Stockdale Scores 21, Outpaces Entire Concrete Team in 57-17 Win
Josh Stockdale poured in 21 points and outscored Concrete alone as Coupeville JV rolled to a 57-17 win, a momentum boost for local high school basketball and community pride.

Josh Stockdale poured in 21 points and singlehandedly outscored Concrete as the Coupeville High School junior propelled the Wolf JV boys to a 57-17 victory in Concrete. The rout on Jan. 20 pushed Coupeville to 5-1 in Northwest 2B/1B League play and 6-6 overall, tightening the Wolves’ position in league standings and giving Island County fans a clear sign that the program has offensive firepower.
The game was lopsided from the opening whistle. Coupeville exploded to a 16-1 lead in the first quarter, with Stockdale and Nathan Coxsey each contributing five points in the frame to put the game well out of reach. Concrete staged its best stretch in the second quarter, outscoring the Wolves 12-9 to cut the halftime deficit to 25-13, but Coupeville took control after intermission.
Stockdale scored 15 of his 21 points after halftime, banking critical baskets and sparking a 12-4 third-quarter surge that effectively sealed the outcome. The Wolves then turned the fourth quarter into a running clock, posting a 20-0 fourth that inflated the final margin. Khanor Jump added 10 points, Nathan Coxsey finished with nine, and Ayden Warren contributed eight. Combined, Stockdale’s 21 points accounted for roughly 37 percent of Coupeville’s 57-point total, underscoring how one player’s second-half burst can reshape a game.
Liam Lawson slashes past his defender, showing the kind of assertive drives that complemented Stockdale’s scoring and stretched Concrete’s defense. Concrete managed just 17 points across four quarters and had acute trouble finding consistent offense in three of the four periods, a sign that Coupeville’s defensive pressure and transition play stifled the hosts.

For Island County, the result is more than a win column update. Coupeville’s decisive performance stabilizes momentum for the program heading deeper into league play, which matters for playoff seeding and local interest in the junior varsity pipeline feeding the varsity roster. Strong performances from underclassmen like Stockdale provide recruiting and retention signals that can affect game attendance, youth basketball participation, and community support for school athletics.
The practical takeaway for readers is that Coupeville’s Wolves have demonstrated the scoring depth and defensive cohesion needed to be competitive in the Northwest 2B/1B League. With a 5-1 league mark and a convincing road performance, Coupeville will aim to carry this momentum into its remaining league schedule and toward postseason positioning, keeping Island County fans engaged as the season unfolds.
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