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Archive for the ‘Hall o’ Fame’ Category

Julie Myers (top, right) is joined by fellow inductees (l to r) Brad Haslam, Boom Phomvongkoth and Lexie Black.

   Julie Myers (top, right) is joined by fellow inductees (l to r) Brad Haslam, Boom Phomvongkoth and Lexie Black.

Domination.

It’s the common trait when you look at the members of the 39th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Regardless of the sport, the four athletes, one who is going into the Hall for a second time, towered above their rivals on a regular basis, more than earning them enshrinement in these hallowed digital walls.

After this, when you want to find Julia Myers, Boom Phomvongkoth, Brad Haslam or two-time inductee Lexie Black, who is being honored today for putting together the ultimate block party, all you’ll have to do is look to the top of the blog and find the Legends tab.

We’re kicking things off with the Lexinator, who is already in the joint, one of the first to be inducted.

Today we’re honoring her performance on Mar. 4, 2005, when the six-foot-two enforcer extraordinaire rejected 10 shots by Zillah, helping her CHS girls’ basketball squad capture a 45-41 win at the state tourney.

Coupeville won two games at state that year, finishing 8th and bringing home the third (and so far final) banner in program history.

Black’s ten-spot, and the 14 total blocks by the Wolves in the game, remain the gold standard to this day. No player, and no team, have ever topped those marks in a 1A girls game, more than a decade later.

Now Lex Luthor is counting down the days until she’ll be a mom, and you know the child is gonna pop out and immediately slap the doctor across the room, just like their mom did to so many errant shots.

Our second inductee, Phomvongkoth, was a little lower to the ground than Black, but he was just as much of a scrapper on the hardwood.

One of the first players I covered back in my Whidbey News-Times Sports Editor days, Boom went all-out all the time, slamming to the floor, harassing rival ball-handlers and knocking down big shots of his own.

It took me a bit to get the spelling of his last name down, but I could see his talent, and his love for the game, from the first moment he strode out into the CHS gym.

When the Tom Roehl Roundball Classic brought Wolf alumni back to town in Dec., Boom was among the returning veterans.

He might be down a few hairs on the head these days (who’s not?), but the skill-set and inner fire were still there, and he still looks like he could school some young punks, if necessary.

Our third inductee, Haslam, was one of the most imposing high school athletes I ever covered.

Which is funny, because off the field, he’s a supremely nice guy, easy-going and laid-back.

But put him on the gridiron and he was an animal, de-cleating anyone who tried to get in his way as he led the blocking charge for the undefeated 1990 CHS football squad.

A superb kicker with a cannon for a leg, he knocked down field goals from uncanny range, as well, earning his keep on offense, defense and special teams.

Equally skilled as a hoops player, Haslam’s biggest impact came on the diamond, though.

A four-time All-League selection as a pitcher, the ’92 grad made batters tremble in the box. Seriously. I saw it happen.

Tall, burly and (in the moment) looking like he was going to murder you, Haslam remains the most overpowering high school pitcher I have ever witnessed on a day-to-day basis.

Our final inductee, Myers, shares a lot in common with Haslam.

No, she wasn’t all that tall, and no one would describe her as burly, but, like her compatriot, she was a supremely nice person off the field (and one of the best ever when it came to taking goofy photos) who played like a beast between the lines.

Whether smacking tennis balls, shutting down fools as a soccer goalie, or droppin’ elbows as a rebounding machine on the basketball court, Julia was a stone-cold killer.

Injuries were the only thing that ever slowed her down, but she fought through some horrific ones and still stalked her prey, knee brace glinting under the lights, slight smirk on her face as she watched her rivals souls shrivel up and blow away.

A vital part of the first Wolf girls’ hoops team to win a league title in 13 years during her senior campaign, “Elbows” always had the heart of a champion.

If we have to win one game to save the universe, I want Julia on our team. Cause when the final buzzer sounds, she’ll be the last one standing.

Of that I have no doubt.

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Bill Riley (top left) is joined by (clockwise) Haley Sherman, Corey Cross and Hayley Waterman (blue shirt).

   Bill Riley (top left) is joined by (clockwise) Haley Sherman, Corey Cross and Hayley Waterman (blue shirt).

We’re bringing the generations together.

The four athletes who comprise the 38th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame are two guys from the early ’70s and two women from the 2000s.

But, regardless of when they played, they all left a sizable impact on their alma mater.

So, with that, we’d like to welcome Bill Riley, Haley Sherman, Corey Cross and Hayley Waterman to these hallowed digital walls.

After this, you’ll find them up at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab, where they and their accomplishments will live on as long as Coupeville Sports does.

Our first two inductees, Riley and Cross, were two of the five athletes named by legendary Coupeville High School coach Bob Barker when I asked him who were the best he had seen here in Cow Town.

The other three?

That’s for me to know and you to wonder until I get around to writing that article.

For now, we want to talk about Cross, whose name still looms large over his hometown.

He was a 10-time letter winner (four in baseball, three each in football and basketball), 12 if you count rugby (which I previously was not aware had ever been a sport at CHS … back to the research desk!) and his name heads up the list of Male Athlete of the Year winners.

Cross actually won the honor twice, in 1970-1971 and 1971-1972, setting the standard for all who have come after him.

But what makes him truly worthy of induction is not just the awards. It’s the way people respond when you bring his name up in conversation.

Jaws drop. Eyes bug. Words like “incredible athlete” and “the best I’ve ever seen” come tumbling out.

Every single time.

Riley, a superb two-sport star for CHS (football and basketball), gets some of that same treatment, especially from his former coaches.

A First-Team All-League selection during his time on the hardwood, it’s there that I’ve actually been able to track some stats down, and they are still as impressive 40+ years down the road.

In ’71-’72 Riley averaged 18.7 points and 14.8 rebounds a game, then he turned that up a notch or two the next season, banging away for 23.9 and 14.4 a night.

As I’ve worked my way through years and years of Wolf athletic history, the only hoops player who I’ve found with a higher single-season scoring average than Riley’s 23.9 was Jeff Stone and his immortal 27 a game from ’69-’70.

So, pretty dang good company.

Our third inductee, Sherman, is our youngest, but there’s no need to wait for time to pass.

Haley was an impact player in both volleyball and softball, helping carry a very-thin Wolf diamond squad to the state tourney in her senior season in 2014.

Despite playing through an ankle injury she suffered at districts, The Shermanator was a standout on defense (gunnin’ down fools from left field) and at the plate, as CHS broke a 12-year dry spell, making its second-ever appearance at the big dance in the fast-pitch era.

A hard worker with a superb sense of humor, Haley was always one of the most radiant athletes we had, a true daughter of the prairie who made her large fan section (she’s basically related to 89% of the town) very proud.

Making people proud came naturally to our fourth inductee.

Waterman doesn’t have the showy stats some of the others had, but that’s largely because she took one for the team. Game after game.

In the early days of girls’ soccer at CHS, wins were few and far between. Really, really far between.

But if it wasn’t for talented booters like Hayley, who sacrificed to build the program, it wouldn’t be anywhere near where it is today, at a point where the Wolves are fighting for league titles and making repeat visits to the playoffs.

Waterman was a wild woman on the pitch, and remains one of the most incredible people I have ever known off the field.

Long before she went on to study cellular and molecular biology in college and then start doing lab work that I can’t understand even when she tries to explain it in simple terms, Hayley was brilliant.

In high school, she did every extracurricular thing you could think of (all at the same time), shepherded all her brothers and sisters (including future soccer star Paige) and still found time to be indispensable at Videoville.

It was there and later at David’s DVD Den, where she was half of The Wonder Twins with Kate Harbour, that she achieved true greatness.

The afternoon where the two created an entire fake section of DVD’s, all crafted to look like “The Brown Bunny,” a film that had scandalized our boss, just for a brief laugh, is just the tip of their shenanigans.

I have had some God awful jobs in my life, but the 15 years I spent managing video stores will always balance out the crud, and the Wonder Twins are, hands down, the best part of those years.

Sports hall of fames? Nice, sure.

But in the true Hall o’ Fame of life, Hayley and Kate will always be my first inductees.

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Megan Meyer (right) is joine dby fellow Hall o' Fame inductees (top to bottom) Bob Barker, Arik Garthwaite, Corinne Gaddis and Noah Roehl.

   Megan Meyer (right) is joined by fellow Hall o’ Fame inductees (top to bottom) Bob Barker, Arik Garthwaite, Corinne Gaddis and Noah Roehl.

Old school and new school meet.

The five-person group headed into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame today, the 37th class inducted into these hallowed digital walls, is a mix of different generations.

But one thing links the three men and two women who, after this, will be found at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

They all had a sizable impact on AND off the field. And continue to do so.

So, with that, we formally welcome Corinne Gaddis, Noah Roehl, Arik Garthwaite, Megan Meyer and Bob Barker.

We kick things off with Garthwaite, who is being honored for his play on the hardwood.

One of the most dominant scoring machines CHS has ever seen, he was a four-year varsity player, topping 100+ points in every season, capped by an eye-popping 423 as a senior.

That’s the second-best single-season mark put up by a Wolf boy in the past 25 years, and, by the time he was done, Garthwaite had scorched the nets for 867 points in his stellar career.

Not bad for a guy who actually focused more on the other side of the court.

“Defense and yelling at the refs were my strong suits,” he once told me with a laugh.

As a junior he helped the Wolves get off to a 12-0 start, then delivered even more fireworks a year later.

During Garthwaite’s senior season in 1997-1998, he blitzed Mount Vernon Christian for 32 and helped Coupeville upend powerhouse King’s in an upset he still treasures.

A gym rat during his days as a Wolf — “Pete (Petrov) had a key to the gym and he and I would play there at night quite a bit. The janitor was pretty cool about it.” — he still remembers what it was like to make the joint rock.

“That gym was electric when we played and always packed,” he said. “I talked to a few guys on each team that we played against and that was always the first thing they mentioned. It was just SO loud, they would say.”

Our second inductee, Roehl, is being honored for his play — he was a standout football and basketball player who took home a CHS Male Athlete of the Year award — but also for the work he has done since graduation.

Keeping alive the memory and work of his father, the late Tom Roehl, Noah has been the driving force behind his family’s charity work.

Through their popular football and basketball alumni games, the family has raised funds for college scholarships year after year and kept a great man’s legacy rolling.

While everyone in the Roehl family chips in, it is Noah who is the face of the franchise and makes things hum.

His dad would be very proud.

Up next are Gaddis and Meyer, two highly accomplished, supremely sweet-natured young women who continue to wow the world every day.

Injuries were the only thing which could slow the fleet-footed Gaddis down (she still finished 8th at the 1A state meet in the long jump and 6th in the 4 x 100 as a sophomore), but they also gave her a larger purpose.

Once she left Cow Town for that other rural chunk of land, Pullman, she aced her way through her days at Wazzu, becoming an athletic trainer and being chosen as a highlighted student during commencement.

These days, she’s helping athletes of all ages and talents, spreading the gospel of Gaddis everywhere she goes, epic grin greeting everyone she meets — perfect proof you can be awesome in high school and somehow find a way to still ramp it up afterwards.

Her path is sort of similar to Meyer, who, for me at least, will always be the little girl who we used to stick in the rolling cart that we parked under the drop slot at Videoville.

And yes, she would grab people’s hands as they dropped their movie in the slot, and yes, it was glorious.

Once she hit high school, Meggie Moo was a tennis player and a cheerleader, and it’s the latter, where she was a captain when CHS was a competition cheer squad, that earns her entry to the hall.

After high school, however, is where the stupendous Miss Meyer has shone most brightly, though, bopping around the globe, a world traveler who has spent most of her time abroad helping others.

I worked at Videoville for 12+ years, from Megan’s first day of preschool until her sophomore year of high school, and there has never been a moment, then or now, when she was not one of my favorite people in the universe.

She is one of the most genuinely lovable people I have ever known. Her mere presence causes the heavens to open, the sun to shine and small animals to dance with little children.

Seriously.

That’s sort of the reaction most of Barker’s former athletes have when you bring him up.

During his time at CHS, he put in 31+ years, working as a teacher, coach (boys and girls basketball and baseball) and athletic director.

Along the way he guided the 1969-1970 Wolf boys to the first district title ever won by a Whidbey Island hoops team, then took that team to state, another first in program history.

He coached some of the most talented athletes in school history — Jeff Stone, Corey Cross, Marlene Grasser, Sherry Bonacci and Jennie Cross just to name a few — but is revered for treating all of his players equally.

And more so, for being the kind of coach who truly impacted lives far beyond the athletic stage.

Bonacci, who grew up to marry fellow Athlete of the Year Jon Roberts and produce a daughter (Lindsey) who is right on track to duplicate her parents feat, speaks for many of Barker’s former students and players.

“He is AMAZING!! ️Neatest man ever … all-around amazing! LOVE HIM!!,” Sherry Roberts said. “He is truly one of those three or four people in my life who have had the greatest impact on me.

“I would truly not be who I am today without his help and guidance and belief in me. What a wonderful man!!”

Sounds like a Hall of Famer to me.

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The 1981 CHS cross country squad braved the weather to make history, and now join Jeff Fielding (top) and Pastor Cliff Horr in the Hall o' Fame. (Photos courtesy Kerry Rosenkranz and Pat Kelley)

  The 1981 CHS harriers braved the weather to make history, and now join Jeff Fielding (top) and Pastor Cliff Horr in the Hall o’ Fame. (Photos courtesy Kerry Rosenkranz and Pat Kelley)

With the state basketball playoffs and Oscars taking most of my attention this weekend (I didn’t spend 15+ years working in video stores for nothing), we’re jumping ahead two days on our normal schedule to honor this week’s Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame inductees.

And, with the jump, why not focus on athletes and coaches who took CHS on a huge jump into the future?

So, with that, we welcome the 36th class into these hallowed digital walls — Cliff Horr, Jeff Fielding and the 1981 CHS girls’ cross country team.

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

Our first inductee, Pastor Horr, is pretty much, without argument, the most successful coach in school history.

Certainly in terms of winning (non-existent) banners for his school.

Wolf baseball coach Jim Hosek captured five straight league titles in the ’70s, but Horr almost doubled him, going a perfect 8-for-8 during the years when he guided the CHS girls’ tennis team.

The female netters, despite getting a late start thanks to the long delay before, you know, girls were allowed to play competitive sports in high school and all, hold the most league titles of any Wolf program with 17.

The first three (’81-’83) came before Horr, and current coach Ken Stange enters this season seeking his seventh, but Horr’s squads remain at the pinnacle, rolling through league play from 1998-2005.

His final squad was his best, with star players Mindy Horr and Taniel Lamb advancing all the way to the state final in doubles, where they lost a three-set war with a private school powerhouse.

That gave the Wolves a 3rd place team finish, which ties the 1987 baseball team and 2002 softball squad for the best team finish at state in the school’s 116-year history.

Our second inductee, Fielding, redefined running at CHS and blazed the trail that folks like Kyle and Tyler King would one day tear up.

During his days as a Wolf, he qualified for state seven times (four as a cross country harrier, three in track), and put his name into the history books as the first CHS athlete, in any sport, to win a state title.

After narrowly missing a cross country championship in ’78 (he was second), Fielding capped his career with an awe-inspiring senior track season in ’79.

Undefeated in the 1600 and 3200 from opening day until the state meet, he snatched second-place in the 1600 and went home champ in the two-mile event.

It would take five more years before a second Wolf (Natasha Bamberger in ’84) would win a state title and 27 before another male athlete (Jon Chittim and Kyle King in 2006) would join Fielding on top of the victory stand.

His fellow athletes from the time remember him as being the most committed, and friendly, athlete they ever went to school with.

“Kid was a genuine and nice guy. Tiny. A leader of the school. Never heard him curse or be mean to anyone,” Pat Kelley said. “Stud on the run. ASB President and Letter C club president.

“I remember coming from home to school and passing him by on the highway about seven miles out running to school with a backpack on.”

Two years after Fielding celebrated his big moment, the school achieved a landmark event on the other side of the gender divide.

Bamberger was a year away, still just a middle school phenom, when the 1981 Wolf harriers became the first girls team, in any sport, to make it to state.

