King’s ends Coupeville’s girls basketball season

The third time was the charm for the King's girls basketball team.

The third time was the charm for King’s girls basketball team.

Not so lucky was Coupeville which was eliminated from the post season 46-42 by the Knights last Saturday at Mount Vernon High School.

Although King’s (9-5, 13-9) finished third in the Cascade Conference, two spots ahead of Coupeville, the Wolves (6-8, 12-11) defeated the Knights twice in league play.

Coupeville won the first meeting at home 46-42, then topped the Knights 39-37 in overtime on the King’s court.

King’s got revenge when in mattered most.

The Knights lost to Nooksack Valley 39-32 Friday, while Coupeville fell to Lynden Christian 74-39. That dropped both teams into the loser-out, third-place district game Saturday. The Knights squeaked out the win and now will take part in this week’s tri-district in hopes of qualifying for the state tournament.

Nooksack (14-9) upset Lynden Christian (18-3) 52-41 for the district title and earned a trip to state. The Lyncs will have to work their way through tri-district to get a state bid.

Although Coupeville lost to King’s, it was far from a lost season. The Wolves showed marked improvement over last year when they failed to win a league game and finished the year 4-18. Going into this season, the Cascade Conference coaches predicted in the preseason poll that Coupeville would finish seventh in the eight-team league. The Wolves placed fifth.

When Coupeville and King’s squared off last Saturday, it was the third straight time the two clubs played a close ball game; this time, however, the Knights came out on top.

No team could wrestle control of the game as the clubs ended the first quarter tied 9-9. Coupeville edged to a 24-21 lead at the half, but King’s tied it back up 34-34 heading into the final period.

Seniors Manker, 16 points (including three 3-pointers), and Megan Smith, 15 points (two 3-pointers), ended their Coupeville careers with fine offensive performances. No other Wolf scored more than Rosenkrance’s four points. O’Keefe hit a 3-pointer, and Katie Smith and Courtney Boyd each scored two points.

King’s featured a more balanced attack, led by Karlie Storkson’s 12 points. Six different players scored at least five points.