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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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Melissa Otto made her varsity debut Saturday, as the Wolves rolled to an 11-1 win. (John Fisken photo)

   Melissa Otto made her varsity debut Saturday, as the Wolves rolled to an 11-1 win. (John Fisken photo)

The Team of Destiny rolls on.

After roaring from behind in almost every game this season, the Coupeville High School softball squad decided to play from in front Saturday.

Raining down runs from the first pitch, the Wolves jumped on host Friday Harbor quickly and never let up, cruising to an 11-1 non-conference win in a game called after five innings.

The victory, the fourth straight for Coupeville, lifts it to 5-1, the best start by a Wolf softball squad in more than a decade.

CHS will have a strong shot at keeping its early season success going, hosting Port Townsend (0-3) Thursday in the 1A Olympic League opener for both teams.

The RedHawks will enter that rumble carrying a 25-game losing streak that stretches back to April 28, 2014.

Coupeville, by stark contrast, has come alive under a new coaching staff, with its young roster runnin’ and gunnin’ teams to distraction.

Facing off with a Friday Harbor team that was coming off a one-run win over Concrete in its opener, the Wolves were ruthless.

Using five walks and booming doubles off of the bats of Katrina McGranahan and Sarah Wright, Coupeville exploded for six runs in the first inning.

The ability to eke out base on balls was a particular strength for the patient Wolf hitters.

“Walks were the theme today, as the opposing pitchers had a tough time finding the strike zone all day,” said Coupeville coach Kevin McGranahan.

CHS continued to attack in the early going, tacking on three runs in the second (three walks and a timely hit from lead-off ace Lauren Rose), one more in the third and a final run in the fourth.

While the offense was clicking, the pitching and defense were just as on-target.

Wolf hurler Katrina McGranahan “pitched great all day and even unleashed a new pitch and had great success,” while Wright nailed two runners trying to steal second with strong throws from behind the plate.

“After that they stopped trying,” Kevin McGranahan said with a laugh.

The Wolf defense was solid all-around, with Mikayla Elfrank recording her second unassisted double play of the young season, going to her left to snag a screaming liner.

Pivoting quickly, the sophomore shortstop stamped on second for one out, then nailed the runner headed to first with a laser throw.

Jae LeVine also put her name in the battle for best defensive play of the afternoon, shooting from her spot at second to run down a ball behind first base.

Having corralled it, she flipped it to Kailey Kellner, who was covering the bag, for an out that brought a smile to her coach’s face.

“The defense was awesome today,” Kevin McGranahan said.

“Another team win and the girls all played as a team and are gelling faster than we expected,” he added. “I can’t be more proud of all of these girls; some of them are doing things for the team and I have not had anyone hang their head, they just keep going.”

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Mia Littlejohn

   Kalia Littlejohn gazes adoringly at big sis Mia, after the sophomore helped spark Coupeville to a huge playoff win Friday night. (Photo courtesy Kalia Littlejohn)

(Amy King photo)

16-5 and off to regionals for the first time in a decade. (Amy King photo)

They screamed. They wept tears of joy. They grabbed each other in bear hugs and twirled around.

And that was just the moms.

Waves of joy and elation swept out of the locker room and across the floor at Sumner High School Friday night, as the Coupeville High school girls’ basketball squad and its substantial rooting contingent celebrated the program’s epic 49-33 district playoff thrashing of Seattle Christian.

Payback to the team that knocked CHS out of the postseason in an overtime thriller last season, the victory lifted the Wolves to 16-5 and propelled them to regionals for the first time in a decade.

Now one of just 16 teams left with a shot at a 1A state title, Coupeville will return to action either Friday, Feb. 26 or Saturday, Feb. 27.

The foe and place of battle will be revealed after district play wraps up Saturday.

Regionals will be a loser-out affair, with the winner hitting the road to Yakima Mar. 3-5 for the eight-team, double-elimination state tourney.

If the Wolves play like they did Friday night, anything is possible in the coming game(s).

After being roughed up by a physical Charles Wright squad in a four-point loss in their opening game at districts Wednesday, Coupeville showed, without a doubt, they had taken the lessons learned to heart.

With five girls firing as one, regardless of which players were on the floor, the Wolves were aggressive, they were ball-hawks, they racked up a steady diet of bruises from hitting the floor in pursuit of loose balls and rebounds, and they frankly weren’t takin’ no crap from no one.

“I’m so impressed with the game these players put together tonight!,” said exhausted but elated CHS coach David King as his players whooped and hollered in the muggy gym.

With their leader stalking the sidelines all night, the young Wolves responded to his pleas, listened to his instruction and made their mentor proud.

And it all started with defense.

In-your-face, take-the-ball-away-and-knock-their-butt-on-the-floor defense.

“We brought our A+ game and had our best defensive game all year,” King said.

“I need to start by spotlighting Lauren Grove and the outstanding defensive effort all game on #15,” he added. “That was one of the most impressive defensive efforts I’ve seen at a high school girls basketball game.”

Seattle Christian, which loves to drop the three-ball, found themselves constantly besieged by the Wolves, who rarely let the Warriors get an uncontested shot off.

“The whole team was outstanding,” King said. “We made a strategic move and instead of putting Makana (Stone) on one of their best offensive players we moved Kailey (Kellner) into that spot. All game Kailey frustrated and held #33 in check.

“It doesn’t end there. Kyla (Briscoe) took turns on both players and didn’t miss a beat and matched the intensity that the other two had on defense.

“Not to be outdone, Makana, Tiffany (Briscoe), Lindsey (Roberts) and Mia (Littlejohn) brought the defensive effort with great help defense that really made us play defense as one.”

Coupeville’s defense made up for an unforgiving basket on the offensive end in the first quarter.

The Wolves got shots, decent shots, a whole lot of shots in fact, but as the minutes started to add up and the ball found even more creative ways to rattle out, pop loose and skitter away from the rim, it would have been easy to panic.

But not on this night.

Stone finally got Coupeville on the board when she soared over two players, snatched a carom and put the rebound back up and in with just 17 seconds left in the opening quarter.

Trailing only 6-2 heading into the second, saved by their scrappiness on defense, the Wolves finally unleashed the beast.

Littlejohn split the defense with a scorching pass to Stone for a layup to kick off the second, then Coupeville claimed the lead for good with an 8-0 run midway through the quarter.

Once they were ahead, the Wolves started to put the hammer down, led by their sophomore point guard, who was at her feisty best.

Bobbing and weaving, barking at opposing players and verbally spurring on her teammates, Littlejohn went for seven of her nine points in a four-minute stretch, capping it with a cold-blooded trey from the top with just five ticks on the clock.

Her dagger (and the yelling of the Coupeville moms) punched a hole right through the heart of the scattered Seattle Christian fans, who started off mild and got quiet really, really fast when faced with the power of Whidbey-cultivated lungs.

If the Warriors thought they were still in the game, that changed in a hurry after halftime.

Stone strode from the locker room, all but dropping her cape James Brown style, and went on a rampage, tossing down 12 points in the third, each basket more explosive than the one before it.

Midway through the quarter she spun past a befuddled defender, who was left looking one way while Stone went the other way, and banked home her 400th point of the season.

Now sitting with 412 points in 21 games (19.6 a night), she joins Brianne King as the only Wolf female hoops stars to score that much in a single season.

She wasn’t the only weapon firing in the third, though, as Littlejohn stormed end to end for a bucket and Kellner came crashing through the paint twice for hard-earned buckets.

The junior sharpshooter, always dangerous from the corners, played like a beast in the paint, her braids flying behind her as she used and abused the Warriors.

Never relenting, the Wolf defense stayed ramped-up in the fourth, forcing Seattle Christian to take unbalanced shots. And then, each time, two to three CHS girls hit the boards in unison, a direct contrast to Wednesday.

With eight of the ten girls on the roster seeing floor time (Skyler Lawrence made her playoff debut while Lauren Rose and Allison Wenzel were raucous on the bench in support), Coupeville overcame not really being fully healthy.

Tiffany is and has been playing on a sprained ankle and was solid on defense,” King said. “Lindsey has been battling being sick all week, hasn’t complained once.

“And every time I called on her to check in she was ready.”

Stone made it 21-for-21 this season with double-doubles, racking up 24 points and 20 rebounds, while Kellner was a killer, throwing down 12, snagging 10 boards and dealing out five assists.

Littlejohn popped for nine, snatched five boards, dealt out three assists, drove Seattle Christian’s ball-handlers to distraction and danced in the locker room afterwards as her teammates played drums on the lockers.

Grove rounded out the offensive assault with four points, while she (6) and Kyla Briscoe (5) accounted for another 11 rebounds as Coupeville thoroughly dominated the glass.

With 13 assists to just 11 turnovers (“our passing game was good all game”), the Wolves put together their most complete game at the biggest moment possible.

The win was the first-ever playoff victory for a basketball team from the 1A Olympic League, which was a combined 0-15 in girls and boys postseason action in its first two seasons.

Now, with a week to prepare for another battle, Coupeville coaches David and Amy King, who will celebrate their 30th wedding anniversary at practice Monday, have time to get their players healthy, while basking (a bit) in the afterglow.

“This was a true team effort from top to bottom!,” David King said. “Every player was engaged the whole game and wouldn’t settle for anything other than a win.

“I’m so impressed!”

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Mia Littlejohn (21), seen here in an earlier game, dropped in nine points Friday to spark Coupeville to a league win. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

   Mia Littlejohn (21), seen here in an earlier game, dropped in nine points Friday to spark Coupeville to a league win. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

They almost threw a shutout.

Using an opportunistic, scrambling defense, the Couepville High School girls’ basketball squad held visiting Port Townsend scoreless for nearly a quarter-and-a-half to kick off Friday night’s game.

And, while they finally did give up a bucket at the 4:25 mark of the second quarter, the Wolves stayed almost as stingy the entire game, freezing out the RedHawks en route to a 29-14 win.

The victory, which capped a long week in which the Wolves faced finals at school while playing three games in five days — two on the road — lifted CHS to 10-4 overall, 4-0 in league play.

Coupeville, the defending league champs, once again sits atop the 1A Olympic League, with Klahowya (2-2), Chimacum (1-3) and Port Townsend (1-3) trying to play catch-up.

While they maybe didn’t play perfect on this night, they kept their record perfect by bringing the heat on ‘D’.

“In the first half we definitely played strong defense; our help defense was there,” said Coupeville coach David King. “I love that we had that energy.”

He would have liked a little stronger showing on the boards, though, as the RedHawks controlled the rebounding game early, but could not get a shot to go down.

No matter what they tried.

Shot after shot slid off the rim for Port Townsend, caught a bad bounce on the glass or started to drop, only to pop back out.

In the early going, Coupeville wasn’t much luckier themselves, as the two teams combined to go scoreless until the 3:37 mark of the first quarter.

The Wolves finally broke through when Lauren Grove banked in a long jumper from the left side, getting the ball to rattle around before it settled through the twines with a sigh.

Of course, that sigh might have come from anxious Wolf fans.

If it did, it changed to a roar in an instant, as Mia Littlejohn drained a pull-up trey from the top on the very next possession, effectively ending the game at 5-0.

While that might sound a bit extreme, it’s not, as Port Townsend could not get anything going on offense, no matter what they tried.

After a Makana Stone put-back staked the Wolves to a 7-0 lead at the end of one, Coupeville finally surrendered a runner in the key, then closed the half out with an 8-0 run.

Littlejohn and Stone each dropped in four during the surge, with the best bucket coming on a vintage coast-to-coast rampage by Coupeville’s lone senior.

On that play, Stone went to the ceiling to absolutely crush a Port Townsend shot.

Having snagged the loose ball off of the block, she hit the rocket boosters in her shoes and promptly out-ran everyone to the other end for a swooping, slicing lay-up.

Port Townsend’s shooting touch warmed up just a bit in the second half, as they finally struggled into double digits in the fourth quarter, but they never truly threatened the Wolves.

Coupeville ran the lead out to 29-10, off of back-to-back buckets from Kailey Kellner, on a beautiful pump fake and drive, and Stone, before the RedHawks tossed in two baskets in the final seconds.

Stone paced the Wolves with 12 points, 18 rebounds, seven blocks and four steals, while Littlejohn banged away for nine points, seven boards and two assists.

Kellner (four points, three rebounds) and Grove (four points, two rebounds) rounded out the Wolf scorers.

Mia played well tonight,” King said. “She was aggressive on defense and helped us get going on offense early on.

Lauren Grove hit a couple big shots for us, as well.”

Lindsey Roberts (3), Skyler Lawrence (3), Tiffany Briscoe (2) and Kyla Briscoe (2) all chipped in on the boards, while Lauren Rose and Allison Wenzel were relentless on defense during their floor time.

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Tanner Kircher

Tanner Kircher

Deeds, not words.

Tanner Kircher makes his statement, and it’s a loud one, by fiercely guarding his patch of the soccer pitch.

A skilled defender who has also successfully doubled as an emergency goaltender this season, he’s a strong, sometimes underrated, linchpin for the Coupeville High School boys’ soccer squad.

Try and bring the ball into his territory and he will ruthlessly crush your dreams of scoring.

“One of my strengths is clearing the ball,” Kircher said. “I want to work on moving up with the offense to make some plays.”

The Wolf junior has spent much of his life on the pitch, following in the footsteps of older brother Nathan, a former CHS star himself.

“I’ve played soccer for about eight years and I started because my brother played soccer and I wanted to be like him,” Kircher said. “I enjoy the play making in soccer; it’s amazing when a play comes together.”

The two Kirchers eventually played together at CHS, one of the high points of Tanner’s soccer career.

With mom Dawn Brock claiming her status as one of the loudest ‘n proudest of any soccer mom in the land, it was a full-on family celebration.

“My brother has made a huge difference in my life,” Kircher said. “If it wasn’t for him, I probably wouldn’t be playing soccer.”

Away from the game, he enjoys woodworking, while, on the field, he wants to help the Wolves nab a district playoff berth.

Soccer is Kircher’s only official school sport, but he’s game for just about any sport you can offer him.

“I don’t play any other school sports but I like to play anything that is physical.”

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