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Scout Smith: Rampaging force of nature. (John Fisken and Charlotte Young photos)

   Scout Smith: a rampaging force of nature. (John Fisken and Charlotte Young photos)

Scout Smith is the real deal.

As a new pack of Wolves get ready to enter the hallways of Coupeville High School, she is at the forefront of the coming athletic revolution.

A three-sport star (volleyball, basketball, softball), who also played soccer and cheered in her younger days, Smith can do it all, and she can do it all extremely well.

As she celebrates her 14th birthday today, Scout is following in the (very successful) footsteps of older brothers CJ and Hunter, and, frankly, I wouldn’t be surprised if she outdoes them.

She’s got the same quiet confidence mixed with raw talent that they possess, and gravitates towards being a team leader.

Not afraid to get down and dirty on the field, Smith is that rarity, an athlete who wants the ball at crunch time and never shies away from the heat of the spotlight.

So, exactly like her brothers.

Whether staring daggers at hitters while pacing in the pitcher’s circle, or draining three-balls over outstretched arms, Scout is a killer.

Who also happens to be an extraordinarily nice person away from the arena, a vital part of a close-knit group of young women who excelled in middle school and little league sports by supporting each other and always focusing on team above all else.

You can go down a checklist with Scout, a very similar one to CJ and Hunter:

Smart, well-spoken, high character, mentally tough, hard workers who reflect extremely well on parents Chris and Charlotte, both as athletes and people.

When the Smith family moved to Whidbey during the 2013-2014 basketball season, Coupeville pulled off a major coup and the benefits to our sports teams and our community grow each day.

So, as she prepares to lay waste to high school competition, we just want to take a moment on her cake day to stop and wish the youngest family member all the best, on and off the field.

You’re a hard-court killer and a diamond thriller, Scout, and a whole lot more. Happy birthday, superstar!

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Kenzi LaRue

   Wolf sophomore Kenzi LaRue has made huge strides on the tennis court. (John Fisken photo)

There are days when a loss can almost feel like a win.

Thursday was one of those days for veteran Coupeville High School girls’ tennis coach Ken Stange.

On the road, facing a large 2A school, with out enough players to fill out a full lineup, and with two of those in attendance making their court debut, the scrappy Wolves still almost upended Port Angeles.

While the Roughriders escaped with a 4-3 non-conference win, dropping Coupeville to 0-1 on the season (it leads Granite Falls 3-1 in a match that hangs in limbo until April), the result drew a fairly satisfied “Not bad” from Stange.

CHS was without two of its 12 players, and those two, Sydney Autio and Bree Daigneault, are top-tier players.

That meant the Wolves had to default at third singles, which was the difference in the otherwise tightly-played contest.

Complete results:

1st singlesValen Trujillo beat Audrey Little 6-3, 6-3

“She was a bit slow to warm up, but Valen shifted into overdrive, outlasting her opponent in rallies that seemed endless,” Stange said. “Consistency + power = victory.”

2nd singlesKenzi LaRue lost to Maddy Woods 6-0, 6-1

“It was a good effort for Kenzi. She’s an inexperienced JV player who has stepped up to play varsity singles, and she’s done it with grace. She keeps improving, too!”

3rd singles — Coupeville defaulted to Claire Fritchler

1st doubles Sage Renninger/Payton Aparicio beat Karina Paup/Byrnes 6-3, 6-3

“This pair, after a long ninth grade season playing the same doubles spot, are now in position to dominate almost every opponent. They have found a way to add power while maintaining consistency. Big things await them, if they stay the course.”

2nd doublesMcKenzie Bailey/Jazmine Franklin beat Emily Traugher/Hannah Brown 6-4, 7-5

“They’d be the top doubles team at just about any other school. They went 14-2 last year in the same spot. They were very dominant today, and will likely maintain that dominance all season long.”

3rd doublesMaggie Crimmins/Kameryn St Onge lost to Summer Olsen/Aeverie Politika 6-1, 7-5

“They put up a good fight against an athletic team. They almost pushed it to a third set. I think they will find their groove soon, and then the wins will come.”

4th doubles — Julianne Sem/Julia Borges lost to Jocelyn Reifenstahl/Paulina Crawford 6-1, 6-0

“It was a tough go for our 4s, but hopefully they’ll find their way soon. It’s not easy joining a team and having to play varsity from day one. It’ll be trial by fire, but I believe they will find their way.”

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Senior JJ Johnson was electric Friday, dropping 19 in a win that clinched a playoff berth for Couepville. (John Fisken photo)

   Senior JJ Johnson was electric Friday, scoring a career-high 19 in a win that clinched a playoff berth for Coupeville. (John Fisken photo)

One team was fighting for the playoffs. The other for a bit of dignity.

In the end, both teams got what they were looking for, though one will be a lot happier about it tomorrow.

Playing the best single minute of ball they have put together all season, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad used an 8-0 run at the end Friday to upend visiting Klahowya 64-60 in a wild one.

The victory lifted the Wolves to 3-3 in league play, 8-8 overall and clinches the program’s second straight playoff berth.

Port Townsend (5-1, 7-10) was stunned 58-56 by defending 1A Olympic League champ Chimacum (4-2, 6-11) Friday, preventing the RedHawks from clinching the conference title.

With three games left in the regular season (Tuesday at home vs. Port Townsend, Thursday at Chimacum, Saturday at Klahowya), Coupeville is still in play to finish anywhere from first to third.

Klahowya (0-6, 1-16) has been eliminated from postseason contention.

Friday night the Wolves faced an Eagles squad that has had an extremely rough season, with losses piling up and their coach having to quit for health reasons.

Seemingly pinning their season on an upset, they came dangerously close, hitting back-to-back three-balls — after their best two players had fouled out — to stake themselves to a 60-56 lead.

It was then that Coupeville, and senior buddies Wiley Hesselgrave and JJ Johnson in particular, stood up and said, in a unified voice loud enough to drown out the raucous Klahowya students who had invaded the Wolf side of the bleachers, “NO MA’AM!!”

Hesselgrave, who for the last four years has been a model of consistency as the CHS boys’ basketball program has rebuilt around his burly shoulders, kicked things off in classic fashion.

Taking the ball at the top of the key, he lowered his shoulder and dared any Eagle to stand up to his charge up the gut.

None were brave enough to accept, and he banked home a bucket to chop the lead in half.

Then came a bit of a surprise, as Johnson, who is primarily a long-range gunner (and was out of his mind, dropping treys from every angle on this night), tied things up with a put-back off a rebound.

It might not really be the first time the Wolf sniper has found himself in the heart of the paint, but it was by far his most emphatic gut-check of a basket since he first put on the red and white.

With the Coupeville crowd hollering (led by Wolf legends Kacie Kiel and Sydney Autio verbally poking the upstart visiting fans who had been mocking them most of the night), the Eagles fell apart in the spotlight.

Harassed unmercifully by the Wolves, Klahowya picked the worst time ever to commit a shot clock violation, putting the ball back in Coupeville’s hands.

At which point the Wolves, who had struggled at the free throw line all night, suddenly got really darn good.

Hesselgrave drained a pair with 18.4 ticks to go, giving CHS back the lead, then Johnson stuck in the final dagger.

First he hustled his rear off, getting into position at exactly the right moment to draw an offensive foul on an out-of-control Eagle who came crashing through the paint.

Then, on the ensuing in-bounds play, Johnson beat his man to the corner, pulled the pass in and hugged it to his chest as he was hammered by the defender.

Capping a truly stellar evening, he tickled the twines on both of his freebies, setting off a rolling wave of celebration that enveloped the gym as the buzzer ended Klahowya’s upset chances.

The wild finish capped a game that lurched back and forth all night long.

With Coupeville’s shooting touch a bit cold in the early going — the Wolves only hit one field goal in the first quarter — the Eagles carried a 14-9 lead into the first break.

Enter Johnson, who lit a fire under the offensive attack, raining down 10 by himself in the second quarter.

The Wolves hit four consecutive treys — two from JJ Johnson and one each from Hesselgrave and Risen Johnson — to get back in things, then capped the half with a 10-5 run.

The final bucket was a thing of sheer beauty, as Risen Johnson ran the clock down to almost zero, then suddenly hit the jets, slashed through the paint and scooped up a runner that started with the ball between his legs as he went airborne.

Klahowya wasn’t ready to quit, though, and the second half saw seven ties and eight lead changes.

Coupeville actually spent much of the fourth quarter trailing, with the widest margin at five, before staging its final run for glory.

Hesselgrave pumped in eight of his game-high 20 in the fourth quarter, while JJ Johnson torched the nets for 19, his best performance as a Wolf.

Risen Johnson dropped in eight, Jordan Ford banged for six, Hunter Smith popped for five and Gabe Wynn (3), DeAndre Mitchell (2) and Dante Mitchell (1) rounded out the attack.

Jared Helmstadter and Desmond Bell also saw floor time, and brought energy and hustle to a win in which every member of the Wolves had an impact on the game.

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Risen Johnson

   The power of the man bun compels you. Risen Johnson scored five of his team-high 15 in the fourth quarter Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

The answer was loud and clear.

After a three-game stretch in which the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad struggled, Wolf coaches challenged their players.

To unite as a team. To buy into their roles. To commit to each other. To get back to how they had opened the season.

Saturday, the players responded, and they did so as one.

It wasn’t just that they won, holding off visiting Mount Vernon Christian in a 69-68 non-conference thriller.

That was big, yes, and it brought Coupeville back to 5-6 on the season.

But more than merely winning, it was how they won. As a true team.

“Everybody stepped up, and everybody stepped up when we needed them to,” said Coupeville coach Anthony Smith. “We found a way to win, a way to get back to how we were before.”

The Wolves could have fractured on this night, and badly.

Up 53-45 after JJ Johnson swooped to the hoop for a bucket to open the fourth, Coupeville hit its only rough stretch of the night.

Taking advantage, the Hurricanes reeled off 10 straight, with a pair of three-balls which were true daggers, as one came off of an in-bounds play and another on a really long rebound that skittered right through the hands of several Wolves.

Suddenly trailing by two, CHS needed a big emotional burst and it got it thanks to teamwork.

Wiley Hesselgrave, who fought like a savage yet had a grin on his face most of the night, came up with a loose ball, spun and dropped the ball into the hands of a flying Dante Mitchell.

Without a trace of hesitation, the lanky senior put the ball on the floor once, snatched it back and shot past his defender for a running layup.

Cue an explosion of joy which ripped through the pro-Wolf crowd and a fist pump of approval from Hesselgrave.

That knotted the game at 55, while setting up an absolute war that played out over the final three-and-a-half minutes.

The two teams exchanged buckets like heavyweight boxers standing in the middle of the ring, slugging it out, daring the other guy to back down, but secretly happy when they didn’t.

A thunderous right — Hesselgrave tearing a rebound out of a Hurricane’s hands and drilling a jumper while three guys landed on top of him.

Then a series of jabs to the spleen —Risen Johnson spinning down the baseline, shedding defenders on his way to three points the hard way; Jordan Ford banking in a bucket off of a bullet pass from Risen Johnson that slid and curved through a maze of rival arms.

Each time Mount Vernon responded with their own nerves-of-steel play, until Coupeville finally broke its will.

Trailing 66-65 with 1:04 to go, the Wolves got a pair of free throws from Hunter Smith to snatch back the lead, then held the Hurricanes scoreless for 62 of the final 64 seconds.

Risen Johnson worked an absolutely textbook give-and-go with Hesselgrave, getting the ball back and hitting a runner while laying the ball up backwards over his head to put CHS up by three.

The Hurricanes went for the tie, missed and got a reprieve when a ref called Risen Johnson for traveling after he leapt, snatched the rebound, but inadvertently rolled over a body coming back down to Earth.

The next trey missed as well, though, and while a Hurricane slipped through to put the rebound back up and in, the clock ran out on the visitors.

Taking the ball out of the net with 1.9 seconds to go and the clock running, Ford alertly never in-bounded the ball, squeezing it to his chest as his teammates celebrated.

The late theatrics capped a game that was smartly played by both teams, a scrappy affair where Coupeville survived MVC runs by getting big-time shots at just the right moments.

Risen Johnson had the play of the first half, in which he stole the ball and zipped in for a layup, making not one, but two, different Hurricanes crash to the floor on the play.

Still, the Wolves trailed 28-21, until they turned it around with a 14-3 run to close out the half.

Mitchell and Gabe Wynn each knocked down a bucket and free throw during the run, but it was long-range gunner JJ Johnson who made the crowd swoon.

The Wolf senior nailed a trey from the right side with 20 seconds to play, then raised the ante by nailing another one with less than a single tick on the clock, backpedaling with a grin as his large fan section lost its ever-loving mind a few feet away.

Coupeville wasn’t done with the crowd-pleasers, hitting three treys in the third, including an even longer one from JJ Johnson.

The final one was the most unexpected, as Ford, far from the paint he normally patrols, rolled out, took a pinpoint pass from Hesselgrave and dropped his own three-ball from the deep, dark corner on the right side.

As the ball started to settle through the twine, the third quarter clock read 0:00, one more time in which the Wolves pulled off perfection thanks to note-perfect team play.

The commitment to getting something from everyone carried over to the scoring totals, where eight of Coupeville’s 11 players scored, with four notching double digits.

Risen Johnson led the way with 15, while Ford banged home 12 and Hesselgrave and JJ Johnson each added 11.

Smith dropped in seven, Wynn popped for six, Dante Mitchell went for five, Ryan Griggs added a bucket and Desmond Bell, DeAndre Mitchell and Jared Helmstadter all chipped in with strong work on the defensive end.

Coupeville is now off for six days, returning to action with a home non-conference game against Stevenson Friday, Jan. 15. That game (varsity only) tips at 5 PM.

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Kyla Briscoe's scrappy defense helped kick-start her Wolf squad to a huge win over powerhouse La Conner Wednesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Kyla Briscoe’s scrappy defense helped kick-start Coupeville to a huge win over powerhouse La Conner Wednesday. (John Fisken photos)

Big sis Tiffany Briscoe was a beast on the boards, snatching seven, including the game's most crucial one.

   Big sis Tiffany Briscoe was a beast on the boards, snatching seven, including the game’s most crucial one.

The will to win is huge in these ones.

Reaching down deep to find something even they might not have realized was there, the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad put together a statement win Wednesday night.

Fighting back from a nine-point deficit, the Wolves used a second quarter run for the ages to stagger hoops heavyweight La Conner, then ferociously clamped down on defense to escape with their fourth straight victory.

The 39-38 non-conference win lifted Coupeville to 6-2 and put the word out on two fronts.

One, if you need a bucket from Makana Stone to ice a game, the stellar senior will deliver.

And two, this Wolf squad can dance with the best and come out on top, even when they don’t have a completely flawless night.

With the game on the line, Stone rose to the moment, scoring all seven of her team’s points in the fourth quarter, including two huge buckets in the final minute.

The first one, on a power move in the paint, staked Coupeville to a 37-36 lead after La Conner had ripped off five straight points to snatch the lead away.

Then, after the Braves immediately responded with a jumper of their own, Stone and her teammates broke La Conner’s press for what would turn out to be the winning basket.

The ball zipped from player to player, threading between defenders, before the most explosive player on the court snatched it, pump faked a defender out of her high tops and shot past her for a layup that sent the home crowd into hysterics.

Even then, La Conner, one of the most patient teams in the land, had two chances to ruin things.

First a lil’ runner in the paint spun around the rim, started to drop and then kicked back out, rejected by the ghost of Wolf players past.

After a second shot banged off the backboard, Tiffany Briscoe ripped the rebound down, clutching it protectively like a baby as Wolf coach David King screamed for a timeout with six ticks left on the clock.

Given a chance to set up a play, Coupeville managed to momentarily evade the inevitable foul on the in-bounds pass, running off a precious three seconds before a Brave could thump a Wolf in front of a ref.

And while Kailey Kellner’s ensuing free throw wouldn’t stay in the basket, it took a gorgeous kick off the rim and shot far to the side.

Though the Braves got their hands on the carom, they had no timeouts remaining and were so buried under the suffocating Wolf defense, they failed to get off a final shot.

The opportunistic CHS defense was the difference, as the Wolves managed to overcome eight three-point bombs by La Conner.

Trailing 13-4 early in the second quarter, Coupeville inserted scrappy sophomore Kyla Briscoe, and what seemed like a small move paid off hugely.

With Briscoe and fellow ball-hawk Lauren Grove relentlessly harassing the Brave ball-handlers, the Wolves started to turn the tide of the game.

Once it started to force turnovers and began to give the La Conner snipers less time to set up, Coupeville kick-started its own offense as well.

Stone rained down 11 of her game-high 22 points in the second quarter and the Wolves went on a 22-9 tear over the final seven minutes of the first half.

And it wasn’t just the big dog who ate, as Kellner drilled a trey and slipped under the defense for a layup off of a sneaky in-bounds pass.

Freshman Lindsey Roberts banged home a pair of buckets as well, with one coming off of gorgeous pass from Mia Littlejohn, who kept La Conner guessing all night as she zigged and zagged while running the Wolf offense.

Having reclaimed the lead right before the half, Coupeville completely shut down the Braves for much of the third quarter, holding them scoreless for nearly six minutes.

While they couldn’t pull away from a smart, veteran squad, the Wolves used two feathery free throws from Tiffany Briscoe to close out the third with a 32-27 advantage.

That set up the fourth, the wild finish and a celebration that included a host of former Wolf greats who were home on winter break.

Stone added 10 boards and three blocks to go with her 22 points, while Kellner (nine points, three rebounds), Roberts (four points, three boards), Tiffany Briscoe (two points, seven rebounds) and Littlejohn (two points, two steals, five assists) all filled up the stat sheet.

After a three-week stretch in which the Wolves played only two games — and won both of them — they will get back to a more consistent schedule with three games next week.

First up is a trip to Port Townsend Tuesday for a conference game which will determine sole possession of first place in the 1A Olympic League.

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