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Posts Tagged ‘CHS Wolves’

SarahRose Bernhardt, the very definition of “a truly lovely human being.” (All photos poached from her Facebook account)

SarahRose Bernhardt is special.

Always has been, always will be.

It takes a special talent to light up every room you enter, to make others feel good about themselves, to achieve and inspire without asking for credit.

But that is SarahRose.

We live in a world which has grown harsher in the past few years.

Or, at the very least, one in which people are much more inclined to be abrasive to each other, to demean and ridicule.

There are days where it feels like there is little hope of kindness reclaiming the public mood.

Which is why SarahRose is like a light at the edge of the world, buffeted like the rest of us, but not willing to give up the fight.

In the same year that the Coupeville High School grad and her fiancée, David, returned to find their home burning to the ground, she has endured, and she has prospered.

As a new year dawns, SarahRose is not sitting back. She has moved to the front of the crowd, pursuing a medical calling at the height of a worldwide pandemic.

In the pictures she and her proud parents have posted, we see a young woman who pulls on fire gear, hefts a saw half the size of her body, and moves into action.

“Badass” Bernhardt (far right), ready to battle whatever comes her way.

We see a brilliant student, a talented dancer — an actress and cheerleader during her high school days — who, clad in PPE from head to toe, brings healthcare right to the front doors of those in need.

Working for Dispatch Health out of Seattle, SarahRose is, like the others she works with, a reassuring face in a troubled time.

That she would make this decision, to be part of the solution at a moment of crisis, is not surprising to me.

While I don’t think I’ve seen her in person since back in the Videoville days, SarahRose, like her parents and siblings, was always something special.

She graduated from CHS in 2004, after being a member of the Hi Q Academic Quiz Bowl team, serving as a school board rep, participating in the Learning Partner program, and being a group leader for Honor Society.

Not content to stop there, SarahRose was also a tutor, an active volunteer in the community, and a team leader for the Wolf cheer squad.

Graduation from the University of Washington, after a similar string of accomplishments, arrived in 2008.

In her post-school days, she used her love of dance to inspire countless people through her work at places such as Barre3 Bellevue and Daybreaker Seattle.

And now, a frontline worker in a troubled time, a continuing ray of hope in all she achieves, and how she reaches those goals.

A day at the beach with her fiancée and the doggos.

As I said before, SarahRose has never been one for beating her chest, screaming out why she rules (even if she does), and expecting folks to get in line and bow to her.

Too bad, cause we’re going to do the latter part right now.

That’s because we’re capping 2020 by inducting SarahRose Bernhardt into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Since it’s technically a digital shrine to athletic achievement, she’ll be listed as a cheerleader, even if she’s really going in for that and a billion other things.

After this, if you wander past the top of the blog and look under the Legends tab, that’s where you’ll find her hanging out.

At least on-line.

In real life, SarahRose will be found where need arises, where her skills and hard work will accomplish much, where she can leave behind an impact on the world she moves through.

She is a badass, and she is the light, and she makes her hometown proud, every day.

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Jazmine Franklin

End the year with a bang, start the next one even bigger.

One of Coupeville’s best and brightest, the uber-talented Jazmine Franklin, continues to kill it in the art world and you could be helping to support her fast-rising career.

When she’s not crafting eye-popping paintings, the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Famer can be found putting her designs to work on a wide variety of clothes, as well as mugs, masks, keychains, and more.

Franklin recently debuted three new designs with her “Heart and Head Collection,” devoted to highlighting positive mental health.

During her days at CHS, Jazmine showcased a variety of talents, from being a student leader to teaming up with McKenzie Bailey to form an award-winning tennis doubles duo.

A truly lovely human being, she is proof positive that you can come from a small town, and yet be a big success through hard work, talent, and being a genuinely kind, caring person.

As 2020 transforms into 2021, maybe take a few moments to bask in her awesomeness and give something back.

 

To see (and buy) Jazmine’s artwork:

JZMN Originals (myshopify.com)

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Former Wolf football coach Kwamane Bowens (left) just released a new eight-song EP. (Photo from Bowens Facebook page)

The days keep poppin’, the music keeps droppin’.

Former Coupeville High School football coach Kwamane Bowens, recording as Groovie Mane, released his newest batch of songs Wednesday — just in time to carry listeners through the New Years celebrations.

His EP, titled Artist, features eight songs from the man who brought his D-1 gridiron skills along with him when he worked with the Wolves as part of Marcus Carr’s coaching staff.

 

To find all the tracks, pop over to Bowens Soundcloud page at:

Groovie Mane | Free Listening on SoundCloud

 

Or check out new tracks such as Life Scars on his YouTube page:

 

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COVID-19, still the biggest story as 2020 ends. Here, a mask-clad Taylor Brotemarkle goes through a basketball practice. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Well, we’ve seen better years.

