Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Xavier Murdy’

Sophie Martin has scored five goals while playing for CHS soccer. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Xavier Murdy has a nose for the net.

Sophie Martin leads the charge.

The Coupeville High School senior has netted five career goals as a Wolf, placing her atop all active CHS soccer scorers heading into a new season.

When Coupeville kicks off the fall campaign — first day of practice is next Monday, August 23 — there will be 11 players who possess eligibility and have at least one varsity goal on their resume.

While we don’t know yet if all of those booters — six girls and five boys — will return to action for the Wolves, we do know who they’ll be chasing.

Mia Littlejohn owns both CHS girls soccer records, having tallied 27 goals in a single season, and 35 for her career.

Over on the boys side of the ledger, the records are split between a pair of cousins, with Derek Leyva having torched the net for 24 scores in a season, while Abraham Leyva finished with 45 career tallies.

Martin’s five goals places her in a five-way tie with Anna Dion, Britt Harpe, Jenn Spark, and Tia Wurzrainer.

The Wolf senior needs four goals to supplant Sage Renninger (8) as the sixth-best scorer in program history, and if she doubles her career total she can join an exclusive club of Wolves to reach double digits.

That list includes Mia Littlejohn (35), Kalia Littlejohn (33), Genna Wright (20), Lindsey Roberts (17), and Avalon Renninger (12).

For the boys program, the top active scorers are senior Xavier Murdy and junior Aidan Wilson, who both sit with three career goals.

 

Career goal totals for active Wolf players:

 

GIRLS:

Sophie Martin – 5
Eryn Wood – 3
Carolyn Lhamon – 1
Ava Mitten – 1
Audrianna Shaw – 1
Reese Wilkinson – 1

 

BOYS:

Xavier Murdy – 3
Aiden Wilson – 3
Nick Guay – 1
Cole White – 1
Cael Wilson – 1

Read Full Post »

Xavier Murdy, seen in a regular-season game, won a three-ball contest at a summer camp. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ready to storm the court. (Photos courtesy Brad Sherman)

This beautifully-refurbished old-school gym was a destination spot for the Wolves. Someone tell Willie Smith to get crackin’ on recreating it in Cow Town.

One big step into the future.

With a pandemic-altered season barely in the rearview mirror, Coupeville High School boys basketball quickly transitioned towards a 2021-2022 season which will arrive in mere months.

Wolf coaches and 20 players made the trip to Moscow, Idaho, where they took part in the Cloud 9 Sports – Gorilla Poet Team Camp from June 28-July 1.

CHS head coach Brad Sherman was able to send both a varsity and JV squad onto the floor, and felt time spent at the camp was invaluable.

“A great experience!,” he said. “We had a great turnout, and we grew as a team and got better against tough competition.”

Teams played eight games in a “simulation tournament,” where end-of-game scenarios were played out.

There were also practices, team meetings, a dunk contest, and a three-point shooting showdown.

Coupeville made a sizable impact there, with incoming senior Xavier Murdy singing the nets as he won the three-ball contest.

The camp also gave the Wolves a chance to integrate younger players, including several of whom haven’t played high school ball yet.

 

Wolf players who made the trip:

Chase Anderson
Ryan Blouin
Hunter Bronec
Hurlee Bronec
Dominic Coffman
Miles Davidson
William Davidson
Nathan Ginnings
Nick Guay
Alex Murdy
Xavier Murdy
Jack Porter
Johnny Porter
Grady Rickner
Landon Roberts
Mikey Robinett
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim
Jonathan Valenzuela
Cole White
Hawthorne Wolfe

 

Xavier Murdy wins the three-ball contest:

 

Grady Rickner competes in the slam dunk contest:

Read Full Post »

Xavier Murdy was one of 11 Wolves to letter this season. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Cole White joined Jonathan Valenzuela as a JV captain.

The most-successful Coupeville High School boys basketball season in 11 years came to an official close Friday.

Wolf hoops coach Brad Sherman handed out certificates and letters to his players, putting a final stamp on a pandemic-altered campaign.

But first he stopped to honor everyone connected with the team for overcoming long odds during an international pandemic.

“We wanted to recognize every member of this team and all they overcame in a difficult year,” Sherman said. “And acknowledge their hard work in a very, very long off-season, without knowing if they’d get a season at all.”

Basketball was moved from the winter to late spring, and the Wolves played a compressed schedule while dealing with multiple Covid-related restrictions.

But both Wolf squads prospered.

The JV, under first-year head coach Hunter Smith, closed with a five-game winning streak en route to posting a 5-3 record.

Coupeville’s varsity won six of its final seven games, with the only loss a one-point decision in overtime.

Finishing 8-4, just a half-game off Northwest 2B/1B League champ Mount Vernon Christian (8-3) — a team they beat twice — the Wolves captured their first winning season since 2010.

Junior Xavier Murdy, who led the varsity in rebounds, assists, and steals, while finishing as the #2 scorer, was named the “Wolf Way Player of the Year.”

The award honors someone who exemplifies the team’s five pillars of grit, gratitude, humility, trust, and excellence.

Fellow junior Hawthorne Wolfe earned Offensive Player of the Year, while sophomore Alex Murdy claimed Defensive Player of the Year.

Wolfe averaged 21 points a night, rattling the rims for 38 points against both MVC and Orcas Island, while Alex Murdy was viewed by CHS coaches as their “best lockdown defender.”

Rounding out the varsity awards, TJ Rickner copped the Coaches Award, with Daniel Olson and Sage Downes receiving Four-Year awards for playing every season of their prep career.

Grady Rickner and Xavier Murdy were honored as team captains.

On the JV side of things, Cole White won the Wolf Way Player of the Year award, with Jonathan Valenzuela (Offensive Player of the Year), William Davidson (Defensive Player of the Year), and Zane Oldenstadt (Coaches Award) also taking home certificates.

White and Valenzuela were JV team captains.

Sherman and his coaching staff (Hunter Smith, Greg White, and Randy Bottorff) also recognized the people who worked hard behind the scenes to make the season a success.

That included Courtney Pilgrim for “keeping our away books and helping to provide our away game food,” Morgan White for “setting up our team gear store and designing the stuff for us,” and CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith for “all of his hard work to make our season a possibility.”

Also feted was the Coupeville Booster Club, which purchased new warm-up tops for the team.

 

Varsity letter winners:

Miles Davidson
Logan Downes (**Freshman**)
Sage Downes
Logan Martin
Alex Murdy
Xavier Murdy
Daniel Olson
Grady Rickner
TJ Rickner
Cody Roberts
Hawthorne Wolfe

 

Varsity participation certificates:

Jonathan Valenzuela
Cole White

 

JV participation certificates:

Ryan Blouin
Dominic Coffman
William Davidson
Nathan Ginnings
Nick Guay
Zane Oldenstadt
Mikey Robinett
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim
Jonathan Valenzuela
Alex Wasik
Cole White
Andrew Williams

Read Full Post »

With a win Tuesday, Xavier Murdy and Coupeville finished 8-4, the first winning season for a Wolf boys hoops squad since 2010. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Concern? Yes.

Panic? Not at all.

Bouncing back from an early deficit, the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball squad rained down pain on visiting Darrington Tuesday night, pulling away in the middle two quarters for a season-closing win.

Using a 47-9 run to bust open the game across the second and third frames, the Wolves turned a six-point deficit into an eventual 64-29 romp.

The victory lifts Coupeville’s final record to 8-4 in this pandemic-altered season, leaving them just a half-game off of Northwest 2B/1B League champ Mount Vernon Christian.

CHS beat MVC (8-3) both times they played this season, with the Hurricanes benefiting from playing one less game than the Wolves.

That’s thanks to MVC not hosting Orcas Island, after the Vikings requested no fans be allowed to attend their road games during the pandemic.

Coupeville joined Concrete as the only schools from the seven-team NWL to play a full 12-game league schedule this spring.

Three of Coupeville’s four losses were decided by one play (a pair of one-point defeats to Friday Harbor and a two-point loss to La Conner) and the Wolves backed down against no one.

Sparked by seniors Daniel Olson, Sage Downes, and TJ Rickner, who were honored Tuesday, this year’s squad became the first Wolf boys varsity hoops team to post a winning record since 2010.

TJ Rickner was one of three Wolf seniors honored Tuesday. (Morgan White photos)

With 10 players eligible to return next season, including two-time scoring champ Hawthorne Wolfe, CHS coach Brad Sherman has much talent to work with going forward.

Thanks to the pandemic pushing basketball from the winter to the spring, the turnaround between seasons will be much shorter than normal.

That left the Wolves trying to balance the joy of what they accomplished this season with almost immediately planning for plunging into the work to take the next step — winning the program’s first league title since 2002, a time when Sherman was a player, and not a coach.

