Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Zane Oldenstadt’

William Davidson (left), Alex Murdy and friends are on a hot streak. (Andrew Williams photo)

Where’s the butter, cause they’re on a roll.

Crunching an Eastern Washington rival for the second straight day, the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball squad end the 2022 portion of their season riding a hot streak.

Bashing Manson 64-42 in Leavenworth Wednesday, the Wolves nab their fifth victory in their last seven games and win the four-team Cascade Holiday Classic.

The host team claimed 3rd place, walloping Kittitas-Thorp 66-51 in Wednesday’s opener.

Basking in the glow of a tourney title. (Riley White photo)

Now 5-4 on the season, Coupeville is off for eight days, then kicks off Northwest 2B/1B League play.

The Wolves host their next three tilts, squaring off with Orcas Island (Jan. 6), Mount Vernon Christian (Jan. 10), and Darrington (Jan. 13).

While Brad Sherman’s squad will enjoy being back on The Rock, and off the ever-bouncing bus, Coupeville is a pristine 4-0 when playing away from Whidbey Island this season.

After holding off a scrappy Kittitas team in Tuesday’s tourney opener, the Wolves dropped the hammer on Manson.

The Trojans actually led 3-1 early, having drilled the first of 10 three-balls they would hit on the day.

After that, with pregame music from Nirvana still lingering in the air, it was all Wolves, almost all the time.

Cole White sliced down the baseline, jabbing inside for a layup to knot things at 3-3, and Coupeville was off on a 17-2 tear to end the first quarter.

Five different Wolves hit the bottom of the net in the frame, with Logan Downes flicking a pair of three-balls over the outstretched arms of Manson defenders to lead the way.

Coupeville’s defense spurred its offense, whether it was Alex Murdy cleaning the glass, White making off with steals, or Nick Guay sacrificing his body to draw a charge.

Once they had the ball in hand, the Wolves made smart passes, setting each other up for easy buckets and keeping the Trojans running all over the floor in a futile effort to slow things down.

Up 18-5 at the first break, CHS maintained its lead during a back-and-forth second quarter, doing the small things to key the big things.

“Loved the energy our guys played with today!” Brad Sherman said.

Dominic Coffman scrambled to put himself into position to draw yet another offensive charging foul on Manson, while Guay and White delivered note-perfect set-up passes, enabling Downes to bank home buckets.

Murdy slashed the defense to ribbons, rambling to the basket to slap home a layup and send the Wolves to halftime with a 32-19 lead.

Manson almost made a small move early in the third quarter, netting a pair of free throws to get back within 10, but then Coupeville put things on ice.

Getting points from Downes, Jonathan Valenzuela, Guay, and Murdy, the Wolves went on a game-busting 13-0 run and never looked back.

Up 53-28 heading into the fourth, Coupeville got the lead as high as 27 points before pulling its starters and giving quality floor time to the stars of the future.

One of those young guns, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, came up big in the paint, crashing through the defense to net his first-ever varsity bucket.

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim stops ‘n pops. (Andrew Williams photo)

With the two points etched next to his name in the scorebook, he becomes the second member of his family to score at the varsity level for CHS.

Quinten officially joins older brother Jacobi in the hoops brotherhood and is the 412th Wolf boy I’ve been able to document scoring for a program which began in 1917.

Coupeville spread its offensive attack between seven players, with Downes banking in a game-high 24, while Guay (13) and Murdy (11) also reached double digits.

Valenzuela (6), White (4), Coffman (4), and Simpson-Pilgrim (2) scored, while Hurlee Bronec, Zane Oldenstadt, Chase Anderson, Hunter Bronec, Jermiah Copeland, and Ryan Blouin also saw floor time.

Wolf big man William Davidson, who started against Kittitas, was on a plane to Colorado Wednesday for a family visit, but the team honored his style of play by body-slamming fools while playing defense.

Here for work, here for fun. (Morgan White photo)

While the strong all-around team play and tourney win will rightfully draw much of the focus, several Wolves reached personal milestones in the win over Manson.

Pilgrim-Simpson became a made man, while Murdy and Downes continue to rise up the all-time CHS boys hoops scoring chart.

Alex Murdy is the third member of his family to crack the top 100, and now sits at #99 with 296 points.

Up ahead are Uncle Allen Black (305) and big bro Xavier Murdy (482).

Downes, who has cracked 20+ points in seven of nine games, is averaging 22.7 a night as a junior, and jumps from #63 to #58 all-time after his work against Manson.

Now with 428 points (204 this season), Angie and Ralph’s youngest passes Nick Sellgren (406), Casey Clark (407), Ben Biskovich (407), Mason Grove (414), and Caleb Powell (421) as he chases the chance to be just the 50th Wolf boy to reach 500.

Read Full Post »

Mia Farris rolls to the hoop. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolf fans check out the latest stats (or their sweet, sweet sandwiches).

Call them the Magnificent Seven.

As we head towards the final week of the regular season, with the promise of playoff action on the horizon, seven Coupeville High School hoops players have cracked triple digit scoring.

But they’re just the tip of the iceberg, as hardwood heroes on all four Wolf teams continue to fill up the bucket.

A look at up to the moment scoring totals for everyone in a CHS uniform this winter:

 

Varsity girls
(13 games):

Maddie Georges – 110
Audrianna Shaw – 82
Izzy Wells – 64
Carolyn Lhamon – 48
Savina Wells – 47
Gwen Gustafson – 30
Lyla Stuurmans – 28
Ja’Kenya Hoskins – 24
Abby Mulholland – 22
Nezi Keiper – 19
Alita Blouin – 11
Katie Marti – 6
Mia Farris – 4

 

Varsity boys
(14 games):

Xavier Murdy – 196
Caleb Meyer – 152
Logan Downes – 141
Alex Murdy – 121
Grady Rickner – 108
Hawthorne Wolfe – 106
Logan Martin – 44
Cole White – 33
Dominic Coffman – 19
Jonathan Valenzuela – 8
Nick Guay – 2
Zane Oldenstadt – 2

 

JV girls
(10 games):

Madison McMillan – 62
Katie Marti – 50
Brooklyn Thayer – 34
Gwen Gustafson – 32
Desi Ramirez-Vasquez – 26
Skylar Parker – 19
Mia Farris – 17
Kayla Arnold – 16
Reese Wilkinson – 13
Lyla Stuurmans – 12
Bryley Gilbert – 7
Jada Heaton – 5
Nezi Keiper – 3
Edie Bittner – 2
Yodnum Nakakul – 2

 

JV boys
(10 games):

Nick Guay – 74
Hunter Bronec – 68
Ryan Blouin – 61
Zane Oldenstadt – 36
Mikey Robinett – 30
Hurlee Bronec – 25
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim – 22
Jack Porter – 15
William Davidson – 10
Johnny Porter – 8
Landon Roberts – 8
Carson Field – 2

Read Full Post »

Nick Guay tossed in 13 points Saturday in a Coupeville JV win. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They made it rain.

Throwing down eight three-balls Saturday, the Coupeville High School JV boys basketball squad blitzed host Granite Falls 49-42.

The non-conference victory lifts the young Wolves to 3-6 on the season, with two more games on the schedule.

The JV closes with road games against Northwest 2B/1B League foes Friday Harbor (Feb. 4) and La Conner (Feb. 10).

Coupeville will enter that home stretch awash in a nice afterglow, thanks to Ryan Blouin, Nick Guay, and Zane Oldenstadt scorching the Granite nets.

The first two of that trio connected on three treys apiece, while Oldenstadt drilled the bottom out of the net twice from distance.

Ryan Blouin ponders life as a three-ball assassin.

CHS actually trailed 15-10 at the first break Saturday, then found its shooting groove.

Six different Wolves scratched their name in the scoring column during a 15-8 second quarter run, before Coupeville blew things open with a 16-6 tear in the third frame.

From there the sweet-shooting assassins coasted in for the win, the first of two claimed by Coupeville’s male hoops players on this night.

Guay topped the scoring chart with 13 points, while Oldenstadt tossed in 11 and Blouin added nine.

Mikey Robinett (6), William Davidson (5), Hunter Bronec (3), and Johnny Porter (2) also scored, with Landon Roberts, Hurlee Bronec, and Jack Porter all seeing floor time.

Read Full Post »

Audrianna Shaw takes a cut during a team scrimmage. (Tiffani Blazek photo)

Sage Sharp frames a pitch. (Morgan White photo)

“Stop … hammer time!” (Blazek photo)

Abby Mulholland (left) offers a helping hand to a rival. (Renae Mulholland photo)

Zane Oldenstadt (13) watches hardball action unfold under the fading prairie light. (Michelle Glass photo)

Mckenna Somes is locked and loaded at the plate. (Megan Somes photo)

The pandemic has changed many things, but there is one constant for CHS athletes — frequent ferry rides. (Glass photo)

The CHS softball sluggers are (sorta) ready for their closeup. (Aaron Lucero photo)

Take a picture. It’ll last longer.

As this pandemic-shortened spring sports season zips by, Coupeville parents are taking heed of that bit of wisdom.

Cameras are clicking, and the return to school athletics in the Age of Coronavirus is being documented from many angles.

Thanks to some of those parents, here’s a collection of images from the prairie and beyond.

Read Full Post »

Zane Oldenstadt rumbles down low in the paint. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Oldenstadt and William Davidson pause for a photo op during track season. (Morgan White photo)

Zane Oldenstadt listens to his mom, and that may pay off as the world deals with a pandemic.

As Coupeville students prepare for a new school year, without knowing for sure how it will play out in the age of coronavirus, incoming freshmen have high hopes in an unsettled world.

For Oldenstadt, who plans to be a three-sport athlete at CHS, it’s a perfect time to reflect on words of wisdom from mom Michelle Glass.

“My mom’s had a huge impact in showing me how the only way things get done is through perseverance and work,” Oldenstadt said.

Whether his high school days start off in a classroom or at home in front of a computer, the outgoing 9th grader-to-be wants to make an impact in everything he does.

Oldenstadt is “very interested in marine biology, and I plan to go to college for it,” while in the arena he hopes to play football, basketball, and baseball, in whatever order the WIAA and CHS allow him to.

Being a three-sport athlete is something which comes naturally, as he played soccer and basketball, then wrapped up the school year competing in track and field during his middle school days.

He also played little league baseball.

While he enjoyed all of his sports, Oldenstadt felt most at home on the hardwood.

“Basketball, I have fun getting out there and battling on the court,” he said. “It’s a sport I never tire of, and I’m always ready to go and give it my all.”

As he makes the transition from CMS to CHS, Oldenstadt already has the height and strength to set him apart from other athletes his own age.

But he also realizes he needs to add other components to his game if he wants to be successful at a higher level.

“I think my athleticism at my size really stands out,” Oldenstadt said. “But I’d still like to work on overall quickness.

“My goal in high school sports is to better myself and the teams I play on through hard work and commitment.”

When he’s not playing sports, Oldenstadt enjoys listening to music.

In an uncertain world, though, athletic activity is key to his happiness.

“Sports helps me cope with stress or anything else that’s bothering me,” he said. “It’s nice just to go and focus all your energy on trying to win something.”

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »