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   A rough and tumble season finale at Forks included CMS spark-plug guard Kiara Contreras suffering an ankle injury. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

As season finales go, this one busted out all the fireworks.

After traveling all day Thursday, and then some, to get to Forks, the Coupeville Middle School basketball squads walked head-on into a wild afternoon on the court.

By the time the Wolves exited and headed back to the bus for their final trip home this season, they had two wins in as many games, though one came in an extremely odd manner.

The Wolf 7th graders romped to a 37-24 win, while the CMS 8th graders officially were credited with a forfeit win after the Forks coach pulled his players and took his ball home while trailing by five with 14 ticks left on the clock.

Seriously.

But first, the game that finished.

7th grade:

Carolyn Lhamon has steadily grown as a force in the paint for the Wolves, and she capped her first middle school season by throwing down a career-high 24 points.

While Lhamon by herself would have been enough to match Forks, she wasn’t alone.

Not by a long shot.

Maddie Georges tossed in seven in support, Nezi Keiper and Gwen Gustafson each added a bucket and Alita Blouin knocked down a pair of free throws to round out the attack.

With the win, the CMS 7th graders finished the season at 8-2 for first-year head coach Alex Evans.

The Wolves fell only to Sequim, a large middle school which funnels players to a 2A high school, and both of those games came down to the wire. One was decided late in the fourth, the other in overtime.

8th grade:

Where to begin?

The game was rough-and-tumble, to be charitable, with Coupeville shooting 35 free throws and losing spark-plug guard Kiara Contreras to a leg injury after she was sent intentionally flying by a Forks rival.

Up by one with 50 seconds to go, the home-town Spartans melted down mentally, throwing away the game and their cool.

Wolf scoring ace Anya Leavell struck twice, stealing a ball and turning it into a go-ahead layup, then pilfering yet another pass only to be tackled to the floor.

Unable to continue, she had to be replaced at the free throw line, with Coupeville coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh calling on Abby Mulholland to do the honors.

“Enter the momentum-swinging hero! After playing less than a minute, Abby steps to the free throw line and sinks them both,” said a proud coach.

After that, things went all to heck and beyond, with a steal on an inbound pass, a turnover, a missed Forks shot, a scramble for a loose ball and a Forks coach coming unglued.

Whistled for a technical, he continued to rant while Izzy Wells iced the game with a pair of charity shots.

And then the Forks coach took his ball and went home, refusing to play out the final 13.8 seconds of the season, forfeiting the game and any chance to close with class.

In the midst of a game where a Forks player cursed right at a ref’s face and Contreras was injured on a play that seemed to spring out of a time machine from the era when the Detroit Pistons “Bad Boys” used to throttle Michael Jordan, there was a saving grace.

It came in the way Coupeville’s players handled a potentially explosive situation on a foreign floor.

“There were a lot of times where we could have given into the fight but we didn’t,” Van Velkinburgh said. “We stayed the course, stayed together and got large contributions down the stretch to pull a wrestling match out to be a basketball game win.

“We end our season and I couldn’t be more proud of this group of young ladies.”

His squad finished 6-4, with their losses coming to Stevens and Sequim, two schools several times larger than Coupeville.

The victories built his team’s confidence, and the losses taught them what they need to do to improve.

As they prepare to move up to high school ball, Van Velkinburgh, who has guided these players through several years of SWISH basketball prior to this season, has seen the Wolves grow, develop and bond as a team, on and off the floor.

“I’m very excited for their future,” he said. “My hope is they continue to work hard and that they stay together.

“Amazing group of young ladies that I can truly say I have been blessed to share the court with.”

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   Hunter Smith tossed in 17 in a win Saturday and finished as the #12 scorer in Wolf boys basketball history. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   Mason Grove dropped in 12 in Coupeville’s JV win, giving him 337 in 19 games for the second Wolf squad. 

They closed the season on fire.

Raining down three-balls in both games Saturday, with almost everyone on the roster scoring, the Coupeville High School boys basketball squads put a final stamp on their campaigns, crushing host Chimacum.

The Wolf varsity rolled 60-31, while the JV cruised in for a 61-23 victory.

