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Posts Tagged ‘Risen Johnson’

CJ Smith (John Fisken photos)

CJ Smith scrapes the ceiling. (John Fisken photos)

Dalton Martin

Dalton Martin, running the break and flexing, all at the same time.

Risen

Risen Johnson, preparing to make off with one of his 4,806 steals on the evening.

Savanna

Savanna Dohner brings in the noise ‘n the funk with a little cow bell.

Gabe

Gabe Wynn is on the move.

mascots

Lesson learned. When Loggers go in the woods, they’re likely to get roughed up by Wolves.

shank

Matt Shank gets intense. You wouldn’t like him when he’s mad.

Sylvia

   CHS cheerleader/ballet superstar turned photo bug Sylvia Hurlburt can still break it down with the best.

team

The Wolf bench (and a Fat Head of Johnson) enjoy what they’re seeing.

The joint was jumpin’.

Kicking off a hoops doubleheader Friday, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad blistered Darrington, grabbing its first win of the season.

Providing the background accompaniment was the CHS/CMS band and a healthy crowd of Wolf supporters.

Snapping pics of the action both on and off the court was John Fisken, who provides the pics above.

To see more (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=7393&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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Dalton Martin poured in a game-high 16 Friday. (John Fisken photos)

Dalton Martin poured in a game-high 16 Friday. (John Fisken photos)

Risen Johnson added 14, most of his points coming off of steals and ankle-breaking moves.

Risen Johnson added 14, most of his points coming off of steals and ankle-breaking moves.

This? This was a beat-down.

Attacking every step of the way, a super-aggressive Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad ran visiting Darrington off the court Friday night.

It wasn’t just the score — which fell 72-41 in favor of the Wolves — but the way they won.

Steal after steal, most turning into breakaway buckets.

A ferocious battle for every loose ball, with CHS coming up with the elusive orb about 85.3% of the time.

Maximum effort from every player one through eleven.

Thoroughly rinsing away any lingering bad taste from the first two games of their season, the Wolves (1-2) romped, and had fun doing it.

Passes zipped back and forth, players set each other up and the bench never stopped rockin’, from tip-off to final whistle.

It was a rebirth of an old school battle between schools that used to play in the same league, and it was the first time this season Coupeville put its pedal through the metal for an entire game.

For the third straight game, the Wolves came out strongly in the first quarter.

Five different players scored, led by junior Dalton Martin, who threw down a quick six, and Coupeville used a 10-0 run to open a 16-11 lead.

Three of the buckets during the surge came off of consecutive steals, while the fourth bucket was a wham-bam miracle.

Freshman Hunter Smith dribbled his man down, whirled and laid the ball right into Ryan Griggs waiting arms, giving the junior the perfect lead for an open layup.

That was merely the prelude, however.

Breaking the game wide open, the Wolves went on a 17-0 tear midway through the second quarter, fueled, again, by steal after steal.

On three consecutive plays, Risen Johnson, Joel Walstad and Aaron Trumbull converted steals into breakaway buckets, before Johnson, emulating Hunter Smith, set Matt Shank up for another basket with a pinpoint pass into the paint.

Coupeville, showing the killer instinct coach Anthony Smith has preached, never let up all evening.

The Wolves poured in 16, 19, 19 and 18 points, remaining remarkably consistent, while also stretching the lead out quarter after quarter.

One player would go on a tear — Johnson breaking ankles or Martin crashing hard to the hoop and sliding around defenders to scoop the ball up off the backboard for buckets — and then another.

It was an equal opportunity fun fest, with 10 of 11 players scoring, led by Martin, who hit for a game-high 16.

Johnson, in his third game at a new school, popped for 14, while Walstad threw down 12.

Trumbull (6), Wiley Hesselgrave (6), Aaron Curtin (6), Griggs (4), CJ Smith (4), Shank (3) and Gabe Wynn (1) rounded out the scoring attack.

