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Archive for February, 2019

I’m one missing season away from fully-recognizing Jack Elzinga’s high school hoops legacy. Who’s sitting on scoring stats from 1953-54? (Photo courtesy Sandy Roberts)

Running this blog is one part writing, one part detective work.

When it’s really humming, I want Coupeville Sports to span the entire length of athletics here on the prairie that sits in the middle of a rock out in the water up in an area which is still shrouded in mystery.

We should celebrate the young girl who is playing middle school basketball for the first time, sporting her first pair of hardwood-ready shoes, her pigtails flying in different directions as she learns to reverse and get back on defense.

And we should also pay tribute to the guys who once played football in leather helmets, raw-boned farm kids who carved out some time from their chores (and feeding the pigs) to chase a pigskin around.

The one can be written about in the moment, while the other takes research, leafing through old newspapers and yearbooks, stirring people’s memories and hoping, always hoping, for some new discovery to fill in a vital part of the story.

Since launching Coupeville Sports in mid-2012, I have discovered one truth — not everyone held on to the past in the way I would have liked.

For every former coach like Randy King, who had complete scorebooks for 19 of his 20 seasons running the CHS boys basketball program, there’s a peer who tossed everything into a closet, or a filing cabinet, or worse, into the round file.

But I have also been pleasantly surprised from time to time by the sudden reveal of mementos, clippings, and photos, pulled from attics, or basements, or the back rooms of various local barns.

While things I wish were easy to find often aren’t, things I never expected to see often surface when least expected.

So I’m putting the call out for what we’ll call the “holy grails,” records and artifacts which currently top my list of wish-we-could-find-them items.

If you or someone you know has these items, or can find them, you will earn eternal membership on my best friend’s list.

And if you have something that’s not on my list, but something you consider interesting, something you wish I would write about, don’t hesitate to contact me.

Coupeville Sports is now, has always been, and will always be, a community effort. I write the words, but I can’t do it without your help.

With that, a few of things I most wish would pop up.

**Individual scoring totals for the 1951-1952 and 1953-1954 Coupeville High School boys basketball teams.

I have stats for 70 of the 102 Wolf boys hoops squads, and, while I would love to find scoring totals for teams from the ’20s, ’30s, and ’40s, these two teams from the ’50s are the biggest remaining missing pieces to the all-time scoring story.

There just wasn’t enough offense in those early decades for any players from that time to compete with the CHS stars of the ’70s and beyond.

But Jack Elzinga, who played on the 53-54 team, and Tom Sahli, who played for both those squads, could shake up the top 20, maybe even top 10, if I could finalize their numbers.

Elzinga is already #25 all-time, and that’s with me missing a full season. Sahli, who went on to be a great college basketball player, is #88, based on just his junior campaign.

Both players were among the first big-time scorers in school history, and deserve to have their legacies fully honored.

**Scoring totals for the 1974-1975 CHS girls basketball team, the first to play after Title IX changed the landscape.

Other than a paragraph or two (and I mean that literally), the Whidbey News-Times completely ignored the season as if it never happened.

And, while I obtained a roster from the school yearbook, there were no stats included.

Of the 45 seasons of Wolf girls hoops in the modern era, it’s the only one for which I don’t have scoring totals, and that is a mighty big airball.

**Video of girls hoops supernova Zenovia Barron and film of the 1969-1970 boys basketball team.

The former is the #2 scorer in school history, girl or boy, and those who saw her play describe her in reverent tones.

Having left the News-Times right before she hit high school, I was busy renting Jurassic Park and hyping The Hudsucker Proxy during the start of my 12-year run at Videoville when she shook up the hardwood scene beginning in the winter of 1994, and I never saw her play.

I wish I had, and I hope someone out there used a camcorder to capture Novi in her prime.

The 69-70 team, which played before I was born (so I have a good excuse for not being there) was the first Whidbey Island hoops squad to win a district title.

Playing before the creation of the three-point shot, those Wolves, led by Jeff Stone and his 644 points, set scoring records which haven’t been touched in 50 years.

This is a longer shot than Barron, maybe, as someone would have needed to operate a film camera in those days, but I’m betting it’s a possibility.

**A complete season stat sheet for the 2002 CHS softball team, which went 24-3 and finished 3rd at the state tourney, winning four of five games at the big dance.

Led by Sarah Mouw, Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, and Erica Lamb, the Wolves only loss at state came in the semis to the eventual state champs, Adna, who captured the sixth title in program history.

When I went through News-Times articles of the day during the 2017 season, when that year’s softball sluggers made a run at matching their predecessors, I was able to recreate, after a fashion, 24 of the 27 games.

But the paper, for reasons unknown, completely omitted any write-ups on three mid-season games, and only gave a general overview of stats for the games covered.

If it’s still out there, a complete look at the stats compiled by the 16 Wolves who suited up in ’02 would be a nice find.

**An interview with Jeff Fielding, the first CHS athlete to win a state title, back in 1979.

Eight Wolves have brought home the ultimate prize, combining for 17 championships.

