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Graphic courtesy Christopher Dahl.

Graphic courtesy Christopher Dahl/WinningSeasons

Next Saturday, Sid Otton will take aim at a sixth state title.

The winningest coach in Washington state high school football history, he is now in his 40th year at my true alma mater, Tumwater High School.

While preaching NGUNNGU (Never Give Up, Never Never Give Up) he and the T-Birds have won five state titles — the first one coming in 1987, sparked by my classmates like Larry Quartano and Sean Modun — and the most recent in 2010.

Next weekend, unbeaten Tumwater meets unbeaten arch-rival Lynden (the only team to ever beat THS in a state title game) for the 2A title. It’ll be the T-Birds seventh appearance in a championship game.

And, as my ninth grade health teacher wraps up his 46th year as a head football coach, Whidbey Island has to wonder — what could have been.

Before the four years he spent in Colfax and the 40 in Tumwater, Otton spent his first two years stalking the sidelines right here in Coupeville.

His first game, in 1967, was a 12-6 loss to Granite Falls, a school the Wolves still play all these years later. The only difference is Coupeville was B-11 and Granite 1A at the time, and 46 years later both schools have moved up a slot to 1A and 2A, respectively.

In an article in The Olympian in September, Otton was quoted by writer Meg Wochnick about his brief time in the red and black:

“You’re young, out of college and you’re really excited. It was a neat experience,” Otton said. “My wife (Marjean, then age 20) would go scouting with me to all the games.

“The people there were really nice. It was a quick learning experience.”

So, what if he had stayed? What if there was no Colfax, no Tumwater? Would Coupeville be the premier football school in the state?

Would Otton have worked his magic with players bearing the last names Sherman, Bagby and King instead of Gurnsey, Lowe and Hicks?

What could have been…

Graphic above courtesy:

http://www.christopherdahl.com/

http://www.winningseasons.net/index.php

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Nick Streubel and the blue turf at Boise State. (Nanette Streubel photo)

Nick Streubel pretends he’s warm while visiting Boise. (Nanette Streubel photo)

Nick Streubel was one of the two best offensive linemen in the Cascade Conference this season.

Even though the league has declined to honor Coupeville High School players the past two seasons, since the Wolves have played a partial conference schedule, the Everett Herald had no such qualms.

The paper selected Streubel, a CHS senior, to their All-Area Football Offensive Team, putting him on the Second Team along side Oak Harbor junior lineman Tyler Adamson.

King’s senior lineman Zach Jacobson was selected to the First Team.

That means that the two representatives from the Cascade Conference hailed from 1A schools and not the 2A squads.

Junior running back Austin Joyner of Marysville Pilchuck, who has signed with the University of Washington, was tabbed as the Offensive Player of the Year.

Streubel will go for dual honors when the paper names its defensive players of the year shortly.

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Nick Streubel (Sharon Edwards photos)

Nick Streubel (Sharon Edwards photos)

You can say it. Awwwww...

You can say it. Awwwww…

The Big Hurt and Coach V hug it out.

The Big Hurt and Coach V hug it out.

We are at war.

It is a war fought for every small town, for every speck on the map, for every under-appreciated, overlooked, easily-dismissed football program clawing for a bit of respect.

We beat the big city boys one time before. We will do it again.

Wolf Nation, and all of its supporters, whether they are Wildcats or Falcons or go by any of a million other names, do not bow down to superior numbers. Not now, not ever.

Marysville came for us, with a population of 62,402 and we blistered their fannies until they crawled away.

Why should a town of 1,865 people be worried by Lakewood, which has about 4,000 less people in their city limits than Marysville?

This battle, which, on the surface, is a fight to honor Coupeville High School senior lineman Nick Streubel as the Everett Herald Defensive Player of the Year, is about more.

Streubel, AKA The Big Hurt, AKA the guy who bear-hugs his mom Nanette after every game, has been shafted for two years running by a decision that made CHS football players unable to be considered for All-League honors when Cascade Conference coaches voted.

So, unlike Lakewood’s Jeff Harrison — a very good player who will have to accept second place — Streubel needs this. Coupeville needs this.

