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Emily Burchfield is joined by Zane Bundy (top right, the '91 CHS baseball squad and Abraham Leyva.

   Hall o’ Fame inductee Emily Burchfield is joined by Zane Bundy (top right), the ’91 CHS baseball squad and Abraham Leyva.

Perseverance. Class. Skill.

Pick your adjective and they all describe the athletes who make up the 47th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Possibly the two most dynamic booters in school history, a two-sport star who overcame a horrifying injury to excel and one of the best teams in Wolf lore, it’s as solid a bunch as they come.

With that, we welcome Emily Burchfield, Zane Bundy, Abraham Leyva and the 1991 Coupeville High School baseball squad to these hallowed digital walls.

After this, you’ll find them up at the top of the blog, living under the Legends tab with their brethren.

Our first inductee, the world-traveling, brilliant Burchfield, was a star on the soccer pitch and tennis court during her time at CHS.

She was also a superb triathlon competitor, and it was at one of those events where she was hit by a speeding car, shattering her back.

Burchfield amazed the doctors and all around her by not only fighting back in record time, but healing to the extent she was able to return to the hard-court and win a district singles title.

One of the most purely talented players to rep the red and black, Emily was also one of the strongest-willed, and her skills, on and off the athletic stage, are undeniable.

These days the former Science Olympiad world-beater is a college grad who is boppin’ around the globe, but her legend still looms large in the little town she sprang from.

Our next two inductees are about to go out and make their mark on the outside world, and it’s appropriate they go into the Hall together.

Bundy and Leyva, who will graduate in June, grew up on the soccer pitch, uniting to form the most potent scoring duo in CHS boys’ soccer history.

In his three years as a Wolf, Leyva set the regular season (20) and career (45) goal-scoring records, with a ton of those set up by his running mate.

Bundy, who had to battle back through injury, was equally explosive when he had the ball on his foot, and that carried over to the football field.

Playing for the first time as a senior, the little kid who once ran wild in the aisles at Videoville, led the Wolf gridiron squad in scoring this past fall.

He was one of the top field goal booters in the state, and his booming drives drew the eyes of college coaches.

In an unexpected detour, it’s football, not soccer, which Bundy will play at the next level, having signed with Santa Barbara City College.

Rounding out today’s class is the 1991 Wolf baseball squad, a team which won a league title, breaking a decade-long dry spell for the program.

Little did they know at the time it would then be 25 more years before Coupeville would again hoist a league title banner for baseball, a feat finally accomplished by the 2016 edition.

The ’91 squad, which featured several players who were key parts of the ’90 Wolf football squad which went undefeated, went on a rampage both with the bats and the arms.

Staff ace Brad Haslam tossed a no-hitter and recorded double digits in strike outs in two-thirds of his starts, while the Wolves rolled up a 145-79 advantage in runs scored over 19 games.

Four different CHS big boppers (Haslam, Frank Marti, Jason McFadyen and Matt Cross) hit legitimate home runs, as Coupeville featured a lineup that thrived on extra-base hits.

Carving up the Northwest B League to a 9-1 tune, the Wolves went 13-6, rolling along until hitting an unexpected bump in their opening playoff game.

One out away from a win over Winlock, Coupeville couldn’t put the game away, surrendering a lead in the seventh before eventually falling 16-13 in 10 innings.

While the loss put a sour taste in a lot of mouths at the time, the achievements of that Wolf team far overshadow a bad inning or two 25 years down the road.

One of the most dominant teams in school history, in any sport, the ’91 hardball squad officially comes home to reside where they have always belonged — the Hall o’ Fame.

Inducted as a team:

Mike Rice (coach)
Cory Smith
(manager)
Eric Anderson
Shawn Ankney
Brian Barr
Troy Blouin
Todd Brown
Chris Cox
Jon Crimmins
Matt Cross
Keith Currier
Chris Frey
Brad Haslam
Frank Marti
Jason McFadyen
Jason McManigle
Jeremiah Prater
Jay Renaux
Ryan Samplawski
John Turner
Aaron Williams
Scott Wofford
Brian Wood
Scott Zustiak

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Just a small fraction of the moms who make Wolf Nation soar. (John Fisken photos)

   An incredibly small fraction of the moms who make Wolf Nation soar. (John Fisken photos)

There are no sports without moms.

That’s true on many levels, from the fact they gave birth to all the athletes, to the fact that, if it wasn’t for them, day-to-day athletic life would likely collapse into something resembling a stinky pile of forgotten gym clothes crammed in the corner of a locker.

They wash the baseball pants. Even when they’re disgusting.

They make the snacks.

Always remembering who’s lactose intolerant and who really, really, really likes Skittles.

They drive the car pools.

On the ferry, off the ferry, back on the ferry, back off the ferry, in an endless loop.

They cheer through good times and bad.

They are there to congratulate their kids (and all the other mom’s kids who they consider their “other children”) when they win, and comfort them when they don’t.

It’s not the same in every case, and there are certainly a lot of dads out there who do a lot.

But, today, on Mother’s Day, dads get to sit this one out.

Because, as a group, we’re sending all the moms, Wolf moms in particular, into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Yep, the 46th class inducted into these hallowed digital walls is the mother of all classes.

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

We’re not going to list all their names, because, one, I don’t want to type for the next 247 hours, and because even the internet has space issues some time.

Suffice it to say, if you are now or have ever been a mom of a kid who has played a sport for CHS or CMS, you’re a Hall o’ Famer.

You let me use your photos. You slip me info on the sly. You answer my questions.

Sometimes you’re happy with me, and say nice things. Sometimes you chide me a bit, and most times you’re right.

You gave us the athletes and now you are the support crew that makes everything hum along.

Without Wolf moms, no coach, no athletic program, and certainly no idiot writing a blog, would be able to function the way we do.

Raise a glass to yourself, Wolf moms, past, present and future.

Too often you are the unsung heroes, but know that today, and every day, we all sing your praises.

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James Smith (top, left) is joined by fellow inductees (clockwise) Chris Hutchinson, Jon Chittim, Kyle King, Steven McDonald and Sid Otton.

   James Smith (top, left) is joined by fellow inductees (clockwise) Chris Hutchinson, Jon Chittim, Kyle King, Steven McDonald and Sid Otton.

Record-setters, one all all.

The six guys who comprise the 45th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame operated (and still do) at the highest levels of their sports.

Whether working as an individual, a team, or the commander of a dynasty, all of them have set standards which will be hard to surpass.

So, with that, we welcome James Smith, Sid Otton and the only CHS relay team to ever win a state title — the 2006 boys’ 4 x 400 unit of Chris Hutchinson, Jon Chittim, Kyle King and Steven McDonald.

After this, you’ll find them sitting atop the blog under the Legends tab.

Which is hardly a surprise.

Our first inductee, Otton, is the most famous of the bunch, and, admittedly, a large part of his success has come post-Coupeville.

But he started as a Wolf, and we’re claiming him.

Fresh on the job market, the former college football star landed his first coaching gig in Cow Town, where he ran the CHS football and baseball programs for two seasons.

While he was on Whidbey, he led the 1969 Wolf baseball squad to a Northwest B League title and the future was promising.

Then Wolf Nation lost Otton and he went and got all legendary at a couple of other stops on the road, most famously Tumwater, where he’s been the head football coach for 42 seasons and counting.

As well as being my 9th grade health teacher. Which was probably harder than all of his football seasons combined.

The winningest high school gridiron guru in state history, with 384 victories and five state titles, he’ll take the field for his 50th season overall this fall.

Before he does so, we’re giving him one more honor, while trying to ignore the age-old questions of “What if he hadn’t left? What if he had stayed in Coupeville? What if we were a dynasty?!?!”

As you all ponder that, we’ll skip on to our second inductee, which comes four men strong.

King won four individual state titles during his time at CHS (his five titles total ties Natasha Bamberger for most in school history) and Chittim snagged two, but they go in today with their oval brothers.

In 116 years of Coupeville High School history, only one time has a Wolf track relay unit stood astride the winner’s podium at the final meet of the season, and that foursome celebrates the 10-year anniversary of their accomplishment later this month.

On May 25-27 of 2006, the Wolves were darn near unstoppable, winning three individual state titles (Chittim in the 200 and 400 and King in the 3200), finishing a school-record fourth in the team standings.

In the premier relay event, Coupeville blasted all of their rivals, coasting to first in the prelims before savaging Goldendale, Charles Wright and a bunch of much-slower squads in the finale.

As the current girls 4 x 200 unit of Lauren Grove, Lindsey Roberts, Makana Stone and Sylvia Hurlburt aim to make their own history (they’re ranked #1 in 1A heading into the postseason), it’s a perfect time to bow in the direction of the original relay gods, who made the entire state Bow Down to Cow Town.

And then we reach our final inductee this week, a coach’s son (both mom Cherie and dad Willie) who joins his siblings in the hall.

James, like Megan and Ian, was a rock for the Wolves, a talented, hard-working athlete who excelled at every single sport that came his way.

A two-time CHS Male Athlete of the Year (2006-2007 and 2007-2008), Smith copped a ton of honors for his work on the gridiron, hard-court and diamond while operating as a captain in multiple years for all three of his sports.

Which was his strongest sport? It’s a toss-up.

Smith was tabbed as an All-League shortstop all four seasons, the first two in the 1A Northwest League, the last two in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference.

Toss in two All-League selections in basketball and three in football, where he was honored on both sides of the ball and was the First-Team QB in the Cascade Conference his senior season, and it’s an impressive body of work.

If I had to call it, I’d lean towards baseball, I guess.

It’s where he played under the watchful eye (and threat of wedgies) from a coach who he called dad away from the diamond, and he mixed power with panache.

But what the heck, if we have a time machine and need a win in any of those sports, I’m super-confident if I see James striding out there, huge grin in place, ready to kick tushie and take names.

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Bob Martin (left) and fellow Hall o' Fame inductees (top to bottom) John Fisken, Jai'Lysa Hoskins, Jason Bagby and Grace LaPoint.

   Bob Martin (left) and fellow Hall o’ Fame inductees (top to bottom) John Fisken, Jai’Lysa Hoskins, Jason Bagby and Grace LaPoint.

Indispensable.

The five members of the 44th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame can all be summed up with that one word.

Whether they were/are coaching, playing or snapping pics, this five-pack is the glue which holds/held everything together.

So, with that, we welcome Bob Martin, Jai’Lysa Hoskins, John Fisken, Jason Bagby and Grace LaPoint to these hallowed digital walls.

From this point on, you’ll find them up at the top of the blog, enshrined with their brethren under the Legends tab.

Our first inductee, Bagby, was one of the most successful athletes in Coupeville High School history, a star across three (football, basketball, baseball) sports.

Part of it was genes — dad Ron was a state champion track runner in the wilds of Forks and all of Jason’s siblings are superior athletic specimens — but a lot of it was work, skills and a burning desire to kick his opponent’s fannies.

That carried him to All-League honors, huge performances in the red and black (he was the second-leading scorer on a 16-5 hoops squad in 2009-2010) and a successful run as a college ball player.

And now, a few years down the road, he’s still a beast, as evidenced by his performances during the annual Tom Roehl Roundball Classics, where he remains a bucket-making, shot-rejecting animal with mad hops.

Our second inductee, Hoskins, offered blazing speed, big school spirit, a spine of steel and underneath the mega-grin, a willingness to get feisty.

A cheerleader and basketball assassin — she delighted in dropping the boom on foes — her greatest accomplishments came on the track oval, where she ran to state glory.

As a senior in 2013, she teamed with classmate Madison Tisa McPhee and two promising freshmen, Sylvia Hurlburt and Makana Stone, to make it to Cheney in both the 4 x 100 and 4 x 200, bringing home a medal in the latter event.

Over her four years of running for the Wolves, Hoskins won 47 times as a sprinter, relay runner, high jumper and long jumper, setting a true legacy of excellence.

Her ability to excel in whatever sport she picked up was matched by LaPoint, who juggled stints in cheer, soccer, basketball, softball and track.

An absolute joy as a person who was beloved by her coaches, Grace won 10 times in two track seasons — including beating future throwing state champ Angelina Berger of South Whidbey head-to-head in the javelin during her senior campaign — then went on to play college softball.

While taking the field for Evangel University in Missouri, she also found the time to put in above-average work in the classroom and beyond.

A 2015 grad with a degree in Business Administration, LaPoint took second in the nation in the Integrated Marketing Campaign competition at the Phi Beta Lambda National Leadership Conference, which drew 1,800 competitors total.

Her drive for excellence is matched by our fourth inductee, Martin.

The former Marine has become an indispensable part of Wolf Nation, going above and beyond the call of duty to take on every coaching job necessary in recent years.

A key member of the CHS Booster Club, Martin has guided numerous athletes, male and female, working as a football, basketball and track guru at the high school, middle school and community levels.

As Coupeville has rebuilt its youth programs, which are hugely important to setting up success at the middle school and high school levels, I would wager there is no one who has been a bigger part of that success than him.

Of course, in typical low-key Martin style, he is likely rolling his eyes right now, and would say he’s just part of the team.

So, we’re going to toot his horn for him.

Without Bob Martin, and the countless hours he’s given to local youth athletics, some paid (way too little), a ton as a volunteer, we wouldn’t be seeing the rise in Wolf athletics we have been witnessing in the past couple years.

Every town needs that one person who steps up and carries everyone on their shoulders, inspiring other coaches and athletes alike.

Bob is Coupeville’s unsung MVP, and he deserves all our praise.

And a schedule which doesn’t make him and his 22-man roster play middle school football games against schools with 600+ students…

And then we reach our fifth and final inductee today, Fisken.

I am not a photographer — never have been, never will be, as I’m more likely to break a camera than get it to focus and am the last human alive without a cell phone.

Which is why Fisken, and Shelli Trumbull, one of our earliest Hall inductees, are so important.

Without Trumbull and her pics, Coupeville Sports would never have gotten off the ground.

And without Fisken and his glossy photos, and his willingness to put up with my constant nattering, we wouldn’t be soaring up in the stratosphere, making serious inroads on our mega-rich Canadian-funded newspaper rivals.

For a man who lives in Oak Harbor, and has a child at OHHS, he has bent over backwards to shoot sports in Cow Town, going out of his way to not only net mucho action shots, but all of the goofy side stuff that sets Coupeville Sports apart.

I can write a billion words (and do), but I need eyeballs to gravitate to those words, and nothing brings in the peepers like a really spectacular photo.

To say I owe him a lifetime supply of Diet Coke is an understatement.

Having bought a couple of 20-packs (what is up with that, Prairie Center? You’ve never heard of selling an actual case?!?), I remain a few trillion behind on that right now.

But, as we wait for me to catch up, welcome to the Hall o’ Fame, Fisken. Hope you brought your own beverage for the induction ceremony.

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Matt Helm and fiancee Jenna Ure.

Matt Helm and fiancee Jenna Ure.

Fire Gods Jerry (left) and Matt Helm.

Fire Gods Jerry (left) and Matt Helm. (Photos courtesy Jerry Helm)

Younger days.

Younger days with sister Mollie.

Let’s mix it up and get personal.

As we send a 43rd class into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame today, it’s going to be a one-man class and I’m going to leave the heavy lifting up to someone else.

Matt Helm was (is) a superb athlete and an even better person, and older brother Jerry, already a Hall member, is stepping forward to induct his lil’ bro.

After this, you’ll find both of them sitting together atop this blog, under the Legends tab.

So, without further ado, I give up the stage to Jerry.

My brother Matthew and I were always competitive towards each other.

As hard as it is for the older brother to publicly admit, he was a much better athlete then I ever was.

I was the hot-headed older brother; he was the quiet smooth assassin.

His ability to focus on the game and shut out the noise always made me envious. He could dribble circles around me, and shoot three pointers in my face all day long.

A very unique opportunity surfaced when I started coaching the high school track and field team.

That year, his senior year, he decided to join the track team for the first time.

Track for me was the last sport where I thought I still had the upper hand on him.

Then during his first meet, he decided to show his older brother up and crush my best height in the high jump event.

As proud as I was, I secretly was still being the hot-headed older brother inside.

What took me four years of hard work, he was able to best it, at his first attempt.

My brother and I also shared a very hard lesson our senior years.

We both ended up breaking bones that sidelined us during our senior year of football.

While mine was in the beginning of the season and I was able to make it back for the final stretch of the season, Matt’s was towards the end, which forced him to miss a big portion of his final basketball season.

In the end we both ended up missing huge portions of the sport we loved the most.

Seeing the pain on his face while sitting on the sidelines, brought back a flood of memories and was a moment of déjà vu.

My heart hurt for him and I could totally understand what he was going through at the moment.

The love I have for my younger brother is laced with tremendous pride that we wore the same Coupeville uniform and shared the same playing fields.

His bravery and strength to this day is something that still inspires me.

His decision to join the US Navy to help protect our country shows his incredible strength and dedication.

Siblings often don’t tell each other often enough how much they love each other, but Matthew’s slower, less-talented, older brother loves him very much and is very proud of him.

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