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   Sarah Wright dropped in eight points to pace Coupeville Tuesday in a road loss at Sequim. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

If they only counted two-point shots Tuesday, it’s a Coupeville win.

Unfortunately, the scoreboard operator in Sequim was willing to credit the hosts for free throws and three-point bombs, and that tipped the scale the wrong way for the Wolf girls basketball squad.

Capitalizing on a 24-0 advantage on specialty shots (nine free throws and five treys), Sequim broke open a close game in the second half and surged to a 44-26 victory.

The non-conference loss drops Coupeville to 6-13 as it kicks off the final week of the regular season.

The Wolves have Olympic League games Thursday at Klahowya and Saturday at home against Chimacum, then head to the playoffs.

Tuesday’s game was an odd one at times, mainly whenever the refs decided to be a part of things.

CHS didn’t shoot a free throw until the 4:45 mark of the fourth quarter, but it was when the guys in black and white stripes actually went to their whistles that things got strange.

At one point Coupeville’s leading scorer this season, Mikayla Elfrank, was whistled for a foul.

Only thing is, she was in street clothes, thanks to an ankle injury, doing the books and no one on the floor was wearing her #23 uniform.

After much consternation, the refs changed the call and dinged #24, Lindsey Roberts, even though she was on the opposite side of the floor from where the foul had occurred.

Meanwhile, the real culprit, Sarah Wright (#45), who had ripped the head off of a rival player in a fight for a loose ball —  a few inches away from two refs, I might add — got off free ‘n easy and walked away with a huge grin on her face.

Just to make sure no one thought that play was an accident, the refs severely bungled the very next call, as well, trying to give Roberts a foul meant for Ema Smith (#14), then arguing with the scorekeeper’s table after being called on their lack of proper glasses.

To be fair, it was Sequim’s daggers which ultimately killed Coupeville more than the refs.

Specifically, a trio of three-balls to open the second quarter opened a wound which never healed.

Coupeville rolled out of the first break up 10-9, and feeling pretty good about things after capping the quarter with back-to-back scores.

First Roberts slapped home a layup off of a sweet feed from Wright, before it was Ashlie Shank’s turn to slip Wright a picture-perfect in-bounds pass for a quick bucket.

With Wright pounding away down low — she had six of her eight points in the opening quarter — Coupeville looked like it was ready to scrap all night with its 2A hosts.

And then the sky fell in.

Or, more appropriately, the basketball kept falling out of the sky and dropping through the wrong bucket.

Sequim nailed three consecutive shots from behind the arc, with three different players connecting on treys, and a 10-9 lead quickly turned into an 18-10 deficit.

CHS fought back, twice closing within four points, at 18-14 late in the second quarter and 22-18 early in the third, but could get no closer the rest of the night.

The Wolves would put together a mini-run, only to have their surge blunted when Sequim tossed in another string of rally-killing shots.

Whether is was Allison Wenzel banking home a shot off the glass from the right side or Scout Smith singing the net with an elegant running hook shot, Coupeville’s offense was like a candle that starts to flicker to life, only to get promptly blown out by the wind.

Sequim was a precision-shooting team, though matters were helped by the Wolves defense not fully clicking on all cylinders.

“Defensively we didn’t play what I would call our tough, hard-nosed defense,” said CHS coach David King. “We did have moments when we did, and disrupted Sequim’s offense. Caused a few turnovers.”

He pointed to a fourth-quarter defensive stand, when the Wolves forced a shot-clock violation, as a positive sign.

Coupeville spread its offense out, with Wright (8), Kyla Briscoe (6), Ema Smith (4), Scout Smith (4), Wenzel (2) and Roberts (2) all scoring.

Hannah Davidson hauled down a team-high five rebounds, Chelsea Prescott delivered two boards and a blocked shot and young guns Maddy Hilkey and Avalon Renninger saw quality floor time.

JV gets night off:

A lack of refs kept the Wolf young guns, who are 7-10 on the season, from playing.

Instead, they kept up a lively stream of chatter from the stands in support of the varsity and will return to action Thursday at Klahowya.

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   Sarah Wright filled up the stat sheet Saturday, collecting five points, seven rebounds, two steals and an assist in a Wolf win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was gut check time, and the Wolves passed.

Playing on the road less than 24 hours after its worst offensive performance of the season, missing its top scorer and facing the unthinkable — a slide into the Olympic League cellar — the Coupeville High School girls basketball squad responded with grit and fire.

