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Posts Tagged ‘Sage Downes’

CMS 8th grader Ja Tarya Hoskins is one of 43 athletes on the Wolf track roster. (John Fisken photo)

   CMS 8th grader Ja’Tarya Hoskins is one of 43 athletes on the Wolf track roster. (John Fisken photo)

(Bob Martin photo)

Practice begins under cloudy skies. (Bob Martin photo)

The numbers are strong.

Coupeville Middle School track coaches Elizabeth Bitting and Bob Martin are expecting to see 43 athletes when the first practice kicks off today.

That number may increase or contract by the time the Wolves hit the road Apr. 27 to travel to Blue Heron Middle School in Port Townsend for their first meet of the season.

With work set to begin in May on a new track, this will be the final season CMS will have to travel for all of its meets.

The roster (so far):

GIRLS:

Ashleigh Battaglia
Zara Bradley
Anna Dion
Emily Fiedler
Natalie Hollrigel
Ja’Tarya Hoskins
Mallory Kortuem
Mikaela Labrador
Jillian Mayne
Cassidy Moody
Morgan Pease
Avalon Renninger
Lucy Sandahl
Mica Shipley
Helen Sinclair
Zoe Trujillo
Raven Vick
Tia Wurzrainer

BOYS:

Trevor Bell
Gabe Carlson
Christopher Cernick
Ethan Clavette
Koa Davison
Sage Downes
Zachary Ginnings
Mason Grove
Tucker Hall
Aiden Juras
Joseph Kelley
Michael Laska
Aram Leyva
Jean Lund-Olsen
James Mayne
Jake Mitten
Jaylen Nitta
Thane Peterson
TJ Rickner
Ben Smith
Sean Toomey-Stout
Nick Wielandt
James Wood
Sam Wynn
Tian Yu

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Ulrik Wells (John Fisken photos)

Ulrik Wells makes his move. (John Fisken photos)

Koa Davison

  Under considerable pressure, Koa Davison prepares to drain a mid-range jumper.

Cassidy

Wolf stat keepers Cassidy Moody (left) and Melia Welling enjoy their job.

Jacobi

   Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim can already hear the soft swish the net will make as his shot drops through.

Sage

   Sage Downes keeps his body between his man and the ball, as longtime Wolf hoops guru Randy King (black shirt) admires his work from afar.

Matthew Kelley

The look of a defender who knows Matthew Kelley has just beat him. Badly.

Daniel

Daniel Olson, droppin’ three-balls like they’re going out of style.

And so it ends.

The Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball season wraps up Thursday, with a road trip to sunny Sequim.

After 10 games, numerous practices and countless hours spent on buses and ferries, the Wolves will pack up their uniforms and cede the courts to the girls.

That season kicks off Feb. 1, with the first day of practice, and Feb. 18, with the first game.

As the Wolf boys prepare to clamber on the bus one final time, let’s toss out a handful of photos to remind you of what the (very successful) season has looked like.

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Daniel Olson (John Fisken photo)

Daniel Olson channels Pete Maravich on opening night. (John Fisken photo)

Daniel Olson has no fear.

Jump back to when he was in kindergarten and first grade and every time he came in my video store, he would storm behind the counter, yank out the seat and take over the computer and cash register.

They were his from that point until the moment his parents forcibly removed him to the car when they were ready to go home. If they could catch him.

Skip forward to Monday, when my former “assistant manager” was making his middle school basketball debut, and Olson might be a little taller and a little older, but his ability to run the room is still firmly in place.

Dropping three-pointers like the reincarnation of “Pistol” Pete Maravich — including one that arced through the net in unison with the third-quarter buzzer — Olson exploded for 20 points on visiting Chimacum.

Toss in 14 from Jake Mitten, who dominated in the paint, and the duo outscored the Cowboys by themselves, sparking Coupeville’s 7th grade squad to a 60-30 rout.

The Wolves came out on fire, cooled off a wee bit in the middle, then torched the joint again in the fourth, giving legendary coach Randy King another notch on the plus side of the career win/loss ledger.

Attacking from all sides, Coupeville flustered Chimacum in the early moments, turning several steals into breakaway buckets.

The few times the Wolves didn’t immediately convert, they controlled the boards, with Mitten standing tall in the middle while Matthew Kelley and Sage Downes slid through to snatch away loose caroms.

Olson and Dakota Eck fought for loose balls, and Coupeville spread the offense around on its way to posting a 20-6 lead after eight minutes of play.

If the Cowboys were entertaining any thoughts of rallying before halftime that faded quickly, as the Wolves stretched the lead out to 20 and never looked back.

Chimacum looked more aggressive in the second half, even cutting the lead down to 13 at one point.

Coupeville responded with a 7-1 run to end the quarter, with Chandler Weil hitting a short jumper and Downes slicing to the hoop for a layup after the Cowboys lost control of a rebound.

The final nail, though, came as Olson, one eye on the clock, brought the ball across mid-court.

A dribble, a head fake, his defender lurched back and the unflappable one rose up and banked the ball neatly off the backboard for a crowd-pleasing trey, the ball spinning through the twine as the clock roared and his teammates rushed him.

His eyes pure ice, the long-range assassin just nodded, content in the knowledge he had drained the shot almost exactly the way he had described it to older brother Ben the night before.

And once he was feeling it, Olson got more and more adventurous, nailing two more three-point bombs in the fourth quarter, each one coming from another step or two further out.

If the clock hadn’t run out, he might be out lofting them up from the parking lot about now.

Coupeville’s balanced scoring attack featured Olson (20), Mitten (14), Kelley (10), Downes (8), Eck (4) and Weil (4), while Michael Laska, Gage Powers, Ben Smith and James Mayne all saw playing time as well.

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"You think (Pat Kelley photo)

   “Hey, Bellevue, you think you can beat my Coupeville mercenaries? Oh, you poor, deluded fools..” (Pat Kelley photo)

Now, it gets serious.

Riding high after thrashing Snohomish United 6-0 Saturday, the North Whidbey Deception FC-01 boys’ soccer squad prepares for a first-place showdown this weekend.

The Deception, who are powered by their high-scoring Coupeville mercenaries, are 4-0 and have outscored opponents 22-4.

Awaiting them this Saturday, Oct. 10 will be Bellevue’s Lake Hills Legend, also 4-0.

The game will be at Ft. Nugent Park, with a kickoff time still to be determined.

Bellevue’s offense is not quit as explosive as Whidbey’s, but their defense is even more lock-down, with the Legends holding a 14-2 scoring advantage on the pitch this season.

In their tune-up against Snohomish, the Deception benefited from Aram Leyva’s second hat trick of the season.

The Coupeville Middle School seventh grader had his first two goals set up by schoolmate Matthew Kelley, then nailed his third score when he corralled his own missed header and knocked the rebound back in the net.

Kelley and fellow Wolf Sam Wynn each scored, while Kelley collected three assists and Sage Downes set up another score.

The Coupeville connection has combined to score 17 of North Whidbey’s 22 goals, led by Leyva, who has tallied eight.

Kelley has six, having scored in every game, while Wynn, Downes and Jake Mitten have tallied one apiece.

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Aram Leyva (left), seen here at a CHS girls' soccer game, had a hat trick Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

   Aram Leyva (left), seen here scoping out the action at a CHS girls’ soccer game, had a hat trick Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

Put them out of their misery fast.

That’s what Aram Leyva and his teammates on the North Whidbey Deception FC-01 boys’ soccer squad wanted to do Saturday.

Playing a team that was greatly over-matched, the Deception, fueled by their Coupeville mercenaries, romped to a 5-0 win in a game that could have had twice as big a margin.

Leyva took care of a huge chunk of the scoring responsibilities, raining down a hat trick, then tossed in an assist to go with his three goals.

Fellow Wolves Matthew Kelley and Sage Downes banged home the team’s other two goals, while Kelley also collected an assist.

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