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Posts Tagged ‘The Bush School’

Sean Toomey-Stout tossed in 12 points Saturday as Coupeville clashed with The Bush School. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They are a team in transition. Full of promise but searching for the perfect fit.

Somewhat young, largely inexperienced, learning on the fly, the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball team has moments when everything clicks, and moments when … they don’t.

Saturday night was a classic example, as the Wolves, even playing without their lone senior, came out focused and clicking on all cylinders, set their foes back on their heels, but couldn’t quite complete the full knock-out.

Unable to stop the suddenly nuclear Kai Osaka, who poured in 19 of his game-high 26 points after the halftime break, Coupeville saw a winnable game slip away, falling 49-30 to The Bush School.

The home non-conference loss drops the Wolves to 0-2.

In the moment, it stings a bit, as Coupeville led from the opening tip until midway through the second quarter, and was still down just four at the half.

But the effort shown, the hustle and desire, and the willingness to learn and improve, provides some salve for Wolf coach Brad Sherman.

“We played a lot tougher (than in our first game) and rebounded the ball a lot better,” he said. “That was very nice to see.

“We came out really strongly in the first quarter and really controlled the beginning of the game,” Sherman said. “The challenge for us is to stay patient in our offense and sustain that patience.”

Coupeville opened the game minus senior captain Dane Lucero, who was earning scholarship money on a visit to Washington State University.

The plus side was the return of big man Gavin Knoblich, who rolled his ankle before the first game, and point guard Jered Brown, who sat out much of the second half against Oak Harbor after being drilled in the chest.

With Brown directing traffic, the Wolves came out firing.

Mason Grove netted a picture-perfect three-ball from the right side to open the game, then Sean Toomey-Stout went to work on both ends of the floor.

“The Torpedo” slapped home a layup, then juked his way through the paint for another bucket, wrapped around a defensive gem in which he climbed to the ceiling to reject a Bush shot into the parking lot.

The visiting Blazers, while solid on the boards, didn’t boast any players remotely capable of standing eye-to-eye with their coach, 6-foot-9 former U-Dub great and NBA vet Steve Hawes.

That left lanky Wolf junior Ulrik Wells plenty of opportunities to use his 6’4 frame to his advantage, and he responded smartly.

A lil’ bank shot off the glass and two note-perfect free throws, set up by a rebound hauled down in traffic, gave Wells four points in the first quarter and sent Coupeville to the first break up 11-8.

Wells wasn’t done, throwing down an explosive block to open the second quarter, spiking the ball like a volleyball kill artist, setting off the Wolf student section into howls of approval.

Unfortunately for Coupeville, it was right after that when things started to slip away a bit.

The Wolves, who had been netting most of their shots, hit a period where the net was unforgiving, eking out just four points in the second quarter.

A put-back by freshman Hawthorne Wolfe and two charity shots from Knoblich kept CHS close, but a Bush basket off a give-and-go right before the buzzer hurt a bit.

Not as much as the start of the third quarter stung, however.

Osaka hit three-balls on three consecutive trips down the floor to open the second half, and before you could say “ouch,” a four-point game soon slid into dangerous 15-point territory.

To its credit, Coupeville didn’t break, scoring the final five points of the third and four of the first six in the fourth, twice pulling back within eight.

Toomey-Stout, in his second game back since missing his sophomore season with a football injury, was a rampaging wild man, forcing the action by slashing into the paint and using his unique left-handed shooting style to bedevil Bush.

Which is why it hurt so badly when the refs, apparently not interested in letting the game turn back into a thriller, whistled “The Torpedo” for his fifth, and final foul, sending him to the bench to be a vocal fan, and not a sweet-shootin’ savior.

Bush used a 13-2 surge to close the game, as the scoreboard turned deceptive at the end, allowing anyone wandering by for the first time to have the wrong impression about how close the game seemed for much of its duration.

Coupeville spread its offense among six players, with Toomey-Stout’s team-high 12 backed up by six from Wolfe and five from Wells.

Grove’s three came courtesy his long trey, while Knoblich and Davison rounded out the scoring with two points apiece.

Brown, who stayed in the gym working on his shot long after the crowd had vanished, ran the offense with style, Jacobi Pilgrim fought the good war down in the trenches and Jean Lund-Olsen showed off his wheels while shadowing Bush guards.

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Avalon Renninger scored four points, grabbed two boards and was her usual scrappy, ball-hawking self Saturday as Coupeville squared off with The Bush School. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Abby Parrish could not, and would not, miss.

The private school sharpshooter blitzed Coupeville Saturday, tossing in five three-balls en route to an 18-point performance, as The Bush School derailed the young Wolf girls basketball squad 51-27.

The home non-conference loss, which came in a game where CHS played without its leader, senior Lindsey Roberts, drops the Wolves to 0-2.

Without its fleet-footed, long-limbed defensive dynamo, who was earning scholarship money with a visit to Washington State University, Coupeville had trouble slowing down the bigger Bush bangers.

“Their two post players, they hurt us all game,” said CHS coach David King. “Inside on the low block and then beyond the three-point line.”

Toss in an apathetic start, perhaps due to the early weekend start, and a Wolf team which played three freshmen and two sophomores had trouble matching up with a veteran-led rival.

The two teams went three-and-a-half minutes before scoring the game’s first point, but then Parrish drilled back-to-back treys.

Coupeville’s only points in the first seven-minutes-plus came courtesy two free throws from Chelsea Prescott, as shot after shot slid off.

“We had some open looks throughout and many fell short of their mark,” King said. “Just not getting our legs under us.”

The seal on the rim finally broke for the Wolves when Avalon Renninger, hanging in air, got a jumper to pop straight upwards off the back of the rim, then sweetly plop through the waiting net.

While that pulled the Wolves back to within 11-4, they were immediately stung, however, as a Bush player slipped through the crowd to yank down a rebound and put it back up and in right at the first quarter buzzer.

The second quarter was where Bush stuck the dagger in, using a 9-0 run to stretch its lead out to 20.

The biggest bright spot in the frame was freshmen Anya Leavell swishing a long jumper from the right side, netting her first varsity points.

With Roberts gone, and no JV game since Bush only had one team, Leavell and fellow frosh Ja’Kenya Hoskins and Izzy Wells swung up and saw considerable floor time.

Two of the three scored, with Wells banking home a fourth-quarter shot, while Hoskins led Coupeville with seven rebounds.

Things turned for the better after a timeout right before halftime, as the Wolves closed the quarter on a surge of energy, then carried it over to a much-more competitive second half.

“That’s when we started to see a spark,” King said. “Coming out of halftime, we wanted to continue with the energy, and it was there.”

Sophomore sensation Prescott knocked down seven of her team-high nine after the break, netting a three-ball and another shot which missed being a three-ball by a fraction of an inch.

She was also wheeling and dealing with the ball, dishing to Renninger, who dropped a pull-up jumper in the paint during Coupeville’s best run.

That mini-surge included a rebound on which Scout Smith knocked the careening ball right onto the fingertips of teammate Nicole Laxton.

Maybe it was an accident, maybe it was on purpose (it looked on purpose, and fits Smith’s cerebral playing style), but the tip was perfectly-placed.

Wheeling on one foot, while sporting socks decorated with rubber duckies, Laxton drained the put-back, flicking the ball off the glass.

Toss out the first half, and the game was a six-point affair with enough positives to inspire King.

“All three freshmen showed some promise,” he said. “(Senior) Ema (Smith) had some precision passes and held her own at the defensive end in her season debut and Hannah (Davidson) played energized basketball in the second half.

“This is a game that we need to learn from and move forward and work on correcting some things,” King added. “One positive we talked about was ball movement. When we move the ball offensively we are getting open looks. We did a much better job of that in the second half.”

Prescott’s nine-point, five-rebound, one-steal, one-block, one-assist night paced the Wolves, while Scout Smith and Renninger added four points apiece.

Davidson, Laxton, Tia Wurzrainer, Wells and Leavell each tallied two, with the last three from that group all scoring for the first time at the varsity level.

After getting (unnecessary) grief from the refs pre-game about her head band, sophomore point guard Mollie Bailey let the looooong hair braids fly free and brought considerable scrappiness to the floor, rounding out the Wolf roster.

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TJ Rickner was a force on the boards for the Coupeville JV hoops squad, which roared back Saturday to capture a one-point win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Close like champions.

Storming back from an early deficit, the Coupeville High School JV boys basketball squad saved its best for last Saturday, using a fourth-quarter surge to stun The Bush School 34-33.

The non-conference home win, coming in front of an enthusiastic pack of their fellow CHS students, lifts the young Wolves to 1-1 on the season.

Bush struck first, rolling out to a 10-5 lead after one quarter against a Coupeville squad missing three players, including starter Alex Jimenez, who broke his foot the previous day.

