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The 1925 Coupeville High School yearbook, only the fifth the school produced in its first quarter century. (Jack Sell photos)

   The 1925 Coupeville High School yearbook, only the fifth the school produced in its first quarter century. (Jack Sell photos)

Mollie Bailey's great-grandfather headlined the nine graduates.

   Mollie Bailey’s great-grandfather, Robert “Fat” Engle, headlined the nine graduates.

1925 was a golden time in Coupeville.

The farm boys were the undisputed titans of Island County 91 years ago, besting Oak Harbor and Langley to nab county championships in three of the four sports played in those days.

Football, basketball and track all belonged to the Wolves, whose players bore nicknames like “Fat,” “Cushy,” “Beans” and “Sockee.”

Only baseball eluded their grasp, when a narrow 3-0 loss to Oak Harbor left them in second-place, a game back, at seasons end.

I learned all that, and much more, thanks to a fairly pristine copy of the 1925 Coupeville High School yearbook, the “Clarion,” which landed in my hands thanks to local library legend Leslie Franzen.

Dotted with just as many Engles, Shermans, Grassers and Libbeys as you would expect, the yearbook was the fifth published in school history (CHS started in 1900) and the first in many years.

It’s also easily one of the most detailed I’ve seen, sports-wise, from any time period.

All the scores are there, with neatly-ordered little write-ups on each game, providing a crystal clear window into prairie sports of the past.

So, grab your seat in the Wayback Machine and let’s skip back to a time when the faculty numbered three, the graduating class hit nine, and the athletic wins topped both combined.

Football:

An 18-man squad, led by captain Robert “Cushy” Cushen, quarterback Marion “Buster” Sill and lineman Robert “Fat” Engle, aka current CMS star Mollie Bailey’s great-grandfather, stuffed Oak Harbor twice to be hailed as county champs.

The Wolves finished 3-3, splitting games with Anacortes and falling to Burlington and Fairhaven, but frankly, none of that mattered as long as they crushed the interlopers from up North.

And they did, rolling to 23-6 and 25-7 wins.

Playing in a time before face masks were en vogue, Coupeville got touchdowns from Cushen, Sill and Joe Bruzas and a “well-directed” field goal from their captain in the first win.

The second time around, the two teams played in front of an estimated 400 fans, all of whom saw that Oak Harbor’s line “was like paper and their offense easily stopped.”

Langley apparently sat football season out.

Basketball:

The Falcons returned in the winter, but the hot streak continued for the Wolves, who went a flawless 4-0 against their Island rivals.

Tripped up a bit by bigger off-Island schools, Coupeville finished 6-5, but played four postseason games.

After beating Index 13-10 in a battle to decide which team from the district would advance to the Northwest Tournament, they went 1-2 at the tourney.

Which raises the question, not easily answerable, if that ’25 squad should be regarded as district champs, 45 years before the 1970 Wolf squad was hailed as the first Whidbey boys’ hoops team to win a district title.

What we do know for sure was Coupeville drilled Oak Harbor (22-10 and 16-12) and Langley (19-11 and 28-17), and center Roy Armstrong was the Jeff Stone of his day, dropping in 80 of his team’s 177 points that season.

On a side note, 47 years before Title IX kicked in, CHS fielded a girls hoops squad as well, though it almost ran out of players before the season was finished.

Still,  led by captain Mary Sherman, the Wolves did pull off one victory, nipping Langley 12-9.

Baseball:

The Wolves were denied a third-straight county championship, losing a 3-0 pitcher’s duel to Oak Harbor on the final day of the season.

Joe Libbey struck out 11 over nine innings, but he was matched by North end hurler Ely (no first name listed), who benefited from a three-run eighth inning rally by his teammates.

The win left Oak Harbor, which took two of three from the Wolves, at 4-1, while Coupeville finished 3-2 (4-3 overall).

Langley, which did NOT have a great 1925, struggled in at 0-4, being blown out 18-4 and 13-4 by the Central Whidbey sluggers.

