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Archive for July, 2016

Ian Smith (right) imparts wisdom to one of his succesors, Aaron Trumbull, in 2012. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

   Ian Smith (right) imparts wisdom to one of his successors, Aaron Trumbull, while coaching American Legion ball in 2012. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Erik King

Homer-happy Erik King takes the field in 2010. (Amy King photo)

The base-knocks never stopped landing.

Look back at the last three decades of Coupeville High School baseball and no team has put together an offensive run to equal what the 2010 squad accomplished.

They weren’t the most successful Wolf team in terms of record or postseason accomplishments.

Didn’t make it to state. Didn’t win a league title. Finished at dead .500 with a 12-12 mark.

And yet that last sentence is deceiving.

The reality is Willie Smith’s squad played superb ball at times, but faced a truly brutal year as the smallest school in a tough 1A/2A Cascade Conference.

The Wolves finished fourth in the league standings at 8-9, a full four games ahead of South Whidbey, the only other 1A league school playing baseball at the time.

King’s used to sit the hardball season out back in the day, leaving the Wolves and Falcons to tangle with the five 2A schools.

Archbishop Thomas Murphy and its rotating band of future college players and MLB draftees went 22-4 and finished 3rd at state in the 2A tourney, while Cedarcrest finished 15-5.

While the 2016 Wolves snapped a 25-year dry spell and won the 1A Olympic League title, it’s hard to really compare their three foes (Klahowya, Port Townsend, Chimacum) to the razor-tipped romp through a no-man’s land Coupeville “enjoyed” in its old league.

Having survived the trek, CHS split four postseason games, beating Lynden Christian 6-4 and Nooksack Valley 10-9, while falling to Meridian 7-1 and (in what became the season finale) Seattle Christian 8-7.

Meridian went on to claim 3rd at the 1A state tourney.

But while their record, as hard-earned as it was, may not be an all-time best, the Wolves were a force to be reckoned with at the plate.

Coupeville had five All-Conference players in ’10, with infielder JD Wilcox landing on the First Team and Ian Smith (P), Chase Griffin (C), Chad Brookhouse (INF) and Erik King (OF) Second-Teamers.

The Wolves were a veteran group that year, with seven seniors in their lineup (though Jason Bagby missed a huge chunk of time) as one era closed out.

That summer a group of Central Whidbey Little League players like Ben Etzell and Morgan Payne won a state title and they joined the high school program almost en masse the next year.

And promptly got beat on for awhile by the 2A powers and their junior and senior-heavy rosters.

But in 2010, Coupeville claimed as many grizzled vets as any team, and they swung the bat like no Wolf team in memory.

The stats are uncanny, frankly.

The top four single-season highs for hits by an individual CHS player in the last 30 years all came that season, and the Wolves hit for average and power.

Wilcox, a certified star, was exactly that, but Coupeville also got career-best work from Brookhouse, a tough-nosed journeyman, and a surprising power show from a slightly unexpected source.

King is not a big, burly dude, but he had exceptional bat quickness and a well-honed eye and used both to pace the team in home runs and slugging percentage.

League titles are not to be sneezed at, and state trophies (like the 3rd place one nabbed by the ’87 CHS squad) live forever, but don’t sleep on the 2010 Wolves.

They blew up the scoreboard and should be remembered for all they accomplished.

Take a look at their plate stats, then tip your hat to the greatest offensive show the prairie may have ever seen.

The stats:

Player AB Runs Hits 1B 2B 3B HR SB BB RBI Avg. Slug.
Griffin 68 28 22 19 2 1 9 20 10 .324 .397
Smith 78 23 30 19 8 2 1 7 8 22 .385 .577
Wilcox 78 31 31 22 6 2 1 12 12 18 .397 .564
King 66 19 27 20 4 3 3 15 20 .409 .606
B-house 70 20 32 26 4 2 2 10 32 .457 .600
Bagby 15 5 6 4 2 3 3 7 .400 .533
Eaton 68 12 22 17 5 1 9 16 .324 .397
McClain 67 8 17 17 2 10 10 .254 .254
Wheat 59 7 12 10 2 6 5 .203 .237
Thurman 50 6 12 10 2 3 4 8 .241 .281
Bodamer 5 1 1
Sele 3
Chan 9 1 1 1 2 .111 .111
Carlson 1
McCormick 1
Gooch 1
TOTALS 639 159 212 165 35 4 8 42 99 151 .332 .437

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The late, great Tom Roehl

   The late, great Tom Roehl (top left) is joined by (clockwise from top right) Joe Kelley, Rob Fasolo, Matt Helm, Ron Bagby, Willie Smith, Dustin Van Velkinburgh and Brad Sherman.

2001 was not a landmark season for Coupeville High School football.

Despite featuring several of the best players to ever wear the red and black, the Wolves closed their season with four straight league losses and finished 3-6 overall.

But, for one night, deep in the heart of Concrete on Oct. 5, 2001, Coupeville put on a performance which has stood the test of time.

As a tribute to longtime CHS assistant coach Tom Roehl, who passed away on this date in 2003, I’m looking back and recreating (as best I can) one of the games of which I think he would have been extremely proud.

I wasn’t there for the game, and I didn’t write about it at the time, as I was deep in my prime Videoville years then.

So, to do so, I’m using Coach Roehl’s own notes and stats from that night.

The season had opened with a loss to King’s, and then, just four days after 9/11, a second defeat on the road at Tacoma Baptist.

It was then the Wolves seemed to catch fire, ripping off back-to-back home wins over Charles Wright and Life Christian before traveling into the heart of the wilderness.

Eight years after This Boy’s Life had hit theaters and introduced the world to Leonardo DiCaprio (as a video store fanatic, I had already witnessed his immortal debut in 1991’s Critters 3…) the eyes of the nation were back on Concrete.

Well, maybe not the whole nation, but certainly Wolf Nation.

The stats for the first half are deceptive, with Wolf QB Brad Sherman piling up 112 yards through the air, as Coupeville led the yardage battle 147-114.

Yet they still trailed 14-8 at the break.

Sherman, who rightfully holds the CHS career passing records regardless of what the big board in the gym may currently say (stats don’t lie), gave Coupeville its only first-half points.

First the junior signal caller dropped a 15-yard scoring strike into the hands of senior tight end Joe Kelley, then Sherman rambled in on a two-point conversion run.

And yet, it wasn’t quite enough.

Now, I’d like to think there was a fiery halftime speech, either from head coach Ron Bagby (or maybe easily excitable, and always quote-worthy, assistant coach Willie Smith?) and the Wolves came flying out of the locker room looking for blood.

Don’t know why. Wasn’t there. And 15 years later, I doubt many of the players would remember.

If this was a movie, the speech would have touched on a nation rebuilding itself after the defining tragedy of the era, maybe a call to arms to show the hicks how football was played back on The Rock.

Whatever was said, whatever was done, it worked.

The second half was a defensive masterpiece, as the (possibly) amped-up Wolves completely shut down Concrete’s ability to move the ball.

After giving up 99 yards on the ground in the first half, Coupeville held the Lions to -12 after the break.

Concrete tried to run the ball 17 times in the second half and time after time Kelley, Mike Smart, Schuyler Porter, Rob Fasolo and Co. smacked the runners silly, driving them backwards.

And, while they were doing that, Coupeville’s version of a battering ram, one Daniel McDonald, was churning.

After rushing 13 times for 50 yards in the first half, McDonald went for 149 on 19 carries after halftime, leaving him one yard shy of 200 for the game.

To which I say to the stat keeper of the time, come on, man, you couldn’t have subtracted one yard from JD Myers (8 carries for 17 yards) and given McDonald an even 200?

Even without that extra yard, the 5-10, 170-pounder, who always ran like a bigger dude, crashed into the end zone three times in the second half.

The first, a three-yard burst in the third (followed by a PAT from Dustin Van Velkinburgh) pulled Coupeville within 17-15, while his next two — also identical three-yard smash-mouth lunges — finally turned the game for the Wolves.

Sherman plunged in on two-point conversions after both fourth-quarter scores to cap what would be the final Wolf win that season.

Losses to Archbishop Thomas Murphy, Friday Harbor, Orcas and La Conner would leave the Wolves at 1-4 in the final league standings.

But the Concrete win, a night when Coupeville stood tall and smacked a program known for toughness, will be the enduring legacy of 2001 Wolf football.

Looking through the stats, there are many key players, and not just the ones we’ve already listed like Kelley and Smart, who combined for 27 tackles.

Matt Helm collected seven tackles, pulled down a team-best 51 yards as a receiver and returned four kicks for 62 yards.

Austin Porter had six tackles and two sacks, Scott Fisher pilfered an interception, Brian Fakkema snagged a 34-yard heave from Sherman and Van Velkinburgh was on point with his kicks all night.

Was it the greatest win in school history? Probably not.

Was it the best-played game in school history? Doubt it.

But it was a win, the kind of victory where a thousand little moving parts all come together at the right moment to swing the day in favor of the good guys.

It was surely a great moment for those guys when they climbed on the bus for the long ride back to Whidbey, and it remains a great moment a decade-and-a-half later.

Tom Roehl devoted a lot of years and a lot of time, sweat and hard work to local kids, helping them better themselves as athletes and people.

As we remember him today, and every day, remember him the way I am sure he looked that night on the bus — wearing a huge smile.

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Bennett Boyles (Photo courtesy Pat Kelley)

Bennett Boyles (Photo courtesy Pat Kelley)

Everyone is chipping in to help Bennett Boyles.

As the 11-old Coupeville basketball player enters his third week of treatments for tumors on his brain stem, efforts to help him and his family continue.

Ciao, Mark Laska’s Italian restaurant (701 N. Main St.) is hosting a “Bounce for Bennett” fundraiser Sunday, July 17 from noon-6 PM.

Pizza will be sold by the slice and kids can play in bounce houses which will be on location ($5 for a short romp, $20 for all-day access).

Money raised will go to help Boyles‘ family, including mom Lucienne Rivera, who is commuting back and forth to Seattle to be with her son.

If you can’t be at Ciao Sunday, you can help out with financial donations, gas cards, ferry passes, gift certificates for food or prayers for the family.

Get well cards and posters are also greatly appreciated.

Items can be dropped off at Ebey Academy (140 SE Terry Road), right across from the high school.

Or pop over to:

https://gobennett.givingfuel.com/go-bennett

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Hunter Hammer (left) and Dalton Engle played key roles in the epic win.

Hunter Hammer (left) and Dalton Engle played key roles in the epic win.

It is, arguably, the greatest moment in a long and loud rivalry.

Coupeville and South Whidbey have warred for decades, and being fairly similar in size, are much more natural rivals with each other than with Oak Harbor.

Over the years the Falcons have won their share and the Wolves their share, but one CHS victory stands the tallest.

Jan. 25, 2011 the two schools clashed in a boys’ basketball game in Langley that features the wildest finish ever seen in the long-running rivalry.

South Whidbey was camped atop the Cascade Conference entering the game, riding a 10-game winning streak, only to see Coupeville pull off a rally for the history books.

Ian Smith scored the game’s final eight points, including dropping a trey at the buzzer, to lift the Wolves to a stunning 44-42 win that five-plus years later just grows in epicness.

Now, thanks to my new-found ability to embed video, you can enjoy the moment over and over, courtesy Wolf mom Linda Hammer, who shot and downloaded the clip that still makes South Whidbey weep.

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   We move closer and closer to making the top photo a reality, but here in Coupeville.

Legacy is huge.

Tim Duncan’s retirement from the NBA today is proof of that.

For 19 years, the Big Fundamental played the game with such precision, such honor, that his bidding farewell to the game at age 40 is like a (quiet) meteor ripping through the sports world.

The five championships, the unparalleled success (19 straight playoff berths, 18 seasons of 50+ wins) the San Antonio Spurs enjoyed with Timmmmmmaaaayyyyyy as their centerpiece, are remarkable.

But it’s the man who will be remembered, for the way he conducted himself, on the court and off. Class personified.

As I’ve pounded out 4,400+ articles here on Coupeville Sports (the four-year anniversary, Aug. 16, approaches), I’ve tried to leave some legacy behind myself.

But, a blog on the internet is not necessarily the best way to do so, as it all kind of evaporates a day or two after a particular story runs.

There is the Hall o’ Fame up at the top of the blog, but even that is a bit gossamer.

Which is why I started the project which is, against all odds, careening towards being a reality.

It’s easy to complain about the limited number of title banners which hang in the CHS gym, but replacing them with something more concrete, more complete, entailed a fair amount of work.

First I had to delve deep into the past (CHS started in 1900, or 90 years before the first banner currently gracing its gym), which required help.

The Whidbey News-Times has archives going back to the 1800’s, but those archives (bound volumes of newspapers, not microfiche or computer files) are locked down these days, in an effort to preserve crumbling, but vital history.

The paper’s head honcho, Publisher/Editor Keven R. Graves, was nice enough to overlook my past poking of his Canadian bosses, and allowed me access, probably against his better judgement.

As I spent days glazing over, flipping through pages looking for a bit of info here, a nugget of history there, News-Times Sports Editor Jim Waller (my high school journalism teacher) was always around to check on my progress, offer advice and help guide me.

Son of a legendary coach (Mert Waller) who got his start in Coupeville, Jim Waller grew up to be a standout athlete in Oak Harbor, then put in 30+ years as a Hall of Fame coach, and his guidance and knowledge of Island sports history is invaluable.

As the research came together, school officials — Superintendent Dr. Jim Shank and Principal Duane Baumann — were open to the idea of installing sports boards similar to what Oak Harbor High School has in its gym.

By doing so, we could fully honor the 109 titles I found (a figure that grows as the discussion over whether to add competition cheer is underway) lurking in the past.

The biggest stumbling block in going from essentially zero to putting 116 years of history on the wall in one fell swoop is, of course, money.

And yet that hurdle has largely fallen, with the Coupeville Booster Club pledging $2,500 and a GoFundMe I started having cleared $3,000 so far.

Now, Whidbey Signs is preparing to craft and install the signs, with a goal of having them in place prior to the start of a new school year.

It probably won’t feel real until the day arrives when the signs are unveiled and I can stand back and say, “This. As a community, as a Wolf Nation, we did this.”

I look forward to that day, because at that moment, with the help of so many, Coupeville Sports will have left something of a lasting legacy.

Something real. Something tangible.

To help us, pop over to:

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

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