Natasha Bamberger (1985) and Tyler King (2010) won cross country crowns, while the same duo joined Kyle King, Jon Chittim, Chris Hutchinson, Amy Mouw, Steven McDonald, and Fielding as track champs.

Eight of Coupeville’s 15 track titles have come in the 3200, with Bamberger and Kyle King each winning three times, and Tyler King and Fielding striking gold once.

Toss in three wins in the 1600 (one each for the King boys and Bamberger), plus titles in the 200 and 400 (Chittim), 800 (Mouw), and 4 x 400 (McDonald, Hutchinson, Chittim, Kyle King) and those eight athletes form Coupeville’s Mount Rushmore.

I’ve spoken, in person or by email, some more frequently than others, with every one of those eight except the trailblazer.

Not every former Wolf athlete (or some current ones) want to talk about their prep sports careers.

If that’s the case with Fielding, no worries.

But if he should ever want to look back on the first-ever Wolf state title, and his own enduring legacy, I’m here, ready to listen.

 

Have any of the things I’m looking for, or something else you think would make a great story? Contact me at davidsvien@hotmail.com today!

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Jessenia Camarena pushes the ball up-court. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Desi Ramirez looks for an opening in the defense.

Skylar Parker would like a teammate to get open, like now.

Reese Wilkinson (24), backed up by Brionna Blouin, looks to kick the ball back out.

Adrian Burrows hauls in a rebound.

Claire Mayne keeps the ball well away from any pesky defenders.

They are the future of the program.

The Coupeville Middle School 7th grade varsity and 8th grade JV went toe-to-toe with King’s Thursday, and wanderin’ photographer John Fisken was there to document things.

The last photo in the camera had barely cooled when he legged it out of the gym and hit the open road to Tacoma to cover the state wrestling championships.

Now that he’s back on Whidbey and rested up, it’s time to look at his snaps from last week’s hoops action.

To see everything he shot, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2018-2019-boys-and-girls/MSGBB-2019-02-14-vs-Kings/

And remember, a percentage of each purchase goes to fund scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes. So, circle of life and all.

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Scout Smith will enter her senior season as the #1 active scorer among CHS girls basketball players. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

There’s madness in the numbers.

Trying to track individual scoring totals through 147 seasons of Coupeville High School basketball – 102 for the boys, 45 for the girls – is a good way to fry your brain.

And yet, I persist, because basketball is my favorite sport, because points are the most concrete stat we have, and because I refuse to give up.

When I look at the master scoring chart I have compiled, I feel good about the girls side and semi-good about the boys.

Other than the inaugural 1974-1975 season, which the Whidbey News-Times all but ignored, I have 99.2% complete scoring totals for every other girls campaign.

I’m missing a game or three from the mid-2000’s, but, other than that, I’ve accounted for 34,452 points scored by 224 Wolf girls.

Over on the boys side, things are a bit more difficult.

I’m golden from the 1954-1955 season to today, but pre-’54 is a scattershot mess of missing score-books, inadequate newspaper articles and players and teams lost to the mists of times.

What I do have, and it’s more than anyone else out there, is a scoring chart reflecting 391 Wolf boys combining to rattle the rim for 73,296 points.

So, a start.

As the 2018-2019 seasons unfolded, I updated my master list after every game.

Now, I could have waited until the end of the season, but it was more fun to do it in the moment, watching current players move up, sometimes a single slot, sometimes leapfrogging a pack of five or six former Wolves in a single burst.

By the time we wrapped, the departing seniors had cemented their place in history, at least until someone else comes flying past them.

Lindsey Roberts made the deepest run, tossing in 448 points in four varsity seasons, finishing in a tie with Vanessa Davis at #18 on the all-time girls chart.

Then, there was Ema Smith (228 points in two seasons, #48 all-time), Dane Lucero (20 points in two seasons, #300 all-time), and Nicole Laxton (15 points in one season, #170 all-time).

Looking forward, 20 of 24 varsity players from this past season can return, 11 boys and nine girls.

So where do they sit on the all-time scoring chart? Glad you asked.

 

Girls:

Scout Smith – (142 points) – (56 as a sophomore, 86 as a junior) – (#78 all-time)

Chelsea Prescott – (139 points) – (38 as a freshman, 101 as a sophomore) – (#81)

Avalon Renninger – (59 points) – (3 as a sophomore, 56 as a junior) – (#118)

Hannah Davidson – (42 points) – (11 as a sophomore, 31 as a junior) – (#136)

Tia Wurzrainer – (18 points) – (18 as a junior) – (#165)

Izzy Wells – (11 points) – (11 as a freshman) – (#178)

Mollie Bailey – (8 points) – (8 as a sophomore) – (#184)

Ja’Kenya Hoskins – (5 points) – (5 as a freshman) – (#203)

Anya Leavell – (4 points) – (4 as a freshman) – (#205)

 

Boys:

Mason Grove – (160 points) – (51 as a sophomore, 109 as a junior) – (#153 all-time)

Hawthorne Wolfe – (158 points) – (158 as a freshman) – (#154)

Sean Toomey-Stout – (122 points) – (122 as a junior) – (#170)

Jered Brown – (100 points) – (5 as a freshman, 24 as a sophomore, 71 as a junior) – (#183)

Ulrik Wells – (78 points) – (4 as a sophomore, 74 as a junior) – (#200)

Gavin Knoblich – (70 points) – (5 as a sophomore, 65 as a junior) – (#212)

Jacobi Pilgrim – (44 points) – (1 as a sophomore, 43 as a junior) – (#253)

Koa Davison – (11 points) – (11 as a junior) – (#330)

Jean Lund-Olsen – (7 points) – (7 as a junior) – (#353)

Xavier Murdy – (4 points) – (4 as a freshman) – (#368)

Daniel Olson – (3 points) – (3 as a sophomore) – (#374)

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Coupeville senior Alex Turner (in back) plays Twister with Medical Lake’s Jared Pendall during the state wrestling championships. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Turner puts Vashon’s Finnegan McClure down hard.

Oak Harbor coach Larry Falcon (left) and Coupeville wrestling guru Tyson Boon monitor the mat action.

The calm before the storm.

Falcon offers some advice. “Grip ’em and rip ’em.”

Turner and Lakeside (Nine Mile Falls) grappler Micah Tenny go to work.

“Hey, if we’re gonna dance, I want to lead!”

One wrestler, one photographer.

Coupeville High School senior Alex Turner, a grappler without a program, had a successful run this weekend at the state championships, and John Fisken bounced around the Tacoma Dome shadowing him.

The nimble Whidbey paparazzi was also at Mat Classic XXXI to shoot Oak Harbor’s batch of wrestlers, but they have their own media outlet to hype them up, so here the focus falls solely on the Lone Wolf.

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Coupeville’s Makana Stone went off for 17 points and 11 rebounds Saturday, helping Whitman earn a win and a home playoff game. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

A sizable collection of Coupeville folks showed up in Tacoma to root for their serene superstar. (Kristi Etzell photo)

Stone netted 7-8 free throw attempts in the win. (Etzell photo)

Stone reunites with former CHS classmates (l to r) Nick Etzell, McKenzie Meyer, Danny Conlisk, and Marisa Etzell. (Eileen Stone photo)

Guess who gets to host a home playoff game after all?

The last day of the regular season broke perfectly for the Whitman College women’s basketball team and its Coupeville star, the ever-rampaging Makana Stone.

With the former Wolf ace going off for 17 points and 11 rebounds in front of an enthusiastic group of hometown fans and friends, the Blues crunched host Pacific Lutheran 73-62 in Tacoma.

Meanwhile, across town, Puget Sound was stunned 61-56 by Whitworth.

That means Whitman, which finishes 13-3 in Northwest Conference play and is 19-6 overall, claims second-place in the nine-team league and will host UPS (12-4, 19-5) Feb. 21 in the first round of the NWC tourney.

Conference champ George Fox (15-1, 22-3) hosts #4 Linfield (8-8, 12-13) the same day, with the winners meeting Feb. 23 in the title game.

The tourney champs earn an automatic bid to the NCAA D-III national championships.

Wrapping up a two-game trip to the wilds of Tacoma, Whitman bounced back strongly Saturday after falling by five points Friday at UPS.

The Blues opened the game with a nice splat, thanks to Taylor Chambers connecting on a long three-ball.

After a couple of early ties, Stone went to work, hitting back-to-back buckets to break open a 9-9 stalemate and give Whitman a lead it would never relinquish.

Up 19-16 after one, the Blues stretched the lead to 37-28 by the halftime break.

PLU, which entered the day in a three-way tie for the league’s fourth, and final, playoff berth, cut the lead all the way back to a single point midway through the second half, but Stone wasn’t having it.

She pumped in seven points in the third quarter, then added another four in the fourth.

Stone rose to the occasion down the stretch, getting key points in the final three minutes, when Whitman back-handed its upstart hosts back into reality.

Out-leaping two defenders, Stone snagged an offensive rebound and promptly crashed hard to the hoop, earning two well-deserved free throw attempts with 2:42 left in the game.

Netting both (she hit 7-8 from the charity stripe on the night), the Whitman junior staked her squad to a 62-55 lead.

A minute later she was right back at it, gunning down the floor and pulling in an outlet pass for a running layup to push the margin out to double digits.

With Whitman senior Maegan Martin following up with back-to-back breakaway layups of her own, the Blues shoved the lead out to 14 before PLU ended its season with a buzzer-beating three-ball.

The Blues big three were the key to the game, as usual.

Stone added a crucial steal to go with her 17 and 11 double-double, while Mady Burdett singed the nets for 16 points, and Martin added 14 points and 12 boards of her own.

Kaelan Shamseldin, who nailed a late three-ball that punched a hole through the hearts of PLU fans, had 11 points as Whitman put four players into double-digits scoring.

Emma Janousek paced PLU with a team-high 15.

Heading into the playoffs, Stone has set personal-bests in virtually every statistical category, and now has 356 points, 203 rebounds, 40 assists, 26 steals and 18 blocks on the season.

She’s shooting 149-290 (51.4%) from the floor and 57-73 (78.1%) from the line.

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