With the wins, the first squad finished 7-13 overall, 5-4 in their final season of Olympic League play.

Coupeville’s second team closed out at 5-14, 4-5.

Varsity:

Facing a win-less Cowboys team limping to the finish, the Wolves put them down hard and fast, busting out to a 24-2 lead at the first break and not slowing down.

“The boys should be proud of how strong they finished out the season,” said Coupeville coach Brad Sherman. “Taking care of the ball, shooting well, tough on defense – playing their best team basketball.

“Says a lot about them, their character, and how hard they worked,” he added. “They can hold their heads high.”

Nine of the 10 Wolves to see action Saturday scored, with Hunter Smith leading the way as he tossed in 17 in three quarters of action.

That gave him 382 for the season and 847 for his career.

Despite missing a chunk of his sophomore year with an injury, Smith finished as the 12th highest scorer in Wolf boys basketball history.

Fellow senior Ethan Spark banked home 13, which gives him 216 for the season.

Cameron Toomey-Stout knocked down 10 in support of the big two, with Dane Lucero (6), Hunter Downes (4), Gavin Knoblich (3), Mason Grove (3), Kyle Rockwell (2) and Ulrik Wells (2) also scoring.

Lucero, a big man who plays in the paint most of the time, shocked the world in the finale, scoring all of his points off of a pair of three-point bombs.

James Vidoni was the lone Wolf not to score, but he drew praise from Sherman for “his toughness on the boards.”

JV:

The big quarter was the third in this one, as the Wolves used a 22-4 surge to ice the game.

Much as in the varsity game, Coupeville spread its scoring out, with 11 of 13 tallying at least one point.

Freshman Sage Downes and sophomore Mason Grove tied for top honors with 12.

That brought Grove’s final mark to 337 over 19 games this year, just shy of the unofficial school JV record of 347, set by Allen Black in 2002-2003.

Grove, who hit double figures in 16 games, and topped 30 three times, was denied the record by his own success.

In the latter stages of the season, he stopped playing full JV games, so he could swing up to varsity, where he finished sixth on the #1 squad in scoring in very limited court time.

The JV scoring Saturday was rounded out by Jake Pease (9), Tucker Hall (7), Koa Davison (5), Daniel Olson (4), Alex Jimenez (4), Vidoni (2), David Prescott (2), Trevor Bell (2) and Knoblich (2).

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   Alex (left) and Xavier Murdy, who both had strong seasons for CMS, hang out with their shooting coach. (Photo courtesy Michele Murdy)

That’s all they wrote.

Ending their season deep on the road at Port Angeles Wednesday, the Coupeville Middle School boys hoops squads ran into a cutthroat rival in ginormous Stevens.

Somewhat predictably, it wasn’t a particularly thrilling finale for the over-matched Wolves, with both varsity and JV being knocked off.

If nothing else, it’s the last time the CMS boys are likely to face Stevens, which funnels students to a large 2A high school and is the rare middle school to have tryouts and cuts for their basketball teams.

With Coupeville jumping out of the Olympic League at the end of the 2017-2018 school year, it will also leave behind the stitched-together middle school version of that league.

Currently, the Wolf middle school athletes play against two schools — Stevens and Sequim — which support 2A schools, along with Port Townsend, Chimacum and the-school-at-the-end-of-the-world, Forks.

Varsity:

Less than 24 hours after pushing Seqium to the final shot, Coupeville stayed competitive with Stevens, which built its 12-man roster off of 50-man tryouts.

Unfortunately, the game slipped away in the second half, with the hosts collecting a 56-41 win.

The loss drops the Wolves final record to 6-4.

Caleb Meyer led the way with 14, while Logan Martin and Xavier Murdy hit eight apiece.

Hawthorne Wolfe (4), Gabe Shaw (3), Aiden Burdge (2), Grady Rickner (2) and Cody Roberts all played their final middle school hoops game, and will bounce up to high school ball next year.

JV:

Damon Stadler accounted for 60% of Coupeville’s offense, dropping in nine in a 57-15 loss.

The young, very inexperienced second squad finished the year at 1-9, with their lone win coming against Chimacum.

Ty Hamilton knocked in four and Alex Wasik drained a bucket to round out the scoring.

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   The only thing associated with Coupeville High School football which wasn’t injured this season. (David Stern photo)

The season started with great promise, only to end with great frustration.

With a roster ripped asunder by injuries, a severely-depleted Coupeville High School football team could have made a pretty good argument in favor of forfeiting its finale.

But the Wolves skipped the easy way out, pulled together what players they had left and traveled to Puyallup Saturday, where they were hammered 70-6 by a state-ranked, playoff-bound, very-healthy Cascade Christian squad.

The loss, Coupeville’s fifth straight after losing explosive two-way stars Hunter Smith and Sean Toomey-Stout, drops them to a final mark of 1-6 in Olympic/Nisqually League play, 3-7 overall.

After starting the season 2-0, with wins over South Whidbey and La Conner, CHS was flying high.

Even after tough losses to Nooksack Valley and Charles Wright Academy, both of which have qualified for the 16-team state tourney, the Wolves rebounded by thrashing Vashon.

But that night, while a romp on the scoreboard, was the beginning of the end.

Smith, the team’s leading receiver and owner of seven Wolf football records, and Toomey-Stout, the team’s leading rusher and tackler, were both lost for the season after sustaining devastating injuries.

After that, the pain never stopped coming, claiming, among others, key two-way starters Matt Hilborn, Chris Battaglia, Andrew Martin, and, in the final game, the team’s leading scorer, Cameron Toomey-Stout.

Coupeville went to Puyallup missing its top four rushers, and six of the 10 players with at least one rushing attempt, and the Cougars savaged what was left of the Wolf roster.

In a small win for the Wolves, they became only the second league team to score against Cascade Christian this season, something even Charles Wright failed to do.

Wolf quarterback Hunter Downes tossed the 35th and final touchdown pass of his career, dropping it into the hands of fellow senior Jake Hoagland to momentarily pull Coupeville to a 6-6 tie early in the first quarter.

With both teams on the board, but having missed PATs, there was the briefest thought the game might be close.

It was, though, the briefest of brief.

Cascade Christian tacked on four more touchdowns in the first quarter, with one coming off of a 53-yard bomb on the first play after the Cougars took over on downs, and the rout was officially on.

Five more TDs and a safety came in the second quarter, as the Cougar starters wrapped up their night with a 37-point second-quarter.

The biggest weapon for Cascade, as it has been all season, was Madden Tobeck, son of 14-year NFL veteran (and former Seahawk) Robbie Tobeck.

Coupeville’s depleted defense had no answer for him, or Tyquan Coleman or Parker Johnson. Or, basically for anyone in a Cougar uniform.

That job now falls to Cascade Christian’s first-round playoff foe, Nooksack Valley, and the other 14 teams gunning for a 1A state title.

For the Wolves, time to put away their pads and helmets, try and focus on the positives of the season, and, for those healthy, turn their attention to basketball.

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   Coupeville’s small, but scrappy, middle school football team showed great growth this season. (Bob Martin photo)

“They done good.”

While the Coupeville Middle School football team couldn’t nab a win in its final game of the season Wednesday, the Wolves earned the approval of coach Bob Martin.

Chimacum used a punishing running game to pull away for a 33-16 win on its home turf, leaving Coupeville with a final record of 1-4.

Playing mostly against teams with much-larger rosters, the Wolves held their own this season. Even when they lost, there weren’t any blowouts.

In its finale, CMS got a couple of big offensive plays from Caleb Meyer, Xavier Murdy and Cody Roberts, and strong defensive play from Nezi Keiper and Scott Hilborn.

As they hang up their uniforms, a look back at those who made up the roster:

Mathias Anderson
Lucious Binnings
Isaiah Bittner
Brayden Coatney
Brawn Gadberry
Jesus Garcia-Partida
Ty Hamilton
Scott Hilborn
Nezi Keiper
Logan Martin
Caleb Meyer
Xavier Murdy
Kevin Partida
Michael Peterson
Cody Roberts
Gabe Shaw
Damon Stadler
Josh Upchurch
Logan Wertz
Hawthorne Wolfe
Kiara Contreras
(Team Manager)
Lucas Salazar (Team Manager)

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