Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Hall o’ Fame’ Category

Clockwise from bottom left, it's Mike, Ben and Marisa Etzell.

Clockwise from bottom left, it’s Mike, Ben and Marisa Etzell.

It’s a reunion.

As we convene today to induct our 74th class into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, we’re making a concentrated effort to make Kristi Etzell get a little teary-eyed.

How are we doing that?

By serving up a family special, inducting her husband, daughter and one of her three sons all at the same time.

After this, you’ll find Mike, Marisa and Ben Etzell hanging out together up at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab.

And probably at family dinners, but that’s beside the point.

At the moment, it’s all about their taking up residence in these hallowed digital hallways we call the Hall o’ Fame.

Up first on the dais is big poppa, since, if it weren’t for him, the other two inductees wouldn’t be around to be honored.

Mike Etzell goes in for a lot of reasons — he’s a key part of the best-in-the-biz CHS football chain gang, he’s a stellar member of the community, and he’s the perfect assistant coach.

Whether working under Willie Smith or Marc Aparicio, the senior Etzell brings knowledge and a subtle touch to his work on the diamond.

Stalking the first base box, needling the players in the dugout, offering sage advice to his head coaches or bringing a fresh take on strategy, he’s indispensable (and underrated).

A fair amount of that knowledge worked its way down to Ben, who was a fireball-throwing star on the diamond.

The only Wolf to be named an MVP in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference in any sport during Coupeville’s decade-plus battles with King’s, ATM and Co., Ben killed foes with his arm, his bat and his brain.

On the mound, he was a strikeout king, routinely buckling the knees of opposing hitters. Then he would pick up a bat himself and lead the offensive charge.

It’s a sport he was seemingly born to play, and one he has continued to excel in, playing the past two years for Saint John’s in Minnesota, his dad’s alma mater.

Away from the diamond, Ben poured in points on the basketball court (and slammed repeatedly into walls while in pursuit of loose balls), while also advancing to state as a tennis player.

That he (willingly) shredded his knees on the cement tennis courts by sliding face-first to pull off a miracle shot is both a testament to his competitive fire and his willingness to freak out his coach and family.

Our third inductee, Marisa, is the quiet warrior, a superb soccer and track star who always looked like she was gliding, even in the heat of battle.

She didn’t get as many bumps, bruises and contusions as her brother, though don’t think that’s because she wasn’t battling just as hard as he did. She just knew where to pick her spots.

On the pitch, she out-ran, out-hustled and out-fought everyone in sight, scoring goals and setting her teammates up en route to earning All-Conference honors as a forward.

Put her on the track oval and Marisa really took off, however.

She owns part of a school record, having joined with Makana Stone, Jai’Lysa Hoskins and Kirsten Pelroy to set a 4 x 400 mark (4:14.98) which has withstood all challengers for three seasons now.

During her stellar four-year prep career, Marisa was a winner 26 times as either an individual or relay runner, while advancing to state three separate times.

Her best showing at the big dance came during her senior season, when she teamed with Lauren Grove, Sylvia Hurlburt and Stone to claim third-place medals in the 4 x 200.

Read Full Post »

Hope Lodell

   Hope Lodell (left) is joined by Hunter Smith and Mia Littlejohn. (John Fisken photos)

We’re spanning the generations today.

As we open the doors to welcome our 73rd class into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, the athletes and performances being honored stretch from 1925 all the way up to a mere eight days ago.

It’s a diverse group, as we welcome four Wolves into this hallowed digital shrine.

One goes in for his entire career, while the other three, who are much younger, are honored for crafting major moments which shattered records.

With that we welcome Roy Armstrong, CHS Class of 1926, and Hope Lodell, Mia Littlejohn and Hunter Smith, all on their way to being part of the CHS Class of 2018.

Armstrong is the only one of the four being honored for his entire body of work, mainly because the other three aren’t done writing their story yet.

While it’s very likely Lodell, Littlejohn and Smith will be returning to the Hall one day to be inducted as athletes, for today they’re being hailed for what they accomplished this fall.

All four, however, will be found hanging out together at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab, after this ceremony.

Our first inductee, Armstrong, is also the first person I’ve put into the Hall without a photo.

While I couldn’t tell you what ol’ Roy looked like, I can tell you he left a sizable impression on the stat sheets of the past.

The campaign which really stands out (because I happen to have lucked into possession of a rare 1925 CHS annual) is Armstrong’s junior year of 1924-1925.

During that school year, he lettered in three sports (football, basketball and track), leading all three to Island County championships.

With Armstrong front and center on all three squads, Coupeville thrashed Oak Harbor and Langley to claim Island supremacy that year.

On the gridiron, he scored a key offensive touchdown in the title-clinching win over the North Enders, while also pulling off a memorable 60-yard fumble recovery in a “sea of mud” against Fairhaven for another score.

Once he moved to the hard-court, Armstrong was Coupeville’s primary scoring weapon, as he accounted for 80 of his team’s 177 points.

That included dropping in 18 of 41 points during a three-game run at the district tourney.

In the spring, he was captain of the track squad, winning the pole vault and running on a dominant relay squad as CHS demolished its Island rivals in the year’s big meet.

Coupeville rolled up 70 points in the 1925 Island County Track Meet, while Langley (28) and Oak Harbor (21) mounted little resistance to the farm boys from Cow Town.

Armstrong’s three companions on this induction day followed in his (long ago) footsteps, putting together record-setting seasons as juniors.

Littlejohn, who had eight goals through her first two seasons on the pitch, went ballistic this fall, torching the nets for 27 as she led the Wolf booters to the first winning season in program history.

That topped the 20 notched last spring by Abraham Leyva and was almost three times the previous girls single-season record of 10 tallied by lil’ sis Kalia Littlejohn in 2015.

Our third inductee, Smith, has been a two-way star on the gridiron since the first moment he pulled on a CHS helmet, and he’s on the cusp of shattering numerous career marks on both sides of the ball.

This season, he knocked off two single-season receiving marks, rolling up 915 yards and 11 touchdown receptions.

The first erased a record which had stood since Chad Gale set it in 1987, while the second nipped a more recent mark set by Josh Bayne in 2014.

Along the way, he also tied a CHS single-game record, pulling in three of those TD catches against Bellevue Christian.

Our final inductee, Lodell, not only broke a single-season record, but she did it in a way which actually broke two records at once.

After dropping 31 service aces as a sophomore, the ever-springy one found a new zone as a junior, raining down 110 aces as Coupeville volleyball put together its best season in 12 years.

Now pause for just a second.

Not only was the 110 aces a single-season record, but, by itself, it allowed Lodell to break the Wolf CAREER ace record (109 by Hall o’ Famer Mindy Horr).

With 141 aces to her credit and a season left to go in her vaunted career, she now has a chance to put the career mark way out of reach.

But that’s the future, a time when we will most likely be revisiting 2016’s terrific trio and inducting them into the Hall a second (or third or fourth) time.

Read Full Post »

Valen Trujillo

Valen Trujillo: a Hall of Famer on the court and in life.

This is sort of odd, if you think about it.

Today, as I hold my weekly induction into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, the 72nd class is comprised of one lone athlete going in by herself.

And yet that athlete, maybe as much as any I have covered in my years of writing, is the very embodiment of a true team player.

Every step of the way, from the first time I watched her play basketball in middle school until the final time she dove on a floor and cartwheeled Saturday, trying to keep her prep volleyball career alive as long as possible, Valen Trujillo was all about her team.

Even when she’s on a tennis court playing singles, one of the ultimate solitary athletic pursuits, she always wants to know how her fellow players are doing.

Win or lose (and she usually wins), she always stays to watch and support her classmates and friends, whether they’re fighting for a varsity win or playing way down on the JV ladder.

It is an enduring testament to her spirit, which has always soared far above her stellar athletic talent.

And yes, I know she’s not done with her high school sports career.

Valen will be back on the tennis court this spring for one final run at net glory (and who knows, she might shock me and return to basketball when practice starts in a week — I’m not holding my breath … or am I?).

But the end of the volleyball season Saturday is one of those seminal moments that will echo for some time, and I say, why wait to induct her?

It was on the volleyball court where she has lived and died (metaphorically, at least) and left a fair amount of her skin.

Trujillo was a libero, the rock anchoring the back line, and her stats can stand with any Wolf to ever put on the uniform.

When the volleyball record board is updated, her name will tower large on it, as she smashed numerous records during her four-year run.

But more than the records, it was her love for the game which will endure in our memories.

The way she poured out her heart on every play.

Whether crouched low on the court, awaiting a serve, like a wild cat ready to pounce, or madly bouncing off a wall as she sprinted full-bore after a ball her mind (but not her heart) already knew was long gone, Valen never, ever gave you less than her best.

Every coach she had spoke of Trujillo with a reverence which is rare.

It was a universal reaction I have witnessed with only a handful of other Wolf athletes, fellow Hall of Famers such as Makana Stone, Nick Streubel and Breeanna Messner.

There are great athletes and great people, and when the two meet, it is something special.

Valen is something special.

The first time I put a face to the name was at a middle school girls basketball game five years ago.

Trujillo smiled and politely said hello to the five King’s players on the other side of the court before tip-off, then made two of those rivals run out of the gym crying once the game started.

She wasn’t a dirty player, but she was a bulldog, one who brought back memories of the immortal Baddest Woman Alive herself, Jodi (Christensen) Crimmins, who once gave a CHS hoops teammate a black eye during a battle for a rebound.

Valen, like Jodi, believed without a doubt that EVERY loose ball belonged to her, and that no girl, now or forever, was going to take it away from her.

And then, after the game, after Coupeville won and Trujillo went down the line hugging each and every one of her teammates, she passed by as she went to her parents, Craig and Amy, who were seated in the stands not far from where I was.

Stopping for a second, this young woman, who I had never met before, looked at me and said “Thank you for coming to my game.”

For a second I thought she was being sarcastic.

Five years, and a few thousand other “thank you for coming to my games” have taught me that couldn’t have been further from the truth.

My greatest disappointment in my run here at Coupeville Sports was that Trujillo left basketball behind when she entered high school. It would have been glorious!

But I understand her desire to focus on schoolwork and singing, and I’ve dealt with it.

Plus, the home-made cookies and chips and salsa Valen gave me certainly helped ease the “pain…”

Baker, warbler, guitar picker, student, athlete, bright shining beacon of light and love to everyone she meets, Miss Trujillo is a rare gem.

It’s not much in the grand scheme of things, but today, I welcome her to my lil’ digital hall of honor.

As long as Coupeville Sports exists on the internet, Valen Trujillo will live on, up at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

So, let me flip it around on you.

“Thank you, Miss Trujillo, for letting me come to your games.”

Read Full Post »

Best in the biz. 14 of the 15 girls who played in a Wolf JV volleyball match this season. (John Fisken photo)

   Best in the biz. 14 of the 15 girls who played in a Wolf JV volleyball match this season. (John Fisken photo)

Screw the five-year waiting period.

Unlike some Hall of Fames that make you wait for induction, here at the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, we have no such guidelines.

So, less than 24 hours after it wrapped its season, we welcome the 2016 Coupeville High School JV volleyball squad to these hallowed digital walls.

As the sole inductee in the 71st class to be enshrined, the 15 players and two coaches who just finished one of the best seasons ever put together by a Wolf team, at any level, get the stage to themselves.

After this you’ll find them at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab.

And why not? They played like legends.

Under the guidance of coaches Kristin Bridges and Ashley Herndon, the Wolf JV went 12-2, won 10 straight matches (a five-week-plus winning period) and dominated their league in a way few teams have.

Coupeville’s young guns went a flawless 9-0 in 1A Olympic League play, the fourth CHS squad to do so, but the first that wasn’t a girls’ basketball team.

And they did so in particularly convincing fashion.

Over the course of their showdowns with Port Townsend, Klahowya and Chimacum, the Wolves won an astounding 23 of 24 sets.

In fact, the only set they lost to a league rival came in the very final set they played this season.

Having already taken the first two sets (and the win) at Port Townsend Saturday, they apparently decided to give the rest of the conference the smallest glimmer of hope by surrendering just a smidge.

In a year where the Wolf varsity went 8-1 and roared to its first league title since 2004, the dominance of the JV is just further proof that Coupeville is ready to rule the volleyball standings for years to come.

With Bridges and Herndon meshing their styles expertly with that of first-year head coach Cory Whitmore, the spiker program is booming, both in terms of bodies in uniform and skills shown on the court.

The JV squad proved it had a short memory, as well, rebounding from a loss to 2A Sequim to drill their fellow Wolves while on the road later in the season.

So don’t think these spikers won’t remember that one lonely little set they gave up to the RedHawks and seek revenge next season.

How were they so good, so quick?

The CHS freshman class this year is extraordinarily deep in talented female athletes, young women who have honed their skills and grown used to winning in all of their sports, at the middle school, SWISH and little league levels.

They also show a willingness to learn and a commitment to hard work which bodes well as these spikers spill over into other programs such as basketball, softball and track.

Unlike a lot of JV teams, Coupeville didn’t struggle to get their serves in, which is huge at any level.

Every Wolf who served in matches operated strictly overhand and many of them laid down scorching aces on a regular basis, putting the burden squarely on the other team.

Then, once the ball was in play (or, in many cases, IF the ball was in play) they attacked as one, scrambling for balls and putting down kills with regularity.

They also seemed to enjoy themselves immensely, and while winning always helps with that, it seemed like more with this squad.

Every player who took the floor showed a burning desire to be good, to be winners, and, maybe most importantly, to pick each other up, in good times (and relatively few) bad times.

The young Wolves never splintered, never pointed fingers at each other on the rare missed shot and were quick to congratulate each other — all traits they shared with their varsity counterparts.

For the moment, though, they get to step away from their older teammates.

The Wolf varsity is a spiffy 11-4 entering the district tourney, the most wins by a CHS varsity squad since 2004, but only one volleyball team made it all the way through league play undefeated this season.

