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Archive for the ‘Hall o’ Fame’ Category

Hall o' Fame inductees Steve Smith (left), Courtney Arnold and Chris Chan (in baseball cap).

   Hall o’ Fame inductees Steve Smith (left), Courtney Arnold and Chris Chan (in baseball cap).

The three people who comprise the 59th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame all left a visible mark.

On and off the field, the trio shone brightly, reflecting extremely well on the community they sprang from, while setting a path to excellence for others to follow.

So today, we welcome Steve Smith, Courtney Arnold and Chris Chan to these hallowed digital walls.

After this, they join their brethren at the top of the blog, enshrined under the Legends tab.

Our first inductee, Chan, is a true Wolf lifer who we’re honoring as a contributor, a tidy way of sweeping all of his many accomplishments into one neat lil’ pile.

As an athlete, maybe his greatest claim to fame is as a member of the 1978-1979 CHS boys’ basketball squad, which upset King’s Garden to claim the Cascade League title.

Even bigger, those Wolves went on to play three games at the state tourney, and their 62-51 win over Montesano Mar. 1, 1979 remains the last time a Coupeville boys’ hoops team won a game at the big dance.

In the years after he helped tickle the twines, Chan has been everywhere his alma mater needed him.

Working with wife Beverly, he gave the school two outstanding children — Laura and Drew — while also finding time to be a hardball guru as part of Willie Smith’s top-tier baseball coaching staff.

His biggest impact, though, probably comes from his time on the Coupeville School Board, where he’s worked tirelessly for the last eight years to give the next generation the best chance to succeed.

Every community, every school, needs those people who are the “glue,” the men and women who give of themselves, never asking for praise, so that things will be better when they’re done.

Chris Chan is one of those unsung greats, and, as a town, Coupeville is very lucky to have experienced him in all his roles — athlete, student, father, coach, school board stalwart.

He’s just a good dude all around, and very worthy of being in any Hall of Fame we might be running around these parts.

Our second inductee, Arnold, joins her mom, former CHS cheer coach Sylvia, in the Hall, but she punched her ticket on her own.

A pretty darn good basketball player during her time in the red and black, Courtney made her biggest mark in the cheer game.

As a captain, she led her team with a light hand, rallying her girls with impassioned speeches which combined her mom’s cheertastic outlook with dad Garrett’s calming words from the church pulpit.

Deeply committed to her faith, her family and her teammates, Arnold led the Wolves when they were still a competition cheer squad, bringing home the program’s third (and so far, final) state meet trophy in 2011.

She’s moved on since those days, sailing through college while continuing to light up the universe around her, but her impact, like her mom’s, is still very much on display.

Young girls who learned their love of the sport from Courtney can be found everywhere in Coupeville, from the high school squad down through youth cheer.

A generation grew up wanting to be like her, to follow her example, as cheerleaders and smart, strong young women, and her legacy is bright and blossoming on the prairie, even if she’s no longer here every day.

Our final inductee, Smith, is quite simply, a legend.

Trying to track down stats from the “olden” days of CHS sports is nigh impossible, except for those moments when someone uncovers a dusty box of clippings from the attic.

But people talk, and when they tell tales of former Wolf greats, Smith’s name is one which comes up often.

He was one of the most physically imposing athletes to ever play for Coupeville, a smash-mouth football player who also had a nimble touch with a tennis racket.

Ask others about him and you hear things along the line of “He was an Adonis in those short shorts they wore in the ’70s” or “He tore people in half, and that was just in practice!”

Smith, who I came to know during my long stretch behind the counter at Videoville, went on to play a little college ball (injuries hurt, however) before serving his country admirably as a medic in Vietnam.

The stories of his exploits in combat (which come from family members and friends, as Steve is not one to blow his own horn) are astonishing and just add to the legend of a larger-than-life guy.

Like Chan, he gave his alma mater children who rose to be athletic stars themselves, including one, daughter Joli (Smith) Bartell, who is already in the Hall herself.

And, like both his fellow inductees, Steve stands tall.

For their exploits during their younger days, and for their exploits after graduation, it’s a trio which should make us all proud.

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Hall o' Fame inductees (clockwise, starting top left) Amanda d'Almeida, Alex Evans, Randy Dickson and Willie Smith's 2010 CHS baseball squad.

   Hall o’ Fame inductees (clockwise, starting top left) Amanda d’Almeida, Alex Evans, Randy Dickson and Willie Smith’s 2010 CHS baseball squad.

Big hits, big scores, big titles — the group being inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame today all excelled during their time repping the red and black as Wolves.

Two stellar athletes who excelled in multiple sports, a coach who led a revival on the prairie and the ultimate hitting machine, they make up the 58th class to enter these hallowed digital walls.

Welcome Amanda d’Almeida, Alex Evans, Randy Dickson and the 2010 CHS baseball squad, AKA “The Hit Machine,” as they join their fellow honorees.

From now on, they’ll reside atop the blog, under the Legends tab.

Our first person to the dais was brilliant on and off the field.

A co-valedictorian when she graduated in 2013, d’Almeida was aces in the classroom and aces in the arena.

Soccer was her first calling, where she was an All-Cascade Conference player who won every team award imaginable (MVP, Best Offensive Player, Best Defensive Player) over her sterling four-year run on the pitch.

The CHS Female Athlete of the Year her senior year, d’Almeida also swung a mean racket, scoring as both a doubles ace (where she teamed with fellow Hall o’ Famer Jessica Riddle) and a singles juggernaut.

A three-time district champ, she claimed MVP honors on the court and was a captain for both of her sports.

Evans, who graduated five years earlier, was a true three-sport threat who put up impressive numbers in all three of his sports.

On the gridiron, he hauled in passes (23 during his senior campaign), used his booming leg to keep the Wolves out of danger (2,500+ career yards as a kicker/punter) and was a beast on defense.

During his final go-around for the Wolves, Evans racked up 84 tackles his senior season, with six of those coming for a loss, including two sacks.

Put a basketball in his hands and he was deadly from long-range, swishing three-balls at a mad clip.

Evans sank 31 treys his senior season, which stands as the seventh-best single season put up by a Wolf sharpshooter between 1990-2015.

His best sport might have been baseball however, where he was a two-way threat, pacing the mound as a staff ace, while also rapping out his fair share of base-knocks at the plate.

Evans led Coupeville with 22 hits his senior year, wrapping up a four-year career in which he collected 66 hits overall.

Only six other Wolf players have topped that career total in the past 25 years.

Our third inductee, Dickson, is the quiet genius, a coach who achieved big results while never looking to toot his own horn.

He was a key member of the coaching staff under longtime CHS football guru Ron Bagby, but we’re putting Dickson in the Hall primarily for his work on the softball diamond.

Taking over a program that was going nowhere, he rebuilt the Wolves into contenders, first as a slow-pitch team, before the program had its biggest success in the fast-pitch era.

Coupeville, which had lost 40 straight games at one point, broke an eight-year drought to make it to Tri-Districts in 2000, then shocked the softball world two years later.

In their first year of playing fast-pitch, the Wolves, led by the titanic trio of Sarah Mouw, Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby and Tracy Taylor, won the only league title in program history, before coming one win away from a state title.

Under the guidance of Dickson, Coupeville won four of five game at state in 2002, falling only to eventual champ Adna, and claimed third place in 1A.

It remains the best showing by any CHS sports team at state in any sport.

One of Dickson’s fellow football coaches, Willie Smith, was the architect of our final honoree, the 2010 Wolf baseball squad.

During his days at the helm of the hardball program, the Wolves fought tooth and nail against stacked competition in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, often as the only 1A school in the mix.

While other teams made a bigger post-season impact (the 2008 squad were district champs), the 2010 Wolves were the ultimate hitting machine.

And it’s not even close.

Cranking out 212 hits in 24 games, that CHS squad put together the best offensive season any Wolf hardball team has had in the past three decades.

The top four single-season marks for individual players from 1990-2016 all came that year, as Smith’s marauders pounded the ever-loving snot out of the ball.

So let’s honor Smith and the 11 Wolves who collected a base-knock that season.

Going in to the Hall, together, as a team, along with their hit totals from 2010:

Chad Brookhouse – 32
JD Wilcox
– 31
Ian Smith
– 30
Erik King
– 27
Kevin Eaton
– 22
Chase Griffin
– 22
Alex McClain
– 17
Sean Thurman
– 12
Erik Wheat
– 12
Jason Bagby
– 6
Drew Chan
– 1

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Hall o' Fame inductees (clockwise, starting in top left) Alexis Trumbull, Tracy (Taylor) Corona, Dalton Martin and Emma Laurion.

   Hall o’ Fame inductees (clockwise, starting in top left) Alexis Trumbull, Tracy (Taylor) Corona, Dalton Martin and Emma Laurion.

Excellence, in big moments and small moments.

The ability to dig deep and find that extra little bit of something special unites those going in to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame today.

Three stellar female athletes, including one who will go down as the greatest Wolf who never was, and two big moments, one by an individual, one by a team, make up the 57th class to be ushered into these hallowed digital walls.

Please welcome Alexis Trumbull, Tracy (Taylor) Corona, Emma Laurion, the weekend when Dalton Martin won three throwing medals at state and the 2011 Coupeville High School softball squad, which pulled off the most improbable playoff win in school history.

After this, you’ll find the athletes and moments enshrined atop the blog, under the Legends tab.

Our first inductee, Trumbull, was a standout softball player, both as a flame-throwing hurler and a deadly hitter at the plate.

For much of her career, she didn’t have a ton of support around her, and the Wolves didn’t win a lot of games during her time (later in this induction ceremony we’ll discuss the biggest W she was part of, however).

That shouldn’t lessen her impact, because Trumbull, who went on to play college ball at Skagit Valley, was as dependable a player as you could want.

She never looked flustered, even when things were falling apart around her, and was a rock for a program trying to rebuild.

Her impact went far beyond wins and losses, and she should be remembered for being a serene star who left it all on the diamond every game.

That’s a trait Corona always had during her stellar run as a three-sport (volleyball, basketball, softball) star.

The late ’90s to mid-2000’s are rightfully viewed as the golden age for CHS girls sports, and the 2002 grad was a key part of that success.

As a sophomore, Corona played on the first Wolf girls’ basketball squad to ever win a game at state, then teamed up with Sarah Mouw and Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby to put an emphatic stamp on their senior seasons.

Led by the terrific trio, Coupeville finished 6th at state in basketball (best in program history) and 3rd at state in softball (tied for best in school history for any sport).

The Wolves also advanced to state in volleyball that season, marking the only time in the 116-year history of CHS that all three core girls sports teams went to the big dance in the same school year.

Corona was indispensable in all three sports, part of the glue which held those squads together.

Need someone to pound in the paint? Someone to get a key hit at just the right moment? Couldn’t go wrong with picking her.

Our third inductee, Laurion, is the classic case of what could have been.

She’s going into our hall because she learned the game of soccer here in Coupeville, but, unfortunately for Wolf fans, she put together her record-setting prep career in Bremerton.

Having left Whidbey at age nine, thanks to her dad’s military transfer, Laurion ended up at Crosspoint Academy, where she was a volleyball and basketball star before graduating in 2015.

But it was soccer, the sport she picked up playing with future Wolves like Julia Myers and Marisa Etzell, which became her true claim to fame.

During her time at Crosspoint, Laurion rained down a mind-boggling 118 goals in four years, leading her squad to back-to-back 1B/2B state titles.