In the Age of Coronavirus, there’s little suspense as to what was the biggest story of 2020.

No Coupeville High School sports team has played a game since the Wolf girls basketball team fell to Meridian February 11 in a loser-out playoff game.

Even with the arrival of the first vaccines, that probably won’t change for awhile.

Spring sports were cancelled, fall sports were postponed, and winter remains a question mark.

But, in between the two times I tried to walk away from the blog this year, there were other stories which arose.

So, since the “retirements” turned into “vacations” both times, I’m still here to take a look back at what was what.

20 stories to define 2020, in fairly random order:

 

20 — Geoff Kappes named Principal at CHS, replacing Duane Baumann, who circles back around to rejoin the school as Special Services Director.

 

19 — Former Wolf spiker Ashley Menges, a 2019 CHS grad, hired as Wolf JV volleyball coach, replacing Chris Smith, who moves off-Island.

Ashley Menges makes the transition from player to coach.

 

18 — Jim Waller, my high school journalism teacher, retires from the Whidbey News-Times, ending his second run as Sports Editor at the newspaper.

I am now the “elder statesman” of Whidbey sports journalism, which will give a lot of people, myself included, the cold sweats.

 

17 — Island Greens, the reasonably-priced nine-hole golf course which welcomed thousands of duffers to Clinton, sold and (seemingly) shut down.

After 33 years, no more tee shots. (Photo property Island Greens)

 

16 — Coupeville grad Kyle King, a five-time state champ during his high school track and field days, runs the marathon at the US Olympic Team Trials.

He finishes a very-respectable 47th out of 222 runners, with his fastest mile coming late in the race.

 

15 — Seventh-grader Savina Wells makes her hardwood debut for Coupeville Middle School and outscores the other team by herself.

Dropping in 20 points through three quarters, while also cleaning the boards and running the point, she paces the Wolves to a 41-15 rout of Northshore Christian Academy.

Savina Wells leads the charge. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

14 — Ally Roberts caps her college equestrian career with a regional championship in Advanced Western Horsemanship.

While COVID prevents her from attending nationals, she exits Western Washington University with her degree — the biggest award of them all.

 

13 — Coupeville loses a pair of legends, as Larrie Ford and Jack McFadyen pass away.

The former was a Hall of Fame coach with CHS track, the latter one of the most loyal fans Wolf athletes have ever had.

Jack McFadyen with his grandkids. (Photo courtesy Carmen McFadyen)

 

12 — Wolf grad Nick Streubel closes his football career at Central Washington University with a pair of honors, being named to the All-Super Region team, and to his school’s All-Decade squad.

 

11 — Lauren Grove, one of just two athletes in the CHS Class of 2017 to play a sport in all 12 seasons, is badly-burnt in a grease fire.

In her recovery fight, and her willingness to share the painful journey with others at lauren (@the.burnt.bitch), she remains one of the strongest women I know.

 

10 — Maya Toomey-Stout, Scout Smith, and Sean Toomey-Stout tabbed as CHS Athlete of the Year winners. It’s the second-straight time Sean takes top honors.

Scout Smith wheels ‘n deals. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

9 — College sports are calling, as Mica Shipley (Eastern Washington University – cheer), Mallory Kortuem (Western Washington University – track), Ja’Tarya Hoskins (St. Martin’s – track), and Ben Smith (Culver-Stockton – football) find their next destinations.

 

8 — CHS boys basketball avenges a series of losses to its personal boogeyman, finally taking Port Townsend down.

With sophomore sensations Xavier Murdy and Hawthorne Wolfe banging away for 22 and 21 points, respectively, the Wolf varsity romps to a 79-66 win at home, a sign of good things to come.

Brad Sherman has a word with his team.

 

7 — Call ’em the comeback kings. The Wolf JV boys basketball team pulls off several stunning come-from-behind wins, but two stand out.

Trailing Granite Falls by three points headed to the final frame, Coupeville explodes for a 56-42 win as Daniel Olson dumps in 13 of his game-high 26 over the final eight minutes.

The most-satisfying victory, however, might have come against arch-rival South Whidbey, when the Wolves scored 27 fourth-quarter points to nail down a 70-63 win.

Going Olson one better, Murdy nets 14 in the final quarter.

 

6 — Coaching jobs start multiplying, with Chris Smith (baseball, volleyball, boys basketball), Erin Locke (middle school volleyball), and Luke Samford (cross country) all leaving Whidbey.

Meanwhile, Kyle Nelson is still hanging around as Wolf girls soccer coach, but lets go of his boys soccer gig.

 

5 — After years of being one of the smallest schools in 1A, Coupeville officially moves back to 2B and its old stomping grounds in the Northwest 2B/1B League.

COVID has delayed the transition, but some day it will become reality on the playing field as well.

Mollie Bailey (32) and Audrianna Shaw will move from 1A to 2B.

 

4 — End of an era, as longtime CHS teacher/coaches Randy King and Ron Bagby retire, along with registrar Marie Bagby.

 

3 — CHS grad Makana Stone caps a splendid four-year run of basketball excellence at Whitman College, graduating as the #2 rebounder and #5 scorer in program history.

She plays in 110 games for the Blues, including making a record 92 starts, and earns All-American and All-Region honors to go with the Northwest Conference MVP award.

Makana Stone, swishin’ hoops and dazzlin’ folks in Jolly Olde England. (Photo property Loughborough University)

 

2 — Not content to stop with America, Stone moves to England.

Six games into her first season at Loughborough University, she’s been tabbed twice as the Women’s National Basketball League Player of the Week, and has made the Team of the Week four times.

 

1 — COVID. It was, and is, a whole thing. But tomorrow is another day.

They will be back in action at some point. Believe it.

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On this day in 1990 these Wolves combined to score 50 points in a 61-56 Coupeville basketball win. Back, l to r: Ben Biskovich and Sean Dillon. Front: Frank Marti, Jason McFadyen. (Photo courtesy McFadyen)

Every day a milestone.

Pluck a date out of time, flip open a random scorebook from the past, and chances are you’ll find something of interest.

Today we jump back 30 years, to December 27, 1990, a moment when the Coupeville High School boys basketball squad rode the hot shooting touch of Sean Dillon to pull out a nail-biting 61-56 win over Vashon Island.

Two seasons out from its last trip to the state tourney, a rebuilt Wolf hoops program was starting to hit its stride again that day.

Legendary CHS coach Ron Bagby was in his final season calling the shots on the hardwood, and he had a team full of guys who could fill up the hoop.

In fact, all four guys featured in the photo with this story would finish their prep careers among the top 56 Coupeville scorers all time.

That’s out of at least 391 Wolves to tally at least a point between 1917-2020.

Well, it’s actually probably well more than 400 players, but some of those really old-school CHS scorebooks and stat sheets continue to evade capture.

For now, we have Jason McFadyen at #24 all-time (654 points), with Dillon at #48 (469), Frank Marti at #49 (462), and Ben Biskovich at #56 (407).

When the Wolves took the floor Dec. 27, it was their first action in nine days, back when they bombed Orcas Island 69-49.

Coupeville would get one more game in before 1990 clicked over to 1991, but it was run off the floor by an Australian traveling team on the 29th, so we’ll focus here on the 27th.

If there was any rust in the Wolves collective shooting touch after a week-and-a-half of rest, it doesn’t show up in the scorebook.

CHS blew out to a 19-10 advantage after one quarter of play, with six different players popping the ball through the rim.

Dillon, who would finish second to McFadyen in the season scoring race, edged out just 261-258, led the way all game against Vashon.

Later he would marry the former Becca Jenson, a volleyball star who was a year behind me at Tumwater High School (small world), but on this date his thoughts were still on torching nets.

The first seven of his game and season-high 22 points came in the opening eight-minute stand, and Dillon lit a fire under his teammates.

Vashon didn’t go away quietly, however, steadily hacking away at the lead over the next two quarters.

A 13-9 run in the second cut the deficit to 28-23 at the half, then things got really tight at 44-41 heading into the fourth.

Dillon dominated in the third quarter, gunning in 11 of Coupeville’s 16 points, hitting shots from all angles.

He banked home four field goals — neither team connected on a three-point bomb in the game — while also hitting three of four free throws in the frame.

Charity shots were anything but for both teams, however, as the Wolves netted just 17-31 (54.8%) from the line, while Vashon was an even-worse 12-23 (52.1%).

And yet, free throws proved to be Coupeville’s salvation down the stretch.

The Wolves crashed hard to the hoop (or so we would presume from the stat line), garnering twice as many free throw attempts in the final frame as their foes did.

While CHS only banked home nine of 18 free shots in the fourth — possibly giving Bagby a coronary — Vashon couldn’t catch up, thanks to netting just five of nine at the stripe during the finale.

Marti, for one, actually did pretty well after being fouled, sinking four of five freebies as part of his six point-performance in the final quarter.

He finished with 12 points, backing up Dillon’s 22.

Biskovich knocked down 10 and the duo of Brad Haslam and McFadyen banked in six apiece.

Brian Barr (2), Todd Smith (2), and Brian Hageman (1) rounded out Coupeville’s offensive attack, while Todd Brown and Nate Steele also saw floor time for the Wolves.

Future star Troy Blouin was also listed on the active varsity roster that night, but didn’t play.

He would get his moment later, however, scoring 256 points over the next two seasons, which would be the first two of a 20-year run for Randy King as CHS boys hoops guru.

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