Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘season finale’

Haylee Armstrong prepares to unleash total freakin’ destruction. (Bailey Thule photo)

Slow start, scorching hot finish.

Coming alive in the second and third quarters Friday night, the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team overcome an early deficit, then blew visiting Friday Harbor off the floor.

Romping to a 45-25 win in their season finale, Scout Smith’s hardwood heroes got to 5-4 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 6-7 overall while showcasing their talents as they seek fulltime employment at the varsity level in the future.

Their leader, wrapping her first season on the sideline, came away pleased with the growth she saw.

“This game was a great culmination of all we have worked on this season,” Smith said. “I am extremely proud of the entire team.

“We executed our systems well on offense and defense.

“Huge shoutout to the whole team for the work and effort they put in this whole season.”

The future of Wolf basketball. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The finale started in favor of Friday Harbor, which used its superior height to get out to a 9-2 lead by the first break.

After that, it was all Wolves, all the time.

“We ramped up the intensity in the second and third quarters and caused turnovers defensively and got quick buckets on offense,” Smith said.

Swing player Haylee Armstrong led the way, dropping in 20 of her game-high 22 points across the game’s middle 16 minutes.

With the sophomore sniper popping three-balls, and getting some help from Lexis Drake in that part of the attack, Coupeville pulled ahead 17-13 by halftime, before unleashing hardwood death ‘n destruction in the third frame.

A 20-4 surge right after halftime blew the game wide open, allowing CHS to carry a 37-17 advantage into the fourth quarter, and Friday Harbor had few answers by that point.

Freshman Adeline Maynes, who led Coupeville in scoring this season, knocked down 14 points to back up Armstrong’s 22, while Sydney Van Dyke (4), Drake (3), and Ava Lucero (2) also scored.

Amelia Crowder, Chelsi Stevens, Jeann Nitta, Capri Anter, and Marin Winger all saw floor time as well for the Wolves.

Marin Winger locks down on defense. (Teagan Calkins photo)

 

Final season scoring stats:

Adeline Maynes – 147
Haylee Armstrong – 118
Ava Lucero – 52
Capri Anter – 44
Lexis Drake – 41
Sydney Van Dyke – 30
Tenley Stuurmans – 20
Marin Winger – 11
Ari Cunningham – 10
Chelsi Stevens – 6

Read Full Post »

Davin Houston led the Wolf JV in scoring this season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a tale of two halves – with one much better than the other.

The Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball team brought its season to a close Friday night, falling 51-26 to visiting Friday Harbor in a game which got away from the young Wolves.

CHS, which finishes 4-5 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, 5-8 overall, played strongly in the first half, but cold shooting after halftime doomed any hopes for the hometown squad.

The Wolves trailed just 10-6 after one quarter of action, with Mahkai Myles rattling the rim for a pair of three-balls to account for all of his team’s scoring.

From there, Friday Harbor edged Coupeville 13-12 in the second frame, before slamming its collective feet through the gas pedal in the third and fourth quarters,

A 15-8 Wolverine run coming out of the halftime break hurt, while a 13-0 romp in the final frame made the game score seem much more lopsided than it had earlier.

Malachi Somes split time between varsity and JV, providing scrappy defense at every level.

Myles and Riley Lawless led CHS with eight points apiece, while Jayden Little (3), Malachi Somes (3), Easton Green (2), and Davin Houston (2) also scored.

Little rippled the nets for his first three-ball of the season to give his point total a little extra spicy flavor.

Kyle McCrimmon, Khanor Jump, Liam Blas, Sage Arends, Carson Grove, and Nathan Coxsey also saw floor time for a young squad which often looked very good this season.

While the finale wasn’t what the Wolves might have hoped for, the future remains bright.

 

Final season scoring stats:

Davin Houston – 92
Mahkai Myles – 68
Riley Lawless – 67
Easton Green – 53
Carson Grove – 49
Liam Blas – 42
Malachi Somes – 40
Sage Arends – 34
Khanor Jump – 17
Nathan Coxsey – 10
Kyle McCrimmon – 8
Jayden Little – 5

Read Full Post »

Coupeville Middle School coach RayLynn Ratcliff and youngest son Braxten, livin’ that hoops life. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Wolves closed with a roar.

Back in their own gym for the first time in five games, the Coupeville Middle School boys’ basketball teams swept three bouts with visiting South Whidbey Monday to put an exclamation point on the season.

It was the second time CMS faced off with their next-door neighbors, and the Cow Town hoops stars went 6-0 overall in the meetings.

How Monday’s finale played out:

 

Level 1:

Coupeville came out on top in three of four quarters, with a 13-6 run in the second the cherry on top.

Up by three heading into the final frame, the Wolves doubled their lead, exiting stage right with a 35-29 victory.

Kamden Ratcliff had the hottest hand, peppering the net for four three-balls on his way to a season-high 15 points.

He was joined on the scoring chart by Diesel Eck, who pumped in 11, Calvin Kappes (6), and Trey Stewart (3).

Xander Beaman, Gracin Joiner, River Simpson, Darius Stewart, Trenton Thule, Jonathan Kappes, and Maverick Walling also saw floor time for Alex Evans‘ squad.

Alex Evans, plotting strategy.

 

Level 2:

The Wolves put the game out of reach early with an 11-0 romp through the first quarter and eventually settled for a 43-12 win.

Xander Flowers knocked down a season-high 10 points to pace CMS, while Joiner (9), Darius Stewart (8), Cyrus Sparacio (8), Cole Van Dyke (4), Aiden Wheat (2), and Jonah Meek (2) all chipped in with strong shooting.

Rounding out RayLynn Ratcliff’s roster were Jacob Lujan and Mario Martinez.

 

Level 3:

Les Queen almost took down South Whidbey by himself.

Coupeville’s season points leader popped for 20 more to spark a 36-15 win, with four other Wolves joining him in the scoring column.

That was Liam Stoner (8), Meek (4), Oliver Miller (2), and Henry Jackson (2), with Miller recording his first basket to the delight of the hometown crowd.

Talon Gamble, Kion Tellery, Jack Bailey, and Carson Marley all hit the floor as well under the direction of CMS coach Jaylen Nitta.

 

Final season scoring stats:

Les Queen – 114
Diesel Eck – 67
Kamden Ratcliff – 49
Gracen Joiner – 41
Darius Stewart – 39
Chayse Van Velkinburgh – 38
Jonathan Kappes – 32
Cyrus Sparacio – 32
Calvin Kappes – 29
Liam Stoner – 20
Colton Ashby – 15
River Simpson – 12
Trey Stewart – 12
Henry Jackson – 11
Jonah Meek – 11
Xander Flowers – 10
Cole Van Dyke – 7
Xander Beaman – 6
Aiden Wheat – 6
Jacob Lujan – 4
Kion Tellery – 4
Trenton Thule – 3
Jack Bailey – 2
Elijah Cole – 2
Talon Gamble – 2
Oliver Miller – 2

When the offense is really clicking.

Read Full Post »

Tomorrow’s volleyball stars are already making names for themselves on the court. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The matches end, but the work goes on.

The Coupeville Middle School volleyball season came to a close Monday, with the Wolves waging a fierce, if good-natured, war with next-door neighbor South Whidbey.

Now, the next question will be which Wolf spikers will seize opportunities to fine-tune their skill set and deepen their passion for the sport.

Some of the girls in red and black uniforms Monday will move on to high school next year, while others will be back in the CMS hallways a year from now.

Where will they be in their volleyball journey?

Will they listen to the many lessons imparted by coaches Cris Matochi and Kristina Hooks this time around, accept the challenges available, commit themselves to growth, and continue to build towards a bright future on the court?

One hopes so, but only time will tell the tale.

For now, this is how the 2024 campaign ended:

 

Level 1:

Coupeville’s top squad put up a spirited fight, but fell just short in a 25-21, 25-21, 15-12 loss.

The Wolves started strongly, jumping out to a 5-1 lead in the first set behind precision serving from Cameron Van Dyke.

South Whidbey battled back, however, forcing three ties before sliding out in front for good at 9-8.

Kennedy O’Neill and KeeAyra Brown scored winners — the first by flipping the ball between defenders, the second by dropping a slicing overhead — but the visitors got the lead up to five points and never relented.

Van Dyke kept her rivals honest with a few more nasty serves and Rhylee Inman stood tall, dropping an emphatic kill, but Coupeville could never quite get completely back over the hump.

The second set was a donnybrook, with 12 ties, including a final one at 19-19.

Emma Leavitt had the hot hand at the service stripe in this frame, peppering South Whidbey with balls which tore off fingertips and skidded away.

Down 23-19, the Wolves got back-to-back winners from Inman — one via a tip, one via a well-crunched kill — but once again the visitors slipped away at the last second.

While the third set was for practice and little else with the match already decided, the two teams still put together another titanic tango.

