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Posts Tagged ‘flashback’

   Future Wolf stars (l to r) Steve Konek, Todd Pedlar, Scott Losey, Mitch Aparicio, Bill Carstensen, Brandy Ambrose and Rusty Bailey. (Photo courtesy Aparicio)

Future gridiron stars, basketball hot shots and track record holders — all wearing prime early ’80s short shorts.

The pic above, which comes to us courtesy Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Famer Mitch Aparicio, captures the junior high version of the Wolves, circa the 1981-1982 season.

As we count down towards Jan. 19, when CHS will celebrate the 101st anniversary of the first hoops game in school history, we’re collecting and posting as many basketball pics as possible.

Have one? Have 100? Send them my way, to davidsvien@hotmail.com.

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   Current senior Payton Aparicio leads off a look at what this year’s volleyball team was up to in 2004, the last time Wolf spikers made it to the state tourney.

Senior Kyla Briscoe

Senior Mikayla Elfrank

   Assistant coach Ashley Herndon, then a high school senior.

Senior Hope Lodell

Sophomore Emma Mathusek

Senior Katrina McGranahan

Junior Ashley Menges

Freshman Chelsea Prescott

Senior Lauren Rose

Assistant coach Chris Smith

Junior Emma Smith

Sophomore Scout Smith

Sophomore Maya Toomey-Stout

Senior Allison Wenzel (left) and big sis Rachel.

   And head coach Cory Whitmore, back when he was tearing up the court as a 14-year-old.

A lot has changed in 13 years.

When Coupeville High School’s volleyball squad heads to Yakima Thursday, it’ll be the first time the Wolf spikers have made it to the state tourney since 2004.

Back then, Toni Crebbin was calling the shots on the sideline for CHS and all-timers like Taniel Lamb, Mindy Horr and Kirsty Croghan were roaming the floor, mixing thunderous spikes with silky sets and sizzlin’ service aces.

As the 2004 Wolves romped through a season in which they were ranked #1 in the state at one point, the next generation was quietly going about its own business.

Spread across Coupeville and several other towns (and states), the 13 girls and three coaches who comprise this year’s state team had no idea they would one day unite in the spotlight.

While they wait for the bus to gas up for the long trip East, let’s take a ramble down memory lane and see just what they were all up to back in those lazy, hazy days of 2004.

You know, when OutKast was singing “Hey Ya!” and I was busy at Videoville, trying to make people rent the criminally-underrated “13 Going on 30.”

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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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(Photo courtesy Willie Smith's spring cleaning)

   You never know what you’re going to find when you start cleaning out the Athletic Director’s office. (Photo courtesy Willie Smith’s spring cleaning)

Sure, it’s Saturday, but you don’t always have to wait until Thursday for throwback photos.

This one comes to us from the “olden days” of 1992-1993, and gives us a glimpse into the early days of some of the best athletes to spring from Coupeville High School.

If you had to play a game of “pick the superstar before they were a superstar” it would probably come down between Jen Canfield and Marnie Bartelson.

Canfield, who is in the back row, far right, next to coach Ron Bagby, went on to be a two-time All-League hoops player in the Cascade Conference, easily one of the best to wear a Wolf uniform.

Her high school coach back in the day, Willie Smith, is now the CHS Athletic Director and the man who unearthed this pic for me.

Looking back, this is how he remembers Canfield:

“She was a complete joy to coach and completely personified what it means to be an athlete: competitive, hard working, coachable, leader, great all-around personality on and off the court.”

Bartelson was a solid hoops player herself, but soccer is where she made her name.

Playing with Oak Harbor (Coupeville didn’t have a team in the mid-’90s), she and fellow Wolf Amanda Allmer led the Wildcats to a league title and 4th place finish in 3A at state.

After winning league MVP honors in high school, Bartelson rewrote the record books at Utah State as a college player

But, while those two made the biggest post-middle school splash, at least athletically, all 12 girls featured here went on to shine, both in sports and off the court.

One, in fact, Emrie McCauslin (bottom row, far right) is the mom of a current Wolf hoops star — Maddy Hilkey.

The lineup (using maiden names):

Back row (l to r) — Jennifer Meyer, Bonnie Engle, Emily Wodjenski, Melanie Frost, Kristina Clark, Jen Canfield, Ron Bagby

Front row (l to r) — Sarah Miller, Marnie Bartelson, Rachel McIntyre, Nicole Monteleone, Jenny Christensen, Emrie McCauslin

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Boom

   Former Wolf great Boom Phomvongkoth played twice on Jan. 25 in a three-year period between 1992-1994. (John Fisken photo)

Both Hunter Hammer (left) and Dalton Engle played key roles in Coupeville upsetting South Whidbey five years ago today.

   Hunter Hammer (left) and Dalton Engle played key roles in Coupeville upsetting South Whidbey five years ago today, when Ian Smith hit “The Shot.” (Photo courtesy Linda Hammer)

Let’s get historical for a second.

Today marks the five-year anniversary of “The Shot” — Ian Smith banking home a lunging three-pointer at the buzzer to slay South Whidbey 44-42 on its own home court.

