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Posts Tagged ‘Wiley Hesselgrave’

Jared Helmstadter, seen here in an earlier game, provided a nice jolt of energy off the bench Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Jared Helmstadter, seen here in an earlier game, provided a nice jolt of energy off the bench Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

If you look at my notes from Tuesday night’s Coupeville vs. Chimacum boys’ basketball game, the same words keep on appearing over and over.

Quick cut. Quick cut. Quick cut.

And every time those two words appear, they are attributed to the same team, which is why the visiting Cowboys ran away with a 69-49 win and why the Wolves exited the floor looking as frustrated as they have at any point this season.

Slashed to death by layup after layup, almost all of which came on quick cuts to the hoop, Coupeville absorbed its second straight loss and dropped to 7-8 overall, 2-3 in league play.

While their chances of catching Port Townsend (5-0) grow slimmer each day, the Wolves are still very much in control of their postseason destiny.

A win Friday at home against Klahowya (0-5) and Coupeville clinches a playoff spot, something last year’s team was unable to do.

Three of the league’s four teams make the playoffs, with the #2 and #3 squads each opening at home.

Earning the #2 berth would mean one less loser-out game to get through, however.

Chimacum (3-2) has a one game lead over Coupeville with four to play for the #2 slot, with the teams having split so far, each winning on the others home court.

The rubber match is Thursday, Feb. 4 at Chimacum.

Tuesday night both teams came out ready for a spirited battle, but missing one key element — the ability to hit a shot. Any shot.

Neither team scored until nearly four minutes into the game, when the Cowboys finally broke through on … a layup off a quick cut to the hoop.

Coupeville couldn’t get a field goal to drop in the first quarter, settling for just a pair of Gabe Wynn free throws, and fell behind 10-2.

Things picked up in the second, with a Jordan Ford put-back at the 7:04 mark finally snapping what had stretched into a nine-minute cold stretch from the field.

Once one shot dropped, the Wolves found more of a rhythm, but could never hit on back-to-back buckets in the first half, allowing Chimacum to hold on to its lead.

Desperate for a boost heading into the half, Coupeville got it when sophomore guard Hunter Smith drilled a three-ball right before the buzzer. The shot pulled the Wolves within 26-16 and provided a ray of hope.

And it seemed to work, at least for a bit.

With Ford pounding away for five, CHS went on a 10-2 run in the third to slash the lead to seven, only to have the run blunted when they promptly gave up 12 unanswered points.

All six buckets? Quick cuts to the hoop and crisp passes setting up layups for the Cowboys.

That became a second-half pattern for the Wolves, as they put together a 14-5 run in the fourth, fueled by a pair of long treys from JJ Johnson.

But, in the next moment, they surrendered nine unanswered points, with passes flying over heads, defensive assignments missed and yep, Chimacum repeatedly slashing to the hoop for largely uncontested buckets.

The game was, in many ways, a microcosm of Coupeville’s season.

When the Wolves are on, they are dangerous, high-flying and fun to watch. When they are off, as they were Tuesday, they tend to self-destruct just as quickly.

Ford was a bright spot, slamming home 13 to take over the season scoring lead, while Hesselgrave knocked down 10.

Smith and Risen Johnson banked home eight each, JJ Johnson racked up six and Dante Mitchell and Wynn chipped in with two apiece.

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DeAndre Mitchell has dropped in 41 points this season, fifth-best for the Wolf boys. (John Fisken photos)

DeAndre Mitchell has dropped in 41 points this season, fifth-best for the Wolf boys. (John Fisken photos)

Freshman Lindsey Roberts (left) and senior Makana Stone have combined for 2?? points.

Freshman Lindsey Roberts (left) and senior Makana Stone have combined for 204 points.

This could be a milestone season.

Looking at the scoring stats for the Coupeville High School basketball squads 10 games into the 2015-2016 season, one number jumps out.

Senior Makana Stone is averaging a super-crisp 18.2 points a game for the 7-3 Wolf girls, which puts her virtually on par with Brianne King when she set what is believed to be the program’s best single-season performance.

Jump back to 2000-2001 and the then-sophomore went off for 18.6 a night over 24 games for 446 points.

Both the total points and the per-game average still stand as CHS records.

Stone is up 1.5 points from last year, when she compiled the sixth-best single-season mark by a Wolf girl.

Her per-game average of 16.7 as a junior was actually third-best all-time, but she was denied a chance to move up the total points scored chart because Coupeville wasn’t able to make a longer playoff run.

The top six single-season performances in program history (that we have been able to document):

1) Brianne King (2000-2001) 446 points/24 games/18.6 avg
2) King (2002-2003) 442/28/15.8
3) King (2001-2002) 386/28/13.8
4) Zenovia Barron (1996-1997) 378/23/16.4
5) Barron (1997-1998) 376/22/17.1
6) Makana Stone (2014-2015) 367/22/16.7

While she’s been wrecking people, Stone has also gotten help, with the next two Wolves — junior Kailey Kellner and sophomore Mia Littlejohn — combining for close to 14 points a night.

On the boys side, it’s a tight race at the top, with three players (Wiley Hesselgrave, Jordan Ford and Risen Johnson) battling for top honors.

Hesselgrave, who has played in nine of his team’s 10 games, has gone for 14.2 a night, while all three players are averaging double figures for a 4-6 team.

The (semi-official) scoring stats through 10 games:

Girls:

Makana Stone — 182
Kailey Kellner — 72
Mia Littlejohn — 66
Tiffany Briscoe — 28
Lindsey Roberts — 22
Lauren Grove — 18
Kyla Briscoe — 5
Allison Wenzel — 5

Boys:

Wiley Hesselgrave — 128
Jordan Ford — 114
Risen Johnson — 110
Ryan Griggs — 48
DeAndre Mitchell — 41
Gabe Wynn — 41
Hunter Smith — 33
JJ Johnson — 13
Dante Mitchell — 12
Jared Helmstadter — 6
Desmond Bell — 5

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Gabe Wynn, seen here in an earlier game, scored five points Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Gabe Wynn, seen here in an earlier game, erupted for five points in a short time span Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

It could go either way.

After falling 59-45 to visiting Port Townsend Tuesday night, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad sits on top of a precipice, and now it’s time to seize the moment and choose whether they stay up high or fully tumble down.

Tuesday’s loss was the third straight for the Wolves, as the fallout from a rocky winter break threatens to derail everything which was once going so well.

And yet, at 4-6 overall, 1-1 in conference play, Coupeville still sits snugly in second place in the 1A Olympic League.

Port Townsend is alone atop the standings at 2-0, the only wins the RedHawks have claimed in a 2-7 season, while defending league champ Chimacum and Klahowya are tied in the basement at 0-1.

Those two squads play Friday.

The Wolves, largely a team of role players, have looked very good at times this season, and always when they play as a team, each player stepping up and accepting their part in the grand scheme.

When they degenerate into 1-on-5 players and lose that cohesiveness, as they did at times against a more disciplined RedHawks squad, is when things go wrong.

“We have got to show up, especially for big games like this,” said Coupeville coach Anthony Smith. “We did not execute, at all, tonight.

“They killed us on the second chances, and we helped make them look very good,” he added. “We have three days now to decide if we’re going to come together and play as a team, play for each other.”

The Wolves, who had played in Langley the night before, came out a step behind Tuesday, falling behind 14-6 midway through the first quarter.

The killer was a six-point play, as Port Townsend hit a bucket, got the foul call, then tacked on three more free throws when the call was questionably upped to a flagrant foul, followed by a technical on the Coupeville bench for daring to ask why the call was changed.

Instead of fracturing at that moment, the Wolves used a timeout to sort things out, then ripped off nine straight points, easily their best run of the night.

Wiley Hesselgrave backed his man down for a bucket, then Gabe Wynn erupted for five points in about five seconds.

The Wolf junior hit a sweet trey from the top, then spun his defender around on the next play, slicing past him for a driving layup.

Playing aggressive defense, CHS capped the run with a steal and breakaway bucket from Jordan Ford, claiming their first lead of the night at 15-14.

Unfortunately, that would be the only time the Wolves would lead all night, as Port Townsend regained control of the game and begin to slowly inch away.

A 9-1 spurt, capped by a bucket that beat the first quarter buzzer by less than half a tick, staked the RedHawks to a 23-16 lead at the first break, and they never relinquished the lead.

Coupeville got within two again midway through the second quarter, only to see Port Townsend nail back-to-back three-balls.

One came from the right side, the other from the left, and much of the air went out of the Wolves.

Port Townsend stretched its lead to 11 after three quarters, then poured it on a bit in the fourth, going up by 18 at one point.

The Wolves found a brief bit of redemption at the very end, as JJ Johnson fed Ford for a bucket, then stole the in-bounds pass and shot through two defenders for the game’s closing basket.

Coupeville, which returns to action Saturday with a home non-conference game against Mount Vernon Christian, will use the next few days of practice to work on things like free throws (they were a weak 10 of 23 Tuesday).

One thing they did accomplish against Port Townsend was getting at least a little bit of offense from nearly every player on the roster, as nine guys scored.

Hesselgrave led the way with 11, while Ford banged home eight and Ryan Griggs dropped in six.

Wynn (5), Hunter Smith (4), Dante Mitchell (4), JJ Johnson (4), Risen Johnson (2) and DeAndre Mitchell (1) rounded out the scoring attack.

Jared Helmstadter and Desmond Bell also saw floor time for Coupeville.

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Jordan Fordf (John Fisken photo)

   Jordan Ford fights for a rebound during a physical, combative game Wednesday night. (John Fisken photo)

This one was ugly. In every way.

A glance at the scoreboard would have told you the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad lost 69-56 to visiting La Conner Wednesday night.

What it wouldn’t tell you was how the game fell apart in the second half, as two teams bickered, exchanged smack talk and came close to starting several fights as the refs lost whatever limited control they once had.

Some will say getting angry finally made the Wolves wake up and play better ball, and it’s true. Sort of.

After a run of games in which it shot out to leads, Coupeville spent a lot of time in the first half looking like a team that hadn’t played in nearly two weeks — which it hadn’t, last taking the court Dec. 18.

Back then, the Wolves bounced Concrete for their third straight win.

Jump forward to Wednesday and the Wolves slid towards the defeat that would even their season record at 4-4 fairly quickly.

Buried under a barrage of three-point bombs from Brave gunner Scott Lindeman, who finished with a game-high 31, Coupeville fell behind by double digits midway through the first quarter.

A 22-3 first quarter spurt staked La Conner to a 16-point bulge, and they stretched it out to 22 by the break, closing out the first half on a 15-3 run.

Down 49-27, the Wolves had to look hard for gems from the first half, though one could be found in JJ Johnson drilling a silky trey for his first-ever points in a Coupeville uniform.

And then we turn to the second half, a half really no one should be especially proud of.

Now it’s true, the Wolves outscored La Conner 29-20 in the second half and they briefly put the Braves on their heels with a ferocious run in the fourth quarter.

But that was tainted by much of what came with it, as a third-quarter altercation kicked off an unpleasant, drawn-out final 12 minutes of play.

A near fight, in which a player from each team had to be pulled from the floor while they yelled at each other — and yet no one was penalized — seemed to be the moment things changed.

It was followed almost immediately by a questionable flagrant foul call, then a clear flagrant foul that was ignored by a ref who watched it happen six inches from his nose.

After that, the petty flood gates opened.

Non-stop verbal sniping, including a player calling a rival coach a word often associated with female dogs, and so much low-class crap by both teams that it would be easy to not fully appreciate Coupeville’s late comeback.

And yes, give the Wolves credit — some players more than others — they clawed back into a respectable loss by essentially taking the ball and running right at the heart of the La Conner defense on every play in the fourth quarter.

It worked, as the gun-shy refs started calling EVERYTHING in an effort to reclaim some kind of control, and Coupeville used a nice run at the free throw stripe to kick-start a 19-5 run.

That pulled them back within nine, but Lindeman surfaced one final time, dropping a rainbow of a three to ice the game.

Coupeville spread its offense around, with Wiley Hesselgrave leading the way with 14. Jordan Ford fought the good fight on the boards and banged home 13, while Risen Johnson tallied 11.

Hunter Smith (5), Ryan Griggs (3), DeAndre Mitchell (3), JJ Johnson (3), Jared Helmstadter (2) and Dante Mitchell (2) rounded out the scoring stats.

After having so much time off, Coupeville returns to a more regular schedule next week.

The Wolves travel to South Whidbey Monday, then host Port Townsend Tuesday and Mount Vernon Christian Saturday.

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Dante Mitchell (John Fisken photos)

   Dante Mitchell, looking like he stepped out of an NBA promotional video. (John Fisken photos)

Risen Johnson

Lions, Lions everywhere and yet Risen Johnson never loses his cool.

Wiley

Wiley Hesselgrave moonlights as a ballet dancer. True story.

Risen and Hunter

“Do I have time for a selfie? I do, son, I do.”

Jordan Ford

   That moment when Jordan Ford (5) is not sure if this is all going to work out. Spoiler: it did.

Hunter Smith has a little shake, he has a little bake, he's about to drive home the stake.

   Hunter Smith has a little shake, he has a little bake, he’s about to drive home the stake.

Ryan Griggs

  Ryan Griggs: “It’s my basketball and he needs to get his stinkin’ fingers off of it!!”

More smiles than I've ever seen in one Wolf boys team photo, ever. Nicely played, gentlemen.

   More sauciness than I’ve ever seen in one Wolf boys team photo, ever. Nicely played, gentlemen.

They are the hottest team in the land.

After polishing off Concrete Friday, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad has won three straight, is above .500 for the first time in five seasons at 4-3 and sits atop the 1A Olympic League.

As they kept the express rolling, travelin’ camera man John Fisken snapped away and captured the pics above.

To see more (and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.nw1a2bathletics.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=10047&league=5&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=43&sport=0

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