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Jon Atkins (John Fisken photo)

   Jon Atkins is Coupeville’s fourth head football coach in the last seven years. (John Fisken photo)

CHS football assistant coaches Ryan King, Jonathan Martin and Brad Sherman.

   CHS football assistant coaches Ryan King, Jonathan Martin and Brad Sherman all had strong high school careers of their own.

New boss, not the same as the old boss.

As Jon Atkins prepares for his first season at the helm of the Coupeville High School football squad — he’s the school’s fourth head coach in the last seven years — he’s busy putting together a staff to help his transition.

Longtime assistant (and former Wolf player) Ryan King returns, while Brad Sherman and Jonathan Martin have joined the cause.

Martin, dad of Wolf senior running back Jacob Martin, is helping King work with the linemen, while Sherman, arguably the most successful quarterback in school history, is passing on his wisdom to his successors.

The 2003 CHS grad, who holds the school season and career record for most passing yards (don’t believe the “record” board in the school gym hallway) is tutoring Coupeville’s quarterbacks and defensive backs.

Sherman has already had an impact on junior Hunter Downes, who was the team’s starting quarterback last year until an injury sidelined him.

Healthy and raring to go, the young gunslinger is listening intently to what the old-school legend has to say.

“I actually really like him after only working with him for a couple of days,” Downes said. “He really knows what he’s talking about and all of his drills and everything that he has us do just makes sense and really helps.

“It is really cool to have someone to coach QB’s who was also a great QB himself,” he added. “I think he will be a great contributor to our success down the line.”

Martin was a standout athlete at Lind High School, where he played football for three seasons and basketball all four.

A 1991 grad, he averaged 19 points a game his senior year on the hard-court and was named to the All Bi-County squad.

He coached youth football in Oak Harbor for five seasons and is looking forward to the transition of working with older players.

“I thought it was time to increase my knowledge of the game and I thought working with Jon Atkins was a good opportunity to do just that,” Martin said. “Youth football is great, but I really want a more in-depth knowledge of a whole program.”

King, who anchored the Wolf line when Coupeville had its last winning season, back in 2005, connects the program’s past with its future.

He played for Ron Bagby, who spent 26 years running the Wolf gridiron program, and is entering his sixth season as a Coupeville coach.

King started at the middle school level in 2011, working as an assistant to Bob Martin, then joined the high school staff under head coach Tony Maggio in 2013.

For this year’s seniors, players like Clay Reilly and Mitchell Carroll, Atkins will be their third head coach.

They were there for the final two campaigns of Maggio’s three-season run, then had Brett Smedley for their junior year.

The one thing connecting them together for their entire four-year run as Wolves is King, the rock on which the Wolf program is built.

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The late, great Tom Roehl

   The late, great Tom Roehl (top left) is joined by (clockwise from top right) Joe Kelley, Rob Fasolo, Matt Helm, Ron Bagby, Willie Smith, Dustin Van Velkinburgh and Brad Sherman.

2001 was not a landmark season for Coupeville High School football.

Despite featuring several of the best players to ever wear the red and black, the Wolves closed their season with four straight league losses and finished 3-6 overall.

But, for one night, deep in the heart of Concrete on Oct. 5, 2001, Coupeville put on a performance which has stood the test of time.

As a tribute to longtime CHS assistant coach Tom Roehl, who passed away on this date in 2003, I’m looking back and recreating (as best I can) one of the games of which I think he would have been extremely proud.

I wasn’t there for the game, and I didn’t write about it at the time, as I was deep in my prime Videoville years then.

So, to do so, I’m using Coach Roehl’s own notes and stats from that night.

The season had opened with a loss to King’s, and then, just four days after 9/11, a second defeat on the road at Tacoma Baptist.

It was then the Wolves seemed to catch fire, ripping off back-to-back home wins over Charles Wright and Life Christian before traveling into the heart of the wilderness.

Eight years after This Boy’s Life had hit theaters and introduced the world to Leonardo DiCaprio (as a video store fanatic, I had already witnessed his immortal debut in 1991’s Critters 3…) the eyes of the nation were back on Concrete.

Well, maybe not the whole nation, but certainly Wolf Nation.

The stats for the first half are deceptive, with Wolf QB Brad Sherman piling up 112 yards through the air, as Coupeville led the yardage battle 147-114.

Yet they still trailed 14-8 at the break.

Sherman, who rightfully holds the CHS career passing records regardless of what the big board in the gym may currently say (stats don’t lie), gave Coupeville its only first-half points.

First the junior signal caller dropped a 15-yard scoring strike into the hands of senior tight end Joe Kelley, then Sherman rambled in on a two-point conversion run.

And yet, it wasn’t quite enough.

Now, I’d like to think there was a fiery halftime speech, either from head coach Ron Bagby (or maybe easily excitable, and always quote-worthy, assistant coach Willie Smith?) and the Wolves came flying out of the locker room looking for blood.

Don’t know why. Wasn’t there. And 15 years later, I doubt many of the players would remember.

If this was a movie, the speech would have touched on a nation rebuilding itself after the defining tragedy of the era, maybe a call to arms to show the hicks how football was played back on The Rock.

Whatever was said, whatever was done, it worked.

The second half was a defensive masterpiece, as the (possibly) amped-up Wolves completely shut down Concrete’s ability to move the ball.

After giving up 99 yards on the ground in the first half, Coupeville held the Lions to -12 after the break.

Concrete tried to run the ball 17 times in the second half and time after time Kelley, Mike Smart, Schuyler Porter, Rob Fasolo and Co. smacked the runners silly, driving them backwards.

And, while they were doing that, Coupeville’s version of a battering ram, one Daniel McDonald, was churning.

After rushing 13 times for 50 yards in the first half, McDonald went for 149 on 19 carries after halftime, leaving him one yard shy of 200 for the game.

To which I say to the stat keeper of the time, come on, man, you couldn’t have subtracted one yard from JD Myers (8 carries for 17 yards) and given McDonald an even 200?

Even without that extra yard, the 5-10, 170-pounder, who always ran like a bigger dude, crashed into the end zone three times in the second half.

The first, a three-yard burst in the third (followed by a PAT from Dustin Van Velkinburgh) pulled Coupeville within 17-15, while his next two — also identical three-yard smash-mouth lunges — finally turned the game for the Wolves.

Sherman plunged in on two-point conversions after both fourth-quarter scores to cap what would be the final Wolf win that season.

Losses to Archbishop Thomas Murphy, Friday Harbor, Orcas and La Conner would leave the Wolves at 1-4 in the final league standings.

But the Concrete win, a night when Coupeville stood tall and smacked a program known for toughness, will be the enduring legacy of 2001 Wolf football.

Looking through the stats, there are many key players, and not just the ones we’ve already listed like Kelley and Smart, who combined for 27 tackles.

Matt Helm collected seven tackles, pulled down a team-best 51 yards as a receiver and returned four kicks for 62 yards.

Austin Porter had six tackles and two sacks, Scott Fisher pilfered an interception, Brian Fakkema snagged a 34-yard heave from Sherman and Van Velkinburgh was on point with his kicks all night.

Was it the greatest win in school history? Probably not.

Was it the best-played game in school history? Doubt it.

But it was a win, the kind of victory where a thousand little moving parts all come together at the right moment to swing the day in favor of the good guys.

It was surely a great moment for those guys when they climbed on the bus for the long ride back to Whidbey, and it remains a great moment a decade-and-a-half later.

Tom Roehl devoted a lot of years and a lot of time, sweat and hard work to local kids, helping them better themselves as athletes and people.

As we remember him today, and every day, remember him the way I am sure he looked that night on the bus — wearing a huge smile.

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Kramer O'Keefe (John Fisken photo)

   Kramer O’Keefe (right) rained down 71 three-balls during his days as a Wolf sniper. (John Fisken photo)

Brad Sherman (Sherry Roberts photo)

   Between 1991-2011, there was no better trey launcher in Coupeville than Brad Sherman (right), seen here with dad Don. (Sherry Roberts photo)

It is the ultimate weapon in high school basketball.

Capable of sending a crowd through the roof or deflating them just as quickly, the three-point shot is the dagger.

A dunk can set off a gym, yes, but there are so few, at least in this neck of the woods, that you can go an entire season without seeing more than a handful, at best.

Even then, most of them are just straight on, two-hands-on-the-ball jams, promptly followed by coaches lecturing the player to “just lay the dang ball up already and stop giving me angina, son!”

But the trey, the three-ball, is here to stay. It’s a part of the fabric of the game, and a crowd-pleaser at that.

As I’ve been going through the score-books from Randy King’s 20-year run as varsity coach at Coupeville High School (1991-2011), I’ve been writing about a variety of things.

Sunday, I decided, on a whim, to see who made the most treys during those two decades. To set the record straight.

Well, almost, as I have 17 of the 20 books, with 2001-2002, 2003-2004 and 2009-2010 AWOL. But it’s a pretty good start.

So, what did I learn?

The most astonishing piece of info was this: Gavin Keohane, who scored nearly 700 points during his run at CHS, the same man I watched win the three-point shooting contest at this year’s alumni game by a WIDE margin, never hit a trey during a high school varsity game.

Ever.

Which means he hit exactly one less than six-foot-seven Hunter Hammer, who capped his 759-point prep career by draining a three-ball in the fourth quarter of his final game.

So, now you have a great piece of trivia. You’re welcome.

Anyway.

Keeping in mind that we’re missing three seasons (which greatly impacts the numbers of accomplished gunners like Brad Sherman, Mike Bagby, Brian Fakkema and Tyler King), here’s 85% of what dropped through the nets during Randy King’s reign.

Let the boasting begin.

Single game high:

Brian Fakkema (6) vs. Mount Vernon Christian on 12-6-02
Brad Sherman (6) vs. Archbishop Thomas Murphy on 2-7-03

Single season high:

Brad Sherman (62) in 02-03
Rich Morris (50) in 96-97
Pete Petrov (50) in 95-96
Brian Fakkema (46) in 02-03
Ty Blouin (39) in 99-00
Brad Sherman (39) in 00-01
Mike Bagby (38) in 04-05
Blake Day (32) in 04-05
Alex Evans (31) in 07-08
Tyler King (31) in 10-11

Career three-balls:

Brad Sherman (101) **Sophomore and senior seasons — junior year is one of the missing books**
Pete Petrov
(101)
Mike Bagby
(80)
Ty Blouin
(80)
Rich Morris
(78)
Kramer O’Keefe
(71)
Alex Evans
(48)
Brian Fakkema
(46)
Zepher Loesch
(42)
Caesar Kortuem
(41)
Blake Day
(35)
James Smith
(35)
Tyler King
(34)
JJ Marti
(33)
Troy Blouin
(28)
Casey Clark
(27)
Cody Peters
(27)
Trevor Tucker
(25)
Greg White
(22)
Geoff Wacker
(21)
Joe Donnellon
(15)
Boom Phomvongkoth
(15)
JD Wilcox
(13)
Arik Garthwaite
(12)
Matt Ortega
(12)
Jason Bagby
(11)
Jason Fisher
(11)
Bryan Hamilton
(11)
Casey Larson
(11)
Ben Hancock
(10)
Ian Smith
(10)
Michael Vaughan
(10)
Keith Dunnagan
(9)
Erick Harada
(8)
James Jorgenson
(7)
Joe Kelley
(6)
Dalton Engle
(5)
Andrew Mouw
(5)
Geoff Hageman
(4)
Jason McDavid
(4)
Virgil Roehl
(4)
Nick Sellgren
(4)
Ross Buckner
(3)
Matt Frost
(3)
Matt Helm
(3)
Kit Manzanares
(3)
James Meek
(3)
Trevor Mueller
(3)
Matt Douglas
(2)
Ben Hayes
(2)
Jerry Helm
(2)
Travis Hooker
(2)
Ryan McManigle
(2)
Nevin Miranda
(2)
Mitch Pelroy
(2)
Matt Petrich
(2)
Tony Prosser
(2)
Joe Rojas
(2)
Scott Stuurmans
(2)
Nic Anthony
(1)
Rob Blouin
(1)
Chris Cox
(1)
Scott Davidson
(1)
Mike Duke
(1)
Eddie Fasolo
(1)
Hunter Hammer
(1)
DJ Kim
(1)
Erik King
(1)
Gabe McMurray
(1)
Brian Miller
(1)
Tim Walstad
(1)
Zeb Williams
(1)