Track:

The Island County Track Meet was dominated by the farm boys, with Coupeville’s 70 points more than Langley (28) and Oak Harbor (21) combined.

Sill, a four-sport letter winner as a junior, won three events, taking the 50, 100 and 220 races.

Dean Edmundson won the discus and high jump, while Armstrong (pole vault), Lewis Berry (shot put) and Stanley Bruzas (mile) also came in as victors.

Coupeville capped off its stellar 1924-1925 campaign by handing out athletic letters to:

Football:

Roy Armstrong
La Verne Arnold
Melvin Arnold
Lewis Berry
Joe Bruzas
Stanley Bruzas
Robert Cushen
Wesley Dickinson
Dean Edmundson
Robert Engle
Melvin Grasser
Aron Grove
Melvin Holbrook
Roland Jenne
Sam Kieth
Fred Lovejoy
Marion Sill

Basketball:

Armstrong
L. Berry
Cushen
Engle
Kieth
Joe Libbey
Sill

Jennie Capaan
Maxine Fowler
Marvel Howard
Eunice Libbey
Jessie Libbey
Daisy Race
Frances Race
Mary Sherman
Beulah Sullivan
Alice Winterburn
Luella Zylstra

Baseball:

L. Arnold
Burley Berry
L. Berry
J. Bruzas
S. Bruzas
Cushen
Grasser
Kieth
Libbey
Lovejoy
Sill

Track:

Armstrong
L. Berry
J. Bruzas
S. Bruzas
Edmundson
Kieth
Sill

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signs (John Fisken photos)

   Jeff Humphrey, owner of Whidbey Sign Company, installs the Coupeville Wall of Fame sign that centers a new historical display in the CHS gym. (John Fisken photos)

signs

If the lift’s a-bouncin’, don’t come a-knockin’.

wall

Halfway home.

Wall of Fame

   116 title boards, in 11 sports, covering CHS accomplishments from 1960 to 2016.

Jeff

   Humphrey (left) and some idiot blogger who spent his Wednesday hanging around the gym, getting underfoot.

We did it.

And let me stress the first word in that three-word sentence — WE.

When you walk in the Coupeville High School gym in the days to come, when you see what has risen, what has been remembered, what has been rediscovered, it is not the work of one person.

It is the work of a nation, of a Wolf Nation.

Everyone who chipped in, through donations, advice, access, historical knowledge, or just a pat on the back, shares in the history which now plays out on the gym wall.

For the first time, Wolf faithful and rivals alike can look up and see the complete tale of CHS sports play out in front of their eyes in living (glossy) color.

Pick the sport of your choice and you can see the changes in leagues, the rise (and sometimes fall) of a program’s success, and the moments which will live forever for the athletes, coaches and fans who participated.

Decades of history which has been locked away largely in dusty newspaper clippings is now front and center, the way it should be.

The warriors of the past are being honored, while the current generation has a target.

It’s been a long time coming and all the work paid off nicely.

Thank you, one and all.

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Jeff Humphrey (left) and (Contributed photos)

   Jeff Humphrey (left) and Ben Garcia craft Coupeville High School’s history at Whidbey Signs. (Contributed photos)

Baseball

   The baseball header, which sits front and center here, will have 18 title boards under it, ranging from 1960-2015.

red

   White boards represent league titles, black are district titles and red are state accomplishments.

It’s like waiting for Christmas.

Having put considerable time into this project, it still seems a little unreal that by this time next week, my efforts to recover and celebrate Coupeville High School’s athletic history will have born fruit.

All the research, all the fundraising, all the sweet-talking and back-and-forth discussions will produce what should be an exciting new centerpiece to the CHS gym.

Instead of the handful of banners which currently grace a corner of one wall, we will have an installation which honors 116 titles won by 11 different Wolf sports.

Tennis to basketball, cheer to cross country, the display, which will cover the wall directly opposite the team benches, will allow viewers to see how Coupeville’s successes have played out.

Using the school’s colors, white title boards will honor team league titles, black boards will acknowledge team district championships and red boards will hail state accomplishments.

Those include top 10 team finishes at state, as well as the 18 state titles in CHS history — two individual state titles in cross country, 14 individual titles in track, one relay state title and the 2006 team state title won by Wolf cheer.

With all the work done, what remains is the installation, which the Whidbey Sign Company plans to do the middle of next week.

Seeing the project completed (though new titles will continue to be added in the years to come as Coupeville wins them) will be huge for me.

The past year has been a rough one at times, and having this project to fall back on has been huge.

The positive result of what we’re doing helps to balance my own personal negativity, and, for that, I am appreciative.

But, deep down, this has never really been about me.

I didn’t attend CHS or play sports here (my high school tennis days were played out at Tumwater), but I have written about the Wolves on-and-off for the past two-decades plus.

I have witnessed great athletes, and better people (and a few turds, but hey, every school has to have a turd or too) and this is who the project is for, ultimately.

It’s so past generations know their accomplishments haven’t been forgotten, and current athletes and coaches have something to aspire towards.

It’s for Jeff Stone and Corey Cross and Bill Riley and Keith Jameson and it’s for Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby and Lexie Black and Mindy Horr and Amy Mouw.

It’s so people know how incredible Natasha Bamberger truly was, a 95-pound whippet who sprang from a small school on a rock in the middle of nowhere, ran people into the ground ruthlessly and won five state titles.

It’s so they remember a day in 2006 when four Wolves — Kyle King, Steven McDonald, Chris Hutchinson and Jon Chittim — meshed together perfectly, made every hand-off count, every step matter and emerged as the best relay team in all the land, brothers camped out at the top of the victory stand.

It’s for every kid who pulled on a Wolf uniform, in every sport, and refused to back down against bigger, richer schools.

For every coach who could have made more money on the mainland, but stayed in Cow Town for a year, a decade, a lifetime, and gave their all to your young men and women.

For every cheerleader, for every fan, for every parent and bus driver and teacher and administrator and score-book keeper and shot-clock runner.

It is your history, it is our history, and now, it will be front and center the way it always should have been.

Thank you.

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CHS state track champs (clockwise from top left) Jeff Fielding, Kyle King, Steven McDonald, Chris Hutchinson, Jon Chittim, Amy (Mouw) Fasolo, Tyler King, Natasha Bamberger.

   CHS state track champs (clockwise from top left) Jeff Fielding, Kyle King, Steven McDonald, Chris Hutchinson, Jon Chittim, Amy (Mouw) Fasolo, Tyler King, Natasha Bamberger.

This is actually going to happen.

After a lot of work, by a lot of people, the effort to install 116 years of Coupeville High School athletic history on the school’s gym walls is heading down the backstretch.

The research has been done (though, in a second I’m going to ask for your proofreading on that), the proper authorities have signed off on the idea, most of the fundraising is accomplished, and we meet with the sign guy Friday.

The plan has always been to have this installed prior to the start of the new school year in Sept., and it seems 99.2% likely at this point.

After years of having just a handful of banners hanging in the gym, the new installation aims to honor every league and district title won by Wolf teams, as well as individual state championships (there are 17) and top 10 team finishes at state.

That entails, as far as I have been able to determine, 112 title boards.

Originally, it was 109, but supporters of CHS cheer have made a solid argument that the program’s three top-four finishes at state (including a title in 2006) deserve to be on the wall as well.

And, before you say it, this is a SPORTS installation going up.

I am well aware the school has a strong run of accomplishments in History Day, band, Science Olympiad and the like.

Some of those are honored in other places at the school, and, to those who would like to see a more complete version, go get ’em.

I’m behind you, I support you, I would certainly write about your efforts and help drive your cause, but Indiana Jonesing 116 years of CHS sports history, on my own time, with no pay, has wiped me out.

The sports history was my crusade.

Someone else better suited to the task will have to take up the academic side of things, if that’s something you’re burning to get accomplished.

It can be done.

We’re proving that with this project, which has brought together the Whidbey newspapers (primarily Jim Waller and Keven R. Graves) with the pain in the ass blogger who you’re currently reading.

The Booster Club, bigwigs like Coupeville Schools Superintendent Dr. Jim Shank and CHS Principal Duane Baumann, and all the people who have donated money or offered research tips, are a huge part of this.

Of course, without the athletes who accomplished these feats, and the coaches who guided them, none of this would be possible in the first place.

When the display goes up, it’s all for us, Wolf Nation, near and far.

But now, as we head towards that meeting with the sign guy Friday, scan my list and see if you notice anything off. Did I miss a title somewhere in my bleary-eyed final days?

If so, let me know. You can reach me at davidsvien@hotmail.com.

And also, you can still chip in and help the fundraising efforts. Every buck counts, especially as we add cheer.

https://www.gofundme.com/2bzt6x76

 

Titles being honored:

 

BASEBALL:

1960 — Northwest League

1965 — Northwest League

1969 — Northwest League

1973 — Northwest League

1973 — District

1974 — Northwest League

1975 — Northwest League

1976 — Northwest League

1976 — District

1977 — Northwest League

1977 — District

1978 — District

1980 — Cascade League

1987 — District

1987 — 3rd at State

1991 — Northwest League

2008 — District

2016 — Olympic League

 

BOYS BASKETBALL:

1970 — Northwest League

1970 — District

1971 — Northwest League

1972 — Cascade League

1975 — Northwest League

1979 — Cascade League

1998 — Northwest League

2002 — Northwest League

 

BOYS TENNIS:

1961 — Northwest League

1967 — Northwest League

1968 — Northwest League

2002 — Northwest League

2009 — Northwest League

2009 — District

2010 — Northwest League

2011 — Northwest League

2015 — Olympic League

 

CHEER:

2006 — 1st at State

2007 — 2nd at State

2011 — 4th at State

 

CROSS COUNTRY:

1975 — Boys 9th at State

1976 — Boys 5th at State

1977 — Boys – Cascade League

1977 — Boys – District

1977 — Boys 5th at State

1981 — Girls 8th at State

1982 — Girls – Cascade League

1982 — Girls 4th at State

1985 — Natasha Bamberger – State Champ

2010 — Tyler King – State Champ

 

FOOTBALL:

1974 — Northwest League

1990 — Northwest League

 

GIRLS BASKETBALL:

1998 — Northwest League

2002 — Northwest League

2002 — 6th at State

2003 — 8th at State

2005 — Northwest League

2005 — 8th at State

2006 — Northwest League

2015 — Olympic League

2016 — Olympic League

 

GIRLS TENNIS:

1981 — Cascade League

1982 — Cascade League

1983 — Cascade League

1998 — Northwest League

1999 — Northwest League

2000 — Northwest League

2001 — Northwest League

2002 — Northwest League

2003 — Northwest League

2004 — Northwest League

2005 — Northwest League

2005 — 3rd at State

2008 — Northwest League

2009 — Northwest League

2010 — Northwest League

2011 — Northwest League

2012 — Northwest League

2015 — Olympic League

2016 — Olympic League

 

SOFTBALL:

2002 — Northwest League

2002 — 3rd at State

 

TRACK:

1979 — Jeff Fielding – State Champ (3200)

1979 — Boys 8th at State

1984 — Boys – Northwest League

1984 — Natasha Bamberger – State Champ (1600, 3200)

1984 — Girls 5th at State

1985 — Boys – District

1985 — Natasha Bamberger – State Champ (3200)

1986 — Natasha Bamberger – State Champ (3200)

1986 — Boys – 6th at State

1986 — Girls – 8th at State

1987 — Boys – Northwest League

1987 — Boys – District

1989 — Girls – Northwest League

1989 — Girls – District

2003 — Amy Mouw – State Champ (800)

2005 — Boys – Bi-District

2005 — Boys – 8th at State

2006 — Boys – Bi-District

2006 — Jon Chittim – State Champ (200, 400)

2006 — Kyle King – State Champ (3200)

2006 — Boys 4 x 400 – State Champ (Chris Hutchinson, Jon Chittim, Kyle King, Steven McDonald)

2006 — Boys – 4th at State

2007 — Kyle King – State Champ (1600, 3200)

2008 — Kyle King – State Champ (3200)

2008 — Boys – 4th at State

2010 — Tyler King – State Champ (1600, 3200)

2010 — Boys — 6th at State

2011 — Boys – 7th at State

 

VOLLEYBALL:

1997 — Northwest League

2001 — Northwest League

2002 — Tri-District

2002 — District

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banner

   We move closer and closer to making the top photo a reality, but here in Coupeville.

Legacy is huge.

Tim Duncan’s retirement from the NBA today is proof of that.

For 19 years, the Big Fundamental played the game with such precision, such honor, that his bidding farewell to the game at age 40 is like a (quiet) meteor ripping through the sports world.

The five championships, the unparalleled success (19 straight playoff berths, 18 seasons of 50+ wins) the San Antonio Spurs enjoyed with Timmmmmmaaaayyyyyy as their centerpiece, are remarkable.

But it’s the man who will be remembered, for the way he conducted himself, on the court and off. Class personified.

As I’ve pounded out 4,400+ articles here on Coupeville Sports (the four-year anniversary, Aug. 16, approaches), I’ve tried to leave some legacy behind myself.

But, a blog on the internet is not necessarily the best way to do so, as it all kind of evaporates a day or two after a particular story runs.

There is the Hall o’ Fame up at the top of the blog, but even that is a bit gossamer.

Which is why I started the project which is, against all odds, careening towards being a reality.

It’s easy to complain about the limited number of title banners which hang in the CHS gym, but replacing them with something more concrete, more complete, entailed a fair amount of work.

First I had to delve deep into the past (CHS started in 1900, or 90 years before the first banner currently gracing its gym), which required help.

The Whidbey News-Times has archives going back to the 1800’s, but those archives (bound volumes of newspapers, not microfiche or computer files) are locked down these days, in an effort to preserve crumbling, but vital history.

The paper’s head honcho, Publisher/Editor Keven R. Graves, was nice enough to overlook my past poking of his Canadian bosses, and allowed me access, probably against his better judgement.

As I spent days glazing over, flipping through pages looking for a bit of info here, a nugget of history there, News-Times Sports Editor Jim Waller (my high school journalism teacher) was always around to check on my progress, offer advice and help guide me.

Son of a legendary coach (Mert Waller) who got his start in Coupeville, Jim Waller grew up to be a standout athlete in Oak Harbor, then put in 30+ years as a Hall of Fame coach, and his guidance and knowledge of Island sports history is invaluable.

As the research came together, school officials — Superintendent Dr. Jim Shank and Principal Duane Baumann — were open to the idea of installing sports boards similar to what Oak Harbor High School has in its gym.

By doing so, we could fully honor the 109 titles I found (a figure that grows as the discussion over whether to add competition cheer is underway) lurking in the past.

The biggest stumbling block in going from essentially zero to putting 116 years of history on the wall in one fell swoop is, of course, money.

And yet that hurdle has largely fallen, with the Coupeville Booster Club pledging $2,500 and a GoFundMe I started having cleared $3,000 so far.

Now, Whidbey Signs is preparing to craft and install the signs, with a goal of having them in place prior to the start of a new school year.

It probably won’t feel real until the day arrives when the signs are unveiled and I can stand back and say, “This. As a community, as a Wolf Nation, we did this.”

I look forward to that day, because at that moment, with the help of so many, Coupeville Sports will have left something of a lasting legacy.

Something real. Something tangible.

To help us, pop over to:

https://www.gofundme.com/2bzt6x76

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