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Emily (Vracin) Kosderka and her children, Colby and Sydney.

Emily (Vracin) Kosderka was money.

There have been great basketball players at Coupeville High School over the years, but was there ever another Wolf player who you were more confident would absolutely, positively put that ball in the hoop at crunch time?

If you say yes, you’re lying.

Now married and a mother of two, the 1992 grad — who also played some pretty dang good volleyball and softball during her days in the red and black — was among the best basketball players I have seen play for CHS in the 22 seasons I have been on this Island.

You can make arguments for Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, Brianne King, Lexie and Brittany Black, Tina Joiner, Linda Currier and a couple of others.

Mike Bagby, Cody Peters, Hunter Hammer and Virgil Roehl are in the argument as well.

But Kosderka was Coupeville’s answer to Larry Bird. If she didn’t have ice water in her veins, she was close.

Modest, too.

“Ha! Oh, I doubt anyone remembers me from back in the day, but on the off chance they do, I hope they remember me as you did,” Kosderka said. “Honestly, I take that as a huge compliment, because that is how I hoped to be perceived — very confident, but a team player.

Magic Johnson once said that during his playing days, he approached the game “with effort and joy” and it made me smile because I could really identify with that,” she added. “In fact, to this day, it’s pretty much my approach to life in general.”

And she agrees with the Bird comparison, to a point.

“It’s funny that you bring up Larry Bird,” Kosderka said. “One of my favorite quotes of all time is from him — ‘In the closing seconds of every game, I want the ball in my hands for that last shot – not in anybody else’s, not in anybody else’s in the world.’ And that doesn’t come from a place of cockiness, but of confidence.”

She retains fond memories of her days as a Wolf, recalling how each of her coaches imparted lessons that have stayed with her and helped shape her as she has gone through life.

Phyllis Textor (basketball), Deb Cummings (volleyball), and Pam Jampsa (softball) were all extremely influential on me and each in their own ways,” Kosderka said. “They had very different coaching styles, but each took the time to teach me a lot about the game, but more importantly about life.

“And now that I really sit down and think about it, other than the flex offense and deny defense, it’s the life stuff that I remember the most,” she added. “After spending the last 20 years in athletics, and realizing how much the game has to teach about life, it’s easy to say that they did it right.”

Having been taught well by her coaches and teachers (“Mr. Engel, Dr. Whittaker, Mr. Bagby, and Ms. Erbaland were some of the most amazing people and I am grateful to them almost on a daily basis, even after all these years. There is no better feeling than to know that someone truly, truly believes in you, and the education they provided extended much further than the classroom.”) Kosderka made a successful leap to college.

She played basketball for two years at Willamette University and then moved into sports medicine, getting a Masters in Kinesiology from Indiana University.

After three years as an assistant athletic trainer with Lewis & Clark College, she made the jump to Concordia University, where she has been the head athletic trainer and taught since 2001.

Married for 10 years to Matt Kosderka, and the mother of a six-year old (Sydney) and four-year old (Colby), she is content with where life has led her. And she firmly believes her days on the diamond and the court helped make her strong enough to weather the storm of changes over the years.

“I could write a novel on the lessons learned through sport,” Kosderka said. “Sport molded me and shaped me into who I am today.

“I learned to compete, to compromise, to revel in the success of others, to work within a team, to respect the officials, to take direction, to be a leader, to always be open to learn, to win gracefully and to lose graciously (most of the time), to endure pain, to manage heartache, to strive for success and to struggle to obtain it, to recognize the unequivocal joy of reaching a goal that you had to work really hard to obtain, and the fact that the best part of it all are the people you are in it with,” she added. “That is what sport gives us. These are the lessons it can teach.”

There is still one lesson to learn, however, and that is how she will deal with being the mom of an athlete (or not).

“Do I want my kids to follow in my athletic footsteps? That is a big question with a complex answer,” Kosderka said. “It sounds cliche, I know, but my greatest hope is that my kids find their passion, whatever that may be.

Matt and I talk about that all the time,” she added. “We wonder what it is that they will connect with and love and are excited to watch them discover that. Will it be sport? Or will it be music? The arts? Dance? Karate? Auto shop?”

While she still believes sports have a lot to teach, she is a bit leery of a hyper-competitive world of travel squads and year-round dedication to one sport, as opposed to “the good old days” when you rotated sports and played with your friends all year.

“I remember the days of little league in Coupeville when we played on crappy fields on Saturdays,” Kosderka said. “We wore polyester uniforms that were five years old, our parents sat on folding chairs, our coaches were dads who just wanted to help kids learn the game, and our competition was the kid down the street. It all seemed so simple, and unfortunately it just isn’t that simple anymore.

“So, we will see. If Colby’s heart beats for baseball and Sydney is determined to shoot 100 free throws every night, then it will be on their own volition,” she added. “In many ways, I hope they do. I hope they get to learn the lessons sport has to teach. I hope they learn to be good leaders, to rely on their teammates, to respect their coaches, to strive and to struggle, and to know the great exuberance of a big win.”

Lessons their mom learned every time she stepped on the court, and reasons why she will never be forgotten by Wolf fans.

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     Brad Haslam (left), showing the softer side of his personality few opposing hitters saw back in his high school days.

Brad Haslam has great hands.

In the early ’90s, they helped him to be one of the most dominating baseball hurlers to ever pull on a Coupeville High School jersey. Now, after carrying him through years of construction work, they are taking him on a new journey, as he studies to be a chiropractor.

A three-sport star (football, basketball, baseball) who made batters quake in their cleats as a four-time All-League pitcher, the 1992 Wolf grad lives in Georgia these days with wife Tammie (10 years of marriage and a 22-year old step-daughter) and is attending Life University. After taking college classes off and on over the past 20 years, he is going full-bore these days and should graduate next summer.

“I met a chiropractor in Eastern Washington and saw what he could do for me and my wife, and it triggered something,” Haslam said. “My body was giving out (from the construction) and I needed a new career path.

“It will give me a chance to help people and leave them smiling when you see them going,” he added.

At one time, Haslam’s baseball-throwing arm was a deadly weapon, something few people wanted to see coming full-tilt at them. He controlled the mound like few others, putting a quiver in opposing batter’s strides with one baleful glare from the mound.

Actually, Haslam was having an excellent time on the mound. He just hid it extremely well under his game face.

“That was just a great time; I looked forward to it every day,” Haslam said. “We put together a pretty good squad together back then.

“Guys like Matt Cross played their hearts out and never got the credit they deserved,” he added. “I remember one game, we were in extra innings, two outs, best pitcher in the conference and Cross rips a single to keep us alive. Playing with guys like him made it great.”

Of course, it’s worth noting Haslam then stepped to the plate and slammed a game-winning home run.

But, as he heads into his older years (“I don’t like being 39. I don’t feel like I’m any older, but sometimes I do FEEL older.”) it’s his teammates contributions he treasures. The guys he played year-round with for four years.

He is quick to hand out praise of former football teammates such as Jason McFadyen (“He would kill you with his passes.”), Todd Brown (“I prided myself on blocking really well for Todd, laying guys out and watching him blow through the hole.”) and Frank Marti (“I would run side by side down the field with him, step back and watch him pummel someone and say, ‘oh, that had to hurt’.”)

And, while he enjoyed playing for all of his coaches, one in particular stands out. Ron Bagby was his football and basketball coach and more to Haslam, who babysat his mentor’s kids, who all went on to be star Wolf athletes themselves.

“He was always there for me on a personal level, always supportive,” Haslam said.

“In seventh grade I didn’t have any basketball shoes,” he added. “That was the year the first Michael Jordans came out and Bagby had bought a pair and he was so proud of them. He let me wear them the whole season, even though I wasn’t on his team.”

Haslam’s meteoric sports career didn’t quite end up where it might have, unfortunately. He had two strong college seasons at Skagit Valley, and then, just as he was receiving recruiting calls from Division 1 schools, something popped.

“I was playing summer league ball and throwing harder than ever and something went in my arm,” Haslam said. “I was on the phone with Washington State and told them and then, click, static … that was kind of it.”

So he found a new path, one that has paid off nicely. He may not have ever strode to the mound at Yankee Stadium, but he has achieved happiness in life and he has his memories.

While he says he’s unsure how his exploits will be remembered (“That’s up to you guys. I had fun, I know that.”) he will always hold dear a time when Prairie Center and the Tyee hung up banners to cheer on his playoff-bound football squad.

“That’s what you want to see in a small town,” Haslam said. “Give the kids some pride and support. They did it for us and they can do it again!”

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   Amy (Mouw) Fasolo, with husband (and former CHS hoops stud) Rob Fasolo and their son, Grady.

They are united.

Both male and female, from different graduation classes and proficient in different track and field events, but bound together by being among an elite group of Coupeville student/athletes.

No matter where their lives take them, Amy (Mouw) Fasolo, Jon Chittim, Steven McDonald and Tyler King will always share one thing — they reached the top of the mountain.

As an institution, Coupeville High School has produced only a handful of state champions.

The one defining trait is they’re virtually all runners.

From Natasha Bamberger, who won four state titles in track, then plopped the cherry on the sundae with a cross country title in 1985, to Kyle King, who blitzed his way to five track titles before heading off to run at Eastern Washington University and the University of Oklahoma, Wolf runners have long been the school’s premier athletes.

But what did it take for them to reach the pinnacle of their sport? And, what does that brief, shining moment in the spotlight mean after the initial rush has faded?

Four of Coupeville’s best looked back, and their answers ran the gamut.

Fasolo broke the tape first in the 800 meter run in 2003, but it’s the moments after the race which stay with her today.

Now married to former Wolf basketball star Rob Fasolo and a mom, she enjoyed the chance to let the competition slide away and be replaced with camaraderie.

“One of my favorite memories from the state track meet is from after the race,” Fasolo said. “The top eight girls had to stay around for the medal ceremony. We had a great time talking and laughing and it was easy to relax because the race was over.

“Plus, they had Popsicles for us since it was really warm,” she added. “We all did our cool down jog around the track together and laughed the whole time. It was a fun way to end the race.”

For Chittim and McDonald, who teamed with Kyle King and Chris Hutchinson to win the 4 x 400 relay in 2006 — Chittim went wild that year, also winning the 200 and 400 — track’s somewhat unique ability to foster team spirit and friendliness among competitors also remains fresh in their memories.

“State was probably the most fun meet of the year,” Chittim said. “Not only because it was the “big show,” but because it was multiple days long.

“Being able to stay in a hotel with my track friends was always the best part,” he added. “The time in between the races was always fun too, because there was plenty of opportunity to meet new friends.”

After attending Vanguard University in California on a track scholarship, Chittim is now a psychical therapy technician in the Army. Married to high school sweetheart Leah Mouw, the couple have a young daughter.

McDonald, who was a sophomore on the winning Wolf relay squad, went on to play football and run track for Pacific Lutheran University, where he majored in computer science, with a minor in math.

“The best memory I have was the feeling after the race, when I handed the baton to Kyle King and realized I did everything I could have done,” McDonald said. “I trained as hard as I could have.

“I put out as much preparation as I could have, and I put everything I had out on the track … well, and into the trash can before and after the race as well.

“That feeling, when hugging Chris Hutchinson and yelling at the top of my lungs at the fellow relay mates as they circled the track to finish the race was better than a million state championship medals,” he added. “That is what being a true champion is about. Doing everything you can to be the best you can and pulling the best out of your teammates as well.

“We all were champions and I’ve not seen a champion more deserving of the name than Chris. I can’t say I never saw him try as hard as I did during the championship, because he was doing it every day in practice.”

That level of commitment is necessary, something Tyler King, who won two track titles and then matched Bamberger by adding a cross country title before landing a scholarship to the University of Washington, knows very well.

“For me personally, it took almost a lifestyle, my life revolving around running. It’s almost lonely, going out on all those runs by myself, but it’s worth it,” King said. “I won’t lie, winning is definitely fun, and it may have been one of the reasons I liked running so much when I started out in middle school.

“Now days the races are only part of it. Winning is still nice, but it’s about more than that,” he added. “But, when you’re gunning down the home stretch, there’s nothing else in your mind other than getting to the line before the guy right next to you.”

Now departed from the CHS hallways, though some of their records still hang on a display in the school’s gym complex, the foursome say they will always remember their glory days — mainly for how it has continued to affect the way they live their lives as young adults.

“Track was an interesting sport for me in comparison to the other sports I played,” Fasolo said. “It was my best sport and I was willing to work hard at it. I was really, really competitive when I ran and I did not like to lose. However, I didn’t really enjoy it because I was so competitive.

“Playing sports can teach you how to work well in a team,” she added. “You get the chance to work with a lot of different people and personalities and it’s important to know how to get along with others.

“It helps prepare you to work with other students in college, for future coworkers or clients in the work place, working in the community, or church activities.”

“Back in high school, winning meant a lot. Not only because it’s something few Coupeville athletes get to experience, but also it meant I would have a much better chance of getting better scholarships,” Chittim said. “I have always had a competitive spirit, so of course winning still means a lot to me, but in a different way.

“Now it is more internal and not for my name to be up on a wall.”

McDonald sums it all up perfectly.

“Being a state champion doesn’t really carry much prestige along with it,” he said. “I always have the medal and the title, but it really was the trip. The day-to-day grind of training and off season preparation which I will remember and hold on to, not the destination of the state track meet.

“Training and being with the relay team and spending time of the track with one another is what I hold dear,” he added. “I’m sure my relay teammates will agree to that one.

“The actual medal only serves as a memory holder for the more important things.”

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  Former Wolf soccer ace Hayley Waterman (back row, far right) now plays for a Seattle indoor rec team by night while doing scientific research by day.

Hayley Waterman can do it all.

That was always clear to anyone who knew her during her time at Coupeville High School, when she juggled soccer, photography, year book, classes, helping take care of her younger siblings and teaming with Kate Harbour to be the Wonder Twins behind the rental counter at Videoville.

Now, all grown up and stuff, she still manages to accomplish more than most of us, while making it look easy.

As shown in the picture above, she’s still playing on the soccer pitch, this time as a member of a Seattle indoor team known as “Somethin’ Like That.” Rec soccer once a week gives her a mixture of fun and exercise, while taking her mind off her day-to-day activities, where she’s well on her way to doing something like solving cancer or stopping the zombie apocalypse.

She lives in the U District with her girlfriend, Rachel, and her 11-year old transplanted-from-Coupeville cat, Siamyan. Working as a Level 1 Technician in a research lab at Puget Sound Blood Center, she’s in with the big guns.

“I’m kinda really busy being a working adult,” Waterman said. “My boss is an awesome genius and one of the few researchers who uses mice as an animal model for transfusion studies. So yeah, I’m doing science and it’s really fun and intense.”

She has plans to continue on to grad school at some point, but for now is happy where she has found herself.

“I really like my boss and what we’re doing. It’s really good science.”

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 Former Wolf great Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby goes out for a bit of fishin’ with the old man, as former CHS football guru Ron Bagby pilots the craft.

Was there ever a more deceptive athlete than Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby?

She would step on the basketball court at Coupeville High School, looking like she was 10, with her short pig-tails jutting up in the air, and other teams would wonder why the ball girl had gotten herself a uniform. And then, in an instant, she would flip the switch and slice the unsuspecting fools off right at the knee.

Spinning and wheeling and dealing and doing just about whatever she wanted to on the court, she electrified audiences. Maybe the best pure athlete in red and black at the time — Brianne King might have an argument — Ellsworth-Bagby helped spark a true golden age of Wolf female athletics.

During her time at CHS, she and her teammates, like the wham-bam volleyball duo of Amy and Sarah Mouw, went to state in all three of her sports (basketball, softball, volleyball), placing third in state in their first year as a fastpitch softball squad and making it to the state semifinals in hoops.

It was a time when the Wolves expected to win and didn’t back down from anyone. And why not? They were all superheroes!

“One of the best memories about basketball was getting to play with my three best friends — Brianne King, Tracy Taylor, and Erica Lamb,” Ellsworth-Bagby said. “We were always doing ridiculous things together, like “forking” teacher’s yards, and calling ourselves superheroes.

“No joke, we had the Underoo’s and everything. I was Batman. Brianne was Flash. Erica was Spiderman, and Tracy was Superman,” she added. “I think we thought that it would make us better athletes or something. We even got our professional basketball picture taken together with the respective outfits!”

A 2002 CHS grad who just returned for her ten-year reunion (“Yikes! I’m old! I hope I am able to remember something good to tell you about the ‘good ol’ days’,” she said with a laugh), Ellsworth-Bagby, like her sister, April, and brothers Mike and Jason, was a star. But she also worked her tail off like few others.

She’d like to be remembered most of all for being “a hardworking athlete that played with all her heart every game and did her very best to practice good sportsmanship. Except for one instance that I can remember in a state basketball tournament game when I got my first technical, and Coach (Willie) Smith proceeded to get one immediately after.

“Needless to say we lost that game.”

Ellsworth-Bagby took a swing at college athletics after her glory days as a Wolf, with a “very long” redshirt year at Pacific Lutheran University (“After a whole year of practicing, working my butt off and watching my team play in the games, I decided I wanted to actually play in a game.”) and a year as a starter at South Puget Sound Community College. After that, real life took her away, as she pursued a career in nursing.

That calling took her to Tucson, where she worked as an ER nurse (and freaked out the world by posting pictures of herself covered in horrifying — but fake — wounds on Facebook), did time as a high school JV basketball coach and eventually moved into being a labor and delivery nurse.

Now back on Whidbey, she currently works as an RN in labor and delivery at Swedish Edmonds, while doing some personal training on the side. Still interested in coaching, she has also thought about returning to school to get her teaching certificate.

An avid rock climber, camper and snowboarder who can still lay down the beat-down on the basketball court, Ellsworth-Bagby devotes a fair amount of her free time to Crossfit training. Much of her current success can be directly related back to the time she has devoted to the sporting life, she said.

“I truly believe being involved in athletics has helped me incredibly, to be successful in my life today,” Ellsworth-Bagby said. “Athletics have taught me not only the importance of physical fitness but how to work hard, set goals and work towards them. It has taught me sportsmanship and how to work together as a team, even with people that you don’t particularly agree with.

“It has also given me great confidence in myself and confidence is key to success in anything you do,” she added.

And if that day comes and Coupeville High School ever decides to put together a Hall of Fame for the great athletes of its past, what would she say in her induction speech?

“Ha ha, this is funny … hmm, well, I guess I would have to say, ‘What a great honor to be thought of as on the same level as so many of these athletes that I have admired and looked up to as a young girl’.”

And then she’d bust out the Underoos one more time.

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