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Julian Welling and his fellow CHS hurlers will be working under a pitch count this spring. (John Fisken photo)

   Julian Welling and his fellow CHS hurlers will be working under a pitch count this spring. (John Fisken photo)

When you talk about what are arguably the two greatest pitching performances in Coupeville High School history, one fact is crystal clear today — no one is matching them in 2017.

I’m talking about Bob Rea going 16 innings and whiffing 27 Darrington batters in a 2-1 win and Ray Cook taking down 21 sluggers in a 13-inning playoff game in ’76.

And why could they not be duplicated this season?

It has nothing to do with the talent of current Wolf hurlers like Hunter Smith or Julian Welling, and all to do with a brand-new rule instituted by the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association.

Effective immediately, no high school baseball pitcher in our state will be allowed to throw more than 105 pitches in a calendar day.

And, if they do hit that limit, or come within 29 pitches of it, they can’t pitch for the next three calendar days.

Seriously.

The days of making a run behind a true ace are gone.

Better to have a deep staff of halfway decent pitchers than one fireball-blazing stud in the “touchy-feely, can-I-encase-that-arm-in-bubble-wrap” age we’re entering.

Warm-ups pitches don’t count, but anything in the flow of the game does.

Score-book keepers will be expected to track pitch counts, with the home book the official final word, and both teams are supposed to confer after every inning to check the counts.

Umpires have no control over pitch counts.

And yes, a pitcher would have to leave in the middle of facing a hitter if he tops out.

Cue every batter in the world trying to perfect the 20-pitch at-bat, nicking foul ball after foul ball.

Violate the pitch count limits and get caught? You’re going to be smacked the same as if you got caught using an ineligible player.

Forfeit city, baby.

The limits:

76-105 pitches = 3 rest days
51-75 pitches = 2 rest days
31-50 pitches = 1 rest day
1-30 pitches = 0 rest days

So, if Smith throws 76 pitches on Mar. 15 against Chimacum, CHS can’t use him on the mound in its next two games — Mar. 17 vs. Sequim or Mar. 18 vs. South Whidbey — because he’s not eligible to pitch again until Mar. 19.

He could play in the infield, but step near the mound and the WIAA enforcement police will take him down with a dart gun.

Allegedly.

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Jae LeVine (John Fisken photos)

   Jae LeVine and the Wolf softball squad get 12 of 20 games on their home field. (John Fisken photos)

William Nelson

William Nelson and CHS soccer kick off spring sports action Mar. 11.

Sage Renninger (left) and Payton Aparicio

   Sage Renninger (left) and Payton Aparicio will have to be road warriors, with tennis playing 60% of its matches away from Coupeville.

Shane Losey

Shane Losey and Co. open their season with six of their first 10 at home.

Fleet-footed Abby Parker, perfectly capturing the look of the spring athlete who kind of wished the season didn't start until June.

   Fleet-footed Abby Parker, perfectly capturing the look of every track athlete who kind of wished the season didn’t start until June.

Now, we’re not trying to hurry basketball out of the gym.

Having endured more than one “spring” on the prairie, I would be perfectly willing to wait until May or June for spring sports to start.

But, the powers that be don’t agree with me, so here we are, less than three weeks until the first day of practice pops up Monday, Feb. 27.

The first games hit Saturday, Mar. 11, and the first time we’ll ever be warm at a game will arrive the day AFTER spring sports end.

Anyway… Here’s your 98.3% correct schedules.

While there may be a tweak or two to come (and weather can, and will, mess everything up at some point), this is pretty close to being ready for the ol’ lamination machine.

Three side notes here.

One, CHS track gets its first home meet in many a year, as the brand-new oval makes its debut Mar. 30.

And your eyes don’t deceive you — the Wolf softball squad gets an honest-to-goodness home doubleheader Apr. 3, when they welcome Blaine to town during Spring Break.

Finally, baseball’s opening day, especially if you look at it on the Olympic League site, is a little confusing.

It lists the Wolves playing at home against La Conner and on the road at Lynden Christian, when in reality both games will be played on the road.

It’s a three-team doubleheader at Lynden, with Coupeville considered the home team in the La Conner game … even though they won’t really be at home.

Got that?