“Certainly great to send our seniors off with a big team win like that,” he said. “This team has a lot to feel good about this year – the resilience they showed through the off-season was remarkable.

“The way they came together during this shortened season, and the growth they showed as a group while they battled it out in this new league was really fun to be a part of,” Sherman added.

“Proud of each of these boys for the hard work and grit they showed week in and week out – and I hope they can look back and be proud of it too.”

Daniel Olson made key contributions, especially on defense, to lead his squad to a winning record this spring.

With its three seniors playing their final game four days after graduation, Coupeville came out a bit slowly against Darrington.

The night’s first bucket didn’t fall until the 5:42 mark of the first quarter, as Sage Downes slapped home a rebound, and then things got even drier.

The Loggers hit a pair of three-balls and jumped on Coupeville, building an 8-2 lead and sending the slightest of tremors through the gathered Wolf faithful.

But any trepidation didn’t last very long, as CHS started to heat up from behind the arc.

Back-to-back three-balls from Xavier Murdy and Wolfe got the crowd happy, before Hawk knifed the Loggers with another trey, this one off an inbounds pass and let loose from way behind the line.

Darrington’s final lead came at 13-11, before Alex Murdy flipped the switch.

A layup, off a pass from his brother, tied the game, then the sophomore sparkplug used a nifty Euro step move to stake CHS to a 15-13 lead at the first break.

Alex wasn’t done, slashing through the paint for a bucket to open the second quarter, and that unleashed a tsunami.

A 23-7 run in the second frame pushed the halftime lead to 38-20, before a 24-2 surge in the third put Coupeville up 62-22 heading into the final quarter.

The Wolves hit from every angle, with the majority of their scoring plays coming off of sharply-thrown passes, each player taking the time to set up their teammate on a night when everyone got a chance to contribute.

Wolfe, who knocked down two more three-balls along the way, was a wizard with the ball, whipping passes to Sage Downes and Grady Rickner for easy buckets.

Both Murdy brothers delivered note-perfect assists as well, while Wolfe, Olson, and Sage Downes teamed up for a bingo-bango-bongo series of passes which covered one end of the floor to the other.

Sage Downes played strongly at both ends of the floor in his finale.

Playing for the final time in a CHS uniform, Sage Downes paced the Wolves with a team-high 14 points, while Wolfe settled for a fairly-quiet 12.

That was still enough to lift the junior gunner three spots on the program’s career scoring chart, as he passes Jason McFadyen (654), Wade Ellsworth (659), and Pat Bennett (659) to move into 24th place across 104 seasons.

Wolfe sits with 662 points heading into his senior season, leaving him just 26 points shy of breaking into the top 20.

Alex Murdy added 10 points Tuesday, with freshman Logan Downes (9), Grady Rickner (7), Xavier Murdy (7), TJ Rickner (3), and Olson (2) also scoring.

With 221 career points, Xavier Murdy is now #125 on the all-time chart, needing 85 points next season to pass uncle Allen Black to become his family’s top scorer.

Logan Martin, Cole White, Jonathan Valenzuela, Miles Davidson, and Cody Roberts rounded out the roster, with everyone seeing floor time in the finale.

 

Final season scoring stats:

Hawthorne Wolfe – 252
Xavier Murdy – 122
Grady Rickner – 94
Sage Downes – 64
Logan Downes – 52
Daniel Olson – 51
Alex Murdy – 49
Logan Martin – 31
TJ Rickner – 18
Jonathan Valenzuela – 15
Cody Roberts – 8
Miles Davidson – 4
Cole White – 2

Read Full Post »

TJ (left) and Grady Rickner are one of five sets of siblings playing basketball for Coupeville High School. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

All in the family.

There are five different sets of siblings playing basketball at Coupeville High School this season – four brother combos and one sister duo.

There’s a wide range of ages involved, as well, with every class (and then some) represented.

Break down the family affair and we find two seniors, four juniors, two sophomores, one freshman, and even one 8th grader.

With the Wolves moving to the 2B classification, CHS can use middle school students to shore up high school programs struggling with low numbers, such as boys soccer or girls basketball.

So, to the great joy of mom Katie Wells, that has meant daughters Savina (8th grader) and Izzy (11th grader) get two seasons together, and not one as originally expected.

Graduation will break up two of the five sets, with Sage Downes and TJ Rickner set to move on after this season.

But for now, there’s a whole lot of family connections at play in the Wolf hoops programs.

William and Miles Davidson

Savina and Izzy Wells

Logan and Sage Downes

Alex and Xavier Murdy

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »