Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Ken Stange’

Coupeville HS tennis coach Ken Stange shows off his dance floor-ready moves. (Wendy McCormick photo)

   Coupeville High School tennis coach Ken Stange shows off his dance floor-ready moves. (Wendy McCormick photo)

The dance floor will unite them.

That’s the plan, as Coupeville High School tennis coach Ken Stange welcomes folks to his South End establishment, kicking things up a notch with an appearance by a band that includes a fellow teacher from Oak Harbor.

Stange, who left teaching behind this year when he purchased Bailey’s Corner Store in Clinton, is bringing in acclaimed Island band Jacobs Road next weekend.

The well-known cover band includes drummer Mitch Aparicio (former Wolf sports star turned co-owner of Penn Cove Brewing Co.) and OHHS teacher Erik Christensen.

The group will be playing classic rock (ideal for singing along and dancing) at Bailey’s Corner next Saturday, Jan. 23 from 6-10 PM.

There’s a nominal $5 cover charge, so basically we’re talking $1.25 per hour — not at all unreasonable.

Especially since, if you’re smooth, you can probably fill up your autograph book that night, as well.

If you haven’t been to Bailey’s before, it’s at 7695 Cultus Bay Rd in Clinton.

Read Full Post »

(Photo courtesy Ken Stange)

   The core of the best boys’ tennis team in Coupeville High School history, led by two-time Hall o’ Fame inductee Connor Tasoff. (Photo courtesy Ken Stange)

Tennis has never gotten the respect it deserves.

It was that way when I played/goofed off for three years at Tumwater back in the day and it’s still the case.

In a just world there would be a bunch more title banners hanging in the Coupeville High School gym, recognizing the work Wolf coach Ken Stange and his teams have put in over the last decade.

Some of those titles came in a two-team league, but they were still titles.

Those banners should still be there, and it does a disservice to the athletes who won them when their school ignores their accomplishments.

So, today, with the 21st class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, we’re going to work a bit on making up for that.

Putting a little twist on things, we’re going to induct Connor Tasoff twice — once as an individual athlete and once as part of the 2009 CHS boys’ tennis team, AKA The District Tourney Sweep Crew.

It may not get them a banner, but they will live on under the Legends tab that sits atop this blog. So, small victory.

For the induction, I’m going to shut up and pass the mic to their coach and let him speak.

Take it away, Stange:

In the fall of 2006, Connor Tasoff, a freshman at the time, joined the tennis team.

It was my second season as the boys’ coach. With only nine players, the previous season had been difficult.

I was pretty shocked to see more than 20 players show up for the beginning of season two. I was the beneficiary of soccer moving to the spring season.

I was also excited because although he was young and inexperienced, Connor already knew how to play.

He also had a passion for the game, a passion that let me know that he’d be the one who’d end up talking tennis with me, all day long. He ended up being that person.

Connor never qualified for state, although he did win a district crown and qualified for quad-district multiple times.

What he did was legitimize the boys’ tennis program at CHS.

I had tons of soccer players who played tennis, and a few basketball players who played tennis.

But Connor? He was simply a tennis player. He was also the team’s best player for a long time.

He showed up early and he stayed late. He took lessons and went to camps. He watched more experienced players, both recreational and professional. He soaked it all up.

He set the tone that is carried on by the likes of John McClarin and Joseph Wedekind. He put in the work and honed his game.

My favorite memories with Connor come from his senior season. Here are a few:

We had a ton of upperclassmen that year. Most of them had taken their lumps playing varsity tennis as underclassmen. Friday Harbor used to slap us silly.

The fall of 2009 was different. We were loaded.

Connor and Ben Hayes at singles. Yes, Ben Hayes at #2 Singles.

Jordan and Nathan Lamb at doubles. Garrett Knoll and Travis Curtin at doubles, as well. We rarely lost that season.

We won a league title that year. There is no banner hanging in the gym for that one.

Our league consisted of two teams back then. It was CHS and Friday Harbor. We smoked the Wolverines that year.

Connor led the way, as our top singles player.

We looked forward to the district tourney, where we knew that all four of our entries, two singles and two doubles, had the chance to advance.

In order to do so, we had to go 1-2 in both singles and doubles, which we did.

Things didn’t go so well at quads, but there was a silver lining for Connor.

Like the rest of our players at quads that year, Connor went two and out.

To say he was devastated would be an understatement. He had played his final HS tennis match.

Fortunately, he played that tennis match at the Nordstrom Tennis Center, home of the University of Washington team.

The manager of the facility had watched parts of his matches, and while she was impressed with his game, she was more impressed by how classy he was.

Once she found out that he was planning to attend the UW, she offered him a job.

Part of what he did while working there was stringing the racquets of the UW players.

For a tennis nut like me, I couldn’t think of a better college job!

I can attest to his stringing abilities. I swear by his work. His string jobs never break and the strings allow me to do good work on the court.

He is still our team’s main stringer, even five years after graduation.

Sometimes, he comes out and helps me because he knows how difficult it can be for one coach to manage 20 players.

I think of him when I run drills using the giant ball cart he and his family donated to the program. I also think of him when I pick up balls using the hopper he donated.

That lovely hitting wall on the side of Court 2? That came from Connor and his family, too.

His mark has been indelible.

He started the ball rolling. His energy and game allowed his teammates to grow and improve.

His classmates from that year, Jordan, Garrett, and Travis, all worked harder because of Connor.

Ben Hayes was a year behind, but he worked his butt off to move up the ladder. Add in a little Nathan Lamb to the mix. Those two were heavily influenced by Connor, too.

Who came after that? Aaron Curtin, and after that came Ben Etzell.

Aaron and Ben quickly took notice of a couple of unskilled ninth graders named John and Joseph.

They saw that those two young boys had a passion for the game, and immediately took them under their wing.

Those two unskilled ninth graders are now my top doubles team, and they have now taken to sharing the game with the younger guys.

It all goes back to Connor.

I may be the guy you refer to as “tennis guru” but in all actuality, I think it still all goes back to Connor.

Like I said before, he set the tone. He passed it on, and, ever since, the boys who’ve followed him have passed it on.

I owe him much.

Read Full Post »

Oliana Stange, back in her Coupeville days. (John Fisken photo)

  Oliana Stange, back in her Coupeville days, keepin’ the beat goin’. (John Fisken photo)

OK, don’t get all flustered, but we need to take a moment to celebrate something done by a Langley athlete.

Wait, what?!?!?!?

Yeah, yeah, yeah, the name on the blog is Coupeville Sports, but, over time, I have mellowed … a bit.

And, regardless of what uniform she currently wears, Oliana Stange is one of Whidbey’s best, brightest, kindest and most-worthy-of-praise athletes, so deal with it.

Miss Stange, daughter of Coupeville High School tennis guru Ken Stange (and super mom Ericka Cooley), used to run for Coupeville Middle School until a family move took her down South this year.

The former Wolf track star is now running cross country as an eighth grader at Langley Middle School, where she and her teammates capped their season by sweeping both titles at the Cascade Conference Championships Thursday.

Langley trumped Lakewood, King’s, Sultan, Granite Falls and Northshore Christian to top the overall scoring in both the girls and boys races.

Stange finished 25th in her race, covering 1.74 miles in 14 minutes, 5.54 seconds.

Of the five races she ran in this season, it was the longest course she has had to deal with.

So, while she may be a Cougar these days, we’re going to ignore that fact for the moment.

Way to go, Oliana!

Read Full Post »

CHS tennis guru Ken Stange (above) is joined by fellow inductees (l to r) Mike Duke, Julie (Swankie) Wheat, Jerry Helm and Will Butela.

  CHS tennis guru Ken Stange (above) is joined by fellow inductees (l to r) Mike Duke, Julie (Swankie) Wheat, Jerry Helm and Will Butela.

Impact.

In the athletic history of Coupeville, some have left a mark, while others have hit with such a force they left a crater.

The members of the 15th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame made, or are continuing to make, impressions that have lasted, and for that they join their brethren at the top of the blog, forever enshrined under the Legends tab.

Welcome to the podium, Jerry Helm, Julie (Swankie) Wheat, Ken Stange and the loud ‘n proud tag-team of Will Butela and Mike Duke.

We want a big opening, so we have to kick things off with Butela and Duke, the fastest-rising names in sports entertainment.

Both athletes themselves who have gone on to adult things like marriage, fatherhood and starring in professionally-made ads that tout their love of Major League Baseball (https://coupevillesports.com/2015/07/14/ermahgerd-i-know-these-dudes/) the duo are going in to our hall as Contributors.

The last couple of years have been an odd time for the student cheering section at Coupeville High School, as administrators, overly-restrictive league officials and the Wolf faithful have conducted an awkward dance.

But jump back just a few years, when Butela and Duke led that section, a time when the stands were jam-packed and ready to rock ‘n roll, and Wolf Nation was a force to be reckoned with.

They had more freedom than the current kids are being given, and they reveled in it, shaking the joint to its rafters. They made the floor rumble and other schools wilt.

They were then what you wish today’s Wolves would be allowed to once again be.

Spirit? Passion? Fun? It flowed from every pore of their bodies and, in our timid times now, they loom even bigger in our memories.

Next up is a guy, who, while being a little bit older than the Fun Brothers, still looks like he could pass for a high schooler.

Helm, the poster boy for Central Whidbey firefighting (he has the calendar to prove it) was a standout athlete in his days as a Wolf.

The 1998 grad used his speed to make a mark as a football, basketball and track star, while dabbling a bit in baseball.

Along the way, he went to state, won MVP awards and was part of a school record in the 4 x 400, before hanging up his track shoes and morphing into a dad and husband.

Whether zipping around the track oval or battling fires, Helm was a winner then, and remains one today.

His journey is a similar one to the trek taken by Wheat, who transitioned from life as a stellar athlete (volleyball, softball) into being a wife and mom, raising her children with husband Erik, himself a decorated former Wolf.

While she was rock-solid on the diamond, the volleyball court is where Julie holds school records.

The Assist Queen, the former setter still holds all three CHS records, for most assists in a game (40), season (309) and career (604 from 2008-2010).

A perpetual ray of sunshine when she was an athlete, the kind of warrior who dominated but never forgot to embrace the sheer joy of playing, Wheat has gone on to provide daily assists to her young sons.

Look at their smiles in the photos in which they appear with their mom, and you know she’s still winning, every day.

Our fifth inductee is a wily tennis guru who has impacted countless players during a decade-plus run at the helm of the Wolf boys and girls’ tennis programs.

Coupeville’s version of The Dude, a free spirit who bops to his own tune, Stange, who is now in his 11th year at CHS, imparts two kinds of lessons. Tennis ones, and life ones.

He’s had some very good players, taken several to state, but it’s the little things which make him worthy of induction.

The way he has pulled in countless kids from the fringes who had never played a sport and then given them a game they can play for a lifetime.

His Zen-like mixture of wild stories, hard truths and laser-like wisdom.

His Swayze-like dancing skills.

Plus, he’s one of the best in the biz when it comes to writing up info for the ink-stained wretches who cover his teams, and, he’s one of the few coaches who can still flat-out blast his players off the court if needed.

You come for the king, you better have a quick racket.

Read Full Post »

Nile Lockwood fires up a service during practice. (Ken Stange photo)

   Nile Lockwood fires up a serve Wednesday afternoon during practice. (Ken Stange photo)

Nile Lockwood has made a fast impression.

“He’s a wild one, but he’s also very kind and funny,” said Coupeville High School tennis coach Ken Stange.

“And sometimes inappropriate,” he added with a huge laugh.

Since Stange is an easy-going free spirit with a wild sense of humor himself, it’s a player/coach match made to order.

Lockwood, a Wolf freshman who started playing tennis six month ago, made his regular-season debut Monday in Sequim, teaming with Aiden Crimmins to play doubles.

It’s just the start of a journey Lockwood hopes will go on for some time.

“I started because it was a lot of fun to play and everyone was super friendly,” Lockwood said. “My goal is to have a great season and win most of my games and make varsity next year.”

Like most younger players, he’s beginning to learn what parts of his game are already set, and what needs to be tweaked.

“One of my strengths is my power,” Lockwood said. “I would like to work on my backhands, because they’re not as strong as my forehand.”

Away from the court he has hopes to “get through high school with good grades and go to college” and he has come to deeply appreciate the help offered by family, his coach and some of the Wolf veterans.

“The people that have helped me out the most are (fellow Wolf player) John McClarin, Ken Stange and my mom for getting me to all the practices and lessons I’ve taken,” Lockwood said. “And just about everyone on the team.”

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »