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Down two starters Friday, Coupeville pulled out a win at Sultan thanks to big performances from players such as freshmen Ja’Kenya Hoskins (left) and Izzy Wells. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

When things were at their bleakest, they made their own sunshine.

It would have been so easy to lose Friday, but the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball team flat-out refused.

Rallying against daunting odds, the Wolves pulled out the kind of win which can define a season, knocking off host Sultan 29-27 after Scout Smith drained a pair of pressure-packed free throws with 10 ticks left on the clock.

As a final Turks shot hit the back of the rim and bounced away, a weary but triumphant CHS squad rejoiced in the moment. Assessing the future will come later.

For the moment, the Wolves snap a three-game losing skid, while rising to 3-2 in North Sound Conference play, 5-7 overall.

They are in third-place, a game back of Cedar Park Christian (4-1), two off of King’s (5-0).

Granite Falls (2-3), Sultan (1-4) and South Whidbey (0-5) are in Coupeville’s rear-view mirror.

After four straight games on the road, CHS gets to play at home for the first time in a month, kicking off a four-game home-stand Jan. 15 with a game against Granite Falls.

As they head back to Whidbey, there is one potentially huge dark cloud hanging over the Wolves, however.

That’s the status of their leading scorer and rebounder, senior captain Lindsey Roberts.

The four-year varsity veteran, #23 all-time on the girls basketball career scoring chart, left Friday’s game early after suffering a dislocated and broken left ring finger.

The Wolves were already down another starter before they left Whidbey, with junior post player Hannah Davidson on crutches after spraining her ankle in practice earlier in the week.

Minus the duo, Coupeville’s remaining players stepped up big-time.

Unable to score for almost the entire first quarter, trailing by eight late in the third, the Wolves rallied to take their first lead of the night midway through the fourth quarter.

The 23-21 advantage came courtesy two free throws from Scout Smith, capping a 10-0 Wolf surge on which CHS scored mainly from the charity stripe.

Chelsea Prescott rippled the nets for four straight free throws to end the third, with the latter two set up by a huge offensive rebound from freshman Ja’Kenya Hoskins.

Fellow frosh Izzy Wells opened the fourth with her own pair of freebies, then senior captain Ema Smith drained a jumper before Scout Smith’s magic.

That set up a wild final couple of minutes, as the teams went through four ties down the stretch, though Coupeville never surrendered the lead after gaining it.

With Roberts and her 408 career points missing, Ema Smith played out of her mind, scoring a game-high 14, including six of those points with the game on the line.

Following up her early fourth-quarter jumper, she took control of the paint, scoring twice on power moves set up by nice feeds from her teammates.

First Prescott fired a laser shot through a maze of defenders, dropping the ball right on Ema’s waiting fingertips for a shot that went up, bounced around the rim 12 times, then softly flopped through the net.

Next time down the court it was Avalon Renninger running the point with precision, flicking a set-up pass to the hottest Wolf on the floor, who promptly banked the ball right back through the hoop.

Ema Smith’s final basket staked the Wolves to a 27-25 lead with a hair over a minute to play, and then things got a bit out of control.

As in neither team could hold on to the ball, exchanging turnovers on a series of wild passes which skipped every which way, before heading out of bounds and into the stands, which sit really close to the floor in Sultan.

The Turks finally broke through with 17 second to go, scoring their first field goal in a 10-minute span, knocking down a running layup to knot the game and give their fans a brief glimmer of hope.

Except Scout Smith is the Crusher of Spirits, and she fulfilled her role of becoming a full-fledged hardwood serial killer, gutting an entire town with two jabs.

Knocked to the floor and fouled by a hyped-up Turk, Scooter stared down an entire gym, sliding both of her free throws through the net, barely rippling the twine while never betraying a single emotion.

Something died, hard, in Sultan at that moment, both in their girls basketball team and the town itself.

And Scout Smith liked it.

As did her coach.

Scout has struggled all season with free throws,” David King said. “But tonight, CLUTCH!”

Sultan hurried down court and did get off a shot right before the buzzer, but, with the Wolf defense up in the shooter’s face, the desperation heave never had a chance.

The win capped a game that could have gone really badly in the early going.

Having lost Roberts, the Wolves failed to score until the final seconds of the first quarter. Thanks to a gritty defense, the deficit was just 5-0 when Ema Smith pulled in a pass from Scout Smith and buried a three-ball from the top of the arc.

Another trey from the Wolf senior and a handful of free throws kept Coupeville close, but it still trailed 14-10 at the half and 21-13 late in the third.

Coupeville had just one regular field goal through three quarters – a jumper from Renninger set up by a nice pass from Nicole Laxton – using a mix of free throws and three-balls to stay close.

However they scored, the Wolves never lost heart, something huge in King’s book.

“I told the players that they rallied without Hannah and Lindsey and got a great win. Very, very proud of the team!,” he said. “Late in the game in a timeout, I told the five players, isn’t this fun!”

Ema played well, and she and Scout led us,” King added. “Izzy and Ja’Kenya played well and stepped up. One offensive and one defensive.”

Prescott (6), Scout Smith (5), Renninger (2) and Wells (2) combined for 15 points, while Ema Smith’s 14 was a season-high.

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Morgan Stevens tossed in four points and played inspired defense Tuesday as the Coupeville JV girls basketball team squashed Sultan. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

First, the great news. Then, the good news.

The top buzz coming out of the world of Coupeville High School JV girls basketball concerns Kylie Chernikoff, who is off her crutches and due back at practice.

One of the hardest-working Wolves in the program, the sophomore has been recovering after hurting her ankle, and her return should deliver a nice jolt to her team’s defense and intangibles.

And, the news gets better, as the team she will be rejoining just shredded visiting Sultan 34-18 Tuesday, capturing its fourth-straight win.

Now 2-0 in North Sound Conference action, 4-3 overall, Amy King’s squad, which has shuffled players all season, is just starting to find its groove.

Imagine if the roster ever solidifies for two games in a row.

No matter which lineup King has to throw at opposing teams, she has multiple weapons at her disposal, as the Turks found out to their great detriment.

Leading from start to finish Tuesday, the Wolves needed just one play to effectively break the collective backs of the Turks.

It came from fab frosh Audrianna Shaw, who rolled around a defender and buried a running hook shot off the glass in the game’s opening moments.

If Sultan thought it still had at least a chance, that quickly vanished, as well.

Anya Leavell, snatching one of her three steals, beat the crowd to the basket, flying coast to coast, while switching hands at the last second. That allowed her to evade a trailing defender and slap the ball home with ease.

From there, it was pretty much all-Coupeville, all-the-time, whether Abby Mulholland was droppin’ jumpers, with Ja’Kenya Hoskins and Leavell feeding her with great set-up passes, or Morgan Stevens suddenly erupting.

The Wolf freshman, a solid role player who continues to show growth in her first year on the hardwood, had a second-quarter run where she brought her JV teammates, and their varsity counterparts, to their feet.

First, Stevens connected on a jumper, set up by a thread-the-needle pass from Kiara Contreras, then she went big-time, backing down her defender and lofting up a ball that banked off the glass and hit pay-dirt.

Inspired by her play on the offensive end of the floor, Stevens ramped up her game on the defensive end, as well, attacking the Sultan ball-handler and barking out “ball, ball, ball!!” like a new version of Chernikoff.

Up 16-7 at the half, with four different players having scored four points apiece, Coupeville continued to share the ball after the break.

Contreras, in particular, played with real precision, wheeling and dealing with flair while running the point for the Wolves.

Kiara had great selfless passing,” King said. “The highlight of the first half to me was her pass out to Morgan.

“It’s so nice to see these girls finding their teammates.”

Along with her passing, Contreras also showed off a deadly jumper, netting a third-quarter bucket with a ball which barely rippled the net as it dropped through.

Keeping alive the selfless theme of the night, that bucket came off a rebound and kick-out from Hoskins, who made the pass while weighed down by a Turk draped across her back.

Coupeville spread out its scoring, with six of 10 active players landing in the book.

Shaw and Leavell each rattled the rim for 10 points, while Mulholland (6), Stevens (4), Izzy Wells (2), and Contreras (2) also scored.

Mulholland yanked down eight rebounds, Shaw pilfered four steals, and the trio of Kylie Van Velkinburgh, Alana Mihill and Mollie Bailey all contributed defensive scrappiness.

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Junior guard Scout Smith threw down a career-high 15 points Tuesday, sparking Coupeville’s varsity basketball squad to a huge win over Sultan. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

I give you two players.

One is a pass-first, defend-second and maybe, possibly, shoot-third point guard.

The other one was coming back from a bad fall which left her wearing a neck brace in a faraway ER just a couple of days ago.

Jump to Tuesday, however, and Scout Smith and Chelsea Prescott were something else entirely — rampaging, lights-out scorers intent on kidney-punching their rivals with sweet jumpers, silky layups and perfectly-lofted free throws.

