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Posts Tagged ‘Jason Bagby’

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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Brad Sherman, back in his record-setting days.

Brad Sherman, back in his record-setting days. (Photo courtesy Sherman family)

The current CHS football record board. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

The current CHS football record board. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

It’s a work in progress.

That we even have a Coupeville High School football record board up on the wall is a HUGE accomplishment.

For a school that has done remarkably little to hold on to its athletic history, the recent efforts of Wolf gridiron coach Brett Smedley and associates to throw a target up on the wall for current players, is a landmark change.

I applaud the effort, heartily.

But…

Since they didn’t have access to full records, some of those names and numbers were best guesses, and they skewed heavily towards modern-day play, which is the only records they could find.

Having gone through a mountain of paperwork left behind by former CHS coach Tom Roehl, however, I can say with out a doubt, there are a few discrepancies.

Earlier this month, we brought you facts to back up the case for Ian Barron rightfully owning the single season and career rushing records.

Now, I’d like to toss another name in the arena.

Brad Sherman, and not the guys currently on the board, owns the school career marks for passing yardage and touchdown passes.

Though, I will add two caveats.

I’m missing stats for four games from Sherman’s senior season, so his numbers should be higher.

But, even with the missing games, he already betters what’s on the board.

And, since we don’t have stats from the ’50s, ’60s, ’70s or a good chunk of the ’80s, there is always a shot someone else with eye-poppin’ stats is lurking out there, ready to bump Sherman like he’s bumping the guys who came behind him.

You find me those stats in a file cabinet someplace and we’ll talk.

For the moment, it’s Sherman and here’s the case for him.

The board lists Joel Walstad with 18 career touchdown passes and Jason Bagby with 2,224 career yards.

Sherman, with a full season of stats from 2001 (his junior campaign) and stats from five of nine games in his senior season of 2002, has 2,706 yards and 24 touchdown passes.

Boom. End of story.

For the curious, here’s how it played out:

2001:

@ King’s — 204 yards, 1 TD
@ Tacoma Baptist — 374, 4
Charles Wright — 187, 4
Life Christian — 163, 4
@ Concrete — 127, 1
@ ATM — 184, 1
Friday Harbor — 206, 0
@ Orcas Island — 161, 2
La Conner — 62, 0

Seasons totals: 1,668 yards and 17 TD (one shy of Walstad’s single-season record)

2002:

Cascade Christian — 159, 1
@ Life Christian — STATS MISSING
@ King’s — 192, 0
Charles Wright — 134, 1
Concrete — STATS MISSING
@ La Conner — 250, 2
ATM — 303, 3
Orcas Island — STATS MISSING
@ Friday Harbor — STATS MISSING

Seasons totals — 1,038 yards, 7 TD through 5 games

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Tournament MVP Jason Bagby swoops to the hoop. (John Fisken photos)

Tournament MVP Jason Bagby swoops to the hoop. (John Fisken photos)

Da champs.

(Most of) da champs.

Brad Sherman gets the ol' shooting touch warmed up.

Brad Sherman gets the ol’ shooting touch warmed up.

ballers

The Central Ballers, minus one man who missed the photo op.

Anthony Bergeron (right) looks for an opening

Anthony Bergeron (right) looks for an opening.

Tourney organizer Noah Roehl hauls in a board.

Tourney organizer Noah Roehl hauls in a board.

Red Pride had a nice run, but it’s done.

For the moment at least.

Reviving memories of high school glory Saturday, the Coupeville Cows upended Red Pride at the Tom Roehl Roundball Classic, ending that squad’s run of three straight tournament championships.

The Cows were paced by tourney MVP Jason Bagby and included other former Wolf stars in Nathaniel Mouw, Mike Bagby, Jason McFadyen, Jerry Helm, Jason Fisher and Brad Sherman.

The Cows nipped the Central Ballers, who advanced to the title game for a second straight year.

This year’s roster, headed up by CHS hoops coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh, included Nick Streubel, Gavin O’ Keefe, Kramer O’ Keefe, Anthony Bergeron, Mike Lacey, Austin Thomas, Rodrick Rumble, Rashaad Smith and Harvey Ruiz.

The annual tournament, a fundraiser which honors a former longtime Coupeville coach, drew seven teams this year.

“It was a lot of fun. Wish we could do it more often,” Van Velkinburgh said. “Coach Roehl would be proud of his children and the charity/scholarship they have started.”

Along with game play, the event added a three-point shooting contest, which was won by Arik Dahlin.

The all-day event was sponsored by Harada Physical Therapy, Island Periodontics, DCG Engineering, Windermere and Cascade Custom Homes.

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