Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘state’

(Amy King photo)

   CHS hoops stars (l to r) Lauren Rose, Makana Stone, Lauren Grove and Kailey Kellner play for one of 16 teams to still have a shot at a 1A state title. (Amy King photo)

It’s Makana vs. Makenna.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad will face off with District 6’s #1 team, Cashmere, in the regional round of the state hoops tourney.

The Wolves (16-5), the #3 seed from District 3, will play the Bulldogs (15-7) Saturday, Feb. 27 at Wenatchee High School.

Tip-off is 4 PM.

That means the Wolves get to travel 163.7 miles (one way), double what they did for districts, while Cashmere will head just 11.6 miles up the road for the game.

Tickets (good for all day) will be $11 for adults and $8 for students (ages 5-11 and 12-18 with a middle school/high school ASB) and senior citizens (62 and over).

Children under five get in for free, so someone should think about putting together a preschool rooter bus of pro-Wolf fans to rock the joint.

Win and Coupeville, which is in the middle of its best postseason run since 2006, books a stay at the Yakima SunDome Mar. 3-5 for the eight-team, double-elimination portion of the state tourney.

To get there, the Wolves will have to beat a school which has finished third at state the past two seasons.

Cashmere’s only losses in six games at state over the past two years have come at the hands of the teams that went on to win the state title.

In 2013-2014 it was Lynden Christian, while King’s toppled the Bulldogs in 2014-2015.

Playing in the Caribou Trail League, a four-team conference in Eastern Washington that includes Chelan, Omak and Cascade, Cashmere went 8-1 in league play this season.

They have three players averaging between 12 and 14 points — 6-foot-1 junior post Abbie Johnson, 5-8 sophomore guard Cami Knishka and 5-9 senior guard Makenna Faulkner.

Coupeville counters with 5-11 senior post Makana Stone, who has had a double-double every game while throwing down 19.6 points a night, and a very stingy defense.

The Wolves, who are scoring 43.1 a game, are surrendering just 32.9.

Cashmere averages 54.2 on offense and 38.6 on defense.

When the two squads did lose this season, it came against top-level competition.

None of Coupeville’s losses were by more than eight points (they also lost by 2, 3, 4 and 4), and two of those teams (Bellevue Christian and Charles Wright Academy) also advanced to regionals.

Cashmere absorbed three double-digit losses in its seven defeats, but faced a brutal schedule.

Two losses came against 2A schools (Ephrata and East Valley of Spokane), three against 1A schools (Chelan, Zillah and Granger) and two against 2B schools (undefeated Okanogan and Mabton).

Five of those seven schools made it to regionals, with only Ephrata and Chelan having been eliminated.

This will be the 20th state playoff game in Coupeville girls hoops history (the Wolves are 7-12 all-time) and the 23rd for Cashmere (12-10), but the first time they have faced each other.

The two schools have a connection through Randy King.

Currently the head track coach at CHS (he did a 20-year stint as Wolf boys’ basketball coach from 1991-2011), King was the assistant coach on the Cashmere boys’ hoops squad that won the 1980 state title.

To see the regional draw, pop over to:

http://www.wiaa.com/Brackets/T1213.pdf

Read Full Post »

Maureen Wetmore (Photos courtesy the Willie Smith Archives) CAMERA

   Maureen Wetmore gets ready to break some fools in half. (Photos courtesy Willie Smith)

Willie Smith

CHS round-ball guru Willie Smith imparts wisdom to his squad.

They were the trailblazers.

As the current incarnation of the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad returns to state for the first time in a decade, we’re going back 18 years to honor the first Wolf girls’ hoops team to make that trek.

The 35th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame is a one-team affair, as we welcome the 1997-1998 CHS girls’ basketball team to these hallowed digital walls.

After this, they will sit at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

And that’s what they are, legends.

When Willie Smith showed up from the wilds of Sequim and took over the Wolf girls program four years earlier, he was inheriting a bit of a mess.

Not that far removed from an 0-20 season, Coupeville had rarely been a strong contender in girls hoops.

That began to change immediately, as Smith and a pack of freshmen led by soon-to-be all-time-greats Novi Barron and Ann Pettit started the uphill climb.

Four years later, with six seniors headlining an 11-player squad, the Wolves smashed all their accomplishments from the past.

The first league title in program history, a third-place finish at tri-districts, 18 wins and their first-ever appearance in the state tourney.

Once in Tacoma, they ran into a brutal schedule, having to face seventh-ranked Toledo and sixth-ranked Dayton, and, while they fought like beasts on both days, eventually bowed out.

But the seeds were planted, and two short seasons later the Wolf girls would capture their first-ever win at state in 2000.

Two players — Jaime Rasmussen and Rachelle Solomon — appeared on both squads, and the manager on the ’97-’98 team, eighth grader Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, would grow up to be a First-Team All-League player as a sophomore on the 2000 squad.

She learned from the best, watching Barron (versus Granite Falls) and Pettit (Vashon Island) each drop 29 points in a game in ’97-’98.

Ellsworth-Bagby also picked up her scrappy defensive style from a then-junior who she would join on the court the following year.

Maureen Wetmore was a tough as nails guard who wasn’t afraid to do the dirty work,” Smith said. “Great defender and as a senior, Ashley’s freshman year, became leading scorer and mentor to Ashley and the rest of the team.”

From top to bottom, the ’97-’98 team were ball-hawks, tough-nosed young women on the court who took on the persona of their coach and changed the way Coupeville girls’ basketball was viewed.

Now, 18 years later, their legend still looms large and provides inspiration to the current Wolves.

When you stand tall and expect to win, when you prepare and play to win, when you refuse to listen to the past and embrace the future, anything is possible.

