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Archive for July, 2015

Be like Wynter Thorne and focus on the best of Coupeville sports. (John Fisken photo)

   Be like Wynter Thorne and focus on the best of Coupeville sports. (John Fisken photo)

There has never been a better time to harass me.

Seriously.

I want your emails. Your chiding, cajoling and impassioned smacks (metaphorically at least) on the back of my head.

Each Sunday for the past four weeks I have inducted a class into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame (take a gander at the Legends tab at the top of the blog to see who’s in so far), and only one vote counts when I make my weekly decision.

That would be mine. It’s a dictatorship.

But, and it’s a big but, I do want and need your input.

I’ve covered sports on Whidbey Island for 25 years and have a fairly decent handle on Coupeville-related sporting activities.

Doesn’t mean I know everything (or even anything), though.

I need you, my readers, to put some thought into who and what you would like to see immortalized in these hallowed digital walls.

There are six categories — Female Athlete, Male Athlete, Coach, Contributor, Team and Moment.

There has to be some connection to Coupeville — I’m not covering Renton here — but, other than that small rule, I am fully willing to listen to wherever your brain goes.

You can nominate anyone and anything. Go back to the 1920s or just yesterday.

Be shameless if you want. Nominate yourself.

If you’re proud of what you’ve accomplished and make a compelling argument, I’ll consider it. And I won’t even tell anyone you nominated yourself.

The Hall o’ Fame, like all of Coupeville Sports, lives and dies as a community thing.

I’m the guy who is pulling it all together, but I can’t do what I do without a lot of help.

I have a general idea of where I’m going with the Hall o’ Fame, a list of potential honorees, but I am super-flexible and waiting to be guided by the wisdom of Wolf Nation.

So, let’s see some action, folks.

Email me at davidsvien@hotmail.com. Message me on Facebook.

Corner me at the grocery store or, once a new school year starts, at one of the many high school or middle school games.

The ball is in your court. Talk to me.

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My new yard sign for the next six months or so. (David Svien photos)

My new yard sign for the next six months or so. (David Svien photos)

Sherman

Signs. Signs. Everywhere a sign. The deer will continue to ignore them all.

It begins.

The long-anticipated Madrona Way Project is lurching to life, as my front yard officially became marked as a detour point late Monday afternoon.

The world HQ for Coupeville Sports sits on the corner of Sherman and Madrona, which will now be the turn a trillion people make over the next six months or so.

When construction work, in all its many forms, kicks into gear in the next couple of days, cars coming towards Coupeville on Madrona will be kicked to the right and shot up Sherman, then dropped on to Black and run down to Broadway.

Come from town, and you’ll do the route in reverse — shot down Broadway, up Black, then a screaming drop to the water on Sherman before you can get back on Madrona.

Madrona itself will be shut down to through traffic from Broadway to Vine, with Vine a no-man’s land.

The project is a two million dollar affair and involves several phases.

So, it’ll probably still be going in 2016…

New water and sewer mains are being installed, and then you get road reconstruction. Adding a storm drain system, bioswales and a pedestrian path are also planned.

I welcome my new construction overlords.

Cause it’s not like I have a choice, do I?

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Hall o' Fame inductees (clockwise from top left) Makana Stone, Ray Cook, Natasha Bamberger and Bob Fasolo.

  Hall o’ Fame inductees (clockwise from top left) Makana Stone, Ray Cook (wearing glasses), Natasha Bamberger and Bob Fasolo.

The Mack Daddy himself, Bob Fasolo, workin' the waves. (Photo courtesy Eddie Fasolo)

The Mack Daddy himself, Bob Fasolo, workin’ the waves.

Chris Tumblin (left) prepares to join the dog-pile after winning a state title.

   Central Whidbey Little League coach Chris Tumblin (left) prepares to join the dog-pile after winning a state title in 2010.

When we’re down the road and we look back, it’s going to be hard to top the class that enters the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame today.

It features the greatest runner in CHS history, the strikeout king, the single most electrifying play I have personally witnessed in 25 years of covering sports, a team that shocked the state and the original Mack Daddy.

The bar has been set, and our fourth class is one for the ages.

Without further ado, we welcome Natasha Bamberger, Ray Cook, Bob Fasolo, Makana Stone and the 2010 Central Whidbey Little League Majors baseball team.

Their new home?

Look to the top of the blog and the tab marked Legends. Cause that’s where they all belong.

Ray Cook was a star when I was in kindergarten, but his accomplishments still astound.

When we talk about great pitchers who wore the red and black for CHS, we can talk about Ben Etzell and Aaron Curtin, about Brad Miller and Brad Haslam, about a lot of guys.

But, up there, by himself, at the very tip top, is Cook, who left behind a string of dejected batters.

He struck out 16 while tossing a perfect game, whiffed 17 in another game, but saved his best for the biggest moment.

