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Archive for the ‘Where are they now?’ Category

Chuck Hardee (12, next to coach) during his glory days as a Wolf running back, complete with a luscious mane of ’70s hair.

There’s little question where Chuck Hardee’s politics fall these days.

Anyone who reads his many Facebooks posts in support of Republican causes can tell you the man is deeply committed to conservatism. Yet, unlike a lot of die-hards on either side, the man has a consistent sense of humor and often uses clever jibes to puncture windbags of all persuasions.

And those rumors that he would only go to the right while operating as a star running back for Coupeville High School in the early ’70s? Just rumors.

Whether you remember Hardee as a wiry, quicksilver triple threat during his days as a Wolf (basketball, football, tennis) or you know him as the successful business owner he is today (he and wife Connie own three retail stores in Spokane), his is a story of a small town boy made good.

A story of a man changed by the times, from a self-described “immature party boy most likely to be voted to go nowhere” to a responsible man who found a sense of purpose in a career in law enforcement. A man no longer on Whidbey who remains forever bound to the town he called home from fifth grade to graduation.

“My enduring memories are from the great students and friends from my time in Coupeville,” Hardee said. “Coupeville was a really special place to grow up in and all those that are there today should know, we are in an elite group of people that have had a chance to taste paradise.

“Most of the kids there today don’t know this yet, but they will always miss their time there after they are gone,” he added. “I miss it terribly and still go back anytime I am near.”

Originally from California, Hardee and his family settled in Coupeville in 1966 and he immediately found a connection with his new classmates through sports. That connection never wavered as he and his friends grew up.

“What I remember most was the team camaraderie; it was very special,” Hardee said. “I think we were so successful because most of us on the team had been in school and playing sports together since we were in the 5th grade.

“Sports is a funny thing. It really is the only thing that kept me in school at all,” he added. “I still remember vividly every touchdown I ever scored or basketball games where I had a high point total. Those memories are burned into my psyche. The trips to other schools, the team bus rides, the rooter buses, the cheerleaders … it was all very cool!”

Playing at a time when there were far fewer things to vie for your attention, Hardee and his teammates played ball year-round.

“It’s about total dedication. In our day, we didn’t play video games, or hang out in a house,” Hardee said. “We literally would play ball all the time — basketball, baseball, football. So our skills were honed.”

As a senior, Hardee starred on one of the best teams in CHS history, a squad that went 6-1 in the regular season (outscoring opponents 123-64) and advanced to the state playoffs, a feat not accomplished by a Wolf team since the late 1930s.

“We were awesome,” Hardee said. “Good teams are few and far between in Coupeville football, but it can be done!”

After the heady days of high school ball, Hardee hit a rough spell before things finally clicked for him.

“I was kind of a lost soul for a few years out of high school. Didn’t know what I wanted to do or how to get there,” he said. “But then one day, snap, it all changed for me. I woke up out of a meaningless slumber, and became ultra-responsible. It’s funny where life leads you sometime.”

He finished his bachelors degree in Public Administration, held management jobs and then segued into a 20-year career in law enforcement before moving into his current life as a retail store magnate.

It was during those years that much of his current political beliefs and outlook on life were shaped, refined and strengthened.

“I think most young people when they start out in life are liberal without ever thinking about it. When I left Coupeville in ’75, liberalism was really all around. Peace, love and rock and roll,” Hardee said. “As I was further educated and a working adult in law enforcement, the real world comes into much clearer focus than the idealistic ideas of when you are young.

“I have certainly been very active politically in the last few years. I believe it is the most important thing that is happening in our world today,” he added. “We have lost our way and our moral compass is spinning out of control.”

He has come to appreciate this quote from Winston Churchill — “If you are not a liberal when you are young, you have no heart, but if you are not a conservative when you get older, you have no brain.”

“For me, it was obvious, that a liberal stance on social, economic, and foreign policy is completely unsustainable and just the wrong way to go,” Hardee said. “Conservatism is much smarter, healthier.”

And while he is aware that some from his past may not agree with his views, he remains open to debate. He knows that people can change, something he has seen firsthand in his own life.

“It’s funny, when I look back at who I was in high school — immature, a party boy, I’m sure I would have been voted most likely to get nowhere,” Hardee said. “However, I would bet today, many would be very surprised at where I ended up.”

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Kwamane Bowens, perhaps the best Wolf-that-never-was.

Want to scare ATM good? I mean really make the big, bad “powerhouse” of the Cascade Conference quake in its cleats?

Go build a time machine, go back about five years and convince Kwamane Bowens’ family not to move away from Coupeville. Put the 2012 version of Bowens, a chiseled gridiron beast who runs the 40 in 4.38 seconds and is being recruited by a dozen high-level Division 1 college programs, behind the beefy Wolf line, and the big, salty tears would start flowing.

Bowens, who ran track during his year on Whidbey Island, moved to Virginia Beach in eighth grade, a family move separating him from what could have been.

“Damn good athlete. I miss this guy,” said Caleb Valko, a former classmate who could have been blocking for Bowens from his center position this year if it wasn’t for the twists of fate.

That sound you hear in the other room? That’s Wolf coach Tony Maggio working frantically on that time machine.

For now, they’ll have to content themselves with watching the best-that-never-was-a-Wolf run wild half way across the country. And they won’t be the only ones watching him, as he blows up big time while playing wideout, corner, kick and punt returner for Salem High School.

ESPN Recruiting Nation Football lists Boston College, Illinois, Ole Miss, Vanderbilt, Virginia Tech and West Virginia as just some of the schools vying for Bowens signature on a college scholarship.

It’s his ability to break off huge chunks of yardage that garners much of the interest.

“My strengths are being able to stretch plays and being a play maker,” he said. “I’m exciting with the ball in my hands.

“I can improve on everything, though; I’m always wanting to get better,” he added. “My main goal is to give back to everyone who gave to me.

While his time in Coupeville was fairly short, he still has friends here and remembers his time here with fondness.

“I talk with some occasionally; some I’m not sure if they remember me,” Bowens said. “I miss everything and everyone. I had so many great memories. I would give the world to get back.”

OK, Maggio, how’s that time machine looking?

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Jessica Riddle

How do you replace a star like Jessica Riddle?

Simple answer — you can’t. The volleyball and tennis sensation was brilliant for two years at Coupeville High School before a family move took her huge smile and killer skills across the bridge, never to be seen again.

Sort of.

The reality is, Anacortes is not in darkest Africa and Riddle has been able to stay in contact with her friends and former teammates, many of whom she has known for better than a decade. Now a senior, she has become an even bigger star for the Seahawks, a brightly-shining comet of athletic ability streaking across the sky, still visible to Whidbey islanders, just not able to still be repping the black and red.

And who knows? Any day now Wolf volleyball coach Toni Crebbin might finally be able to stop crying over the loss of The Natural. Maybe…

The unexpected transition wasn’t easy for anyone involved.

“Going from CHS to AHS was difficult,” Riddle admits. “I had to leave all of my friends and a town that I had been in since second grade.

“AHS is a lot bigger and it took a whole month before I could find my classes on my own,” she added. “AHS is bigger than CHS, has a lot more classes you can choose from, classes start at 7:30 am, there are more sports to choose from like sailing and bowling and it is a bigger town.

A natural talent on the volleyball court who sparked the Wolves from the first day she stepped on the court as a raw freshman, playing along side older sister Michelle, Jessica had to face down that most unexpected of things — nerves — during her intro to her new teammates, who she eventually helped finish 5th at the state Class 2A tournament.
 
“In the beginning, it was very scary to be at a different school and not knowing very many people,” Riddle said. “I remember my very first volleyball game as a Seahawk. It was before school had even started, so all of the faces in the crowd were unrecognizable. I didn’t know anybody and it was very intimidating. I was so nervous, which is weird because I usually never get nervous.

“After the game started and I got into a rhythm, my nerves went away and I had a lot of fun,” she added. “When I started school I was known as ‘the girl that hits really hard’.”

Once she settled in, Riddle found Anacortes a nice, welcoming place. But, as much as she likes her new home, she still has fond memories of her years in Coupeville.

“I keep in touch with all of my friends, so that makes me happy,” Riddle said. “I miss almost everything about CHS — how small and friendly it is, how all of my friends are like family to me, the teachers are so down to earth, and how everyone is so supportive when it comes to the sports at CHS.”

Along with lighting up opposing Northwest Conference teams with her high school teammates, Riddle has also continued to shine in both club volleyball and two-on-two sand volleyball, where she teamed with Taylor Rodriguez to take first in her level at the prestigious Alki Beach volleyball tournament. Her club team, Skagit Island Volleyball Academy, finished second in the region.

Now, it’s back to school and preparations for a second run at a state title. After that, college looms, with multiple coaches having expressed interest in her, raising the possibility of getting scholarship offers. Wherever she goes, she plans on taking full advantage of the educational opportunities.

“So far my plan is to get a Ph.D. in biological sciences, then go to medical school. After my schooling I want to be a clinical research scientist,” Riddle said.

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