Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘championship banners’

Robert Wood has been named the new head coach for the Coupeville High School boys soccer program. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

He’s a familiar face in a new place.

For anyone who follows soccer on Whidbey Island, Robert Wood has been one of those guys doing a bit of everything, helping the sport boom locally.

Always upbeat, radiating a love for the sport which he tries to pass on even to those heathens such as myself who have a limited appreciation for the beautiful game, he’s a go-getter.

And now, he’s the new boys soccer coach for Coupeville High School, bouncing up from an assistant position to replace Kyle Nelson.

Wood’s former boss is not going anywhere, but decided to focus on coaching just the Wolf girls now that both CHS soccer programs will play during the same season.

Previously, the Coupeville girls played in the fall, with the boys taking the pitch in the spring.

But, with the Wolves moving from 1A to 2B, all soccer will now be played in the fall.

Except during a pandemic…

The current plan for a return to play during COVID-19 is for spring sports to kick things off, with fall sports, including soccer, set to run from March 29 to May 8.

With the adjusted schedule, Wood and other coaches will need to adapt.

Consider the well-organized new head man ready and raring to go.

“The season will be short — six weeks — so player development isn’t going to happen,” he said. “Thus, playing time and teamwork, and enjoyment is the focus.

“Getting the kids to realize what works, what wins, what fails, and the movements/leadership required on the field,” Wood added. “Long term … there’s a noticeable lack of soccer banners in the CHS gym. It’s time to fix that!”

After slamming into state soccer powers such as King’s, Klahowya, and South Whidbey in recent years, the transition to the Northwest 2B/1B League and playing against schools with student bodies much closer to Coupeville’s should be a confidence-booster.

“Now that we’re playing in a proper league we have a great opportunity to develop a winning program and the kids should realize we’re no longer a complete underdog,” Wood said.

“(We) want to develop a long-standing, long-running, successful high school soccer program that is integrated with the community soccer club.”

Wood, a father of three — two of whom have played soccer for CHS — was deeply involved in the Central Whidbey Soccer Club.

Toss in his work as a high school coach (five years with girls and boys), as a select coach (six years with Deception FC), and running the field as a ref, and he comes to his new job with a rock-solid resume.

Soccer has been a big part of his life, from his childhood days — when he also swam, ran, skied, and played lacrosse — to his time with the United States Navy.

Wood continued to patrol the pitch, and was an avid runner, until “my legs gave out,” he said with a laugh.

Now he teaches computer software classes for the Navy, hangs out with wife Jill, the Director for the Washington State Department of Radiation Protection, and gets his soccer thrills coaching and watching his children play.

Wood (right) watches a game with fellow Wolf dad Kelly Keilwitz.

James, currently a freshman at Colorado State University, rattled home six goals across three seasons for the Wolves, while showcasing a powerful kicking leg and a scrappy on-field demeanor.

He lost out on his senior season when the pandemic shut down sports last March, but had already wrapped up a stellar run as a doubles player on the tennis court.

Daughters Eryn (a CHS junior) and Aby (a CMS 8th grader) are both athletes pulling down A’s, keeping their brother’s tradition alive.

Eryn tallied her first varsity soccer goal last season, while Aby currently plays volleyball in the fall as CMS does not have a girls soccer program.

When he’s not coaching, or trying to explain the finer points of the game to us heathens, their dad “loves to cook” and “at one point was a pretty good guitar player … until I started studying soccer.”

Intently preparing for all possibilities on the pitch is part of his game-plan, though he admits sometimes he needs to step back and just take a deep breath or two.

“I am a perfectionist, but I’m continuing to learn that not everyone is, so I can’t expect perfection,” Wood said. “I will make mistakes … oh well, let’s acknowledge that and move forward.”

What he wants from his players is not necessarily perfection, but a desire to strive for that ideal.

“Trust the process! We’re starting a program that I hope will be effective and successful long after we’ve all moved on,” Wood said. “Laying the foundation is a requirement for players in later years.

“Playing a game without your hands and without timeouts is difficult and requires mental thought and a dedication and focus beyond what they’ve given before.

“Dedication to improvement is all I ask; the wins will come as long as we move forward as a team.”

Read Full Post »

(Photo courtesy Jeff Stone)

   CHS hoops players are lifted up by the crowd after the 1969-1970 Wolves clinched a trip to state, the first in school history. (Photo courtesy Jeff Stone)

Our greatest generation of athletes are being shafted.

The further I dig into the history of Coupeville High School sports, it becomes increasingly obvious the 1970s were a golden age in Cow Town.

From Jeff Stone to Corey Cross to Bill Jarrell to Ray Cook and many, many more, the athletes of that decade carried teams to state, set records and won league titles.

But when you walk into the CHS gym, you would have no clue, because, when you look above the entrance way at the two rows of banners celebrating league titles and teams which placed at state, the first banner is from … 1990.

That’s right.

It’s as if no Wolf team in school history ever won anything until Ron Bagby’s football squad went undefeated in the fall of ’90.

That’s a lie, and a shameful one.

Why is it that way? There may be a thousand reasons, but we don’t have the time to debate who failed, or when they failed. Doesn’t matter.

Because, now, in 2016, we should be focused on something more positive.

We, the people, can fix this error. We can restore our forgotten legacy of sports excellence in the most public way possible.

It’s been 40+ years for those athletes of the ’70s, so they are now in their fifties or sixties.

The coaches of teams which won league titles in that decade, some of whom are still with us, are even older.

This is a situation which needs to be corrected NOW.

And it can be, if we work together.

Here is what I propose:

I ask the Whidbey News-Times to bend their rules slightly and allow me one day of access to their archives, which would offer the quickest and most concise way to determine what league titles Coupeville won in the ’70s.

This information is not on the internet, and pulling it together, piece by piece, as people unearth scrapbooks and moth-eaten score-books, will take forever.

I understand the refusal to let the general public go through the archives anymore, as the papers are old and, as they say, “they are our history.”

Emphasis on OUR history. Theirs, mine, yours. Ours, as a community.

I will wear the white gloves, if necessary. I will not bring food or drink in the room.

I wrote a whole bunch of articles which are in those archives. I understand the historical value (well, maybe not of my stories…) and will not act like an idiot.

If the News-Times overlooks my past poking of them and joins me in this COMMUNITY effort, once I know how many banners we would be talking about, I will sit down with school administrators and find out what the cost would be to have them made and hung.

At that point, I would propose that we, the people, come together and chip in whatever money is needed to do so.

Once we have a dollar amount, it would be as simple as setting up a GoFundMe page, and I feel secure that the members of Wolf Nation, near and far, would make it a done deal.

Later this year, probably right before graduation, CHS will be raising new title banners — boys’ tennis and girls’ basketball have won league championships in 2015-2016, and the school year is far from done.

When they do so, I would like to see them pay tribute to the past, as well, and raise banners to the teams of the past.

If we, as a community, work together, we can make it possible and make it so the school has little to do but say yes.

When next year’s freshmen walk into the gym for the first time and look up, they should see a long and lasting legacy of excellence reflected on those walls.

And when their grandfathers walk into that gym and look up, they should know their teenage glory days are not forgotten.

As Wolf fans, we owe them that much.

Read Full Post »

The first new league championship banners in 13 years at CHS. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

   The first new league championship banners in 13 years at CHS. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Seniors

   Wynter Thorne (big pic) and (clockwise from top right) Hailey Hammer, Kacie Kiel, the Luveras, Madeline Strasburg, Monica Vidoni, Micky LeVine, Haleigh Deasy, Julia Myers, Jacki Ginnings. (John Fisken photos)

They’re up!

Just in time for graduation, which will allow the 11 seniors who played on those teams to witness them on their final trip through the gym, league championship banners have been raised.

Both the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball and girls’ tennis teams went undefeated in 1A Olympic League play this year.

The titles were the first the school had won since 2002.

Playing key roles on both teams were members of the Class of 2015, with six seniors on each team.

Wynter Thorne was the lone Wolf senior to play on both teams (joined by junior McKenzie Bailey).

Monica Vidoni, Hailey Hammer, Kacie Kiel, Julia Myers and Madeline Strasburg joined Thorne on the hoops squad while Micky LeVine, Jacki Ginnings, Haleigh Deasy, Ana Luvera and Ivy Luvera also played for the netters.

CHS graduation is 6 PM tonight.

Read Full Post »