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Posts Tagged ‘Xavier Murdy’

“Sit down, son! You were out by a mile.” (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Spring sports are sprung, no matter what the thermometer says.

A hardy prairie wind made it seem colder than it probably was Saturday, but we endured.

Players, coaches, some fans, and even a wanderin’ photographer or two stayed around for both halves of a baseball doubleheader in Coupeville.

The photos seen above and below capture moments from both the varsity and JV contests and come to us from John Fisken.

To see everything he shot, and ponder the possibility of purchasing some glossies for Grams in Great Neck, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Baseball-2021-2022/BB-2022-03-12-vs-Mt-Baker/

 

“Get in my glove!”

Feeling a random raindrop, Hawthorne Wolfe has a stare-down with Mother Nature.

Seth Woollet pivots into prime bunting position.

Xavier Murdy slaps the tag on an incoming runner.

Camden Glover flings the high, hard cheese.

Peyton Caveness patiently waits for the throw.

“Cold? This ain’t freakin’ cold!” Morgan Payne, the living legend who once slid through frozen mud to tap home and end the harshest CHS baseball game I’ve endured on the wind-torn prairie. It was -450 degrees that day. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.

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Caleb Meyer and Co. pushed top-seeded Kalama hard in their state playoff opener. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s a ding in the armor, but not a fatal blow.

Friday night, the Coupeville High School boys basketball team absorbed its first loss of the season, but the dream of bringing home a trophy from the state tournament still lives.

The Wolves, making their first appearance at the big dance in 34 years, fell 59-54 to Kalama, the top-ranked 2B team, in a game played at Battle Ground.

Coupeville, which used a blistering defense to spark a late 10-0 run to almost pull out the win, falls to 16-1, while Kalama improves to 20-1.

The Chinooks only loss this season came in their season opener, when a chunk of the team was still AWOL after winning a state football title.

Both teams advance to the next level of the state tourney, set for the Spokane Arena Mar. 2-5.

With the win, Kalama advances to the quarterfinals, while Coupeville will play either Lake Roosevelt or River View Mar. 2 in a loser-out game.

The top six teams at state bring home trophies.

The first round of state, played at “regional” sites, features four loser-out games pitting teams ranked #9-#16 in the draw, resulting in 12 teams advancing to Spokane.

Seeded #8, Coupeville was assured of playing at least two games, regardless of how the Kalama game went down.

For a team repping a program which last played at state in 1988 and won its first league title in 20 years and first district title in 52 seasons this year, the Wolves showed no signs of nerves.

Caleb Meyer drilled the bottom out of the net on a pull-up three-ball to open the scoring, and Coupeville played even with Kalama for much of the first half.

With the refs calling just three fouls total in the first half — a lesson for the folks wearing black and white striped shirts in our region — both teams got to play a fast-and-physical style.

The Wolves often looked quicker, while the Chinooks are a rugged bunch which hits the glass with a cold fury.

Twice Kalama nudged ahead in the first frame, only to see Xavier Murdy knot things right back up with three-balls which flipped the net high as the ball slid through.

The second trey was set up by a zippy pass off of Hawthorne Wolfe’s fingertips, with the scoreboard flicking to 11-11 as X-Man hit paydirt.

Trailing 13-11 at the first break, Coupeville put together a 7-0 run midway through the second quarter to pull back in front at 23-21.

All seven of the points came from the Maraudin’ Murdy boys, with younger brother Alex jumping in to aid Xavier.

Xavier Murdy topped all scorers Friday with 24 points.

Unfortunately for Coupeville, its only real weak stretch followed almost immediately.

Pounding away down low, Kalama used a variety of short-range shots to close the half on a 10-0 spurt, walking to the locker room with a solid 31-23 advantage.

But the Wolves weren’t ready to go away quietly. Cause that’s not their style.

Kalama, playing with precision and catching a ride on the rugged shoulders of Jackson Esary, who banged home 23 points, tried repeatedly to pull away.

Each time, however, Coupeville denied the Chinooks.

Facing a 14-point deficit midway through the third, the Wolves stormed back to cut it down to seven, thanks to a whole lot of Murdy boys and some gut-check buckets from sophomore Logan Downes.

Then, after Kalama stretched the margin back out to 13, CHS coach Brad Sherman unleashed a full-court press to fuel Coupeville’s biggest run.

Down 57-44, the Wolves forced multiple turnovers, turning the extra chances into a magical 10-0 explosion which set the Chinooks back on their heels.

Grady Rickner got things started with a sweet lil’ jumper, before Meyer nailed a free throw and Alex Murdy converted off of an offensive rebound.

That set up Xavier Murdy to seize the spotlight, as the perpetual ball of energy capped a game-high 24-point performance with two of the biggest baskets of his prep career.

First he knocked down a shot in the paint, but not before Downes punched the ball free and Alex Murdy snatched it away from the Chinooks, feeding his brother with a pinpoint pass.

With the Coupeville fans — who made a 400+ mile round-trip — shaking the bleachers, the Wolves forced Kalama to throw the ball away on the next possession, followed by Xavier Murdy getting magical.

X-Man’s three-ball went up, hit the rim, popped straight up, kissed the heavens, then tumbled back through the net, cutting the margin to 57-54 and setting off pandemonium.

But give Kalama credit.

A fair amount of their players knows what it’s like to win a gridiron state championship, and they emerged from a very-tough district tourney after winning back-to-back games in the final seconds.

So, it’s not surprising the Chinooks held up under pressure in the final 37 seconds, netting two free throws to make it a two-possession game, while keeping Coupeville from hitting one (or two) more big shots.

The Murdy boys combined to drop 38 on Kalama, with Xavier (24) and Alex (14) both reaching personal milestones along the way.

With 201 career points, and counting, Alex — Coupeville’s main defensive dynamo — cracks the 200-point club, joining uncle Allen Black (305) and big bro Xavier (472).

X-Man, meanwhile, moves into a tie with Pat O’Grady at #51 on the CHS boys career scoring chart, which dates back 105 seasons.

Downes chipped in Friday with eight points, Meyer and Rickner both banked in four, and Wolfe, Logan Martin, and Cole White saw floor time for Coupeville.

 

State tourney bracket:

http://www.nw1a2bathletics.com/m2/tourn.php?act=vt&tid=3462

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Xavier Murdy makes a deposit. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

We rolled right over them.

Sparked by a grandma on a mission, Wolf Nation overwhelmed 37 other fan bases to carry our guy to a lopsided win at the polls.

Coupeville High School senior Xavier Murdy, one of the leaders of a 13-0 boys basketball squad, handily won a voting showcase which ended Sunday night.

The poll brought together a mad mix of girls and boys from across the state, and hailing from every classification, and was hosted by SB Live Washington.

Its official name is the “WaFd Bank Washington High School Athlete of the Week,” and for the dates of Jan. 17-23, that’s one Mr. Murdy.

And it was like a tsunami hitting the shore, as the Wolf senior captured 138,436 votes, or 48.14% of every vote cast.

Murdy held off Zillah hoops star Ashton Waldman, who started strong, and finished less so, ending with 113,106 tallies.

Third place was way, way back, with Eastlake’s Will Woodward, a basketball player who has signed with the University of Washington as a baseball star, eking out 8,185 votes.

In all, the 38 athletes involved in the poll brought in 287,568 votes.

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Xavier Murdy (11), ready to fill up the stat sheet. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Just a small smidge of X-Man’s fan club.

Hard worker, selfless player.

Coupeville High School senior Xavier Murdy is prone to filling up the stat sheet, but always with an eye on one thing — the final score on the board.

“We got the dub!” is how he proudly summed things up after a recent romp, part of an 11-0 start for the red-hot Wolves.

Monday, Murdy got some respect from the big boys in the biz, when Scorebook Live hailed his work from last week, when he helped spur CHS to four wins in five days.

To see the write-up, pop over to:

https://scorebooklive.com/washington/2022/01/24/top-stars-best-performances-in-washington-high-school-boys-and-girls-basketball-jan-17-23/?fbclid=IwAR36EsWObaujJ4S3w7cCzgK-ruMUK7cb0Z-wLOM50NXvrtX235QAbXdM5zo

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Grady Rickner and Coupeville are flying high at 10-0. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

No stumble in their step.

Holding visiting Concrete without a shot for the first two-and-a-half minutes Thursday, the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball team made quick work of their overmatched foes.

Blitzing the Lions 72-24, the Wolves surge to 8-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League action, 10-0 overall.

Next up is a non-conference rumble at South Whidbey Saturday, then a rematch with their top league foe, Mount Vernon Christian, Jan. 27.

The Wolves, who are chasing their first league title since 2002, play their final five regular season games on the road, not returning home again until they host the district tournament Feb. 15-17.

Giving the local fans a glimpse at how scary it can be when everything is clicking, Coupeville decimated Concrete from the opening tip.

With all five starters attacking on defense, the Wolves roared out to a 14-0 lead before Concrete managed to get a shot up, much less make a bucket.

Xavier Murdy drilled a three-ball from the left corner to kick things off, then a madly scrambling full-court press produced turnover after turnover to be converted into lightning-quick buckets.

The Lions finally got the ball airborne at the 5:35 mark of the first quarter, hitting a layup.

Concrete also converted its second shot attempt, though by the time that pullup jumper tumbled through the net, it trailed 27-2.

The Wolves knocked down six three-balls in the opening frame, with Xavier Murdy netting half of those, and headed to the bench boasting a 38-6 advantage at the first break.

For comparison, Concrete has only topped 38 points in an entire GAME twice this season in 11 contests, so anyone hoping for a shocking comeback had to have known they were out of luck.

To the Lions credit, they scrambled and played hard, and actually slowed Coupeville’s offense down for a brief bit.

The Wolves only added a pair of breakaway buckets off of steals across the first five minutes of the second quarter, but then shook free of their brief stupor to push the halftime lead out to 52-15.

Third quarter three-balls from Caleb Meyer, Logan Downes, and then Meyer again — with a picture-perfect jumper off the fingertips of Logan Martin mixed in for good measure — moved the needle all the way out to 63-15.

Then the running clock became the only thing capable of slowing Coupeville’s roll.

Giving his bench some solid floor time, CHS coach Brad Sherman watched as Dominic Coffman carried the scoring load late, while Nick Guay popped an elegant jumper from the side for his first varsity points.

Brad Sherman draws up a play.

With two regulars sidelined by Covid protocols, the Wolves also bumped freshman Hunter Bronec up to the first team, and he made a strong varsity debut.

Xavier Murdy paced Coupeville’s attack, going off for all 22 of his points in the first half, with Meyer and Downes adding 13 and 12, respectively.

Coffman (6), Alex Murdy (5), Grady Rickner (5), Cole White (5), Guay (2), and Martin (2) also kept CHS scorekeeper June Mazdra and her well-sharpened pencil busy.

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