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Action heats up in the paint as Juniper Dotson comes flying in to create havoc. (Julie Wheat photo)

Some lessons are painful, some are joyous.

Facing off with a rival from a much-larger school Tuesday, the Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball teams experienced a wide range of emotions.

Two blowout losses to visiting Lakewood, administered in methodical style, certainly weren’t fun, but the Wolves third squad rallied impressively in the second half of its contest to end the day on a positive note.

How things played out:

 

Level 1:

You take your opponent’s where you can find them in middle school sports, hence CMS hosting Lakewood, while the high schools they support have a 628-192 difference in student body size.

The visitors boasted a deep roster, and more than that, an obviously experienced one, with every girl to hit the floor highly proficient and deeply committed to their team’s game plan.

Forget about three-balls, the Cougars used old-school tactics — double-teams on defense, strong rebounding, and successful layup after layup — to dominate during a 56-3 win.

The loss drops Coupeville to 1-4 on the season.

Up 24-0 after one quarter, Lakewood stretched the margin to 40-0 by the half, while limiting Coupeville to a mere handful of shot attempts.

The Wolves fought hard, with Zayne Roos and Laurel Crowder refusing to back down on defense, but it was a textbook case of a rout which could have been even worse if Lakewood had wanted to truly push things.

With a running clock in force in the second half, the score was scrubbed from the scoreboard — one of the sillier middle school rules as all it accomplishes is to make fans repeatedly ask the clock operator why baskets aren’t being recorded.

But while the Wolves didn’t see their points pop up on the board, they did get a solid response from the fans when Roos knocked down a jumper and Kaleigh Millison rattled the rim on a successful free throw attempt.

Emma Green, Claire Lachnit, Sabrina Judnich, Finley Helm, Cami Van Dyke, Anna Powers, and Aubrey Flowers also saw floor time for a CMS squad which was still scrapping until the last second ticked off the clock.

 

Level 2:

This one didn’t turn as fast as the opener, with the Wolves trailing by just a bucket seven minutes into play, but Lakewood eventually powered up for a 39-6 victory.

The opening quarter was largely a defensive stalemate, with Bella Sandlin a fiery standout for CMS, and Annabelle Cundiff popping in a jumper from the side to keep the home squad within 4-2.

Unfortunately for Coupeville the offense dried up after that, with Lakewood using a 27-1 surge across the second and third frames to take control of things.

The Wolves never did hit another field goal after Cundiff’s basket but did get two free throws apiece from Juniper Dotson and Addison Jacobson to round out their scoring.

While the final margin was a bit lopsided, CMS, now 0-5 on the campaign, didn’t lack for effort.

Dotson was a feisty fireball while handling a lot of the point guard duties, and Reagan Green drop-kicked a few rivals with a nice display of rough-and-tumble defense.

That included one emphatic takedown which caused the Lakewood coach to clutch his non-existent pearls and act like he had witnessed the rebirth of the ’80s Detroit Pistons Bad Boys.

Is Green the new Dennis Rodman?

I’m not saying she is, but I am saying if she wants to embrace the enforcer role, I, for one, approve.

Also seeing action for the Wolves were Halle Black, Claire Lachnit, Ava Alford, Arianna Vinson, Daisy Leedy-Bonifas, Abby Hunt, and Emily Rains.

Daisy Leedy-Bonifas, here to get buckets and take names. (Photo courtesy Alysabeth Leedy)

Level 3:

This one was a game of ever-shifting emotions and, by far, the closest battle of the afternoon.

While Lakewood escaped, and that’s the operative word here, with a 20-14 win, the young Wolves made some noise, got the gym rockin’, and ended the day with a bang.

Maybe most importantly they were on the floor in the first place, evening their record at 1-1 after three of Coupeville’s first four opponents only went two squads deep.

Lakewood jumped out to an 8-2 lead through one quarter, but the Wolves bucket was maybe their best of the day, with Nikolette Dunham zipping a pass to Ruby Folkestad, who promptly banked in a line-drive jumper.

From there, the squads battled through a scoreless second frame, punctuated by several dynamic defensive plays from the always-busy Dunham, before returning to scoring buckets in the third quarter.

Trailing 12-2, Coupeville found its groove, closing the third on an 8-2 tear to rile up the fans.

Daisy Leedy-Bonifas went off, raining down three consecutive buckets, one off a sweet hook shot, the other two on coast-to-coast breakaways, before Dunham drained a jumper in the paint.

The Wolves weren’t done, with Ellie Callahan banking in a bucket to open the fourth quarter — on a pass from Leedy-Bonifas — and were back within 14-12 with six-plus minutes to play.

Lakewood settled down after that, however, while a number of CMS shots came dangerously close to dropping through the net before popping back out, giving the visitors just enough breathing room to close out the win.

