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Posts Tagged ‘Jeff Stone’

Allen Black, former CHS softball star Mandi Murdy and their adorable daughter, who is going to be the family's biggest star.

   Allen Black, former CHS softball star Mandi Murdy and their adorable daughter, who is going to be the family’s biggest star.

If you were a Coupeville High School boys’ basketball fan in 2002-2003, there was plenty to see.

Wolf senior Brad Sherman was closing out his stellar career, while freshman Mike Bagby was just beginning his. Toss in Brian Fakkema and Casey Clark, and CHS had four strong offensive weapons.

And yet, one wonders what could have been with a roster tweak or two.

Because, while that year’s varsity finished 5-15 a year after Coupeville had won a league title, the Wolf JV stormed to a 16-3 record behind one of the most explosive seasons put together at any level by a CHS hoops star.

Having recently obtained the JV score-book from that season, it’s a revelation.

Allen Black was a junior, and almost didn’t play in 2002, until the coach talked him into turning out.

Once on the court, he put on a show, breaking 20 points nine times, with a high of 32 against Concrete — not the last time he’d scar that team.

Black joined Bagby on the varsity squad the next year, where the duo both claimed All-Conference honors.

During the 2003-2004 season, Black went off for 39 in a rematch against Concrete, believed to be the most by a Wolf since Jeff Stone set the school record with 48 in the late ’60s.

Unfortunately, the varsity book for his senior year is one of two that have gone missing from Randy King’s 20-year run as CHS coach (1991-2011).

But looking at the JV book, one wonders, what would Black have done if he made his varsity debut BEFORE his senior season?

If I had a time machine, I’d love to go back and find out how a guy torches the nets for 347 points in 19 games and never gets the call-up.

When I talked to Black recently, he laughed it off, forever remaining Mr. Easy Rider.

“Can’t complain too much, I had a blast,” he said. “I was on the C-Team freshman year and that was probably the funnest year.

“But glad I showed up and kept playing.”

During his JV year to remember, Black, who was a team captain, opened the season with 21 in a 59-46 win over Granite Falls, and was the only player on his squad to score in all 19 games.

He topped double digits in 17 of 19 games, and while teammates Eddie Fasolo (24) and JJ Marti (20) each topped 20 once, Black went on a late season tear that is remarkable.

Facing off with league foes, he topped 21 or more points eight times in the final nine games — all wins for Coupeville.

Black started off with 21 against Concrete, then tossed down games of 24, 25, 27, 32, 23, 25, 14 and 27.

Frankly, he was lightning in a bottle all year, six times scoring in double digits in just a single quarter, with a high of 19 in the first quarter the night he scored 32.

He had a tendency to hurt teams right off the opening tip, throwing down nearly a third of his points (114) in the first quarters of his games.

So, in the end, what’s this all mean?

Well, that Allen Black was a heck of a baller at all levels, that he should have gotten the call to the big leagues sooner, and that we should take a moment to remember how good that 2002-2003 JV squad was.

There’s no banner hanging in the gym for them, but that doesn’t mean they didn’t kick some serious fanny. So, here’s a shout-out to them (and their high-scoring captain).

The complete scoring totals for the 2002-2003 JV squad:

Allen Black 347
JJ Marti 163
Eric Taylor 163
Blake Day 133
Eddie Fasolo 130
Bryan Sherman 72
Andrew Mouw 46
Sean O’Neill 39
Brad Rogers 37
Mike Duke 24
Andre Cooper 10
Danny Graham 7
Jack Armstrong 6

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The starting five from '67-68. (PHotos courtesy Jeff Stone)

Coupeville’s high-scoring starting five from 1967-1968. (Photos courtesy Jeff Stone)

A first-hand account of the scoring machine.

A first-hand account of the scoring machine.

Stats, stats and more stats.

Stats, stats and more stats.

Tourney time.

Tourney time.

Team picture day captures the full squad, including Wayne Hesselgrave, uncle to current Wolf star Wiley Hesselgrave.

