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Archive for July, 2016

JD Wilcox

   JD Wilcox (left) whacked 85 hits over four years, best by any Wolf since 1990. (Mindy Wilcox photo)

Morgan Payne

   Morgan Payne (left) and Ben Etzell were four-year starters and both finished in the top five for career hits between 1990-2016. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Need one hit to save the day?

Over the last two decades-plus, the man you wanted at the plate for Coupeville High School was JD Wilcox, then.

Having gone through a pile of old baseball score-books, which featured wildly different recording styles (favorite notation from the late ’90s scrawled under a wild inning — “No clue. It was a cluster…”), I have a better idea now of who were the true Wolf hitting machines.

And no one recorded more career base-knocks during that time frame than Wilcox, who scorched 85 of them.

Now, having access to 18 of 27 score-books from 1990 to 2016, my research work is not complete, but reasonably close.

Even with nine missing books, I can piece together two-thirds of the time period.

So, a pretty good slice of the pie.

The best single season that I know about?

Chad Brookhouse, who stroked 32 hits in 2010.

In fact, that year produced the top four single-season performances found in my research, with Wilcox (31), Ian Smith (30) and Erik King (27) also swinging hot sticks.

Now, the question which lingers — was the ’10 team, which outhit the ’08 district champs 212-171, truly the best-hitting squad of the last 26 years?

Or was that year’s scorekeeper more lenient on what constituted a base hit?

We may never know.

Career-wise, Wilcox edges James Smith 85-77, with Ben Etzell (71), Casey Larson (70), Morgan Payne (68), Jake Tumblin (67), Alex Evans (66), Ian Smith (65), Kurtis Smith (61) and Aaron Curtin (52) rounding out the Top 10.

Of course, with the missing books, there’s always a chance we’re excluding someone worthy from that roll call.

Especially if they played from 2002-2004, the longest stretch of consecutive seasons lost to the wind.

But hey, if I’m not giving you something to argue about, I’m not doing my job.

So here, as best as I have been able to piece together, is the CHS hit parade from 1990-2016.

1990:

Frank Marti – 18
Matt Cross
– 17
Chris Frey
– 16
Brad Haslam
– 16
Brian Barr
– 13
GT Wolfe
– 10
Todd Brown
– 8
Ryan Samplawski
– 8
Les Hall
– 6
Scott Zustiak
– 3
Jordan Osorio
– 4
Shawn Ankney
– 1
Troy Blouin
-1
? Byers
– 1

1991:

Brad Haslam – 18
Frank Marti
– 18
Brian Barr
– 15
Jason McFadyen
– 15
Matt Cross
– 14
Chris Frey
– 12
Todd Brown
– 10
Jason McManigle
– 8
Ryan Samplawski
– 8
Eric Anderson
– 4
John Turner
– 4
Troy Blouin
– 1

1992:

Brad Haslam – 16
Troy Blouin
– 12
Jason McManigle
– 12
Jay Renaux
– 11
Matt Cross
– 9
Keith Currier
– 9
Todd Brown
– 6
Brian Wood
– 5
Tad Crease
– 4
Jason Hughes
– 3
Eric Anderson
– 2
Lance Allen
– 1
Jeremiah Prater
– 1

1993:

Keith Currier – 16
Cody Lowe
– 9
Jason McManigle
– 9
Jay Renaux
– 9
Jon Crimmins
– 8
Jason Hughes
– 7
Keith Dunnagan
– 5
Brent Fitzgerald
– 5
Scott Wofford
– 4
Troy Blouin
– 3
Blair Miller
– 1

1994:

Brad Miller – 14
Rich Morris
– 13
Mike Vaughan
– 13
Keith Dunnagan
– 11
Nick Sellgren
– 8
Jeremy Staples
– 8
Brent Fitzgerald
– 6
Blair Miller
– 3
Ben Lyle
– 2
Ryan Wiley
– 1

1995:

Brad Miller – 23
Mike Sloan
– 19
Jeremy Staples
– 14
Mike Vaughan
– 14
Greg White
– 12
Christian Lyness
– 11
Nick Sellgren
– 11
Keith Dunnagan
– 7
Rich Morris
– 6
Ryan Wiley
– 2
Brent Fitzgerald
– 1
? Nelson – 1

1996:

Book missing

1997:

Book missing

1998:

Christian Lyness – 14
Matt Brown
– 13
Aaron Henderson
– 12
Josh Smith
– 12
Ben Hancock
– 11
Eric Wiley
– 10
Caden Russell
– 6
Justin Barnes
– 5
Daniel Palmquist
– 5
Mike James
– 4
Bill Marti
– 3
Jason Joiner
– 1

1999:

Book missing

2000:

Book missing

2001:

David Rochin 19
Dustin Van Velkinburgh
15
Brett Barker
11
Justin Barnes
11
Tyler Hauan
11
Jacob Henderson
10
Tyrell Blouin
9
Mark Whittaker
5
JD Myers
4
Brian Fakkema
2
Brian Miller
1
Casey Mitchell
1

2002:

Book missing

2003:

Book missing

2004:

Book missing

2005:

Casey Larson 23
Kirby Mitchell
23
James Smith
19
Alex Evans
18
Trevor Mueller
18
Jack Armstrong
17
Mike Bagby
17
Cory Black
16
Anthony LaPoint
6
Tony Prosser
6
Kyle Wilcox
6
Jared Murdy
3

2006:

Book missing

2007:

James Smith – 22
Zach Hauser
– 17
Casey Larson
– 15
JD Wilcox
– 13
Jared Murdy
– 10
Kyle Wilcox 
– 9
Alex Evans
– 7
Tony Prosser
– 6
Jake Hill
– 4
Cory Black
– 3
Kramer O’Keefe
– 1
Zach Pelant
– 1

2008:

Alex Evans – 22
Zach Hauser
– 22
James Smith
– 22
Kyle Wilcox
– 22
JD Wilcox
– 19
Kramer O’Keefe
– 17
Jake Hill
– 16
Jared Murdy
– 15
Chase Griffin
– 8
Jason Bagby
– 5
Ian Smith
– 3

2009:

JD Wilcox 22
Ian Smith
– 16
Jake Hill
– 15
Chad Brookhouse
– 14
Erik King
– 14
Chase Griffin
– 13
Jason Bagby
– 10
Kevin Eaton
– 10
Alex McClain
– 5
Dalton Engle
– 3
Joe Fleck
– 3
Ryan Oliver
– 1

2010:

Chad Brookhouse – 32
JD Wilcox
– 31
Ian Smith
– 30
Erik King
– 27
Kevin Eaton
– 22
Chase Griffin
– 22
Alex McClain
– 17
Sean Thurman
– 12
Erik Wheat
– 12
Jason Bagby
– 6
Drew Chan
– 1

2011:

Morgan Payne – 18
Ian Smith
– 16
Alex McClain
– 11
Jake Tumblin
– 11
Wade Schaef
– 10
Brandt Bodamer
– 7
Drew Chan
– 7
Ben Etzell
– 7
Kurtis Smith
– 6
Kole Kellison
– 5
Zach McCormick
– 3
Ben Carlson
– 2

2012:

Jake Tumblin – 18
Morgan Payne
– 16
Ben Etzell
– 15
Wade Schaef
– 12
Drew Chan
– 9
Korbin Korzan
– 8
Kurtis Smith
– 8
Aaron Trumbull
– 8
Aaron Curtin
– 7
Josh Bayne
– 4
Brandt Bodamer
– 3
Brian Norris
-2
Zach McCormick
– 1
Paul Schmakeit
– 1

2013:

Morgan Payne -24
Ben Etzell – 23
Kurtis Smith
– 23
Jake Tumblin
– 17
Drew Chan
– 11
Aaron Curtin
– 11
Kyle Bodamer
– 10
Korbin Korzan
– 8
Aaron Trumbull
– 8
Josh Bayne
– 7
Wade Schaef
– 3
Cole Payne – 2
Joe Edwards – 1

2014:

Ben Etzell – 25
Kurtis Smith
– 24
Aaron Trumbull
– 24
Josh Bayne
– 21
Jake Tumblin
– 21
Wade Schaef
– 14
Aaron Curtin
– 12
Morgan Payne
– 10
Korbin Korzan
– 7
Cole Payne
– 4
CJ Smith
– 2

2015:

Aaron Curtin – 22
Cole Payne
– 16
Kyle Bodamer
– 15
Josh Bayne
– 13
Hunter Smith
– 12
Clay Reilly
– 11
Carson Risner
– 11
Aaron Trumbull
– 11
CJ Smith
– 9
Jake Hoagland
– 2
Julian Welling
– 2
Gabe Wynn – 2
Joey Lippo
– 1
Cameron Toomey-Stout
– 1

2016:

Book not available

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A small smidgen of those whose athletic accomplishments will be honored when our title board project is a success.

   A small smidgen of those Wolves whose athletic accomplishments will be honored when our title board project is a success.

We can see the goal line approaching.

A project which has taken months of effort and the combined talents of many is about to come to fruition, but it just needs one more little push.

No, I’m not talking about the new track oval being installed for Coupeville High School, but nice thought.

What I am talking about is my great white whale, the idea to slap 116 years of athletic success up on the CHS gym wall in time for the start of a new school year.

As you may know, there are currently just a handful of title banners hanging in a corner of our gym, and the oldest one is from 1990.

Which means every time a Wolf alumni who played on the ’69 Northwest League champion baseball squad (coached by future football legend Sid Otton) or ran with the ’81 girls cross country squad that finished fourth at state enters the gym, there is no acknowledgement of what they accomplished.

But that’s changing.

Having obtained rare access to the Whidbey News-Times archives, thanks to Keven R. Graves and Jim Waller, I combed through history and came up with a list of 109 titles which should be hanging on the wall.

This includes all team league and district titles, top 10 team finishes at state and individual state titles (there’s 17 of those).

School officials have signed off on the project, Whidbey Signs has been selected to produce and install the signs and the Coupeville Booster Club ponied up the first $2,500.

The club also agreed to set aside funds for adding new title boards in the coming years.

Which won’t be too much of an issue, as once we get past that first 116-year step, it’ll be fairly inexpensive and the boards, while looking all glossy and historical on the wall, require little to no upkeep.

But, that first step is a big one, and I need to come up with $3,000 to add to the Booster Club’s outlay to make this a reality.

To get there I launched a GoFundMe Sunday night and we’ve already cleared 70%, sitting at $2,125 this morning.

All we need to is one final push to get over the top.

Whether you skip a day at Starbucks and give that $5 to honor your Pop-Pop’s legacy instead or come in big-time, every dollar truly counts.

The link to our fundraiser:

https://www.gofundme.com/2bzt6x76

PS — There are some who can’t or won’t use GoFundMe, but still want to contribute.

If so, I can be reached at 165 N. Sherman, Coupeville, WA 98239 or at davidsvien@hotmail.com.

I am a beach bum these days and have no phone of any kind, but don’t let that stop you.

Onward to the top, Wolf Nation!

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Savina Wells takes a wicked cut. (John Fisken photos)

Savina Wells takes a wicked cut. (John Fisken photos)

team

Win or lose, a united team to the end.

Don’t let the final score fool you.

While it’s true the Central Whidbey Little League Minors softball squad fell 17-5 to visiting Sedro-Woolley Wednesday, that alone won’t tell you the whole story.

Yes, the playoff loss, their second in as many days to the off-Islanders, ended the season for the Yellow Jackets.

And yes, it snapped a two-year run as District 11 champs for Central Whidbey’s 9/10 softball program.

But while a loss is a loss, this one, which came on a sun-drenched evening on the prairie, shouldn’t dampen what was an amazing season.

A feisty, fun-loving group of young girls, the Yellow Jackets romped to a 13-1 mark in the regular season.

All three CWLL softball squads were on fire this year, combining to go 41-4-1.

With a young, successful group of players anchoring the high school team above them, softball is the strongest it’s been in years in Coupeville, at every level.

With the possible exception of girls’ basketball, there is not a Central Whidbey sport in a better situation, top to bottom, right now.

So, while a loss like the one absorbed Wednesday likely stings a bit for young players accustomed to winning, it does not define their season.

It gives them reason to fight back, to keep working on their individual and team games, and to realize off-Island competition, where teams are drawn from a much larger population base, will always be the benchmark Coupeville needs to aim at.

Even in a 12-run loss, one in which too many errors piled up on each other, there were bright spots.

First and foremost was the team’s attitude, which remained upbeat to the final out.

Even facing a huge deficit, the Yellow Jackets were swinging from the heels, with Alena Osbourne rocketing a lead-off shot to center field in the final inning.

The hardest-hit ball of the game, it showcased Central Whidbey’s drive to succeed, even when the odds were against them.

The Yellow Jackets actually scored first, using a gorgeous bunt by the game’s opening hitter, Gwen Gustafson, to set the table.

With Central Whidbey playing as the visitors on their home field this time out, Gustafson promptly stole second, shot to third on a fielder’s choice ground-out by Vivian Farris, then scampered home on a passed ball.

The lead didn’t hold for long, however, as Sedro turned five Yellow Jacket errors into a six-run first inning.

Gustafson, who got the call in the pitcher’s circle after Savina Wells whiffed 13 in a narrow loss Tuesday, did her best to keep things under control, chasing down and tagging a straying runner who came too far around third, then panicked.

Central tacked on a run in the second (Sofie Peters reached on an error and came around to score on a passed ball), then added two more in the third.

A walk to Maddy “Mad Dog” Georges and a resounding single from Savina “The Smiling Assassin” Wells were the big plays in the brief rally.

The Yellow Jackets were within 8-4 heading into the bottom of the third, but that was where the floor caved in, with Sedro running wild on its way to a nine-run inning.

Osbourne’s hit (she came around to score) and cupcakes provided by team moms softened the finale a bit.

The season may have ended, but take note of the Central roster, because we will be hearing much more from these girls in the coming years.

That roster?

Georges, Gustafson, Wells, Allie Lucero, Osbourne, Peters, Emma Hargrave, Chloe Marzocca, Allison Nastali, Vivian Farris, Mia Farris and Hope Sinclair.

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Dalton Martin: American Bad-Ass (John Fisken photo)

Dalton Martin: American Bad-Ass (John Fisken photo)

In a just world, this video goes viral.

Dalton Martin, who graduated from Coupeville High School last month, after capping a stellar track career by becoming the first Wolf ever to win three throwing medals at one state meet, is comfortable on camera.

In the school’s annual torch-passing video, he took the lead role in a remake of “Hot Rod” and nailed it. Andy Samberg, who?

But this is bigger, better, badder and with far more deer, all in one incredible seven-second clip.

Enjoy, then spread the word.

Help Dalton become the next Damn Daniel.

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Ashley Smith (John Fisken photos)

Ashley Smith is ready to tear up the soccer pitch. (John Fisken photos)

Smith

Not even an injured hand can slow down the high energy Smith.

She is the heir to the throne.

Ashley Smith, who will be a junior at Coupeville High School in the fall, follows in the footsteps of siblings who are highly accomplished Wolf athletes.

Megan, James and Ian Smith all were among the best in their respective classes, and now Ashley is here to tear up the soccer pitch.

A bright, super-friendly young woman who one time gave me so much (good-natured) grief over my plan to skip a boys’ JV soccer game that I gave up and stayed after all, the youngest Smith is a ball of fire.

As she celebrates her 17th birthday today, Ashley has a very bright future, both on and off the soccer pitch.

She is willing to get right in the middle of things as a defender, fighting for every loose ball, even when one of her hands is thickly wrapped in a bandage.

With the Wolves having lost several key players to graduation, Smith is primed to see even more playing time this fall, and I’m confident she will take advantage of the opportunity.

Off the field, she is kind, yet sarcastic, able to drop zingers on you while also embracing her friends and family.

Ashley, like all of her family, takes great delight in life and brightens up the world around her.

Happy birthday, Miss Smith. May your cake day be as awesome as you are.

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