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Coupeville Middle School hoops star Inara Maund played in one game Tuesday and sketched her teammates in action during the other. (Photo courtesy Kristina Forbes)

“They came with a fire and a passion that I have been waiting to see this season.”

For first-year Coupeville Middle School girls basketball coaches Kassie O’Neil and Kristina Forbes, this has been a season of celebrating each milestone, as largely inexperienced players learn the game on the fly.

Instead of wins and losses, the Wolves have measured their success on lessons learned, skills picked up, and confidence built.

Which is why O’Neil exited the CMS gym Tuesday after game #7 in a eight-game season with a visible sense of pride.

“This was our best game, by far,” she said. “The girls walked away super happy and ready to play in the offseason. It was the perfect last home game.”

Coupeville closes the campaign with a road trip to Langley Thursday, and the program has taken a major leap forward since opening day.

How Tuesday played out:

 

Varsity:

Coupeville upped its point total in each quarter, and while the Wolves fell 37-19, the hot shooting of Haylee Armstrong and the team’s defense were big standouts.

“We just learned zone (defense) this week and you couldn’t even tell,” O’Neil said. “It looked like they had been playing zone all season.

“I honestly wish we had been, because they KILLED it.”

Armstrong rattled the rims for a season-high 11 points, including hitting a three-ball which further cements her status as a fast-rising, sweet-shooting star.

Haylee came out shooting amazing; she kept swishing shot after shot,” said O’Neil, who nailed her fair share of big shots during her own Coupeville hoops days.

“Our guards worked hard on driving with a purpose and dishing to the posts or wings to shoot,” she added.

“Our big thing has been “you miss 100% of the shots you don’t take,” so today, whether they made them or not, I told the girls I would be proud of them just for taking the shot.

“And they did just that.”

Kierra Thayer slapped home six points in support of Armstrong, with Rhylin Price and Brynn Parker each rippling the net on a free throw.

Liza Zustiak, Tenley Stuurmans, Capri Anter, Ava Lucero, Marin Winger, Lexis Drake, and Avery Williams-Buchanan also saw floor time, with Winger getting a nice shout out from O’Neil for having “hustle every time she hit the court — executing our defense perfectly and being aggressive on offense constantly.”

The Wolf hoops guru spread love to everyone on the roster.

“The girls went out and weren’t afraid,” she said. “When the season is over, these are the games I hope they’ll walk away holding onto, pushing them into further basketball careers.

“Their excitement and pride was palpable in the locker room after the game,” O’Neil added. “Today was a day that reminded me why I love this game so much.

“Regardless of the score, we walked away knowing we won that game in all of the ways that matter.”

 

JV:

Facing a physical team, the young Wolves held up well, playing Sultan virtually even in the second half during a 25-11 loss.

Forbes and her players achieved one goal — holding the Turks to 25 or less points — while narrowly missing out on setting a season-high with their own scoring efforts.

Most importantly, the Wolves set out to play better against Sultan than they did earlier in the season, a mission you can mark as accomplished.

“The girls stayed strong throughout this game,” Forbes said. “They got beat up pretty good!”

Taylor Marrs sparked the rough-and-ready Wolf attack, using every one of her allotted fouls while clamping down on the Turk shooters.

“We had our first foul-out of the season,” Forbes said with pride. “When you think of defense, that’s Taylor all the way. She has definitely come a long way.

“I am so proud of these girls and the confidence they are starting to show on the court!”

Melanie Wolfe topped the Coupeville scorers, dropping in all five of her points in the fourth quarter, while Chelsi Stevens, Adeline Maynes, and Rhylin Price each chipped in with a bucket.

It was the first points of the season for the hard-working Stevens, who becomes the 15th CMS player to score.

Rosie Lay, Willow Leedy-Bonifas, Marrs, Laken Simpson, Elyse White, Ava Carpenter, Inara Maund, and Lexis Drake also saw floor time for the Wolves.

 

The art of the game:

Earlier this season, while I was covering a CMS hoops game in person, Inara Maund was busy working the camera, shooting the action for her coaches.

During time-outs she showed me some of her artwork and I later wrote about how I wanted to showcase some of her creations here on Coupeville Sports.

And what do you know, it’s happening!

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Kierra Thayer powers to the hoop. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Step by step, they’re building a bright future.

Coupeville Middle School girls basketball players — many making their hardwood debut — continue to flash signs of brilliance, drawing approval from their coaches.

Thursday was the middle match-up in a three-game road trip, sending the Wolves to the wilds of Sultan to face off with one of the best programs in the Cascade League.

And while CMS absorbed a pair of losses, hoops gurus Kristina Forbes and Kassie Lawson exited content in the knowledge that their teams are trending in the right direction.

How the day played out:

 

Varsity:

Sultan’s middle school teams have been dominant in recent years, and the young Turks proved up to the challenge in a 43-7 win.

The loss drops Coupeville’s top squad to 0-3 on the season.

The hosts barreled out to a 15-0 lead after one quarter of play, then put the game on ice with a 12-5 run in the second frame.

Brynn Parker netted her first points of the season, pacing the Wolves with a team-high four, while Haylee Armstrong rattled the rims for a bucket, and Kierra Thayer swished a free throw.

Capri Anter caught some love from her coaches for her defensive play, including a tooth-rattling rejection of a Turk shot.

Liza Zustiak, Rhylin Price, Lexis Drake, Avery Williams-Buchanan, Tenley Stuurmans, and Valeria de Jesus Merino also saw floor time for Coupeville.

 

JV:

The Wolves fell in a game in which the Sultan scorebooks uphold a longstanding middle school tradition of not adding up.

Maybe it was 26-5. Maybe 25-5. Maybe 20-5.

We’ll never know for sure.

What we can attest to is Lexis Drake (4) and Melanie Wolfe (1) breaking into the scoring column for the first time during the 2022 campaign.

And a whole lot of hustle from the Wolves (0-2) on both ends of the floor.

Willow Leedy-Bonifas was fierce for going for steals,” Kristina Forbes said. “They played great defense.

Chelsi Stevens stepped up as a guard on offense and handled it well,” she added. “Adeline Maynes — a shorty — stepped up to help our posts with rebounds; she didn’t let the tall girls scare her away.”

Ava Carpenter, Price, Laken Simpson, Taylor Marrs, and de Jesus Merino also saw floor time for Coupeville, which wraps up its road trip with a journey to Granite Falls Mar. 15.

After that, the Wolves get three-straight home games.

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Hawthorne Wolfe and Co. will not be making a trip to the wilds of Sultan this season, after all. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“Well, if it’s not Covid, it’s something else!”

The steady buzzing sound you hear this winter is the sound of Coupeville High School Athletic Director Willie Smith’s phone, as the basketball schedule changes nearly every hour.

The latest upheaval doesn’t involve the pandemic but will still cost the Wolf hoops squads a game.

Former league rival Sultan, who Coupeville was scheduled to play next Saturday, Jan. 15, is still fighting through the aftereffects of the recent snow/ice storms and is starting to hit crunch time.

“They are getting backed up in their league games, and, like us, their league games take precedence over their non-league games,” Smith said.

So, off the schedule goes what would have been a road trip for the Coupeville boys, and home games for the Wolf girls.

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Aiden O’Neill pushes the ball. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It was a home finale full of wild mood swings.

The Coupeville Middle School boys basketball teams played their final games in the CMS gym Monday — there are two road tilts left on the schedule — and gave everyone their money’s worth.

Even if fans don’t have to actually pony up cold, hard cash for middle school games.

But you get the point.

Anyways, here’s how the day played out:

 

Varsity:

The best game of the season, regardless of the final score.

Bouncing back after losing by 15 the first time the teams played, the Wolves stormed from behind Monday, forced overtime, then fell 62-56 to visiting Sultan.

The defeat drops CMS to 2-4 on the season, but coaches Craig Anderson and Jon Roberts came away pleased with what they saw.

“We played like we expected to win, which we did not do the first time,” Roberts said. “This was us taking that next, big step.”

Sultan is perennially a middle school power, and they had at least three players who already look ready to make an impact on the high school court.

Toss in teammates who make smart passes, hit the boards with intensity, and play in-your-face defense, and it’s no surprise the Skyhawks can soar.

But give Coupeville major credit, as the Wolves never backed down — even when the Sultan coach, whipped up into a lather, got himself a technical foul and, later, a stern warning.

“You can sit down, or you can go home,” barked the ref, followed by a stare-off, and then the Skyhawk head man choosing to mute himself.

On the court, the action was intense from the get-go, with two talented teams punching and counterpunching from opening tip to wild finale.

Chase Anderson ended the first quarter by splashing home a pullup jumper, but Coupeville went to the break down 15-11.

A quick three-ball from the Skyhawks to open the second frame stretched the deficit out to seven, before the Wolves came alive.

Camden Glover, standing tall in the paint for CMS, kick-started things by rippling the net with a sweet jumper, and Coupeville brought its fans to their feet with a 12-0 run.

Four different Wolves scored during the surge, with Anderson and Aiden O’Neill knocking down three-balls, and Malachi Somes netting a jumper off of an inbounds pass.

CMS had its first lead of the game, only to see Sultan turn the tables almost as quickly.

The Skyhawks ripped off their own 9-0 rally to momentarily blunt Coupeville’s mojo, escaping to the halftime break back in front 27-23.

But this had become a game of runs, and the Wolves burst out of the locker room ready to rumble.

Glover couldn’t be stopped in the second half, scoring off of rebound put-backs and power moves in the paint, then droppin’ jumpers to keep the defense honest.

Two of his third-quarter buckets were set up by hustle work from Somes, who used fast hands and a go-go motor to always be in the right place at the right time.

First he pilfered the ball — setting up a Glover layup — then Somes corralled a loose ball and fired a beauty of a kick-out pass, hitting his teammate in stride.

The lead changed six times in the third frame, though Coupeville couldn’t stay in front and still trailed 39-36 heading into the fourth.

The (supposedly) final quarter featured the Wolves at their grittiest, as they never led over the seven-minute span, but never let Sultan escape.

Glover snatched a rebound, then powered up through three defenders for a second-chance bucket to knot things at 42-42, but time and again the Skyhawks seemed to hold the upper hand.

A pair of Sultan three-balls were deadly, and the visitors, with their coach melting down in real time, were still clinging to a 50-46 advantage with under a minute to play.

So, time for a little magic.

Anderson split the defense, faked a pass, and dropped in a roller to get the Wolves within two, before coming back around to hit two pressure-packed free throws to tie things up.

The trip to the charity stripe was courtesy the mad dog frothing at the end of the Sultan bench, who looked like he might have a stroke when one of his players missed a potential go-ahead free throw with just seven ticks on the clock.

That set up Coupeville with a chance to win things outright, but a stern Skyhawks defense made life tough for Anderson and his buzzer-beater slid off the rim.

The good times continued through two minutes of the extra period. Only problem — middle school overtime is three minutes.

Back-to-back three-balls from Anderson, with both shots kissing the glass before plopping through the net, staked CMS to its last lead at 56-55.

Unfortunately for the Wolves, that was where their offensive attack ended for the afternoon, with Sultan closing on a 7-0 spurt over the final 58 seconds.

The scorebook will tell you it was a loss. The feeling in the gym, however, was that of a win.

Anderson and Glover paced the Wolves, hitting for 21 and 20 points, respectively, while O’Neill banked in eight and kept alive a new, and intriguing, tradition.

The sweet-shooting guard has lost a shoe during action in every game I’ve seen him play during his 8th grade year. So, three.

Is O’Neill simply too fast for conventional footwear to be able to constrain him, or does someone need to start double-tying their laces? Debate.

Playing with both shoes on at all times, Jayden McManus added five points for Coupeville, Somes netted a bucket, and Easton Green and Riley Lawless also saw floor time.

 

JV:

Coupeville’s second squad, largely comprised of players new to the game, fell 48-11, dropping their record to 0-6.

But there were bright spots along the way, and proof that the work being put in by coaches and players is starting to pay off.

The Wolves were able to run more offensive sets than normal, and player’s willingness to sacrifice their bodies by setting screens for teammates was at an all-time high.

Jackson Waterbury came around the corner on one play, rumbling like a freight train going down a steep incline with no brakes.

The CMS 7th grader was intent on setting a screen, and for one beautiful second it looked like he was going to dislodge all the brain matter from the Sultan player in his way.

Veering off at the last second, Waterbury didn’t deliver the full-on crunch, opting to screech to a halt and show benevolence with a well-timed hip check instead.

Googly-eyed and content to stay down and enjoy the floor’s sweet embrace, his rival had a story to tell his parents when he got home.

“Yeah, mom, I almost died today! That dude was going to destroy me!! So yes, I think I will have seconds on dessert, and no, there won’t be any discussion on the matter!!!”

Also coming up big in the down ‘n dirty world of setting (or almost setting) screens was Wolf 6th grader Jonah Weyl, who went toe-to-toe with a kid three times his size and never blinked.

“You love to see it!” said Roberts with a note of pride in his voice.

Coupeville got its primary scoring boost from a rampaging Matthew Kuzma, who tallied his first five points of the season.

He banked in a three-ball, right after teammate Captain Teuscher made off with a steal, then came back around to get a bucket in the paint.

Lawless chipped in with four points, all set up by cleaning the offensive glass, while Joshua Stockdale made off with a steal, then went coast-to-coast for a cartwheeling layup.

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Coupeville Middle School basketball will play its next three games at home. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’re coming home.

Having survived a road trip to the wilds of Sultan Wednesday, the Coupeville Middle School boys basketball teams now get to play three straight in front of their home fans.

The Wolves host Granite Falls Dec. 6 and Northshore Christian Academy Dec. 8, before a rematch against the Turks on Whidbey Dec. 13.

With more experience under their collective belts by then, Coupeville’s young hoops stars can hope for a better result the second time around against Sultan.

How Wednesday played out:

 

Varsity:

Coupeville got double-digits scoring from Chase Anderson and Camden Glover, but fell 51-36 to a notoriously-tough foe.

The loss drops CMS to 1-2 on the season.

After coming out a bit cold — racking up just 13 points in the first half — the Wolves went off for 14 in the third quarter alone.

Anderson sparked that run, netting three bombs from behind the three-point arc.

That was part of a 12-point afternoon for Coupeville’s leading scorer, while Glover was hot on his heels, pumping in 11.

Jayden McManus tossed in eight points — his first tallies of the season — while Aiden O’Neill rounded out the scoring attack by banking in five points.

Mahkai Myles, Riley Lawless, Malachi Somes, Easton Green, and Carson Grove also saw floor time for the Wolves.

 

JV:

Coupeville’s second unit is a work in progress, with few of its players having organized basketball experience, something Sultan took advantage of during a 56-6 win.

Lawless scored all four of his points in the first quarter, while Grove tossed in a bucket in the third.

Jonah WeylMatthew Kuzma, George Spear, Zach Blitch, Kenny Jacobsen, Dylan Robinett, Joshua Stockdale, Captain Teuscher, Ethan Walling, Jackson Waterbury, Wyatt Fitch-Marron, Max Ohme, and Myles also played.

Wolf coach Jon Roberts imparts hoops wisdom to his young players.

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