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Lathom Kelley, a bad-ass with the biggest heart in the game. (John Fisken photo)

Lathom Kelley, a bad-ass with the biggest heart in the game. (John Fisken photo)

How do you measure greatness?

Do you measure it only in terms of state meet medals won, of MVP awards claimed, of popularity polls that can be easily manipulated?

Or, do you measure it in terms of heart, of commitment, of a refusal to bend the knee even when that might make your life easier?

Do you measure it in terms of orneriness on the field and compassion off the field?

Of a bad-ass who actually, not that far down, and not that well hidden, has a surprising gentleness of the soul layered underneath the good ol’ boy bluster?

I look at the four years of writing this blog, and what I see when I look across the field at Lathom Kelley is a man.

He certainly was young at the start, and to us old school types, is still a young man now at 18. But there was never a moment when he was a boy.

Lathom has been a man from day one of his freshman year to his high school graduation.

From the first moment I watched him play football, flying around the field like a maniac, hauling down runners from behind, laugh cackling across the field, he was a wonder.

Bouncing off the walls in the CHS gym, flying in one door, streaking across the court, then running up the wall at the other end and landing the back-flip (most times), the raw athletic talent on display was always eye-popping.

You put him in an event, any event, during his years in track and field, and he would throw down times and distances that were frequently astonishing.

Most times, without having ever practiced the event before.

In a just world, Lathom would have sailed through all four years of his high school life without an injury.

But, this isn’t always a just world.

Rarely have I seen such a talented athlete bedeviled so often by injuries.

If there was a moment when he strode by not wearing a cast of some kind, it was a rare moment.

Injuries denied him honors he deserved, chances to stand on podiums and hear his name called.

But never think for a moment he took the easy way out.

He played through pain that would have stopped most people cold.

One of the enduring images I have is watching him grind forward for yardage on the gridiron, casted-up arm swinging madly, as three rival players tried (and failed) to bring him down.

When you look at Lathom’s prep career, there are great moments, both on the football field and track oval.

There is also what could have been.

But honestly, that’s more me and far less him — he never struck me as a guy who was going to spend much time sitting around wallowing in his “glory days.”

So, let’s not waste too much time worrying about alternate worlds.

Let’s praise Lathom for what he was able to accomplish, when his body agreed.

For how he entertained us, for how he brightened the world of Wolf Nation, for how he strode past, sardonic grin in place, always off to create good-natured havoc and mischief.

As a fresh-faced youngster or a beard-rockin’ “old guy” he was our McConaughey, our bright shining ball o’ fire living life to his own funky beat.

And let’s praise the man, the stand-up guy who came barreling out of the stands and put a bear-hug on a classmate when he noticed the player’s parents weren’t able to be in the gym for basketball’s Senior Night.

Declaring “this is my boy!” as he posed for pictures with his newly-adopted son, it was class, pure and simple.

So, how do you measure greatness?

You measure it in heart and soul, and few have shown the heart and soul of Lathom Kelley.

Today I welcome him into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, as a one-man wrecking crew, the 53rd class inducted into these hallowed digital walls.

After this, you’ll find him alongside other Wolf greats at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab.

Will he care about this?

Part of me hopes yes, that, deep down, it’ll mean something to him, a token of our respect for him and the man he has become.

Part of me hopes he just cocks an eyebrow and says “Yeah, whatever dude,” smiles, and moves on.

Either way, the dude will abide. And that’s how it should be.

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Fathers and sons (who became fathers). Top (l to r): Tony, Larrie and David Ford.

   Fathers and sons (who became fathers). Top (l to r): Tony, Larrie, David Ford. Bottom, Sandy Roberts, Jay Roberts and family, Jon Roberts and daughter Lindsey.

So, today is Father’s Day.

It’s also the 52nd consecutive Sunday I’ve inducted a class into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, which is kind of amazing in itself. So yay, me.

How to tie together these two milestones, you ask?

With a six-pack of honorees, as we present a unique class — two longtime, influential local coaches and the athletic sons they guided into manhood, where the sons have returned the favor to the next generation.

Today, two families, fathers and sons, as these hallowed digital walls welcome Sandy, Jon and Jay Roberts and Larrie, David and Tony Ford.

After this, you’ll find them at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab.

The four sons are part of a golden age for Wolf male athletes, guys who played three sports a year in the ’80s while also putting in time in the classroom and in the community.

They were among the leaders (along with classmates like Mitch and Marc Aparicio) during the Reagan years, a time when CHS routinely went to state in almost every core sport on a yearly basis.

Jon Roberts is the only one of the four to bag a Male Athlete of the Year Award, but the competition was cutthroat those years.

Or he’s just the best athlete of the bunch…

Let the family fightin’ begin!!

While Jon has his best in class award, it’s Jay’s name that sits up on the big board in the entrance way to the CHS gym.

Part of a quartet that set a school record in the 4 x 100 in ’86, he, along with Bill Carstensen, Tony Killgo and Rick Alexander, own the longest-standing track record in CHS history.

Both Roberts boys are matched by the Fords, who could grow better mustaches back in the day (though maybe not as lush as the Aparicios) and were rock-solid athletes in every sport.

Adding to their legends, three of the four (Jon, Jay and David) have gifted their alma mater with athletically-gifted children, as well.

David’s youngest, Jordan, shattered the school record in the pole vault this spring and was a three-sport letterman who played like his dad and uncle, with grit and determination.

Jay’s progeny, former softball slugger Madeline and current volleyball spiker/horse ridin’ sensation Ally, have carved a super-successful path, while Jon’s oldest, Lindsey, is the next great Wolf superstar.

As a freshman, she lettered in soccer, basketball and track, going to state in the latter two sports.

And, oh yeah, became the first female athlete in school history to win three medals at one state track meet, though the question remains — is Lindsey’s speed from dad, who loathed cross country during his one season as a runner, or from mom Sherry, who beat her husband into the Hall?

A lot of the success enjoyed by the Roberts and Ford boys, and their children, started with the guys they called dad.

Sandy Roberts and Larrie Ford might not be in the state record books like former Wolf football coach Sid Otton, but they are the very personification of what small town sports coaches should be.

They were there, always, wherever someone was needed, to guide, to inspire, to teach, to pat you on the back or kick you in the butt, depending on what the situation called for at the moment.

Larrie Ford’s greatest work might have come on the track oval, where he put in many years working with Wolf athletes, many of whom speak of him with deep respect, admiration and love.

A quality guy through and through, who always had time to talk to the press (he’s a personable guy with many a story to tell), he laid the groundwork for successful seasons, and, more importantly, successful lives.

He may have retired from working for CHS a few years back, but his impact will continue to be felt for decades.

And you can easily say the same for Sandy Roberts, who coached a ton of basketball (both at the junior high and high school levels) and who, to this day, continues to sprinkle wisdom onto current little league sluggers like grandson Landon.

Like papa Ford, papa Roberts is one of the nicest guys you could hope to meet, a huge smile and a firm handshake always waiting for everyone in his path.

And I’m not just saying that because he gave me a cushion to ease the agony of sitting through multiple games every week on the horrifyingly rock-hard bleachers in the CHS gym.

Though that certainly didn’t hurt his cause.

As we celebrate another Father’s Day, it just feels right to do it by honoring these six, sons and fathers all rolled into one.

May they, and their proud family legacies, continue to soar high as honored members of Wolf Nation.

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Makana Stone (top) is joined by fellow inductees (l to r) Bessie Walstad, Jon Chittim, Ben Hayes and Yashmeen (Knox) Wilson.

   Makana Stone (top) is joined by fellow inductees (l to r) Bessie Walstad, Jon Chittim, Ben Hayes and Yashmeen (Knox) Wilson.

How many exclamation points are too many?

Today marks the 51st class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, and as we head down the back stretch towards the one-year mark (haven’t missed a week yet!), you might think I would run out of superlatives to bestow.

You’d be wrong!! Mostly.

Every class has its high points, though, so let’s just dial it down a wee bit and issue this claim — today’s class is as solid across the board as any.

Help me welcome Ben Hayes, Bessie Walstad, Yashmeen (Knox) Wilson, the weekend Jon Chittim won four state track medals and our version of Ken Griffey, Jr.Makana Stone, who, if this Hall was voted on, would, could and should go in with 100% approval.

After this, you’ll find them at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab.

First up is Chittim, who is already in the Hall as an individual and as part of a state title-winning relay team.

Today he makes a third trip into these hallowed digital walls, as 10 years down the road we honor his performance from May 25-27, 2006.

Chittim, now a husband and father of two, was on fire that year, winning state track titles in the 200 (23.02) and 400 (49.93), while running a leg on the best 4 x 4 boys relay squad in 1A (3:28.11).

He teamed with Kyle King, Chris Hutchinson and Steven McDonald for that win, and they remain the only relay team in the 116-year history of CHS to stand atop the podium at the end of the season.

While Natasha Bamberger and Kyle King are tops, career-wise, with five state titles apiece, it’s Chittim who remains the only CHS athlete to win four medals and three titles at a single state meet.

Both are records which appear to be untouchable, withstanding the best efforts of even 11-time state meet medal winner Tyler King.

Joining the speedy Chittim in the Hall is the lanky, easygoing Hayes, an eternally laid-back two-sport star.

On the tennis court, he was part of a 2009 Wolf squad which swept to a district title, then moved up to become the program’s #1 singles player.

Put him on the hardwood and Hayes put his height to good use, teaming with fellow Twin Tower Hunter Hammer to provide a reliable one-two punch.

He topped the 2010-2011 squad in scoring, tossing in 287 points for a team which came within two buckets of being the only unit to have four 200-point scorers in the same season during coach Randy King’s 20-year run.

Our third inductee, Walstad, was the very definition of rock-solid, a team leader her entire career.

Playing volleyball, basketball and softball, Bessie piled up a sizable amount of All-League and team honors while operating as a captain for much of her time in the red and black.

She led by example, fighting for every rebound, every spike, every foul ball, and she led by taking command of her teams, knowing when to exhort and when to congratulate, when to hug and when to kick ’em in the rear.

Other players may have finished their careers with more points or glossier stat sheets, but Walstad’s impact can, and should, be measured in the respect and admiration she won, deservedly, from coaches, fellow players and fans.

Like Bessie, our fourth inductee, Wilson, was a three-sport star, a vital part of Wolf volleyball, basketball and track teams.

On the hard-court, she’s part of school history, one of six players who scored Mar. 2, 2000, when Coupeville rallied in the fourth quarter to upend Freeman 46-42 at the state basketball tourney.

The first state win in program history, it kicked off a run which stretched over six years and resulted in three state trophies for the Wolf girls hoops players.

But Yashmeen’s biggest impact came in the world of track, where she won five state meet medals, covering three different events.

After placing 8th in the javelin as a freshman, she came back to nab 7th in the same event as a sophomore, while also picking up a 6th in the high jump.

Wilson capped her stellar run with a 7th in the 100 and her personal best, a 4th in the high jump, as a senior.

And then we reach today’s final inductee, Stone, who is already in the Hall for big moments and as part of a historic team.

Today, however, she gets the big call, going in as an athlete honored for her entire prep career, which came to a close this spring.

Frankly, this could have happened back on week one, and it would have been appropriate.

Regardless of when it happened, Makana is one of the few whose eventual induction was written from day one in … uh, Stone.

I have covered high school sports on Whidbey Island, on and off, since 1990, and she is the best I ever covered in person, boy or girl.

End of story.

If she had remained as a soccer player, she would have been the best the school has ever seen.

On the basketball court, her scoring numbers are matched only by Brianne King and Zenovia Barron, but scoring was just the tip of the iceberg with Makana, who snatched rebounds, pilfered steals and made jaw-dropping plays at a rate previously unseen.

Put her on the track and the numbers speak for themselves — seven state meet medals, with at least one every year, and, oh yeah, she won her first 28 races as a freshman, something no other Wolf has ever achieved.

Watching Makana run in person, and seeing one of the nicest people in the history of civilization drop that Mask ‘o Death onto her face as she erupted down the backstretch, was goosebump-inducing.

I could go on and on about her ability to bring out the best in others, teammates and foes alike, how watching her play (any sport) was like watching a great artist paint a masterpiece in real-time, and much more.

But she’s gracefully put up with four years of me blathering on, always (and I mean ALWAYS) doing everything possible to divert the spotlight onto others, making sure to hit every teammate all the way to the end of the bench.

She deserves, finally, some peace.

So we’ll keep it short and sweet, and just say this, “Thank you, Makana.”

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Ryan O'Keefe (top with children Gavin, Kendra and Kramer

   Ryan O’Keefe (top with children, l to r, Gavin, Kendra and Kramer). Bottom, as a CHS ace and early diamond days. (Photos courtesy Renae Mulholland)

Four-time state track meet medalist Brian Miller.

