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Posts Tagged ‘state tourney’

   Jeff Stone’s basketball scoring records still stand nearly 50 years after he hung up his CHS uniform.

There are records, and then there are RECORDS.

As I research Coupeville High School’s basketball history, one season in particular stands out.

It’s been 47 years since Jeff Stone played his final game in a Wolf uniform — a 63-54 loss to Kittitas Mar. 5, 1970 at the state tourney.

His totals that night: 27 points and 24 rebounds.

Nearly five decades have passed since then, and yet what he accomplished in his senior season remains as astounding today as it was back then.

Playing at a time before the three-point shot was a thing, the lanky 6-foot-4 gunner, who would go on to be a college hoops star, before a long run as a coach, teacher and administrator at Oak Harbor High School, was unstoppable.

Over the course of 24 games in the 1969-1970 season (when CHS went 20-4 and became the first Whidbey Island basketball team to win a district title), Stone dropped in 644 points.

He averaged 26.8 a night, while NEVER failing to score in double figures, as the Wolves poured in 1,836 points (76.5), breaking 100 points four time.

A 114-48 win over Watson-Groen stands as the greatest scoring night in CHS history, boys or girls.

To put Stone’s 644 points in perspective, the next highest single-season Wolf performance I have found on the boys side of the board was Pete Petrov’s 442 in 25 games during the 1995-1996 season.

And Petrov both had the trey at his disposal, and used it quite often.

Oak Harbor’s single-season scoring mark is 469 from Manny Martucci in 1993 — a season I covered while at the Whidbey News-Times.

Stone, wearing “short” shorts and getting his points two at a time, never went below 14 points as a senior, and topped out with a school-record 48 in the biggest game of his career.

That performance came in the district title game against longtime rival Darrington, in a game played in front of 2,200 fans (according to newspaper articles of the day).

He earned every one of the points, as well, hitting 17 of 28 from the field and a crisp 14 of 16 from the charity stripe.

And, while Stone’s 48 is one off of the 49 netted by Oak Harbor’s Pat McGreevey in a 1953 game, let’s also note the Wolf star exited the title game with a full 90 seconds left to play.

If Coupeville coach Bob Barker doesn’t pull him early enough to take a curtain call, 50 is a certainty and 60 is not out of the question.

As I continue to go through newspaper articles, chase down score-books and forgotten stat sheets and permanently cross my eyes, I’m sure I’ll find a lot of highlights — some expected, some surprises.

But I have no doubt. Nothing I find is going to stand up to Stone’s superb swan song.

By the numbers:

Regular season:

Neah Bay — 41 points (102-42 win)
Quilcene — 36 (74-31 win)
Quilcene — 14 (71-40 win)
Joyce — 19 (67-20 win)
Watson-Groen — 38 (114-48 win)
Darrington — 37 (67-50 win)
Joyce — 27 (103-29 win)
Clallam Bay — 16 (70-49 win)
Orcas Island — 30 (95-58 win)
Friday Harbor — 18 (64-38 win)
Skykomish — 19 (64-59 win)
Clallam Bay — 30 (71-40 win)
La Conner — 18 (53-49 loss)
Watson-Groen — 35 (86-29 win)
Darrington — 24 (76-52 win)
Orcas Island — 16 (84-49 win)
Friday Harbor — 21 (82-46 win)
Skykomish — 31 (78-76 win)
Bellevue Christian — 26 (106-46 win)
La Conner — 23 (54-50 loss)

Districts:

Skykomish — 19 (74-58 win)
Darrington — 48 (84-62 win)

State:

Ritzville — 31 (63-51 loss)
Kittitas — 27 (63-54 loss)

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   Coupeville’s Nathan Ginnings closes out a win Sunday, sending North Whidbey Little League to the state tourney. (Contributed photos)

Ginnings gets ready to rip.

The uniform says North Whidbey Little League, but it was a Central Whidbey mercenary who got the final out.

Coupeville’s Nathan Ginnings slammed the door on Anacortes Sunday, striking out the final hitter in a 12-2 win that punches a ticket to the state tourney.

Oak Harbor’s 11/12 baseball squad (and its Coupeville star) head to Federal Way for the big dance.

NWLL has a first-round bye, then opens play Sunday, July 16.

Playing at South Whidbey in the District 11 championship, North Whidbey needed just one win to claim the title, while Anacortes would have needed a doubleheader sweep.

Oak Harbor’s sluggers, with Ginnings playing most of the game at third base, put things away early, torching Anacortes for eight runs in the third inning.

Ginnings, who played for NWLL since Central Whidbey couldn’t get enough players to field a full squad this season, reached base on an error and a fielder’s choice and scored a run.

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Yellow Jackets catcher Maddy Georges frames the pitch. (Paula Peters photos)

Yellow Jackets catcher Maddy Georges frames the pitch. (Paula Peters photos)

team

Ready to rumble.

Put some buzz in the Yellow Jackets stride.

Central Whidbey Little League’s Minors softball squad, which went a spiffy 13-1 this season, opens the best-of-three District 11 championships July 5 in Oak Harbor.

The only one of Coupeville’s three softball teams to stay together for All-Star play this summer, the Yellow Jackets need to win two games to punch a ticket to the state tourney in Montesano.

Based on this season’s results and prior work put in by these players, expectations of going to the big dance are sky high.

With that in mind, team parents are running a fundraiser on GoFundMe to raise the money necessary to get 12 players, their families and their coaches 122 miles down the road.

The team would need to cover a hotel stay for a minimum of three nights, plus food and gas.

All money raised by the GoFundMe will go directly to the team and be split evenly among all players.

If they raise more funds than necessary, any extra money will be donated to Central Whidbey Little League to help out with its other programs.

To read more and help the Yellow Jackets, pop over to:

https://www.gofundme.com/coupevilleallstars

Meet the players:

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David King lays down some wisdom to his high-flying Wolf girls squad. (John Fisken photos)

   David King lays down some wisdom to his high-flying Wolf girls squad. (John Fisken photos)

JJ Johnson

JJ Johnson (far left) and his teammates plot strategy.

The path is there. You just have to follow it.

With the regular season officially in the books, the Coupeville High School basketball squads stand on the precipice of the postseason, the road to the Yakima SunDome and the state tourney stretching out in front of them.

The Wolf girls (15-4), having won their second consecutive 1A Olympic League title, sit a fair bit closer than the CHS boys (9-10), but both squads have their fates in their own hands.

For the girls, it will take two wins in three games to get to state, while the boys will need four victories, and have little margin for error in the early going.

As the #3 Olympic League seed, the boys will have to win back-to-back loser-out games to get to the double-elimination portion of districts.

First up is a home playoff rumble Thursday (7 PM tip) with Bellevue Christian (8-10), a squad they beat 53-50 on the road in the first weeks of the regular season.

Win again and they travel to Cascade Christian (9-8) Saturday.

Put together back-to-back victories and they’ll still need at least one win in two road games between Feb. 16-20 to advance to regionals, which is a loser-out game — with the victor punching their ticket to the eight-team state tourney.

The girls, having earned the #1 seed, already sit in the double-elimination portion of the districts brackets and are guaranteed at least two playoff games.

Coupeville’s first opponent will be one of three teams — Charles Wright (13-5), Port Townsend (7-12) or Vashon Island (7-13) — and that game will be at a neutral site (Sumner High School) Feb. 17.

Win and they’re regional-bound, with a spot in the district championship game Feb. 20 at Foss High School first, for seeding purposes mainly.

Lose their opener, and the Wolf girls return to Sumner Feb. 19 for a loser-out 3rd place game.

Advance to regionals through either route and the girls will get a winner-take-all game for the program’s first trip to state since the 2005-2006 season.

The Wolf boys last went to state in 1987-1988.

Time to make some new history.

To see the district brackets (and check my math), pop over to:

Girls: http://www.cascadeathletics.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=2&page=1&school=0&sport=12&tournament_id=1767

Boys: http://www.cascadeathletics.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=2&page=1&school=0&sport=3&tournament_id=1814

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Stone

   CHS hoops coach Bob Barker (bottom, right) and some of the players who launched Wolf basketball into a new world. (Photos courtesy Jeff Stone)

It was a time when legends were crafted.

You wouldn’t know it by looking at the gym walls today, but between 1968 and 1970, boys’ basketball became the biggest game in Coupeville.

The Wolves already had a star in Barry Brown, who had been a First-Team All-League pick in ’66-’67 and ’67-’68, but things really took off the next two seasons.

That was when Jeff Stone rewrote the record books, setting marks that have never been approached, nearly 50 years after the fact.

During his junior season (’68-’69), Stone tossed in 317 points and was tabbed as one of the league’s best players.

But then CHS hoops coach Bob Barker decided to change things up heading into Stone’s final go-around.

“As far as the players were concerned, we were excited for the new brand of basketball Coach Barker switched to for our senior year,” Stone said. “Where as the previous years we were more deliberate offensively, we employed more of a full court press and fast break offense.

“That was especially effective in the little cracker box gym we called home.”

Running wild, Coupeville ripped though its schedule, going 18-2, with only a pair of razor-thin losses to perennial power La Conner.

After that came two huge wins at the district tourney over Skykomish and Darrington, with Stone pouring in 48 points — that still stands as a school record — in the title game.

The district title, the first in school history, propelled Coupeville to state, also for the first time ever.

And while the Wolves fell 63-51 to Ritzville and 63-54 to Kittitas (Coupeville won its first game at state in ’75-’76, after five previous losses), they didn’t go down without a fight.

Stone corralled a school record 27 rebounds against Kittitas and finished the season with 644 points, both records which stand to this day.

After his prep swan song came college ball and then a solid run as a coach, teacher and athletic director up north in Oak Harbor, but Stone’s time as a Wolf remains dear to his heart.

He was at the center of a legendary run, and will always treasure that.

“Memories that I remember the most were the crowds; everybody loves a winner, right?,” Stone said with a laugh. “Coupeville didn’t have a rich tradition in basketball or any sport for that matter.

“The Whidbey News-Times with Wallie Funk couldn’t get enough of it. It was like Hoosiers!”

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