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Foster Faris, April Ellsworth-Bagby (top right in Arizona shirt) and Clay Hughes headline today's Hall of Fame class.

   Foster Faris, April Ellsworth-Bagby (top, on left) and Clay Hughes headline today’s Hall of Fame class.

They can stand with anyone.

The three athletes and one basketball team headed into the Coupeville Sports Hall of Fame on this sunny Sunday are among the best to ever grace the hallways at CHS.

Two Athlete of the Year winners, one of the most underrated running backs in program history and the last Wolf boys’ hoops team to make the trip to state, they join together to form a potent group.

So, with that, we open the doors to these hallowed digital walls for the 63rd time and welcome April Ellsworth-Bagby, Clay Hughes, Foster Faris and the 1987-88 CHS boys’ basketball team.

After this, you’ll find them atop the blog, under the Legends tab.

Our first inductee, Ellsworth-Bagby, was a two-sport star (volleyball, softball) who capped her senior season by being named the school’s Female Athlete of the Year.

On the court, she helped lead the Wolf spikers through some of their best seasons, while on the diamond she was a standout pitcher on teams which finally brought respectability to the softball program.

After high school, April went on to compete in college rugby, served 15 months in Iraq and was honored as a Pat Tillman Military Scholar while seeking her law degree.

Part of a highly-successful sports-orientated family, many of whom welcome her to the Hall, Ellsworth-Bagby graduated right on the cusp of the golden years for Wolf female athletics in the early-to-mid 2000s, but it was athletes like her who set the stage for what was to come.

She may not have gotten the trips to state little sister Ashley did, but April is a star in her own right, as an athlete, a soldier and a lawyer.

Our second inductee, Hughes, was one of the most inspired gridiron runners to ever suit up in the red and black.

Churning away next to fellow Hall o’ Famer Casey Larson, Hughes racked up 1,582 yards and 15 touchdowns in his two years on the Wolf varsity.

He broke the 100-yard barrier eight times in 17 games, three times busting 150 yards, with a high of 164 against always-brutal Concrete.

Clay was a busy bee, also returning kickoffs and punts, hauling in passes and lighting up fools on the defensive side of the ball, playing through pain at times against a stretch of the toughest foes Coupeville has faced.

Off the field, he was (and is) a walking-talking grin machine come to life, but strap on the helmet and pads, and Hughes was a rough and tumble bruiser. Never forget.

Now, if this was a real Hall o’ Fame, our third inductee, Faris, would probably have been one of the first in the doors.

But I’ve struggled to find a photo of him (until, one day, I looked up at the school’s display of Athlete of the Year photos and a light bulb went off…) and finding anyone who kept stat sheets from the ’70s?

Yeah, good luck on that.

But if you go off of nothing more than the memories of those he played with, or for, Foster is truly one of the best athletes to ever pull on a Wolf jersey.

Esteemed long-time CHS coach Bob Barker picked him as one of the five best athletes he had ever seen at the school, and the athletes who followed in his footsteps, such as David Ford, tell glowing tales of his accomplishments.

So let’s welcome Faris into the Hall, while still continuing the search for clippings and stat sheets from his prep days.

Clean out your attics, your basements, and help me really honor his athletic legacy.

Rounding out our roster for today is one of the most talented teams in school history, in any sport, the ’87-’88 CHS boys’ hoops squad.

Led by remarkably balanced scoring (four guys averaged in double figures, led by Timm Orsborn at 13.9 a game), the Wolves went 19-6 and remain, 28+ years later, the last team in program history to make it to state.

Coupeville finished 10-2 in Northwest B League play that year, missing out on a share of a league title by a single game.

But one huge positive was giving league champ La Conner, which finished 5th at state, its only conference loss.

After running wild through the regular season, the Wolves split four games at districts (which they hosted), then absorbed two tough losses at state to top-level schools.

As we wait for the the boys’ hoops program to get back to the big dance (10,400+ days and counting), let’s give the ’87-’88 squad one more curtain call.

Inducted together, as a team:

Ron Bagby (head coach)
Sandy Roberts (assistant coach)
Cec Stuurmans (assistant coach)
Brandy Ambrose
Marc Aparicio
Andrew Bird
Brad Brown
Tom Conard
Tony Ford
Chad Gale
Dan Nieder
Timm Orsborn
Morgan Roehl
Joe Tessaro

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Clay Hughes

   Clay Hughes plays through the blood and churns for yardage back in 2006. (Photos courtesy Willie Smith’s spring cleaning)

Hughes2

Concrete’s defenders are already too late.

ballet

Hughes was also an accomplished ballet dancer in his spare time…

Who knows what lurks in the back rooms at the Coupeville High School gym complex?

Go digging through old boxes, like I’ve done recently after Athletic Director Willie Smith went on a spring cleaning binge, and I’ve found treats galore.

Old stat sheets, middle school basketball photos and a lot of rosters from rival schools (Tom Roehl liked to horde them).

Buried in one box were a couple of discs containing photos from the 2006 CHS football season.

Who the photographer was, I have no clue.

And, to my great disappointment, no incriminating photos of any Wolf coaches taking Bellevue-style payoffs or players involved in raging keggers.

Come on man, where’s my decade-old scandal?!?!?, he said with a grin.

Anyways … back in reality, the one thing that popped out from the photos was the frequent image of Clay Hughes, gridiron stud extraordinaire, hard at work.

Mr. Hughes, now a wildly successful businessman, was a junior during the ’06 gridiron campaign and the Wolves primary rusher.

Working in tandem with Casey Larson and Trevor Tucker, he led Coupeville’s ground game in a season in which they churned out 2,042 yards over a 4-6 season.

Larson had the biggest single game of the year, ripping South Whidbey for 182 yards and four touchdowns in a 27-8 Wolf win.

But it was Hughes who carried the brunt of the offense, piling up 907 yards in the nine games he played, while Larson tallied 784 yards in 10 games.

Twice the duo combined to smash the 300-yard barrier that season.

South Whidbey, of course, where Hughes tacked on 119 yards as the Wolves battered the Falcon defense silly.

Their best game, though, came in an 18-7 win over Concrete in week two, in which Larson went for 165 and Hughes 164.

Coupeville gained an astonishing 411 yards that day — Sept. 8, 2006 — on 58 carries, allowing quarterback James Smith to throw the ball just twice.

Larson and Smith are already in the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, and Hughes will likely join them one day soon.

Until then, as we approach the 10-year anniversary of the Concrete Massacre, let’s look back at some photos of Hughes in action and reflect on one of the best seasons ever thrown down by a Wolf rusher.

La Conner — 17 carries for 69 yards
Concrete — 28-164
ATM — 13-38
Sultan — 28-159
Granite Falls — OUT
South Whidbey — 19-119
King’s — 29-158
Lakewood — 18-85
Cedarcrest — 12-42
Friday Harbor — 27-74

Totals: 192-907 with 5 TDs; averaged 4.7 yards a carry and 100.8 yards a game.

Also had 26 tackles on defense.

PS — He added 675 yards and another 9 TDs as a senior.

So, a tip of the hat, Clay. Once a beast, always a beast.

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Clay Hughes

Clay Hughes

He’s still The Man.

His high school football playing days may be done (heck, he’s even graduated from college at this point and has a real job), but Clay Hughes remains a larger-than-life myth in Wolf Nation.

They whisper about him in hushed tones, nodding quietly as they talk about how he would explode through the line, scattering South Whidbey players with every carry.

You can look at the numbers and know he was good.

StatewideStats.com tells you Clay rushed for 1,131 yards as a Wolf, crossing the 100-yard barrier five times.

Three times he broke 150 yards, crushing Concrete for 164 yards, ripping Sultan for 159 and decimating King’s for 158.

Though, in the end, probably none of those performances topped his 119-yard throttling of South Whidbey in Week 6 of 2006.

Coupeville obliterated the Falcons 27-8 that night and the tears flowed from Langley for weeks.

Nice.

Whether wearing the red and black and bouncing off of would-be tacklers or operating in the world of RV sales, as he does now, Hughes has never settled for second best.

So, today, on his birthday, we hail the once and future king and remind him of one thing.

You ‘da man, Clay. You ‘da man.

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