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Archive for the ‘Hall o’ Fame’ Category

Hall o' Fame inductees (clockwise, from bottom left) Jim Wheat, Craig Pedlar, Rich Wilson and, representing the 1924-25 CHS boys' hoops team, captain Robert Engle.

   Hall o’ Fame inductees (clockwise, from bottom left) Jim Wheat, Craig Pedlar, Rich Wilson and, representing the 1924-25 CHS boys’ hoops team, captain Robert Engle.

A little something for everyone.

When you take a look at the 65th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, diversity is the name of the game.

An athlete, a coach, a contributor and a team all come together today, ready to be enshrined inside these hallowed digital walls.

So, with that, we welcome to the podium Craig Pedlar, Jim Wheat, Rich Wilson and the 1924-1925 Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad.

After this, you’ll find them with their brethren atop the blog, under the Legends tab.

Our first inductee, Wilson, was a two-sport sensation who still holds a CHS track and field record 16 years after his graduation.

His mark of six feet, four inches in the high jump in 2000 hasn’t been topped since, leaving him just three years shy of matching his predecessor.

When he broke the mark, it had stood since 1981, the year of Wilson’s own birth.

And, in a fun side fact, his wife Yashmeen (Knox) Wilson, already a Hall o’ Famer, holds the CHS record in the same event on the girls side.

Her mark of 5-02 has held since 1999.

Track wasn’t Wilson’s only area of expertise, however, as he was a bruising two-way star on the gridiron who racked up tons of tackles and churned out big yardage.

The only thing keeping his offensive numbers down a bit was his career crossed paths with that of Coupeville’s greatest weapon, school career rushing leader Ian Barron.

But if you look at the time period when Barron went down with a broken ankle, Wilson seizes the spotlight and runs with it, one of the best backs to ever wear the red and black.

Our second inductee, Pedlar, has a strong history at two Island schools, and he was in the prime of his Oak Harbor days when I worked with him while I was a young Sports Editor at the Whidbey News-Times.

But, as much success as he achieved at OHHS, his CHS days stack up quite nicely.

He was an assistant basketball coach, working along side legendary hoops guru Bob Barker, but his biggest impact probably came in his stints working with Wolf runners.

The cross country program, which boasts a deep collection of league, district and state meet accomplishments as part of the school’s new Wall of Fame, was his baby and he turned it into a powerhouse.

A big part of his success came from his skill at reaching each individual runner and finding what they personally needed to succeed.

Natasha Bamberger, who went on to win a state title in cross country, and four others in track (making her the only five-time individual state champ in CHS history), vouches for Pedlar’s impact.

“Feeling believed in is very powerful,” she said. “I never felt that before and I credit those coaches with it, all starting with Coach P.”

Our next inductee, Wheat, could go in as a coach (he was a key part of the staff of the 2002 CHS softball squad which finished 3rd at state), but today we’re inducting him as a contributor for his work as an umpire.

He has a sterling touch on the field, where he is highly-respected for his game-calling skills, but he continues to make an even bigger impact as the head of umpires for Central Whidbey Little League.

Whether it’s recruiting and training other umps, working with them on the field, or all the work he puts in behind the scenes helping to keep CWLL a roaring success, Wheat is The Man.

Putting him in the Hall o’ Fame? It’s just the right call.

Wrapping up our class we’re reaching back in time to induct the earliest team yet to enter the Hall.

The 1924-1925 CHS boys’ hoops squad, led by high-scoring (for the day) Roy Armstrong, won a county championship, drubbing Oak Harbor and Langley twice each, then found a bit of postseason glory.

A 13-10 win over Index gave the Wolf farm boys a district title and sent them on to the Northwest Tournament, where they went 1-2 against big-city schools.

While the name of their coach is lost to time (at least it’s not listed in the 1925 CHS yearbook), we want to reach back and honor the letter winners from that early round-ball juggernaut.

Inducted, together, as a team:

Roy Armstrong
Lewis Berry
Robert Cushen
Robert Engle
(captain)
Sam Kieth
Joe Libbey
Marion Sill

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Jordan Ford

   Jordan Ford (left) is joined in the Coupeville Sports Hall of Fame by David Torres and Robyn Myers.

School spirit? It flows through their veins.

The three inductees who make up the 64th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame all shared a deep, abiding love for CHS.

Through different sports and activities, and different ways of showing that spirit, they remain united down deep, Wolves through and through.

So, with that, we welcome into these hallowed digital walls Robyn Myers, David Torres and Jordan Ford.

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

Our first inductee, Torres, took the concept of school spirit quite literally.

One of the most upbeat dudes you will ever meet, the CHS Class of 2000 grad is a product of a bygone era, a time when the Wolf cheer squad was a coed, competitive team.