For this moment, we hail the JV’s achievement, for what it means today and what it will mean for tomorrow.

Inducted into the Hall o’ Fame, together, as a team:

Kristen Bridges (coach)
Ashley Herndon
(coach)
Hannah Davidson
Maddy Hilkey
Nicole Lester
Emma Mathusek
Jillian Mayne
Lucy Sandahl
Scout Smith
Maya Toomey-Stout
Zoe Trujillo
Raven Vick
Willow Vick
Peytin Vondrak
Melia Welling
Allison Wenzel
Sarah Wright

Read Full Post »

Hall o' Fame inductee Suzy Zustiak is joined by Zach Hauser (top) and a vintage Chuck Hardee.

   Hall o’ Fame inductee Suzy Zustiak is joined by Zach Hauser (top) and a vintage Chuck Hardee.

Unsung warriors.

The three athletes who comprise the 70th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame all made a huge impact during their playing careers, while maybe not always getting their due credit.

Whether it was because they played at a time when other stars pulled a lot of the spotlight away, or their teams were still works in progress, this top-notch trio should have gotten more credit in the heat of the moment.

So, we’re here to fix that and welcome all three into these hallowed digital walls — where a (soft, soothing) spotlight is locked on them 24/7.

After today, you’ll find Suzy Zustiak, Chuck Hardee and Zach Hauser living up at the top of the blog under the Legends tab, which is where they always deserved to reside.

Our first inductee, Zustiak, was a power-hitting softball sensation who could play any position you asked.

She just missed the renaissance in the CHS diamond program, graduating in 2000, two seasons before the Wolves came within an inning of winning a state title.

But it’s safe to say Coupeville wouldn’t have been in position to do what they did in 2002 without trailblazers like Zustiak, which is why her former coach, fellow Hall o’ Famer Randy Dickson, nominated her for induction.

“Just as solid as they come,” he said. “Suzy was one of our building blocks.”

Playing at a time before the Wolves went from being a slow-pitch to a fast-pitch program, Zustiak, along with teammates like April Ellsworth-Bagby, helped CHS transition from losing 40+ straight games to making the playoffs in their senior season.

Winning eight of its final nine regular season games, including huge victories over Archbishop Thomas Murphy, Lynden and La Conner, Coupeville finished 2nd in league in 2000, earning the first tri-district playoff berth in program history.

Zustiak was key to the surge, bashing home runs and saving the La Conner game with a sliding catch that made even her low-key coach jump out of his shoes.

Our second inductee, Hauser, was also a diamond dandy, a hard-chuckin’, hard-hittin’ pitcher/first baseman who put together a dynamic CHS career, then played several successful seasons of college ball.

With the Wolves, he was an All-League hurler in 2008, at a time when CHS was in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, and was invited to play in the All-State feeder games.

When he wasn’t blitzing foes from the mound, Hauser was a hit machine at the plate, one of the most consistent batters to rep the red and black.

He tied for the team lead in hits as a senior after narrowly missing the top rung as a junior, finishing an inch or two behind James Smith in producing base knocks.

After high school came a solid two-year run at Big Bend Community College, where he was a successful starting pitcher as a freshman, before transforming into a lights-out closer in year two.

Our final inductee, Hardee, comes from a different generation than his two companions.

A product of the party-hearty “Dazed and Confused” ’70s, he was a three-sport athlete (football, basketball, tennis) who, by his own recollection, is not quite sure how he always stayed in school.

The night life didn’t slow him down however, as he was a key running back on a Wolf gridiron squad which shocked the nation (well, at least the state) in his senior season.

Coming off of a one-win year, the Wolves outscored foes 123-64 in ’74, winning one of only two football league titles in modern CHS history.

Piling up more than 2,000 yards on the ground, Coupeville lost only once in the regular season (an early non-conference game) and carried the good times all the way to the state playoffs, a place the Wolf gridiron warriors hadn’t seen since the ’30s.

Once Hardee finished his high school athletic days, he made one of the biggest transitions any former Wolf athlete ever has.

The self-proclaimed “party boy” became a cop, with 20 years in law enforcement, now owns three stores in Spokane and got deep into politics — becoming a committed conservative who, most recently, put in countless hours as part of the Washington state support crew for the Ted Cruz presidential campaign.

Still a die-hard Wolf, even if he no longer lives on Whidbey, Hardee reminisced about his high school days for me when I badgered him into being in my “Where are they now?” series on former CHS greats.

“It’s funny, when I look back at who I was in high school — immature, a party boy, I’m sure I would have been voted most likely to get nowhere,” Hardee said. “However, I would bet today, many would be very surprised at where I ended up.”

Today, that journey takes a side trip to the Hall o’ Fame.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »