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Posts Tagged ‘Greg Oldham’

(John Fisken photo)

   Half of the most successful high school hoops squad on Whidbey Island. (John Fisken photo)

Overcoming adversity by banding together as a team.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad has done just that season, overcoming a brutal schedule (11 of 13 on the road), illness and injuries to sit at 10-3 overall, 5-0 in Olympic League play.

Carrying a six-game winning streak, and sitting just one victory from clinching a third straight conference title, the Wolves also cracked the top 10 Sunday in the state RPI rankings for 1A teams.

The key?

Unity, as CHS round-ball guru David King expounds upon in this week’s visit to the Coaches Corner:

Five years ago when Amy and I took over the program, our goal was to change the culture of the basketball program.

The team had talent, but we needed to learn how to battle every day and win consistently.

That first year we made some good strides, but after year two things were really starting to change. You could see players starting to believe that we could compete against each opponent we played.

Years 3-4, we kept the culture moving in the right direction, but emphasized ‘One Team, One Goal, Family’.

The team really took that to heart and played well with one goal in mind. First in league and then make it to districts and advance.

Returning players knew the system, helped lead the younger players as they were starting their high school basketball careers.

This year we added Unity (the state of being one) to what we have going on with our culture as a program and playing as a family.

Our last ferry ride home after our Port Townsend game, the state of Unity rang so true for the team.

They may or may not have realized it, but it was front and center during their post game spotlighting (a carry over from the Greg Oldham years we still do).

During the game I wasn’t able to make the substitutions like I had hoped for after a very strong first quarter.

This meant less playing time for some players. This can be frustrating, however the ultimate goal is to get a win.

What I witnessed as a coach was what every coach would want. The unity and unselfishness with the players is outstanding.

The way teammates talked about each other is what makes us as successful as we are.

Multiple teammates talked about their teammates who may not have played much, but still brought energy, encouragement and a calmness to those playing.

Those are the players I want on my team each and every day.

We have one goal we are working towards and when you have players/teammates that play for each other and as a unit, it keeps us competitive and a team that puts team goals over personal ones.

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When CHS hoops coach Amy King needs to teach a lesson...

When CHS hoops coach Amy King needs to teach a lesson about teamwork…

she tells the story of the time Amy Mouw helped the Wolves advance to state thanks to...

   she tells the story of the time Amy Mouw helped the Wolves advance to the state tourney thanks to…

Samantha Roehl.

an unexpected decision by her teammate, Samantha Roehl.

Amy King has seen a lot in 20 seasons as a high school coach.

But there’s one story she pulls out when times are tough, when teams are starting to fracture, when her players need to know the difference between being just an athlete and being a true teammate.

It comes from the 2002-2003 girls’ basketball season, when she was an assistant coach working with Greg Oldham at Coupeville High School.

The Wolves were coming off the best performance in program history, having gone 23-5 and finished 6th at state the previous year.

And while they had lost big weapons Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, Tracy Taylor and Sarah Mouw to graduation, they still had tons ‘o talent.

Brianne King, who still holds Coupeville’s career scoring record for girls (1,546 points) was heading into her senior season, and she was joined by Amy Mouw, Carly Guillory, Erica and Taniel Lamb, Vanessa Davis and a shot-blocking sophomore and future league MVP named Lexie Black.

The squad was so deep future college hoops player Brittany Black (admittedly just a freshman at the time) only saw action in 12 of 28 games.

The Wolves roared through the regular season at a 15-5 clip, finishing 8-2 in the Northwest A League, bested only by Archbishop Thomas Murphy twice.

Once they hit tri-districts, they got even hotter, winning three of four — losing only to the state’s #1-ranked team, King’s — then won two of four games at state (where they pushed eventual 1A champ Brewster to the wire), claiming 8th place.

But lost in the hubbub about a 20-8 record and another banner to hang on the wall was a small, but very important, moment at tri-districts.

Mouw, who was the team’s #2 scorer behind Brianne King, was helping to lead the Coupeville charge, until someone noticed she had blood all over her uniform — a big no-no in the days of heightened disease awareness.

“I remember the game and discovering during a timeout that I had blood all over,” Mouw said. “Amy King, Coach Oldham’s wife and I all ran down to the locker room and one of them washed out my jersey top and the other my shorts in the sinks trying to get the blood out while I tried to figure out where I was bleeding.

“Ended up just being a cut on my pinkie finger that bled like crazy.”

Despite the scrub-job, the blood wasn’t responding to the water and it looked like Mouw might be sidelined at a crucial moment.

At which point Samantha Roehl, who, in tribute to her last name, was a role player on a team full of stars, stepped up and did something few high school athletes would do.

She turned down the chance to replace Mouw on the floor and instead sacrificed her chance to play.

“She told us, she needs that uniform more than I do,” Amy King said. “And she immediately went and swapped out what Amy needed so she could return.”

“I do remember that pretty clearly and that’s about exactly what happened,” Roehl said. “They were going to put me in, but, because I hadn’t played in the game yet, technically my number hadn’t had any points or fouls against it, so I offered that they use my jersey for Amy so that she could keep playing with a fresh number.”

Oldham was caught up in the game at the time and missed most of the shuffle, but looking back now, he could see it happening.

Sammie was a good teammate,” he said.

For Amy King, who has since gone on to coach volleyball, softball and much more basketball at CHS, Roehl’s decision is one she has treasured.

“When I get a team that gets a little full of themselves, that starts to forget that everyone on the team truly matters, from the top of the rotation to the last body on the bench, I pull that story out,” she said. “It, to me, is what high school sports are supposed to be about.”

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Katie Smith (top, right) with mom DeeAnna

   Katie Smith (top, right) with mom DeeAnna and fellow Hall inductees (l to r) Jason McFadyen, Ben Biskovich, Greg Oldham and (representing the 1992 CHS football team) Chris “Kit” Manzanares.

Big wins, big personalities.

The members of the 16th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame all possessed the second, which helped them achieve the first.

Regardless of the sport, and most of them crossed over to multiple activities, they remain high achievers in “real” life whose impact on Wolf Nation still lingers.

So we welcome to the podium Jason McFadyen, Greg Oldham, Katie Smith, Ben Biskovich and the 1992 Homecoming Miracle.

In future days, you’ll be able to find them at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab.

McFadyen and Biskovich will always be linked by their days playing catch for the 1990 Coupeville High School football squad, the last Wolf team to go undefeated, but they both accomplished a ton in other areas.

Biskovich, who has gone on to be a partner in three physical therapy clinics with wife Karin, is a successful runner these days, keeping alive the legacy of his days as a Wolf, when he was a state finalist in the 110 high hurdles.

A captain in football and basketball, he remains one of the hardest-working players ever to grace CHS, albeit it one who did so with eyebrow firmly cocked, Fonzie-style.

“Have a great time, it goes fast,” Biskovich told me in an interview. “Train, practice and play like you’ve got something to prove, like you’re fighting for a roster spot and don’t want to be taken off the field or court, so that afterwards you have no regrets.

“Win or lose, you can look at yourself in the mirror and say, “I could not have done anything more.”

That was a philosophy shared by his quarterback.

A four-sport letter winner at CHS (football, basketball, track, baseball), McFadyen was the brains that drove the Wolf gridiron squad, but garnered much of his glory on the basketball court.

Two-time team MVP. Two-time selection to the league’s All-Defensive team. First-Team All-Conference.

And he can still bring it, as he proved by leading his squad to a title in the most recent Tom Roehl Roundball Classic, a tournament which annually brings back a who’s-who of former Wolf stars.

McFadyen, who these days runs Windermere’s property management division and is the President of the Greater Oak Harbor Chamber of Commerce, was a winner back in the day, and remains a winner in the present.

Our third inductee, Oldham, put together a five-year run that few, if any, coaches at CHS, can match.

Taking over a successful Wolf girls’ basketball program — previous coach Willie Smith had led the program to the school’s first-ever win at state in any sport in 1999-2000 — Oldham went on a tear, winning nearly two-thirds of his games.

From 2000-2001 to 2004-2005, his squads went 85-43 overall and won at an even higher clip in Cascade Conference play, where they were 45-11.

Led by stars such as Brianne King, Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby and Lexie Black, the Wolves won a school-record 23 games in 2001-2002, reached the state semifinals and eventually claimed a pair of state tournament banners that grace the gym wall.

Now a college coach, Oldham’s impact during his time at Coupeville can not be denied.

The same could be said of Smith, one of the most underrated of all Wolf athletes.

Katie, a graceful young woman who has gone on to be an all-star aunt to her many nephews, was that rock-solid athlete (and person) who every team needs at its heart.

Whether she was playing basketball, volleyball, softball, or (late in her prep career) dazzling folks on the track oval, Smith was a team leader who led by example and not by screaming.

Part of a huge clan of athletic over-achievers, some of whom will probably join her in the Hall in the coming weeks and months, Katie is prairie royalty, with Sherman blood flowing through her veins.

She honored the legacy, and has always made her family and town very proud with the way she carries herself, on and off the athletic field.

A Coupeville Hall of Fame without her? Not much point.

And, as we reach the end of today’s festivities, five days before the 2015 Homecoming football game, we take a trip in the way-back machine to pay tribute to one of the greatest comebacks I have ever witnessed in person.

It was Oct. 30, 1992 and Gina (Dozier) Slowik was the senior class queen, while on the field, the Wolves trailed league rival Foster 21-6 with only a quarter to play.

Cue the fog. Cue the comeback for the ages.

Scoring three touchdowns, and then sealing the deal with an interception in the end zone at the final buzzer, Coupeville roared back for a 25-21 win that still seems amazing 23 years later.

Wolf quarterback Troy Blouin started things with a one-yard keeper, but the two-point conversion failed.

No problem, as Coupeville pulled off a trick play in which Blouin pitched the ball to running back Todd Brown, normally known for slamming face-first into would-be tacklers.

On this night, though, Brown pivoted and fired a bomb, dropping a 32-yard scoring strike into the arms of Kit Manzanares.

Nothing would be easy, however, as the Wolves promptly missed the extra point, leaving them down 21-18.

Wolf coach Ron Bagby unleashed defensive Hell in a wild bid to get the ball back, and it worked better than anticipated, as Foster fumbled the ball and it skipped into the end zone.

To this day, no one is really sure who landed on the ball, but he was wearing red and black, and the resulting touchdown sent the crowd into a tizzy.

But, even as the ramshackle CHS press box (nothing has changed in 23 years) was rockin’, Foster got two more chances to rewrite the miracle.

The first failed on fourth down, but, after a Wolf fumble while trying to run the clock out (Bagby may have had a stroke at that moment…), Foster had time for a Hail Mary.

The ball went up, the crowd went eerily silent, the ball descended, confusion reigned and then Blouin shot out of the pack, holding the ball aloft, restarting his coach’s heart and igniting pandemonium.

Legendary.

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Makana Stone glides up-court, looking to put the rock in the bucket. (John Fisken photo)

Makana Stone, looking to put the rock in the bucket. (John Fisken photo)

The greatest scorer in CHS girls' basketball history, Brianne King.

The greatest scorer in CHS girls’ basketball history, Brianne King.

The history of CHS girls' basketball lives on in these books. If anyone sees a copy in the CHS library, let me know. (Greg Oldham photo)

History lives in these books. (Greg Oldham photo)

Makana Stone is gunnin’ for the legends.

As the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad prepares for the district playoffs, the Wolf junior is enjoying one of the best scoring seasons in recent memory.

But, since CHS is notoriously spotty in keeping track of its sports history — outside of the snazzy wall of track records — one wonders where she stands.

While anything before the 1990’s resides in a giant black hole at this point, we were able, with the help of former Wolf coaches Willie Smith and Greg Oldham, to track down most of the “golden era” (late ’90s to mid-2000’s) of Coupeville girls’ basketball.

And, what that shows is Stone (with 331 points in 20 games) has currently put together the 7th best scoring mark in the last two decades.

With her average sitting at 16.6 a game — third-best by a Wolf player in that time period — she could make a serious run up the chart if Coupeville stays alive in the playoffs for any duration.

The Wolves (15-5) are guaranteed two games at districts, and could pick up a third.

Win two and they advance to regionals with the dream of being the first CHS hoops squad to return to state since 2005-2006.

The honor roll of Wolf scorers as we know it (and, as soon as this hits print, maybe we’ll hear from someone who has score-books from the glory days of Marlene Grasser that’ll blow these away):

1) Brianne King (2000-2001) 446 points/24 games/18.6 avg

2) King (2002-2003) 442/28/15.8

3) King (2001-2002) 386/28/13.8

4) Zenovia Barron (1996-1997) 378/23/16.4

5) Barron (1997-1998) 376/22/17.1

6) Ann Pettit (1997-1998) 363/25/14.5

7) Makana Stone (2014-2015) 331/20/16.6 avg

Also of note: Lexie Black had 295 in 26 games in 2004-2005.

Plus, King tossed in 275 during her freshman year of 1999-2000, giving her 1,549 points during her splendid career.

We’re 99.2% sure that’s a school record.

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