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Posts Tagged ‘Hall of Fame’

Toni Crebbin (with blaster) joins fellow Hall of Famers (clockwise from upper right) Mike Meyer, Brittany Black, Paul Mendes, Marie Hesselgrave and Jessica Riddle.

   Toni Crebbin (with blaster) joins fellow Hall of Famers (clockwise from upper right) Mike Meyer, Brittany Black, Paul Mendes, Marie Hesselgrave and Jessica Riddle.

Heart. Lots and lots of heart.

It’s what drove the six people who make up the 14th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

They’ll live on, up at the top of this blog, under the Legends tab, but, frankly, none of them needed us to say a word. Their legacy is already set in stone.

But, it’s Sunday, and I need something to do, so let’s welcome Toni Crebbin, Brittany Black, Jessica Riddle, Paul Mendes, Marie Hesselgrave and Mike Meyer to these hallowed digital walls.

We kick it off with a man who is probably already in a few real Halls, Señor Mendes.

An elite-level soccer player who lettered four years at the University of Washington and went on to play for the original Seattle Sounders, he is the only CHS coach who can say they played in a game with Pele.

After an injury cut short his playing career, Mendes detoured into coaching, and was a champ at every level.

Two national titles as an assistant at Seattle Pacific University. Two state titles, and two runner-up finishes, as a head coach at Newport High School.

But most importantly to us, he graced the Coupeville High School soccer field for the final eight years of his career, building the Wolf program from the ground up and guiding it to the state tourney several times.

Better yet, he did it with a style and quiet passion that were unmatched. He was The Man, a genuine superstar whose presence on The Rock has been a blessing to all who have gotten to know him.

Our second inductee, Black, joins older sister Lexie in the Hall, reuniting the Black ‘n Blue sisters.

The very definition of laid-back cool off the court, Brittany was a ball o’ fire on the hardwood, helping lead CHS basketball during its heyday of repeat state tourney appearances.

But as good as she was in high school, her life after graduation has taken our appreciation level (it was already high) up several notches.

College basketball in Alaska, where her eyelids would often freeze as she and her sis ran from the car to the gym, was impressive, but her decision to reveal her battle with alcohol — https://coupevillesports.com/2015/01/17/sobriety-is-the-coolest-thing-i-have-experienced/ — showed her class, her grit and her hope to a new generation of gym rats.

As she prepares for marriage to girlfriend Megan King, it is an honor to honor Britt for her game and her life.

Our third inductee was so good, she gets in the Hall despite having played half her career at Anacortes High School.

A family move plucked Riddle from Cow Town after her sophomore year, but the volleyball prodigy still sees her name on the school’s record board three times for her play from 2009-2010.

She holds the Wolf single-game record for kills (21) and service aces (13), as well as the career mark for digs (342), plus she was a pretty dang talented tennis player at the time.

After the move, she led the Seahawks to back-to-back fifth place finishes at the state 2A tourney, winning Northwest Conference MVP as a senior, then signed a college scholarship with St. Martin’s.

While it might have been nice to see Riddle launching herself skyward while clad in red and black all four years, two years was all it took to become a legend. Anacortes had her last, but she’s Coupeville’s forever.

Joining her on the stage is her former coach, Crebbin, who worked the bench for 21 years, impacting several generations of Wolves.

One of the best there has ever been when it came to coaches who worked well with the great unwashed media hordes, she was great for quotes, even better for stats and insight.

On the court, she shaped winners, took teams to great success, and won honors for her coaching.

Off the court, she has transformed lives, traveling frequently to China to work with orphans, often taking her athletes and students with her and giving them a powerful insight into a world they wouldn’t have otherwise experienced.

With two sons in college and two irrepressible young daughters keeping her running these days, she’s “retired,” but is still a frequent presence at CHS volleyball matches, where she can be found at the scorer’s table.

As a coach or an announcer, Crebbin is the gold standard. Of that, there is no doubt.

These days, Wolf fans get to enjoy the hard-charging play of Wiley Hesselgrave, a throw-back to another time, a football/basketball star who hits like a freight train.

Everything he knows, however, came from his big sis, one of the best role players Coupeville athletics has ever had.

Marie did the dirty work on the basketball court, and she did it like a hurricane unleashed.

On the tennis court, she was no less gritty. The longer the match went, the harder she fought, and she pulled out win after win because she simply refused to back down, breaking her opponent mentally and physically.

A supremely nice person in real life who has gone on to serve her country in the military, Hesselgrave is the kind of athlete every Wolf should strive to be.