Leedy-Bonifas finished with a team-high six points, while Folkestad banked in four, and Callahan and Dunham each chipped in with a bucket.

It was the first points this season for Folkestad and Callahan, with the duo becoming the 23rd and 24th Wolf girls to score across the season’s first five contests.

Amira Anunciado, Danielle Halsing, and Abby Hunt rounded out the magnificent seven Tuesday, delivering Coupeville’s top performance of the day.

 

Up Next:

Three royal rumbles left on the schedule, and they’ll go down in a four-day period next week.

The Wolves host Sultan Monday, Mar. 9, before road trips Mar. 10 to South Whidbey and Mar. 12 to Granite Falls.

Coupeville’s Khanor Jump is transitioning from basketball to track and already making some big noise. (Jackie Saia photo)

He’s got some zing in his fling.

Coupeville High School sophomore Khanor Jump finished 3rd in the hammer throw Saturday at a meet held at Evergreen State College in Olympia, smashing his PR by a solid seven feet.

The Wolf ace launched his implement 117 feet, two inches, thoroughly besting his top mark from his freshman campaign of 110-02.

The hammer throw is not part of the traditional lineup for Washington state high school teams during the regular season, so throwers have to find other outlets.

Jump was competing in the Hammer Meet Series Polar Bear event, part of a string of competitions which will lead up to the Washington Hammer State Championships, which are held separately from the WIAA state meet.

He finished 22nd in that finale last year, second-best showing of any freshman in the field, but obviously wants more this time around.

“Good improvement from last year, great start!” said CHS coach Bob Martin. “Pretty sweet!”

The Orcas Island girls were one of three Northwest 2B/1B League basketball teams eliminated from the state tourney this weekend. (Jackie Saia photo)

The Hurricanes are our only hope.

Five Northwest 2B/1B League basketball teams advanced to the state tourney, but four lost their openers this weekend, with three eliminated.

Girls’ squads from La Conner, Orcas Island, and Concrete all went one and done, leaving just the Mount Vernon Christian girls and boys alive and able to advance to Spokane.

Those MVC girls, seeded #8 in 2B, actually lost their state opener, falling 62-34 to top-ranked Napavine, but were guaranteed at least two games by being a top-8 team.

The Hurricanes will square up with #9 Davenport Mar. 4 in a loser-out game at Numerica Veterans Arena in Spokane.

The only NWL win this weekend came courtesy the #11 MVC boys, who upended #14 Kittitas 66-47 to advance to a loser-out game in Spokane Mar. 4 against #3 Okanogan.

For the other three teams from Coupeville’s conference, it was a short run at state.

In 1B, Concrete got whacked 64-37 by Taholah, while in 2B La Conner fell 50-40 to Raymond-South Bend and Orcas Island was washed away 66-42 by Lake Roosevelt.

Zayne Roos flies to the hoop. (Julie Wheat photo)

Four down, four to go.

The Coupeville Middle School girls’ basketball teams reached the halfway point of the season Thursday, clashing with powerhouse King’s in a pair of very-close games.

With two home rumbles and two road trips left on the schedule, 22 Wolves have tallied points.

Where the individual scoring stats stand at the mid-point:

 

Laurel Crowder – 24
Emma Green – 16
Halle Black – 14
Anna Powers – 13
Daisy Leedy-Bonifas – 12
Kaleigha Millison – 12
Cami Van Dyke – 11
Annabelle Cundiff – 8
Juniper Dotson – 8
Finley Helm – 8
Abby Hunt – 7
Claire Lachnit – 5
Sophia Burley – 4
Aubrey Flowers – 4
Zayne Roos – 4
Bella Sandlin – 4
Ava Alford – 2
Nikolette Dunham – 2
Reagan Green – 2
Millie Somes – 2
Addison Jacobson – 1
Arianna Vinson – 1

Taygin Jump, a master in the classroom and around the track oval. (Photo property Plattsburgh State track and field)

She’s shining on the big stage.

Coupeville grad Taygin Jump, now a junior at Plattsburgh State, set a PR in the weight throw Friday, earning points for the Cardinals by finishing 7th in a field of 22 competitors.

The former Wolf was competing at the State University of New York Athletic Conference (SUNYAC) Indoor Track and Field Championships in Brockport, New York.

Jump’s best throw Friday traveled 44 feet, 10.25 inches, besting her previous top mark of 44-09, set just a week ago.

A standout volleyball and track and field athlete during her Cow Town days, Aleksia and Khanor’s big sister is majoring in Environmental Planning & Management at Plattsburgh.

The Cardinals wrap the indoor season with two more postseason meets for qualifiers — the All-Atlantic Region Track and Field Conference Championships and the NCAA D-III Championships — before moving outdoors as the weather warms.