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Wolf senior lineman William Davidson rumbles at summer football camp. (Courtney Sollars photos)

Best way to prepare for breezy fall football Fridays?

Put in the work on hot Thursday afternoons during the summer like Coupeville High School players did recently.

The Wolves, coming off their first league title and trip to state since 1990, traveled to Shelton for a multi-day camp this week.

While in the land of the Highclimbers, Coupeville players participated in a wide array of drills, strong man competitions, and team bonding moments.

Now they’re back home, with less than six weeks until the first game of the 2023 campaign.

That’ll be a home affair Friday, Sept. 1, with non-league rival Klahowya slated to travel to Cow Town for a 6:00 PM kickoff.

Until then, marinate in a batch of camp pics.

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Wolf hoops guru Brad Sherman (grey shirt) plots strategy. (Michael Davidson photo)

Turn up the heat, turn up the intensity.

Coupeville High School boys’ basketball coaches packed 24 Wolf players into various cars and trucks and headed East this past Thursday, landing in Spokane for a weekend full of hoops.

Gonzaga University was the destination, with a three-day basketball camp at the home of the Bulldogs the reward.

Playing at all hours in a heat not seen back in Cow Town, the Wolves got plenty of floor time.

Coupeville played seven varsity games, as well as appearing in six JV games, with the spare hours featuring clinics put on by Zags staff and players, as well as team bonding time.

Coupeville seniors, and their support crew. (Photo courtesy Charlotte Young)

“I need you to go in like a wrecking ball.” (Michael Davidson photo)

Looking for an opening in the defense. (Michael Davidson photo)

Getting ready for game time. (Michelle Glass photo)

Reppin’ Cow Town in a hoops mecca. (Courtney Simpson-Pilgrim photo)

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Aiden O’Neill came up huge in the final moments Wednesday in a summer ball win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

God’s chosen sport was in full bloom Wednesday night.

Basketball, of the early summer variety, was on the schedule, and Coupeville High School’s boys’ hoops squads were in action on their home hardwood.

Hosting Island rivals Oak Harbor and South Whidbey, the Wolves won two of three, pulling out a thriller in the JV game and splitting a pair of varsity tilts.

Ultimately, summer ball, with each game boasting two 20-minute halves with a running clock until the final 120 seconds, is more about improvement and growth than wins and losses.

“The boys are playing well together,” said CHS varsity coach Brad Sherman.

“And it’s summer, so we’re getting to see new groups play together and try some new stuff. It’s fun!”

The Wolves, who return most of their roster from this past winter, are scheduled to play in a variety of scrimmages and tourneys this summer, as well as attend a team camp at Gonzaga University.

 

How Wednesday’s games played out:

 

JV:

Coupeville scored the final six points to pull out a 37-36 win in a game with Oak Harbor where it led by eight early, then trailed by five late.

Down 36-31 with the clock running out, the Wolves had no room for error.

So, they played to perfection.

Jack Porter rolled down the baseline to knock down a bucket, before CHS clamped down on defense.

Oak Harbor was called for a crucial offensive foul with 36 ticks remaining — a Wildcat bowling over a Wolf defender with a resounding crunch — and Coupeville responded.

Aiden O’Neill buried a three-ball to knot the game at 36-36, his second trey in the game’s final moments, then came back around to knife the Wildcats with a game-icing free throw with six seconds on the clock.

The furious finale capped a game of extremes, as Coupeville rolled early, only to see Oak Harbor crawl back into the game behind a hail of three-balls.

Hunter and Hurlee Bronec had the hot touch early, combining for seven points as the Wolves built a 9-1 lead.

The Wildcats didn’t break however, closing the half on a 13-4 run, with a pullup jumper right before halftime pushing them out in front 16-15.

Coupeville trailed for much of the second half, briefly knotting things at 26-26 before Oak Harbor once again threatened to pull away for good.

O’Neill’s late heroics, which also included a note-perfect pass to set up Hunter Bronec for a key layup, kept the Wolves alive, with everything going exactly to script in the waning moments.

Jack Porter paced CHS with a game-high 14 points, with Hunter Bronec (8), O’Neill (7), Hurlee Bronec (4), Landon Roberts (2), and Mikey Robinett (2) also scoring.

Yohannon Sandles, Johnny Porter, and Timothy Nitta also saw floor time for the Wolves.

 

Varsity Game #1:

Blowout city, as Coupeville came out hot and never cooled off, thumping South Whidbey 47-23.

The Falcons actually scored the first bucket of the game, before the Wolves unleashed hardwood hell on their neighbors.

Logan Downes poured in 13 of his game-high 18 points during a game-busting 26-7 run, which also featured a couple of sweet buckets off the fingertips of Cole White and a beautiful hustle play by William Davidson.

The cerebral big man slid between a pair of Falcons to snatch away a rebound, before pivoting and firing a gorgeous outlet pass to Chase Anderson, who was so far ahead of the defense South Whidbey needed binoculars to watch the ensuing layup.

William Davidson, eyeballing the cameraman, is an invaluable role player. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Up 26-13 at the half, the Wolves went deep into their bench, while continuing to push their advantage.

Downes singed the nets on a corner three-ball, after pulling off a shimmy-and-go move which left his defender parked six rows up into the bleachers.

After that, he left the scoring up to the young guns fighting for roster spots, with Jack Porter and Hunter Bronec spilling sweat while dominating in the paint.

White finished with eight to back up Downes and his 18, while Anderson dropped in six points.

Nick Guay (4), Porter (4), Bronec (4), Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim (2), and Davidson (1) rounded out the scoring, while Zane Oldenstadt and Ryan Blouin were aggressive on defense.

 

Varsity Game #2:

Coupeville’s top squad returned to the floor mere moments after wiping out South Whidbey, while Oak Harbor’s main crew was fresh and playing for the first time.

Ultimately, that proved to be the difference, as the Wildcats held on for a 55-48 win.

The visitors don’t have much height, but they are quick, and threatened to bust the game open early.

Trailing 24-12 and scrabbling a bit, Coupeville rediscovered its mojo, closing the first half on a 10-0 tear.

Downes and White combined to provide the offensive fireworks, while Davidson generated the loudest audience reaction of the night after drawing a charge down low.

Coupeville actually knotted the game up at 24-24, only to have its final bucket waved off for being a fraction too late.

Instead, the Wolves came out of the very-short halftime break down two and hung tough even as they begin to exhibit tired legs down the stretch.

The biggest killer in the second half was an inability to string together buckets, as CHS only notched back-to-back baskets once in the final 20 minutes.

That gave the Wildcats a bit of breathing room, and time and again, Oak Harbor hit shots when it needed them most, holding off its scrappy small-school rivals.

Blouin peppered the net for a pair of three-balls late, while White and Downes each made the twine jump on a long shot of their own.

Unfortunately, for Downes, his three-ball, coming on the game’s final play, was waved off like Davidson’s buzzer beater in the first half, falling victim to being .000001 of a second too late.

The Wolf senior-to-be still finished with a team-high 21 points, while White banked in 11 and Blouin knocked down eight.

Guay and Anderson rattled the rims for four apiece to finish off the attack.

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Nick Guay slashes hard to the hoop. (Bailey Thule photo)

These are the nights which bring a warm glow to a coach’s heart.

Facing off with the tallest team in the Northwest 2B/1B League Tuesday, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball squad proved big hearts can beat big bodies.

Doing all the important things sometimes overlooked in the buzz over scoring records — hitting the glass, closing out on defense, making the extra pass — the Wolves held on for a 44-39 win over visiting Mount Vernon Christian in an old-fashioned bar room brawl.

The win, Coupeville’s fourth in its last five games, lifts Brad Sherman’s squad to 6-5, while the Hurricanes slip to 9-5.

While the game featured two league rivals squaring off, the result doesn’t count in the conference standings.

Thanks to a quirk in the schedule, the rematch, which is Jan. 20 in Mount Vernon, is the rumble which matters most as Coupeville seeks to defend its league crown.

But whether it was a “league” or “non-league” game, Tuesday’s tilt was a biggie, and one the Wolves really wanted.

From William Davidson drawing two offensive charging fouls on MVC players in the first quarter, to fellow Wolf bruisers Zane Oldenstadt and Dominic Coffman yanking down rebounds, this was a true team effort.

Add in ferocious defensive play from Alex Murdy and Cole White, doing their best to thoroughly frustrate Hurricane ballhandlers, and Sherman came away pleased.

“That was a good team win,” he said.

“A lot of guys played really tough tonight and got their jobs done, especially our guys battling in the paint and out pressuring the ball.”

MVC actually jumped in front early, claiming a 6-0 lead, before Coupeville stormed back.

Logan Downes popped back-to-back three-balls, kicking off a run of 13 straight points from the Wolf junior, busting things open a bit.

After teaming up with Oldenstadt on a scorching give-and-go play, Downes also picked up a bucket on a slash through the heart of the Hurricane defense, before capping things with a third trey.

Frazzled, MVC lost the ball in the back court, or rather, it was ripped away by Coffman, who immediately turned it into a bucket of his own, and the Wolves were romping, up 15-6.

The visitors were a resilient bunch, though, getting a three-point play the hard way to end the first quarter, then holding Coupeville to just five points in the second frame.

While slowed down a bit, the Wolves never lost control of the game, or relinquished the lead after claiming it for the first time.

White drew a charge on an MVC player, before Downes ran down the clock, cutting hard to the basket for a layup with a single, solitary second left before the halftime break.

His bucket staked Coupeville to a 20-17 lead, and the Wolves jumped hard on the Hurricanes to open both the third and fourth quarters.

The first time around, a 12-2 surge, with Ryan Blouin and Downes nailing back-to-back three-balls and White netting his 100th career point on a short jumper, pushed the lead out to 13 points.

MVC hung tough, closing the third quarter on its own 8-0 run to get back within 32-27, but the Wolves put together a 10-4 tear to open the fourth, all but sealing the win.

Coupeville’s buckets down the stretch were fueled by big plays on the defensive end of the floor.

Murdy yanked away a rebound, and White made off with a steal, with both Wolves feeding Downes on breakaway baskets.

Then there was Davidson, standing tall in the paint, turning a rebound into a kickout to White, who beat the defense down the floor.

While MVC narrowed the final margin from 11 to five during a frantic final 45 seconds, time ran out on the Hurricanes, with a layup under pressure from Nick Guay capping Coupeville’s offensive effort.

Downes had a hot hand, pumping in a game-high 28 points, and moves within four of cracking the 500-point club, while Guay (5), White (4), Coffman (4), and Blouin (3) provided support.

Jonathan Valenzuela, Oldenstadt, Davidson, and Murdy may not have scored on this night, but all four provided key contributions for a team which earned the victory by continuing to showcase its ability to survive a string of rough-and-tumble foes.

Up next is a home game against Darrington (3-7) Friday, with this one counting in the league standings, and a long trip Saturday to play non-conference rival Neah Bay (4-3).

That second contest kicks off a run of road games for the Wolves, who play six of their final eight regular-season bouts away from Whidbey Island.

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Myca Clarkson and Co. are bound for the state playoffs. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Eight games in, and the future is wide open.

The Coupeville High School football team capped a 7-1 tear through the regular season by claiming its first league title, and first trip to the state playoffs, since 1990.

By this weekend, we’ll be down to 12 teams capable of winning a 2B crown, and one of those will be wearing red and black.

The Wolves find out their opening foe, and when and where they’ll play, when the field is seeded this Sunday, Nov. 6.

Until then, you can marinate in some season-to-date stats offered up by CHS coaches.

 

OFFENSE:

 

Passing:

Logan Downes — 80-133 for 1,155 yards with 17 TDs
Chase Anderson — 4-10 for 31 yards with 1 TD

 

Receiving:

Tim Ursu — 25 receptions for 271 yards
Daylon Houston — 14-262
Scott Hilborn — 18-227
Hunter Bronec — 11-163
Dominic Coffman — 6-133
Anderson — 1-40
Henry Ohme — 1-35
Aiden O’Neill — 1-25
Cameron Breaux — 2-15
Johnny Porter — 1-14
Marquette Cunningham — 1-(-3)
Jack Porter — 1-(-3)

 

Rushing:

Coffman — 76 carries for 680 yards
Hilborn — 47-458
Jo. Porter — 34-141
Downes — 17-66
Ursu — 11-31
O’Neill — 7-20
Ja. Porter — 1-8
Xander Stinnett — 2-5
Anderson — 3-4
Devinion Hill — 2-1
Mikey Robinett — 1-0

 

Total Yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes — 1221
Coffman — 813
Hilborn — 685
Ursu — 302
Houston — 262
Hun. Bronec — 163
Jo. Porter — 155
Anderson — 75
O’Neill — 45
Ohme — 35
Breaux — 15
Ja. Porter — 5
Stinnett — 5
Hill — 1

 

All-Purpose Yards (Rush/Rec/KR/PR/IR):

Hilborn — 815
Coffman — 813
Ursu — 668
Houston — 433
Jo. Porter — 167
Hun. Bronec — 163
Downes — 91
O’Neill — 52
Anderson — 44
William Davidson — 40
Ohme — 35
Breaux — 15
Ja. Porter — 5
Stinnett — 5
Hill — 1

 

Pancake blocks:

Davidson — 1
Zane Oldenstadt — 1

 

Touchdowns:

Coffman – 13
Hilborn – 12
Ursu – 12
Houston – 3
Jo. Porter – 3
Anderson – 1
Hun. Bronec – 1
Peyton Caveness – 1
Davidson – 1
Downes – 1
Ohme – 1
O’Neill – 1

 

Conversions:

Ursu — 2
Hilborn — 2
Coffman — 1
Houston – 1

 

PATs:

Houston — 18
Anderson — 12

 

Field Goals:

Houston — 1

 

Points:

Coffman — 80
Hilborn — 76
Ursu — 76
Houston — 41
Anderson — 18
Jo. Porter — 18
Hun. Bronec – 6
Caveness – 6
Davidson – 6
Downes — 6
Ohme – 6
O’Neill — 6
Team — 4

 

DEFENSE:

 

Tackles:

Hilborn — 77
Ursu — 59
Coffman — 45
Kevin Partida — 42
Caveness — 41
Jonathan Valenzuela — 36
Davidson — 29
Josh Upchurch — 23
Robinett — 21
Downes — 20
Kai Wong — 13
Houston — 11
O’Neill — 11
Marcelo Gebhard — 10
Oldenstadt — 5
Jo. Porter — 5
Hurlee Bronec — 4
Coen Killian — 3
Ja. Porter — 3
Anderson — 2
Hun. Bronec — 1
Myca Clarkson — 1
Yohannon Sandles — 1
Chris Villarreal — 1

 

Tackles For Loss:

Hilborn — 17
Upchurch — 7
Valenzuela — 7
Caveness — 5
Coffman — 5
Robinett — 3
Ursu — 3
Partida — 2
Davidson — 1
Downes — 1
Killian — 1
O’Neill — 1

 

Interceptions:

Downes – 3
Hilborn – 2
Ursu – 2
Coffman – 1
Davidson – 1
O’Neill — 1
Valenzuela – 1

 

Passes Defensed:

Ursu — 9
Downes — 6
Hilborn — 3
Caveness — 2
Davidson — 2
O’Neill — 2
Valenzuela — 2
Anderson — 1
Hun. Bronec — 1
Partida — 1
Ja. Porter — 1

 

Fumble recoveries:

Caveness — 3
Coffman — 3
Hilborn — 1
Partida — 1
Upchurch — 1
Ursu — 1
Valenzuela — 1

 

Sacks:

Hilborn — 6
Coffman — 3
Caveness — 2
Upchurch — 2
Valenzuela — 2
Killian — 1
Robinett — 1

 

QB Hurries:

Coffman — 4
Davidson — 4
Oldenstadt — 3
Robinett — 3
Hilborn — 2
Jo. Porter — 1
Valenzuela — 1
Wong — 1

 

Blocked Punts:

Valenzuela — 1

 

SPECIAL TEAMS:

 

Kickoffs:

Ezra Boilek — 14

 

Punts:

Downes — 8-282

 

Kickoff returns:

Houston — 4-171
Ursu — 4-155
Hilborn — 5-127
Jo. Porter — 2-12
O’Neill — 1-7

 

Punt returns:

Ursu — 9-169
Hilborn — 1-3

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