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Posts Tagged ‘Haley Sherman’

Bill Riley (top left) is joined by (clockwise) Haley Sherman, Corey Cross and Hayley Waterman (blue shirt).

   Bill Riley (top left) is joined by (clockwise) Haley Sherman, Corey Cross and Hayley Waterman (blue shirt).

We’re bringing the generations together.

The four athletes who comprise the 38th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame are two guys from the early ’70s and two women from the 2000s.

But, regardless of when they played, they all left a sizable impact on their alma mater.

So, with that, we’d like to welcome Bill Riley, Haley Sherman, Corey Cross and Hayley Waterman to these hallowed digital walls.

After this, you’ll find them up at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab, where they and their accomplishments will live on as long as Coupeville Sports does.

Our first two inductees, Riley and Cross, were two of the five athletes named by legendary Coupeville High School coach Bob Barker when I asked him who were the best he had seen here in Cow Town.

The other three?

That’s for me to know and you to wonder until I get around to writing that article.

For now, we want to talk about Cross, whose name still looms large over his hometown.

He was a 10-time letter winner (four in baseball, three each in football and basketball), 12 if you count rugby (which I previously was not aware had ever been a sport at CHS … back to the research desk!) and his name heads up the list of Male Athlete of the Year winners.

Cross actually won the honor twice, in 1970-1971 and 1971-1972, setting the standard for all who have come after him.

But what makes him truly worthy of induction is not just the awards. It’s the way people respond when you bring his name up in conversation.

Jaws drop. Eyes bug. Words like “incredible athlete” and “the best I’ve ever seen” come tumbling out.

Every single time.

Riley, a superb two-sport star for CHS (football and basketball), gets some of that same treatment, especially from his former coaches.

A First-Team All-League selection during his time on the hardwood, it’s there that I’ve actually been able to track some stats down, and they are still as impressive 40+ years down the road.

In ’71-’72 Riley averaged 18.7 points and 14.8 rebounds a game, then he turned that up a notch or two the next season, banging away for 23.9 and 14.4 a night.

As I’ve worked my way through years and years of Wolf athletic history, the only hoops player who I’ve found with a higher single-season scoring average than Riley’s 23.9 was Jeff Stone and his immortal 27 a game from ’69-’70.

So, pretty dang good company.

Our third inductee, Sherman, is our youngest, but there’s no need to wait for time to pass.

Haley was an impact player in both volleyball and softball, helping carry a very-thin Wolf diamond squad to the state tourney in her senior season in 2014.

Despite playing through an ankle injury she suffered at districts, The Shermanator was a standout on defense (gunnin’ down fools from left field) and at the plate, as CHS broke a 12-year dry spell, making its second-ever appearance at the big dance in the fast-pitch era.

A hard worker with a superb sense of humor, Haley was always one of the most radiant athletes we had, a true daughter of the prairie who made her large fan section (she’s basically related to 89% of the town) very proud.

Making people proud came naturally to our fourth inductee.

Waterman doesn’t have the showy stats some of the others had, but that’s largely because she took one for the team. Game after game.

In the early days of girls’ soccer at CHS, wins were few and far between. Really, really far between.

But if it wasn’t for talented booters like Hayley, who sacrificed to build the program, it wouldn’t be anywhere near where it is today, at a point where the Wolves are fighting for league titles and making repeat visits to the playoffs.

Waterman was a wild woman on the pitch, and remains one of the most incredible people I have ever known off the field.

Long before she went on to study cellular and molecular biology in college and then start doing lab work that I can’t understand even when she tries to explain it in simple terms, Hayley was brilliant.

In high school, she did every extracurricular thing you could think of (all at the same time), shepherded all her brothers and sisters (including future soccer star Paige) and still found time to be indispensable at Videoville.

It was there and later at David’s DVD Den, where she was half of The Wonder Twins with Kate Harbour, that she achieved true greatness.

The afternoon where the two created an entire fake section of DVD’s, all crafted to look like “The Brown Bunny,” a film that had scandalized our boss, just for a brief laugh, is just the tip of their shenanigans.

I have had some God awful jobs in my life, but the 15 years I spent managing video stores will always balance out the crud, and the Wonder Twins are, hands down, the best part of those years.

Sports hall of fames? Nice, sure.

But in the true Hall o’ Fame of life, Hayley and Kate will always be my first inductees.

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Birthday folks (clockwise, from left) Haley Sherman, Carmen McFadyen and Brian Shank.

Birthday folks (clockwise, from left) Haley Sherman, Carmen McFadyen (and grandchildren) and Brian Shank.

They are the diversity of Coupeville.

Three parts of Wolf Nation, all making impacts in different ways, and all celebrating birthdays today.

Brian Shank is the newbie, a multi-sport athlete (football, basketball, track, tennis) who arrived in town from Utah two years ago when his father, Dr. Jim Shank, became Coupeville’s new superintendent.

An easy-going guy with a quick grin, he, like older brother Matt and younger sister Ashlie, immediately fit in, making friends and becoming an integral part of the school sports scene.

Whether he’s lofting three-point bombs for the Wolves or goofing off with his teammates, he wears the red and black with class.

Carmen McFadyen is the Godmother, a powerful, highly-respected leader in the community, and, someone who tries her best to get me to show respect to all in my writing.

I may not always follow her advice, but I would be smarter if I did.

She has already given Coupeville two standout athletes in son Jason and daughter Aleshia, and has four rambunctious grandchildren who will likely blaze their own bright athletic futures.

Plus, she’s married to Jack McFadyen, a personal favorite of mine since my early days at Videoville.

So, she’s got that going for her too, which is nice.

Our third honoree of the day is a young woman who, simply put, IS Coupeville.

Haley Sherman is connected at the roots to this town, and every time she played volleyball or softball for CHS, her personal cheering section was comprised of a lot of the men and women who have made Coupeville what it is today.

Proud of her heritage, Haley was a talented athlete and a better person. She possesses a radiance that is rare and it has never dimmed, through good times and bad.

This trio, united by their birthday and the town they call home, represent some of the best of what Coupeville has to offer.

They have lived different lives, accomplished different things, but all three represent us extremely well. We’re lucky as a community to claim them all.

Happy birthday and thank you.

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Haley Sherman and Dylan Canell.

Haley Sherman and Dylan Canell.

One of Coupeville’s finest and her family could use our help right now.

Haley Sherman, a really wonderful young woman who graduated from CHS this spring after being a standout volleyball and softball player, lost her much-loved older brother, Dylan Canell, this week.

As the family deals with the sudden tragedy, Dylan’s uncle, Ryan, has put together a GoFundMe fundraising account to try and help the family pay for the sudden funeral expenses.

Whether you knew Dylan personally from his time on Whidbey or not, he, like his sister, was an important part of this town.

One of his teachers at CHS, Ken Stange, reflected on their time together, which was brief, but memorable:

Dylan, you hated school, but you always showed me great respect.

Your reputation preceded you, before you arrived in my 9th grade English class. I admit that I was worried, but your warmth quickly disarmed me.

You had a certain way about you; no matter the person or situation, you could ease the tension and bring smiles into the room, even if it meant you’d be answering to Mr. Black.

You were a wildcard and I liked that about you.

Nobody ever knew what to expect, but everybody knew you’d make them laugh.

You were literally the person who would give someone the shirt off of your back, as referenced by Kenneth Hopkins.

I also remember you as being the only Coupeville kid who would wear a track jacket without a tee shirt underneath. That ’70s look was priceless!

Like too many, you’ve gone far too early. I wish you love and joy in the afterlife, my friend. You’ll be missed.

Peace.

If you can help a little or a lot, or even just pass the word on, please consider doing so.

To find out more, jump to:

http://www.gofundme.com/iwkgh8

The family has also announced there will be a memorial service for Dylan 1 PM Saturday, Dec. 20 at Thomas Family Farms, 9010 Marsh Road in Snohomish. All are welcome.

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Breeanna Messner (left) and McKayla Bailey pose with the sportsmanship awards they won at the state tourney. (Amy King photo)

   Breeanna Messner (left) and McKayla Bailey pose with the sportsmanship awards they won at the state tourney. (Amy King photo)

The magical mystery tour ended with a mix of smiles and tears.

Back-to-back losses at the 1A state tourney in Richland Saturday brought a close to one of the wildest Coupeville High School softball seasons in school history, but the memories put together by this squad will linger for a long time.

And I’m not just talking about the billion and a half cookies they made and/or bought for me this season. Though that was … sweet.

The splendid trio of CHS seniors — Breeanna Messner, Haley Sherman and Madeline Roberts — who played all four years with passion and hustle that were remarkable, went out on the short end of an 8-1 loss to Warden and a 5-2 thriller to Okanogan.

But they also went out having gotten to play nine playoff games this season, stretching through districts, tri-districts and state.

No Wolf softball team had put together that long of a postseason run since the immortal 2002 squad, which finished 3rd at state — the best finish by any team in any sport in school history.

Coupeville opened its first trip to the state tourney in 12 seasons by facing one of most imposing pitchers in the field.

“Warden had a dominating pitcher, 6-foot-2 or close to that,” said CHS coach David King. “She was long, threw hard and with her length it helped her fastball get on our hitters quicker than they were used to.

“She had a good rise ball and we were swinging under early on and just missing,” he added. “Later in the game, she seemed to slow down, lost some of her accuracy and we started to get the bat on the ball.”

The Wolves didn’t get a runner on until Hailey Hammer eked out a two-out walk in the fourth, and 15 of their 21 outs came via strikeouts.

McKayla Bailey, who was firing her own missiles from the mound, got a single off her rival hurler, while Sherman, back after recovering from injuring her ankle during tri-districts, thumped an RBI double to right center.

Warden, which cranked back-to-back home runs in the third, broke the game open with a five-run fourth, combining four hits, a walk and an error for the runs.

Bailey got back in a groove, however, keeping Warden on their heels after that.

The sixth was her best inning, as she shut her opponents down one-two-three with a strikeout, a pop up and a grounder that she snagged and flipped to Hammer to end the inning.

The second game of the afternoon was closer, but, once again, errors, which had bothered Coupeville during the regular season, reemerged as a villain.

“The errors hurt us this weekend,” King said. “When we only have one legitimate pitcher it’s not just tough on our team having to get extra outs, but it’s taxing on our pitcher.”

Coupeville did come up with a couple of web gems, however.

Freshman Tiffany Briscoe made “a very good running catch” in right, while Messner exploded from her position behind the plate to snuff out a bunt attempt, spearing it in mid-air and making “probably the defensive catch of the year.”

At the plate, the Wolves hit better in game two, getting doubles from Messner and Madeline Strasburg, but couldn’t find the big break-out inning they needed to upend Okanogan.

Bailey led the Wolves with three hits at state, while Messner and Hammer had two apiece. Strasburg, Sherman and Roberts each had one.

As they return home to The Rock, one thing remains ever true — this team, these 14 girls, endured, they improved, they went out with class and style.

Long after their season was supposed to be over, the surprise of the spring kept playing, and their giddy grins are the story of the season.

Wolf baseball, which went to state, was expected to be good (the core of that team won a state title as little leaguers).

Makana Stone is electric on the track oval, and Sylvia Hurlburt, Lathom Kelley and Co. are a worthy support crew.

Christine Fields has gone to state three times in three seasons, just like older brother Austin before her. Golf excellence flows through their veins.

Boys’ soccer, with the wham-bam scoring punch of sophomores Abraham Leyva and Zane Bundy, took huge strides, while Allie Hanigan and her tennis compatriots held their own all season with the best of the Cascade Conference.

But softball? Softball almost didn’t happen this season.

There were serious questions as to whether the Wolves would have enough bodies to field a team, and, when they did (barely), half the roster was unproven freshmen who would have played JV at any of the 2A schools from the Cascade Conference who beat up on CHS during the regular season.

But they never quit. They never gave in. They came back, game after game, through epic wins and demoralizing losses. They stayed upbeat. They remained a team to the end.

And they got the postseason run they so richly deserved, but couldn’t have expected. Small miracles do happen to good people.

Messner, Roberts, Sherman, Hammer, Strasburg, Bailey, Briscoe, Monica Vidoni, Emily Licence, Robin Cedillo, Erin Josue, Emily Coulter, Jae LeVine and manager Kailey Kellner — well done, ladies.

You made your town very, very proud.

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Wolf hurler McKayla "Million Dollar Arm" Bailey. (Robert Bishop photos0

Wolf hurler McKayla “Million Dollar Arm” Bailey. (Robert Bishop photos)

Hailey Hammer is on an RBI-producing tear in the postseason.

Hailey Hammer is on an RBI-producing tear in the postseason.

Breeanna Messner, one of three Wolf seniors, stares down the pitcher as she waits for her at-bat.

  Breeanna Messner, one of three Wolf seniors, stares down the pitcher as she waits for her at-bat.

Haley Sherman injured her ankle at districts ... but did get a free cart ride. So there was that.

Haley Sherman injured her ankle at districts … but did get a free cart ride. So there was that.

To be the best, you have to go through the best.

So, in an effort to get that out of the way quickly, the Coupeville High School softball squad will open the 1A state playoffs Friday in Richland against one of the best teams in the tourney.

Warden enters the state playoffs as the #1 seed from District 5, and the Cougars ended all three of their district games quickly.

Now 20-2, the Eastern Washington school pounded Cle Elum 11-1, River View 10-0 and Connell 11-0.

Which could make them ripe for the pickin’, as Coupeville has already taken down a school — Blaine — that had won an earlier district game 32-4.

So, 11-0? Whoopee…

Win or lose, the Wolves will play at least two games May 30 (possibly three) in the double-elimination tourney.

Keep their postseason hot streak alive and CHS will stick around for play Saturday and try to snag a new banner for the gym wall.

The top four teams from the 16-team field bring home hardware and hoist banners.

In Coupeville’s only other appearance at state in the fastpitch era, it claimed third-place in 2002.

That year, a squad led by Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby beat Cle Elum-Roslyn 8-0, knocked off Royal 3-2, were blanked 4-0 by eventual champ Adna, then rebounded to drill Okanogan 6-1 and thump Napavine 11-6.

One bright spot for the Wolves this time around is the news that senior left fielder Haley Sherman, who injured her ankle at tri-districts and missed the final game, is feeling better.

“It’s doing okay,” she said. “I’m trying to heal it as fast as I can, so yeah, it’s slowly but surely getting better!”

Shermaninator locked in? Let the beatin’ commence!

The state bracket:

http://www.wiaadistrict1.com/tournament.php?act=view&league=1&page=1&school=0&sport=15&tournament_id=1292

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