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Posts Tagged ‘Sage Downes’

Big man TJ Rickner provides Coupeville’s JV hoops squad with a strong defensive presence in the paint. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Unleash the beasts.

Raining down death ‘n destruction from all angles, the Coupeville High School JV boys basketball team torched the nets for 28 points in the third quarter Saturday, blowing open their hardwood rumble with visiting Orcas Island.

That explosion, in which seven different Wolves tallied points, turned a modest eight-point halftime lead into a 32-point bulge.

By the time the final buzzer mercifully sounded, Coupeville was on top 60-23, claiming a win in its home opener, and improving to 2-1 on the season.

Chris Smith’s squad came out focused early, turning a 12-9 lead at the first break into a 20-12 edge by halftime.

But it was the third quarter, a 28-4 reign of beautiful terror, which really sealed the deal.

Sage Downes had the hottest hand of any Wolf shooter, rattling the rim for nine of his game-high 16 points in the frame.

He had plenty of help, however, as Grady Rickner tossed in six in the quarter, while Alex Murdy banked home four.

For the game, the Wolves put three guys into double digits, as Downes (16), Daniel Olson (10), and Rickner (10) split the primary scoring load.

Murdy (8), Logan Martin (5), Cody Roberts (4), Andrew Aparicio (4), Chris Cernick (2), and Alex Jimenez (1) scored as well, while TJ Rickner, Miles Davidson, and Chris Ruck also saw floor time.

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Sage Downes went for 19 Tuesday, including hitting one of the better buzzer-beaters seen in the CHS gym. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There were 98 points scored, but the final three will be the ones remembered.

Capping a splendid one-man shooting show in a losing cause against a powerhouse foe Tuesday, Sage Downes went from on-fire shooter to professional arsonist in the flick of a wrist.

And while his shot for the ages, and his 19 points, weren’t enough to save the Coupeville High School JV boys basketball squad against visiting King’s, you would never know it from the crowd reaction.

Sure, the scoreboard showed a 58-40 advantage for the Knights at the final buzzer, but what happened a millisecond ahead of said buzzer is what we’re here to talk about.

Charging up court, the clock running out on him, Downes, about a billion miles away from the basket, had no time and no chance.

But he had a shot.

Flipping the basketball high in the air, just as he neared the half-court line, while jammed tight against the scorer’s table, Downes arced a rainbow.

And promptly found the bucket of gold waiting underneath it.

His shot dropped from somewhere high up in the rafters, splashing home for a miracle three-ball which should have been worth four or five points for creativity, derring-do and how-the-heck-did-that-go-in.

The crowd went bonkers, the Wolf bench flooded the floor and JV coach Chris Smith about jumped out of the gym, arms pumping like a madman unleashed.

And Downes?

A little grin, a little shrug, a little stare-down of his defender, and then he strolled away, the thought bubble above his head plainly saying, “I can do this every day, any day, baby.”

The shot capped a strong performance for Downes, and his teammates, as they took the best hay-makers King’s could fire, and didn’t break.

The Knights JV, while not having the towering height of their varsity counterparts, are an exceptionally speedy bunch, and they used their jets to bust open the game.

Mixing running layups with net-rustling three-balls of their own — King’s hit five of its six treys in the opening quarter — the visitors led almost from start to finish.

Coupeville actually got on the board first thanks to a pretty pull-up jumper from Xavier Murdy, but then the Knights went to work.

Despite eight points from Downes, including the first two of his five three-balls, the Wolves trailed 19-10 at the first break and couldn’t make up the deficit.

CHS had its moments in the second quarter, though, primarily a three-ball from Logan Martin and a resounding blocked shot from the ever-busy Downes, then played King’s almost even in the second half.

The Wolves closed the third quarter on a 12-5 run, with Downes banking in eight, but he got help.

Grady Rickner also rattled the rim on his own successful trey, while Tucker Hall put on a show doing all the small things which turn into bigger things.

Fighting on the boards, hitting free throws, and twice making great kick-out passes which translated into Wolf three-balls, Hall was the night’s unsung hero.

“Great, great game for Tucker,” Chris Smith said. “Love to see that!”

While Downes was the big man on offense with his 19, Coupeville got balanced scoring, netting points from seven of its 10 players.

Grady Rickner (5), Hall (4), Murdy (4), Martin (3), Daniel Olson (3), and Cody Roberts (2) all chipped in, while Chris Ruck, TJ Rickner and Miles Davidson also saw floor time.

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Sage Downes tossed in a team-high 11 Friday for the Coupeville JV boys basketball squad. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Toss out the first quarter, and it was a one-point thriller.

Unfortunately for the Coupeville High School JV boys basketball squad, the refs insisted on counting every point Friday night.

And that one brief hiccup, when they were outscored 14-9 over the game’s first eight minutes, sent the Wolves to a 40-34 loss to visiting South Whidbey.

The defeat drops the CHS young guns to 2-4 in North Sound Conference play, 6-7 overall.

The first time the Island rivals have faced this season (they play in Langley Jan. 29), Friday’s rumble was edge of your seat all the way.

The Falcons used a 6-5 “run” in the second quarter to take a 20-14 lead in at the half, then the two squads played even after the break.

Coupeville got a fair amount of its points thanks to shots from behind the three-point arc, raining down seven treys to four from the Falcons.

But those four were killers, as South Whidbey’s Ben Lind hit a pair in the opening frame, and two more in the final quarter en route to a game-high 13 points.

Answering for the Wolves was sophomore Sage Downes, who tickled the nets for 11 points, including a trio of three-balls.

Much of his support came from freshman Xavier Murdy, who netted all nine of his points thanks to nothin’ but three-balls, while Daniel Olson hit Coupeville’s final trey and had seven points.

Grady Rickner knocked down three points, with Cody Roberts and TJ Rickner adding a bucket apiece to round out the scoring attack.

Tucker Hall and Logan Martin also saw floor time for the Wolves.

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   Mason Grove tossed in 11 in three quarters Tuesday as the Wolf JV battled Klahowya through two overtimes. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They saved the best for last.

With the JV boys playing second Tuesday at Klahowya, the young guns put on a show in the longest game of the season.

Playing the kind of game where everyone involved is sorry to see someone have to lose, the host Eagles held off Coupeville 58-56 in a double-overtime thriller that came down to free throws.

Specifically, it was the four shots from the charity stripe which the Eagles netted in the second overtime which provided the final margin.

The Wolves, who got red-hot in the fourth quarter to stage a successful comeback and force extra basketball, fall to 1-3 in Olympic League play, 2-11 overall.

Coupeville didn’t go down easily, however, using a 23-15 run in the final period of regulation to keep things interesting.

With three Wolves — Sage Downes, Jacobi Pilgrim and Mason Grove — combining to score all of their team’s fourth-quarter points, CHS rallied from a 33-25 deficit to knot things up at 48-48.

In the first overtime, the two squads exchanged buckets, with Downes and Pilgrim swishing three-balls while the Eagles knocked down three baskets of the old-fashioned two-point variety.

Still tied at 54-54, the Wolves and Eagles headed to a second four-minute extra period, and Coupeville’s luck finally ran out.

Koa Davison knocked in a bucket for CHS, but Klahowya slid four of its six free throws through the net in the second OT to finally ice the game.

The wild finale capped a game which started off a little slowly.

Klahowya led just 9-6 after the first quarter, held serve at 16-13 at the half, then inched further ahead with a 17-12 surge in the third.

That was when Coupeville turned up the offensive heat, with Downes, who hadn’t scored before that, suddenly raining down nine points in the fourth.

Pilgrim added eight and Grove hit a pair of three-balls to round out the 23-point uprising for the Wolves.

For the game, Pilgrim paced CHS with 14, while Downes dropped in 12 and Grove, who had seven in the fourth quarter of the varsity game, added 11 in three quarters of JV action.

Davison (6), Daniel Olson (5), Jean-Lund Olsen (5), Gavin Knoblich (2) and Jake Pease (1) also scored for the Wolves, who hit 10 three-balls on the night.

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Hawthorne Wolfe (John Fisken photos)

   Hawthorne Wolfe, seen here in an earlier game, dropped in 14 Monday for the CMS 7th graders. (John Fisken photo)

The big dog was gone, but his schoolmates still howled.

A game after scorching Forks for 26 points, Coupeville Middle School hoops sensation Caleb Meyer was a world away Monday — visiting his mother’s family in New Zealand.

Without their rampaging beast in the paint, the CMS 7th graders put up a strong fight, but fell 55-36 to host Port Townsend.

Meanwhile, Coupeville’s 8th graders put together their most complete game of the season, but were nipped 35-30.

The losses dropped the CMS 7th graders to 2-2 and the 8th graders to 0-4 on the season.

The younger squad got another big game from their other lethal scoring weapon — fleet-footed gunner Hawthorne Wolfe — as he hit for a team-high 14, including a pair of three-balls.

Coupeville put up most of its offense in the first half, scoring 24 before the break, then hit a cold stretch with their shooting touch.

Still, they spread the scoring wealth around, with seven other players joining Wolfe in the scoring column.

Connor Barton drained six, Cody Roberts and Logan Martin knocked down four apiece and Aiden Burdge, Xavier Murdy, Gabe Shaw and Grady Rickner each added a bucket.

Jonathan Carroll and Logan Wertz also saw floor time for CMS.

In the eighth grade game, Jake Mitten made his own run at matching Meyer’s season-high, scoring in all four quarters as he tallied 20 of his team’s 30 points.

After banking home a bucket in the first, he accounted for all seven of Coupeville’s second quarter points, then tallied 11 more in the second half.

Daniel Olson and Sage Downes backed Mitten, both hitting for five. Olson’s points all came in the first quarter, while Downes capped his run with a fourth quarter trey.

Ben Smith (playing on his birthday), Dakota Eck and Alex Jimenez rounded out what is a very thin 8th grade roster.

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