The basket shattered a ten-game Falcon winning streak, took down the first-place team in the Cascade Conference and ignited an explosion from the visitors side of the bleachers that has yet to fade.

To this day, video of that miracle — in which the Wolves snagged a rebound off of a missed South Whidbey free throw, got the ball to Tyler King, then watched as somehow, trapped, he spun the ball to Smith at the very last second — still enjoys huge popularity online.

So, with my recent temporary acquisition of 17 of the 20 score-books from Randy King’s tenure as CHS basketball coach, I got to wondering. What else might have happened on this day?

Turns out the Wolf boys played six times on Jan. 25 during King’s reign (that we know of; remember, I’m missing a couple of books), winning three.

Let’s go hop in the Way-back Machine, shall we, and explore this day in Coupeville basketball history.

1992: Wolves fall 70-39 to Tolt

King’s first season as head coach was a rough affair, as he had no seniors and had to throw an extremely young roster on the floor every night during an 0-20 campaign.

This night was not as bad as the other game against Tolt (a 101-41 loss) or their non-conference battle with a Blaine squad that refused to stop pressing the entire game (105-18), but the Wolves were also starting a three-game stretch without their top scorer, Virgil Roehl.

Tied at eight after the first quarter, CHS crumbled in the second (22-7) and fourth (20-9).

The lone bright spot came at the charity stripe, where Coupeville held a 19-5 advantage, led by Troy Blouin, who went a crisp 8-8.

Blouin netted 14 to pace the Wolves, while Brandon Huff banged home 12.

Scott Sollars (6), Matt Douglas (3), Boom Phomvongkoth (2), Jason McManigle (1) and Kit Manzanares (1) rounded out the attack.

1994: Wolves nipped 84-76 by Cedarcrest

This game was decided on free throws, with the Red Wolves hitting seven in the fourth, while Coupeville clanged five in the same time frame.

The final eight minutes were an offensive explosion all around, with 52 of the game’s 160 points (27-25 Coupeville) coming in the fourth quarter, keeping scorer Stephanie Engle’s fingers flying.

Five of the six Wolves who scored hit double digits, led by Brad Miller (19) and Manzanares (17).

Phomvongkoth and Matt Ortega dropped 11 apiece, while Roehl (10) and Gabe McMurray (8) both fouled out during a frantic finish.

2000: Wolves thrash Concrete 89-60

Third time’s the charm, as the Wolves opened on this Jan. 25 with a a 25-3 first quarter assault, then tacked on another 25-10 run to carry a 50-13 lead into the locker room.

Caesar Kortuem was out of his mind, outscoring Concrete by himself in the first half.

Knocking down shots from everywhere, he had 15 of what would turn out to be a career-high 26 before the break.

Now, here’s where it gets tricky to know exactly what happened simply based on cold hard numbers in a book.

With the lead expanded to 72-28 after three quarters, you would expect a running clock to be in effect, and yet Concrete somehow had enough time to score 32 in the fourth.

That’s correct. The Lions tallied more than 50% of their offense in the final eight minutes, at a time when the clock should have been zooming out of control.

Either they took advantage of every single possession or someone forgot to trigger the mercy rule.

In the end, all nine Wolves who played scored, with Patrick Bennett (13), Jason Fisher (11) and Noah Roehl (10) joining Kortuem in double digits.

Matt Frost (9), Joe Donnellon (9), Chris Good (6), Ty Blouin (3) and Geoff Hageman (2) all scored as well.

2005: Wolves slip by Orcas 55-48 (or was it 53-48?)

Two straight Jan. 25 wins, as Coupeville jumped to a 20-5 first quarter lead and never looked back.

It was Blake Day’s night, as the Wolf gunner sank four treys en route to a team-high 14.

Andrew Mouw banked in 12 in support, while Mike Bagby tickled the twines for 10. Trevor Tucker (9), JJ Marti (6) and current CHS assistant coach Trent Diamanti (2) all etched their names in the score-book, as well.

Now, the only question is, did Coupeville score 55 or 53?

The score-keeper wrote 55 in as the final score, but the quarter scores and the individual stats both add up to 53, but, as they say, a win’s a win, even if the stats don’t add up.

2008: Wolves foiled by South Whidbey 51-46

Those dastardly Falcons slipped away with one, thanks to a dead-eye from the line in the fourth.

Clinging to a one-point lead after three quarters, South Whidbey hit 10 free throws in the final eight minutes (Coupeville swished only seven all night) to win the all-Island rumble.

Kramer O’Keefe torched the nets for a game-high 17 to pace the Wolves, while Brian Miller (13), Alex Evans (8), Zepher Loesch (6) and James Smith (2) also scored.

Of note, Cody Peters, who would score 518 points over the course of this season and the next, is listed as having played in all four quarters — yet went scoreless for what seems to be the one and only time in his Wolf varsity career.

On that Jan. 25, the Falcons would celebrate, but, three years in the future, redemption, and Ian Smith, lurked.

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