Back together, as a team, which was how they always played, the 1997-1998 CHS girls’ basketball team:

Willie Smith (coach)
Cherie Smith (assistant coach)
Novi Barron
Stephanie Kipp
Hilary Kortuem
Ann Pettit
Jennifer Pettit
Jaime Rasmussen
Jess Roundy
Rachelle Solomon
Danielle Vracin
Kim Warder
Maureen Wetmore
Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby (manager)

Read Full Post »

Allison Wenzel (John Fisken photos)

  Allison Wenzel and Co. are ready to make a postseason run. (John Fisken photos)

CHS coach David King points the way to state.

CHS coach David King points the way to state.

The Kings are up to their old tricks.

Two years ago, during their final season as Coupeville High School softball coaches, David and Amy King took the Wolves to state, snapping a 12-year drought for the program.

Now the dynamic duo stand two victories away from guiding the CHS girls’ basketball program back to the promised land, as well.

Accomplish that and a Wolf girls hoops squad will advance to state for the first time since 2006.

The Coupeville boys haven’t been there since 1988.

The path is simple, yet full of danger.

Win its district opener against rugged Charles Wright Academy (14-5) Wednesday at Sumner High School (6 PM tip-off) and Coupeville (15-4) is regional-bound.

The Wolves would have a district title game Saturday first, but, win or lose there, would be one of the final 16 teams in the race for a 1A state crown.

Lose Wednesday, and they’ll get a second chance Friday, playing the loser of Bellevue Christian (18-2) vs. Seattle Christian (10-6).

However it comes, one win at districts sends the Wolves to a loser-out game at a regional site Feb. 26 or 27.

The winners of the regional games move on to Yakima Mar. 3-5 for the eight-team, double-elimination state tourney.

Six of those eight teams return home with trophies.

Coming off their second straight 1A Olympic League crown, the Wolves have more opportunity this year because District 3 advances three teams to regionals, as opposed to just two last season.

That also means one win will get you through, while last year it would have taken two.

In 2014-2015 Cascade Christian (which didn’t even make the playoffs this year) and Bellevue Christian snatched the two slots.

Coupeville went two-and-out at districts in 2015, wrapping up a 15-7 season with a narrow 50-44 loss to Seattle Christian.

Both BC and CC then won their regional games, before going two-and-out in Yakima.

To chart Coupeville’s potential path, take a look at the brackets here:

Districts: http://www.nisquallyathletics.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1767&sport=12

Regionals: http://www.nisquallyathletics.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1855&sport=12

State: http://www.nisquallyathletics.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=1834&sport=12

Read Full Post »

State champion Ashley Menges and her trusty steed. (Jennifer Menges photo)

  State champion Ashley Menges and her trusty steed. (Jennifer Menges photo)

Ally (Jennifer Roberts photo)

   Ally Roberts (center) keeps grinning, even after bring robbed by the judges. (Jennifer Roberts photo)

The judges were half right.

Coupeville High School’s horse-riding superstars, Ashley Menges and Ally Roberts, hit the state fair in Puyallup and returned with a state title and a little angina.

Menges, a freshman at CHS, wowed the judges, claiming a grand championship in bareback riding and now sits atop the horse world as a state champ.

Roberts, a Wolf junior, ran into some judges who had misplaced their seeing-eye dogs, but still enjoyed her trip East.

“We unfortunately had terrible judges and all the girls I went with will vouch for that,” Roberts said with a laugh. “But my horse and I had fun!”

The duo have now returned to the volleyball court and both will see action Friday afternoon when Coupeville plays host to non-conference foe Orcas Island.

Tip-off is 4 PM, with the Wolf varsity playing in the CHS gym and the JV playing across the hall in the CMS gym.

Read Full Post »

Plays like this helped carry Central Whidbey to a district title. (John Fisken photo)

Plays like this helped carry Central Whidbey to a district title. (John Fisken photo)

The comeback kids. The champs. (Photo courtesy Mimi Johnson)

The comeback kids. The champs. (Photo courtesy Mimi Johnson)

Set off the fireworks, cause Central Whidbey is da champs.

Cruising to its second win in as many days against arch-rival North Whidbey, the Pineapple Ninjas, a 9/10 All-Star little league softball squad that features Coupeville and South Whidbey girls, clinched the District 11 championship Saturday.

The 15-9 win, coming on a hot 4th of July, sends Central Whidbey to the state tourney.

It also capped a remarkable comeback for a squad that suffered through a heart-rending opening to the district playoffs.

Central Whidbey let a four-run lead over North Whidbey slip away in the final inning of their playoff opener, falling 11-10.

Instead of falling apart, the girls in red and black rallied to win three consecutive loser-out games, knocking off Sedro-Woolley before sweeping back-to-back games from their closest rival.

Playing with everything at stake Saturday, Central ran away with the game. Literally.

Running wild on the base-paths, leaving behind a never-ending string of stolen bases in the scorebook, the Pineapple Ninjas broke open the game with an 11-run fourth inning.

Having seen an early 4-2 lead slip away, Central trailed 7-4 entering the fourth, before it flipped the switch and bolted to a win.

Kaela Meffert smacked three singles to pace her squad, while Jill Prince scorched a single and Central hurler Chanel Sterba whiffed seven North Whidbey hitters.

The Pineapple Ninjas open the state tourney in Vancouver next Saturday, July 11 with a game against a Marysville team coached by former Coupeville softball star Natalie (Slater) Maneval.

It’s a reunion, since Maneval and Central Whidbey coach Mimi Johnson were roommates back in the day when they played softball at Skagit Valley College.

A second reunion could occur later in the tournament, as former Wolf Matt Cross has a daughter on a rival team, while his sister, Jennie (Cross) Prince, will be cheering on her daughter, Jill.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »