leapt, snatched the rebound, but inadvertently rolled over a body coming back down to Earth.

The next trey missed as well, though, and while a Hurricane slipped through to put the rebound back up and in, the clock ran out on the visitors.

Taking the ball out of the net with 1.9 seconds to go and the clock running, Ford alertly never in-bounded the ball, squeezing it to his chest as his teammates celebrated.

The late theatrics capped a game that was smartly played by both teams, a scrappy affair where Coupeville survived MVC runs by getting big-time shots at just the right moments.

Risen Johnson had the play of the first half, in which he stole the ball and zipped in for a layup, making not one, but two, different Hurricanes crash to the floor on the play.

Still, the Wolves trailed 28-21, until they turned it around with a 14-3 run to close out the half.

Mitchell and Gabe Wynn each knocked down a bucket and free throw during the run, but it was long-range gunner JJ Johnson who made the crowd swoon.

The Wolf senior nailed a trey from the right side with 20 seconds to play, then raised the ante by nailing another one with less than a single tick on the clock, backpedaling with a grin as his large fan section lost its ever-loving mind a few feet away.

Coupeville wasn’t done with the crowd-pleasers, hitting three treys in the third, including an even longer one from JJ Johnson.

The final one was the most unexpected, as Ford, far from the paint he normally patrols, rolled out, took a pinpoint pass from Hesselgrave and dropped his own three-ball from the deep, dark corner on the right side.

As the ball started to settle through the twine, the third quarter clock read 0:00, one more time in which the Wolves pulled off perfection thanks to note-perfect team play.

The commitment to getting something from everyone carried over to the scoring totals, where eight of Coupeville’s 11 players scored, with four notching double digits.

Risen Johnson led the way with 15, while Ford banged home 12 and Hesselgrave and JJ Johnson each added 11.

Smith dropped in seven, Wynn popped for six, Dante Mitchell went for five, Ryan Griggs added a bucket and Desmond Bell, DeAndre Mitchell and Jared Helmstadter all chipped in with strong work on the defensive end.

Coupeville is now off for six days, returning to action with a home non-conference game against Stevenson Friday, Jan. 15. That game (varsity only) tips at 5 PM.

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Girls varsity (John Fisken photos)

   Four-year starter Makana Stone (bottom) is joined by (top to bottom) Lauren Rose, Allison Wenzel, Lindsey Roberts, Syler Lawrence, Kyla Briscoe and (l to r) Mia Littlejohn, Lauren Grove, Kailey Kellner, Tiffany Briscoe. (John Fisken photos)

Girls JV

   Top to bottom, l to r, JV players Brisa Herrera, Ashlie Shank, Nicole Lester, Ema Smith, coaches Amy and David King, Sarah Wright, Maddy Hilkey, Lindsey Laxton, Brittany Powers.

boys varsity

   Varsity coach Anthony Smith (bottom) with top to bottom, Jared Helmstadter, JJ Johnson, DeAndre Mitchell, Hunter Smith, Desmond Bell, Dante Mitchell and (l to r) Risen Johnson, Gabe Wynn, Ryan Griggs, Wiley Hesselgrave, Jordan Ford.

boys jv

   JV players, top to bottom, l to r, Ariah Bepler, Luke Merriman, Beauman Davis, James Vidoni, Hunter Downes, Andre Avila, Ty Eck, Brian Shank, Gabe Eck.

Cameron Toomey-Stout, the only one of 39 Wolf hoops players not to be present on head shot day.

   Cameron Toomey-Stout, the only one of 39 Wolf hoops players not to be present on head shot day.

Well, we almost nailed the landing.

On the night travelin’ photo man John Fisken captured head shots of the Coupeville High School basketball players, 38 of 39 athletes were on hand.

Sophomore Cameron Toomey-Stout, who has been pulling double-duty while performing in “The Nutcracker,” was the lone Wolf to go AWOL.

But, when he’s working his rear off that hard to make both the hoops and dance communities happy, we can’t leave him out, so he gets his own photo.

Which might have been his plan the whole time.

Cameron is pretty dang smart, after all.

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