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Ulrik Wells dropped in four points Tuesday to help power the Coupeville JV to a win at Concrete. (John Fisken photo)

   Ulrik Wells dropped in four points Tuesday to help power the Coupeville JV to a win at Concrete. (John Fisken photo)

Never skipped a beat.

Playing without three of their four tallest players Tuesday, the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad turned to the three-ball and knocked off host Concrete 40-36.

The win, which snaps a brief two-game skid, lifts the Wolves to 5-4 headed into Christmas break.

Coupeville played without big men Kyle Rockwell, Koa Davison and Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim, but sharpshooter Mason Grove picked up the offensive slack.

Raining down 17 points, including four treys, he kept the Wolves alive early, then put them over the top later.

Concrete actually led 16-11 after the first quarter, with Grove (6) and Sean Toomey-Stout (5) accounting for all the CHS points.

The second quarter saw an immediate change, as the Wolves clamped down on defense, using a 12-2 surge to snatch the lead away for good.

Jered Brown hit a pair of shots, but it was Grove who wielded the biggest dagger, rolling up another eight points with treys #3 and #4 and a pair of free throws.

From there, Coupeville coasted home for the win, icing the game with strong work at the free-throw stripe.

“It wasn’t pretty, but we got the job done,” said CHS coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh. “Got good minutes from Tucker Hall, Nikolai Lyngra, Dawson Houston and Elliott Johnson.”

Toomey-Stout hit for nine to back up Grove’s 17, while Brown knocked down seven.

Ulrik Wells, Coupeville’s only active big man, powered inside for four and Jean Lund-Olsen came up with all three of his points down the stretch.

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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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Jake Hoagland (John Fisken photo)

   Jake Hoagland was one of nine Wolves to get a hit Wednesday, as the Wolf JV crushed Concrete 14-0. (John Fisken photo)

No umps, no problem.

A scheduling snafu left Coupeville and Concrete without any men in blue for their JV baseball game Wednesday, but that didn’t stop the teams from playing.

And it certainly didn’t keep the Wolves from howling.

With CHS varsity coach Marc Aparicio stepping in to call balls and strikes, the CHS young guns slapped their visitors around 14-0 in a game called after five innings.

The win lifted the Wolf JV to 5-1 on the season.

The lack of umpires did not go unnoticed, but everyone survived quite nicely.

“It was a very clean game but bummer we didn’t have them,” said Coupeville JV coach Chris Smith.

Coupeville had everything working, with tons o’ hits, stellar defense and crisp pitching all perfectly meshing under the guidance of Smith and coaching partner Mike Etzell.

Matt Hilborn, Nick Etzell and Jonathan Thurston split time on the mound for the Wolves, combining for the shutout, while their defense was nearly spotless behind them.

At the plate, Joey Lippo lashed a two-run triple to key things, while he, Shane Losey, Hilborn and Etzell all had multiple hits.

Cameron Toomey-Stout, Dane Lucero, Jacob Zettle, Jake Hoagland and Jake Pease all collected hits as well, as the Wolf batters dinged Lion pitching all game long.

The Coupeville JV returns to action Saturday (11 AM), when it hosts a three-team tourney.

The Wolves will play three-inning games against Oak Harbor and South Whidbey, packaged around a similar meeting between the Wildcats and Falcons.

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CJ Smith (John Fisken photos)

   CJ Smith tossed a complete-game shutout Friday, as Coupeville rolled 9-0 at Concrete. (John Fisken photo)

This one was over quickly.

After playing one-run affairs in both of its first two games this season, the Coupeville High School baseball squad strolled through Friday’s game at Concrete.

Scoring in six of the seven innings played, the Wolves pounded their very accommodating hosts 9-0 to sweep a home-and-away series with the Lions.

Now 2-1 on the young season, Coupeville returns home to face Cedarcrest Monday and Sequim Tuesday, as they play four of their first five games on the prairie.

Making the drive off-Island didn’t seem to hurt the Wolves on the field or in their ability to draw fans, as a fairly large collection of Coupeville supporters showed up to watch the diamond men work.

Before all the traveling fans had even settled in, CHS put the game away, taking just three batters to score all the runs they would need on this day.

Hunter Smith led off, lashing a single to left, then came around to score on an RBI single to center from older brother CJ.

The elder Smith soon scampered around the base-paths himself, propelled by Cole Payne, who kept a recent hot streak alive by crunching an RBI double to deep right field that landed in the shadow of the snow-capped mountains.

While the initial assault quickly sputtered out, with a double play off of a fly-out by Dane Lucero (Payne was thrown out trying to advance to third) blunting the attack, it would be all CJ Smith would need.

The senior hurler went the distance on the mound and was untouchable most of the afternoon.

He retired the side in order in four of the seven innings, and gave up just a single base runner in two of the other three frames.

The only time Concrete was able to get anything going was in the bottom of the sixth, but CJ Smith never broke a sweat getting out of the mini-jam.

Bearing down, the unflappable righty got a Lion to pop out to Lucero at first, stranding multiple base runners and earning a fist pump from dad Chris Smith, who was pacing on the edge of the dugout.

Coupeville kept picking away at Concrete’s pitching staff, adding a single run in the the third, fourth and fifth, before dropping three in the sixth and another solo run in the seventh.

Lucero, Hunter Smith and Cameron Toomey-Stout knocked in runs to stretch the lead to 5-0, then the Wolves put together their best sustained rally in the top of the sixth.

Payne ripped a one-out single, Lucero smacked an RBI double, Gabe Wynn sent a screamer over the third baseman’s head for another RBI double and Brenden Gilbert eked out a bases-loaded walk and the rout was on.

Not content to stop with eight, Coupeville saved its most thrilling journey across home plate for the final inning.

With Payne perched on third, after another double and a wild pitch, Joey Lippo laced a grounder to the Lion first baseman for the inning’s second out.

The crafty senior crept down the line, then exploded at the last second, sliding under the frantic tag as Concrete’s catcher juggled the throw while trying to slap the ball on Payne’s leg.

Popping up to a roar from his own personal cheering section, Cole was all smiles, a familiar sight among Wolf players and fans on this afternoon.

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Ty Eck scored the game's 25th and final run Wednesday. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Wolf freshman Ty Eck scored the game’s 25th and final run Wednesday. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Senior catcher Cole Payne knocked in five runs, including the game winner.

   Senior catcher Cole Payne knocked in five runs, including the game winner, and was a rock for his young pitchers.

This one got wild.

If you left midway through Wednesday’s non-conference baseball game between Concrete and Coupeville, you’re going to read most of this article and be like, “What the heck?!?!”

What started as a pitcher’s duel on the sun-drenched prairie turned into a slugger’s brawl in which the Wolves lost a seven-run lead in the final inning, but still came back to hand new coach Marc Aparicio his first win.

Riding a walk-off RBI single from senior catcher Cole Payne — his fifth RBI of the day — Coupeville escaped with a 13-12 victory that left the overflow crowd happy while evening the team’s record at 1-1.

Payne’s pinpoint hit, which sliced beautifully into center field and would have likely cleared the bases if more runs had been necessary, capped a topsy-turvy afternoon.

With freshman hurler Dane Lucero blanking Concrete over the first three innings, Coupeville built a narrow 2-0 lead and fans seemed to be in for a low-scoring affair.

The Wolves eked out a run in the first, off of two Lion errors and two walks, then tacked on a run in the third when Lucero scampered home on a passed ball.

Concrete scratched their way back into things, however, scoring three in the top of the fourth, two after what everyone originally thought was the third out.

An RBI double had sliced the lead to 2-1, but with runners at second and third and two outs, a Lion hitter topped the ball and was tossed out at first.

Only he wasn’t, as after both teams had left the field, the umps conferred and brought them back on, deciding the ball had never been fair in the first place.

Given a reprieve, Concrete promptly ripped a two-run double down the left field line to snatch the lead away.

Joey Lippo replaced Lucero on the mound to start the fifth, and with the ump calling a tight strike zone, walked home another run to let the Lions stretch their lead out to 4-2.

Then, in the snap of a finger, the Wolf offense suddenly became Murderers’ Row, drilling Concrete for five runs in the fifth, then another five in the sixth.

Coupeville sent 19 batters to the plate across the two innings, with Payne crunching a two-run single one inning, then topping that with a two-run double the next time up.

Lucero, Lippo, Gabe Wynn and Matt Hilborn all knocked in runs with hits, while the final two Wolf runs in the surge scored on a throwing error.

Cruising at 12-5, just three outs away from closing out a romp, Coupeville decided to even things up by suddenly forgetting how to play defense, at least for half an inning.

Three errors and a balk by the previously fairly-stable Wolves opened the door, and Concrete burst through in style, tacking on four hits as they cut the lead to 12-11.

Coupeville came within inches of closing the game on a double play, but after forcing a runner at second for out #2, the ensuing throw to first base hit the dirt and skipped over the waiting glove for error #4 in the inning.

That allowed the tying run to shoot home, sending Concrete players into hysterics and emotionally sucker-punching the pro-Wolf crowd.

And yet, Coupeville never blinked.

Payne, one of only two senior starters for the Wolves, immediately settled down his freshman pitcher (Hilborn) and they got out of the inning.

Then, as he headed to the bench, he commanded his team to go win in the bottom of the seventh.

They listened.

Three straight walks put Ty Eck, Hunter Smith and CJ Smith perched on the bags with no outs and Payne strode to the plate, ready to claim the same legendary status once owned by big brother Morgan.

Staring down the Concrete pitcher, Cole jumped on a pitch and wrote the perfect ending, launching the ball into the dying sun.

As the ball caught grass, Eck stomped on home and the crowd went bonkers with a mix of joy and relief, the middle Payne kid strolled around first and into Wolf lore.

Cole, what a great game he had,” Aparicio said. “Not just at the plate, either. He called a really good game and talked to his pitchers when they were struggling and got them focused.

“I’m really proud of him.”

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