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Brad Sherman, still rumbling in his "later years." (John Fisken photo)

Brad Sherman, still rumbling in his “later years.” (John Fisken photo)

Gems from the back of the book

   Gems from the back of various score-books. On the left is the scrawled record of the 1999-2000 CHS boys JV team. At right, an intrasquad game from Feb., 2001.

Hidden gems everywhere.

Crawl through enough score-books, as I have been doing lately, and you’ll find all sorts of unexpected things.

As I work my way through 18 of the 20 books from Randy King’s tenure as head boys’ basketball coach at Coupeville High School (1991-2011), I found two more things which caught my fancy.

One was a hand-scrawled record of the JV season from 1999-2000, the other a record of a hotly-contested intrasquad game from early 2001.

In the grand scheme of things, neither one is earth-shattering, maybe.

But both are small slices of a bigger history, bits of thread that can now be woven back into the tapestry of Wolf Nation.

The JV record, recorded in at least five different pen colors (and pencil), tells the tale of a team that lost on opening day, then rolled like a freight train down a steep incline the rest of the way.

Those young Wolves won their final 12 games en route to an eye-popping 18-2 record (that year’s varsity squad went 12-10).

They beat always-strong La Conner twice (nice), thumped the richniks from Archbishop Thomas Muphy twice (even nicer) and ravaged Island arch-rival South Whidbey twice (nicest).

Only Sequim and Lynnwood could catch that pack of Wolves, who reportedly consisted of Geoff Hageman, Dustin Van Velkinburgh, Matt Helm, Joe Kelley, James Meek, Rob Fasolo, Sean Callahan, Chris Good, Casey Clark, Brad Sherman, Brian Roundy and Rob Blouin.

The other little gem is a five-on-five game between teammates that someone took the time to record for posterity.

Apparently they knew that 15 years later, I was going to deeply care.

In the showdown, which features a who’s-who of Wolf hoops stars, Sherman and Callahan went toe-to-toe.

Callahan won the individual battle 33-32, but Sherman’s squad, identified as The Wagon Burners, won the war, running away with an 83-77 victory.

From the score-book, the game looks like a scorcher.

Sherman’s boys surge out to a 24-18 lead after one, fall behind by three at the half, reclaim a basket lead through three and put the game away with another 24-18 surge in the final quarter.

Well, sort of…

When you look at the book 15 years later, Sherman’s team scored 22 in the fourth, not the 24 listed, so the final score should have been 81-77.

That’s actually one of two mistakes that day.

Whomever was recording things originally had Sherman scoring 26, then scratched it out and wrote in 30. Only thing is, he really had 32 when you count the baskets.

Anyway, no scandal here. Movin’ on.

Sherman’s cause was helped by Brian Fakkema, who hit five treys as part of his 20, while Joe Rojas banged for 14.

Roundy (8) and current CHS boys’ JV coach Van Velkingburgh (7) rounded out the Wagon Masters scoring.

On the other side, you can’t read the team name through the scrawled pencil (well, at least, I can’t), but I can see Erick Harada had 17 in support of Callahan.

Ty Blouin dropped in 12, Scott Harbour (whose last name is misspelled, and probably not for the last time) banked home 11 and the game’s mystery man had two.

It simply says LeCorre, and is the only one of the 10 names I didn’t recognize.

With a little research (a Facebook message to Van Velkinburgh) it turns out the interloper was a French foreign exchange student named Andrew who went on to play soccer in Oak Harbor.

So, now we know. One less mystery to keep me awake at night.

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Caleb Valko (top) joins fellow Hall o' Fame inductees (l t r) Jon Chittim, Tyler King, Sean LeVine, Brad Sherman and Joe Kelley.

Caleb Valko (top) joins fellow Hall o’ Fame inductees (l t r) Jon Chittim, Tyler King, Sean LeVine, Brad Sherman and Joe Kelley.

We have a shortage of testosterone.

As we induct people into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame each week, it goes in weird fits and bursts.

Sometimes I know who and what is going in well in advance.

Sometimes I’m making changes up to a few hours before the announcement, as all three people who deeply care hang on the edge of their sofas.

With this haphazard approach, the ladies have surged to an 11-5 lead with seven classes having entered these hallowed digital halls to be enshrined under the Legends tab at the top of the blog.

So, in a concentrated effort, we’re going to level the playing field a bit this week, with all of our inductees (five athletes and a coach) being of the male  persuasion.

The eighth class?

Say hello to Brad Sherman, Caleb Valko, Jon Chittim, Joe Kelley, Sean LeVine and Tyler King.

It’s a class that features a tackling machine, a guy who did something no other guy ever did in Coupeville High School history, a record-setting quarterback, and so much more.

We kick it off with King, since he was usually at the front of the pack.

Two state titles in track were a start but a state title in cross country (where he won by an astonishing 31 seconds) was unique. Natasha Bamberger is the only other Wolf to accomplish that feat.

Oh, and he was also a pretty good basketball player, where he was part of one of the biggest plays in school history.

Racing the clock and fighting a suffocating South Whidbey defense Jan. 25, 2011, King somehow managed to get the ball to Ian Smith, who banked home a three-pointer at the buzzer for a stunning 42-41 dethroning of the first-place Falcons on their home court.

Grace under pressure was a strong trait for Chittim, as well.

A superb track sprinter, he capped the 2006 season with three state titles at the 1A meet, winning the 200 and 400, before joining Kyle King, Chris Hutchinson and Steven McDonald to capture the 4 x 400.

“Back in high school, winning meant a lot,” Chittim told me in an interview years later. “Not only because it’s something few Coupeville athletes get to experience, but also it meant I would have a much better chance of getting better scholarships.

“I have always had a competitive spirit, so of course winning still means a lot to me, but in a different way. Now it is more internal and not for my name to be up on a wall.”

Well, it’s a digital wall, so we should be OK.

Valko didn’t get the chance to win a state title like our first two inductees, but he was a strong leader who worked his rear off during his time at CHS, while still finding time to talk smack and entertain the masses.

A team captain in football and basketball, he also was a thrower in track and became the Page Hit King thanks to his willingness to let his emotion and sense of humor come out, but not overwhelm, his drive and determination.

Truly an athlete who could walk away at the end of his high school career and say he had left it all on the field.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again — Mr. Valko was born to be a coach.

He’s gone down that path a bit, working with CMS football, and I hope it’s one he fully pursues at some point in his life, cause he’d be a natural.

Sherman and Kelley hit the stage next, since their careers as Wolf gridiron warriors overlap perfectly.

The 2002 grads were record busters whose exploits still tower.

Sherman is the career leader for passing yardage and touchdown passes (while also being a dominant athlete in other sports) and Kelley was the very definition of a game-changer for the CHS defense.

He’s on the record board with 103 tackles in 2000, but as I waded through a recently-uncovered treasure trove of stats, we documented he bested that in ’01, when he amassed 142 take-downs.

Kelley topped out with 20 tackles against Orcas, settling for “just” 19 in two other games that season.

Our sixth inductee fits today’s “trend,” of being male, though much of his work has come with female athletes. So LeVine is an equal opportunity legend.

A stellar soccer player in Oak Harbor during his high school days, LeVine has been a driving force in building girls’ soccer in Coupeville.

He’s done it both at the youth league level and as coach of various Whidbey Islanders select squads that have meshed players from Oak Harbor, South Whidbey and Cow Town.

Now that oldest daughter Micky “Two Fists” LeVine is off to college, he’s taking a momentary break from coaching the Islanders.

More time to focus on saving the world as an EMT and arguing with fellow Hall o’ Famer Chris Tumblin over who’s more stylish, but you know he’ll be back.

Coaches don’t retire. They just recharge the batteries.

And, like the other five inductees, LeVine’s battery always went off the charts.

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