Pitching in the 1976 district title game, he went 13 innings(!) to get the win, gunning down an eye-popping 21 batters.

He was Cow Town’s Nolan Ryan, and his name should be invoked every time a modern-day hurler starts settin’ ’em up and sittin’ ’em down.

If Cook ruled the ’70s, Natasha Bamberger owned the ’80s, winning four state titles as a track runner, putting her name on the school record board (where it still sits) and then doing something no Wolf had done.

Running at the A/B state cross country championships Nov. 9, 1985, she faced down 123 other runners and bested them all, breaking the tape in 19 minutes and 51 seconds.

It would take 25 years before another Coupeville runner would match her feat, when Tyler King won the 2010 1A boys XC title.

When CHS installs a new track that is currently in the planning stages, they should name it in honor of the greatest runner the school ever saw. Micky Clark Field should be encircled by the Natasha Bamberger track.

Someone get on this.

Our third inductee is a young woman who, in three years, has proven to be the single most dynamic athlete I have covered.

While Makana Stone’s career is far from over, and her time to be inducted as an athlete will come later, today we honor a play she pulled off during the 2014-2015 CHS girls’ basketball season.

Now who knows, the videotape may tell a slightly different story, and, if it does, don’t bother me with the facts. I’m printing the legend, the way I remember it happening.

Stone, midway through an MVP season in which she led her squad to its first league title in 13 years — a campaign in which the Wolves won every league game by double digits — was on fire. As usual.

Then she ripped out our eyeballs and dunked them into awesome sauce in a way I have never witnessed.

Flying high above the crowd, she hauled in a rebound, then spun and fired the ball nearly the length of the court, hitting teammate Kacie Kiel in mid-stride.

A lone defender, scrambling to get back, veered into Kiel’s path, causing her to stumble as she put up the layup. The ball skittered off the rim and then…

Sweet succotash!!!

Any other player, having made the pass, would have stayed at the far end of the court. The play was done, and you’d already be back on defense.

Stone, however, took off like a bolt of lightning as soon as she fired the ball, and she came flying like a bat out of Hell, running the length of the floor in a few graceful strides.

The ball hung on the rim and then Makana was there, swooping in, snagging the rebound and popping the ball back up and in as every jaw in the gym ricocheted off the floor.

Making half that play — either half — is the sign of a top-notch player.

Pulling off the entire thing, and then immediately backpedaling on defense as Klahowya’s collective soul lay stone-cold-dead on the floor — that’s legendary.

Our fourth inductee is already the coolest cat in the hall.

The late Bob Fasolo could do it all.

Street baller. Surfer dude. McConaughey before McConaughey was McConaughey.

Both of his sons, Rob and Eddie, were gifted basketball players, and they learned their skills from the man who always had a grin under the beard, especially when he just broke both of your ankles.

If you didn’t meet Bob, it might be hard to understand what an impact he had on others, athletically and just in general life. And, if you didn’t meet him, your life is a lot less blessed.

He was the Mack Daddy, the pimp king, the guy who was just cooler than everyone else around him, whether he was shredding waves or just giving me good-natured grief at Videoville.

I miss the dude, but I know he’s out there tonight, one with the waves.

And, to cap things off, we’re going to crowd the stage for our finale.

In 2010, three coaches and 13 players went on a trip no one expected.

Representing little ol’ Coupeville, they stared down big city squad after bigger city squad, and whipped them all.

It wasn’t just that they won a state little league title, but the way they did it, storming from behind in nearly every game and then celebrating like mad.

They weren’t given any respect at the start of the tourney, but they earned it every step of the way, and their run, both for the title and the way they won it, stands as one of the greatest athletic accomplishments this town will ever witness.

And they stayed together, with nine of the 13 playing for CHS in their senior seasons, and eight of those players suiting up all four years.

Playing as a team, as brothers, they exited the field July 24, 2010 as state champs, and they went on to become the core of a Wolf baseball program that is in a very good place five years later.

Let’s give it up, for the champs. Inducted, together, as a family:

Chris Tumblin (Coach)
Brad Trumbull (Assistant Coach)
Ramon Villaflor (Assistant Coach)
Kyle Bodamer
Brendan Coleman
Aaron Curtin
Ben Etzell

Korbin Korzan
Brian Norris
Morgan Payne
Carson Risner
Wade Schaef
Paul Schmakeit
Kurtis Smith

Aaron Trumbull
Jake Tumblin

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Maya Toomey-Stout (John Fisken photo)

   Maya Toomey-Stout is among the CMS volleyball players who can return for a new season in September. (John Fisken photo)

Two months from now, they’ll be getting ready to play games again.

School doesn’t start until Aug. 31, and Coupeville Middle School doesn’t kick off its football and volleyball seasons until late Sept., but it’s never too early to run schedules.

I mean, what else are we going to do with our time here in mid-July?

So, here you go, something to look forward to, then.

And, an interesting side note — any affiliation with the 1A/2A Cascade Conference is truly gone.

Last year, CHS moved into the 1A Olympic League, but CMS continued to play games against schools such as King’s and Langley.

No more, as this year’s schedules are awash in Port Townsend and Chimacum, with Forks, Sequim and a newcomer, Stevens (from Port Angeles) tossed into the mix.

New year, new rivalries.

CMS fall sports schedules, as they sit on July 19:

FOOTBALL:

Wed-Sept. 23 Stevens
Wed-Sept. 30 Port Townsend
Wed-Oct. 7 @ Chimacum
Wed-Oct. 14 Sequim
Wed-Oct. 21 @ Forks
Wed-Oct. 28 @ Port Townsend

VOLLEYBALL:

Mon-Sept. 21 Chimacum
Thur-Sept. 24 @ Stevens
Mon-Sept. 28 Forks
Thur-Oct. 1 Sequim
Mon-Oct. 5 @ Port Townsend
Thur-Oct. 8 @ Chimacum
Mon-Oct. 12 Stevens
Thur-Oct. 15 @ Forks
Mon-Oct. 19 @ Sequim
Thur-Oct. 22 Port Townsend

To keep up to date on any changes, pop over to:

http://coupeville.tandemcal.com/

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Lauren Rose and the Wolf spikers will be the first CHS team to play at home this fall. (John Fisken photo)

   Lauren Rose and the Wolf spikers will be the first CHS team to play at home this fall. (John Fisken photo)

Learn to love the road.

Looking ahead at fall sports schedules for Coupeville High School (hey, the first day of practice is Aug. 19, just a month away), that’s the theme.

Unless things change (always possible), three of the four Wolf teams (football, volleyball, girls’ soccer) will play more games on the road than at home.

The only team that currently has more home matches than road trips is the CHS boys’ tennis squad, and that’s deceptive, because that’s also the only team that obviously doesn’t have a finished schedule.

Little quirks to look forward to:

Wolf volleyball will be the first team to play in front of fans sitting on the newly-installed bleachers in the CHS gym, when it hosts South Whidbey Sept. 8.

By the time football plays at home, we’ll be firmly into the cold season, as the Wolf gridiron squad plays its first FOUR games away from Coupeville.

Schedules as they stand on July 18 (* = league game, and there is no way the tennis schedule is complete, so there’s that):

BOYS TENNIS:

Wed-Sept. 30 Port Townsend (*)
Fri-Oct. 2 @ Klahowya (*)
Wed-Oct. 7 @ Port Townsend (*)
Fri-Oct. 9 Klahowya (*)
Mon-Oct. 12 Sequim
Wed-Oct. 14 Port Townsend (*)

FOOTBALL:

Fri-Sept. 4 @ South Whidbey
Fri-Sept. 11 @ Sequim
Fri-Sept. 18 @ Chimacum (*)
Fri-Sept. 25 @ Port Townsend (*)
Fri-Oct. 2 Klahowya (*)
Fri-Oct. 9 Port Townsend (*)
Fri.-Oct. 16 Chimacum (*) — Homecoming
Fri-Oct. 23 @ Klahowya (*)
Fri-Oct. 30 Concrete

GIRLS SOCCER:

Thur-Sept. 3 @ Oak Harbor Jamboree
Tue-Sept. 8 @ Mount Vernon Christian
Thur-Sept. 10 @ South Whidbey
Tue-Sept. 15 @ Bellevue Christian
Thu-Sept. 17 @ Sequim
Fri-Sept. 25 Orcas Island
Sat-Oct. 3 Crosspoint Academy
Tues-Oct. 13 @ La Conner
Thur-Oct. 15 @ Chimacum (*)
Sat-Oct. 17 @ Klahowya (*)
Tue-Oct. 20 @ Port Townsend (*)
Thur-Oct. 22 Chimacum (*)
Mon-Oct. 26 Klahowya (*)
Thur-Oct. 29 Port Townsend (*)

VOLLEYBALL:

Tue-Sept. 8 South Whidbey
Thur-Sept. 10 @ Friday Harbor
Sat-Sept. 12 @ South Whidbey Invite
Tue-Sept. 15 @ Mount Vernon Christian
Fri-Sept. 25 Orcas Island
Wed-Sept. 30 @ Darrington
Tue-Oct. 6 @ Bellevue Christian
Tue-Oct. 13 Klahowya (*)
Thur-Oct. 15 @ Chimacum (*)
Tue-Oct. 20 @ Port Townsend (*)
Thur-Oct. 22 Chimacum (*)
Mon-Oct. 26 @ Klahowya (*)
Thur-Oct. 29 Port Townsend (*)

To stay on top of any updates, check:

Olympic League — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?league=21&page_name=school_home&school=0&sport=0

Coupeville Schools — http://coupeville.tandemcal.com/

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