Led by junior Kerry McCormick (whose daughter Erin Rosenkranz would later star for CHS as a soccer player and long distance runner), the Wolves jelled under legendary coach Craig Pedlar and were high achievers all season.

They finished second at the Cascade League championships, third at districts and then eighth at state, not only advancing there for the first time, but bringing home a trophy to boot.

A year later, with McCormick a senior and Bamberger on the squad, the Wolves would win a league title and place 4th at state.

Three years later the greatest runner in school history would win an individual state title.

Four years later the program would fall apart for lack of numbers, and, after a brief revival, fade into memory.

Today, there is no cross country program at CHS and it is a shame.

If someone finally steps up and restarts the program, they can point to the past for inspiration.

Pedlar went on to a long career, first at Coupeville, then Oak Harbor, where he taught and coached multiple sports, while team members have fanned out and become leaders in their communities who have watched their own children achieve great athletic highs.

On this, the 35th anniversary of their run into school history, we reunite the ’81 harriers and honor them for blazing a trail that still lights up the way for Wolf athletes, in any sport, today.

Inducted, as a team:

Craig Pedlar (coach)
Sharon Brown
Debbie Logan
Jill Luedtke
Kristine Macnab
Terri McClane
Kerry McCormick
Karen Reuss

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Maureen Wetmore (Photos courtesy the Willie Smith Archives) CAMERA

   Maureen Wetmore gets ready to break some fools in half. (Photos courtesy Willie Smith)

Willie Smith

CHS round-ball guru Willie Smith imparts wisdom to his squad.

They were the trailblazers.

As the current incarnation of the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad returns to state for the first time in a decade, we’re going back 18 years to honor the first Wolf girls’ hoops team to make that trek.

The 35th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame is a one-team affair, as we welcome the 1997-1998 CHS girls’ basketball team to these hallowed digital walls.

After this, they will sit at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

And that’s what they are, legends.

When Willie Smith showed up from the wilds of Sequim and took over the Wolf girls program four years earlier, he was inheriting a bit of a mess.

Not that far removed from an 0-20 season, Coupeville had rarely been a strong contender in girls hoops.

That began to change immediately, as Smith and a pack of freshmen led by soon-to-be all-time-greats Novi Barron and Ann Pettit started the uphill climb.

Four years later, with six seniors headlining an 11-player squad, the Wolves smashed all their accomplishments from the past.

The first league title in program history, a third-place finish at tri-districts, 18 wins and their first-ever appearance in the state tourney.

Once in Tacoma, they ran into a brutal schedule, having to face seventh-ranked Toledo and sixth-ranked Dayton, and, while they fought like beasts on both days, eventually bowed out.

But the seeds were planted, and two short seasons later the Wolf girls would capture their first-ever win at state in 2000.

Two players — Jaime Rasmussen and Rachelle Solomon — appeared on both squads, and the manager on the ’97-’98 team, eighth grader Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, would grow up to be a First-Team All-League player as a sophomore on the 2000 squad.

She learned from the best, watching Barron (versus Granite Falls) and Pettit (Vashon Island) each drop 29 points in a game in ’97-’98.

Ellsworth-Bagby also picked up her scrappy defensive style from a then-junior who she would join on the court the following year.

Maureen Wetmore was a tough as nails guard who wasn’t afraid to do the dirty work,” Smith said. “Great defender and as a senior, Ashley’s freshman year, became leading scorer and mentor to Ashley and the rest of the team.”

From top to bottom, the ’97-’98 team were ball-hawks, tough-nosed young women on the court who took on the persona of their coach and changed the way Coupeville girls’ basketball was viewed.

Now, 18 years later, their legend still looms large and provides inspiration to the current Wolves.

When you stand tall and expect to win, when you prepare and play to win, when you refuse to listen to the past and embrace the future, anything is possible.

Back together, as a team, which was how they always played, the 1997-1998 CHS girls’ basketball team:

Willie Smith (coach)
Cherie Smith (assistant coach)
Novi Barron
Stephanie Kipp
Hilary Kortuem
Ann Pettit
Jennifer Pettit
Jaime Rasmussen
Jess Roundy
Rachelle Solomon
Danielle Vracin
Kim Warder
Maureen Wetmore
Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby (manager)

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