   Team picture day captures the full squad, including Wayne Hesselgrave, uncle to current Wolf star Wiley Hesselgrave.

It was a time of giants.

From the late 1960s on through the 1970s, Coupeville High School had an especially impressive run in athletics.

Like a lot of history, the tale of those Wolves is scattered in bits and pieces these days, but we’re starting to pull it together, as everyone works together and digs through their scrapbooks and newspaper clippings.

The photos above are from the 1967-1968 boys’ basketball season, when a high-powered CHS squad rolled to a 9-3 mark in league play en route to districts.

Among their players was Jeff Stone, who, two years later, carried Coupeville to the state tourney for the first time in school history.

At this point he was a fast-rising sophomore who had yet to torch the nets for a school-record 48 in a game, but the seeds were being planted.

The photos are courtesy him, and give us a fun ride in the Wayback Machine.

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(Photo courtesy Jeff Stone)

   CHS hoops players are lifted up by the crowd after the 1969-1970 Wolves clinched a trip to state, the first in school history. (Photo courtesy Jeff Stone)

Our greatest generation of athletes are being shafted.

The further I dig into the history of Coupeville High School sports, it becomes increasingly obvious the 1970s were a golden age in Cow Town.

From Jeff Stone to Corey Cross to Bill Jarrell to Ray Cook and many, many more, the athletes of that decade carried teams to state, set records and won league titles.

But when you walk into the CHS gym, you would have no clue, because, when you look above the entrance way at the two rows of banners celebrating league titles and teams which placed at state, the first banner is from … 1990.

That’s right.

It’s as if no Wolf team in school history ever won anything until Ron Bagby’s football squad went undefeated in the fall of ’90.

That’s a lie, and a shameful one.

Why is it that way? There may be a thousand reasons, but we don’t have the time to debate who failed, or when they failed. Doesn’t matter.

Because, now, in 2016, we should be focused on something more positive.

We, the people, can fix this error. We can restore our forgotten legacy of sports excellence in the most public way possible.

It’s been 40+ years for those athletes of the ’70s, so they are now in their fifties or sixties.

The coaches of teams which won league titles in that decade, some of whom are still with us, are even older.

This is a situation which needs to be corrected NOW.

And it can be, if we work together.

Here is what I propose:

I ask the Whidbey News-Times to bend their rules slightly and allow me one day of access to their archives, which would offer the quickest and most concise way to determine what league titles Coupeville won in the ’70s.

This information is not on the internet, and pulling it together, piece by piece, as people unearth scrapbooks and moth-eaten score-books, will take forever.

I understand the refusal to let the general public go through the archives anymore, as the papers are old and, as they say, “they are our history.”

Emphasis on OUR history. Theirs, mine, yours. Ours, as a community.

I will wear the white gloves, if necessary. I will not bring food or drink in the room.

I wrote a whole bunch of articles which are in those archives. I understand the historical value (well, maybe not of my stories…) and will not act like an idiot.

If the News-Times overlooks my past poking of them and joins me in this COMMUNITY effort, once I know how many banners we would be talking about, I will sit down with school administrators and find out what the cost would be to have them made and hung.

At that point, I would propose that we, the people, come together and chip in whatever money is needed to do so.

Once we have a dollar amount, it would be as simple as setting up a GoFundMe page, and I feel secure that the members of Wolf Nation, near and far, would make it a done deal.

Later this year, probably right before graduation, CHS will be raising new title banners — boys’ tennis and girls’ basketball have won league championships in 2015-2016, and the school year is far from done.

When they do so, I would like to see them pay tribute to the past, as well, and raise banners to the teams of the past.

If we, as a community, work together, we can make it possible and make it so the school has little to do but say yes.

When next year’s freshmen walk into the gym for the first time and look up, they should see a long and lasting legacy of excellence reflected on those walls.

And when their grandfathers walk into that gym and look up, they should know their teenage glory days are not forgotten.

As Wolf fans, we owe them that much.

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