And we wrap up our induction with one that is personal.

Having worked 12+ years for his mom, Miriam, at Videoville, I saw Lil’ Mikey Meyer grow up, from the tow-headed kid who bounced around the store to the gridiron warrior recording 20 tackles a game for CHS to the father of three he is today.

If he was small for a moment, that was replaced with a muscle-rockin’ beast by high school, but one who was still fragile, even if not all knew.

Mike has been a Level 1 diabetic his entire life and playing football, which drains the body, was a tricky affair. It required great attention to detail, and gave his mom more than one unsteady moment.

But Meyer, and his family, handled all the setbacks by tackling them head-on, kind of like how Mike met anyone foolish enough to try and run to his side of the field.

If you just look at the stats, where the 2000 CHS grad more than earned his All-Conference honors, he would be a worthy candidate for the Hall.

Look closer at what he overcame, and he becomes a slam dunk.

Look even closer at the photos of the three joyous children he and wife Christi have brought into the world, and the athletic stuff is just the icing on the cake.

But hey, everyone, even a talented chef like Mike, needs a little frosting from time to time.

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The blockers who drove the 1990 CHS football squad are joined by (bottom, l to r) Hunter Hammer, Randy King, Kyra Ilyankoff and Tina (Lyness) Joiner.

   The blocking crew who powered the 1990 CHS football squad are joined by (bottom, left to right) Hunter Hammer, Randy King, Kyra Ilyankoff and Tina (Lyness) Joiner.

Winners, through and through.

That perfectly describes the members of the 13th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

A diverse group with some crossover, they all had high standards and left behind big marks, though one is still adding to his legacy at Coupeville High School.

Joining their brethren under the Legends tab at the top of the blog are Kyra Ilyankoff, Hunter Hammer, Randy King, Tina (Lyness) Joiner and the 1990 CHS football squad.

Our first inductee, Ilyankoff, was a powerhouse on the volleyball court and in the track stadium.

As a spiker, she owns school records for most blocks in a game and a season, while as a thrower, she placed in the top four at state as a javelin hurler three times.

With a second, third and fourth place medal to her name, it was only injuries that kept Ilyankoff from going a flawless four-for-four from 2008-2011.

A serene, sweet-natured young woman who had a fiery, intense drive deep in her soul, she will always stand tall when we talk about Wolf athletes who simply wowed us.

Standing tall came naturally to Hammer, since the camera-lovin’ force of nature eventually grew to a lanky six-foot-seven.

On the basketball court, he was a dominant force on very successful squads (his 2009-2010 team went 16-5, best in a long time for CHS boys’ hoops), before joining track as a thrower his final two seasons, shattering long-held school marks and claiming three medals at state.

Through it all, he broke the mold by refusing to play dour like a lot of male high school athletes do when it came time for photos to be taken.

He loved having his photo snapped, and the camera loved him, thus launching the first in a line of solid gold Photo Bomb champions at CHS.

Others have come for his title in the years since, but Hunter was, is, and will always be, The Man.

Hammer’s coach in both his sports, King, has the longest current tenure of any CHS coach.

After 20+ years on the hardwood as boys’ varsity basketball coach, he stepped away, but then returned to coach middle school hoops in recent years, while continuing to lead the Wolf track program.

A teacher and sometimes football PA announcer, King has done it all and I find it hard to believe there will ever be a day when he’s not at the school, helping to guide a new generation of athletes.

And we’re certainly not going to wait for him to retire to induct him into our Hall.

Our fourth inductee, the hoops artist formerly known as Miss Lyness, was an assassin with a sweet soul.

One of the nicest people to ever trod the earth, Tina completely tamped that down when she strode onto the basketball court.

A standout player with ice in her veins when it came time to put the ball into the hoop, she was a key part of making history.

Her short eight-footer at the buzzer as a senior lifted Coupeville to a stunning 43-42 upset of dastardly ATM, knocking the private school power out of the playoffs and sending the Wolves to state.

That 1999-2000 squad would go on to become the first CHS team, in any sport, to win a game at state, kick-starting a decade’s worth of excellence in the program, but all of that would never have happened if she hadn’t dropped the dagger.

And now Tina has a young son who is showing signs of being a golf/fishing/whatever-sport-he-wants-to-play prodigy, meaning she might have helped to kick-start a new wave of excellence that will pay off for Wolf Nation down the road.

Topping our inductees on this day is a team that, without much argument, can lay claim to being the best in its sport ever produced by Cow Town.

The 1990 gridiron warriors, led by a talented senior class that left school in spring of ’91, went 9-0, winning a Northwest League title while outscoring opponents 258-107.

Led by a power running game and a cerebral, highly-efficient quarterback in senior Jason McFadyen, the Wolves rolled all the way to hosting a state playoff game.

Buffeted by Whidbey wind, Coupeville fell to Rainier in a state quarterfinal game Nov. 10, 1990, but that lone loss can’t mar what came before.

And, cementing their status, no other Wolf football team has stepped up to match their unbeaten mark or make it back to state in the 25 years since they last strode the gridiron at Mickey Clark Field.

It would be nice, on this anniversary, if the school would step up and honor the ’90 squad, though it doesn’t seem likely. Coupeville, unlike other schools, often lets its athletic past go to waste, which is a shame.

But whether they get their moment back on the field or not, we here at Coupeville Sports can remember them, and induct them, as a team, into our Hall.

Together, one more time, they are:

Ron Bagby (head coach)
Brian O’Hara (assistant coach)
Jon Prater (assistant coach)
Tom Roehl (assistant coach)

Brian Barr
Ben Biskovich
Troy Blouin
Danny Bonacci
Todd Brown
Ross Buckner
Ted Clifton
Matt Cross
Sean Dillon
Chris Frey
Scott Gadbois
Les Hall
Brad Haslam
Van Kellems
Scott Kirkwood
Eric Lester
Mark Lester
Kit Manzanares
Frank Marti
Jason McFadyen
Craig McGregor
Gerald McIntosh
Jason McManigle
David McMillan
Jerimiah Prater
Virgil Roehl
Ben Russell
Ryan Samplawski
Todd Smith
Joseph Staples
Nate Steele
Kevin Steiner
Aaron Williams
Tracy Wilson

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Stacie Farmer, during her days as a softball slugger.

   Stacie Farmer, during her days as a softball slugger. (Photos courtesy Farmer family)

Farm Dog

Farm Dog, on top of the world.

Stacie Farmer turns 29 today.

And yes, I am aware that, in one sense, she has been gone for five years. In another sense, however, she never left us.

A tragic accident damaged her body, but Farm Dog held on long enough for her family to reach her side before she departed the physical earth 24 years to the day she first entered it.

Sept. 15, 1986 – Sept. 15, 2010.

Not long enough at all, and yet she did so much, accomplished so much, brought so much joy to those she loved, or those she met just for a moment, that she filled every one of her days to bursting.

In the five years since her passing, Stacie’s life has lived on, through her words and those of all who knew her.

Her Facebook page, left open by her family, has become a place for people to remember the young woman who bounced through life, dreadlocks swinging, transcendent smile touching every part of the horizon.

From her days as a softball slugger at Coupeville High School to the moments when she and her friends hung out at Miriam’s Espresso and Videoville — where I most frequently came into contact with her — to her times exploring the world, her open heart reaching out to touch all she encountered, Stacie was like no other.

She wasn’t perfect. No one is. But she made a solid run at it.

Stacie strode through life, unafraid, always up to a challenge, always looking for the good in others.

In the mountains, on the river, wherever she was found, Farm Dog was the one who reached out to others, brought others into her world.

She was only here for 24 years, but she spent her time well.

Each of us who had a chance to know Stacie have kept her memory alive in some way, through stories, through tears, through memories.

With Coupeville Sports, I have a small, but unique, way to make sure her name, her memory, her spirit, never fades.

Here on this blog we have a Hall o’ Fame (it’s at the top of the blog under the Legends tab), dedicated to the best that Coupeville has produced. Normally the induction ceremonies, twelve so far, happen each Sunday.

Today, on a day that has so much significance, I want to induct Stacie alone, for she was always in a class by herself.

For her days on the diamond, yes, but more, for her life and the way she chose to live it.

It is not much, admittedly, but it is at least a small way in which I can make sure she is always with us, is always remembered.

When someone goes through the list of honorees and asks “Who was Stacie Farmer? Why is she in your Hall?” it will keep the conversation alive. It will give us another chance to make sure her flame never flickers.

As it should be.

On this day, and every day, we say “Goodnight, Stacie.” Never “Goodbye Stacie.”

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Hall o' Fame inductees (clockwise, from bottom left) McKayla Bailey, Emily (Vracin) Kosderka, Dustin Van Velkinburgh and Mitch Aparicio.

   Hall o’ Fame inductees (clockwise, from bottom left) McKayla Bailey, Emily (Vracin) Kosderka, Dustin Van Velkinburgh and Mitch Aparicio.

Impact.

Real, solid, enduring impact.

It’s what the four members of the 12th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame all delivered.

They were athletes, they had their moments in the sun, but, after they had taken the uniform off for the final time, their legacies, their spirit, their lessons have lived on in the town they once represented.

It’s why they are true legends, and why you’ll now find their names at the top of this blog, enshrined under the tab marked … legends.

I give you, Mitch Aparicio, Emily (Vracin) Kosderka, Dustin Van Velkinburgh and McKayla Bailey.

We’ll kick if off with Coach V, who could have gone in as an athlete, but will get the call as a coach.

Dustin was a superb athlete (still is) who played multiple sports in his younger days, but he is also that rarity, a top-level stud who turned around and came back to coach at the school where he prospered.

He often talks about how much the coaches he had shaped his life, gave him hope and a purpose, and he has retained those lessons and passed them on in his work with CHS football and basketball players.

Young (and skilled) enough to still be able to break his players ankles on the court if necessary, but wise enough to know when to use that power and when to quietly impart wisdom and support, he has helped shape a generation of Wolves.

If they come out the same kind of man he is, what a boon for this community.

Joining him on the stage is Aparicio, an 11-time letter winner who put in work like no other.

A three-time Mr. Hustle award winner in basketball, who later married his coach’s daughter, Mitch was an all-star in football, basketball, baseball and track who could have a trophy room full of All-League honors — if that mattered to him.

Instead, the Class of 1987 alum, who carried his football squad to state three times, has always been content to focus on the small moments instead of the trophies.

“Looking back at it now, I believe the best memories I have are of living in a small town and being close to family,” he once told me. “Living in a small community was a great opportunity to be involved, to play everything and get recognized by your family and community.”

He’s given back, gifting CHS with talented daughters Sydney and Payton, and always being one of the school’s most visible boosters with wife Tami.

And while the high school ‘stache is gone, the huge grin is still there, lighting up the town he loves, which loves him right back.

Our third inductee is the single most cold-blooded killer I have ever covered in person.

Kosderka was Coupeville’s answer to Larry Bird on the basketball court, and I swear I never, ever saw her miss a shot at money time.

The Class of 1992 grad was a standout volleyball and softball star, as well, but it was on the hardwood that she truly excelled.

Need one shot to win? From anywhere on the court? With no time to even think or blink?

Boom. The ball would snap into her hands, fly out with a whisper and the small smile would play at the corner of her mouth as she was backpedaling before the ball hit nothing but the bottom of the net.

Post high school, she has devoted countless hours to helping other athletes as a trainer, and has two young children who may one day surpass their athletically-gifted parents (husband Matt is a college baseball Hall of Famer).

If so, one can only hope Emily brings them home to the town in which she scorched so many nets.

Our headliner, and the most recent athlete by far, is Miss Bailey, who departs for college this week.

A top-level softball player who also dazzled as a hoops star, a spiker and a booter, McKayla is going in to the Hall as a contributor, and it’s not meant as a slight on her athletic skills.

Girl could whip a fastball.

But, in McKayla’s case, her impact went so far beyond the diamond and I want to acknowledge her unique position.

It’s impossible to overstate how important The Photo Bomb Queen was to the growth of Coupeville Sports.

When she was a freshman, I called her a Diaper Dandy (after which I had to explain to mom Donna who Dick Vitale was and why the term was a GOOD THING, all while Donna chased me through the town waving the beatin’ stick).

For the final three years of her high school days — the first three years of this blog — McKayla was my absolute go-to gold standard for anything and everything.

She would pose for photos until the cows came home (and then corral the cows into some more photos), she perfected the art of photo-bombing like no other (yes, yes, lil’ sis McKenzie has mad skills too) and she would answer every stupid question I asked with style, wit and zing.

McKayla is a great athlete, but she is so much more.

She is smart, she is kind, she is graceful, a vibrant, good-hearted young woman who it was a genuine honor to write about.

I hope she goes out into the world and kicks an unholy amount of booty, whether on the field, in the classroom or just in every day life.

There have been a lot of talented athletes in Coupeville, past, present, and surely in the future. There are also a lot of very entertaining ones.

But McKayla, there will never, ever be another McKayla Bailey.

I am so glad I get the chance to honor you, even in this small way.

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Hall o' Fame inductees (top to bottom) Aimee Bishop, Jennie Prince, Ron Bagby, Marlene Grasser

  Hall o’ Fame inductees (top to bottom) Aimee (Messner) Bishop, Jennie (Cross) Prince, Ron Bagby and Marlene Grasser stack up next to an old school Sherry (Bonacci) Roberts.

And that's how you play defense. (Photo courtesy Sherry Roberts)

And that’s how you play defense. (Photos courtesy Sherry Roberts)

Three Hall o' Famers in one photo

   Four Hall o’ Famers (so far) in one photo, as Grasser (24), Bishop (32) and Roberts (30) join their already-inducted coach, Phyllis Textor.

Roberts (

   Modern-day Wolf spikers? Roberts (4) and Prince (12) could probably still thump you.

The page hits? They’re never gonna end on this story.

The 11th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame manages to incorporate some of the most beloved, reader-friendly legends in the history of this here town.

It’s almost like I planned it that way…

So, without any further ado, rising up to live under the Legends tab at the top of the blog, I give you Marlene Grasser, Jennie (Cross) Prince, Sherry (Bonacci) Roberts, Aimee (Messner) Bishop and Ron Bagby.

And we just broke the internet.

Our first inductee, Bagby, was the CHS football coach for 25+ years and that alone would probably grant him access to these hallowed digital walls.

He produced an unbeaten team in 1990 and shaped generations of gridiron warriors, but there was, of course, much more to the man.

Basketball and track coach, athletic director and, before that, the dude who led the ENTIRE NATION in punt returns during his sophomore year at the University of Puget Sound.

Bagby in a football uniform was all Forks had going for it before they discovered twinkly vampires, and, barring a leg injury, he was slated to be drafted by the United States Football League, the NFL rival that gave us Doug Flutie, Herschel Walker and Donald Trump.

Instead, Coupeville got him and the rest is (Wolf) history.

Joining him are four of the most talented athletes to traverse the hallways at CHS in the late ’80s, all of whom have gone on to spectacular post-high school success.

Grasser (Class of ’87) was a two-time Athlete of the Year who sparkled in four sports (volleyball, basketball, softball and track) before going on to play college volleyball.

Her running mate, Roberts, once said this about her:

Marlene was my athletic role model. She was such an amazing and gifted athlete and one of the nicest people ever. She always helped me and encouraged me to strive for excellence and become the best I could be.”

Grasser flipped the switch, revealing she still had, and treasured, letters of encouragement Roberts (Class of 1989) wrote her in their younger days.

“I’m the one who thought of Sherry as my role model. She was always so bright and cheery and made the best of any situation. I admired that and strove to be that way too!”

The one-time Bonacci was a four-year letter winner in basketball and volleyball who also went on to play college ball.

An Athlete of the Year honoree herself, the Mrs. Hustle winner later married a Mr. Hustle Winner (Jon Roberts) and their daughter Lindsey is now a CHS freshman poised to wipe out all of their records while flashing the epic smile inherited from her ever-bubbly mom.

If Roberts was usually smiling, Prince (Class of 1990), living up to the Cross family tradition, was a little more intense when glaring at opponents (and sometimes, teammates).

A supremely nice woman off the court, Carson Risner’s mom made no bones about it — she was gonna break you in half and feel damn fine about doing it.

One of the most committed competitors the Wolves have ever had, she was a 12-time letter winner (four each in basketball and volleyball, three in track and one in softball) and her school records in the shot put and discus have never been touched.

Want to capture Jennie back in the day?

In the words of former teammate Georgie Smith:

“I lived in terror of volleyball practice in high school. Bump – set – spike with Jennie and the evil grin she would get when it was her turn to spike!”

And they were friends…

Rounding out our quartet is Bishop (Class of 1988), a three-sport athlete (volleyball, basketball, track) who has gone on to be a very successful (and frequent) runner.

Along the way she produced an Athlete of the Year winner in daughter (and future Hall o’ Famer) Breeanna Messner, earned huge internet fame as the most dependable photo subject in the history of Coupeville Sports and proven herself indispensable keeping Wolf athletics up and running.

And that’s actually how we’re going to induct her into the Hall, as a contributor.

It’s not meant to diminish her athletic accomplishments, but Bishop has made a huge impact as an athletic coordinator at CHS.

All you have to do is go to a game at a different school (say, football at South Whidbey…) and you realize how efficiently she does her job.

The lights stay on, the programs get printed, ice gets to injured players and everyone, and I mean EVERYONE, gets a smile along the way.

Putting her in as a contributor re-links her with her former running mate behind the scenes, Kim Andrews, who was already inducted.

The Kim ‘n Aimee Show, still playing up in the Hall o’ Fame.

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