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Posts Tagged ‘three-balls’

Ulrik Wells dropped in four points Tuesday to help power the Coupeville JV to a win at Concrete. (John Fisken photo)

   Ulrik Wells dropped in four points Tuesday to help power the Coupeville JV to a win at Concrete. (John Fisken photo)

Never skipped a beat.

Playing without three of their four tallest players Tuesday, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad turned to the three-ball and knocked off host Concrete 40-36.

The win, which snaps a brief two-game skid, lifts the Wolves to 5-4 headed into Christmas break.

Coupeville played without big men Kyle Rockwell, Koa Davison and Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim, but sharpshooter Mason Grove picked up the offensive slack.

Raining down 17 points, including four treys, he kept the Wolves alive early, then put them over the top later.

Concrete actually led 16-11 after the first quarter, with Grove (6) and Sean Toomey-Stout (5) accounting for all the CHS points.

The second quarter saw an immediate change, as the Wolves clamped down on defense, using a 12-2 surge to snatch the lead away for good.

Jered Brown hit a pair of shots, but it was Grove who wielded the biggest dagger, rolling up another eight points with treys #3 and #4 and a pair of free throws.

From there, Coupeville coasted home for the win, icing the game with strong work at the free-throw stripe.

“It wasn’t pretty, but we got the job done,” said CHS coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh. “Got good minutes from Tucker Hall, Nikolai Lyngra, Dawson Houston and Elliott Johnson.”

Toomey-Stout hit for nine to back up Grove’s 17, while Brown knocked down seven.

Ulrik Wells, Coupeville’s only active big man, powered inside for four and Jean Lund-Olsen came up with all three of his points down the stretch.

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Mason Grove (bottom, left) is joined by, clockwise, Ashley (Manker) Bailey, Jared Helmstadter and Paul Mendes, the coach of the 2010 CHS boys soccer team.

   Mason Grove (bottom, left) is joined by, clockwise, Ashley (Manker) Bailey, Jared Helmstadter and Paul Mendes, the coach of the 2010 CHS boys soccer team.

There’s a little something for everyone today.

As we prepare to induct the 77th class into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, we’re hitting a lot of bases, with an emphasis on basketball and soccer.

Two athletes, one stellar team and a moment which happened less than 24 hours ago (an “instant” Hall o’ Fame induction) come together as we fling open the door to these hallowed digital halls.

So, with that, we welcome Ashley (Manker) Bailey, Jared Helmstadter, Mason Grove and the 2010 Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad.

After this, you’ll find them up at the top of the blog, camped out under the Legends tab.

Our first inductee, Bailey, was a standout athlete in two sports, patrolling the goalie’s box on the pitch and defending the paint on the hardwood.

The best goaltender the CHS girls soccer program has had in its relatively short run, she used her height and knowledge picked up from coach/dad Gary to thoroughly frustrate opposing teams.

Put her on the hardwood, when her body would cooperate, and Bailey was a consistent scoring threat (the perfect #2 option to high-scoring teammate Megan Smith) who cleaned the glass like few other Wolves.

And when I say consistent, I mean it, as she scored in 42 of the 44 games she played as a sophomore and senior, breaking double digits 16 times.

Bailey went out battling, dropping a game-high 16 against King’s in a four-point playoff loss during her senior season in 2010, then went on to play both her sports at the collegiate level.

Our second inductee, Grove, is just starting his run. With a season of tennis tucked under one arm, the CHS freshman is now five games into his first basketball season.

And yet he may have already done something no other Wolf has ever accomplished.

As far as I can tell, Brad Sherman and Brian Fakkema, who both hit six three-pointers in a varsity game in the early 2000s, are the gold standard for long-range bombers.

Enter Grove, who nailed seven treys, including three in the fourth quarter, last night, part of a 24-point rampage that lifted the Coupeville JV to a roof-rattling 55-51 win over a South Whidbey squad that had two freshmen 6-foot-4 or taller.

Grove is listed at 5’4 on the CHS roster, but put a ball in his hands and he’s a giant. And now, an instant Hall o’ Famer.

Our third inductee, the 2010 Wolf boys’ soccer squad, stands as the best team in the history of the program.

Playing for legendary coach/original Seattle Sounder Paul Mendes, whose own induction into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame was maybe about #347 on his list of soccer accomplishments, the Wolves won a program-record 12 games that year.

Four of those victories came during a six-game playoff run, in which Coupeville toppled Lynden Christian, Nooksack Valley, Orting and Meridian before falling to Overlake at the state tourney.

Led by a very strong pack of seniors (including five who netted All-Conference honors —  Spencer Tack, Justin Adams, Travis Curtin, Jordan Lamb and Evan Ameluxen-Coleman), the Wolves survived a brutal schedule that season.

Playing in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, they faced King’s (4th in 1A) and ATM (which lost 1-0 to eventual 2A state champ Bellingham in the quarterfinals), while Overlake went on to finish second in 1A.

Through it all, they relied on an aggressive defense and the goal-tending of Ameluxen-Coleman to reach heights never seen before or since by a Coupeville soccer team.

Our final inductee, Helmstadter, may not have the same numbers as some of his fellow Hall o’ Famers, but he fully deserves his spot as one of the hardest workers I have witnessed in the prep sports world.

Few athletes got as much enjoyment out of their high school sports career as he did, a time when he was the only student in the CHS Class of 2016 to play all 12 seasons.

Through four years of tennis, basketball and track (which ended with a trip to state in the 4 x 400), there was never a moment when Helmstadter didn’t seize whatever opportunity was given him.

Born prematurely at 26 weeks (weighing just two pounds), he wasn’t expected to survive and has dealt with blindness in his left eye his entire life.

Some would give up early, others later. Not Jared.

A tremendously supportive teammate who gave every ounce of energy he had, Helmstadter is the person I would offer up to all young athletes as a role model.

Your high school days are going to be shorter than you think.

Enjoy whatever sports experience you get to have, never stop striving to be the best YOU can be, and walk away with a lot of memories.

Simply put, be like Jared.

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Jered Brown (John Fisken photo)

   Jered Brown netted 11 Saturday, including a game-busting breakaway bucket off of a steal. (John Fisken photo)

(Kim Bepler photo)

   After hitting seven three-point bombs, Mason Grove (center) was so hot the wall turned red above his head. (Kimberly Bepler photo)

The real show was in the side room.

Pitting three-ball flinging mad men against South Whidbey’s big bangers, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad pulled out a wild 55-51 win Saturday night.

In a game where the lead went back-and-forth all night, the Wolves, now 3-2, held on to grab victory on the strength of their shooting from behind the arc.

Freshman Mason Grove knocked down seven treys, including three in the fourth quarter, as CHS countered a Falcon lineup which included freshmen who come in at 6’5 and 6’4.

Clinging to a one-point lead entering the final quarter, the Wolves put the ball in Grove’s hands and he answered, scoring half of his team-high 24 points in the final eight minutes.

That point total is the best by a CHS player this year, varsity or JV.

Grove’s treys also came in the white hot spotlight, with one tying the game late in the going and the next one giving Coupeville the lead for good.

Jered Brown, who tossed in 11 points in support, followed up Grove’s back-to-back bombs with a steal that he turned into a breakaway to seal the deal.

Drawing a defender to him while on the fly, the Wolf frosh hit a reverse layup, then added a free-throw after getting hammered at the end of the play.

Jered is one of the toughest kids I’ve coached, and that’s saying a lot,” said Coupeville coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh.

Also coming up big were Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim, who “did the yeoman’s work” in trying to deal with the Falcon’s big duo, and Ulrik Wells and Nikolai Lyngra, who did “a fantastic job” helping the Wolves deal with losing three players to fouling out.

Pacquette-Pilgrim dropped in eight in support of Grove and Brown, while Sean Toomey-Stout (5), Koa Davison (4) and Kyle Rockwell (3) also scored for the Wolves.

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(Amy King photos)

   Good luck getting to the ice machine and back in one piece with a pack of Wolves roaming the hotel hallways. (Amy King photos)

Charlotte

   Charlotte Langille (second from right), who hit the big 1-8 Saturday, checks out the birthday card her teammates made for her.

Mia

Mia (left) and Kalia Littlejohn share a sisterly moment on the ferry trip.

(Mindy Grove photo)

   Winner, winner, chicken dinner. Lindsey Roberts (24) and Co. watch as her game-winning trey hits nothing but net. (Mindy Grove photo)

The Wolves celebrate the title in the locker room. (King photo)

And still the champs! (King photo)

Change the sign on the Friday Harbor High School gym, because Coupeville owns the joint.

The Wolf varsity girls’ basketball squad has now gone 4-0 on the FHHS court over the past two seasons, winning back-to-back Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic titles.

The latest triumph came Saturday, thanks to a dagger of a buzzer-beating three-ball from Lindsey Roberts.

The only basket the sophomore hit all game, it dropped through the net and rolled away as the game’s final two seconds ticked off, silencing a partisan crowd and lifting Coupeville to a 34-31 win over the tourney hosts.

Coming a day after the Wolves manhandled Seattle Academy, the win lifts CHS to 2-1 heading into league play.

Coupeville has a busy week coming up, finally playing at home when they host 1A Olympic League rivals Chimacum Wednesday and Klahowya Friday.

The Wolves will close their longest home-stand of the season when they welcome Island rival South Whidbey to town next Saturday for a non-conference game.

Coupeville won its second straight Tip-Off Classic by living out the Glengarry Glen Ross credo — Always Be Closing.

A little flat in the early going, the Wolves fell behind against a taller team, but kept on scrapping.

“All game it was a battle in and around the key,” said CHS coach David King. “Friday Harbor had the height advantage, but Lindsey, Tiffany (Briscoe), Kailey (Kellner) and Mikayla (Elfrank) stood toe-to-toe all game with their post players.”

Trailing 15-13 headed into the halftime break, King stressed the need to get back to a team-wide effort on the offensive end of the floor.

“The first half was a lot of one-on-one play for us,” he said. “This led to poor shots and we didn’t give ourselves a chance to get offensive rebounds.

“We didn’t play good enough to be leading, but just well enough to know if we made a few changes after halftime we could regain the lead and come away with a win.”

Wanting to share the ball more, Coupeville did just that on a key play in the third.

Out on the break, Elfrank pulled the defense to herself, then fed Briscoe for a layup to give the Wolves the lead.

Coupeville also ramped up its defensive game, with aggressive play from guards Mia Littlejohn, Lauren Rose, Kalia Littlejohn and Lauren Grove driving their foes bonkers.

Friday Harbor committed three 30-second shot clock violations, with the biggest resulting in a Wolverine trey being called off, as it left the shooter’s hands after the buzzer.

Up three headed into the fourth, Coupeville was looking to pull away, but took a body blow when leading scorer Kailey Kellner was lost to a dislocated finger.

She made an ER visit while her teammates closed out the game, but is expected to be back at full power next week.

Coupeville and Friday Harbor went back-and-forth down the stretch, with Elfrank coming up huge.

She turned a steal into a crucial bucket, then fed Roberts for the game-winner.

With the game knotted at 31 and 10 seconds to play, King drew up a play for Elfrank to get the final shot on the wing.

With a defender in front of her, the Wolf junior smartly didn’t try and force a shot, but whipped a pass to Roberts, who was trailing just outside the arc.

Ball hit hands, ball left hands, ball met net, and Roberts danced away, having slipped the dagger in that killed all of Friday Harbor.

Before her injury, Kellner dropped in 12 points and snagged eight boards to pace the Wolves.

Elfrank had eight points, six rebounds and three blocks, while Mia Littlejohn knocked down five points and Roberts (3), Rose (2), Briscoe (2) and Grove (2) rounded out the scorers.

Grove and Roberts twinned again, each hauling down five boards.

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Koa Davison (John Fisken photo)

   Koa Davison banged away inside for six points Friday and helped trigger a stifling defense as Coupeville’s JV rolled to a big win. (John Fisken photo)

Now that’s called flipping the switch.

Shrugging off a first quarter in which it largely stunk up the joint, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad suddenly found its groove Friday night and blew visiting Sultan off the court.

Roaring back from an 11-point deficit, the young Wolves combined a stifling defense with an aggressive, three-ball-happy offense and throttled the Turks 49-41 in a game that speaks well for the future.

The win evens the CHS young guns record at 1-1 heading into the start of 1A Olympic League play.

It was truly a tale of two halves — with the first one being seven minutes of agony and the second being 25 minutes of bliss.

Despite an early trey from Mason Grove, the Wolves stumbled badly out of the gate, giving up 12 straight points on a series of barely-contested buckets en route to trailing 16-5.

At which point CHS coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh unleashed the beasts.

Employing a nasty full-court press that frustrated, befuddled and terrorized the Turks, Coupeville turned the tide in a hurry.

Suddenly the Wolves were on the run, the ball was zipping from player to player and everyone was hitting nothing but net.

Meanwhile the Turks were getting dangerously close to crying, as they could barely get the ball up-court against a stifling, opportunistic defense.

Once the flow changed, the Wolves rode the wicked hot shooting touch of Jered Brown and Sean Toomey-Stout, who combined for 17 points during a game-busting 22-4 run.

The few times the duo didn’t put the ball in the hoop, their teammates did, with Kyle Rockwell knocking down a perfectly-angled bank shot and Grove hitting one of his three treys.

Coupeville’s run continued well into the third, with Grove hitting for seven in the quarter, while Koa Davison and Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim added buckets while doing the dirty work in the paint.

Up by 17, the Wolves took a breather, let Sultan crawl back to within seven, then emphatically slammed the door shut on the Turks.

Davison hit back-to-back baskets, packaged around a virtuoso bucket from Brown, on which he sucked the entire defense out to the top of the key, then slashed right through the group without being touched.

Coupeville spread its offense around, with Brown hitting for a game-high 16, while Grove notched 13.

Toomey-Stout added nine points (while snatching 12 rebounds and pilfering four steals), with Davison (6), Rockwell (3) and Pacquette-Pilgrim (2) also etching their names in the book.

Ulrik Wells, Tucker Hall, Aram Leyva, Dawson Houston, Aiden Juras, Elliott Johnson and Nikolai Lyngra also saw playing time.

The ever-growing Wells was a force on the boards while Lyngra all but ripped one Turk’s head clean off his shoulders during a scrap for a loose ball.

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