The Big Hurt battled through injury, through triple-teaming, chop-blocking opponents, and dominated in a way few players do. He changed the flow of games. He made coaches design entirely new game plans.

If you vote for Nick, if you spread the word and the link, if you fuel fires for him from Atlanta to Belgium, if Whidbey (North, South and Central) come together as one to lift him to this win, it will be justice. It will be right.

Let Mr. Rockne play us out…

Well, boys … I haven’t a thing to say.  Played a great game … all of you. Great game.

I guess we just can’t expect to win ‘em all.

But sometime, when the team is up against it — and the breaks are beating the boys — tell them to go out there with all they got and win just one for The Big Hurt…

I don’t know where I’ll be then, but I’ll know about it, and I’ll be happy.

At my signal, unleash Hell:

http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20131123/BLOG18/131129942

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Nick Streubel

Nick Streubel (John Fisken photo)

Defensive MVP Nick Streubel gives mom Nanette a hug.

He hugs his mom. How can you not vote for The Big Hurt?

They will fear us. Oh yes, they will fear us.

Wolf Nation brought home 2,000+ votes for Jake Tumblin when the Everett Herald held its Prep Football Player of the Week poll recently.

More votes than there are people in the town of Coupeville, and we beat the crud out of Marysville and their 60,000+ population.

And now they want to tempt us again.

A poll to pick the prep football Defensive Player of the Year went up tonight (while I was detained at my real job) and the man, the myth, the legend — CHS senior lineman Nick “The Big Hurt” Streubel — currently sits in second place (out of 11 contenders).

If Marysville couldn’t keep us down, ain’t no way Sultan is winning this one.

Fire up the voting machine, Betty Sue! We’re going to war!! I wanna see 3,000 votes this time!!!

Go! Go! Vote! Vote! Here:

http://www.heraldnet.com/article/20131123/BLOG18/131129942

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Jared Dickson, one of the unsung stars of the CHS defense. (John Fisken photo)

Jared Dickson, a quiet star for the Wolves. (John Fisken photo)

“I hope to be remembered as the kid who did his job.”

For anyone who watched Coupeville High School senior Jared Dickson as he played out his football career, there is no doubt he succeeded.

Whether catching balls or crushing people while patrolling as a linebacker, the two-way starter was a model of consistency. He worked hard, never quit and went out the way he came in — as the kind of player every coach loves to see strap on a helmet and pads.

For his part, Dickson, who plans to serve a two-year Mormon mission after graduation, then head to Brigham Young University with plans to become a dentist, remains low-key.

He was never one to scream about his accomplishments, and knows how fast the game can change on you.

“I will always remember the game against Sultan this last season, when I was on special teams and we were punting,” Dickson said. “I was all by myself, no one around me and I thought for sure that I was going to tackle the guy that had just caught the ball.

“At the last second, however, I was blindsided by a guy who just flat laid me out,” he added. “It was the weirdest feeling thinking that you were doing so well and then in an instant be totally humbled. It is definitely a feeling that I will never forget.”

That was a fate rarely suffered by the always-smiling big hitter, whose younger sisters Allison and Lainey are CHS cheerleaders. Usually he was the one cracking helmets and taking folks down.

His style was shaped by his coaches, who he is quick to give credit.

“I felt that my biggest strength was my ability to listen to what my coach had to say, and then be able to use his advice to make myself a better player,” Dickson said. “The thing that I enjoy the most about football is that it takes everyone on the team doing their job in order for you to have success, and that it really is all about working as a team.”

Playing on Senior Night — he was sick and missed the final cross-over game against Chimacum — capped a six-year run for Dickson, one he treasured.

“I started because it has always been a game that I enjoyed to watch and I wanted to see if it was just as much fun to play,” he said.

When not working on the gridiron, he has been a strong student, as well, favoring science and math classes. Away from school he scuba dives, mountain bikes, does tree-work with his dad and has been known to shoot a shotgun or two.

And, while his coaches have played a big part in his development, everything begins at home.

“By far those responsible for making me who I am today are my parents,” Dickson said. “They have always been there for me, and have constantly used that time to teach me how I should act and who I should want to be.

“I owe everything I am to my parents.”

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