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One of the gift baskets available at this Saturday’s Booster Club dinner and auction. (Photos courtesy Jess Lucero)

Two days to go, with 16 tickets left on the open market.

After that you’ll have to hang out behind the gym and deal with the ticket scalpers.

The return of the Coupeville High School Booster Club’s annual dinner and auction is set for this Saturday, Nov. 11, with doors opening at 4:30 PM.

The event happens at the Whidbey Island Nordic Lodge (63 Jacobs Road) and will be catered by Serendipity Catering and Events.

Dinner begins at 6:00, with a dessert auction set for 6:30, and a live auction hosted by Dale Sherman kicking off at 7:00.

A silent auction and raffles run throughout the evening.

Tickets are $55, or $400 for a table of eight, and can be obtained from Booster Club board members, who can be found at the end of this article.

Auction items continue to pour in, with some recent additions including “beachside drinks and pu pu platter,” hosted by Gordon McMillan and Nancy Conard, a painting party (with wine) for up to 10, and a dinner for six (with wine pairings) cooked in your home by a professional chef.

Those items join already announced ones such as a one-week stay at a Maui condo, a sunset cruise, and a four-day, three-night stay at a townhome in Park City, Utah — home of the Sundance Film Festival.

Wolf cross country cares about your tender tootsies.

There will also be a variety of themed baskets available in the silent auction, including Italian dinner and wine and cheese assortments, as well as Sherman beef, running and Patagonia gear, and local artwork.

All proceeds help the Coupeville Booster Club, which provides major funding for school athletics.

The organization annually awards eight $1,000 scholarships to graduating seniors, while also providing a yearly stipend to high school and middle school sports programs.

The club provides roses for Senior Night festivities, varsity letters for Wolf athletes, meal money and goodie bags for road trips, and numerous team improvement items.

These have ranged from literature and DVDs to tarps, weight room equipment, batting cages, upgrades to school athletic fields and facilities, and t-shirts for cancer awareness nights.

The Wall of Fame in the CHS gym, which documents accomplishments from 100+ years of Coupeville athletics?

It wouldn’t exist without the support of the boosters, who provided the biggest financial contribution to its development, and continue to handle updates.

Your bucks help the booster club thrive, and the club helps athletics thrive. The circle of life in Wolf Nation.

 

To buy tickets, call Jess Lucero at (636) 675-1632 or reach out to any of these Booster Club board members:

 

Michelle Armstrong
Garrett Arnold
Dina Guay
Leann Leavitt
Mariah Madsen
Bob Martin
Gordon McMillan
Jon Roberts
Ron Wright

Ashley’s Design can outfit your entire crew.

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Dale Sherman, man of the hour. (Photos courtesy Jack Sell)

Everyone gets a win.

You get one, and you get one, and what the heck, you get a couple more for good measure.

Coupeville High School’s athletic programs were all clicking during the 1963-1964 school year, as a look through one of my landlord’s yearbooks proves.

It was a year when Wolf football, boys basketball, and baseball all posted winning records, going a combined 28-14, while the CHS boys tennis team captured league and sub-district titles.

What was the netters record, you ask?

The Leloo Cly of the day ain’t tellin’, so I ain’t sayin’, but it was a campaign which included multiple titles and ended with David Lortz and Ron Edwards playing at the state tourney, so probably pretty darn good.

Toss in what appears to be a four-man track and field squad, and a seven-woman girls tennis team which (rare for the time period) got to compete against rival schools, and things were hoppin’ back in the day.

Roger Eelkema, ready to run like the wind.

 

How things played out in ’63-’64:

 

Baseball:

The Wolves, paced by Bob Rea, the Strikeout King of Snakelum Point, went 11-5 overall, 8-4 in Northwest League play, finishing a close second to Granite Falls.

Coupeville dropped 19 runs in one win over Langley, and swept all four games against arch-rival La Conner, but it was a mid-season game at Darrington which will live forever.

That was the day Rea, then a junior, rang up 27 strikeouts across 16 innings in a 2-1 win.

Yes, those numbers are correct, and as we descend further and further into a nanny state dominated by pitch-count rules, it is the one CHS record, in any sport, which will absolutely, positively, NEVER be broken.

 

Boys basketball:

Denny Clark closed one of the great Wolf hardwood careers, pouring in 365 of his 869 career points to pace a squad which went 12-5, finishing third at the league tourney.

The buzz-cut one was #2 all-time in scoring when he graduated, behind just Mike Criscuola, and nearly 60 years (and the introduction of the three-point line) later, still sits at #9 on the career scoring chart.

Clark had plenty of help, with three others putting up triple-digits in the time of the two-hand set-shot.

David Lortz banked in 251, Dick Smith popped for 173, and future prairie farming legend Dale Sherman tossed in 142 during a campaign in which the Wolves won eight straight games at one point.

 

Boys tennis:

Coupeville beat Friday Harbor in the season finale to claim the Northwest League crown, with Lee Milheim, Bill Bainbridge, and Bruce Seiger coming up big in the match.

From there, the Wolves stormed their way through the postseason, with Ron Edwards and David Lortz keying a sub-district team title, then advancing to state, where the duo made the final eight.

 

Cheer:

Carolyn Hancock led a five-woman team, with Sharon Meadors, Marilyn Sherman, Sue Gable, and Christy Carter joining her in bringing the noise ‘n pep.

 

Football:

A team which featured my landlord, Jack Sell, and was led by coach Ray Olmstead, overcame injuries to finish 5-4, beating everyone it played except league kingpins Chimacum and Granite Falls.

The Wolves started 3-0, with a 57-7 shellacking of La Conner capping the run, before a one-point loss to Chimacum ended any dreams of a perfect season.

Coupeville bounced back to blow out La Conner again, this time triumphing 33-13, while a 39-6 thrashing of Darrington clinched the winning mark.

Six seniors — Paul Leese, Denny Keith, Gary Crandall, Dale Sherman, Denny Clark, and Ed Brown — led the way, with Crandall earning Most Inspirational honors.

 

Girls tennis:

Title IX was still years away, with girls sports mostly intramurals under the banner of the Girls Athletic Association.

But in ’64, the CHS girls purchased their first tennis uniforms — “white sweatshirts, bright red Bermuda’s, and white tennis shoes” — and played Friday Harbor, Tolt, and Granite Falls.

Coupeville’s top girls doubles duo.

While no record is recorded in the yearbook, the lineup is:

1st singles — Liz Edwards
2nd singles — Sue Gable
3rd singles — Sharon Meadors

1st doubles — Jan Pickard/Marilyn Sherman
2nd doubles — Betty Brown/Sue Bowers

 

Track and Field:

Dick Bogardus, Paul Messner, Roger Eelkema, and Lee Dennis are all shown in photos, though there is not a word about their exploits.

Still, looking at a photo of pole vaulter Messner, gridiron legend and future Santa Claus, draws a line from the past to the present.

“How you doin’?”

Decades later, one of Messner’s grandchildren, Jordan Ford, also repping Coupeville, went all the way to the state tourney and medaled in the pole vault.

It was meant to be.

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“Wine Racks by Willie, it’s the next Amazon. Just sayin’, get in on the ground floor or weep sweet, salty tears for the rest of your life.” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The crabs will be there, will you?

Coupeville High School’s biggest athletic fundraiser, the annual Crab Feed, is set for Nov. 9, and tickets go on sale today.

The event, which features Dale Sherman (and his velvet voice) as auctioneer, is held at the Whidbey Island Nordic Lodge Hall, which is located at 63 Jacobs Road in Coupeville.

Doors open at 4:30, though the crabs will be entering through the back door.

Tickets, which can be purchased from any Coupeville Booster Club board member, are $50 and include two free drinks.

If you don’t cross paths with the ticket holders, you can also reach them by messaging them through the Club’s Facebook page:

https://www.facebook.com/coupevilleboosterclub/

Along with the crab and various other tasty food products to be served, the event features an auction.

A couple of highlights include a two-hour boat tour from Saratoga Yacht Charters, a champagne and truffle reception for 12 at the Compass Rose, and a hand-made Madrona wood side table with a built-in wine rack created by CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith.

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Dale Sherman, still basking in the glow of Coupeville's 1963 beat-down of La Conner on the gridiron. (Sherry Roberts photo)

   Dale Sherman, still basking in the glow of Coupeville’s 57-7 beat-down of La Conner in 1963. (Sherry Roberts photo)

Play like it’s 1963.

As the Coupeville High School football team heads to La Conner tonight (7 PM kickoff) to meet one of its most storied rivals, the stakes are relatively high for this early in the season.

While it’s a non-conference game, win and the Wolves open at 2-0 for the first time since 2009.

Plus, anytime you take down the Braves, who have a truly rich athletic history, it’s a cause for major celebration.

Which takes us back to Sept. 27, 1963 and the beat-down heard across the state.

That day a scrappy Coupeville squad found itself in a hole just one play into the game.

La Conner, having won the coin flip, took the opening kick-off to the house, returning it 80+ yards for a touchdown.

With barely a few seconds ticked off on the game clock, the Wolves were trailing, they were disorientated and they were desperate.

Or were they?

53 years down the road, the exact mood of the moment is probably hard to remember.

But this much is true, it shifted quickly.

Coupeville promptly threw down 57 unanswered points — eight touchdowns and a game-capping safety — and thrashed the bejeebers out of the Braves 57-7.

By the time they were done the Wolves would rack up a 386-23 advantage in yards, one of the most lopsided statistical games in CHS history.

Bob Rea, the strikeout king on the baseball diamond, got things going when he chucked a 46-yard bomb to receiver Denny Clark for a game-tying touchdown.

After that, it was boom, boom, boom, as the scores kept coming, one after another.

Rea connected with Clark for a second score, then the Wolves went to the ground with a relentless attack.

Denny Keith and Eddie Brown each rumbled into the end zone twice, while Dale Sherman and Gary Crandall both chipped in with their own stroll to pay dirt.

Crandall’s was a bit of a surprise, as he wasn’t even a running back.

With the score getting lopsided, Coupeville’s coaching staff moved Crandall, normally a lineman, into the backfield to give him a reward for his hard work.

Given the chance to inherit a skills position, he promptly rose to the occasion, shedding tacklers as he surged right up the middle to the promised land.

Not finished there, Crandall capped the scoring when, back at his normal position, he plastered a La Conner ball-carrier, riding him down in the end zone for a safety that brought a merciful end to the scoring onslaught.

The game remains one of the true high points in Coupeville football history, not only for the score, but for the level of the opponent toppled, as well.

It was truly a perfect storm.

And, it could and should be inspiration for the 2016 Wolves.

Go out there tonight and play like the ’63ers and 50+ years from now someone (maybe even me) will be telling your tale of triumph.

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