Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘All-League’

Gabe Wynn

   Gabe Wynn capped his high school hoops career by being named First-Team All-League. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith

   Junior guard Hunter Smith was similarly honored by Olympic League coaches when voting was announced.

Hunter Smith and Gabe Wynn stood tall all season, and it paid off.

The Wolf duo, who opened the boys basketball season as the only returning varsity players, were called on to provide scoring and leadership for a very inexperienced squad, and they never flinched from their duties.

Their play, their heart and their intangibles were honored when Smith, a junior, and Wynn, a senior, were named First-Team All-League selections after a vote by the 1A Olympic League coaches.

Smith averaged 16.6 points a night over a 20-game season, with a high of 34 against Klahowya.

Wynn knocked down 10.3 a game, and set a school single-game record, hitting seven three-point bombs in a home game against Port Townsend.

Those honors were the biggest news as the Coupeville High School boys’ hoops squad brought an official end to the 2016-2017 season Thursday with an awards shindig.

Smith also took home the Mr. Hustle Award, while freshman Sean Toomey-Stout earned the same honor for the JV squad.

Manager Axel Partida was hailed for his stellar work keeping the Wolf teams in working order all season.

Letter winners:

Ariah Bepler
Steven Cope
Hunter Downes
Joey Lippo
Kyle Rockwell
Brian Shank
Hunter Smith
Ethan Spark
Cameron Toomey-Stout
Gabe Wynn

Certificates of Participation:

Jered Brown
Koa Davison
Mason Grove
Tucker Hall
Elliott Johnson
Aiden Juras
Gavin Knoblich
Aram Leyva
Jean Lund-Olsen
Nikolai Lyngra
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim
Sean Toomey-Stout
Ulrik Wells

Read Full Post »

Your 1A Olympic League volleyball MVP, Katrina McGranahan. (John Fisken photo)

   Your 1A Olympic League volleyball MVP, Katrina McGranahan. (John Fisken photos)

Cory Whitmore

It took Cory Whitmore a single season to be named Coach of the Year.

Every time Katrina McGranahan hit the volleyball this season, it exploded.

Mixing power at the net, where she led Coupeville in kills for the second straight year, and at the service stripe, where she was one of the best servers in the state, the Wolf junior was fury unleashed.

And now, after helping lead the CHS spikers to their best season since 2004, McGranahan has been rewarded, being named the 1A Olympic League MVP.

She was one of five Wolves hailed by league coaches Wednesday, with Cory Whitmore being tabbed Coach of the Year and teammates Hope Lodell and Valen Trujillo earning First Team All-League honors.

Lauren Rose was also tabbed as an Honorable Mention pick.

The future looks bright for Coupeville, as well, as the league champs were the only school to have a non-senior honored in the first group.

McGranahan, who threw down 91 kills, 14 blocks, 134 service points and 62 aces and Lodell, who notched 75 kills, 137 digs, 187 service points and 110 aces, are juniors.

Trujillo closed her career with 195 digs (giving her a school record 550), 348 service returns, 35 aces and 94 service points.

Rose, a junior setter, recorded 192 assists and garnered 132 service points and 35 aces with a team-best 92.7% serving percentage.

The Wolves went 11-6 overall, 8-1 in league play under Whitmore, who is in his first season as head coach.

The complete list of winners:

Coach of the Year: Cory Whitmore, Coupeville

Team Sportsmanship: Chimacum

Most Valuable Player: Katrina McGranahan, Jr., Coupeville

Defensive MVP: Nicole Mills, Sr., Klahowya

1st Team All-League:

Valen Trujillo, Sr., Coupeville

Hope Lodell, Jr., Coupeville

Jessica Carlson, Sr., Klahowya

Ashley Sharp, Sr., Klahowya

Taylor Carthaum, Sr., Chimacum

Shanya Nisbet, Sr., Chimacum

Read Full Post »

Zane Bundy (John Fisken photos)

  Zane Bundy (7), celebrating a goal with Abraham Leyva, was named Most Inspirational when CHS soccer held its banquet Thursday. (John Fisken photos)

Will "The Thrill" Nelson, showing off the deft touch that led to him setting a single-season assist record.

   Will “The Thrill” Nelson, showing off the deft touch that led to him setting a single-season assist record.

They rewrote the record books and were rewarded for it.

Coupeville High School booters Abraham Leyva and William Nelson set new program records for goals and assists, respectively, this season, so it was appropriate the duo were tabbed as First-Team All-League players by 1A Olympic League coaches.

Leyva, a senior, notched 20 goals in his final go-around on the CHS pitch, giving him 45 for his career.

He also departs with the school’s career assist record, having compiled 26 over three seasons.

While both of Leyva’s goal records are likely unassailable, Nelson is on his way to taking away the assist mark.

He set a single-season record as a sophomore with 14 set-ups this year.

The duo received their All-League honors at a banquet Thursday night, where Wolf coaches Kyle Nelson and Gary Manker handed out a nice assortment of awards.

Leyva copped Player of the Year honors for the varsity, while Zane Bundy (Most Inspirational), Laurence Boado (Most Improved) and Ethan Spark (Rookie of the Year) also saw time in the spotlight.

Andre Avila was front and center for the JV, capturing Player of the Year and Most Inspirational.

Jaschon Baumann rounded out the awards, taking home Most Improved for the JV squad.

Varsity letter winners:

Andre Avila
Laurence Boado
Zane Bundy
Jose Castro
Taylor Chiles
Garrett Compton
Sebastian Davis
Tanner Kircher
Abraham Leyva
Uriel Liquidano
Connor McCormick
Cody Menges
Zack Nall
Loren Nelson
William Nelson
Santiago Ortiz
Ethan Spark

Bundy and Kircher were four-year varsity players, while Compton, McCormick, Menges, Nelson and Beauman Davis all played four years in the Wolf soccer program.

JV participation awards:

Jaschon Baumann
Beauman Davis
Nick Dion
Brandon Jansen
Jonathon Johnson
Uriah Kastner
Ethan Kedrowski
Teo Keilwitz
JT Quinn
Brian Roberts
Mathew Shreffner

Read Full Post »

Modern-day Bill Riley. (Photo courtesy Riley)

Modern-day Bill Riley. (Photo courtesy Riley)

“I hope that my teammates and coaches that are still alive today would say I was a good teammate.”

Bill Riley remains one of the most talented athletes to ever represent Coupeville High School, the second ever to be named CHS Athlete of the Year, but he was never concerned with being showy or drawing attention.

Instead, he was a highly successful three-sport athlete by focusing on what he could add to a team.

“Stay humble, let your performance on the court or field be all you need to say,” Riley said. “No need to bring any attention to yourself or celebrate excessively after a great play.

“People will know you did well without the theatrics.”

And the 1973 CHS grad did as well as any athlete to ever pull on the uniform, an All-League First-Team pick in basketball and football (on both sides of the ball) who also went to the state track and field meet as a long jumper.

On the hardwood he was on the 1969-1970 hoops squad that became the first in school history to go to state, then later compiled the second-best single-season scoring average in program history.

Put him on the gridiron and he was a monster, or, at the very least, played a position known as “monster,” which gave him the ability to follow the ball (“That was fun!”) at all times.

It worked, as league coaches honored him for his work as a safety and floating linebacker, as well as his offensive game as a running back and flanker.

So it came with little surprise when Riley was tabbed as his school’s Athlete of the Year in ’73, making him the successor to Corey Cross, who won the first two times the award was handed out.

Following in his teammate’s footsteps remains an honor for Riley.

“I had the deepest respect for Corey,” he said. “He was a natural leader.”

As an athlete, Riley soaked up lessons from those around him, and the men who were coaching him, lessons which have impacted him throughout the years.

“No question, Coach (Bob) Barker was a significant influence,” Riley said. “I looked up to the upperclassmen, Randy Duggan, Corey Cross of course, Jeff Stone, Pat O’Grady.

“On the coach front Craig Pedlar (track and JV BB). In football, Coach Steele, Lippincott, Hosek and legendary football coach Sid Otton were all important figures during those development years.”

With the passage of time, athletes of the ’70s, who put together a truly golden era in Coupeville, may not be as well-remembered as they once were, but the town remains largely the same.

“Those memories are long gone for most people that lived in Coupeville when I was playing sports,” Riley said. “What is irreplaceable, and I believe so special about Coupeville, is how the entire town would support the team.

“Small schools and their towns seem to have that closeness with their teams,” he added. “It felt like the movie Hoosiers at Coupeville during basketball season.”

Riley, who fondly remembers the run to state in ’70 (he was a last-minute selection as a freshman when another player was injured), tempers that with a bit of sadness over his highly-rated ’72 squad falling just short and being knocked out a step away from state by La Conner.

But through good times and bad, the sport remains his favorite, and one he is still active in today.

While he gave up playing in 2008 after a hip replacement, he has been involved in sponsoring teams at the 3A/4A state tourneys in Tacoma for many years.

“Basketball was the best sport because it has kindled a love for the game to this day,” Riley said. “I still believe that high school basketball is the purest form of the game.

“For the last 14 years I have been able to be with the players and coaches, at practices, in the locker room and meals when they come to the Tacoma Dome for three days.

“It’s penance for not making it in 1972, I suppose,” he said with a laugh. “In a sense I get to go every year to the state tourney, living it thru the teams I sponsor.”

The one-time prep sports star grew up to get an undergraduate degree in Business Finance and an MBA, and has been involved in real estate brokerage, investment, property management, construction and land development since 1978.

As he’s progressed through the business world, Riley has used sports lessons to shape modern-day decisions.

“So many lessons to be learned from playing sports — competition, leadership, working together for a common goal are all attributes that have helped me in business,” he said. “Having good mentors at an impressionable age was invaluable.

“I specifically remember Coach Barker using the term “we were a poised team” in 1972 after coming back and winning the Kings Garden game,” Riley added. “I believe we were down double digits late in the fourth quarter.

“Winning games, sometimes by small margins, provided a great lesson on remaining calm during times of stress and has helped me in business.”

Riley’s daughter, who followed her dad into the business world, is 30 now, and if he ends up with athletic grandchildren, the former Wolf ace will be quick to help the newest generation.

“I would help them aspire towards competitive sports because it taught me so much about life, but only if they initially show a liking.”

As he looks back on his own fond memories and surveys the modern-day sports scene, Riley has one very important lesson to pass on.

“Soak it in; it goes by fast,” he said. “Never feel that you’re great or good enough; there is always something you can work on to make you and your game better.”

Read Full Post »

Wiley Hesselgrave was named First-Team All-League by 1A Olympic League coaches for the second straight season. (John Fisken photos)

   Wiley Hesselgrave was named First-Team All-League by 1A Olympic League coaches for the second straight season. (John Fisken photos)

Cameron Toomey-Stout took home a Mr. Hustle Award Tuesday night.

Cameron Toomey-Stout took home a Mr. Hustle Award Tuesday night.

So did Jordan Ford.

So did Jordan Ford (5).

Back-to-back.

Coupeville High School senior Wiley Hesselgrave capped his prep basketball career with a second straight selection as a First-Team All-League player.

Hesselgrave’s honor, which came after a vote by coaches in the 1A Olympic League, topped the awards given out Tuesday at a season-ending banquet for the Wolf boys’ hoops squads.

Fellow senior Jordan Ford (varsity) and sophomore Cameron Toomey-Stout (JV) were given the Mr. Hustle award by CHS coaches Anthony Smith and Dustin Van Velkingburgh.

Varsity letter winners:

Andre Avila
Desmond Bell
Beauman Davis
Jordan Ford
Jared Helmstadter
Wiley Hesselgrave
JJ Johnson
Risen Johnson
Dante Mitchell
DeAndre Mitchell
Hunter Smith
Gabe Wynn
BayLee Dunsmore
(manager)

Participation certificates:

Ariah Bepler
Hunter Downes
Gabe Eck
Ty Eck
Luke Merriman
Brian Shank
Cameron Toomey-Stout
James Vidoni

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »