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Posts Tagged ‘Jeff Stone’

Barry Brown

  Wolf legends Barry Brown and Jeff Stone, with some of their ’67-’68 basketball teammates. (Photo courtesy Stone)

Bob Barker (Photo courtesy Sherry Roberts)

Bob Barker (Photo courtesy Sherry Roberts)

Bob Barker spent 31+ years at Coupeville High School, working as a teacher, coach and Athletic Director, affecting countless lives over the years.

A 1959 grad of what would become Western Washington University, he led baseball and basketball (both boys and girls) teams at CHS, taking three to state.

Hailed by his former players as “the best coach I ever had” and “one of the three or four people who shaped who I am today,” his impact lingers long after his retirement.

In this series, Barker responds to my questions as only he can, eloquently and passionately.

Today’s question: “Was Jeff Stone the greatest athlete you ever coached at CHS?”

David,

It is currently raining so I thought I would take some time and give my response to your third question.

Jeff was six-feet-four, but had very long arms.

He had soft hands and a very fine touch on the ball.

He had great athletic ability and while he played with his back to the basket for me, he learned to play facing the basket while in college.

He was recruited by Seattle Pacific, which was playing a very high level game at that time.

By his junior and senior college years he played on exceedingly fine teams and was one of their better scorers. 

Jeff’s skills fit very nicely in the sport of basketball,  and if I was to pick an all-star basketball team from the 30 years that I observed the sport at Coupeville, Jeff would be my first pick. 

Although Jeff didn’t play tennis, if he had had the interest, with his build and skills, I think that he would have made a tremendous tennis player, too.
 
Now having said that, it is my opinion that he was not the best all-around athlete competing in sports during that period of time.

I am going to list some special performers from some of my basketball teams. These were All-Conference Performers.
 
NAME                  TEAM              YEAR
Barry Brown     NWB 1st            1967
John O’Grady    NWB 2nd          1976
Barry Brown      NWB 1st           1968
John O’Grady    NWB 1st           1968
Jeff Stone          NWB 1st            1969
Jeff Stone          NWB 1st            1970
Pat O’Grady      NWB 2nd           1970
Corey Cross       NWN 1st            1971
Bill Riley             Cascade 1st       1972
Corey Cross         Cascade  2nd     1972
 
If I was to pick some of the most all-around athletes that I have observed during the 30 years at Coupeville they would be Barry Brown, Corey Cross, Bill Riley, Randy Keefe and Foster Faris.

Most of these individuals were outstanding in at least two and many three sports.

I believe that Randy Keefe lives in Coupeville but has changed his name to O’Keefe.
 
I am going to include a few individual season statistics which you may or may not find interesting. 

Best point average per game:

1. Jeff Stone  (27.0)  1969-70
2. Bill Riley  (23.9)  1972-73
3.  Bill Riley  (18.7)  1971-72
 
Most Rebounds:

1. Bill Riley  (310)  1971-72 (21 games)
2. Jeff Stone  (295)  1969-70 (24 games)
3. Bill Riley  (288)  1972-73 (20 game) 
4. Randy Duggan  (262)  1971-72 (21 games)
5. Barry Brown  (206)  1967-68
6. Pat Brown  (175)  1969-70
7. Jeff Stone  (159) 1968-69
8. John O’Grady (141) 1967-68
 
Here is another tidbit. The best season free throw percentage was Alan Hancock at 75.4%. 

Alan is now a judge on Whidbey Island.
 
I hope that this has been of some interest to you.
 
Sincerely,
 
Bob Barker

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Bob Barker (Photo courtesy Sherry Roberts)

Bob Barker, hard at work. (Photo courtesy Sherry Roberts)

Bob Barker spent 31+ years at Coupeville High School, working as a teacher, coach and Athletic Director, affecting countless lives over the years.

A 1959 grad of what would become Western Washington University, he led baseball and basketball (both boys and girls) teams at CHS, taking three to state.

Hailed by his former players as “the best coach I ever had” and “one of the three or four people who shaped who I am today,” his impact lingers long after his retirement.

In this series, Barker responds to my questions as only he can, eloquently and passionately.

Today’s question:

“Was the 1969-1970 CHS boys’ team the best basketball team in school history?”

David,

Let me set the scene a little.

The schools in the Northwest B League were members of what was I believed called a tri-district (B schools in Snohomish, Skagit and Island county.)

Based on the total enrollment of the schools this district rated a total greater than 1 but less than 1.5. I am not sure, but lets say 1.3.

This meant that we rated more than one team in the state tournament but not enough for two teams. 

There must have been other districts in the state with the same problem, hence we would get one team one year and two teams the next and so on.

Coupeville had for many years been a strong basketball school.

One thing I noticed when I came in the spring of 1959 was there was a number of outside baskets and these were always busy before school and at lunch.

Football and baseball were just something to do until basketball season rolled around.

COACH            YEAR           TOURNAMENT PLACE
Sanman           56-57                   3rd
Boushey          57-58                   3rd
Boushey          58-59                   2nd
Boushey          59-60                   2nd
Boushey          60-61                   3rd
Boushey          61-62                   3rd
Boushey          62-63                   3rd
Boushey          63-64                   3rd
Boushey          64-65                   4th
Barker              65-66                   2nd

So you can see that some of those years where there were two teams we finished 3rd and at least two years where there was one team we finished 2nd. 

It was very frustrating.

1970 was the year that Coupeville finally broke the jinx by winning the district tournament.

In 1970 we opened the season with 12 victories and were 12-0. 

In January, when the polls opened, Coupeville was rated #1 in the state in its division and Jeff Stone led the scoring for all high school players in the state.

Now a small town such as Coupeville takes great pride in their school activities.

The school district put up a special levy in February and due to the pride in our basketball team the levy passed with well over 80%, which was really unheard of.

When we won the District tournament we became the first Whidbey Island school to gain a state berth.

Now to the question, was this the best Coupeville team in history.

I am not sure that I can say that as I had a great team in 1972, but this team due to some unfortunate circumstances did not make it to state. 

In 1971 -72 the Cascade A League had lost a couple of members, hence invited La Conner and Coupeville to join their league. 

If we had joined them and declared to play up we would have had to place in the top four in the league and then go to the A tournament in Mount Vernon and compete with perennial state powers like Lynden, Lynden Christian, Mount Baker, etc. 

We agreed to come in but would go back into the B tournament at the conclusion of the season.

The members of the Cascade thought this would be alright as they could use us as cannon fodder and complete their schedules.

The problem arose that Coupeville won the Cascade League that year and La Conner placed third.

This provoked the Cascade members as they were then sending their 2nd, 4th, 5th and 6th place teams to compete with the powerful teams to the North.

It also pissed off the rest of the Northwest B League teams, so they set up the tournament in such a way to extract some revenge by putting Coupeville and La Conner in the same bracket.

The Northwest B League was now sending two teams to state every year.

It should have been La Conner and Coupeville meeting in the final game and both teams going to state.

Being the lower-rated team La Conner played some team in the first round and beat them.

We, having the better record had been seeded and met La Conner.

Now ask any coach would he like to play or be seeded as that first night the kids get rid of their jitters and stage fright, which every team has.

Unfortunately we were defeated by a good La Conner team that was more relaxed than we were.

In my estimation winning the Cascade A League title in 1972 was a greater achievement than winning the district tournament in 1970, however, not as exciting as taking the first Coupeville team to state.

At that time the Cascade League contained a powerful Lakeside team, a talented King’s team, Granite Falls, Langley, Sultan and Tolt as well as La Conner.

We ended up winning the league with a record of 14-2.

One loss was to Lakeside and one to La Conner.  I believe that our season record going into the tournament was 18-2.

I probably have given you more information that you wanted but when I get started babbling it is hard to stop.

Bob Barker

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Hall of Fame

   Old newsprint captures Hall of Fame inductees (clockwise from top right) Jim Hosek, Eileen Kennedy, Jeff Stone and Marnie Bartelson (in front).

Sometimes there’s no rhyme or reason.

While some induction ceremonies into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame have had a noticeable theme, today’s 34th class is united by only one thing — excellence.

A Wolf coach and three athletes, one of whom went on to be a successful coach himself, are welcomed into our hallowed digital walls.

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

With that we welcome Marnie Bartelson, Jim Hosek, Eileen Kennedy and (hyperbole alert) the greatest athlete in Coupeville High School history, Jeff Stone.

We kick things off with Kennedy, who was running cross country for CHS back in my days as Sports Editor of the Whidbey News-Times.

Yes, it’s true, young ones. CHS once had a cross country program, one which can hang a number of title banners in the gym if the school becomes so inclined.

Kennedy didn’t run during that ’70s and ’80s heyday, though, and when she did run in the early-to-mid ’90s, she was often the lone Coupeville girl to do so.

A distance runner in track, she left volleyball behind as a junior and hit the open trail, and consistently beat all of the boys on the Wolf squad for the next two seasons.

She never won a state title like predecessor Natasha Bamberger, but she remains to this day one of the most dedicated athletes I ever covered, and Eileen’s serene spirit has always remained with me.

Our second inductee was a little rowdier, at least on the field.

Bartelson was a goal-scoring whiz kid, but, while she repped the red and white while playing basketball, she never actually wore a Wolf uniform on the soccer field.

Her freshman year Oak Harbor and Coupeville, after much back-and-forth fighting, instituted a joint soccer program, with Bartelson’s mom, Carol, taking the head coaching position.

The deal, which was bitterly opposed by the OHHS Athletic Director of the day, allowed Coupeville athletes to compete for Oak Harbor in sports which CHS didn’t offer, such as soccer, wrestling and swim.

The biggest impact of the deal, which went through various incarnations before being disbanded (after which Coupeville started its own soccer programs), was felt on the pitch, where the Wildcats inherited a superstar.

A program which hadn’t won a game before the arrival of the Bartlesons finished 4th at the 1994 state 3A tourney, with Marnie, a sophomore, being named MVP of the Western Conference.

The only other Coupeville girl on the roster that season was senior Amanda Allmer, the team’s imposing goaltender.

After she finished a spectacular prep career, taking the ‘Cats back to state as a junior and senior, the younger Bartelson tore up the college pitch, as well.

When she graduated from Utah State in 2000, Bartelson, who scored in her first college game, left her name high on the school’s record board.

At her departure, she was #1 in career assists,  #2 in points and #3 in goals all-time, while also sitting at #1 for most goals (3) and points (7) in a single game.

Our third inductee had his own torrid streak.

Hosek coached more than one sport at CHS, but he will be best remembered for his run on the baseball diamond, where he racked up 103 wins, five straight league titles and four district crowns from 1973-1978.

Coupeville baseball made deep playoff runs every year he was at the helm, and his innovations followed him when he moved on to a successful run as a college coach.

One of those was Hosek’s habit of ordering his uniforms so that every jersey number included a one, reinforcing his belief that he and his team always view themselves as #1.

Our final inductee is the man whose name comes up most often when people talk about the greatest athletes in town history.

There are two or three other names which will be mentioned, but then, after a momentary pause, everyone says the same thing, “It’s Jeff Stone. No argument.”

After high school, he was a stellar college athlete, then went on to a long, successful run up North as a teacher, coach and Athletic Director in Oak Harbor.

But, during his days as a Wolf, he set records which still stand, nearly 50 years later.

The 1970 CHS grad is best known for basketball (more on that in a second), but, let’s take a moment and glance at the stats for his senior year of baseball.

.456 batting average
26 hits
23 runs
7 triples
2 HR
29 RBI

And yes, he led his team in every single category, if you’re wondering.

On the basketball court, of course, he has never had a peer.

Playing in the days before dunking and three-point shots, he threw down 644 points as a senior, leading a ’69-’70 Wolf squad that broke 100 points in a game four times (high of 114 against Watson-Groen).

Stone was the ultimate big-game player, scoring a school record 48 in the district title game (as Coupeville became the first Whidbey Island hoops team to EVER win a district title), then snatched 27 rebounds in a state playoff game.

To put those numbers in perspective, in the 46 years since he left CHS, the best any other Wolf has done in a single game was 39 points.

The best single season scoring total I have found for any other player, boy or girl,  is 198 points below what Stone netted during his senior year.

And those players took full advantage of the three-point line.

We could go on and on, or we could just stop and say what everyone else says when Stone’s name pops up.

Best ever.

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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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Stone

   CHS hoops coach Bob Barker (bottom, right) and some of the players who launched Wolf basketball into a new world. (Photos courtesy Jeff Stone)

It was a time when legends were crafted.

You wouldn’t know it by looking at the gym walls today, but between 1968 and 1970, boys’ basketball became the biggest game in Coupeville.

The Wolves already had a star in Barry Brown, who had been a First-Team All-League pick in ’66-’67 and ’67-’68, but things really took off the next two seasons.

That was when Jeff Stone rewrote the record books, setting marks that have never been approached, nearly 50 years after the fact.

During his junior season (’68-’69), Stone tossed in 317 points and was tabbed as one of the league’s best players.

But then CHS hoops coach Bob Barker decided to change things up heading into Stone’s final go-around.

“As far as the players were concerned, we were excited for the new brand of basketball Coach Barker switched to for our senior year,” Stone said. “Where as the previous years we were more deliberate offensively, we employed more of a full court press and fast break offense.

“That was especially effective in the little cracker box gym we called home.”

Running wild, Coupeville ripped though its schedule, going 18-2, with only a pair of razor-thin losses to perennial power La Conner.

After that came two huge wins at the district tourney over Skykomish and Darrington, with Stone pouring in 48 points — that still stands as a school record — in the title game.

The district title, the first in school history, propelled Coupeville to state, also for the first time ever.

And while the Wolves fell 63-51 to Ritzville and 63-54 to Kittitas (Coupeville won its first game at state in ’75-’76, after five previous losses), they didn’t go down without a fight.

Stone corralled a school record 27 rebounds against Kittitas and finished the season with 644 points, both records which stand to this day.

After his prep swan song came college ball and then a solid run as a coach, teacher and athletic director up north in Oak Harbor, but Stone’s time as a Wolf remains dear to his heart.

He was at the center of a legendary run, and will always treasure that.

“Memories that I remember the most were the crowds; everybody loves a winner, right?,” Stone said with a laugh. “Coupeville didn’t have a rich tradition in basketball or any sport for that matter.

“The Whidbey News-Times with Wallie Funk couldn’t get enough of it. It was like Hoosiers!”

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