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Posts Tagged ‘Bill Jarrell’

Hot-shooting Bill Jarrell (left) and Coach Bob Barker, key members of the 1975 state team, reunite in 2018. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Back to the big dance!

Thanks to Renae (Keefe) Mulholland, we’ve been working our way through radio broadcasts of some of the biggest games in Coupeville High School boys basketball history.

With her brother Randy singing the nets in the mid-1970s, their dad Tom used his “new realistic Radio Shack cassette deck” to record the work of KBRC play-by-play men.

Today’s broadcast is the second of two games the Wolves played at the 1975 state tournament, with Kiona-Benton the foe.

If you missed it, Coupeville’s first state tourney clash from that year can be found at:

State hoops glory comes alive again | Coupeville Sports

And now, on to game #2.

 

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Dorothy Keefe keeps an eye on those rascals, Randy Keefe (middle) and Bill Jarrell. (Renae Mulholland photo)

We’re off to Spokane.

Renae (Keefe) Mulholland has been digitizing cassettes from her father’s collection of radio broadcasts, and this time out we’re at the big dance.

The Coupeville High School boys basketball team clashes with Lind in the first of two games it played at the 1975 state tourney, and we have the radio call to prove it.

The game you can listen to below was part of Coupeville’s second of five trips (so far) to the state tourney.

The first came during the go-go 1969-1970 campaign, and the first Wolf win on the sport’s biggest stage would come almost exactly a year after this Lind game.

On March 4, 1976, CHS, featuring some of the same players who made the trip to state in 1975, such as Bill Jarrell, Foster Faris, and Marc Bissett, bounced Columbia (Burbank) 80-63.

That, along with a 62-51 win over Montesano March 1, 1979, remain the only tourney wins for a Coupeville boys basketball program which sits at 2-10 all-time at state.

But, the future is an unknown. Who knows how many state wins may be lurking right around the corner?

As you wait for that, and as the current players work for that, take a moment to bask in past glory.

 

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   Bill Jarrell, whose 415 points in 1975-1976 still stands as the fifth-best individual season in CHS boys basketball history, slices to the hoop. (Photos courtesy Brad Sherman and Bill Jarrell)

The 1974-1975 squad, the second Wolf team to make it to state.

The bright-faced Wolf stars of the ’50s.

   Randy Keefe remains the #3 scorer in school history, and is the only man to have two Top 10 individual seasons, scoring 398 in 1974-1975 and 397 a year later.

   The 1975-1976 Wolves were the first to win a game at state, drilling Columbia (Burbank) 80-63.

The pride of the prairie in 1952-1953.

Two weeks and counting.

If you played, coached, managed, took stats, played in the band or cheered from the stands during a Coupeville High School boys basketball game, Jan. 19 looms large.

That’s the 101st anniversary of the first hoops game in CHS history (a 29-7 win over Langley in 1917), and the current Wolves host Chimacum that night (5:15 tip).

The school is commemorating the moment with a celebration that night, which will include an expanded game program focusing on the history of the program.

The record-setting 1969-1970 team will be honored at halftime, and, after the game, all former Wolves in attendance are invited to take part in an epic “team” photo.

As we count down the days towards then, I’m searching for Wolf hoops photos from any years.

If you have them, shoot them to me at davidsvien@hotmail.com.

The pics seen above capture two different generations at play — the trailblazers from the early ’50s and the gunners from the mid-’70s.

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   Jeff Rhubottom (top, left) is joined by (clockwise from top right) Bill Jarrell, Randy Keefe and Terry (Perkins) Powell (wearing blue necklace).

Better late than never.

As I’ve constructed the one-man, semi-real shrine to excellence known as the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, I’ve zigged and I’ve zagged, plucking excellence from all decades.

And yet, I would be the first to admit, my decision-making process has always been at least slightly suspect.

Some people got in really early, and sometimes, for a thousand different reasons, some of the most qualified have been left to bide their time outside the doors of our digital hall.

Almost always it wasn’t intentional. I promise.

Today, we’re making up for that, at least a little, with the induction of four of the most talented Wolves to ever put a basketball into the bucket.

They all played multiple sports, and were standouts regardless of the season, but, with my recent deep dive into the CHS basketball records — which exist in a million little pieces — this fab four looms even larger.

So, way, way, WAAAAAAAYYYYYYYY overdue, let’s welcome Randy Keefe, Terry (Perkins) Powell, Bill Jarrell and Jeff Rhubottom to the Hall o’ Fame.

After this, you’ll find them up at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab, which is something they’ve always been, even if this writer has taken forever to get them enshrined.

Our first inductee, Powell, stands as one of the first true girls basketball stars in Central Whidbey history.

She led the Wolves in scoring for three consecutive seasons, tossing in 194 points in 1984-1985, 165 in the ’85-’86 campaign, then topping things off with a 314-point barrage in ’86-’87.

Working in tandem with fellow Hall o’ Famer Marlene Grasser (who netted 307 points that year), Powell was the leader of the first CHS girls hoops team to advance to the playoffs.

At the time of her graduation, Powell held the school single-season and career scoring marks for girls.

The increased pace of the game and addition of the three-point shot allowed a handful of other Wolves to eventually catch and pass her, but she remains #7 in career scoring with 673 points.

Her fellow inductees dominated in the ’70s, and the fact all three remain in the top 10 with both career and single-season scoring marks, is made more remarkable by two facts.

One, they all played before everyone and their brother got three points for hitting a shot behind the arc, and two, they suited up at a time when ninth graders either didn’t play high school basketball or were firmly affixed to the very end of the bench by their coaches.

That didn’t stop any of the three, though.

Keefe and Jarrell’s high school hoops careers ran from the ’73-’74 season (their sophomore campaign) through a journey to the state tourney in ’75-’76 as seniors.

One was maybe the most consistent scorer in school history, while the other caught his buddy at the end with a season for the ages.

CHS boys basketball has played 100 seasons (1917-2017), and Keefe owns two of the 10 best single season performances.

He rattled home 293 points as a sophomore, 398 as a junior (#7 all-time) and 397 as a senior (#8 all-time), leaving him with 1,088 points, third-best in program history.

Only two guys beat him, Jeff Stone (1137) and Mike Bagby (1104), and Stone had to throw down an Island-record 644 points as a senior to assure that, while Bagby, playing in the modern era, got a full four years as a varsity starter.

Jarrell didn’t come out of the gate quite as quickly as his running mate, settling for 83 points as a sophomore, fifth-best on that year’s team.

Then, something clicked and he went off for 357 points as a junior and 415 as a senior.

Snapping Keefe’s two-year run as team scoring champ, Jarrell’s senior heroics stand as the fifth-best single-season performance, and his 855 points lands him at #10 on the career list.

That ’75-’76 squad was one of the best the school ever had, and, along with the hot-shooting senior duo of Keefe and Jarrell, the Wolves got a huge contribution from a rampaging 6-foot-4 sophomore named Rhubottom.

He pounded away for 228 points as a sophomore, then took on even more of the scoring load over the next two seasons.

Rhubottom knocked down 325 as a junior (backing up Foster Faris, who went off for 348), then unleashed a beat-down as a senior.

By the time he was finished with the ’77-’78 season, Rhubottom had 459 points, which remains the second-best single season in school history, boys or girls, trailing just Stone’s once-in-a-century performance.

His 1012 career points will have him sitting #4 on that list when CHS raises a basketball record board.

Now, of course, we haven’t talked about the hundreds upon hundreds of rebounds hauled down, the assists doled out, the steals made off, or all the small plays this four-pack made.

But, even just talking about their scoring ability, it’s easy to see why Powell, Keefe, Jarrell and Rhubottom remain among the biggest stars to ever grace the CHS hardwood.

Hall o’ Famers, one and all, even if they had to wait way too long for it to be “official.”

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Bob Barker

Bob Barker, old school style. (Photo courtesy Jeff Stone)

Curt Youderian

Modern-day Curt Youderian, with daughter Corynn. (Photo courtesy Corynn Youderian)

Bob Barker spent 31+ years at Coupeville High School, working as a teacher, coach and Athletic Director, affecting countless lives over the years.

A 1959 grad of what would become Western Washington University, he led baseball and basketball (both boys and girls) teams at CHS, taking three to state.

Hailed by his former players as “the best coach I ever had” and “one of the three or four people who shaped who I am today,” his impact lingers long after his retirement.

In this series, Barker responds to my questions as only he can, eloquently and passionately.

Today’s question: “If you had to pick a highlight from your coaching career, what would it be and why?”

David,

In response to your final question:

I have already mentioned several highlights, concerning championships, district tournaments, and state tournament entries, etc.

However, there is one that I have not yet mentioned and it concerns the boy’s 1973 – 1974 basketball team.

Out of the 12 years that I coached boys varsity basketball, it is the only team that lost more games than it won. 

Now, one might make the assumption that it was a year and team, that as coach, I would be most likely to forget.

Actually, just the opposite of that is true as I have fond memories of that team and take great pride in its accomplishments.

The team consisted of four seniors, Steve Bisset, Les Jacobson, Rick Keefe and Curt Youderian.

If my memory serves me, Curt had dropped out of sports for a couple of years and decided that as a senior he would like to give it another try. 

At 6-foot-1, Curt was our so called “big man.” 

Junior Scotty Franzen was probably our most experienced player. 

In addition we had three sophomores, Randy Keefe, Bill Jarrell and Mark Bissett, who all would later play big roles in getting Coupeville entries into state basketball tournaments in 1975 and 1976.

We knew at the beginning of the season that scoring was not going to be our strong point so we spent a great deal of time on practicing our defensive schemes. 

There isn’t a lot of glamour to defense and it takes a lot of hard work and effort. 

But defense kept us in most games and due to the positive leadership demonstrated by the aforementioned seniors and the development of the sophomores I found this to be one of my most enjoyable years in coaching.

Sincerely,

Bob Barker

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