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Posts Tagged ‘Ann Pettit’

Maureen Wetmore (Photos courtesy the Willie Smith Archives) CAMERA

   Maureen Wetmore gets ready to break some fools in half. (Photos courtesy Willie Smith)

Willie Smith

CHS round-ball guru Willie Smith imparts wisdom to his squad.

They were the trailblazers.

As the current incarnation of the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad returns to state for the first time in a decade, we’re going back 18 years to honor the first Wolf girls’ hoops team to make that trek.

The 35th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame is a one-team affair, as we welcome the 1997-1998 CHS girls’ basketball team to these hallowed digital walls.

After this, they will sit at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

And that’s what they are, legends.

When Willie Smith showed up from the wilds of Sequim and took over the Wolf girls program four years earlier, he was inheriting a bit of a mess.

Not that far removed from an 0-20 season, Coupeville had rarely been a strong contender in girls hoops.

That began to change immediately, as Smith and a pack of freshmen led by soon-to-be all-time-greats Novi Barron and Ann Pettit started the uphill climb.

Four years later, with six seniors headlining an 11-player squad, the Wolves smashed all their accomplishments from the past.

The first league title in program history, a third-place finish at tri-districts, 18 wins and their first-ever appearance in the state tourney.

Once in Tacoma, they ran into a brutal schedule, having to face seventh-ranked Toledo and sixth-ranked Dayton, and, while they fought like beasts on both days, eventually bowed out.

But the seeds were planted, and two short seasons later the Wolf girls would capture their first-ever win at state in 2000.

Two players — Jaime Rasmussen and Rachelle Solomon — appeared on both squads, and the manager on the ’97-’98 team, eighth grader Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, would grow up to be a First-Team All-League player as a sophomore on the 2000 squad.

She learned from the best, watching Barron (versus Granite Falls) and Pettit (Vashon Island) each drop 29 points in a game in ’97-’98.

Ellsworth-Bagby also picked up her scrappy defensive style from a then-junior who she would join on the court the following year.

Maureen Wetmore was a tough as nails guard who wasn’t afraid to do the dirty work,” Smith said. “Great defender and as a senior, Ashley’s freshman year, became leading scorer and mentor to Ashley and the rest of the team.”

From top to bottom, the ’97-’98 team were ball-hawks, tough-nosed young women on the court who took on the persona of their coach and changed the way Coupeville girls’ basketball was viewed.

Now, 18 years later, their legend still looms large and provides inspiration to the current Wolves.

When you stand tall and expect to win, when you prepare and play to win, when you refuse to listen to the past and embrace the future, anything is possible.

Back together, as a team, which was how they always played, the 1997-1998 CHS girls’ basketball team:

Willie Smith (coach)
Cherie Smith (assistant coach)
Novi Barron
Stephanie Kipp
Hilary Kortuem
Ann Pettit
Jennifer Pettit
Jaime Rasmussen
Jess Roundy
Rachelle Solomon
Danielle Vracin
Kim Warder
Maureen Wetmore
Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby (manager)

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Ann Pettit (top, left) joins her fellow inductees (bottom, l to r) Tom Roehl, Amy Briscoe, Dalton Engle and Mitch Pelroy.

   Ann Pettit (top, left) joins fellow inductees (bottom, l to r) Tom Roehl (with son Virgil), Amy Briscoe, Dalton Engle (with dad Michael) and Mitch Pelroy.

The 2014-2015 CHS varsity girls' hoops squad. (John Fisken photos)

The 2014-2015 CHS varsity girls’ hoops squad. (John Fisken photos)

The 2014-2015 Wolf JV squad, which went 9-0 in league play to match the varsity.

The 2014-2015 Wolf JV squad, which went 9-0 in league play to match the varsity.

How do you choose who goes in the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame?

Bribes. It’s all about the bribes. So start baking those chocolate chip cookies…

Now that we’ve gotten that out of the way, it’s time to welcome the 10th class into these hallowed digital walls, forever to live on at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

Welcome to the stage Dalton Engle, Ann Pettit, Mitch Pelroy, Tom Roehl, Amy Briscoe and (no, it’s not too soon) the 2014-2015 Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team.

Leading us off is the most unsung of the group, the glue who helps hold Wolf athletics together, Mrs. Briscoe.

The ultimate den mother, Amy is the sort of indispensable, take no crap but love ’em all parent every school needs.

That CHS has her is a huge win.

She’s given the Wolves two talented daughters, Tiffany and Kyla, but she goes in to the Hall for the way she takes care of all of her daughters (and sons).

A fierce fighter and protector of every kid who crosses her path, Amy knows when to hug and when to put her foot between someone’s butt cheeks, and she does both with compassion and heart (and fresh baked brownies).

Wolf Nation, and its athletes, could have no finer force ‘o nature watching over them, day and night.

Joining her in entering the hall is another larger than life presence, the late Tom Roehl.

Like Amy, he spent countless hours helping the children of Coupeville.

From his years as Ron Bagby’s right-hand man with the CHS football program to the time he poured into keeping youth basketball hoppin’ in Cow Town, he gave his all.

And, while his passing left a huge hole, his family has kept his memory and his lessons alive over the years, giving out numerous scholarships in his name through their foundation.

Coach Roehl’s impact will filter down through generations to come, and it is an honor to add him to our little club.

The Wolf football program that he dedicated so much time to has produced a long list of stellar players, and two of the best in recent memory go into the Hall with him.

Engle, who followed the path set by his dad Michael, is on the school record board for the most career tackles, but it was his leadership which shone above all else.

A quiet, confident guy who led by example and never backed down on the field, he was a rock for the Wolves.

Pelroy was just as important, a zippy, highlight-reel-producing receiver and defensive back who excelled in the return game, a track star leaving would-be tacklers in his dust.

His speed, and his hard work, carried him to college, where he continues to shine for Montana Western while rockin’ the best hair in the biz.

Our fifth inductee is one of the best basketball players to ever rep the red and black. And it ain’t even close.

A two-time Offensive Player of the Year (1996, 1997) and the team’s MVP in 1998, Pettit scored in bursts and teamed with Zenovia Barron to form arguably the most dangerous one-two attack Wolf hoops has ever had.

How potent was she?

In her varsity debut as a sophomore, she entered the game in the third quarter … then ripped off 18 points.

CHS coach Willie Smith, in one of his many brilliant moves, started Pettit every game for the rest of her career.

Her brightest moment may have come during her senior season, when Coupeville upended Bellevue Christian to reach the state tourney, with Pettit shutting down BC’s Cathrine Kraayeveld (currently in her 11th season in the WNBA).

Shutting people down was the hallmark of our final inductee, last year’s Wolf girls’ basketball team.

Led by league MVP Makana Stone and a six-pack of skilled seniors, Coupeville romped to a title in the inaugural season of the 1A Olympic League, hanging the first new championship banner in the CHS gym in 13 years.

Young women who had not seen their school win a title in any sport since they were kindergartners made an epic statement, and they did it in style, winning all nine league games by 15 or more points.

Even more impressively, the Wolf JV also went 9-0, drilling Klahowya, Port Townsend and Chimacum and we are honoring the entire squad today.

For going 18-0 in league play. For sweeping away the past and kick-starting a new era, an era in which the howl of the Wolves sends shivers down the spines of other teams.

Inducted, together, as a team, the 2014-2015 CHS girls’ basketball squad:

David King (coach)
Amy King (coach)
McKenzie Bailey
Kyla Briscoe
Tiffany Briscoe
Lauren Grove
Hailey Hammer

Brisa Herrera
Kailey Kellner

Kacie Kiel
Skyler Lawrence
Mia Littlejohn
Mattea Miller
Julia Myers
Lauren Rose
Makana Stone
Madeline Strasburg
Wynter Thorne
Monica Vidoni
Allison Wenzel

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Ann Pettit (left) with partner Christina Parker.

Ann Pettit (left) with partner Christina Parker.

“Everything, and I mean everything in my life is based off of basketball in one way or another. My life has revolved around the ball like the earth does around the sun.”

Ann Pettit is one of the greatest basketball players in Coupeville High School history, a high-scoring sensation who helped lead the Wolf girls to their first-ever appearance at the state tournament.

The team’s Offensive Player of the Year in 1996 and ’97 and MVP in ’98, she excelled on the court and it was where she was the happiest.

“My best memories at CHS was when I played basketball,” Pettit said. “That was the only time I enjoyed myself.

“Our team coached kids, as well as went on tournaments, and camps together during the summers,” she added. “We had a great team, very well coached and organized. As a unit we were amazing.”

Pettit was a huge part of that success, making an impact from the first moment Wolf coach Willie Smith gave her varsity playing time.

Bouncing up from the JV team as a swing player her sophomore season, she didn’t enter her first game as a varsity player until the second half, yet still poured in 18.

“Coach Smith put me in during the third quarter, scared out of my mind for sure,” Pettit said. “I will never forget that game. From then on, I was a starter on varsity.”

Teaming with Zenovia Barron to form a formidable scoring duo, Pettit faced down considerable talent to lead the Wolves to state during her senior season in 1997-1998.

While Lakewood and King’s provided huge obstacles, the biggest might have come in the game that sent the Wolves to the Big Dance.

Facing off with Bellevue Christian — the same school Coupeville plays tonight in a district playoff game — Pettit found herself matched up with Cathrine Kraayeveld, now in her 11th season in the WNBA.

Despite giving up considerable height — Pettit was five-foot-nine and Kraayeveld is listed at 6-3 these days — the feisty Wolf held her own and a photo of her being swept up in a post-game hug by mom Julia anchored the Whidbey News-Times coverage of the game.

It is a moment she holds dear.

“My mom came to watch after work. She was so so proud of me,” Pettit said. “The photographer was there at the perfect moment.”

To get to that moment, and all the times she sparkled on the hardwood, Pettit put in considerable time working on her game.

If she had a chance to play, she seized it. Always.

“I played basketball year round. Sometimes I practiced twice a day,” she said. “I had a lot to learn, and skills to develop. I wanted basketball to take me someplace.

“Coupeville was small, still is, but I wanted to experience the sport at another level.”

It was a dream she lived out, playing ball for Peninsula College for two seasons, followed by a stint with York College in Nebraska while she attended Concordia University for fine arts.

Her time at Concordia, followed by the Art Institute of Portland, where she graduated in Design Visualization, led to her current work as a 3D artist.

No matter where she has been, or what work she’s pursuing, basketball has always been there for her.

After countless 3-on-3 tourneys and rec league action (once playing on three different teams at the same time), she is not playing as often as she approaches 35, but, when she does, she still comes full-tilt.

“I have been able to work hard, in work, in life with my dedications I learned through sports,” Pettit said. “I am a competitor. This world is full of competition, everywhere! It is a competition just to merge onto the freeway.

“Basketball itself made me who I am today.”

She’s also seen the game from the other side, coaching a JV girls’ basketball team for two years and handing down the lessons she learned to young players on her rec league teams.

“I want to coach again in the future. My heart will always be with the sport of basketball,” Pettit said.

“I always give the best advice I can while I play and when I coach,” she added. “I feel like now, I coach still with the younger 20’s ladies I play with.”

One of her favorite players, all-time hoops great Sheryl Swoopes, was featured in a Nike ad with the quote “Basketball is basketball, athletes are athletes.”

It is a quote Pettit believes deeply in.

“I always told my girls that. It is easy to get intimidated, and it is easy to intimidate,” Pettit said. “Believe me, there are girls who want to do just that. Always remember it’s basketball.

“She is an athlete just like you. No matter how tall, how fast. Next, the offensive player always has the advantage, and know it,” she added. “Finally, cherish every game like it is your last.

“High school seems like an eternity, but man, basketball was awesome then, love the game.”

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