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Posts Tagged ‘University of Puget Sound’

Gavin St Onge gives Mica Shipley a boost during a cheer camp in Tacoma. (BreAnna Boon photos)

Emily Fiedler celebrates after she, Ja’Tarya Hoskins (left), and Melia Welling (right) teamed up to win a “strongest women” competition.

St Onge, a first-year cheerleader, earned All-American status.

Ashleigh Battaglia soars above the field.

Small town, big awards for the high-flying Wolf cheerleaders.

“We’re a little town, but we’re strong.”

Living up to their new team motto, a group of Coupeville High School cheerleaders endured 90-degree heat to emerge as big winners from a four-day summer camp.

The biggest highlight might have been the most unexpected, as a first-year Wolf cheerleader claimed All-American status.

That was transplanted football lineman Gavin St Onge, who showed off big-time moves in cheer, jump, and stunting skills.

His older sister, Ciera, is a former Wolf cheer superstar, and the biggest member of the current CHS squad impressed everyone gathered at the University of Puget Sound.

Gavin was the hit of the camp,” said Coupeville coach BreAnna Boon. “Small town boy with big muscles!”

The Wolves also claimed first-place in the camp’s “strongest women” competition, with Ja’Tarya Hoskins, Melia Welling, and Emily Fiedler teaming up to bring home the trophy.

The trio faced off with 20+ other schools to see who could hold a stunt for the longest amount of time.

The Wolves had to do squats, turns, and tricks, all while holding Fiedler in the air, and outlasted the field.

“After almost five minutes of pure torture, team after team dropped to the ground, and our Wolves came out on top!!,” said a very-proud Boon.

Coupeville added a fifth-place in jump, thanks to Ashleigh Battaglia, and a pair of thirds in team competitions on the final day.

Performing in front of a packed audience, the Wolves threw down “rally” and “game day” routines.

The first event includes a dance and a stunt, while the second encompasses band dance, sideline, and cheer.

Boon, entering her second season at the helm of the CHS cheer program, had 10 athletes accompany her to camp.

Hoskins, Battaglia, Fiedler, St Onge, and Welling were joined by Kim Castro, Coral Caveness, Mica Shipley, and incoming freshmen Karyme Castro and Lucy Crouch.

The group went from 8 AM to 8:30 PM daily during the camp, and were taught dances, cheers, and stunts.

Coupeville performed and was evaluated by camp administrators at the end of each session, then went in front of all the other cheerleaders, coaches and parents on the final day.

Despite the heat and the non-stop work, the Wolves held up well, earning a superior ribbon each night, as well as ownership of the spirit stick.

“The days were grueling and long hours, and there were times we didn’t think we were gonna make it out alive,” Boon said.

But her cheerleaders responded, not only showcasing their skills, but making friends along the way.

“We actually bonded with a squad from Kalama and had a pizza party with them on the last night!,” Boon said. “Our goal as cheerleaders is to bond teams together, and even though Kalama may become a rival one day, we are happy to call them our friends.”

And, circling back to the new team motto, Coupeville continually impressed the judges with how strong its small squad is, especially for a program which just got back into competition cheer last year.

“The UCA staff was amazed at the stunting skill level this small but mighty team had,” Boon said. “They are such talented, strong kids individually, so when you put that all together to make one team, the outcome is like something you have never seen before.

“This is the team that is destined for greatness,” she added. “Through their blood sweat and tears, they thrive.”

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Makana Stone (23) and her Whitman teammates will need everything to break right Saturday for them to host a playoff game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Six days from now, the Whitman College women’s basketball team will be in the playoffs.

But, barring a last-second reversal of fortune Saturday, the Blues and former Coupeville star Makana Stone will start the postseason on the road.

Despite a strong second-half rally Friday, Whitman couldn’t quite make up for a poor first half, falling 60-55 to the University of Puget Sound.

The road loss, coming in the next-to-last regular season game, drops the Blues, 12-3 in Northwest Conference play, 18-6 overall, into a tie for second-place with UPS (12-3).

But, since the Loggers swept the season series, also winning 75-67 in Walla Walla Jan. 19, they hold the tiebreaker.

Unless Whitman beats Pacific Lutheran (7-8) Saturday and UPS falls to Whitworth (7-8), the Blues will be the #3 seed to the four-team NWC tourney.

League champ George Fox (15-1) hosts whichever 7-8 team — PLU, Whitworth or Linfield — emerges Saturday to claim the #4 seed, while #2 hosts #3.

The first round of the single-elimination tourney goes down Feb. 21, with the title game Feb. 23.

The tourney champ gets an automatic bid to the NCAA D-III national championships, while other NWC teams will sweat out the announcement of at-large teams.

Friday’s loss came down largely to one really bad five-minute-plus stretch in the second quarter.

Whitman led through much of the first quarter, and, even after finally losing the advantage, was still hanging tough down 21-16 with 6:20 to play in the first half.

Unfortunately for the Blues, their shooting touch promptly went into deep freeze, and Puget Sound took advantage.

Using a 14-0 tear over the next five minutes and 32 seconds, the Loggers turned a close game into a potential blowout.

Kaelan Shamseldin finally snapped the scoring drought, pulling off a three-point play the hard way, but her bucket and free throw could only trim the halftime deficit to 35-19.

The second half was a different story, as Whitman shaved away at the lead with 17-9 and 19-16 runs across the final two periods.

Stone drained a jumper to pull the Blues within four points late in the third quarter, then slipped a free throw through the net to slice the margin to 49-46 with a hair under four minutes to play in the game.

Puget Sound hung tough down the stretch, though.

Even with the league’s arguably-best player, Jamie Lange, held to just seven points, the Loggers found just enough offense to persevere.

Elizabeth Prewitt rattled the rim for a game-high 20, with seven of those points coming down the stretch, to pace UPS.

For Whitman, Mady Burdett scorched the nets for 18, and the lone Blues senior, Maegan Martin, notched a double-double with 16 points and 11 rebounds.

Stone, who had to battle through foul trouble, finished with seven points, six rebounds, and an assist, while being restricted to just 13 minutes of floor time.

The former Wolf ace is sitting with 339 points, 192 rebounds, 40 assists, 25 steals, and 18 blocks for her junior campaign.

She’s shooting 144-276 from the field, and 50-65 from the line.

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Coupeville’s Makana Stone dropped in a team-high 14 points Saturday, but Whitman College had a seven-game winning streak snapped. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A dangerous weekend turned deadly at the end.

Haunted by foul trouble, the Whitman College women’s basketball team watched a big one slip away Saturday, falling 75-67 to visiting University of Puget Sound.

The game, which was a one-point affair with less than 90 seconds to play, hinged on free throws, and frequent foul calls, at the end.

Using a 9-2 surge to close the game, with a brutally-effective three-ball and then six straight charity shots, the Loggers threw the Northwest Conference standings into disarray with eight games left on the schedule.

With the loss, Whitman falls to 7-1 in league play, 13-4 overall and slips back into a first-place tie with George Fox (7-1, 14-3).

Technically, the Blues still have a slight edge, as they won the first of two games against George Fox. The rematch is Feb. 8 in Walla Walla.

Whitman gets a second crack at UPS, which sits a game off the lead at 6-2, 13-3, a week later on Feb. 15.

After facing two of the top four teams in the league this weekend — they drilled Pacific Lutheran Friday — the Blues have a softer schedule awaiting them.

Whitman’s next four games, the ones prior to the showdown with George Fox, pit them solely against teams in the bottom half of the league.

Which makes Saturday’s loss to UPS even tougher, as a win would have kept the Blues, who had a seven-game winning streak, alone and untouched at the top of the league.

Instead, they got roughed up two times against the Loggers, unable to stop the one-two duo of Jamie Lange and Elizabeth Prewitt, who went for 27 and 25 points, respectively.

Coupeville grad Makana Stone did what she could to fire back, popping for a team-high 14 points on 7-11 shooting, but both she and front-court mate Maegan Martin were fouled out of the game by fairly one-sided reffing.

Puget Sound finished the game with no player having more than two fouls to their credit, while Whitman lost their interior stars, and had several other players with at least three fouls each.

Still, the game was close almost from the opening tip to the final buzzer.

Knotted at 19-19 after one quarter, the teams swapped two-point leads at the next two breaks. UPS went to the half up 37-35, before Whitman jumped back in front 55-53 after three quarters.

The Blues final lead, at 59-57, came when Taylor Chambers slashed to the hoop for a layup with a hair over eight minutes to play.

While Lange powered her way through the Blues defense for her own personal 6-0 run after that, Whitman stayed close, and was down just 66-65 in the late moments.

Prewitt was a savage, however, drilling a game-busting three-ball with 1:24 on the clock.

After that, it was all free throws for UPS, as the Loggers closed by hitting six straight at the line.

Given far more opportunities at the charity stripe, Puget Sound hit 14-19 on freebies, while Whitman could only scrape out four tries, nailing three of them.

UPS also out-shot the Blues from the floor, sinking 50.9% of its shots to 43.1% from the home team.

Before she fouled out, Stone added three rebounds, two assists and a steal to her 14 points.

On the season, the junior has 270 points, 151 rebounds, 27 assists, 21 steals, and 17 blocks. She’s shooting 113-217 from the floor and 43-55 at the line.

Stone, who was playing in the 74th game of her collegiate career, passed a personal milestone, crossing the 800-point barrier with her second bucket of the night.

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Makana Stone (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Makana Stone, seen here last season, had 10 points and 11 rebounds Saturday as Whitman won the Northwest Conference tournament. (Sylvia Hurlburt photos)

Puget Sound sign-makers discover the folly of their ways.

Puget Sound sign-makers regret their choices in life.

Makana and Sylvia, reunited and it feels so good.

Makana and Sylvia, reunited and it feels so good.

They won when it mattered most.

Avenging two regular-season overtime losses, the Whitman College women’s basketball team shocked Puget Sound 81-72 Saturday in the championship game of the Northwest Conference tourney.

The win, coming on the road at Tacoma, lifts the Blues to 23-4, while snapping an 18-game win streak for the Loggers (25-2).

It also punches Whitman’s ticket to the NCAA Division III Women’s Basketball Championships for the first time since 2014.

Back then, the school, still playing as the Missionaries, finished second in the nation, falling 80-72 to undefeated FDU-Florham in the national championship game.

One player, Alysse Ketner, connects both Whitman squads.

She was a freshman reserve in 2014 and is a senior starter now for the team, which adopted a new mascot this season.

One of the biggest keys to Saturday’s win? A first-year player who came to the school just as it made the switch from Missionaries to Blues.

I speak of that rampaging Wolf of yore, Coupeville grad Makana Stone, who threw down 10 points and snatched a game-high 11 rebounds in the tourney title tilt.

The former Wolf garnered eight points and five rebounds during a mid-game hot streak that turned around Whitman’s fortunes.

Puget Sound, which won the first two meetings this season 73-71 and 89-82, bolted out to a 21-9 advantage after one quarter Saturday night.

Not to be deterred, the steady Blues chipped away at the lead with a 26-16 run in the second, then broke UPS with a 25-12 surge in the third quarter.

Five Whitman players landed in double figures in the scoring book, led by Chelsi Brewer with 19 and Casey Poe with 17.

Stone, who hauled in eight of her rebounds in the second half, out-dueled Puget Sound’s Jamie Lange, the league’s Freshman of the Year, to lead all players in cleaning the glass.

She also had two assists, setting up Mady Burdett and Emily Rommel on back-to-back buckets in the first quarter.

For the season, Stone has played in 26 of 27 games, starting 10. She has 175 points (6.7 a night), 159 rebounds (6.1), 27 assists, 13 steals and 11 blocks.

Whitman will find out its postseason path when the NCAA tourney bracket is announced Monday morning.

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Makana Stone (23), seen here during last year's state tournament, notched team-highs in points and rebounds Friday. (John Fisken photo)

   Makana Stone (23), seen here during last year’s state tourney, notched 16 points and 11 rebounds Friday for Whitman College. (John Fisken photo)

Everything but the win.

Coupeville’s Makana Stone, making her sixth start as a college basketball player, put together her best performance of the season Friday night, while facing her most accomplished rival.

But, in the end, Stone’s team-high 16 points and 11 rebounds, some of which fueled a wild fourth quarter comeback for Whitman, couldn’t stop the University of Puget Sound from clinching a league title.

UPS, after blowing a 17-point lead in memorable fashion, rallied in overtime to down the Blues 89-82.

The win lifts the Loggers to 13-0 in Northwest Conference play, 21-1 overall, while Whitman slides to 10-3, 19-3.

The Blues drop into a second-place tie with George Fox with three games to play, but have the upper hand, having beaten the Bruins the first time around.

Whitman plays 1-21 Pacific Lutheran Saturday, before closing the regular season at home Feb. 17-18 against Lewis & Clark and the aforementioned George Fox.

Both times Puget Sound and Whitman played this season the game hinged on missed free throws in the final seconds and then went to an extra period.

In the first meeting the Blues missed the charity shots, while this time it was UPS star Samone Jackson who clanked two free throws with 20 seconds in regulation.

Puget Sound was clinging to a two-point lead at the time, and, with the reprieve, Whitman knotted things up when Casey Poe netted a pair of free throws of her own with 13 ticks on the clock.

That the Blues even had a chance to tie things up was extraordinary.

After battling to a 41-41 tie at the break, UPS went nuclear on Whitman in the third quarter, hitting 64% of their shots while outscoring the Blues 30-13.

But, instead of breaking, Whitman, sparked by two fourth-quarter blocks by Stone (plus a silky jumper, three rebounds and a key assist) roared back in the game’s final minutes.

Going into lock-down mode on defense, the Blues limited UPS to just 13% shooting in the final quarter, pulling off the 26-9 comeback.

Stone sliced through the paint for a layup at the 2:37 mark of overtime to stake Whitman to an 82-81 lead, but after that her squad struggled to get another shot off.

The Blues didn’t get another attempt airborne until the 0:33 mark, then missed a pair of treys and a jumper in a final effort to catch UPS.

Using all 27 of her minutes to maximum impact, Stone scored her 16 points off of 8 of 11 shooting, while adding three assists and two blocks to go with her 11 boards.

Through 22 games, she has 135 points (6.1 a night), 129 rebounds (5.9), 24 assists, 12 steals and nine blocks.

Stone is #2 on the team in rebounding, even with coming off the bench in her first 16 games, and is tied for #2 in field goal percentage, hitting 51% (60 of 117).

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