With the added muscle of male athletic stars like Torres, Peter Charron and Co., Coupeville, under the direction of Sylvia Arnold, was able to pull off moves and throws the current squad can’t.

It was a time when the Wolves went beyond their work on the sideline and regularly vied in their own competitions, bringing home a fair amount of hardware which can be seen nestled in the trophy case in the entrance to the high school gym complex.

At the heart of it all was Torres, loud, proud and fairly bursting with pride in his school.

During his days at Videoville, when he worked alongside me behind the counter, that spirit carried over to how he treated customers as well.

And, it’s sort of appropriate that he should be inducted on the anniversary of 9/11, as Torres also served his country faithfully in the Coast Guard, including leaving the store for a tour of duty right after the attacks.

One of my memorable moments in my 12+ years at Videoville was being interviewed in a locked-down back office by three “men in black” (well, the lead one was actually a woman) before young Mr. Torres was whisked away.

I came away with the impression that if I said the wrong thing, I might conveniently “disappear,” but I also had total conviction in my answers, so just turned off the banter for once.

Frankly, I have never met a bigger patriot than David Torres, who, even as a young man, believed deeply in his country and his faith, and that’s what I told my gun-packing, dark-suit-wearing, ultra-serious interrogators.

Watching him grow as a man, a husband and a father, there’s no doubt in my mind David remains first-class all the way, and welcoming him to my lil’ Hall o’ Fame for his trailblazing work as a cheerleader is the very least he deserves.

He shares a lot of traits with our second inductee, Myers, who was a pretty darn good athlete back in the day (at, shudder, Oak Harbor).

And yes, I’m fully aware my diploma is purple and gold as well…

Having married well, Robyn has found herself at the heart of Wolf Nation as an adult and her impact has been immeasurable.

As a mom and step-mom to numerous CHS athletic stars, she’s been important.

But during her stint as president of the Coupeville Booster Club, she took the invaluable part of the equation to a new level.

Now, am I biased because she was my biggest cheerleader during the drive to create the Wall of Fame that now graces the CHS gym wall?

Absolutely.

But having attended a fair amount of Booster Club meetings and seen them at work, I can honestly say that, even if she hadn’t greased all the wheels, made all the speeches and twisted all the arms on my project, Robyn’s run of wielding the gavel was impressive.

Even now, having recently turned over the reins to new prez Wendi Hilborn, she remains hard at work, doing all the crucial little things so important to keeping Wolf athletics, and its support base, strong and growing.

Our third and final inductee today, young Mr. Ford, is part of a family which now has six members in the Hall o’ Fame.

Jordan joins dad David Ford, uncle Tony Ford, aunt Aimee Bishop, cousin Breeanna Messner and grandpa Paul Messner in the pantheon, and what’s maybe most amazing is he truly deserves it, despite having only been a Wolf for one season.

When his family moved back to Whidbey just in time for his senior season, CHS got extremely lucky.

From the opening moments of his stellar year, when he snatched a fumbled football and took it to the house against South Whidbey, to his final triumph, claiming a state meet medal in the pole vault while ferociously sick, 2015-2016 was the Year of the Ford.

On the gridiron, he was a two-way terror, averaging 17.5 yards a reception (best of any Wolf receiver with 10 or more catches), while also piling up sacks, fumble recoveries and tackles on the defensive side.

When winter rolled around, he was Coupeville’s #2 scorer at 10.5 ppg (trailing Wiley Hesselgrave by just 217-210), #1 rebounder and the hardest worker on the floor game in, game out.

Sparked by his never-say-die attitude, the Wolves finished 9-11, the best record the program has put up since 2011.

Then came track and field in the spring, where Ford captured wins in four different events (long jump, high jump, pole vault and 4 x 100) while smashing the school record in the pole vault.

He left his mark (12-09) on the big board in the CHS gym, and his memory will continue to soar high with Wolf fans everywhere.

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Foster Faris, April Ellsworth-Bagby (top right in Arizona shirt) and Clay Hughes headline today's Hall of Fame class.

   Foster Faris, April Ellsworth-Bagby (top, on left) and Clay Hughes headline today’s Hall of Fame class.

They can stand with anyone.

The three athletes and one basketball team headed into the Coupeville Sports Hall of Fame on this sunny Sunday are among the best to ever grace the hallways at CHS.

Two Athlete of the Year winners, one of the most underrated running backs in program history and the last Wolf boys’ hoops team to make the trip to state, they join together to form a potent group.

So, with that, we open the doors to these hallowed digital walls for the 63rd time and welcome April Ellsworth-Bagby, Clay Hughes, Foster Faris and the 1987-88 CHS boys’ basketball team.

After this, you’ll find them atop the blog, under the Legends tab.

Our first inductee, Ellsworth-Bagby, was a two-sport star (volleyball, softball) who capped her senior season by being named the school’s Female Athlete of the Year.

On the court, she helped lead the Wolf spikers through some of their best seasons, while on the diamond she was a standout pitcher on teams which finally brought respectability to the softball program.

After high school, April went on to compete in college rugby, served 15 months in Iraq and was honored as a Pat Tillman Military Scholar while seeking her law degree.

Part of a highly-successful sports-orientated family, many of whom welcome her to the Hall, Ellsworth-Bagby graduated right on the cusp of the golden years for Wolf female athletics in the early-to-mid 2000s, but it was athletes like her who set the stage for what was to come.

She may not have gotten the trips to state little sister Ashley did, but April is a star in her own right, as an athlete, a soldier and a lawyer.

Our second inductee, Hughes, was one of the most inspired gridiron runners to ever suit up in the red and black.

Churning away next to fellow Hall o’ Famer Casey Larson, Hughes racked up 1,582 yards and 15 touchdowns in his two years on the Wolf varsity.

He broke the 100-yard barrier eight times in 17 games, three times busting 150 yards, with a high of 164 against always-brutal Concrete.

Clay was a busy bee, also returning kickoffs and punts, hauling in passes and lighting up fools on the defensive side of the ball, playing through pain at times against a stretch of the toughest foes Coupeville has faced.

Off the field, he was (and is) a walking-talking grin machine come to life, but strap on the helmet and pads, and Hughes was a rough and tumble bruiser. Never forget.

Now, if this was a real Hall o’ Fame, our third inductee, Faris, would probably have been one of the first in the doors.

But I’ve struggled to find a photo of him (until, one day, I looked up at the school’s display of Athlete of the Year photos and a light bulb went off…) and finding anyone who kept stat sheets from the ’70s?

Yeah, good luck on that.

But if you go off of nothing more than the memories of those he played with, or for, Foster is truly one of the best athletes to ever pull on a Wolf jersey.

Esteemed long-time CHS coach Bob Barker picked him as one of the five best athletes he had ever seen at the school, and the athletes who followed in his footsteps, such as David Ford, tell glowing tales of his accomplishments.

So let’s welcome Faris into the Hall, while still continuing the search for clippings and stat sheets from his prep days.

Clean out your attics, your basements, and help me really honor his athletic legacy.

Rounding out our roster for today is one of the most talented teams in school history, in any sport, the ’87-’88 CHS boys’ hoops squad.

Led by remarkably balanced scoring (four guys averaged in double figures, led by Timm Orsborn at 13.9 a game), the Wolves went 19-6 and remain, 28+ years later, the last team in program history to make it to state.

Coupeville finished 10-2 in Northwest B League play that year, missing out on a share of a league title by a single game.

But one huge positive was giving league champ La Conner, which finished 5th at state, its only conference loss.

After running wild through the regular season, the Wolves split four games at districts (which they hosted), then absorbed two tough losses at state to top-level schools.

As we wait for the the boys’ hoops program to get back to the big dance (10,400+ days and counting), let’s give the ’87-’88 squad one more curtain call.

Inducted together, as a team:

Ron Bagby (head coach)
Sandy Roberts (assistant coach)
Cec Stuurmans (assistant coach)
Brandy Ambrose
Marc Aparicio
Andrew Bird
Brad Brown
Tom Conard
Tony Ford
Chad Gale
Dan Nieder
Timm Orsborn
Morgan Roehl
Joe Tessaro

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Bennett Boyles (Photo courtesy Pat Kelley)

   Bennett Boyles, welcome to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame. (Photos courtesy Pat Kelley)

rock

The rock outside CHS speaks for us all.

Bennett (Konni Smith photo)

Bennett and his basketball teammates hang out. (Konni Smith photo)

Hall of Fame inductions are normally about looking to the past.

Today, we’re looking to the future.

I want to put a little different spin on today’s ceremony, in which we welcome the 62nd class to be enshrined inside the hallowed digital walls of the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

So, let’s open the doors and welcome the youngest inductee in Hall history, and one of the bravest, Bennett Boyles.

After this, he’ll be found up at the top of the blog alongside his athletic brothers and sisters, under the Legends tab.

Bennett is an 11-year-old basketball player, son of Coupeville High School grad Lucienne Rivera, and he has a boundless future on the court and off.

He’s a smart kid, a fun kid, a well-liked kid, a talented kid.

He is also battling through something no one of any age should have to deal with.

Bennett has been fighting (and fighting is the right word) inoperable tumors on his brain stem, undergoing weeks of radiation therapy.

His mom, whose sweetness of spirit still shines years after I first met her at Videoville, his little sister and his family have been with him every step of the way.

So has, in spirit, the community he has called home since birth.

Through fundraisers, through prayer, Coupeville has rallied around Bennett and his family, covering them in love.

Cancer affected my two families — my blood relative one and the other that was comprised of the people I worked with for 12 years in the video store business.

I have seen the fight, and I have seen the fight won.

As important as medicine is, a huge factor often is sheer willpower.

You can not give in to the darkness. You have to know that others love you, and you have to take their strength and make it your own.

So, Bennett, and I want to speak directly to you right now — what I’m giving you today is an invitation.

An invitation to prove my faith in you as an athlete, as a fighter, is very, very justified.

I’m putting you in my Hall o’ Fame because your spirit is unbeatable, because you can, and will, win this fight.

Your induction is deserved and you can stand, shoulder-to-shoulder, with any of your fellow Hall of Famers.

For what you have accomplished in the first 11 years of your life and what you will accomplish in the many years to come.

You will walk back out on that basketball court again, wearing the red and black of Coupeville.

I believe this, we all do, and you should too.

You are us, we are you, and together, we all are one Wolf Nation.

I have my notebook and pen ready, and I will be in the stands the day you return to the court. I promise you that.

Every day that you fight, know we are all by your side.

You are not forgotten. Ever.

You are not alone. Ever.

Bennett, you are a Hall of Famer, every step of the way, every day.

We love you, man. We believe in you. And we will see you on the court again, very soon.

 

In honor of Bennett’s Hall o’ Fame induction, please consider helping him and his family in their fight by popping over to:

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

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Mike Smart (Photo courtesy Dustin Van Velkinburgh)

Mike Smart (Photo courtesy Dustin Van Velkinburgh)

The stats were impressive. But that’s not why he’s remembered.

Mike Smart racked up defensive numbers for Coupeville High School which let him stand shoulder-to-shoulder with virtually anyone who has ever strapped on the pads as a Wolf.

But it’s his presence in the huddle, on the bus, in the locker room, which remains with his former teammates 15 years after he played his final down at CHS.

The son of a coach, Gary Smart, Sr., and younger brother to Gary Smart, Jr., a very successful Wolf quarterback in his own right, Mikey is the lone member of the 61st class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall of Fame.

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

The induction is posthumous, as Smart passed away at just 21, after a fatal car crash on Fort Casey Road in 2005.

He left behind a son, though, who, under the tender care of mom Kimberly (Bagarelli) Robinett, grows to look more like his dad with each day.

And he left behind a lifetime of memories for those who lined-up next to him on Friday nights at Mickey Clark Field.

Smart was a two-way warrior for the Wolf gridiron squad, a fullback and a linebacker, where he made his biggest impact.

During his senior season in 2001, he combined with Joe Kelley, a fellow Hall of Famer, to provide one of the most brutally-efficient defensive duos Coupeville has ever had.

Smart collected 119 tackles that season (Kelley had a school-record 142), earning team MVP honors and receiving All-League recognition.

He had the ability to turn games by sheer force of will, which is evidenced by a game at Concrete at mid-season.

Sparking a 31-17 Wolf win, Smart collected 12 tackles, a sack, two tackles for loss of yardage, forced a fumble and recovered another.

He topped out that season with 19 tackles against Archbishop Thomas Murphy, while chasing down Jevon Butler, the two-time 1A state player of the year.

But, as great as his stats were, it’s not the tackles or the fumble recoveries for which he is most remembered.

Dustin Van Velkinburgh, who graduated with Smart in 2002 after playing football and basketball along side him, is now a Wolf coach.

When he looks back and reflects on his friend, this is how he remembers him:

Mike always put a smile on your face. I absolutely loved that kid!

I remember him blocking for Ian Barron his junior year, getting run over again and again and never complaining.

He was tough as nails.

But he was also the kid who made you laugh all the time. There was never a dull moment.

He would do the Mikey Shuffle.

He had a white t-shirt that had been cut-up, had that shirt since he was a freshman.

It was yellow, dirty, he never washed it all four years.

He’d wear that, put his cleats and helmet on, nothing else, and tap-dance in the shower for us.

In the huddle Noah (Roehl) would get upset with us. “We gotta score now!!”

And then Mikey would tell him to shut up and make him laugh.

When basketball came around, we all showed up with our brand new Nike’s. We had the freshest gear.

Mikey walks in wearing an old pair of Chuck Taylor’s, didn’t care what anyone thought.

We used to eat Coach Smart, Mike’s dad, out of house and home … literally.

He’d come home and be, “What the hell?!?!”

Those memories are priceless. You can’t get those back.

I miss Mikey.

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