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Posts Tagged ‘coaches’

   Want to be a coach? Then emulate Gabe Wynn’s playing style and take your shot. (John Fisken photo)

Everyone secretly thinks they can coach.

Listen to enough chatter from the stands, and it quickly becomes apparent there are very few who don’t believe they possess that elusive secret to guiding a team to state championship glory.

And yet, I’ve also noticed, the bigger the talker, the less likely they are to actually step up and take on the job.

Easier to be a “genius” in the stands than prove you were full of hot air in the heat of battle, I guess.

After 27 years of writing about school sports on Whidbey Island, I have worked with many coaches, seeing them in good times and bad.

Some have been brilliant, many were competent, a few less so, and at least one was Hall of Fame worthy, if that award is for being a royal pain in the ass.

But they all accepted the challenge, whether it was for one cringe-inducing season or a stellar career, and did what most of us would not do.

Through endless road trips, on rickety school buses and ferries bouncing through winter storms, through back-and-forth with parents who believe their child is going D-1, despite averaging two points a game, through long hours and low pay, through endless second-guessing, through having to put up with my never-ending stream of inane questions, they persevered.

They did it because they love their sport, because they want to support their town and school, because that one kid you break through to makes it all worthwhile.

Some have helped fill up Coupeville’s Wall of Fame in the gym.

Others never quite got over the top, but they made an impact on the lives of their athletes and those player’s families, friends and neighbors.

I have great respect for those who have stepped up, and those who will do so in the future.

It takes guts. It takes commitment. It takes an ability to believe in yourself and your plan, even when the buzz around you becomes great.

I have never coached, cause I already know I don’t have the answers.

Jim Waller, the Sports Editor at the Whidbey News-Times, coached multiple sports for 30+ years and is in the state Hall of Fame for baseball coaches.

Willie Smith, the Coupeville High School AD, ignited the girls basketball program in the late ’90s, then went on to lead Wolf baseball through years of success, never once backing down from the richniks at King’s or ATM.

When I talk to them, or other coaches, whether they be lifers like Randy King and Ron Bagby, seasoned vets like David and Amy King or fast-rising “youngsters” like Cory Whitmore, it reinforces two things.

One, I have no real freakin’ clue, so it’s a good thing I’ve always positioned myself as a hype man building legends and not an expert when it comes to writing about sports.

Yes, I want the Wolf basketball teams to dress all in black, emerge from the locker room in total darkness, then get hit with a spotlight as AC/DC nails the opening notes of “Thunderstruck” and a FULL student section bounces up and down, making the gym resemble the epicenter of an earthquake.

Again, hype, legends, not reality.

And two, I see why they are coaches.

The jobs are not easy, and there are times where every coach stares into the abyss and questions their choice in life, but there is great reward to be found.

Not just wins and titles, either.

Coaches change lives, often in ways teachers and counselors can’t.

They are parents, mentors, friends and drill sergeants mixed into one, and the best find a perfect balance between all those aspects.

So, why do I bring this all up?

Because, as of this morning, we’re sitting at a rare moment when multiple coaching opportunities are available here in Coupeville.

The search for a CHS football assistant and head girls soccer coach are ongoing, and now three basketball positions have posted — head and assistant gigs with CHS boys basketball and a head coaching job with CMS girls hoops.

This is your moment. Don’t let it pass by.

If you have ever thought about being a coach, or if you have prior experience, step up, make a run at a job.

Do it for yourself. For the town and school. For the kids.

Or just do it for me, so I have some new people to harass with endless questions. Yep, ultimately, think about me.

 

To see current CHS/CMS athletic job opportunities, pop over to:

https://www.applitrack.com/coupeville/onlineapp/default.aspx?Category=Athletics%2fActivities

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   Orson Christensen (left) and Tony Maggio, always discussing strategy, even in the stands. (John Fisken photo)

The Brain Trust.

Tony Maggio and Orson Christensen could probably finish each other’s sentences, and the two football coaches were a perfect match during their time stalking the sidelines at Coupeville High School.

With Maggio abusing his baseball cap as a fiery, but lovable head coach and gridiron lifer Christensen gliding by his side, providing a calm, cool voice of well-earned wisdom, the 2014 Wolves put together the best season in program history in more than a decade.

Utilizing the game-breaking running of Josh Bayne and the pinpoint passing of Joel Walstad, that CHS squad put up team offensive numbers never before seen in these parts.

It’s for that season, and a million other reasons, we welcome the ol’ ball coaches to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame today.

After this you’ll find the duo of Maggio and Christensen hanging out at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

We’ll start with the whippersnapper, Maggio, who accomplished a ton in a three-year run as Wolf gridiron head coach.

After working his way up after stints as an assistant with Oak Harbor and his predecessor at CHS, Jay Silver, the man in the #00 jersey fired up a Wolf program in the doldrums.

Two wins over arch-rival South Whidbey put the spring back in Coupeville’s step, and Maggio got the roster numbers up while also increasing his team’s wins.

He brought out the best in players from stars like Jake Tumblin and Nick Streubel on down to the last guys on the end of the bench.

And he did it by genuinely caring about his guys in ways both visible to the public and private.

Since he didn’t teach at CHS, Maggio kept a regular presence at the school by attending nearly every home sporting event the Wolves played.

He showed considerable support for his guys when they played other sports, but he was also front and center, holding court in the stands, for a ton of sports that involved kids he never coached.

The man bled red and black (and still does, frequently popping in even during his “retirement” days) and lordy, he stormed a sideline like few others.

There was one game where the refs were particularly cruel to the Wolves, and the press box had great fun counting how many times the ball cap came off and hit the turf.

But then, in typical Maggio fashion, after slapping his cap against his chest 237 times on one play, shortly afterwards he was standing next to a ref, cracking wise and making the guy smile.

Wins and losses matter, but to really build a high school program you have to invest in the students and see them as more than just athletes, something Tony always did.

We may not have gotten decades out of him, but his impact will be felt for a long time in Coupeville.

The same can be said of Christensen, a ’57 Oak Harbor grad (he was a four-sport letter-man for the ‘Cats) who played both ways on the line for Pacific Lutheran University before starting a 50+ year coaching career.

CHS was the 16th stop on his journey, one on which he’s won eight titles and been named a Coach of the Year five times.

Splitting his time between college and high school coaching jobs, Christensen, an innovator and a people person in equal measures, has been successful everywhere he’s twirled a whistle.

Virtually every coaching position he accepted has had similar trappings — a program which hadn’t been successful for several years prior to his arrival, which then became a winning one while he was employed.

Christensen is a treasure trove of football knowledge and has never been shy about sharing what he’s learned with fellow coaches, players or idiots who write blogs.

He knows the game inside out and it has always been a pleasure to talk with him, or linger in the background and listen to him imparting wisdom.

Like Maggio, Christensen has always seen his athletes as people first, and the respect accorded to him by players, coaches and fans is remarkable, and justified.

Even take away the epic football achievements, and he’s just a truly nice guy, one of the best I’ve met in my sports writing career.

So, today, with a great deal of respect for both men, based on how they conduct themselves on and off the gridiron, I welcome the dynamic duo to my lil’ Hall o’ Fame.

You earned it, gentlemen. You earned it.

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(John Fisken photo)

   Rise up and help make volleyball on Whidbey Island super successful. (John Fisken photo)

The Whidbey Volleyball Club needs you.

Once it’s fully up and going, the new organization will offer playing opportunities to Island players from ages 10-18.

But, as things kick off, there’s a need for coaches, equipment and places to play.

With tryouts in late Nov. and the season running through spring, the club is competing for playing space with basketball, and is looking for options outside of the high school and middle schools.

The club is also looking for organizations which would be interested in helping Whidbey Volleyball cover the costs of equipment and anyone interested in joining the coaching staff.

If you can help with any of the issues (playing space, equipment or coaches) contact whidbeyvolleyball@gmail.com today.

Cause, the community that spikes together stays together.

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Jim Hosek

   Jim Hosek, the most successful baseball coach in Coupeville High School history. (Clipping courtesy Keith Jameson)

What if?

Today’s tale is of three coaches, one from each of the three primary boys sports, who all, at one point, were employed by Coupeville High School.

As I start to plow through the athletic history of CHS, one is left to wonder how many more championships the school might own if one, two, or all three of these men had NOT left Cow Town.

We start with the biggie.

Sid Otton came to Coupeville straight from college (he was the first All-American selection in Weber State history while holding the line at tackle), after a brief tango with two NFL teams.

While on Whidbey, the young upstart was the school’s football and baseball coach for two seasons, winning the 1969 Northwest B League title on the diamond.

And then we lost him to different pastures.

Two years getting a Master’s degree at Utah State, a four-year run as head football coach at Colfax (and an unofficial state title in ’71), and then Otton settled down with his family in Tumwater.

From that point on, he got historic.

Now 42 years into the job as T-Bird head coach (with most of the same assistant coaches the whole way), Otton is the winningest high school football coach in state history — by a lot — and has raised six state title banners.

He also suffered through a semester with me, when I was a THS freshman taking health.

The class he taught in was in a room inside the bottom of the school’s football stadium, a place with no windows where time stood still.

Entombed in cement, we ventured out at the end of class every day pretty dang sure nuclear disaster had torn the Earth apart and we would be the only survivors walking into a desolate, “Mad Max” world.

Then we would see the sun again and cry tears of joy, until the next time.

Winning football games was nothing compared to putting up with a pack of 14-year-olds going stir crazy, I’m tell you what.

Now, Coupeville has had some decent coaches after Otton, with Ron Bagby putting in a strong 26-year run.

But, what it?

What if Otton stays, and the NGUNNGU (Never Give Up, Never Never Give Up) flags fly in Coupeville? What if I don’t meet him in high school, but instead as a young reporter after the move to Whidbey?

What if the Wolves had six state titles? What if the prairie was where the premier gridiron program in the state lived?

What if?

And then we move to Jim Hosek, a much-loved teacher and coach who didn’t leave the Island, but was forced into leaving his role of shepherding the Wolves.

During his six-year run as head baseball coach at CHS (1973-1978), Hosek won 103 games, five straight league titles and four district crowns.

Year after year the Wolves were either in the state tourney or on the cusp of it, and then it ended when Hosek resigned as a teacher to focus on his family’s novelty business.

He offered to remain on as the school’s baseball coach, but the school board of the time was fairly strict about wanting teachers as coaches and went in a different direction.

Fun fact: today, in 2016, eight of the 11 head coaching positions at CHS are currently filled by men and women who are not teachers at the school.

Only Randy King (track), Brett Smedley (football) and Kyle Nelson (boys soccer) would fit the old guidelines.

In ’78, though, the school went away from their hardball guru, and he ended up going on to excel as a coach at Skagit Valley College.

Again, the Wolves have done OK since his departure — Willie Smith had an especially strong run — but, what if?

What if the man who had built the start of a dynasty had been given the chance to complete the job?

What if Wolf baseball continued to rampage under Hosek, piling up more titles, more (non-existent) banners, maybe even finish the job of winning a state title or two?

What if?

Our last man in this trio is a bit of a mystery.

Archie Mick Vivian was the boys’ basketball coach for less than three full seasons, but the Wolves flew high during his time at the helm.

In his second campaign (’78’-’79), Coupeville upended King’s for the Cascade A League title, then became one of just two Wolf boys hoops team to ever win a game at the state tourney.

But, during his third season, as injuries and the death of a key player’s father ripped apart his squad, Vivian was forced to suddenly step down.

The newspaper reports at the time are vague, hinting that it had to do with an alleged incident with a female student who he gave a ride home, then nothing more is to be found.

Vivian’s players, now in their early ’50s, stand by their coach, calling him one of the best they ever played for, and believe he was exonerated shortly afterwards.

After his time at Coupeville, he taught English in Mount Vernon, drove a delivery truck and worked as a process server until he passed away in 2006.

In an online tribute story I found, he is remembered as one of the greatest athletes to ever come out of Kalama, and remains, to this day, the only guard in Washington state prep basketball history to play in four consecutive state title games.

The story lists no other coaching jobs for Vivian after his time at CHS.

I wasn’t on Whidbey in the late ’70s. I can’t claim to know the whole story about Vivian’s departure.

What I do know is this. Sports fans are a curious lot.

Give us a hint of what a coach could do, of what a coach might have been, and you can’t help but wonder.

What if Vivian had stayed in Coupeville and continued to build on his strong start?

Wolf boys’ basketball has only made it back to state one time in the 36 years since his departure. Would that have changed if he had remained?

You can’t help but wonder, the same as we do with Otton and Hosek.

What if?

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The young soccer players you coach today could grow up to be all-stars like Julia Myers one day. Then think how proud you'd be. (John Fisken photo)

   The young soccer players you coach today could grow up to be all-stars like Julia Myers one day. Then think how proud you’d be. (John Fisken photo)

Well, it’s North Whidbey … but one Island and all that jazz.

Despite the fact all the games are taking place up in the Navy-owned town we don’t talk about (if we can help it), we’re throwing the North Whidbey Soccer Club a bone.

With a huge influx of youth league players this season (430, with a wait list beyond that) NWSC will boast 60 teams, but doesn’t have close to that number in coaches.

The league is delaying the start of the season to Sept. 19 (the eight-week season runs through Nov. 7) while trying to pull together more soccer gurus.

Know something about soccer? Anything? Feeling community-orientated?

Now’s your moment.

If you’re interested in coaching or assisting, contact the league’s director of recreation, Theresa, at nwscrecreation@gmail.com.

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