Putting together a ferocious defensive stand in the late going, the Wolves rallied to upend host Klahowya 29-23 Saturday, evening their conference mark at 1-1.

Now 3-9 overall in a rebuilding year, CHS pulled within a half game of Chimacum (2-1) and a full game of Port Townsend (3-1) in the league standings.

The three-time defending champs, who lost four starters before the season (three to graduation, one to a transfer) and two more starters in the past month (one to injury, one who quit), needed to dig deep, and they did.

Hitting seven of 10 free throws in the fourth quarter, after netting just 5-15 up to that point, Coupeville used a 12-5 surge in the final eight minutes to turn a one-point deficit into a semi-comfortable win.

“The fourth hit and something clicked,” said Wolf coach David King. “We came out with more fire, a confidence, one could say.

“Our energy was at its highest throughout the fourth,” he added. “We threw on a press and created havoc. Got some turnovers and got them sped up.”

Trailing 18-17 after three quarters of defensive struggle, the Wolves seized their moment.

Lindsey Roberts, stepping up big to fill the gap left by the absence of top scorer Mikayla Elfrank, out with a severe ankle injury, dropped in both ends of a one-and-one opportunity at the free throw line.

That put CHS up 21-20, and gave it a lead it would never relinquish.

To drive home the point, the Wolves immediately jumped on Klahowya on the very next play, stealing the in-bounds pass and turning it into a game-busting play.

With the shot clock running down, Sarah Wright set a screen for Kyla Briscoe, who drove right to left, got into the free throw line area, then threaded a flawless pass to Roberts on the wing.

The never-nervous junior caught the ball and promptly drained a three-ball, stretching the lead to four and knifing the Eagles for good.

“That play was the one that we could see the air went out of the Klahowya players,” King said.

Down the stretch, Coupeville iced the game with free throws and another play run to perfection by Wright and Briscoe.

On this one, Briscoe came off of a screen set by her teammate, rolled inside the charity stripe and singed the nets with a jumper over the outstretched arms of a defender who was a step too late to stop her.

Rebounding quickly after a sub-par 17-point performance in a non-conference loss to 2A North Mason, King was thrilled to see his players show their heart and will to win.

“Everyone had better games than last night,” he said. “It really was a game to see what we were made of, and we found a way.

“It was a well-deserved win by and for the players.”

Playing in Klahowya’s deadly-quiet gym, the Wolves allowed their hosts to be the aggressors in the early going. After falling behind 8-4 at the end of one quarter, however, Coupeville noticeably toughened up.

Wright ripped down “a monster rebound” in the second quarter, in which she out-dueled three rivals in her pursuit of the ball, and that lit a spark under the Wolves.

Radically cutting down their turnovers in the second half, and relentlessly attacking the hoop (“I’ll take 25 free throws every game!”), Coupeville turned the tide.

“They battled the whole night,” King said.

With Elfrank injured, Avalon Renninger sick and Hannah Davidson on her way back from an out-of-state trip, Coupeville only went seven deep Saturday, but got big play from everyone in uniform.

Ema Smith was a whirling dervish on both ends of the floor, and when foul trouble sent her to the bench, freshman Chelsea Prescott stepped up, hitting the boards hard.

Still recovering from her own illness, Scout Smith was healthier than she had been against North Mason and brought “energy and heart to the court,” while Allison Wenzel drew a tough assignment and nailed it.

Matched up against Klahowya’s talented Amber Bumbalough, Wenzel was an aggressive shadow, always with a hand in her face, preventing the Eagle gunner from getting hot.

Allison is a hard-nosed defender and she did a great job all night,” King said.

Rounding out the Wolf bench were Maddy Hilkey and Ashlie Shank, who made the jump up from the JV squad. While the duo didn’t see floor time, they brought an extra jolt of energy as vocal cheerleaders for their teammates.

With Elfrank expected to be out for much, if not all, of the rest of the regular season, others will need to help fill the gap.

“We need everyone else to step up their games,” King said. “It’s going to have to be a team effort. Tonight, that’s exactly what it was.

“All of the players have a well-earned day off tomorrow.”

Roberts paced the Wolves, throwing down a double-double with 11 points and 10 rebounds, while still finding time to pilfer three steals.

Briscoe, Ema Smith and Wright each dropped five points in support, while Prescott notched three.

Every girl who played helped fill up the stat sheet, with Briscoe (five rebounds, three steals, two blocks) and Ema Smith (five boards, four steals, two assists) busy bees.

Wenzel ripped down three rebounds, while Scout Smith picked the pocket of an Eagle ball-handler twice.

