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Coupeville softball sluggers (l to r) Capri Anter, Ava Lucero, and Sydney Van Dyke celebrate their awesomeness. (Photos courtesy Grant Van Dyke)

They lit off some fireworks.

Closing with three straight wins this weekend, the Island Vipers 14U softball squad captured a title at the Fun in the Sun tournament in Kent.

The sluggers, who boast players from all three Whidbey high schools, swept both games they played Sunday in bracket play to clinch the crown.

A 7-1 win over a squad from Sammamish sent the Vipers to the championship game, where they nipped the Washington Rage from Moses Lake 8-7.

The hot finish came on the heels of a third-place finish in pool play, as Whidbey held its own with top-ranked rivals.

After opening losses to squads from Woodinville and Seattle, the Vipers drilled a team from Puyallup 8-0 to start its turnaround.

Sunday’s title tilt started off with a bit of a clang, as Whidbey fell behind 4-0.

But the Vipers never faltered, rallying time and again.

“The players did a great job of embracing never being out of the fight and kept chipping away and playing aggressive softball,” said assistant coach Aaron Lucero.

“Chaos on the base paths mixed with timely hitting and effective small ball.”

With two outs and the potential winning run at third, Jolene Coleman came up huge, lacing a hard-hit shot past the shortstop to plate her teammate and capture the crown.

The Vipers awarded three game balls, one to Coleman for her timely base knock and one each to the pitching and catching duo of Adeline Maynes and Ava Lucero, who survived the heat and thrived.

“All my players know my rock and marshmallow speech and they were all rocks,” Aaron Lucero said.

“To come from behind from a pretty good hole in the championship game to winning on a walk off speaks volume of this team and the character that they have.

“I’m extremely proud of them. It was truly an entire team effort.”

 

Weekend stats:

Shea Allison — Three singles, one double, two walks
Capri Anter — One double, one triple, five walks
Haylee Armstrong — Four singles, three doubles, two walks
Jolene Coleman — Six singles, one triple
Emma Cushman — One walk
Lena Heggenes — One single, one triple, two walks
Ava Lucero — One single, two walks
Adeline Maynes — Three singles, one walk
Chelsi Stevens — One single
Cameron Van Dyke — One double
Sydney Van Dyke — One double, one home run, two walks
Abby Whitney — One single
Sophie Ziegler — Three singles, two doubles, one triple, one walk

 

Tryouts this Saturday:

The Vipers are looking to “round out their roster and add a second team to the club.”

Tryouts for both 14U and 16U teams will be this Saturday, July 13 at 10 AM at Rhododendron Park in Coupeville.

All girls ages 12-16 are welcome, though they can’t be older than 16 as of Dec. 31, 2024.

If your player can’t be at Saturday’s tryouts, you can set up a private tryout by contacting coach Grant Van Dyke at Islandvipers@yahoo.com.

Nick Guay, having fun every step of the way. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

So, one night, Nick Guay swung by the duplex and dropped off chocolate chip cookies sent my way from his mom.

Was that, in itself, enough to earn him induction into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame?

Well, it didn’t hurt…

Still, cookies or no cookies (and always choose cookies), Guay more than earned HoF status with his year-round play across the last four years.

The lanky one suited up for Coupeville High School in soccer, basketball, and track and field, and made sizable contributions in all three.

On the pitch, Guay rattled home 14 goals, the sixth-most in program history.

And he did so even with his freshman season reduced to just a handful of games thanks to the pandemic.

Guay scored in all four of his campaigns, jumping from one score as a frosh to five as a sophomore, punching in two as a junior, then closing with a six-goal burst in his final go-round.

Carried off the pitch by his teammates after a playoff thriller. (Morgan White photo)

But he was more than a goal scorer, as he was also a goal denier, often playing in the net for Coupeville, with maybe his biggest day coming in the playoffs as a junior.

Squaring off with Lopez Island and Providence Classical Christian in a three-team tiebreaker on the turf at Oak Harbor Stadium, the Wolves won both games to earn the lone bi-district playoff slot up for grabs.

Guay blanked the Lobos 1-0, then came up big on both sides of the ball during a penalty kick shootout to break a scoreless regulation tie with PCC.

Stepping out of the net, he joined Preston Epp and Aidan Wilson in popping balls into the corner of the net to stake CHS to a 3-2 lead.

Down to its final shooter, PCC needed a miracle, and its prayers went unanswered under cloudy skies as Guay caused his rival to shank the ball to the left on the final shot of the day.

Taking his silky-smooth style of play to the hardwood, he saw varsity action in three seasons, racking up 213 points with a mix of three-balls and swooping layups.

That puts him 136th all-time for a program which has played since 1917, right between fellow all-timers Ryan Keefe and Jordan Ford.

But again, Guay’s contributions were about far more than just scoring.

He was a crafty rebounder — using his long reach to snag key boards — a smart defender, and a guy who always brought a big burst of energy with him to the floor.

Along the way, Guay was part of two squads which won league and bi-district titles while advancing to state.

Making it to the big dance was something he also accomplished in track, where he closed out his CHS career by earning 5th place at the state meet in the high jump.

Stretching for that elusive extra inch. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

That senior season saw Guay also compete at state in the 4 x 100 and 4 x 400 relays.

Overall, he racked up 27 wins across three seasons of track and field, competing in sprints, relays, the high jump, the long jump, and, for one moment, the shot put.

A talented athlete who could do it all, and look smooth at every moment, Guay was also one of Coupeville’s top 10 seniors in terms of GPA and received his fair share of honors for his off-field accomplishments.

From the stands, it always looked like he greatly enjoyed his time wearing a Wolf uniform, bringing a sense of style and an upbeat attitude, whether he was in the middle of the action, or cheering on his teammates.

So, yes, even if he hadn’t delivered chocolate chip cookies to Coupeville Sports world headquarters, we’d most likely still be doing this.

Nick Guay will be remembered by Wolf fans, young and old, and hailed for what he accomplished and how he accomplished it long after his graduation.

Today, we swing open the doors to the Hall o’ Fame, adding him to our roster.

After this you’ll find him up at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab, making the joint a whole lot cooler for his presence.

A fan favorite. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ready to tear up the diamond.

Another weekend, another tournament.

The Island Vipers 14U softball squad, which brings together players from all three Whidbey high schools, has been busy this summer.

Last weekend, the diamond dandies competed at the NSA state tourney in the Tri-Cities, while this weekend the sluggers are off to Kent for Fun in the Sun.

The Vipers open pool play Saturday.

At the state tourney, which drew 30 teams, Whidbey went 1-2.

“Good play throughout the weekend with a lot of positives,” said assistant coach Aaron Lucero. “The team did a great job of manufacturing runs when we needed and being aggressive — we call it create chaos on the basepaths.

“We continued to focus on the little things, such as situational awareness, two strike hitting, and getting the ball in play to advance runners.

“They’re developing and continuing to learn, which will benefit all the high schools on the island as we have players attending all three.

“We played some talented teams that pushed us hard which only makes us better.”

 

State tourney stats:

Shea Allison — One double, two walks
Capri Anter 
— Two singles
Haylee Armstrong 
— One single, one double
Jolene Coleman
— One walk
Lena Heggenes 
— One single, one double
Ava Lucero
— Two walks
Kennedy Strevel 
— One single, one walk
Cameron Van Dyke 
— One walk
Abby Whitney — Two singles
Sophie Ziegler
— One single, one triple

The guy on the right, Davis Fogle, a skinny 8th grader in 2021, is now a 6-7 powerhouse who just committed to Gonzaga. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Gonzaga’s next big basketball star once went toe-to-toe with Coupeville.

Davis Fogle, who announced his commitment to the Zags Thursday, is now a rising senior at Arizona Compass Prep — one who happens to be six-foot-seven and capable of throwing down dunks from multiple angles while elevating over opponents.

In his final high school test in Washington state, he torched the nets for a game-high 39 points in March while playing in the Futures Game at the All-State weekend.

Before the recent move to Arizona, Fogle played his sophomore and junior seasons at Anacortes High School.

But during the pandemic days, the future star got his prep hoops start at Mount Vernon Christian.

As a much-skinnier 8th grader, he was a key part of one of the best games to go down in the CHS gym’s history.

Played in June — because of the pandemic throwing everything off — the game featured Fogle scoring 21 points and coming within an inch of throwing in a game-winning bucket at the buzzer.

To the delight of Wolf fans, however, the ball refused to drop, and Coupeville held on for a wild 66-65 victory and a season sweep of the Hurricanes.

CHS rallied from six points down in the final seconds, with sophomore Alex Murdy draining the tying and eventual winning free throws with just 11 ticks to play.

Fogle was injured for much of his freshman campaign, preventing a rematch with the Wolves, then departed for Anacortes.

As he has grown in height and lit up the select basketball circuit in addition to his play for the Seahawks, he’s risen up the ranking charts.

Jumping nearly 40 slots in a short period of time, Fogle is ranked as the #38 player nationally in the Class of 2025. In Washington state, he was at #1 on most charts.

After cutting his list to national powers Gonzaga, Creighton, and Kansas, his decision to sign with Mark Few’s program breaks a recent trend for the Bulldogs.

Gonzaga, which has advanced to the Sweet 16 nine consecutive years, added four transfers and Senegal native Ismaila Diagne in its 2024 class, not signing any high school players.

Samuel Wolfe

Samuel Wolfe is a winner.

From twirling no-no’s as a little league pitcher to earning awards for his films as an adult, the Northwest native is lighting up the world.

He blazed a trail of success as a young man, setting the bar for younger siblings Hawthorne, Melanie, and Camilla, who have all found their own triumphs in Coupeville.

Jump back 20 years, to mid-July 2004, and Samuel Wolfe was unhittable.

Chucking the ball for the North Whidbey Little League 11-12 All-Stars, he set down all 18 Central Whidbey hitters he faced in a playoff game.

Employing a four-seam fastball and a nasty curve, Wolfe whiffed 13 of those batters, with most of his rivals being unable to even get the bat on the ball.

After a fly ball to start the game, the young hurler simply overpowered his opponent, with Central Whidbey having no answers for the flame thrower.

Wolfe continued to excel in sports growing up, playing baseball and football, before finding a new passion as a filmmaker.

He currently works as part of a three-man Fishboat Media team based out of Port Townsend, which recently won its first Emmy award.

The honor, bestowed by the Northwest Chapter of the National Academy for Television Arts & Sciences, was for a video campaign called “This is Maritime Washington.”

Wolfe and associates Tyler Rowe and Jeremy Johnson documented the experiences of those living and visiting Washington state’s saltwater shores, and the campaign claimed top honors in the PSA – Single Spot or Campaign category.

Navigating the 3,000+ miles of coastline which make up the Maritime Washington National Heritage area, the trio put together a seven-story series.

Numerous interviews were conducted, with Fishboat Media working with the Swinomish Tribe, Washington State Parks, the ferry system, and Haven Boatworks among others.

With one Emmy in hand (and a previous nomination for his commercial campaign work for the city of North Bend), Wolfe is off to new adventures.

Fishboat Media was tabbed to create a five-part short-form docuseries for the Cascade PBS Origins series which will tell the tale of the last reef netters working the Salish Sea.

Wolfe was chosen from a pack of filmmakers, with the announcement coming during the closing ceremony of this year’s Seattle International Film Festival.

The plan is to focus on the Kinley family, who are the last Native permit holders from the Lummi Nation.

Cascade PBS will cover production costs, through a $40,000 grant, while providing technical and editing support, with the plan for the series to release on its platforms in March 2025.

This will be the third go-round for the series, which helps regional filmmakers document communities which they belong to.

Previous seasons have focused on Vietnamese and Afghan refugees and their experiences after resettling in Washington state and growing up Black in Seattle.

 

For more info on Samuel Wolfe and a chance to watch his Emmy-winning series, check out Fishboat Media at:

Home

 

Or listen in on a podcast at:

http://thetrialreporter.com/podcast-meet-samuel-wolfe-origins-season-three-filmmaker.html