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Posts Tagged ‘scoring stats’

Jordan Ford (John Fisken photos)

Jordan Ford (5) is tied for the team lead in scoring. (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Rose knocked down her first varsity bucket Saturday.

Lauren “Mouse” Rose knocked down her first varsity bucket Saturday.

Defense wins titles. Offense gets page hits.

Plus, while I don’t have any stat sheets listing all the rebounds, steals and blocked shots for the Coupeville High School varsity squads, I have kept a fairly-complete tally of points.

So, as we head into the district tourney, with the Wolf girls (15-4) a #1 seed and the boys (9-10) a #3 seed, here are the regular season scoring totals.

Girls:

Makana Stone — 368
Mia Littlejohn — 124
Kailey Kellner — 119
Tiffany Briscoe — 57
Lindsey Roberts — 50
Lauren Grove — 51
Kyla Briscoe — 17
Allison Wenzel — 12
Skyler Lawrence — 6
Lauren Rose — 2

And, before we get to the Wolf boys, a quick look at where Stone’s current output places her in CHS girls basketball single-season scoring history.

1) Brianne King (2000-2001) 446 points/24 games/18.6 avg
2) King (2002-2003) 442/28/15.8
3) King (2001-2002) 386/28/13.8
4) Zenovia Barron (1996-1997) 378/23/16.4
5) Barron (1997-1998) 376/22/17.1
6) Makana Stone (2015-2016) 368/19/19.4

And on to the guys, where a three-man battle for the top continues.

Boys:

Jordan Ford — 208
Wiley Hesselgrave — 208
Risen Johnson — 200
Hunter Smith — 116
Gabe Wynn — 80
JJ Johnson — 68
DeAndre Mitchell — 54
Ryan Griggs — 50
Dante Mitchell — 32
Jared Helmstadter — 20
Desmond Bell — 11

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DeAndre Mitchell has dropped in 41 points this season, fifth-best for the Wolf boys. (John Fisken photos)

DeAndre Mitchell has dropped in 41 points this season, fifth-best for the Wolf boys. (John Fisken photos)

Freshman Lindsey Roberts (left) and senior Makana Stone have combined for 2?? points.

Freshman Lindsey Roberts (left) and senior Makana Stone have combined for 204 points.

This could be a milestone season.

Looking at the scoring stats for the Coupeville High School basketball squads 10 games into the 2015-2016 season, one number jumps out.

Senior Makana Stone is averaging a super-crisp 18.2 points a game for the 7-3 Wolf girls, which puts her virtually on par with Brianne King when she set what is believed to be the program’s best single-season performance.

Jump back to 2000-2001 and the then-sophomore went off for 18.6 a night over 24 games for 446 points.

Both the total points and the per-game average still stand as CHS records.

Stone is up 1.5 points from last year, when she compiled the sixth-best single-season mark by a Wolf girl.

Her per-game average of 16.7 as a junior was actually third-best all-time, but she was denied a chance to move up the total points scored chart because Coupeville wasn’t able to make a longer playoff run.

The top six single-season performances in program history (that we have been able to document):

1) Brianne King (2000-2001) 446 points/24 games/18.6 avg
2) King (2002-2003) 442/28/15.8
3) King (2001-2002) 386/28/13.8
4) Zenovia Barron (1996-1997) 378/23/16.4
5) Barron (1997-1998) 376/22/17.1
6) Makana Stone (2014-2015) 367/22/16.7

While she’s been wrecking people, Stone has also gotten help, with the next two Wolves — junior Kailey Kellner and sophomore Mia Littlejohn — combining for close to 14 points a night.

On the boys side, it’s a tight race at the top, with three players (Wiley Hesselgrave, Jordan Ford and Risen Johnson) battling for top honors.

Hesselgrave, who has played in nine of his team’s 10 games, has gone for 14.2 a night, while all three players are averaging double figures for a 4-6 team.

The (semi-official) scoring stats through 10 games:

Girls:

Makana Stone — 182
Kailey Kellner — 72
Mia Littlejohn — 66
Tiffany Briscoe — 28
Lindsey Roberts — 22
Lauren Grove — 18
Kyla Briscoe — 5
Allison Wenzel — 5

Boys:

Wiley Hesselgrave — 128
Jordan Ford — 114
Risen Johnson — 110
Ryan Griggs — 48
DeAndre Mitchell — 41
Gabe Wynn — 41
Hunter Smith — 33
JJ Johnson — 13
Dante Mitchell — 12
Jared Helmstadter — 6
Desmond Bell — 5

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Hailey Hammer pops for two of her ? points. (John Fisken photos)

Hailey Hammer pops for two of her 95 points. (John Fisken photos)

Wolf juniors Makana Stone and Wiley Hesselgrave have combined for ??? points this season. (John Fisken photo)

Your leading scorers in 2014-2015, juniors Makana Stone and Wiley Hesselgrave.

2,087 points.

Take the 23 players to score in a varsity game for Coupeville High School this season, and that’s what you get. Assuming my points totals are sorta, kinda correct (which is always debatable).

Leading the way, by a large margin, was junior Makana Stone, who accounted for 17.6% of all points scored by herself.

Tossing in 367 over 22 games, she averaged 16.7 a game, figures topped by only two girls — Brianne King and Zenovia Barron — in a CHS uniform in the last 25 years.

The points were the sixth-most in a season during that time (King holds the high-water mark with 446 in 24 games in 2000-2001) and the scoring average was the third-best (King at 18.6 in the same season is tops).

My best guess for season-ending point scoring totals:

GIRLS:

Makana Stone — 367
Julia Myers — 148
Kacie Kiel — 116
Madeline Strasburg — 96
Hailey Hammer — 95
Monica Vidoni — 69
Wynter Thorne — 58
Mia Littlejohn — 52
McKenzie Bailey — 17
Kailey Kellner — 12

BOYS:

Wiley Hesselgrave — 273
Aaron Trumbull — 148
Aaron Curtin — 134
Joel Walstad — 133
Ryan Griggs — 97
Risen Johnson — 87
CJ Smith — 54
Matt Shank — 53
Dalton Martin — 47
Gabe Wynn — 24
Hunter Smith — 3
Jared Helmstadter — 2
DeAndre Mitchell — 2

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Makana Stone glides up-court, looking to put the rock in the bucket. (John Fisken photo)

Makana Stone, looking to put the rock in the bucket. (John Fisken photo)

The greatest scorer in CHS girls' basketball history, Brianne King.

The greatest scorer in CHS girls’ basketball history, Brianne King.

The history of CHS girls' basketball lives on in these books. If anyone sees a copy in the CHS library, let me know. (Greg Oldham photo)

History lives in these books. (Greg Oldham photo)

Makana Stone is gunnin’ for the legends.

As the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad prepares for the district playoffs, the Wolf junior is enjoying one of the best scoring seasons in recent memory.

But, since CHS is notoriously spotty in keeping track of its sports history — outside of the snazzy wall of track records — one wonders where she stands.

While anything before the 1990’s resides in a giant black hole at this point, we were able, with the help of former Wolf coaches Willie Smith and Greg Oldham, to track down most of the “golden era” (late ’90s to mid-2000’s) of Coupeville girls’ basketball.

And, what that shows is Stone (with 331 points in 20 games) has currently put together the 7th best scoring mark in the last two decades.

With her average sitting at 16.6 a game — third-best by a Wolf player in that time period — she could make a serious run up the chart if Coupeville stays alive in the playoffs for any duration.

The Wolves (15-5) are guaranteed two games at districts, and could pick up a third.

Win two and they advance to regionals with the dream of being the first CHS hoops squad to return to state since 2005-2006.

The honor roll of Wolf scorers as we know it (and, as soon as this hits print, maybe we’ll hear from someone who has score-books from the glory days of Marlene Grasser that’ll blow these away):

1) Brianne King (2000-2001) 446 points/24 games/18.6 avg

2) King (2002-2003) 442/28/15.8

3) King (2001-2002) 386/28/13.8

4) Zenovia Barron (1996-1997) 378/23/16.4

5) Barron (1997-1998) 376/22/17.1

6) Ann Pettit (1997-1998) 363/25/14.5

7) Makana Stone (2014-2015) 331/20/16.6 avg

Also of note: Lexie Black had 295 in 26 games in 2004-2005.

Plus, King tossed in 275 during her freshman year of 1999-2000, giving her 1,549 points during her splendid career.

We’re 99.2% sure that’s a school record.

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Kacie Kiel (left) and Julia Myers open every game with a chest bump, and it seems to . (John Fisken photos)

   Kacie Kiel (left) and Julia Myers open every game with a chest bump, and then go kick some fanny. (John Fisken photos)

elbow

   Myers demonstrates her elbow-friendly style of defense to Madeline Strasburg (center) and Wynter Thorne.

"Youse talkin' to me? I don't see anyone else here

  “Youse talkin’ to me?” Maddie Big Time teaches McKenzie Bailey how to be a bad-ass.

Makana

   Makana Stone (hugging Bailey) has accounted for 36% of Coupeville’s offense, pouring in 321 points in 19 games.

Domination.

It’s the name of the game for the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad, which has zipped to a 14-5 record (the best mark the program has seen in a decade) in 2014-2015.

A few numbers:

The Wolves have outscored their opponents 900-705 this season, which means they’re winning by 10+ points a game, with averages of 47.4 on offense and 37.1 on defense.

Step into the Olympic League, where Coupeville is 8-0, and the spread is even more severe.

When facing Chimacum, Klahowya and Port Townsend, the Wolves have won every game by at least 15 points, with 34 and 33-point wins to their credit.

Bouncing their rivals 427-246 (53.3 against 30.8), they are laying down the law.

And, with the Wolf JV girls also a spotless 8-0 in league play, that law is this:

Wolves rule. Everyone else drools.

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