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   Freshman Chelsea Prescott tossed in seven points Friday in a varsity loss. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sometimes it’s just not your night.

A combination of a depleted roster, unfriendly refs and a cold shooting touch doomed the Coupeville High School girls basketball squad Friday deep on the road.

By the time the Wolves pulled away from North Mason, they had endured a 39-17 non-conference loss which left coach David King to simply say “very few positive highlights tonight.”

The defeat, which came in Coupeville’s first game after losing leading scorer Mikayla Elfrank to a possibly season-ending ankle injury, drops the Wolves to 2-9.

CHS gets an immediate chance to bounce back Saturday, when it travels to Klahowya for an Olympic League game.

The three-time defending conference champs, who are still trying to find their groove during a rebuilding season, are 0-1 in league play.

With just seven players on their active roster Friday, and some of those suited-up battling illness and injury, the Wolves struggled to find a rhythm on offense.

Down 10-4 after the first quarter, CHS hung tough in the second (being edged just 10-8), then went belly-up in the third.

A 17-4 surge coming out of the halftime break sealed the deal for North Mason, while the fourth quarter was a relatively modest war of attrition with the Bulldogs coming out on top 2-1.

“We didn’t compete on the offensive end,” King said. “Just not seeing open teammates and our passing led to a very high number of turnovers.”

While his team spent huge chunks of the game unable to buy a bucket, the Wolves did bring a strong defensive effort.

“Defensively in the first half I was pleased,” King said. “We were scrambling and causing them to rush. Kyla (Briscoe) did a great job getting deflections and getting some steals.”

Most of Coupeville’s offense came from junior Sarah Wright, who worked down low for a team-high eight, and freshman Chelsea Prescott, who swished seven.

Lindsey Roberts added a bucket to round out the scoring.

With the game out of hand in the late going, King called a timeout “to get a quick break and see if we could dig down deep and finish strong.”

The Wolves responded and finished with a final burst which gives their coach hope for the second half of the season.

“It was good to see from a coaches perspective,” King said.

JV falls in rough one:

“Mouth guardsh and shpit … JV didn’t win the war, but we won several battles.”

Facing a rough-and-tumble North Mason squad (if we’re being polite), the Wolf JV girls, who only suited seven of their own thanks to injuries and illness, got to play old-school, forearm-to-the-head ball.

And, while her squad fell 29-22, dropping their record to 5-5 on the season, coach Amy King, still getting over her own illness, liked the spirit she saw from her players.

“Something about this group, they didn’t care about the numbers and they fought each and every quarter until the game ended,” King said. “Many of the North Mason team wore mouth guards, spitting as they talked; they were overly aggressive for no apparent reason.

“Their fouling was relentless, but our girls fought through.”

Ashlie Shank lit the spark for the Wolves, piling up rebounds and steals as a one-woman wrecking crew.

“She was on fire all night,” King said. “Sprinting down the floor, directing on offense and an animal on defense.

“In the third she had a really nice offensive rebound put back – just came out of nowhere and did her thing.”

Others making big impressions included defensive wizard Tia Wurzrainer, who played all 32 minutes and was ruthless while patrolling the back court (“I love the way her game keeps progressing”), and the duo of Maddy Hilkey and Genna Wright.

Hilkey was a leader on the floor, helping the Wolves break the North Mason press, while Wright, recently returned from injury, was “a rebounding beast!”

As her squad makes the turn to head into the heart of league play (the JV is 1-0 in conference), King sees many reasons to be proud.

“Despite the loss, we knew that we played out best and never let up,” she said. “I believe North Mason was freaked out that we stayed so close to them with only seven players.”

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   Wolves (l to r) Natalie Hollrigel, Genna Wright, Mallory Kortuem and Lindsey Roberts were part of a very successful soccer squad. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They left it all on the field – heart, soul and a few body parts.

Facing a tough rival, and a transition from grass to turf, the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad put up its best postseason performance in a decade Saturday afternoon.

The Wolves didn’t get what they were chasing — the first playoff win in program history — but they came as close as they ever have, falling 2-0 in a rough-and-tumble scrap with Vashon Island.

With the loss, CHS finishes its first season under Kyle Nelson at 8-9, tying the program’s single-season record for wins.

“They played good, very good,” he said. “A great effort all around and nothing to be ashamed about.

“We were the more dangerous team in the second half and had more shots on goal, but their goalie just made some fantastic saves on us,” Nelson added.

“We were very close. These two teams, another day, and I fully believe we’re the team that’s walking away with the win.”

The omens looked good for Coupeville, as it escaped a potentially dangerous situation just a few moments into the match.

Vashon was awarded a free kick after a tussle in front of the goal, setting up a shooter in a one-on-one situation with Wolf goaltender Sarah Wright.

Looking to drop an early dagger, the Pirate sniper went right, but flinched (perhaps after gazing into the fiery eyes of Wright and deciding she didn’t want to be pulverized?) and drilled the ball off the bar on the side of the net.

As the ball skittered away, Vashon’s shooter slumped, Wright pumped a fist and a deep sigh of relief ran through the pro-Coupeville crowd.

That sense of calm remained until the game’s 7th minute, when the Pirates slapped a short shot into the right side of the net on a breakaway.

Showing no panic, the Wolf defense responded by clamping down, with the rejuvenated Lindsey Roberts (in her second game back after a leg injury cost her a chunk of the year) and Co. instituting a No Shooting Zone.

It held until right before the end of the half, when Vashon got lucky on a long, airmailed shot that found a sliver of open net for the game’s second goal.

Coupeville was relentless in trying to break its postseason scoring drought, with Kalia Littlejohn roughing up fools (then staring down the refs) between runs at the goal.

She, fab frosh Genna Wright and senior captain Sage Renninger all had good looks at the net, but were denied time and again by a spry Vashon goalie.

Several times the Pirate net-minder hit the turf as a Wolf crashed through her kingdom, only to pop up and secure the ball at the last second.

The second half was a war of attrition, as the two teams exchanged body blows across the field.

The two biggest hits came very late in the game, with Renninger getting blasted in the … lower extremities … on one shot, while Wright went medieval on a rival while turning away a run.

With the Vashon shooter slicing towards her, Coupeville’s goalie charged out to meet her, slid and delivered a thunderous body-check while also hitting the ball, leaving permanent dents on both the rival player and the orb.

The ball came off the duo with such force it shot from in front of the net to almost midfield, without touching the ground, finally finding a landing spot nestled up against the bleachers.

Upon being picked up, the ball’s first words?

“Please call the cops! There’s a killer on the loose!!”

The loss was the final time Wolf seniors Renninger and Lauren Bayne will take the high school pitch, but Coupeville, which went 6-3 in Olympic League play, could return 16 of its 18 players.

“We’re young, very young,” Nelson said. “That showed at times today, with adjusting to the playoffs, but it’s a big positive going forward.”

After coaching the Wolf boys for several seasons, he added the CHS girls job this season, and, non-stop Disney sing-a-longs on the bus aside, was very glad he did.

“I had a great time,” Nelson said. “The girls were great and I enjoyed myself. I look forward to coming back.”

 

Coupeville rattled home 42 goals this season, the second-best mark in program history. They came from:

Kalia Littlejohn 16
Genna Wright
8
Lindsey Roberts
5
Sage Renninger
3
Mallory Kortuem
2
Avalon Renninger
2
Ema Smith
2
Knight Arndt
1
Lauren Bayne
1

Own goals by opposing teams 2

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   After a 1-0 win Thursday, Lily Zustiak and her CHS soccer teammates are one victory from tying a program record. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Play the weather.

Buffeted by wind on a damp prairie Thursday night, the Coupeville High School girls soccer squad adapted strongly, using the elements to its advantage during a 1-0 thriller over visiting Port Townsend.

The win lifts the Wolves to 5-2 in Olympic League play, 7-7 overall. That pulls them within a win of the program record for victories, set last season.

With two league clashes left next week, followed by at least one playoff game, CHS is in hot pursuit of at least two big accomplishments.

One is the wins record, while the other is the mark for most goals in a single season.

Thursday night’s score, which came off the foot of Mallory Kortuem, was the 40th the Wolves have put into the back of the net.

Last year’s Coupeville team tallied 47, which gives the current group a solid number to shoot at down the stretch.

The Wolves were playing with the wind behind them in the first half Thursday and took advantage, raining down shots on a beleaguered RedHawk goaltender.

“We were taking a lot of good shots that were narrowly missing,” said Coupeville coach Kyle Nelson.

That changed when Kortuem unleashed a laser from distance, rattling home her second goal of her sophomore campaign.

Coming out of the halftime break, the Wolves faced a different weather outlook, with the brunt of the storm slamming straight into their faces.

Aided by a strong band of scrappy defenders, CHS net-minder Sarah Wright merely laughed at the wicked weather, “providing some excellent saves to maintain the victory.”

It was the second shutout recorded by the first-year goalie.

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