Coupeville will get an immediate chance to keep its hot streak alive, when it returns to action Saturday with a home game against Bellevue Christian (2 PM).

**Darrington did not have a boys’ JV team, so the Wolf boys only played one game Friday.

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A Meridian defender gets extra-chesty with Gasbe Wynn

  A Meridian defender gets extra-chesty with Gabe Wynn. It doesn’t work. (John Fisken photos)

Risen

Risen Johnson floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee.

team

   Proving the girls’ hoops players are NOT the only ones who can play to the camera, we have (back, l to r) CJ Smith, Wynn, Aaron Curtin, Johnson, Dalton Martin. Front, Aaron Trumbull, Joel Walstad, Matt Shank, Ryan Griggs, Wiley Hesselgrave.

Curtin

Curtin gets a wee bit intense.

CJ

Smith has places to go and ankles to break.

coaches

Wolf coaches Dustin Van Velkinburgh (left) and Anthony Smith discuss strategy.

Joel

Walstad, a deadly shooter from the charity stripe.

Trumbull

   Trumbull vows not to breathe again until the ball gets in the hoop. Spoiler: it did and he did.

Time to play some hoops.

Monday night kicked off a new basketball season and travelin’ photo man John Fisken was on the scene in Coupeville to document the happenings.

The photos above capture the Wolf boys’ varsity squad, which will kick off its season with five games in eight days.

Take a gander, learn their names and sit back and wait to be entertained. The resurgence of CHS hoops continues.

Like what you see? Need more? Pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=7360&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

And, as always, a percentage of all sales goes to fund college scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes. Something to keep in mind.

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Risen Johnson prepares to take off during a running drill. (John Fisken photos)

Risen Johnson prepares to take off during a running drill. (John Fisken photos)

Johnson shadows Wolf freshman Nick Etzell.

Johnson shadows Wolf freshman Nick Etzell.

He’s learning from the best.

Risen Johnson, who transferred from Oak Harbor to Coupeville for his junior year and is in contention to earn a slot on the Wolf boys’ varsity hoops squad, tabs “Bad Boys” as his favorite film.

No, not the Will Smith/Martin Lawrence cop shoot-em-up, but the ESPN 30 for 30 documentary on the Detroit Pistons of the late ’80s and early ’90s.

That squad, led by Isiah Thomas, Bill Laimbeer and Dennis Rodman, won back-to-back titles, dominated the NBA and frustrated the crud out of Michael Jordan with their five-fouls-per-play rule.

With Coupeville coach Anthony Smith putting an emphasis on defense, having the Pistons as role models should benefit Johnson.

But defense is not the only thing he brings to the floor.

Bouncing between the guard positions, Johnson, who also plays baseball, says his strength is “probably my handles,” though he would like to work a bit on his left-handed layups.

Having picked up the game at age five, he’s a firm believer in playing the way the Bad Boys always did — as a team, a five-man unit that moved together, played together, lived and died for each other on the court.

“I started because my older brother and uncle played, so I wanted to play with them and it always stuck with me ever since,” Johnson said. “I enjoy the whole team part and getting wins.

“Without the team, what’s basketball?”

While he’s new to the Wolf squad, he already had connections on the team before the jump to Coupeville.

Friends with CHS players Dante and DeAndre Mitchell, Johnson wanted a chance to suit up with them.

Now that he’s here, Johnson, who picks U.S. History with Randy King and conditioning with Brett Smedley as his favorite classes, has quickly bought into the team-wide goal of making a strong debut in the new 1A Olympic League.

“My goals for this upcoming season are to get that trophy, the banner, and to have fun with the team,” Johnson said.

While his distinctive first name is likely to catch people’s attention, he’s not sure if it has any special meaning.

“I actually do not know the story behind my name,” Johnson said. “I just know that I was named after my uncle.”

Give him a little time in a Wolf uniform and he should more than make a name for himself.

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