The diamond women have the spring’s most favorable schedule, with 12 of 20 at home.

Baseball (10 of 20 or “11” of 20, if we’re counting the road “home” game) and boys soccer (8 of 15) also play on Whidbey more times than not.

Only girls tennis (6 of 15) and track (1 of 8) will be true road warriors.

The varsity schedules (* = Olympic League games):

BASEBALL

Sat-Mar. 11 — DH @ Lynden Christian (vs. La Conner 1:00 and LC 3:30)
Wed-Mar. 15 — @ Chimacum (*) — 3:30
Fri-Mar. 17 — Sequim — 3:30
Sat-Mar. 18 — South Whidbey — 1:00
Mon-Mar. 20 — Bremerton — 4:00
Fri-Mar. 24 — @North Mason — 3:30
Sat-Mar. 25 — Vashon Island — 1:00
Mon-Mar. 27 — Sultan — 4:00
Wed-Mar. 29 — Klahowya (*) — 3:30
Fri-Mar. 31 — @ Port Townsend (*) — 3:30
Sat-Apr. 8 — @ Cedarcrest — 1:00
Wed-Apr. 12 — Chimacum (*) — 3:30
Sat-Apr. 15 — Friday Harbor — 2:00
Mon-Apr. 17 — @ Sequim — 3:30
Fri-Apr. 21 — @ Klahowya (*) –3:30
Wed-Apr. 26 — Port Townsend (*) — 3:30
Fri-Apr. 28 — @ Chimacum (*) — 4:15
Mon-May 1 — Klahowya (*) — 3:30
Wed-May 3 — @ Port Townsend (*) — 3:30

BOYS SOCCER

Sat-Mar. 11 — @ Olympic — 1:15
Tues-Mar. 14 — Chimacum (*) — 6:45
Fri-Mar. 17 — Sequim — 5:15
Tues-Mar. 21 — @ Forks — 3:30
Fri-Mar. 24 — North Mason — 6:45
Tue-Mar. 28 — @ Klahowya (*) — 3:30
Fri-Mar. 31 — Port Townsend (*) — 6:45
Mon-Apr. 3 — @ Vashon Island — 5:30
Tues-Apr. 11 — @ Chimacum (*) — 6:45
Fri-Apr. 14 — Port Angeles — 6:45
Sat-Apr. 22 — Port Townsend (*) — 6:45
Tues-Apr. 25 — Klahowya (*) — 6:45
Fri-Apr. 28 — @ Port Townsend (*) — 6:45
Tues-May 2 — Chimacum (*) — 6:45
Fri-May 5 — @ Klahowya (*) — 5:30

GIRLS TENNIS

Mon-Mar. 13 — @ Port Angeles — 3:00
Tue-Mar. 14 — @ South Whidbey — 3:30
Thur-Mar. 16 — Sequim — 3:30
Tues-Mar. 21 — @Kingston — 4:00
Thur-Mar. 23 — Klahowya (*) — 3:30
Mon-Mar. 27 — Olympic — 3:15
Wed-Mar. 29 — @ Granite Falls — 3:30
Mon-Apr. 10 — @ North Kitsap — 4:00
Wed-Apr. 12 — North Mason — 3:30
Fri-Apr. 14 — @ Chimacum (*) — 4:00
Tues-Apr. 18 — Klahowya (*) — 3:30
Tues-Apr. 25 — Chimacum (*) — 3:30
Wed-Apr. 26 — @ South Whidbey — 3:30
Thur-Apr. 27 — @ Klahowya (*) — 4:00
Thur-May 4 — @ Chimacum (*) — 4:00

SOFTBALL

Sat-Mar. 18 — South Whidbey — 1:00
Fri-Mar. 24 — @ North Mason — 3:30
Sat-Mar. 25 — Vashon Island — 1:00
Wed-Mar. 29 — Klahowya (*) — 3:30
Fri-Mar. 31 — @ Port Townsend (*) — 3:30
Mon-Apr. 3 — Blaine (DH) — 11:00/1:00
Fri-Apr. 7 — @ Meridian — 4:00
Wed-Apr. 12 — Chimacum (*) — 3:30
Sat-Apr. 15 — Friday Harbor — 2:00
Thur-Apr. 20 — La Conner — 4:00
Fri-Apr. 21 — @ Klahowya (*) — 3:30
Sat-Apr. 22 — Lynden Christian — 2:00
Wed-Apr. 26 — Port Townsend (*) — 3:30
Fri-Apr. 28 — @ Chimacum (*) — 3:30
Mon-May 1 — Klahowya (*) — 3:30
Wed-May 3 — @ Port Townsend (*) — 3:30
Thur-May 4 — Sequim — 3:30
Mon-May 8 — @ Chimacum (*) — 3:30
Wed-May 10 — @ Sequim — 3:30

TRACK

Thurs-Mar. 16 — @ Island Jamboree in Oak Harbor — 3:30
Thur-Mar. 23 — @ Port Angeles (Kingston, Olympic) — 3:15
Thur-Mar. 30 — CHS home meet (opponents TBA) — 3:15
Wed-Apr. 12 — @ Olympic (North Kitsap, Sequim) — 3:15
Sat-Apr. 15 — @ Cashmere Invitational — 12:00
Thur-Apr. 20 — @ Port Angeles (Port Townsend, Sequim) — 3:15
Sat-Apr. 22 — @ Lil’ Norway Invitational in North Kitsap — 10:00
Thur-Apr. 27 — @ Port Townsend (North Mason, Olympic) — 3:15

To stay up to date as the spring unfolds in all its (probably) rainy, blustery glory, keep an eye on:

Olympic Leaguehttp://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?pid=0.21.0.0.200

Coupeville Schoolshttp://coupeville.tandem.co/

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Jon Diem heads to the hoop while playing for Oak Harbor High School. (Photos courtesy Sherry Roberts)

   Jon Diem heads to the hoop while playing for Oak Harbor High School. (Photos courtesy Sherry Roberts)

The basketball slides along the young boy’s fingertips for a moment, and then, in one smooth motion, it arcs skyward.

The young boy holds his breath, the ball hits nothing but the bottom of the net, and the young boy exhales, a superstar already on the cracked cement court.

And then the young boy is a young man, and now he’s wearing his school’s uniform, but the look in his eyes, the smile on his face, the feeling of the ball slipping off his fingertips, are all the same.

This time, when the ball hits the bottom of the net, a referee’s hands shoot skyward, the young man’s friends, family and classmates go crazy and the young man is a superstar again, but in a different world.

And then the young man is a grown man, living in the real world, helping nurture the daughter who will continue to carry his name forward, and he is a superstar still.

One day, the grown man, who has endured much hardship in his life, but has remained, against all odds, a kind, caring soul described as “the most talented and humble athlete I have ever known,” leaves our world, too soon.

The sound of the basketball rhythmically hitting the court, the baseball thunking into his mitt, fades, but his memory does not.

For his family, and his friends — which included everyone he played with and against — Jon Diem will always be here.

Diem, who passed away just weeks shy of his 45th birthday, leaves behind seven siblings — brothers David, Michael and Robert and sisters Mary, Cathie, Nancy and Shawn — his father Charles and his beloved daughter Lexie.

Diem and daughter

Jon and daughter Lexie.

He was preceded in death by his mother, Sara, and will be laid to rest next to her at Coupeville’s Sunnyside Cemetery.

From the moment he popped into the world Feb. 26, 1972, Jon brought a light with him.

One of the most gifted athletes Coupeville has ever seen, he moved up to the big city (Oak Harbor) for high school.

A standout basketball and baseball player while wearing the purple and gold Wildcat uniforms, Diem graduated with the OHHS Class of 1991.

On the hard-court, Jon was a lights-out shooter from long range, a three-ball king in short shorts who lit up the scoreboards while running alongside teammates such as Tony Midyette, Manny Martucci, Pat Herms and Trig Johnson.

Many of the first games I covered for the Whidbey News-Times, in my fledgling journalism career, involved watching Diem drop bombs from all angles against teams like Marysville-Pilchuck or Shorewood.

There wasn’t a spot on the floor on which he didn’t feel confident launching a trey, and he hit an astonishing number of his efforts.