Carrying a bigger chunk of the offensive game plan than normal, Smith and Prescott combined for 27 points, sparking the Coupeville High School varsity girls basketball squad to a 44-34 rout of visiting Sultan.

The win, the third-straight and fourth in the last five games for the Wolves, lifts them to 2-0 in North Sound Conference play, 4-4 overall.

It leaves Coupeville in a tie atop the league standings with state power King’s headed to a showdown in the new year.

Both teams finish 2018 with non-conference tilts, then meet in Shoreline Jan. 4 to kick off the remainder of the 10-game league schedule.

While King’s is one of the premier programs in the state, Coupeville can’t be overlooked. Especially after proving they have far more than just one offensive option.

With leading scorer Lindsey Roberts running wild on defense Tuesday, her younger teammates stepped up and eased her job on the offensive end of the floor.

Smith knocked down nine of her game-high (and career-high) 15 in the second quarter, when the Wolves seized control of the game, while Prescott banked in six of her 12 in the third frame.

Coupeville entered the game having broken 50 points in back-to-back games, and while the 44 they scored Tuesday was their third-best team total of the season, it took a few moments for the Wolves to get going.

Actually, more like a few minutes, as CHS didn’t hit a field goal for the first seven minutes and 52 seconds of the game.

The unforgiving rim finally played nice with just eight ticks left in the opening quarter, and only when Avalon Renninger slashed to the hoop, split three defenders and dared the hoop to refuse her.

It didn’t dare.

Thanks to stingy defense, and three different Wolves – Ema Smith, Scout Smith and Roberts – hitting free throws, Coupeville was just a bucket behind when Renninger drained her runner.

Escaping the first quarter with a hard-fought 6-6 tie, the Wolves figured enough tip-toeing around. Time to drop the hammer.

Not that the scrappy Turks went down all that easily, however.

Scout Smith kicked off her whirlwind second quarter by tossing in a running bank shot from the left, while being roughed-up in full view of blind refs, but Sultan responded with a modest 6-2 run of its own.

A three-ball from Ema Smith, who stopped on a dime, rose up and dropped the trey right in the face of her defender, kept the Wolves close, while a put-back on a rebound by Prescott gave CHS a brief lead.

Coupeville finally broke through for good midway through the second, and it came thanks to Scout Smith seizing the moment.

The junior guard takes great delight in setting up her teammates with pinpoint passes, but on this night, she pulled the ball back into her body frequently and went to town.

Charging head-long into the fray, keeping Turk defenders backpedaling and falling over themselves, “Scooter” tossed a swooping layup high off the backboard, drained a sweet fall-away jumper, then twirled a lil’ curler that kissed the glass and plopped through the net with a happy little sigh.

Playing in front of big brothers CJ and Hunter, in town for the holidays, Scout Smith was making a statement – my court, my time.

And she was getting help from all sides, whether it was Roberts and Hannah Davidson crashing the boards, Tia Wurzrainer driving Sultan ball-handlers insane with her smothering defense, or her team’s superb passing.

Coupeville was as patient Tuesday as it has ever been this season, with one Wolf after another making the smart pass, looking for the best option, setting each other up, then slapping hands after made buckets.

Ema Smith and Prescott capped the first half with a play which perfectly epitomized the team-first style the Wolves were rockin’ all game.

Soaring between two Turks, Ema Smith yanked down an offensive rebound, then was knocked to her knees as she came back to Earth.

Instead of losing the ball, instead of traveling, she kept the ball held aloft, flicking it to Prescott, who was alone on the side, before going down face-first.

Prescott, without skipping a beat, twirled into the air, lofted the ball, and splashed home the jumper.

Ema Smith, sprawled on the floor (and possibly untying the shoelaces of any Turks near her hands), pumped her fist, then jumped up and joined her sophomore teammate as they loped back on defense.

Up 21-18 at the half, the Wolves continued to play smart ball after the break, stretching the lead out inch by inch and never giving Sultan a chance to carve into its deficit.

The Turks hit their only three-ball of the night early in the third, cutting the lead to a bucket for a millisecond, but Coupeville responded with authority.

Prescott and Scout Smith continued to knock down buckets, and once the lead blossomed to eight, the game stayed that way the remainder of the night.

The few times Sultan got a bucket down the stretch, the Wolves immediately answered.

And never more emphatically than when Coupeville broke the press with a quick pass to Roberts, who snatched the ball at mid-court, spun, and thundered the length of the court in about 1.3 steps before slapping home a psyche-crushing layup.

Coupeville didn’t play a perfect game, maybe, missing a fair amount of free throws for one thing, but it did play an inspired game.

There were 11 Wolves in uniform, and 11 Wolves used whatever amount of time they were given by coach David King to make an impact in their own personal way.

It was Nicole Laxton, down in the pits, wrestling for a rebound and yanking the ball away from her rival, her normally sunny exterior transformed by a glare which could cut through steel.

It was Davidson, shutting down the paint, and kicking beautiful passes to open teammates, a role player proving she can be a weapon on both ends of the floor.

And it was Wurzrainer, a defensive dynamo on the soccer field, who brings a burning intensity to her role as the spiritual successor to revered ball-hawks of past days like Kacie Kiel and Julia Myers.

Locked-in and ready to knock you on your keister, Wurzrainer and running mate Renninger are the specialists every good team needs and wants.

Scout Smith’s 15 gives her 99 career points at the varsity level, leaving her just a free throw shy of becoming only the 97th Wolf girl to reach triple-digit scoring since 1975.

Prescott is hot on her heels, and her 12 Tuesday gives her 88 on her short career (#104 all-time), while making it very likely there will soon be four active Wolf girls in the 100-point club.

Already there are Roberts (#25 with 382 points) and Ema Smith (#79 with 135), who went for seven and six, respectively, against Sultan.

Renninger tossed in three points, Mollie Bailey tickled the twines for a free throw to round out the scoring, while freshmen Ja’Kenya Hoskins and Izzy Wells also saw floor time.

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Coupeville’s Mason Grove connected on a trio of three-balls Tuesday, but Sultan answered with 12 treys of its own in a 65-47 Turk win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sometimes all you can do is shake your head and mutter “Dang…”

When your team plays strongly, has an early lead and then gets buried under an avalanche of three-balls, the kind of avalanche where six different rival players hit from behind the arc, there’s not much else left to do.

It was that kind of night Tuesday for the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball team, as visiting Sultan nailed 12 treys en route to a 65-47 win.

The loss, coming in the North Sound Conference opener, drops the Wolves to 0-1 in league play, 0-6 overall.

Even while losing, CHS did not play badly.

The Wolves shot out to an 8-1 lead after freshman Hawthorne Wolfe banged home back-to-back three-balls of his own.

One came during a coast-to-coast jaunt by the fab frosh, who leads his team in scoring this season, while the second was a rainbow set up by a beautifully-timed kick-out pass from deep in the paint by Ulrik Wells.

With Wells and Gavin Knoblich each slapping home a bucket of their own, and Mason Grove exploding off the bench to caress the net with his own three-ball, Coupeville led by as many as five points in the first quarter.

But what seemed like a minor slow-down, with Sultan scoring the final two buckets of the opening frame on inside moves, became something far, far worse.

The free-flowing Wolf offense on display in the game’s early moments sputtered and wheezed for a bit, as the Turks ran off the first 12 points of the second quarter.

The 16-0 surge, which crossed quarters but never slowed down, turned a five-point deficit into an 11-point lead for the visitors, and they would never relinquish the advantage.

Coupeville finally broke the dry spell on a long jumper from Jered Brown, and the Wolves scraped back to within six, but then a disturbing trend starting rearing its head.

Sultan, once it started shooting from behind the arc, rarely missed, and the Turks, time and again, used an artfully-shot three-ball to blunt every single Wolf run for the remainder of the game.

Cameron Gunderson was the primary culprit, swishing six treys as he rolled up a game-high 22 points, but nearly every one of his Turk teammates was locked-in, as well.

The third quarter was a prime example.

CHS cuts the lead to 12 off of an offensive rebound and put-back by Sean Toomey-Stout?

Bam. Bam. Back-to-back Turk three-balls.

The Wolves rebound to cut a 20-point margin back to 13 right before the end of the third quarter?

Bam. Bam. Bam. Sultan hits two treys to close the quarter and a third to open the final frame.

Coupeville’s best sustained play of the night came right after the Turks drained that three-ball to open the fourth quarter.

A 10-0 run, helped out by four free throws, Wolfe making a dash coast-to-coast for a layup and Knoblich slapping home a basket off of a steal and dish by Toomey-Stout, made things interesting.

And then, one last time … bam, bam, as the Turk three-ball express made its final stops.

“Give Sultan credit where it’s due,” said Coupeville coach Brad Sherman. “They shot the ball extremely well tonight. Extremely well.”

While CHS couldn’t match Sultan’s long-range launching (the Wolves hit six treys of their own, with Grove netting three), Coupeville held its own in other areas.

The Wolves won the turnover battle, a special point of pride for Sherman, and a young team in transition continues to grow. The 47 points were a season-high.

“We moved the ball well on offense and got good looks; I’m happy with that,” Sherman said. “I thought our offensive movement continues to improve.

“Also, as a coaching staff, we continue to be impressed with the effort and work being put in by our guys,” he added. “They’ll be here tomorrow, heads up and ready to work, and that’s huge.”

Coupeville will have some time to fine-tune things before its next league game.

The Wolves travel to Concrete Friday for a non-conference clash, then have trips to Port Townsend and Nooksack Valley ahead on the schedule.

CHS doesn’t return to league play until Jan. 4, when it travels to King’s to kick off the final nine games of the 10-game conference season.

Tuesday night the Wolves spread out their offensive load, with eight of the nine players who saw floor time scoring,

Brown singed the nets for a team-high 11 points, with Wolfe and Grove chipping in with nine apiece.

Wells (6), Toomey-Stout (5), Knoblich (4), Koa Davison (2), and Jacobi Pilgrim (1) also scored, while Dane Lucero hit the boards with intensity.

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Freshman Logan Martin scored 12 of his game-high 19 in the fourth Tuesday, as the Coupeville JV almost pulled off a come-from-behind win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

All the shots Logan Martin has put up over the years are paying off.

The Coupeville High School freshman has been one of the most consistent scoring threats the Wolf JV basketball squad has, something he more than proved Tuesday night.

Rattling home 12 of his game-high 19 in the fourth quarter, Martin sparked a pressure-packed CHS comeback against a tough Sultan squad.

Trailing by seven entering the final frame, the Wolves snatched their first lead of the game with three minutes to go, but couldn’t hold on in the waning seconds, falling 52-46.

The loss, coming in the North Sound Conference opener, drops Coupeville’s young guns to 0-1 in league play, 3-3 overall.

While he was hoping for a win, Wolf JV coach Chris Smith exited wearing a huge smile, pleased with the grit his team showed.

Especially with virtually no bench, as Coupeville, missing three key players due to injuries and illness, only went six deep on the night.

“Best we’ve played this season!,” Smith said. “Great to see the guys get after it.”

The Wolves trailed for the first 29 minutes of a 32-minute game, but never let Sultan slip too far away.

That set up the potential for a fourth-quarter thriller, and Martin and Co. delivered.

Down 33-26 after three quarters, CHS roared to life in the final frame, going on a 17-6 run in which Martin threw down 12 points.

After hitting a sweet fall-away, slapping home a layup off of a steal, and netting a turnaround jumper in the paint, he wandered outside the three-point arc and began to rain the pain.

The first of back-to-back three-balls off of Martin’s sizzlin’ fingertips pushed the Wolves up 40-39, then the follow-up stretched Coupeville’s lead to four points.

He wasn’t the only Wolf making sweet music with the net, as Daniel Olson sank a long jumper under pressure and Grady Rickner hit an awkward-looking, but very-effective, three ball while being severely bumped by a defender in the left corner.

Sultan was nothing if not resilient, however, immediately connecting on a one-handed runner in the paint and a three-ball of its own to reclaim the lead at 44-43.

With the table set for a fingernail-chomping finale, CHS knotted the game at 44 on an Olson free throw, then snatched back the momentum with a major show of force down in the paint.

Sophomore big man TJ Rickner, who has taken huge steps in his first season, yanked down a rebound in a forest of Turks, then powered back up.

As he banked home the ball from up close to make it 46-44, his coach screamed “Yes, TJ, yes!!” and it was time for Sultan to collapse.

But, as quickly as it arrived, the fairy tale ending evaporated for Coupeville, as the Turks closed the game on a methodical 8-0 “run” to seal their harder-than-expected win.

Half of the points came via free throws, as Sultan capped a strong evening at the charity stripe by netting its final four opportunities.

The torrid fourth quarter capped a game which stayed very close from start to finish.

Cody Roberts splatted a long three-ball in the first quarter, while Martin was a force on both ends of the floor, dropping a mix of turnaround j’s and three balls, and also skying to reject a pair of Turk shots.

Still, Sultan slipped in enough in the early going to nail down a 13-9 lead after one quarter, then stretch the margin to 23-18 at the half.

Coupeville wrapped a pair of treys, one from Grady Rickner and one from Olson, around a short jumper from Tucker Hall, to keep things close in the third and set up the frantic finale.

Martin’s 19 points represent his best showing as a high school player, while Olson and Grady Rickner backed him with eight apiece.

TJ Rickner (4), Hall (4) and Roberts (3) also scored, as all six Wolves to see floor time scratched their names in the scoring column.

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