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Archive for the ‘Football’ Category

Oscar Liquidano (bottom right) with other CHS football captains. (Sylvia Arnold photo)

  Oscar Liquidano (bottom right, black hoodie) with other CHS football captains. (Sylvia Arnold photo)

Even if he moves to Las Vegas with his family, the legend will live on in Coupeville.

Even if he moves to Las Vegas with his family, his legend will live on in Coupeville.

Aaaaaa-goooooo-nyyyyyyyy.

It’s not 100% certain yet, but there’s a very real possibility the Wolves will lose one of their football captains before he can suit up for his senior season.

Junior lineman Oscar Liquidano, who also plays basketball and soccer for Coupeville High School, may be pilfered away from the red and black if a family move to Las Vegas happens shortly.

“Well, it’s not a sure thing … but only God knows what will happen,” Liquidano said.

The easy-going man mountain was supposed to join Josh Bayne, Carson Risner and Aaron Wright to lead the Wolves into a new league next season. Coupeville is hopping out of the 1A/2A Cascade Conference and joining the 1A Olympic League.

CHS football coach Tony Maggio was last seen huddled in a corner, tears running down his face. Or, at least that’s how I imagine it…

“Devastating. I love that kid,” Maggio said.

If the move happens, it will actually take two football players away from Coupeville, as younger brother Uriel was a standout defensive player for the JV this year as a freshman.

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CHS football coach Tony Maggio

CHS football coach Tony Maggio: “Week 1? We’re playing them Week 1?!?!”

Lathom Kelley: "Relax, Papa Wolf ... we got this." (John Fisken photo)

Lathom Kelley: “Relax, Papa Wolf … we got this.” (John Fisken photo)

Rivalry week comes early next season.

When the 2014-2015 school year starts in September, Coupeville High School is leaving the 1A/2A Cascade Conference and moving to a new 1A-only division in the Olympic League. As the smallest 1A school in the state, CHS is looking for a more level playing field.

One thing the Wolves won’t leave behind, however, is their natural rivalry with South Whidbey. The two Island schools will continue to face off, just in non-conference games.

And that back-and-forth battle is probably biggest on the gridiron, where the Wolves and Falcons battle for possession of The Bucket.

Two years ago, Coupeville went to Langley and, led by seniors Caleb Valko and Danny Savalza, brought the trophy home.

Last year, with All-State lineman Nick Streubel out with injury, the Wolves fell at home in what may have been the foggiest game ever played on Whidbey.

Coupeville’s effort to reclaim the hardware will get an early start in 2014, as Wolf Athletic Director Lori Stolee has confirmed the two schools have penciled in each other for week one of the football season.

“South Whidbey is locked in,” Stolee said. “We don’t have the schedule made yet, but my unofficial schedule has them locked in!”

Nestled away in his top-secret mad genius lair, Wolf coach Tony Maggio has already started plotting out new, mind-boggling plays.

The countdown to smack-down has begun.

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Pride of a new generation of Hawk fans. (Oliana Fletcher creation)

Pride of a new generation of Hawk fans. (Oliana Stange creation)

And Ken Stange danced, all day and all night and into the next day. (Wendy McCormick photo)

And Ken Stange danced, all day and all night and into the next day. (Wendy McCormick photo)

I am a die-hard Pittsburgh Steelers fan. That’s not going to change just because the Seahawks are suddenly trendy.

That being said, I have a great deal of respect for the true Hawk fans, the ones who wandered in the desert for many years before finding that elusive oasis.

My one true sports obsession is not the Steelers, however. It is, and has always been, the Portland Trail Blazers.

I was six when they won their title and nine when I started listening to every game on the radio when we lived in the border town of Kelso.

So, I missed Bill Walton.

Twice the Blazers have gone to the NBA finals in my 33 years of fandom, running into Detroit’s Bad Boys and Michael Jordan.

So, that sucked.

From Sam Bowie (a nice guy who gave me an autograph but will never live down being drafted ahead of Jordan, Charles Barkley and John Stockton) through the Jail Blazers, the trading of Clyde Drexler, Brandon Roy’s forced medical retirement, Greg Oden not being Kevin Durant and the Blazers blowing a 15-point fourth-quarter lead in Game 7 of the Western Conference finals to the much-loathed Shaq and Kobe, I have endured.

Against all odds, Portland is the biggest surprise in the NBA this season, 35-14 with two young All-Stars in LaMarcus Aldridge and Damien Lillard.

And yet, these are the Blazers, and I know, deep down, in the name of Walter “The Worthless” Berry, it’s all going to go wrong.

It has to. They’re the Blazers.

I know that’s how Seahawk fans, the long-timers, the ones who know their Tom Flores from their Dan McGwire, have felt for so long.

Maybe, one day, I will know what you are feeling right now.

If nothing else, I can give a platform to one of the true fans, Coupeville High School tennis coach Ken Stange. Here’s a beautiful piece he wrote.

Hope, sometimes it gets answered.

Unless you’re a Trail Blazer fan. Hope doesn’t exist in this dojo.