On the baseball field, he was a two-way threat, adept with the bat and his glove while roaming the infield for the ‘Cats.

baseball

Diem comes in hot during his diamond days.

Jon played baseball at OHHS from 1988-1991 and was the starting second baseman and cleanup hitter on the Wildcat team that placed second at the 3A state tourney in 1990.

“The thing I remember most about Jon after all these years was his gentleness,” said former longtime OHHS baseball coach Jim Waller. “Teenage boys probably don’t want to be called sweet, but that is the best way to describe him.

“He was quiet and thoughtful, selfless and caring. Although he was shy around the coaching staff, he liked to laugh and would play practical jokes on his teammates.”

As an athlete, Diem had raw talent for days, but it was his work ethic which caught his coach’s attention.

“He was a graceful athlete, one of those players who moved so fluidly that it appeared sports came easily to them,” Waller said. “Yes, he had natural talent, but his success wasn’t solely from his innate ability but from his hard work and dedication to the game.

“He had the qualities all coaches want in an athlete — a strong work ethic, a willingness to put the team first, a willingness to be coached, an ability to laugh and laugh at himself, a hunger to win, a respect for his opponents,” he added. “And, more importantly, those qualities are a mark of a good person as well as a high-character athlete.”

In the days after Jon’s passing, friends and former teammates poured out their love for him on Facebook, and their words paint a picture of a gifted athlete who was a better person.

Of a man who ultimately cared as much, or more, about others accomplishments as his own.

“He was such a stud,” wrote former CHS athletic star Ben Biskovich, who grew up alongside Diem in Coupeville. “Always the best athlete on the field and always so humble.

“When we were picking teams, I always wanted to be on his team.”

That was a thought echoed by Jason LaMont, whose own athletic experiences landed on a different side of the spectrum from Biskovich.

“He (Jon) always treated everyone nice, even me, who sucked at sports,” LaMont said. “Even as a kid, he was building people up.”

For Chris Potts, who stayed in contact with Diem long after high school, it was Diem’s approach to life, and not just sports, which made him so memorable.

“He was an amazing soul, with a humble confidence,” Potts said. “A happy-go-lucky approach to life.

“An amazing sense of humor that was punctuated by a crooked grin and a laugh that invited everyone to join in,” he added. “He had a heart just a chosen few are given in this life.”

Jon’s ability to be the best athlete in the room, or on the field, and yet never make anyone feel like he was lording it over them, carried on after his prep athletic career had ended.

He continued to play in his adult years, making new friends every step of the way.

“Playing together as an adult when it was for the pure love of the game and not the pressures of school, but back to the feeling of being a kid for a few hours,” Steve Van Rensum said.

“Rest easy old friend, teammate and brother. Sit fastball and don’t get cheated.”

In the distance, you can hear it, a soft sound at first that grows with each heartbeat.

The young boy twirls the basketball on his fingertip, then lets it drop into his palm. His breath slips out in a ragged burst and the ball slides off his hands, arcing skyward.

A soft bang as it hits the backboard, a softer swish as it drops through the hoop.

The young boy continues to shoot long after the sky has turned from afternoon into early evening.

It is his escape. It is his love.

The ball drops through the hoop, again and again, and he never stops shooting.

Tonight, and every night, Jon Diem lives on, out there on that court or diamond, in all of our memories.

Jon Diem (1972-2017)

Jon Diem (1972-2017)

A service for Jon Diem will be held at 11 AM Friday, Feb. 3 at Saint Augustine’s Catholic Church in Oak Harbor. It will be followed by a graveside burial at Sunnyside Cemetery in Coupeville.

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to Boeing Employee Credit Union.

A college fund has been set up for Jon’s daughter, Lexi Diem. It’s at Bank of America Acct: Lexie Diem college fund; routing #: 125000024; account #: 138122330559.

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Caleb Meyer (John Fisken photos)

Caleb Meyer goes low to field a screamer. (John Fisken photos)

Maddy Georges

   Maddy “Mad Dog” Georges prepares to crush the softball (and all of the pitcher’s hopes and dreams).

Act now, save now.

Registration for the spring Central Whidbey Little League baseball and softball seasons is underway, and, if you get your children signed up in the next six days, you’ll save a few bucks.

Registration runs through Mar. 31 (the season is Apr. 1-June. 1), but you get $10 off if you sign up by Jan. 31.

So, it’s a good thing I kept this story short. Just a little time to read it and a lot of time to go grab your discount.

To register, pop over to:

http://www.centralwhidbeylittleleague.com/Default.aspx?tabid=958723

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David Rochin

David Rochin

Amanda Allmer

Amanda Allmer (far left). (Photo courtesy Jon Crimmins)

There are good players, great players and then ones who really dominate.

The two superstars who form the 78th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame both firmly fall into that latter category.

Amanda Allmer only had one year at CHS, while David Rochin had two, but both left a sizable impact, and are fondly remembered by their coach, Willie Smith, who is taking the dais today to welcome them into the Hall.

After this you’ll find the duo up at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

First though, let’s take a few moments to bask in the afterglow of their vaunted prep careers.

Allmer joined CHS classmate Marnie Bartelson in traveling up to Oak Harbor to play for the Wildcats at a time before Coupeville had its own soccer program.

Anchoring the team in goal, she helped lead OHHS to a league title and a 4th place finish at the 1994 state tourney, then came back to CHS for basketball season, which is where Smith became the happiest coach in all the land at the news of her arrival.

Amanda Allmer, the only true center I ever had play for me and it was in my first year.

Great transfer from Juanita, parents bought, or had owned, the restaurant at the ferry and moved here her senior year.

As a first year coach, having a senior, who was not only extremely talented, but one of the finest leaders I ever had, was a godsend.

She was an extremely hard worker who never quit no matter what the score was.

She was an inside presence that allowed Zenovia Barron, Jen Canfield and Mika Hosek to operate on the perimeter; without Amanda in the middle the development of those three kids takes a lot longer.

She was a great role model for all of our future stars that played with her: in addition to those three we had Ann Pettit, Jen Eelkema and Vanessa Bodley, who all watched her toughness and ended up playing as hard as she did.

She was pretty unstoppable in the middle, and that was when we played in the Cascade Conference in some of the hey-days of the programs.

Sultan, Lakewood, and King’s were perennial league champs and had very strong programs and Amanda was an easy First-Team pick during that time.

As tough as she was on the court, she was as nice and respectful off of it; a great student, superb leader, and even better person.

I feel pretty fortunate to have got to coach her.

Jump forward into the early 2000s and Smith, firmly entrenched as Coupeville’s baseball coach, lucked into his second unexpected superstar.

David (daveed) Rochin (rochine): lived with one of our families here and was not a foreign exchange student as he attended both his junior and senior years.

I would say the best pure baseball player I got to coach here.

He played shortstop and pitcher for us and was unbelievable.

He had a rifle of an arm, great range, and was a great hitter (power and average) ending up hitting .455 his junior year then “dropping off” to .377 his senior year and leading the way in RBI’s and extra base hits both years.

What made him so special was he made everything look so effortless; to say he was smooth would be an understatement. It was just so fun to watch him play.

And he loved to play.

Intense but always with a smile and a quip, he combined with Justin Barnes, Ty Blouin and affable Jacob Henderson as perhaps the greatest quartet of one-liners and greatest goofs I’ve ever coached.

The four of them umpired our Little League baseball games, showing the backbone of our program’s future stars — James Smith, Casey Larson, Kyle Wilcox, Alex Evans, Zach Hauser, Jared Murdy, etc. — how fun the game could be (as well as how hard you needed to work).

The greatest moment for me, and I think for those four seniors was the first game of the year their senior year.

We had had a student transfer to South Whidbey for baseball and it just so happened that we played them first that year.

The game was close and we were up by a run or two in the top of the seventh with two outs and a runner at second; Barnes is on the mound with David at short, Ty at third, and Hendo at first.

As fate would have it, their former teammate steps up the plate; he squibbles a grounder to short and David comes in to make the play.

As he fields the ball, his feet go out from under him; the kid’s hustling down the line so instead of panicking, David simply raises to his knees and throws the kid out by two steps and we go berserk.

Of course David has a big ole grin on his face as he gets mobbed.

One of the nicest kids, perhaps best baseball player I have had, and one of the most memorable moments of my baseball coaching career.

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