Van Dyke, Inman, and O’Neill all offered strong work at the service line, while Inman also delivered on several of her team-high seven kills.

 

Stats:

Zariyah Allen — 4 digs, 1 ace
KeeAyra Brown — 1 kill
Laurel Crowder — 2 digs
Rhylee Inman — 7 kills, 7 digs, 2 aces
Emma Leavitt — 1 dig, 1 ace
Kennedy O’Neill — 1 kill, 2 digs, 1 ace
Cassie Powers — 2 kills, 1 dig, 3 assists, 1 ace
Scarlett Spencer — 1 kill, 1 dig
Sage Stavros — 3 digs, 2 assists
Cameron Van Dyke — 1 dig, 4 assists, 3 aces

 

Level 2:

The closest match of the day, except for the first five minutes.

Coupeville fell behind 11-1 in the opening set, then roared back to life, outscoring the Falcons the rest of the way in a razor-thin 26-24, 25-21, 14-16 loss.

The turn started with Scarlett Spencer, Emma Leavitt, and Emily Rains catching fire on their serve, then really got interesting with Laurel Crowder and Olivia Martin going bonkers at the stripe.

Crowder, just a 6th grader, smoked a particularly sweet ace before Martin, having her best performance of the season, started dropping bombs on South Whidbey from all angles.

From 10 points down, Coupeville got all the way back to holding a 23-21 lead.

And while the Falcons proved to be a hard target to take down, the Wolves did hold off a set point, forcing the frame beyond the standard 25-point finish line.

Properly warmed up by that point, CMS came out swinging in the middle set.

Up 4-1 after Leavitt dropped a winner over her shoulder while her back was to the net, the Wolves set off a yo-yo effect.

South Whidbey jumped out in front at 11-7, Crowder brought the Wolves back to a 12-11 advantage on her serve, then the Falcons reclaimed control at 19-14.

Except Coupeville wasn’t done.

Savannah Coxsey strolled to the service stripe and pounded out a pristine run of five straight points, with two of them coming on unhittable aces, pushing the Wolves back in front.

While CMS ultimately couldn’t quite close out the middle set on top, it did complete the KO in the third frame.

Rains proved to be the difference in the finale, matching Coxsey with her own five-point surge on her serve, while Spencer nailed a key tip winner to help close things out.

 

Level 3:

The final moments of the 2024 season went in South Whidbey’s favor, with the Falcons winning 25-14, 25-23, 15-8, but again a scrappy Wolf squad refused to exit the floor without first putting up considerable resistance.

Autumn Rubin, Maja Govorcin, and Sabrina Junich picked up points on their serve in the first set, with Junich dropping an ace which caught the sideline and skidded away, leaving the Falcons flat-footed.

The second set showcased the Wolves at their grittiest.

While it trailed for most of the frame, Coupeville steadily chipped away at the deficit, with Emma Green, Bella Sandlin, Rubin, Amira Anunciado, Reagan Green, and Govorcin all picking up points.

Sandlin was an equal opportunity assassin, scoring both on her serve and with a variety of flips and lobs in the open court, while Rubin finally pushed the Wolves ahead at 21-20.

A tense tussle which included a ball being launched skyward, where it got trapped (possibly forever) in the curtain which can be used to divide the court, ended in favor of the Falcons.

But, like the third set, which featured spotlight-worthy plays from Milly Somes and Diana Herrera, there were many bright spots for a still-developing pack of Wolves.

Jade Peabody, Annabelle Cundiff, Addison Jacobson, Kaylee Moore, and Kaylee Beshear round out a roster full of potential.

The matches are done (for now). The uniforms to be returned shortly.

But the future is right there, waiting to be claimed.

Which of these Wolves makes the commitment to become the next Teagan Calkins?

She’s currently a junior kill machine for an undefeated high school squad, and a positive role model who devotes a chunk of her time to helping the middle school coaches.

And which of these bright and whip-smart young women comes for the mantle currently held by CHS senior Katie Marti?

She’s the sublime setter who drives her team’s attack, and the saint who gave me a free hamburger after I endured almost four hours on rock-hard bleachers.

To the CMS spikers — this is your moment, ladies. This is your time.

Make it all you can.

Read Full Post »

A fleet-footed Wolf runner heads for the finish line. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They beat the raindrops one last time.

Running in the season finale Wednesday at the Cascade League Championships, Coupeville Middle School cross country harriers stayed one step ahead of the incoming bad weather.

As they did so, piling up top times, some of the young Wolves were captured on film by wandering photographer John Fisken, as seen in the pics above and below.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »