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(Photo courtesy June Mazdra)

  Hyperbole alert. It’s the greatest team (in any sport) in Coupeville High School history — the record-setting 1969-1970 boys’ basketball squad. (Photo courtesy June Mazdra)

Now, if this whole Hall of Fame thing was happening in real life, and there were plaques or busts being handed out by local civic leaders, these guys would have been the first inductees.

But Coupeville High School’s athletic history lies largely covered in cobwebs, and it took me some time to track down info.

Having done that finally, we can, with the 33rd class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, welcome the “Greatest Team in Any Sport in the History of the Town” to these hallowed digital walls.

From this point on, the 11 players, coach and two managers who made up the 1969-1970 CHS boys’ basketball team will be found at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

And, if efforts in the coming weeks pay off and championship banners from the past rise in the CHS gym, their legacy will once again loom large over their school’s current basketball court.

Now, I am prone to hyperbole, yes.

The use of the double exclamation points in most headlines is testament to that.

But I will be danged if there has ever been a better team in the history of Cow Town, in any sport.

No, they didn’t earn a state tourney banner (losing two hard-fought games to extremely tough competition), but, as they romped to a 20-4 record, they hurt teams in a way no other Wolf squad ever has before or since.

Ripping through an 18-2 regular season (with two four-point losses to perennial powerhouse La Conner), Coupeville threw down 100+ points FOUR times, with what has to be a school-record 114 against Watson-Groen.

Now, let’s stop a moment and remember our history.

If you’re a young gun, this will seem a foreign concept to you, but in ’69’-’70, they scored all those points WITHOUT the benefit of a three-point line.

Jeff Stone, Corey Cross and Co. could have put the ball up from beyond the half-court circle and it still would have counted for just two points, and yet those Wolves scored like no other team in the history of the school.

Plus, you know, short shorts, which supposedly can cause circulation problems (and cold thighs), so they overcame that, as well.

In the postseason, they knocked off Skykomish and Darrington for a district title, something no Whidbey Island school (much less just Coupeville) had ever done before.

Facing off with Darrington, Stone rained down 48 points, a number which has stood untouched for almost 50 years.

The future Oak Harbor High School teacher/coach/Athletic Director tickled the twines for 644 points as a senior (also a school record — by a mile), accounting for almost a third of his team’s point total.

Overall, the ’69-’70 Wolves outscored their foes 1,836-1,155 over 24 games. That divides out to 76.5-48.1, which means they won, on average, by nearly 30 points a game.

At a school which had little to no prior reputation in the prep sports world, that squad sent shock waves through the state and kicked off a very successful run by the boys’ hoops program which lasted well through the ’70s.

Four more trips to state by CHS boys’ hoops squad, two of whom won a game while there, have followed that first visit, but none topped the guys who set the path.

If I accomplish nothing else during my time at Coupeville Sports, we will see league and district title banners raised in the CHS gym for the ’69’-70 squad, and it will happen while the players are still here to see it happen.

For the moment, I offer this, induction into my little digital Hall.

Inducted, together, as a team. As the greatest team to ever wear the red and white.

Bob Barker (coach)
Pat Brown
Corey Cross
Tim Leese
Ralph Lindsay
Glenn Losey
Mike Mallo
Pat O’Grady
Tim Quenzer
Jeff Stone
Randy Stone
Jim Syreen
Bob Mueller
(manager)
Geoff Stone
(manager)

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The Battlin' O'Keefes (l to r Gavin, Kramer and Kendra) are joined by

   The O’Mazin’ O’Keefes (l to r, Gavin, Kramer and Kendra) are joined by JD Wilcox (red hat), Erik King (green hat) and the ’75-’76 CHS boys’ basketball squad.

Underrated.

If there is a theme to the 32nd class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, it is that.

These five athletes — three from the same family — and a milestone team in CHS history, didn’t always get the full credit they deserved at the time they played, but their legend only grows with time.

With that, we welcome to these hallowed digital walls Erik King, JD Wilcox, the O’Mazin’ O’Keefe siblings, Kramer, Kendra and Gavin, and, close to the 40th anniversary of their biggest moment, the 1975-1976 Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad.

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

Our first two inductees were friends and teammates, united by a love of fun and a burning desire to carry their teams to greatness.

Whether on the baseball field or the basketball court, Wilcox and King played their hearts out.

As seniors, they hit a scorching .397 and .409 at the plate, respectively (career-wise King held a .325 to .316 advantage), and both led the teams in multiple stat categories.

King topped Coupeville in home runs, slugging percentage and being hit by pitches, while Wilcox was the main man when it came to runs, triples, stolen bases and fielding average.

Turn to the hardwood and they were a key part of several teams, most notably the 2009-2010 CHS squad which went 16-5.

Wilcox was always a dependable gunslinger to complement big stars like Hunter Hammer and Ian Smith, while King made his name by being the gritty guy who would run through every screen while shadowing the other team’s best player.

“He was a hard-nosed kid who never backed down from anyone or anything,” said current CHS assistant coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh. “I enjoyed watching and coaching him.”

The dazzling duo are joined on the dais by the triple threat O’Keefe’s, who just happen to be some of the best long-range gunners the Wolf basketball programs have ever seen.

Following in the rich hoops traditions of their older relatives (more on that in just a second), all three were money when Coupeville needed a huge shot.

Kendra made a regular tradition of hitting game-busting three-balls, Kramer quietly put together one of the best runs any Wolf boy has had in the past 25 years (he was a top-three scorer for three straight years, racking up 636 points) and I have rarely seen a player enjoy their time on the floor as much as Gavin.

He had to fight through a ton of truly unfortunate injuries, and yet, each time, he worked his rear off to get back, then exploded off the bench, huge smile on his face, when he was able to keep both of his legs in working condition.

During a down time in Wolf basketball, when the program was being rebuilt with very young players, Gavin was a rock for his coaches and they spoke about him with reverence. Exactly the same as previous coaches did with his siblings.

The O’Keefe name is a huge one in Wolf basketball history, deeply respected, and it began with the trio’s uncle, Randy, who played as Keefe before he, and most of the family, officially reinstated the O’ in recent years.

He was the second-leading scorer on our final inductee, the ’75-’76 Wolf hoops squad.

Keefe rattled home 278 points during the regular season, teaming with Bill Jarrell (327) and Marc Bisset (267) to form a three-headed monster.

Coupeville actually had five guys top 174 points as it rolled to a 14-6 record, including a thrashing of Island rival Langley, and returned to the state tourney after much the same roster got there the year before.

Once there, though, this squad did something no other Wolf team, in ANY sport, had ever done in what the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association officially views as the “state tournament” years — it won.

In two previous trips to state (’69-’70 and ’74-’75), Coupeville had played, and lost, two games.

The third time around, the Wolves were nipped in their opener by Wahkiakum, but rebounded to drill Columbia (Burbank) 80-63 on Mar. 3, 1976.

Though it lost to Rosalia the next day and was eliminated, that Coupeville squad retains its place in history.

While the Wolf girls’ basketball players of the late ’90s and early-to-mid 2000s made multiple trips to state and had deep runs several times, only two Wolf boys’ hoops team (’78-’79 is the other) have ever won a game at state.

As the first team to ever break through heads towards the 40th anniversary of maybe the biggest milestone in school athletic history, we want to give them a moment back in the spotlight. The place where they shone the brightest.

Inducted, together, as a team:

Bob Barker (coach)
Mike Gibson (assistant coach)
Marc Bisset
Randy Blindauer
Charlie Cook
Richard Cook
Mike Ellsworth
Foster Faris
Bill Jarrell
Randy Keefe (O’Keefe)
Jeff Rhubottom
Jeff Thomas
Charlie Toth
Steve Whitney
Mike Allgire (manager)
David Sem (manager)

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Hall

   The triple threat trio (top, l to r, Nick Sellgren, Mike Vaughan and Rich Morris) are joined by (bottom, l to r) Allie Hanigan, Janiece Jenkins, and, leading her 2004 CHS volleyball squad, Toni Crebbin.

Bring out the big guns.

That’s what we’re doing today, as we welcome our 31st class into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Five individual athletes and the only Wolf team to be ranked #1 in the entire state in any sport in the modern era, this is the cream of the crop.

With that, we welcome Rich Morris, Mike Vaughan, Nick Sellgren, Janiece Jenkins, Allie Hanigan and the 2004 Coupeville High School volleyball squad to these hallowed digital walls.

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

We kick things off with one of the speediest runners this town has ever known.

Jenkins was a speed demon on the track oval for the Wolves and held the school record in the 200 for a stellar eight years, before gracefully congratulating her successor when Makana Stone finally shattered her mark.

Even if she no longer holds a record on the big board, the memory of her senior year trip to state will last forever.

Competing in the spotlight in 2005, Jenkins brought home three medals, finishing fifth in the 100, eighth in the 200 and running a leg on a 4 x 100 unit that claimed sixth.

Along with raw athletic talent, Janiece shares other traits with our second inductee, Allie Hanigan.

Both played with a rare sense of grace and drew frequent praise from teammates, both at the time and after their prep sports careers ended.

Hanigan was a two-sport star for CHS, a standout tennis player who anchored the Wolves at first singles, and a ferocious hitter on the volleyball squad who controlled play at the net.

She was also a great teammate, or at least always seemed that way from the view the stands offers.

Now, Allie is blazing a bright trail in the modeling world while attending college, and, one day soon we’re all going to turn around and marvel that the biggest name in the biz used to live in our small town.

Joining her are a trio of three-sport stars who spent much of their high school days together, on and off the field.

Morris, Vaughan and Sellgren played football, basketball and baseball and were stars in every sport, leaders for their entire high school careers.

If you add up all the trophies and awards the trio earned, it would fill a nice-sized room, and they all continue to kick butt even as they (slightly) age.

Vaughan, for one, was a key part of the Red Pride hoops squad which ran the table at the most recent Tom Roehl Roundball Classic.

If it’s hoops, though, Morris gets the nod over his buddies.

While Sellgren had two strong years as a big-game scorer, and Vaughan saw varsity action all four years, Morris had a rare knack for putting the ball in the hoop.

He remains one of just three CHS boys players in the last 25 years to score 300+ points in two separate seasons (he netted 328 and 309), a feat matched only by Gavin Keohane and Mike Bagby.

Turn to the other sports and we could start an argument which will never end, or we can just acknowledge the trio as a testament to a time when high school athletes played three sports, year in and year out, and excelled at them all.

They left a mark, both as athletes and showmen, which will be long remembered.

As did our final inductee, a team which still casts a huge shadow.

The 2004 CHS volleyball squad set a program record with 13 wins, but the biggest one might have come at districts, when the Wolves shocked Bush, who had been ranked #1 in the state all season.

With the win, Coupeville inherited the top spot in the polls, something no other team in any sport at CHS has done as far as my research shows.

After opening the state tourney by thrashing Zillah, the Wolves ran headlong into their arch-rival that season, La Conner, losing a hard-fought duel to the eventual state runner-ups.

The schools had split two matches during the regular season, sharing a league title, before Coupeville won a third meeting during the playoffs. Round #4 was not to be, however.

A second loss at state, coming in five epic sets against Freeman, denied the Wolves a chance to bring a banner home, but even now, 12 years later, that squad remains the best group of spikers the school has ever seen.

So, let’s bring them back together one more time for another bow, at least in the digital world.

Inducted, as a team:

Toni Crebbin (head coach)
Thea Flynn
(assistant coach)
Jennifer Bailey
Brittany Black
Lyndsay Boling
Laura Crandall
Kirsty Croghan
Heather Davis
Heather Fakkema
Mindy Horr
Taniel Lamb
Annie Larson
Kristina Morris
Beth Mouw

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Football (Photo courtesy Chuck Hardee)

   There’s no way this is the ONLY Coupeville-related sports photo from the ’70s still out there. Time to clean out your closets, folks. (Photo courtesy Chuck Hardee)

OK, now that I’ve got your attention…

Over the last 30 weeks, I’ve been hard at work crafting my own personal Hall o’ Fame (it’s at the top of the blog under the Legends tab), a celebration of the people, teams and moments which, collectively, make up our town’s sports heritage.

The reaction has been far more intense than I ever imagined.

To be honest, the whole thing started as a way to give me something to write about on Sundays, traditionally the slowest day of the week in the world of small-town sports.

Now, it’s become something bigger. Much bigger, at times.

But, for it to truly blossom as greatly as it can, I need your help. Cause, even though I like to pretend otherwise some times, I don’t know everything.

The Hall so far has slanted a bit towards more modern times (though there is one guy in there who would be 100+ if he was still alive), because, having covered sports on Whidbey off and on since 1990, that’s the time period of which I have some first-hand knowledge.

Every day new names and tidbits pop up, especially from the years when I was busy in the video store biz, but a fair amount of the people who have been inducted are people I covered, people I have met, or people whose name still lingers in town.

But we need to stretch out and reach farther into the past.

I know, without a doubt, there were great athletes, coaches and teams in Cow Town in the ’60s and ’70s and well before then.

The tricky part is this — there is no magic room where I can go and get info on all that.

The Whidbey News-Times no longer allows “outsiders” to go through their bound volumes of past newspapers (understandably, as old news print crumbles under repeated use … and I annoy their corporate overlords).

The internet has its uses, but nowhere on it will I find info on how CHS did in football in the ’40s, much less a roster for the 1975-76 Wolf boys’ basketball squad, which is approaching the 40th anniversary of the first win at the state tourney in program history.

Coupeville High School, unlike some other schools, has done a haphazard job of holding on to its sports history, frankly.

All those score-books from years past? Left in the care of individual coaches, with a lot of them largely scattered to the wind.

A while back, the sons of the late coach Tom Roehl brought me a filing cabinet full of his stuff, and it was invaluable.

Going through his paperwork, for instance, I found conclusive proof Ian Barron should hold the school’s career football rushing record, and it’s not even close, regardless of what the school’s own record board currently says.

Then you have the banners in the gym, which would suggest no Wolf team did anything of importance before 1990, which is laughable.

BUT, and this is a big but, there is info out there. I know it, I can feel it.

And that’s where you all come in.

Are you sitting on score-books, rosters, photos, memories? You need to share them.

Nominate a player, a coach, a team, a contributor, a moment and tell me why. Give me info so I can sound half-way convincing when I induct them.

I have my own constantly-changing list of potential inductees, but I guarantee this, you can win me over. It’s not hard to do.

And remember, the only limitation on who and what gets inducted is up to you, the readers.

It’s not all about high school sports. Your great-grandfather was a barnstorming wrestler? Tell me about it.

As long as there is some slight connection to Coupeville, it’s all in play.

Email me (davidsvien@hotmail.com), write to me (165 Sherman, Coupeville, WA 98239), message me on Facebook or Twitter or leave a comment here on Coupeville Sports, talk to me in person at a game or harass me at the grocery store.

Can’t call me, cause I don’t have a phone, but you can work around that.

I am doing what I can, but the only way this continues to work, the only way it becomes something truly magical, is if we all chip in.

Bury me in history, baby.

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Jen Canfield, back in the day. Don't let the smile fool you. she'd break folks in half. (Photo courtesy Canfield)

   Jen Canfield, back in the day. Don’t let the smile fool you. She’d break folks in half. (Photo courtesy Canfield)

Cody Peters (left) is joined by Gabe McMurray (top) and the man who hit The Shot -- Ian Smith (and wife Allyson).

   Cody Peters (left) is joined by Gabe McMurray (top) and the man who hit The Shot — Ian Smith (and wife Allyson). (Left, top photos by John Fisken, bottom photo courtesy Vicki Wells.)

Cannfield (Photo courtesy Canfield)

Canfield, droppin’ buckets on the big stage. (Photo courtesy Canfield)

It’s all about hoops today.

The athletes who make up the 30th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall ‘o Fame played multiple sports during their time as Wolves, but it will be basketball for which they are longest remembered.

With that said, let’s welcome Jen Canfield, Cody Peters, Gabe McMurray and, as we approach the five-year anniversary, “The Shot That Made South Whidbey Cry” by Ian Smith, into these hallowed digital walls.

After this, you’ll find the trio and The Shot up at the top of this blog, where they will reside under the Legends tab.

P.S. — Smith will certainly be back to be inducted as an athlete himself, but I have something special in mind for that moment, so simmer down. It’ll happen. Soon.

Up first, we induct two of the more dominant hard court stars to ever pull on the red and white, McMurray and Peters.

They played in different decades, with McMurray running the floor in the early to mid-’90s, while Peters strode on to the court in the mid-to-late-’00s, but both were the focal point when then they held court.

Both capped their senior seasons by being named First-Team All-Cascade Conference players, more than holding their own with the big school boys.

Peters took it a step further — a big step at that — by being tabbed as a First-Team All-State player in 2009, before going on to throw down quite successfully at the college level with several teams.

Part of the appeal of the annual Tom Roehl Roundball Classic is to see how former Wolf hoopsters are holding up down the road, and both McMurray and Peters acquitted themselves quite well in late Dec.

McMurray can still bang down low, and the six-foot-six Peters still has an uncanny touch from range to go with the power he brings when playing in the paint.

Nice to see they still have it, but never forget the heights they reached as young warriors.

Joining them is one of the most complete athletes to ever lace up the shoes at CHS.

Canfield, who joins brother Pete Petrov in the hall, was a three-sport whirlwind, starring in volleyball, basketball and softball during her days as a Wolf.

Today, we have a guest speaker to formally induct her.

Welcome her hoops coach, the silver-tongued Willie Smith, who had the following to say about Canfield:

She was one of the toughest, smoothest players I had.

Amazing mental toughness, especially her senior year in the playoffs when we finished 4th at Districts, losing by 10 to King’s, who went on to win the state title.

Standing at only 5’8″, she was as comfortable inside as she was outside.

With the prettiest shot outside of Ann Pettit, she was a considerable nightmare for other teams to try and match up with.

She was a two-time Cascade Conference All-Leaguer and was a great leader for the ’96-’97 team.

The best thing about Jen was her smile and willingness to mix it up.

To look at her you wouldn’t think she had a killer instinct in her; she always seemed to be smiling on the court, in practice, walking down the halls.

But there were not many others that I wanted with the ball in their hands when the game was on the line other than Jen.

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.

Definitely a player that helped turn the program around and create the winning atmosphere and expectations for all the teams that followed in the late 90’s-2000’s.

And then we wrap today’s festivities with a look back at a moment which will live forever in Wolf hoops history — The Shot.

Everything was at stake for the CHS boys’ hoops squad on Jan. 25, 2011.

They were in Langley to face their arch-rivals, a South Whidbey team that had won ten straight and sat atop the Cascade Conference standings.

Having already nipped the Wolves earlier in the season, the Falcons controlled that night’s game, leading by 10 late in the third.

A huge 15-5 run, with Hunter Hammer throwing down eight, knotted things at 36 with just under three minutes to play, but South Whidbey calmly escaped, reopening a 42-36 lead.

With 59 ticks on the clock, it was time for a miracle, so enter Smith.

The standout senior, a flawless football and baseball star when he wasn’t on the court, knocked down The Shot Before The Shot, draining a three-ball with 38 seconds to play.

A turnover, a Falcon foul and two free throws from Smith sliced the lead to one, but South Whidbey had a chance to ice the game when T.J. Russell was sent to the line for a one-and-one with seven seconds left.

Rattled by a large Wolf cheering section which had traveled down-Island in “blackout” t-shirts, Russell skimmed his freebie off the rim and back into Coupeville’s hands.

State track and cross country champ Tyler King, using all of his speed, snatched the ball and bolted up court, only to be trapped as the clock slid towards zero.

Never blinking, the future U-Dub star somehow threaded a pass to Smith, who, in true cold-blooded assassin style, promptly banked home an off-balance three-pointer that hit the bottom of the net as the horn sounded.

In the blink of an eye, Coupeville pulled off a 44-42 stunner and the CHS section of the crowd went bananas as SWHS fans wept collectively like a little girl who had just discovered that, no, she wasn’t getting a pony for her birthday.

Beautiful.

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