And she shone brightest in the big moments, scoring the only goal in a 1-0 championship win as a junior, before tossing down a hat trick in the final game of her senior season.

We could wonder what it would have been like for Coupeville to have played ATM and King’s with Laurion running wild, or we can merely step back, stop crying, and honor her for all she accomplished, regardless of the uniform.

Yep, let’s do number two.

Joining her in the “what could have been” category, but in a different way, is Martin.

A standout football, basketball and tennis player, he was severely hampered by injuries (concussions mainly) which eventually whittled down his athletic choices.

Instead of complaining, Dalton turned to track and finished his high school days with a bang.

After taking 5th at state in the discus as a junior, Martin went bonkers in his final trip to Cheney as a Wolf.

By the time he was done this spring he had claimed three medals (2nd in the discus, 8th in the shot put and javelin, with the last event being one he had picked up just five weeks prior).

That put him in auspicious company, as one of just seven Wolves to have won three medals at the same state track meet.

Even better, he is the only one of the seven to have accomplished the feat solely as a thrower.

Now he’s droppin’ viral videos and preparing to take his throwing skills to the college level, but, before he goes, we just had to give him one more honor.

Our final inductee today is the most unlikely.

The 2011 CHS softball squad did not have a great season. Can’t sugarcoat that.

The only 1A school to take the diamond that year in the Cascade Conference, they got beat on by ATM and Co. and finished the regular season at 0-17.

But, as I mentioned, they were the only 1A school (South Whidbey was up in 2A at the time and King’s doesn’t play softball), so, whether they wanted it or not, the Wolves were playoff-bound.

At which point they pulled off the most stunning postseason win in school history.

Led by the seasoned Trumbull, a team which played as many as six freshmen in the lineup at some points shocked the world (and Meridian), bouncing the Trojans out of the playoffs to a 5-1 tune.

A pair of close 7-3 losses to Friday Harbor and Lynden Christian ended Coupeville’s season at 1-19, but that win will stand forever as proof that any team can win on any day.

The Wolves scored first, with Trumbull crunching a double, followed by singles from Autumn Stevenson and Bessie Walstad.

Tied at 1-1 in the fourth, Meridian finally looked like it was ready to break out, loading the bags with just one out.

At that point, CHS coach Jackie Calkins pulled her starting pitcher (Stevenson) and brought Trumbull on in relief.

Game over.

Alexis whiffed the next two batters, hung three more scoreless innings on Meridian, and fueled a game-winning rally in the fifth.

Madeline Roberts led off with a walk, went to third on yet another double by Trumbull, then scampered home with what would be the winning run on a ground-out off of Stevenson’s bat.

Coupeville tacked on two more in the inning, using walks to Walstad and Breeanna Messner and a huge error on a ball smacked by Sydney Aparicio.

The game’s final run came courtesy of back-to-back two-baggers from Walstad and Aparicio.

There have been huge playoff wins in CHS history, landmark ones like the 1970 boys’ hoops team winning the first district title by a Whidbey Island team.

But none have been so improbable, and possibly, so satisfying, as a season of pain was washed away by one glorious afternoon in which the Wolves stood tall and howled as a team.

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Hall o' Fame inductees (clockwise, starting in top left) Ryan King, Nick Streubel, Erica (Lamb) Holland, Chad Brookhouse.

   Hall o’ Fame inductees (clockwise, starting in top left) Ryan King, Nick Streubel, Erica (Lamb) Holland and Chad Brookhouse.

Commitment.

To their school, their sports, their families, their faith, they were as rock-solid as they come, fully embracing the big C at every point in their lives.

Who am I talking about?

The athletes who comprise the 56th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, a stellar collection of some of the best to ever wear the red and black.

With that, we welcome Erica (Lamb) Holland, Chad Brookhouse, Nick Streubel and Ryan King to these hallowed digital walls.

From this point on, you’ll find them up at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab with other Wolf greats.

Our first inductee, Holland, was, without a doubt, one of the most talented athletes CHS ever had the honor of claiming.

She was also a bright shining light beaming out to the world, a young woman who led by example on the field and in the classroom.

Like sister Taniel (who she joins in the Hall), Erica set an exceptional standard for all who followed, including talented younger brothers Jordan and Nathan.

A true three-sport star, Holland was a key player on volleyball, basketball and softball squads which achieved heights never before reached by Wolf girls athletic teams.

By the time she graduated in 2003, after being co-Athlete of the Year with Amy Mouw and co-Valedictorian, she had helped carry five teams to state.

While it would be impossible to single out one sport as her best — she was aces in everything she played — Erica’s greatest contribution might have come in softball, where she was the ultimate team player.

Over the course of four years, and the school’s transition from slow-pitch to fast-pitch, Holland played every single position on the diamond, culminating with a run at catcher for the 2002 squad that finished 3rd at state.

Our second inductee, Brookhouse, was also a jack of all trades.

On the gridiron, he was named an All-Cascade Conference selection on both sides of the ball in 2009, honored for his work as a tight end and a linebacker.

On the basketball court, he did a lot of the dirty work, while also coming in as the fourth-leading scorer on a 2009-2010 hoops squad which went 16-5, the best mark any Wolf boys team has achieved in decades.

Brookhouse closed his prep career by punching 32 hits for the 2010 CHS baseball squad — the best single-season total of the last three decades — capping a strong run.

Our final two inductees, Streubel and King, share the fact they both anchored the line for Wolf football, and that King stayed on at his alma mater to coach Streubel and his teammates.

The Big Hurt was one of the most imposing physical specimens ever to trod the gridiron at CHS, though away from the battle in the trenches Streubel is the very epitome of a low-key nice guy.

Quite the talented swimmer in his younger days, Nick was a rock for a rebuilding Wolf boys’ hoops program, an accomplished thrower in track and the very last person opposing quarterbacks wanted to look up and see come crashing through the line.

But take away the pancake blocks, the times he blew up multiple would-be blockers and the play in which he got a rare chance to carry the ball and hauled seven Chimacum tacklers into a giant mud hole, and he’d still be a Hall o’ Famer.

For the time, covered from head-to-toe in manure-scented mud, he chased speedy Wolf coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh down a ferry dock and caught him in a bear hug.

For the time he plucked V’s little son off the ground and held him up in the air so the wildly grinning preschooler could dunk on a real hoop.

And for a million other times when he was a genuine class act, on and off the field.

Going in to the Hall with Streubel is a guy who is Coupeville, through and through.

King played on the last Wolf gridiron squad to post a winning record (way back in 2005) and he’s been diligently working to help get Coupeville back to those days as a coach.

Whether as a football assistant at the middle school or high school level, or as a head coach (he made a strong debut this winter coaching 7th grade girls basketball), King shows the same commitment today that once carried him through days of banged-up knees, bruises and stingers while blocking for Casey Larson.

A great story teller (some of which I can actually print), he is part of the glue which holds together Wolf sports.

For schools to be successful, top to bottom, you need those coaches who are there because they really, truly believe in the value of what they’re doing.

Because they want to give today’s athletes a chance to reach the same success they enjoyed.

Ryan King is one of the good ones, and the Hall is happy to welcome him.

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Clockwise from top left are Sarah (Mouw) Samuels, Brad Sherman, Bob Rea and Brad Miller.

   Clockwise from top left are Sarah (Mouw) Samuels, Brad Sherman, Bob Rea and Brad Miller.

There have been talented athletes and big moments in the history of Central Whidbey sports, but few reached the levels achieved by those who make up the 55th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Two athletes who ruled over multiple sports, and two moments when nothing short of perfection was achieved, make up today’s honorees.

So welcome into these hallowed digital walls Sarah (Mouw) Samuels, Brad Miller, the afternoon Bob Rea whiffed 27 batters in one game and the night the Wolves boys’ basketball squad made all 22 of its free throw attempts.

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

We’re kicking things off with Rea, who is already in the Hall as an athlete.

Today, he goes in for the day in 1964 when he set a Coupeville High School baseball record which has remained untouched for 50+ years.

Facing off with Darrington on its home field, Rea went the distance in a wild 16-inning affair, setting down 27 Loggers before collapsing back onto the school bus with a 2-1 victory under his belt.

Ray Cook, who notched 21 K’s in a 1976 game, seems to be the only other Wolf to have topped the 20-strikeout mark in a game, and if you let a modern-day pitcher throw 16 innings, the coach would probably be fired for “abuse.”

So, I’m pretty sure Rea’s marks may stay untouched for another 52 years.

While his performance was largely a one-man show (though he still needed his teammates to score, eventually), our second moment enshrined in the Hall today was a true team effort.

In the 20 years Randy King coached boys hoops at CHS (1991-2011), he had three nights when his team was flawless at the charity stripe.

One team was 2-2, another 4-4 and then, on Jan. 3, 2003, four Wolves combined to go 22-22 at a time when Coupeville needed every single point.

Trailing host Friday Harbor by six entering the fourth, the Wolves ripped off 27 points, 15 on free throws, to rally for a 63-58 win.

Casey Clark led the way, going 11-11 (the only player to hit double digits in made free throws in a single game during King’s tenure), with eight of those coming down the stretch.

Nearly matching him was Brad Sherman, who hit all seven free throws he attempted in the fourth.

Mike Bagby and Brian Fakkema had each tickled the twines for two freebies apiece earlier in the game to wrap up the best night at the line in modern Wolf history.

Afterwards, in typical understated King fashion, his response to the papers was simply “That’s a pretty good performance.”

Indeed.

Our third inductee, Miller, was a master of the big moment, a rampaging beast in three sports.

Big and bald (he often sported a shaved head when I was covering his exploits), the 1995 CHS grad scored 526 points on the hardwood, while hauling down a considerable number of rebounds.

He was the team’s leading scorer as a junior, number two as a senior and, along with fellow Hall o’ Famer Gabe McMurray, formed one of the most potent one-two combos the Wolves have ever had.

Put him on the baseball diamond and he was one of the few modern-era players capable of making a run at Rea and Cook as a strikeout fiend.

Miller whiffed 19, 18 and 14 in different games, while also leading the team at the plate, where he topped the Wolves in hits as both a junior and senior.

Samuels had a lot less time at CHS than any of her fellow inductees, as she and her family moved to Whidbey from Iowa in 2001, just in time to start her senior year.

That year, though, she put together a run that stands with anyone to ever wear the red and black.

A First-Team All-League pick in all three of her sports (volleyball, basketball, softball), she was a Northwest League Co-MVP in softball and helped carry all three of her squads to state.

Volleyball won a league title (the last time Wolf spikers have done that), finished second at tri-districts, then made a run at state, while basketball (6th in 1A) and softball (3rd in 1A) achieved the best results in program history.

With Samuels meshing her considerable skill-set with classmates Ashley (Ellsworth-Bagby) Heilig and Tracy (Taylor) Corona, the hoops squad rolled to two straight wins to open the state tourney.

While they hit a roadblock after that, the 2001-2002 squad remains the only Wolf hoops team to reach the state semifinals.

As good as she was in volleyball and basketball, Samuels saved her best for last.

On the softball diamond, she joined a program which was making the jump from slow-pitch to fast-pitch and she promptly put together the best individual season ever achieved by a Wolf slugger, before or since.

Samuels led CHS in batting, doubles, triples, home runs and RBIs, while going 22-2 on the mound for a team that finished 24-3.

After years of lackluster performances, the Wolf softballers won the only league title in program history, then swept to four wins in five games at state, falling only to nine-time state champ Adna.

Now that’s domination.

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