The major bright spot in the opening frame was freshman Logan Martin, who did his best to keep the Wolves alive, scoring all of their points in the opening quarter.

Things settled down a bit after that, but, while Coupeville played Bush even through the next two quarters (6-6 and 9-9), it couldn’t shave the lead.

Enter the fourth quarter and ignite the one-two scoring pop of sophomore gunners Daniel Olson and Sage Downes, who promptly fueled a frantic 14-8 game-finishing run.

Olson hit a pair of jumpers, Tucker Hall tossed in a free throw, then Downes burnt the joint down with a pair of three-balls launched from up around Deception Pass.

Downes scored all 11 of his points in the second half, while Martin finished with nine.

TJ Rickner, who was a force on the boards all night, popped for five in support, while Olson (4), Hall (4), and Cody Roberts (1) rounded out the Wolf scoring attack.

Defensive dynamos Miles Davidson and Chris Ruck also saw floor time for Coupeville, which was playing without Jimenez, Xavier Murdy, Grady Rickner and coach Chris Smith.

Scott Fox stepped in to fill Smith’s shoes, picking up his first win as a CHS coach.

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   Matt Hilborn, seen here in an earlier game, was a vacuum at short Thursday afternoon. (John Fisken photo)

They held their own.

Playing against a varsity squad Thursday, the Coupeville High School JV baseball team strung together five-plus really solid innings, but fell 6-1 to visiting Bush on the first truly sunny day of the spring sports season.

What stung the Wolves was a brief bit of sustained trouble in the first inning, and a momentary burp at the very end of the game.

Otherwise, take the second through the sixth inning and it was a 1-1 deadlock.

The loss drops the CHS young guns to 1-3 on the season, while Bush, a private school out of Seattle, improves to 4-1.

The game was set up because the Blazers first-year head coach, Greg Conley, played baseball at Sequim High School for Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith.

“One of the best players I ever coached,” Smith said. “Great kid, good baseball guy.”

After high school, Conley went on play at Oregon State and was drafted in 1995 by the Los Angeles Dodgers.

While he’s only been in his current job for a short time, you can see the Bush players are learning quickly from their new mentor, and they played with poise and polish.

Or, basically, played a lot like Willie Smith’s own hardball teams, at Sequim and Coupeville, always did.

Conley’s counterpart at CHS, Chris Smith, salted his JV lineup at the top with three varsity players, Matt Hilborn, Joey Lippo and Julian Welling, and that trio combined to collect all five of Coupeville’s hits.

But the Wolves also treated the game as an effective way to give their true JV players solid innings against strong competition, with Chris Smith getting at-bats for 12 different players.

The top of the first was the only poor frame for Coupeville, as Bush used three solid hits and a couple of Wolf miscues on attempted pick-offs to build an early 3-0 lead.

After that, Wolf hurler Jonathan Thurston locked in and was deadly effective for the remainder of his five-inning stint.

He retired 13 of the final 17 hitters he faced, whiffing four and not surrendering a hit after the first inning.

“Once Johnny was able to dial it in, he pitched us a gem,” Chris Smith said. “He really threw a beautiful game.”

Coupeville had a golden opportunity to get right back in the game after Lippo laced a one-out double over the head of a Blazer outfielder in the bottom of the first.

It wasn’t to be, however, as Bush fielders made two nice plays back-to-back to deny Welling and Jake Pease base-knocks.

Down 4-0 after the Blazers added an unearned run in the fourth, the Wolves broke through in the bottom half of the inning.

Hilborn and Lippo started the inning off with consecutive singles, then teamed up on a double steal, largely thanks to nimble base-running by Lippo.

Skidding to a stop halfway to second, he drew the throw to him, giving Hilborn a chance to streak home while he then danced out of the pickle and landed safely at second.

After an infield single from Welling on which he couldn’t move up because of where the ball was hit, Lippo successfully stole third, dipping at the last second to slide under the tag.

Except…

Every single person in the park, including the Bush third-baseman, who slapped his thigh in frustration, saw it that way.

Just not the ump, who caught everyone by surprise by signalling an out.

That took a bit of the wind out of Coupeville’s sails, and the Wolves couldn’t get a sustained rally going again after that.

Bush scraped out a pair of runs in the sixth to pad the final margin.

Other than their first-inning misfires, the Wolves were fairly solid on defense.

Ulrik Wells pulled down a skyscraper of a popup at second, Hilborn was a vacuum at short, Lippo ran down a pair of deep shots to center and Thurston and Welling made nice plays on come-backers to the mound.

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