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Chaos reigns on the baseball diamond. (Ryan Blouin photo)

The good news is they rallied. The bad news is it was too little, too late.

Returning from Spring Break Monday, the Coupeville High School varsity baseball squad started off cold, then warmed up a bit in the latter stages of a 9-4 loss to visiting Sultan.

The non-conference defeat drops the Wolves to 3-7 on the season and kick-starts what could be a very busy week.

CHS is slated to travel to Darrington Tuesday, host La Conner Thursday, then trek to Forks Saturday, with the first two of those rumbles against Northwest 2B/1B League rivals.

With 10 regular season games down and nine left to play, the Wolves hope the second half of the campaign plays out like the second half of Monday’s game.

Held hitless until Cole White plunked a leadoff single in the bottom of the fourth, Coupeville was in a 7-0 hole at that point.

Four errors on defense stung, and an inability to get anything going on offense didn’t help on a cold, windy, slightly rain-splattered day.

White’s base knock finally lit a fire under the Wolves, as they scratched out two runs in the fourth, one more in the fifth, and a final tally in the seventh.

But while Coupeville sliced the lead down to 7-3, it never got closer than that.

Sultan tacked on a pair of runs in the top of the sixth to stretch the margin back out to six runs, before CHS briefly mounted a rally in its final at-bats.

Peyton Caveness thumped his second double of the day, followed by an RBI triple from Johnny Porter, but the Turks escaped thanks to a double play and strikeout.

Sultan finished the day with an 8-5 lead in hits, though the Wolves eked out a 6-4 advantage in walks.

Steven Gonzalez, Aidyn McDermott, and Landon Roberts each earned a pair of free passes, while Coop Cooper collected a single to round out the hit parade.

Coupeville used four pitchers on the day, with Seth Woollet whiffing five in 4.2 innings of work to carry the biggest portion of the load.

He was joined on the hill by Jack Porter, Camden Glover, and Cooper, who combined for another five strikeouts.

It was Cooper’s season debut on the mound, and the Wolf sophomore pitched a perfect seventh inning, setting two batters down on K’s before inducing a groundout back to his glove.

Jack Porter flings heat. (Ember Light photo)

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Emma Leavitt (left) and Inara Maund are a great support crew for fellow CMS hoops players. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Three more names in the scoring column.

Making their next-to-last road trip of the season Monday, the Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball teams went bucket for bucket with host Sultan across 2.5 games.

As they did so, three more Wolves — Selah Rivera, Laken Simpson, and Taylor Marrs — recorded their first points of the campaign.

That gives CMS 29 players with at least a bucket heading into the season finale Tuesday at South Whidbey.

That trip will be a much-shorter affair than Monday’s march to the wilds of Sultan, where “it was rowdy!” according to Wolf coach Brooke Crowder.

How the day played out:

 

Level 1:

An immediate rematch, as these two schools tangled in Coupeville four days prior.

Sultan came out on top again, but it was closer this time, as the Wolves, who fell by 17 Thursday, lost 33-21 on the road.

The defeat drops CMS, which was missing top scorer Tenley Stuurmans for a second-straight game, to 1-6.

Lillian Ketterling, zipping around the court, paced the Wolf attack with a team-high eight points as she continues to blossom into a dangerous scoring threat.

Tamsin Ward backed her up with four points, with Adie Maynes (3), Marrs (2), Simpson (2), Ari Cunningham (1), and Sydney Van Dyke (1) joining the scoring effort.

Coupeville’s top squad also got quality minutes from Olivia Hall, Ava Lucero, and Chelsi Stevens.

 

Level 2:

The hottest team in Wolf Nation netted the season sweep of Sultan, downing the Turks 18-13 thanks to a fourth-quarter comeback.

CMS, now 5-2 on the season, actually went scoreless in the first quarter but turned up the defensive heat and trailed just 2-0 at the break.

Proving the clampdown was no fluke, the Wolves held the Turks scoreless across the second seven-minute segment, pulling ahead 5-2 at the half.

A temporary slowdown on offense cost Coupeville in the third quarter, however, and it went into the final frame trailing 9-7 in a tense, low-scoring affair.

The Wolves needed a spark, and they got one from Kennedy O’Neill and Willow Leedy-Bonifas, who combined to outscore Sultan 11-4 down the stretch.

O’Neill banked in seven of her game-high 10 points in the final quarter, while her running mate tossed in four of her six.

Defensive stalwart Amelia Crowder rounded out the attack with a third-quarter bucket, while Amaiya Curry, Elizabeth Marshall, Sage Stavros, Sophia Batterman, Allison Powers, and Isa Mc Fetridge played key roles in the win.

 

Level 3:

These two didn’t play Thursday, as Sultan didn’t have enough healthy girls to field a third team.

This time around, they made it through two quarters, with the Turks holding on for a 13-8 win that leaves the Wolves at 3-2 on the year.

Zayne Roos came alive for CMS, scoring four points to lead the way, with Rivera and Cameron Van Dyke both tossing in a bucket.

Claire Lachnit, Brooklyn Pope, Cassandra Powers, Emma Cushman, Kaleigha Millison, Annaliese Powers, and Zariyah Allen rounded out the rotation for the Wolves.

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Winner, winner, who bought a chicken dinner at PC? It’s Wolf ballhawks Amaiya Curry (left) and Willow Leedy-Bonifas, that’s who. (Alysabeth Leedy photo)

One for them, one for us, one for nobody.

The Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball squads split a pair of games Thursday with visiting Sultan, while not playing a third contest due to sickness.

It was the Turks who begged out of a Level 3 bout thanks to missing a bunch of ill players.

That kept budding Wolf hoops stars like Brooklyn Pope and Cameron Van Dyke sitting in the bleachers, and not waging war down in the paint.

How the rest of the day played out:

 

Level 2:

The Wolves dominated on both sides of the ball, bringing the offensive tsunami in the first half and the defensive heat after the break.

All in all, that added up to a resounding 26-8 win, lifting CMS to a rock-solid 4-2 record on the season.

With coach Bennett Richter working his magic on the sideline, Coupeville came out and quickly jumped on the Turks, running out to an 8-2 lead after one quarter of play.

Willow Leedy-Bonifas had the electric touch early, twice rolling hard to the hoop and slapping home layups, while Sophia Batterman and Elizabeth Marshall collected offensive rebounds, putting them back up and in.

Batterman continued to torment Sultan in the second quarter, banking in a pair of buckets, while lethal leftie Kennedy O’Neill roared to the front of the attack, snatching loose balls and rumbling end-to-end on consecutive plays.

Coupeville stretched the lead out to 20-6 by the half, punctuating things with a one-woman highlight reel crafted by Amelia Crowder.

Patrolling the paint like a young Lauren Jackson, she terrorized the Turks in the final moments of the half, rejecting three shots, before banking in a bucket off a sweet feed from Isabella de Souza Oliviera Mc Fetridge.

While offense was the name of the game in the first half, buckets became very hard to obtain in the final 14 minutes.

Sultan eked out a 2-0 “run” in the third, as both teams combined to find 10,003 different ways to get balls to spin back out of the net.

After that, the Wolves clamped down, holding Sultan scoreless in the fourth, while netting a couple of baskets of their own.

Leedy-Bonifas collected a putback, Sage Stavros banked in a silky shot from the top of the key, and O’Neill ended things with a jumper that made the net merrily bounce.

Six of nine Wolves scored, with Leedy-Bonifas (8), Batterman (6), and O’Neill (6) leading the way.

Stavros, Marshall, and Crowder each added a bucket, with Amaiya Curry, Allison Powers, and de Souza Oliveria Mc Fetridge working hard on defense.

 

Ari Cunningham sells out on defense.

Level 1:

Missing several key players, the Wolves got stung in the second quarter en route to a 31-14 loss.

The defeat drops Coupeville to 1-5 on the season, though that’s a deceptive record when you consider the talent wearing red and black.

The nine girls in uniform put up a considerable fight, scrapping with the physical Turks down to the final plays in a rough-and-tumble affair.

Chelsi Stevens ripped a rebound free and knocked down a late shot while being body-checked, and she wasn’t the only Wolf to feel the fury of wayward elbows, knees, and fingers.

Teammate Ari Cunningham hit the floor hard on one play, then got up and hit a free throw while eyeballing the Turk who tweaked her.

And then there was Ava Lucero, charging into the heat of battle like a Valkyrie, throwing bodies left and right, giving back as good as she got.

Caught in a tangle of players, she flipped a foe as she went to the hardwood, surely bringing a smile to dad Aaron’s face if he was in the stands.

“Sweet sassy molassy! I got me another wrestler!”

The game was close after one quarter, with Sultan edging out to an 8-4 lead thanks to a putback with a mere two seconds left on the clock.

Unfortunately for Coupeville, that was the start of a game-busting 14-0 tear for the Turks, who built an 18-4 lead heading into the half, then opened the third with a bucket in the paint.

Lillian Ketterling, a lightning-quick warrior in braids who spent the game running the offense under great duress, finally broke Coupeville’s cold streak.

She banked home a bucket, twirling the ball off the glass with a pleasing lil’ thunk, before coming right back to pull off a breakaway.

Utilizing her runner’s speed, Ketterling brought the zing back, sending a ripple of excitement through the stands filled with her classmates and family.

And she wasn’t done, fighting off taller girls to convert an offensive board into a bucket in the fourth quarter as Coupeville made its final stand.

The Wolves might have lost the game, but Ketterling, Lucero, and fellow scrappers such as Taylor Marrs, Laken Simpson, and Olivia Hall had some moments when they made sure the Turks felt a sting down deep in their souls.

Here to rumble, always, win or lose.

Ketterling finished with a team-best six points, while ever-plucky Adie Maynes survived and thrived during her visit to Thunderdome, rattling the rim for three.

Sydney Van Dyke and Stevens chipped in with a bucket each, with Cunninghams made free throw so technically perfect it could be displayed in a how-to-play-the-game video.

 

Next up:

Coupeville closes its season with back-to-back road trips next week, traveling to Sultan Mar. 4 and South Whidbey Mar. 5.

The hope is the rematch with the Turks will be a three-game affair.

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Haylee Armstrong (left) and Capri Anter (middle) combined to rattle the rims for 22 points Saturday in Sultan. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Pretend the second quarter didn’t happen.

In that scenario, the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team would have left Sultan Saturday night with a win.

Unfortunately for the Wolves, the scorebook keepers insist on following the rules, and that leaves Cow Town’s hardcourt warriors on the short end of a 38-31 score.

The non-conference road loss drops CHS to 1-1 on the season, with a busy week ahead.

The young Wolves, who played three 8th graders Saturday, vie at home twice in the next six days, while hopping on the bus once.

Wednesday night they host Orcas Island, then it’s off to Friday Harbor on Friday, before a return visit to the CHS gym Saturday to square off against South Whidbey.

That night the Wolf JV will be part of the 50th anniversary of their school’s girls’ hoops program.

Saturday in Sultan, Kassie O’Neil’s squad came out sharp, jumping to an 8-3 lead at the first break.

Freshman Haylee Armstrong had the hot hand, banking in four of her game-high 15 points in the first frame, while Lexis Drake and Bryley Gilbert added buckets.

Kassie O’Neil’s hardcourt warriors play at home twice this coming week.

The second quarter didn’t go quite as well, however, as the host Turks used a 17-6 surge to snatch the lead back.

Down 20-14 at the break, the Wolves kept things close in the second half.

Capri Anter scored all five of her team’s points in the third, as CHS hung tough in a 6-5 defense-first frame, before the teams put together a 12-12 donnybrook in the finale.

Cousins accounted for 22 of Coupeville’s 31 points, with Anter popping for seven to back Armstrong’s 15.

8th grader Tenley Stuurmans rippled the nets for five, while Drake (2) and Gilbert (2) rounded out the scoring attack.

Desi Ramirez-Vasquez, Ari Cunningham, and Chelsi Stevens also saw floor time, with the latter two in that group being 8th graders who are playing up this winter.

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On their way to deliver another beat-down. (Michelle Glass photo)

Call him Knute Rockne.

Whatever Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball coach Brad Sherman said at halftime Saturday, it lit a fire under his squad.

Down by six at the break in Sultan, the Wolves tore up the floor in the second half, turning a nailbiter into a 58-48 romp.

The non-conference road win over a 1A school which is slated to move to 2A next year lifts lil’ 2B Coupeville to 3-1 on the season.

It also gives the Wolves a nice bounce back after taking their first loss of the season and sends them into a busy week on a high note.

CHS hits the road again, and again, playing at Granite Falls Tuesday and Friday Harbor on Friday, before nabbing a rare home game Saturday against archrival South Whidbey.

Playing in front of a chippy crowd in Sultan, the Wolves hung tough during a back-and-forth first half.

Chase Anderson got Coupeville on the scoreboard first, hauling in a long football-style pass from Logan Downes, before the latter nailed a soft jumper of his own.

The Wolf senior had a memorable opening frame, firing another long outlet pass to Cole White for a breakaway layup, and netting the first of his five three-balls.

Downes also put up a shot which got stuck in the gap between the rim and the backboard, though he shrugged that off and kept firing.

Most of a 3-1 team. (Michael Davidson photo)

Up 11-10 at the first break, after thwarting two Sultan shots in the final three seconds, Coupeville opened the scoring in the second quarter thanks to a nifty play from Anderson.

Intended or not — and that was the subject of much debate — the super sophomore froze the defense, appeared to pass the ball to himself by bouncing it off a rival, then slashed to the hoop for a sweet layup.

Sultan responded by mounting its best run of the night, closing the half on a 15-6 run.

A trio of three-balls hurt, while a buzzer-beating turnaround jumper really stung.

Coupeville got a pair of treys, one from Downes and one from Ryan Blouin, during the stretch, but found itself trailing 25-19 at the break.

Not to worry, as Sherman said whatever he said, and, to a man, the Wolves responded.

First up was Downes, who went off for 16 of his season-high 33 points in the third quarter, sticking in knives from every angle and twisting them with wild glee.

Back-to-back three balls tied the game up, and a three-point play the hard way staked Coupeville to a lead it would not relinquish.

White, trying not to get hit in the face by a defender for the third straight game, stayed a step ahead of the Turks, draining a short jumper before slashing to the hoop for a gorgeous layup.

With William Davidson and the Battlin’ Bronec Brothers, twin titans Hunter and Hurlee, hitting the boards with passion, CHS thwarted the Turks from grabbing many second-chance opportunities.

CHS coach Brad Sherman strolls back to the bench as his Wolves prepare to attack. (Michelle Glass photo)

Sultan, down 40-28 late in the third, did cut the deficit back to 42-38 heading into the fourth, but Coupeville had an answer every time.

Anderson, bounding airborne and yanking down a pass like the football receiver he also is, came up with a crunch time bucket, while the Wolves closed things out at the free throw line.

After a Turk three-ball cut the lead down to 50-46 with about 90 seconds to play, Downes crashed through the defense for a game-sealing bucket.

From there, Anderson, White, and Downes calmly flicked charity shots through the rim, each flip of the net a slap to the face of Turk Nation.

Along with the win, the night was rich in history, as Downes moved from #13 to a tie for #9 on the CHS boys’ career scoring list.

Now sitting with 869 points and counting, he’s even with Denny Clark, just six points away from unseating Sherman (874) for #8 on a chart compiled over the course of 107 seasons.

Downes passed Wolf legends Hunter Smith (847), Bill Jarrell (855), and Arik Garthwaite (867) Saturday.

White and Anderson each banked in nine to support Downes and his 33, with Blouin (3), Hunter Bronec (2), and Hurlee Bronec (2) also scoring against the Turks.

Nick Guay, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, and Davidson rounded out the rotation.

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