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Posts Tagged ‘Athletic Director’

Jon Atkins

He’s movin’ on up.

Former Coupeville football coach Jon Atkins is now the Athletic Director at Mariner High School in Everett.

That’s a 4A institution which plays in Wesco.

Atkins, who is also an Assistant Principal at Mariner, made the job change public on Facebook Friday afternoon.

“Athletics has been a huge part of my life and now I get to serve in my dream job!” he wrote.

Atkins, who was also a girls’ basketball coach in Oak Harbor, worked the gridiron sidelines at Coupeville High School from 2016-2017.

He will be best remembered by Wolf Nation for posting a perfect record against archrival South Whidbey, leading Coupeville to back-to-back wins in the annual Bucket Game.

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Willie Smith, possibly up to shenanigans. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

As he prepares for his exit, let’s hear from the man himself.

It was publicly announced Friday that Willie Smith was stepping down as Coupeville High School/Middle School Athletic Director at the end of the 2023-2024 school year.

That puts a cap on his second run in the role, which began in 2016.

Previously Smith, who plans to teach PE one more year, held the AD position from 2005-2010.

He’s been a coach or AD in Coupeville for three decades, after surprising himself by being hired after thinking he had bombed his initial interview with Cow Town administrators.

But now, the man who left Sequim, his alma mater, to start life on Whidbey Island with wife Cherie, has left a long and lasting legacy.

In his letter to Coupeville Schools Superintendent Steve King and CHS/CMS Principal Geoff Kappes, the man at the forefront of Wolf sports talked about his reasons for stepping down, and his hopes for the future.

 

I am writing to inform you that I am resigning as middle and high school athletic director, effective at the end of the school year.

I am resigning for the following reason(s):

I’ve been either coaching or an athletic director every year of my employment while at Coupeville School District and while it’s been an extremely rewarding and positive experience, I feel like now is the time for me to step away and pursue other challenges.

While choosing to step away I do want to be a resource for the next athletic director during the transitional period.

I believe it will be very important for the next athletic director to have a resource available from somebody that has been in the same position (teacher/athletic director) and can assist them in any way needed.

I believe that the athletic department is in good shape.

It has a solid staff who are caring, professional, hardworking, and understand the importance of athletics in our schools today.

We’ve worked hard to create a positive environment that sees the benefits for all student-athletes no matter what level they may be and values their contributions no matter how big or small.

We have become a fiscally successful and responsible department, tasked with raising nearly all of our own funds for operation without overburdening our very supportive community.

Whomever takes over will be walking into a situation that is successful, education-driven, with high standards and positive contributions to our school district.

With all of that being said the position of athletic director is very vital to the health of our athletic department and continuing the model we have used during my tenure has, and will continue to be, the best model for our programs.

Having a past or current coach as the athletic director creates a bridge for our programs and allows the athletic director to focus on athletics rather than splitting their time among other administrative duties.

While many districts have used the assistant principal/athletic director model, the trend is moving back to a teacher/athletic director model based on the reality of their responsibilities.

Both jobs entail a great amount of time, effort, and focus and the reality is that one area will be focused on while the other is not.

It is my recommendation therefore that Coupeville continue using a current or past coach as the athletic director and not hire an assistant principal to take on the role of athletic director.

I am proud to have served our district, community, and students as the athletic director and as a coach for so many years.

It has been an amazing place for me to raise my family and I am very proud of the work that myself, our coaches, community, and schools have put in to make Coupeville School District a great representative of what a school community should truly look like.

Sincerely,

Willie Smith

“I’m taking my balls and going home!!”

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Willie Smith, best dressed athletic director in the state? (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One more year in the gym, but with a lot less stress.

Willie Smith, the last of a “trinity” of longtime Coupeville High School/Middle School coaches/teachers/admins, is moving towards joining former compatriots Ron Bagby and Randy King on the sidelines.

He plans to teach one more year of PE but will step down as Athletic Director at the end of this school year.

That will put a cap on Smith’s second run as Coupeville’s AD, which began in 2016. He previously held the position from 2005-2010.

After arriving from Sequim in 1994, Smith has been actively involved in Wolf athletics at every level for the past three decades.

As a coach, he led the girls’ varsity basketball program from 1994-2000, advancing to state twice and earning the school’s first-ever big dance win for a girls’ team in any sport.

Smith also was a CHS football assistant coach from 1995-2011, ran the middle school program for three years, and put in 19 years at the helm of the Wolf varsity baseball team.

Coaching back when baseball guys wore stirrups, like God intended. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

During his AD stints, he set a high standard for his coaches and programs, with both high school and middle school teams collecting a wide range of awards, trophies, honors, and praise from rivals.

He has led CHS through life in both the 1A and 2B classifications, guided transitions through numerous leagues, and was a resolute leader during the pandemic.

Currently the Northwest 2B/1B League president, Smith is known and respected throughout the state.

Last year, right after CHS sports teams earned three academic state titles, on the heels of football and baseball advancing to state for the first time in decades, the AD position was put in jeopardy.

A list of proposed budget cuts included taking Smith’s admin duties away and giving them to an already overworked assistant principal.

The uproar was deafening.

In a very short time, school district officials were hammered from all sides, with numerous AD’s, coaches, fans, parents, and athletes – former and current – speaking out on his behalf.

The proposed cut was removed long before the final budget was approved by school board members.

Without skipping a beat, Smith continued to merrily chug along, doing what he has always done for three decades plus — put his athletes, coaches, and students first.

The Wazzu super fan has never been about the glitz and glamour or tooting his own horn.

Few realize how much time and effort he has put in, or how complicated the AD job is, especially in the modern world where cell phones make sure you can always be reached.

Taking a real vacation, or simply spending time with wife Cherie, is hard, as everyone with a question — including yours truly — is always looking for his calm answer.

There’s a rumor he once sat on a tree stump during a hunting trip, watching elk wander by and stick their tongues out at him, while he talked everyone through a football-related meltdown back at home.

Which goes a long way to explaining why now is the time for Smith to step aside and let a new generation live and die by the email tsunami.

Grandpa’s coming home. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“I’ve got five grandchildren I need to see,” he said.

“I’ve been coaching or involved on a direct basis with sports for 30 years here in Coupeville, and before that in Sequim.

“I have truly enjoyed it, but I’ve got other things to do.

“Need to figure out what that it is,” he chuckled. “But it’s time.”

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One of Coupeville’s most successful rivals is leaving the gridiron.

Brock Hauck has stepped down as Friday Harbor’s head football coach but will remain as the school’s athletic director.

“It was an extremely difficult decision but hopefully the right one,” Hauck said.

His counterpart in Coupeville expressed his appreciation for the Wolverines leader.

“Bummed by this news,” Bennett Richter said.

“As Brock’s opponent he has earned nothing but respect from me. His teams and staff were always well prepared, and he was nothing but a class act to me!

“I learned a lot about football being on the opposite side of him.”

Hauck, who led Friday Harbor to two Northwest 2B/1B League titles in the past three seasons, coached his final game (for now at least) in November, when his squad lost 32-14 to Kalama in the state playoffs.

He racked up more than a decade on the sideline, working as a defensive coordinator before becoming head coach in 2017.

In addition to coaching and working as AD, Hauck also teaches culinary classes at FHHS and is the school’s Capitol Projects Manager.

 

The Friday Harbor football coaching job is posted here:

https://seaintsol.net/wiaasecure/mywiaa/JobDetlWL.aspx?ID=cf46346a-be55-419a-af8d-013e313c8ee8

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Robby Sullivan elevates for a shot between Coupeville defenders Nick Guay (4) and William Davidson. The Wolves won handily in the final time South Whidbey AD Paul Lagerstedt will be involved in the rivalry. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

After a decade on the job, Paul Lagerstedt is retiring as South Whidbey High School Athletic Director.

The change was listed on the consent agenda for Wednesday’s school board meeting and his last day of employment will be June 30.

Lagerstedt, who is also an assistant vice principal, arrived at SWHS in 2015, after putting in 17 years at Thomas Jefferson High School in Auburn.

Along with being an AD, he has also worked as an English teacher and basketball coach.

That included a 10-year stint working with Mercer Island’s Ed Pepple, the winningest high school hoops coach in Washington state history.

During his time at South Whidbey, Lagerstedt worked closely with Coupeville AD Willie Smith, who said the friendly Falcon will be greatly missed.

Paul has become one of my closest circle of AD’s, and more importantly, a good friend,” Smith said.

“Such a high caliber of a person: ethical, high character, even-keeled, knowledgeable, and passionate about his school and students.

“South Whidbey will certainly have a tough time replacing him,” he added.

“Though, if I know Paul, he has someone that he has mentored and will continue building up what he has started and maintain the same level of professionalism and character driven programs that he has developed.

“Definitely one of the highlights of my 30 years of education is getting to work alongside, with, and befriending Paul.”

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