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Posts Tagged ‘James Smith’

In a poll of CHS coaches, former lineman Brenden Gilbert received props. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ashlie Shank was hailed for her work ethic on the track oval.

I have opinions, but they’re just that – opinions.

It’s easy for those of us in the stands to spout our thoughts on high school athletics, but, if you want a deeper appraisal, it’s time to turn to the coaches.

The men and women who run Coupeville programs, or have in the past, tend to understand their sports on a deeper basis than your friendly neighborhood idiot blogger.

While I am easily swayed by emotion, coaches deal with cold, hard facts and often have a different view of their athletes than we might.

The coaches see who actually commit in practice, who puts in work on the side, how they deal with fellow athletes, how they handle the highs and lows away from the spotlight.

With that in mind, I reached out to a bunch of active and former CHS coaches, asking them to reveal their picks on several subjects.

Who are the best athletes they’ve worked with? Who did they wish they could have coached? Who wins their approval for most underrated or top role model?

A few brave souls answered, and we’ll look at their responses in a five-part series starting today.

 

Dan d’Almeida

(Former CHS head girls soccer coach):

In my opinion the top five from girls soccer in my generation were Anna Bailey, Cassidi Rosenkrance, Amanda d’Almeida, Ashley Manker, and Caitlin Phillips.

The first four were all four-year varsity starters when I was coaching, the fifth was a four-year player I only coached her senior year.

So their overall commitment to the program first and foremost. All were captains for at least one season and they also were competing when we were in the very tough Cascade Conference.

Ashley Manker I wanted to especially point out, because it was her goalkeeper training that was the genesis of Coach (Gary) Manker’s “system” that was used for many years with both boys and girls.

She was his guinea pig and did so well considering he was still developing it and there is always the father/daughter dynamic that could be an issue!

 

Anonymous Coach #1

(Former HS assistant/MS head coach, worked with girls and boys):

Best female athlete, tough one, but I would say Lindsey Roberts.

A young talent whose bloodline runs deep in Coupeville and she lives up to her family’s legacy. An athlete who always wanted to be the best and she has grown so much and is out there dominating every sport

Best male athlete is another very tough choice, but I will have to say Josh Bayne.

A kid with natural talent and he was never a selfish kid. Never wanted to be the one who wanted stats and glory.

He loved the game and loved being out there with his brothers and had so much pride for Coupeville.

Most underrated athlete, there have been a lot of great athletes, but I have two in mind, Joel Walstad and Brenden Gilbert.

Joel did something you don’t really see. He decided to play QB towards the end of his junior year and never saw varsity time until he became a senior, and man, he did not disappoint.

To have never really played QB at all and to take on that role as a senior, he went in knowing he was the leader and knew he had to work harder than anyone else.

He set a season record (for TD passes), you don’t ever see that; he definitely was someone I was proud to see excel.

Brenden had great mentors in Carson (Risner) and Nick (Streubel) and Brenden really took on the mantel as being our guy on the line his senior year and really excelled.

Role model? Hands down Nick Streubel.

He proved that with hard work, excel in the classroom and play with everything you got on the field, you can do anything and you can make your dreams happen.

We have never really had anyone succeed in football at the next level as much as Nick has at Central.

He helped carry Coupeville and he is the anchor in that line in Central.

But he is also very humble, prideful in where he came from, respectful to members of the community, his peers and his coaches.

He also knows how to live his life still but manages all his time to never give up on his goals.

Another athlete I would say is Valen Trujillo.

She was always about her team and always pushed them to be better.

She was a leader in the weight room and took time away from her workouts to help everyone else. Took time to teach young athletes and always cheered them on and encouraged her fellow athletes.

She dominated every sport she did and she was very respectful to all who she faced and was very thankful for everyone coming to the games. Never would you ever see her not smile.

She always pushed herself to be better and the records show for it.

 

Ken Stange

(Entering 14th year, and 27th season, as CHS tennis coach):

I’ll start with which CHS athletes I wished I could’ve coached – James Smith and Sarah Wright.

Like everyone in his family, James was a gifted athlete. He was smart, aggressive, and confident.

Sadly for the tennis team, he was a talented football player.

He was good friends with Connor Tasoff, my resident tennis junkie at the time, and they played quite a bit.

Connor was my top guy at the time, and James consistently made Connor work hard.

I would joke with James that he should quit football and join the tennis team. He said he wished there were a fourth sport season so he could play tennis.

As a student in my 8th grade English class, Sarah was smart, assertive, and thoughtful.

As an athlete, she’s smart, aggressive, and team-oriented, not to mention universally-beloved.

Her cousins Megan and Brooke (Monroe) played for me and her sister, Genna (Wright), just finished a strong 9th grade season for me.

I just know that if Sarah wasn’t busy kicking butt on the softball diamond, she’d be a lights-out tennis player.

As for the most underrated, I have to go with a doubles team and John McClarin and Joseph Wedekind are an easy pick there.

With all due respect, those two guys did not look like eventual Olympic League doubles champs when they showed up as freshmen.

But once they got a taste of the game, they worked their tails off 12 months a year for the rest of their CHS tennis days.

To go from near the bottom of the JV ladder as freshmen to league champs as seniors is quite an accomplishment.

What’s more, they were basically assistant coaches to the girls’ team, because that was the only way they could get court time during the girls’ season.

When I think of which athlete I would want kids to emulate, I struggle to come up with one name. 26 seasons have given me a long list of choices.

What I do think of are team leaders I’ve had. I think of the ones who inspired and instilled the kind of tennis culture that is both fun and competitive.

I think of leaders like Connor Tasoff, Ben Etzell and Aaron Curtin, John McClarin and Joseph Wedekind, and William Nelson and Joey Lippo.

I think of Hannah Merrell and Megan Monroe, Jordan Akins and Jessica Blanchette, Amanda d’Almeida, Valen Trujillo and Payton Aparicio and Sage Renninger.

Those people? I’d be happy to have my kids emulate any and all of them!

 

Anonymous Coach #2

(Current assistant with a spring program):

The athlete I wish I could coach? This one is easy, Scout Smith.

Even though she doesn’t participate in my sport, she is an amazing athlete who is overall an amazing person.

She plays with a competitive spirit, yet she also strives to always better herself and her teammates. She plays with an intensity that is electric and one that would have been so great to have in track.

She is an essential player in any sport that I’ve seen her in and it would have been a joy and an honor to coach her.

I feel that Ashlie Shank is the most underrated athlete that I coached.

This girl was a sleeper and for some reason it seemed that no one expected much from her, but she expected so much from herself and worked so hard to get to where she was before she left.

She was very consistent in her times and she continued to bring them down by working hard, harder than some of the best athletes on the team.

She was essential to her relays and amazing on her own. She knew how to push herself and find new limits every day.

I wish she could have stayed so I could’ve seen her senior season but I wish her the best for her senior year.

Although I coached many amazing young athletes, the athlete that I would want young kids to emulate would be Jean Lund-Olsen.

This kid is amazing all around.

He is humble, a hard worker, he listens to and respects his coaches, he is respected, he listens to his body and knows when he needs to heal (admittedly sometimes he needs to be reminded of that), he respects the sports that he participates in, the list goes on.

This athlete is one that is hard to find, and I believe that many young athletes should strive to follow his lead.

 

Return Wednesday for Part 2 of our five-part series, as Ken Stange looks back at 13 seasons and picks his ultimate boys tennis lineup.

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JD Wilcox

   JD Wilcox (left) whacked 85 hits over four years, best by any Wolf since 1990. (Mindy Wilcox photo)

Morgan Payne

   Morgan Payne (left) and Ben Etzell were four-year starters and both finished in the top five for career hits between 1990-2016. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Need one hit to save the day?

Over the last two decades-plus, the man you wanted at the plate for Coupeville High School was JD Wilcox, then.

Having gone through a pile of old baseball score-books, which featured wildly different recording styles (favorite notation from the late ’90s scrawled under a wild inning — “No clue. It was a cluster…”), I have a better idea now of who were the true Wolf hitting machines.

And no one recorded more career base-knocks during that time frame than Wilcox, who scorched 85 of them.

Now, having access to 18 of 27 score-books from 1990 to 2016, my research work is not complete, but reasonably close.

Even with nine missing books, I can piece together two-thirds of the time period.

So, a pretty good slice of the pie.

The best single season that I know about?

Chad Brookhouse, who stroked 32 hits in 2010.

In fact, that year produced the top four single-season performances found in my research, with Wilcox (31), Ian Smith (30) and Erik King (27) also swinging hot sticks.

Now, the question which lingers — was the ’10 team, which outhit the ’08 district champs 212-171, truly the best-hitting squad of the last 26 years?

Or was that year’s scorekeeper more lenient on what constituted a base hit?

We may never know.

Career-wise, Wilcox edges James Smith 85-77, with Ben Etzell (71), Casey Larson (70), Morgan Payne (68), Jake Tumblin (67), Alex Evans (66), Ian Smith (65), Kurtis Smith (61) and Aaron Curtin (52) rounding out the Top 10.

Of course, with the missing books, there’s always a chance we’re excluding someone worthy from that roll call.

Especially if they played from 2002-2004, the longest stretch of consecutive seasons lost to the wind.

But hey, if I’m not giving you something to argue about, I’m not doing my job.

So here, as best as I have been able to piece together, is the CHS hit parade from 1990-2016.

1990:

Frank Marti – 18
Matt Cross
– 17
Chris Frey
– 16
Brad Haslam
– 16
Brian Barr
– 13
GT Wolfe
– 10
Todd Brown
– 8
Ryan Samplawski
– 8
Les Hall
– 6
Scott Zustiak
– 3
Jordan Osorio
– 4
Shawn Ankney
– 1
Troy Blouin
-1
? Byers
– 1

1991:

Brad Haslam – 18
Frank Marti
– 18
Brian Barr
– 15
Jason McFadyen
– 15
Matt Cross
– 14
Chris Frey
– 12
Todd Brown
– 10
Jason McManigle
– 8
Ryan Samplawski
– 8
Eric Anderson
– 4
John Turner
– 4
Troy Blouin
– 1

1992:

Brad Haslam – 16
Troy Blouin
– 12
Jason McManigle
– 12
Jay Renaux
– 11
Matt Cross
– 9
Keith Currier
– 9
Todd Brown
– 6
Brian Wood
– 5
Tad Crease
– 4
Jason Hughes
– 3
Eric Anderson
– 2
Lance Allen
– 1
Jeremiah Prater
– 1

1993:

Keith Currier – 16
Cody Lowe
– 9
Jason McManigle
– 9
Jay Renaux
– 9
Jon Crimmins
– 8
Jason Hughes
– 7
Keith Dunnagan
– 5
Brent Fitzgerald
– 5
Scott Wofford
– 4
Troy Blouin
– 3
Blair Miller
– 1

1994:

Brad Miller – 14
Rich Morris
– 13
Mike Vaughan
– 13
Keith Dunnagan
– 11
Nick Sellgren
– 8
Jeremy Staples
– 8
Brent Fitzgerald
– 6
Blair Miller
– 3
Ben Lyle
– 2
Ryan Wiley
– 1

1995:

Brad Miller – 23
Mike Sloan
– 19
Jeremy Staples
– 14
Mike Vaughan
– 14
Greg White
– 12
Christian Lyness
– 11
Nick Sellgren
– 11
Keith Dunnagan
– 7
Rich Morris
– 6
Ryan Wiley
– 2
Brent Fitzgerald
– 1
? Nelson – 1

1996:

Book missing

1997:

Book missing

1998:

Christian Lyness – 14
Matt Brown
– 13
Aaron Henderson
– 12
Josh Smith
– 12
Ben Hancock
– 11
Eric Wiley
– 10
Caden Russell
– 6
Justin Barnes
– 5
Daniel Palmquist
– 5
Mike James
– 4
Bill Marti
– 3
Jason Joiner
– 1

1999:

Book missing

2000:

Book missing

2001:

David Rochin 19
Dustin Van Velkinburgh
15
Brett Barker
11
Justin Barnes
11
Tyler Hauan
11
Jacob Henderson
10
Tyrell Blouin
9
Mark Whittaker
5
JD Myers
4
Brian Fakkema
2
Brian Miller
1
Casey Mitchell
1

2002:

Book missing

2003:

Book missing

2004:

Book missing

2005:

Casey Larson 23
Kirby Mitchell
23
James Smith
19
Alex Evans
18
Trevor Mueller
18
Jack Armstrong
17
Mike Bagby
17
Cory Black
16
Anthony LaPoint
6
Tony Prosser
6
Kyle Wilcox
6
Jared Murdy
3

2006:

Book missing

2007:

James Smith – 22
Zach Hauser
– 17
Casey Larson
– 15
JD Wilcox
– 13
Jared Murdy
– 10
Kyle Wilcox 
– 9
Alex Evans
– 7
Tony Prosser
– 6
Jake Hill
– 4
Cory Black
– 3
Kramer O’Keefe
– 1
Zach Pelant
– 1

2008:

Alex Evans – 22
Zach Hauser
– 22
James Smith
– 22
Kyle Wilcox
– 22
JD Wilcox
– 19
Kramer O’Keefe
– 17
Jake Hill
– 16
Jared Murdy
– 15
Chase Griffin
– 8
Jason Bagby
– 5
Ian Smith
– 3

2009:

JD Wilcox 22
Ian Smith
– 16
Jake Hill
– 15
Chad Brookhouse
– 14
Erik King
– 14
Chase Griffin
– 13
Jason Bagby
– 10
Kevin Eaton
– 10
Alex McClain
– 5
Dalton Engle
– 3
Joe Fleck
– 3
Ryan Oliver
– 1

2010:

Chad Brookhouse – 32
JD Wilcox
– 31
Ian Smith
– 30
Erik King
– 27
Kevin Eaton
– 22
Chase Griffin
– 22
Alex McClain
– 17
Sean Thurman
– 12
Erik Wheat
– 12
Jason Bagby
– 6
Drew Chan
– 1

2011:

Morgan Payne – 18
Ian Smith
– 16
Alex McClain
– 11
Jake Tumblin
– 11
Wade Schaef
– 10
Brandt Bodamer
– 7
Drew Chan
– 7
Ben Etzell
– 7
Kurtis Smith
– 6
Kole Kellison
– 5
Zach McCormick
– 3
Ben Carlson
– 2

2012:

Jake Tumblin – 18
Morgan Payne
– 16
Ben Etzell
– 15
Wade Schaef
– 12
Drew Chan
– 9
Korbin Korzan
– 8
Kurtis Smith
– 8
Aaron Trumbull
– 8
Aaron Curtin
– 7
Josh Bayne
– 4
Brandt Bodamer
– 3
Brian Norris
-2
Zach McCormick
– 1
Paul Schmakeit
– 1

2013:

Morgan Payne -24
Ben Etzell – 23
Kurtis Smith
– 23
Jake Tumblin
– 17
Drew Chan
– 11
Aaron Curtin
– 11
Kyle Bodamer
– 10
Korbin Korzan
– 8
Aaron Trumbull
– 8
Josh Bayne
– 7
Wade Schaef
– 3
Cole Payne – 2
Joe Edwards – 1

2014:

Ben Etzell – 25
Kurtis Smith
– 24
Aaron Trumbull
– 24
Josh Bayne
– 21
Jake Tumblin
– 21
Wade Schaef
– 14
Aaron Curtin
– 12
Morgan Payne
– 10
Korbin Korzan
– 7
Cole Payne
– 4
CJ Smith
– 2

2015:

Aaron Curtin – 22
Cole Payne
– 16
Kyle Bodamer
– 15
Josh Bayne
– 13
Hunter Smith
– 12
Clay Reilly
– 11
Carson Risner
– 11
Aaron Trumbull
– 11
CJ Smith
– 9
Jake Hoagland
– 2
Julian Welling
– 2
Gabe Wynn – 2
Joey Lippo
– 1
Cameron Toomey-Stout
– 1

2016:

Book not available

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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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