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Jason Bagby models his design.

Jason Bagby models his design.

Check out the Seattle cityscape in the tree roots.

Check out the Seattle cityscape in the tree roots.

Former Wolf softball star Emma Puharic models her sweatshirt.

Former Wolf softball star Emma Puharic, ahead of the fashion curve.

Jason Bagby is expanding his world-wide empire.

The Coupeville High School grad, who has taken his rim-rattling, shriek-inducing hoops game to the college level, where he currently plays for Yakima Valley Community College, is now channeling his inner entrepreneur, as well.

He’s launched his own logo and shirt company, Evergreen Clothing, and is selling custom-designed t-shirts, sweatshirts and hoodies as fast as he can make them.

Bagby’s unique logo incorporates a giant Evergreen tree, with the roots swirling around a cityscape of Seattle that evokes the former glory of the Sonics, before they were stolen away by Oklahoma robber barons.

You can choose virtually any color and size and then simply wait for the man to deliver the same way he does on a break-away run at the basket.

While the project is still in the beginning stages (“It’s more of a side deal, because I have school basketball and a girlfriend that needs attention”), his design has started showing up more and more, with other former Wolf athletic stars buying his product and then dropping pictures of themselves on-line wearing his gear.

Not bad for something that mainly started because Bagby was feeling a bit of a financial pinch.

“To be honest, the first reason I started this was because I got tired of going to the store and spending $20 on a t-shirt and $40 on a sweatshirt,” Bagby said. “So I got this idea, why not make a logo that’s exactly how I want and the exact color I want and sell them for cheaper than you would see in a store.

“Over the last few months this has started to blow up,” he added. “My next step is to pitch my logo to a few stores that I have on my radar.”

Bagby plans to have a website up soon, but for now you can find out more info and get in contact with Evergreen Clothing at their Facebook page — //www.facebook.com/Evergreenclothingco?ref=stream

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Legendary.

Legendary.

People ask me what it takes to be a high-level Division 1 college athlete, and the answer is simple.

I’m sure hard work, dedication and a lot of natural talent helps, but there is one thing, and one thing only, that truly sets apart the greats. And that is the ability to be freakin’ awesome in a robe.

Good thing Coupeville High School grad and all-time Wolf legend Kyle King knows the secret. Otherwise he’d be running cross country and track for Middle Tennessee State and not national power Oklahoma.

But he’s running for the Sooners, cause he (and his robe) are awesome like that.

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Hammer Time back in the day. Left to right, Ian Smith, Nevin Miranda, Hammer, Ben Hayes, Tyler King and, in front, Scott Davidson.

  Hammer Time back in the day. Left to right, Ian Smith, Nevin Miranda, Hammer, Ben Hayes, Tyler King and, in front, Scott Davidson.

Forever a star. (Laura Chan photo)

Forever a star. (Laura Chan photo)

675 days is a lifetime.

Feb. 10, 2011 Hunter Hammer and his Coupeville High School teammates walked off the basketball court in Port Townsend with a swagger to their steps and a smile on their lips. They had just bounced their hosts 49-41 and were advancing on to the next round of the playoffs.

Hammer had dominated as only a six-foot-seven Tower of Power can, shredding the Redskins for 19 points and 10 boards and leading a second-half comeback in what would turn out to be the final win in Wolf coach Randy King’s twenty-plus year coaching career.

A loss to University Prep in the next game brought an end to Hammer’s high school hoops days. With him went Ian Smith, Tyler King, Ben Hayes and one of the best basketball-playing classes in school history.

Now, two years, and 25 more losses down the road, that victory seems far, far away.

But, as the current Wolves fight to get that elusive first win, Hammer offers a few reflections on his own time in the red and black. Thoughts that encompass the joy of winning, but also why you take the court in the first place.

Hah, your right, that has been some time away.

A thing I notice now is just how important those high school days are. How basketball may just be about the wins and losses. But even though the wins are great, the memories outlast it all.

Basketball may have united us, but winning or losing didn’t separate us.

Truth is, basketball and other sports are just games. But that doesn’t mean we give up on those games. Play hard, not just for yourself, but for the players wearing the same jersey.

It’s easy to get caught up in high school. Once it’s gone, you miss the days with the boys on the courts and fields.

My senior class was huge — Ben Hayes, Ian Smith, Tyler King, Nevin Miranda, Nic Anthony, all players who started playing Swish back in the day. That including junior Dalton Engle at the time.

I’ve won and lost many sports games with these guys, but the bonds and friendship we built over the years outweigh the sports.

The Port Townsend game was a fun one. One that almost ended our season.

Have fun with it, play with all you have, leaving it all on the court. The season may not be bright but there is a purpose to everything. Play for the love of competition and the sport.

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Lily Doyle (front) and some of her Vassar teammates.

Lily Doyle (front) and some of her Vassar teammates.

Lily Doyle is swimming with the big girls.

The Coupeville High School grad, now a junior at Vassar College, swam in four events at the Liberty League Swim & Dive Championships in Rochester, New York Friday and Saturday. The event, where Vassar finished sixth out of eight schools, brings an end to the 2012 portion of the Brewers’ swim schedule.

Doyle and her teammates won’t return to the water for a competition again until the middle of January.

Swimming over the weekend, Doyle finished 27th in the 200 backstroke (2 minutes, 28.92 seconds), 29th in the 100 back (1:08.78), 36th in the 200 IM (2:37.40) and 50th in the 50 free (28.87).

She is the daughter of Coupeville couple Richard Doyle and Barbara Ballard, who is better known to CHS students as the Gatekeeper to All Things College Related.

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Lily Doyle (right), back in her high school days, when she aced classes at Coupeville and kicked butt in the water for Oak Harbor.

Lily Doyle is getting noticed by her coach.

The Coupeville High School grad, now a junior at Vassar College, was singled out for praise by the big boss, Lisl Prater-Lee, on the college’s athletic web site, after Doyle busted out a top personal performance Nov. 17 in the 200 backstroke in a meet against SUNY New Paltz. Her time of two minutes, 33.91 seconds was her best swim of the year.

Lilian dropped two seconds off her season-best, which is a positive performance in a tough meet,” Prater-Lee was quoted.

That followed on the heels of a strong all-around afternoon in a meet against Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (try saying that five times fast) Nov. 10.

In that meet, Doyle swam in four events, placing fourth in the 100 back (1:11.60), fifth in the 200 back (2:35.81) and sixth in the 500 free (6:25.70). She also swam a leg on a 400 free relay team that claimed fourth in 4:09.79.

Doyle and her Brewer teammates are now prepping for the Liberty League Championships Nov. 30-Dec. 1.

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