But, anyway, testify brother Stange. Testify.

Today, as I basked in Seattle’s Super Bowl glory, I took a trip down memory lane.

My family moved to Washington when I was seven, in the summer of ’78. We became instant Seahawk fans. Fall and winter Sundays were marked by supporting our pathetic Seahawks.

In my house, nobody was more vocal than my mother.

She screamed at the TV as if the players and officials could actually hear her. I loved it. Today, I carry on the tradition.

Oh, did the Seahawks stink! Jim Zorn ran as if his very life depended on it, and the most exciting plays were pure trickery. It was all they could manage.

I thought of my mom today, and know that she would have been ecstatic!

I also remembered the many games I attended with my father.

The Kingdome was drab and dull, and the awful turf shortened many a career. However, I loved the place.

The sound was deafening. Sitting in the corner of the end zone, I had a commanding view when the action was at my end of the field.

Binoculars, and the information provided by my father, who always wore headphones so he could listen to the play-by-play, kept me in the action when the team was on the other end of the field.

He provided me with all the info that I’d normally see if I were watching on TV. One needs to have every stat, you know?

In fact, my father provided those stats to the entire section. After all, he was wearing headphones, and never realized just how loud he was.

I think it was the only time that my normally quiet father was that loud!

Subway sandwiches and Seahawk games with dad. Those are fond memories.

I remember all the no-name players, I remember the fake kicks and punts, and I remember Dan Doornink rumbling down the field for an 80-yard TD.

I remember Ground Chuck, and the years that we began to achieve some degree of respectability.

I remember the string of mediocre quarterbacks, including Rick Mirer, and I remember the 2-14 team, too.

I remember the ’05 run, and our team not being able to make the plays necessary to overcome a couple of bad calls.

I recalled last season’s heartbreak in Atlanta.

What I remember most about last season is how my daughter, Oliana, became a hard-core Seahawks fan. She learned how to be passionate about it, just like her father.

My son, Fletcher, thinks we are crazy for being so loud. He doesn’t get it.

Oh, well. Someday, he will understand, and hopefully will join us!

Today, I shared my joy with Oliana. She created the photo I included.

In a couple of decades, maybe she’ll share her love of the Hawks with her own kids, if she chooses to have them.

It was a family affair, and I was all smiles and cheers.

My father called me after the game. I shared with him much of what I just shared with you.

I was all choked up. I’m a sentimental guy, and today my sentimentality paid big dividends.

I know it was just a game played by overpaid athletes. I know in the larger scheme of life, football doesn’t really matter that much.

But today? Today was a beautiful day of distraction.

It was a day of remembering all the good times I’ve had, thanks to the Hawks.

It was a good day for the collective 12th Man. It was a day for me, it was a day for Oliana, it was a day for my dad, and it was a day for my mom.

It was a day of celebration and memory — a day of love.

Go Hawks!

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Nick Streubel puts autograph to paper Wednesday morning. (Amanda Streubel photo)

  Nick Streubel puts autograph to paper Wednesday morning. (Amanda Streubel photo)

And it's a done deal. (David Streubel photo)

And it’s a done deal. (David Streubel photo)

Streubel Tuesday during Senior Night for boys' basketball with his parents and grandmother. (John Fisken photo)

Streubel Tuesday during Senior Night for boys’ basketball with his parents and grandmother. (John Fisken photo)

Nick Streubel dotted all his I’s and crossed his T’s and is now a Wildcat.

The Coupeville High School senior lineman, a 1A All-State player this year, officially signed his letter of intent Wednesday morning to play football for Central Washington University next fall.

The Big Hurt will be on scholarship at the D-2 school, which has a new coach in Ian Shoemaker.

CWU has won the conference championship in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference seven of the last 11 seasons. They went 7-4 in 2013.

To see who else has signed with CWU, a list that already includes quarterback Jayden Croft, the grandson of Tumwater coach Sid Otton, the winningest high school coach in state history and my 9th grade Health teacher, head over to:

http://wildcatsports.com/news/2014/2/5/FB_0205143249.aspx

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Jake Tumblin and big sister Ashlyn Cronin. (John Fisken photo)

Jake Tumblin and big sister Ashlyn Cronin. (John Fisken photo)

Jake Tumblin followed Nick Streubel’s blocks on the football field.

Now, the Coupeville High School senior running back would like to follow his fellow gridiron warrior to Central Washington University to play college football.

Streubel, a 1A All-State lineman, is signing his letter of intent with CWU Wednesday, Feb. 5 (National Signing Day), having accepted their scholarship offer.

Tumblin was invited to Ellensburg last weekend to participate in a tryout for Wildcat coaches, and, while he will have to wait for a few days to find out if CWU is interested (“They said between Wednesday and the weekend”), Tumblin left the tryout in good spirits.

“It was good! Felt like I did well,” he said. “They just wanted us to do some drills, see us move a little bit.”

Tumblin was tested in a twenty-yard dash and vertical jump, then did positional drills. For him, that meant putting in work as both a defensive back and running back.

Afterwards he and the others took a tour of the campus.

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