Four-time state track meet medalist Brian Miller.

Marilyn (Sherman) Clay (back row, far left) and fellow Wolf cheerleaders pose with awards won by the CHS boys' basketball squad. (Photo courtesy Diane Eelkema)

   Marilyn (Sherman) Clay (back row, far left) and fellow Wolf cheerleaders. (Photo courtesy Diane Eelkema)

A terror on the hardcourt

   A terror on the hard-court, Clay (bottom, far right) played at a time when female athletes rarely received the notice they deserved. (Photo courtesy Jack Sell)

Unsung excellence.

It’s what the three athletes who comprise the 49th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame embody.

Dynamic stars, in different decades, the trio set records, won awards and yet have never really gotten their full due, for various reasons.

But today, as we welcome Ryan O’Keefe, Brian Miller and Marilyn (Sherman) Clay to these hallowed digital walls, they get their well-deserved moment in the spotlight.

After this, you’ll find them up at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab, cause that’s what they are.

We’re starting with the young gun in the bunch, Miller, who was a strong athlete all across the board, but left his biggest impact in track and basketball.

Competing at the same time as Coupeville’s most successful male track stars of all time — Kyle and Tyler KingMiller’s accomplishments went a bit under the radar.

They shouldn’t have.

Before this year’s trio of Lindsey Roberts, Makana Stone and Dalton Martin joined the club, Miller was one of just four Wolves in the school’s 116-year history to win three medals at the same state track meet.

As a senior in 2008, he showed incredible range, finishing 5th in the javelin, 6th in the high jump and running a leg on a 4 x 400 relay team which claimed 6th.

Toss in a 3rd place finish in the high jump as a sophomore, and his track career remains one of the best CHS has ever seen.

Miller wasn’t a one-trick pony, either, raining down 597 points across three seasons as a varsity basketball player.

He led the team in scoring as a junior, was second as a senior and fourth as a sophomore.

During his junior and senior seasons, Miller’s main running mate on the hardwood was Kramer O’Keefe, the son of our second inductee.

Ryan O’Keefe, part of a spectacularly-talented athletic family, which includes children Kramer, Kendra, and Gavin — all in the Hall for their own stellar play — had his greatest success on the diamond.

Coming hot on the heels of fellow Wolf great Raymond Cook (who was two years ahead in school), O’Keefe — then pitching as Keefe, before the family restored the O, was as good a mounds-man as Coupeville has ever seen.

When CHS played doubleheaders, O’Keefe would toss the opening game, then move to shortstop in the nightcap with Cook sliding onto the mound.

Among his many highlights was a 15-strikeout one-hitter to carry Coupeville to a state playoff win and a nine-game winning streak as a senior where he threw a complete game every time out.

Hidden away in his earlier days was the time O’Keefe pitched seven innings for his junior high team, then went out that same night and tossed a six-inning game for his little league squad.

That ability to do a bit of everything was also showcased by our third and final inductee, Clay.

Attending school at a time before Title IX, she never had the opportunities current Wolf female athletes take for granted.

While school records are spotty (at best) and the News-Times writers of the day ignored anything which wasn’t football, baseball or boys basketball, any time you talk about female athletes in the early days, Clay’s name pops up in the conversation.

A talented tennis player who also was a cheerleader, sang in the chorus, acted in the school play and frequently appeared on the honor roll, she was one of the trailblazers today’s stars should recognize.

Which wouldn’t be too hard to do, as she frequently appears at CHS sporting events with husband Bob, following the exploits of her countless relatives.

You can’t be a Sherman in Coupeville and not know at least one or two names on the roster, most days.

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Ray Cook

   Ray Cook (blue shirt) and Madeline Strasburg are joined by part of the 2014-15 CHS girls hoops team — l to r, Makana Stone, Kacie Kiel, Wynter Thorne and Hailey Hammer.

Maddie Big Time

Maddie Big Time (Robert Bishop photo)

They were the biggest of big-time performances.

As we usher in the 48th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, we’re focusing on an athlete who always lived up to the nickname Big Time, and two performances which were otherworldly.

The afternoon Ray Cook whiffed 21 batters and a basketball game in which Coupeville came from eight down with 58 seconds to play share the stage with one of the most electrifying figures in sports entertainment — Maddie Big Time, AKA Madeline Strasburg.

After this, both performances and our one-of-a-kind athlete will be found at the top of this blog, enshrined under the Legends tab.

First up we’re honoring Cook, who is already in the Hall for his body of work.

Today we’re paying tribute to his performance as a high school junior in the 1976 district baseball title game.

The best strikeout-tossin’ hurler in CHS history, hands down, Cook had already racked up games with 17 and 16 K’s.

This time out, though, he threw an unbelievable 13 innings (nearly the equal of two regular seven-inning high school games), setting school records for K’s and innings that haven’t been touched in 40 years.

The closest anyone has come was Brad Miller, who sent 19 batters back to the bench crying in a 1995 game.

The 13 innings from one pitcher? A modern-day coach would be nationally lambasted.

The ’76 title game win propelled Coupeville to state, and the 21 whiffed batters sent Cook, already a legend, into Wolf immortality.

In terms of one-time “wow factor,” his work on the mound is matched by the best comeback I ever witnessed in person.

It was a Saturday in late 2014 (Dec. 13 if you’re checking the calendar) and the CHS girls’ basketball squad, at the time repping the smallest 1A school in the state, was hosting Sequim, a larger 2A school which came to town bearing a snazzy 3-1 record.

The Wolf girls would win a league title that season, but, on this day, they stunk for a good chunk of time.

Wolf coach David King was speechless at the half, his players were visibly frustrated, and it was a wonder the game wasn’t more of a blowout.

But, somehow, Coupeville hung around, just long enough for the magic to happen.

And when it hit, it was so unbelievable it still seems like a fever dream to this day.

Down 39-31 with 58 seconds to play, things were beyond dire.

Key the greatest minute in Wolf hoops history.

Kacie Kiel dropped in a free throw, Wynter Thorne knocked down a jumper (her first points of the day), then Makana Stone jumped in front of a Sequim pass and took it back for a layup.

The visitors looked rattled and promptly shanked the front end of a 1-and-1 off the rim, but CHS couldn’t take advantage.

At a time when EVERY single play was going to have to go Coupeville’s way, the Wolves, down by three, threw the ball away with eight ticks on the clock.

A trickle of fans headed for the exits (trying to beat the “crushing” Cow Town traffic, maybe?) but Stone wasn’t having it.

Bellowing “no fouls! no fouls!,” the soft-spoken junior forced a turnover in the back-court, then found Kiel curling into the deepest part of the right corner.

So far out in the weeds she was practically sitting in the bleachers, the Wolf senior, an ever-smiling assassin, drilled the bottom out of the net with an impossibly high, arcing three-ball that set off pandemonium.

Overtime was pointless, but sweet.

Sequim’s players were already crying on the bench before the extra period even tipped off, and Coupeville held the visitors scoreless for five minutes to put the cap on a 42-39 win.

Afterwards, the visiting coach sat on the floor, motionless, his back against the scorer’s table, looking like someone who had just witnessed the end of the world.

Around him, Coupeville players went bonkers, and the die-hard Wolf supporters (the ones who didn’t ankle to the exits early) joined them, led by leather-lunged super fan Steve Kiel, who hit levels of screaming joy never before witnessed.

Wins come and wins go, but this one? My goodness.

So let’s give a shout-out to coaches David and Amy King and the eight Wolves who played in the game — Stone, Kiel, Thorne, Monica Vidoni, Hailey Hammer, McKenzie Bailey, Mia Littlejohn and Julia Myers.

Now, there should have been another Wolf on the court that day, but Strasburg was battling back through an injury and was instead an unpaid, but highly-enthusiastic assistant coach.

When she was healthy, which was most of the time, Maddie Big Time was a three-way terror (volleyball, basketball, softball) who delighted in rising to the occasion.

If she hit a home run, it wasn’t going to be a little poocher that rolled around in the outfield, it was going to be a majestic moon shot that left the prairie and headed down South to land at the ferry dock.

Want a spike, a teeth-rattling, knee-buckling laser that had to be perfectly flawless or else the entire match would end on the spot?

Cue Strasburg, who would come barreling in, screaming like a banshee as she elevated and decimated.

And basketball? She was like lightning in a bottle.

At one point, she hit half-court three-point bombs in consecutive games, from the same exact spot on the floor, at the same exact moment (final play of the third quarter) … 17 days apart.

Always among the most personable and free-wheeling of athletes, Maddie was a delight in every way, on and off the court, truly unforgettable.

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