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Posts Tagged ‘Kyle Bodamer’

Ken Stange bids farewell to the CHS tennis courts. (Jackie Saia photo)

The mission is complete … for now.

Ken Stange recently wrapped an 18-year run as Coupeville High School tennis coach, leading the Wolves through two seasons most years.

As he marinates in his “retirement” down at Bailey’s Corner Store, he’s sharing memories, deep thoughts, and (maybe) clues to where the bodies are buried.

A nine-part odyssey inside the mind of the man, the myth, the always-entertaining net guru:

 

Court 1 will forever be my favorite of the CHS tennis courts.

Court 1 had the easiest access, the best viewing area, and the best light and backdrop.

When I played my own tennis at CHS, I played on Court 1.

It was also my preferred court for playing against and hitting drills with players.

It always felt like my home court (along with the grass court in Oak Harbor), and I felt very comfortable playing there.

Here are some of the memories Court 1 would share with you.

It would tell you that there were some unbelievable singles players that played there … how being titled a show court made it the home for #1 singles.

It would tell you about a long line of top dogs, both male and female.

Guys like Connor Tasoff, Ben Hayes, Aaron Curtin, Sebastian Davis, Jakobi Baumann, and Drake Borden.

It would tell you that each one of those young men led with a combination of kindness, dedication, humor, and passion for the game.

It would pause to tell you about the guys who have yet to be talked about in an in-depth way.

It would tell you about Sebastian Davis, who was one of the most intelligent players to be a part of the team. He was so well-rounded.

He played multiple sports, was a prominent member of the theater troupe, and earned very high grades.

What’s more, he had a sense of wonder that was well younger than his age, but he had the soul of someone much older.

Jakobi Baumann gets intense. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It would tell you about Jakobi Baumann, who was a true-blue leader.

He played so hard, and he cared so much about his teammates.

I especially enjoyed the road trips we took during his time.

He appreciated good food, and I turned him on to gyros. That was a game changer on road trips.

It would tell you about the young women who dominated on that court and led their teams to many league titles.

It would talk about Ashley Sanders, Julia Maria Castaño, Emily Burchfield, Amanda d’Almeida, Jacki (Ginnings) McCormick, Valen (Trujillo) Printz, Genna Wright, Abby Mulholland, and Helen Strelow.

While it would have nothing but positive things to say about the list of outstanding #1 singles players, it would pause and tell you about a few from that list who have yet to be talked about in an in-depth way.

It would tell you how Ashley was a quiet leader and a stealthy tennis player who kind of snuck up on her opponents.

She ran everything down, hit it back, and waited for her opponents to make mistakes.

It would tell you that Jacki was the queen of three-hour matches.

She took Ashley’s strategy to all-time highs. Her opponents usually looked miserable for such long periods of time.

Jacki could run down errant balls for the entire three hours without looking bothered.

On the way home from road matches in Port Townsend, she could eat most of a large Waterfront Pizza, one of the classic road trip food stops, right next to the Port Townsend ferry terminal.

It would tell you about how Amanda d’Almeida was one of the fiercest athletes to grace the CHS courts, and how she was difficult to defeat because she had a full toolkit to go with endless speed and endurance.

Abby Mulholland swats a winner. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It would tell you how Abby Mulholland was one of the hardest hitting players to grace a CHS tennis court, and how she led with her heart on her sleeve.

Abby possessed a great deal of want and power, and that often resulted in big wins.

It would talk about Genna Wright, the one player I ever had that stepped onto the #1 singles court and held it for her entire high school career, except her junior year, when she was rehabbing from knee surgery.

Genna was funny, calm, cool, and always let her racquet do the talking. I enjoyed having a close-up view of her maturation as a tennis player.

It would tell you it saved Emily Burchfield for last, because she did something physically amazing during her final year.

In the summer before her senior year, she was in a horrible bicycle vs. car accident. There were questions about whether she’d walk again.

Not only did she recover, but she played tennis the following spring.

She played hard-fought matches where she was dealing with her recovery at the same time. It was inspiring to me to watch her play through that pain.

Years later, when I broke my back, I told myself that if Emily could do it, I could do it, too.

I did, but while I thought I knew the kind of pain she was playing through while she was recovering, I now know that I never knew.

I don’t know if she ever thinks about the things she accomplished, but they were amazing.

Court 1 was my favorite court.

However, with all due respect to the fine people who played #1 singles, the best tennis I ever saw played at CHS was on Court 3.

Court 3 would tell you it’s just fine with me saying it was my third favorite court because it had some of the best doubles tennis CHS has ever seen.

It would tell you that it didn’t need me, because it was home to #1 doubles, the most exciting match of the day.

Sage Renninger (left) and Payton Aparicio, seen here as freshmen, played #1 doubles during all four seasons they were Wolves. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Doubles matches can be very fast paced.

As opposed to singles players who cover a vast expanse of court space, and usually stay towards the back of the court, doubles players are most successful when close to the net.

It is very common for all four players to be within five feet of the net, which is up close and personal.

The ball can move quickly. I call it tennis in a phone booth.

When two players were already close, and they both had great games, they could make a doubles team go far.

Many seasons, our team had more than one top player, and if the top two players could get along and play well together, having them play doubles gave them a far greater chance for postseason success.

That was often the case at CHS.

The doubles tradition is long, and so are Court 3’s string of memories.

Brian Miller

It would tell you about that time when Jake Weaver and Brian Miller played a district doubles final against a duo from Friday Harbor, even though they knew they wouldn’t have time to finish the match because Brian’s father had recently passed away and he had to leave early for the memorial service.

Brian played his giant heart out, while Jake was there supporting him the entire way.

When the appointed time to leave came, Brian and Jake walked up to the net, apologized for having to forfeit the match, and Brian went off to honor his father.

It was the first time I cried at a tennis match.

It would tell you about how guys like Ben Etzell, Aaron Curtin, and Kyle Bodamer dove for balls on a semi-regular basis, leaving patches of DNA on the court.

It would tell you about John McClarin and Joseph Wedekind, who ascended to the #1 doubles spot by grit, hard work, and determination.

Joseph Wedekind defends his side of the court. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It would also tell you about Joey Lippo and William Nelson, who beat John and Joseph, taking Court 3 for themselves.

It would tell you about some of the most exciting matches that featured our top duos squaring off against pairs from private schools and larger schools from the peninsula, and how those were the matches that made our players battle tested.

It would also tell you about some of the girls doubles teams that dominated the court.

It would tell you about Hannah and Megan, who were the first pair to exert their dominance and earn a trip to state.

It would tell you about Jordan Akins and Jessica Blanchette, who were smooth tennis players and worked their way to the top, until they were dethroned at the end of the season by a pair of ninth grade teammates in the league tournament final.

It would go on to tell you about how Amanda d’Almeida and Jessica Riddle could have been one of the legendary CHS doubles teams, had Jessica not moved to Anacortes.

Alas, she did, eventually playing college volleyball, while Amanda had a stellar singles career before playing college soccer.

Then it would pause and remember the one doubles team that played in the top spot for four years.

It would tell you about Payton Aparicio and Sage Renninger, and how they steadily grew their games each day for four years, capping it off with a win and fourth place finish at state.

If those courts could talk, they’d have much to say about what happened between 2005-2023.

I associate so many memories with the individual courts, and the facility in general.

I think of the families that had multiple kids come through the program.

Names like Blanchette, Akins, Lamb, Knoll, Monroe and Wright, Parker, Fiedler, Borden, McCormick, Etzell, Curtin, McClarin, Daigneault, Renninger, and more that I’m forgetting as I write.

I think of the kids and the moments they experienced … the moments I experienced with them.

I think of the ups, downs, and the powerful emotions I felt about the program.

When I think of it all, I’m grateful for the time I had there.

I’m grateful I got to pass on the gift my dad shared with me, and I hope that some of the people who played for me play until they’re old, as my father did … as I plan to do.

Maybe a former player will eventually become a tennis coach.

If so, I hope that person can rely on and improve upon what was learned from the CHS tennis program.

The maintenance department will soon swallow the courts to make more room for their operation, and a new tennis facility will be constructed by the gym.

I wish the old courts were being demolished so I could get a chunk of court to keep as a memento.

The memories will suffice, though.

Oh yeah! If I hit you with the ball, it’s my point! Peace!

Stange

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Kyle Bodamer, breaking bats (and hearts) wherever he goes. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

   Kyle Bodamer, breaking bats (and hearts) wherever he goes. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Wolf seniors (l to r) Aaron Curtin, Aaron Trumbull, Josh Bayne and Bodamer

  Wolf seniors (l to r) Aaron Curtin, Aaron Trumbull, Josh Bayne and Bodamer get serious for one last group photo op.

Bayne has places to go and he always believes in arriving early.

Bayne has places to go and he always believes in arriving early.

South Whidbey's Trent Fallon (middle)

   South Whidbey’s Trent Fallon (middle) and Mo Hamsa (beard) joke around with their Coupeville counterparts.

Trumbull and Curtin, who played together since little league, exchange one last fist bump.

   Trumbull and Curtin, who have played together since little league, exchange one last fist bump.

One hurdle down, one to go.

Coupeville High School senior pitcher Aaron Curtin was nominated for the All-State baseball series Wednesday after playing in the 1A/2B/1B Northwest Regional Feeder Games in Bellingham.

Curtin was one of 10 players to be nominated, and the only one from the four Wolf players who participated in the feeder games.

Fellow CHS seniors Aaron Trumbull, Kyle Bodamer and Josh Bayne wrapped up their high school careers by playing in the two-game series at Joe Martin Field.

Final decisions on the All-State rosters will be announced June 7, with the games in Yakima June 13-14.

If Curtin makes the final cut, it would give Coupeville a representative for the second straight year.

Last year, Ben Etzell got the call and pitched in the second game at All-State.

The feeder games in Bellingham were part of a state-wide effort to showcase senior diamond men.

Coupeville’s quartet played for the Americans team, which was coached by South Whidbey’s Tom Fallon.

They tied 6-6 in the opener Wednesday, then lost 4-3 in the nightcap.

Nooksack Valley’s Cole Mattice won the second game when he singled home Meridian’s Tanner Tutterrow with two outs in the seventh inning.

The winning rally included a boost from a player who could have been a Wolf.

Taylor Gardner attended elementary school in Coupeville, before a family move took his baseball skills to Nooksack Valley.

His walk in the seventh, packaged between singles from Tutterrow and Overlake’s Mike Lau, juiced the bags for Mattice.

Along with Curtin, the other nominees for All-State include Tuterrow, Ryan Gelwicks (Nooksack), David McLaurin (Cedar Park Christian), Andrew Young (Darrington), Curtis Handy (Nooksack), Mo Hamsa (South Whidbey), Aaron Mell (Overlake), Evan Sather (Overlake) and Gibson Fichter (Concrete).

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We're four games into the season and Aaron Curtin already has two no-hitters. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

   We’re four games into the season and Aaron Curtin already has two no-hitters. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

The Coupeville High School baseball squad has played four games this season, twice ten-running their opponents and twice being shut out.

Friday it was the more popular of the two options, as the Wolves jumped all over host Port Townsend early, then rode nearly flawless pitching from Aaron Curtin (tossing his second no-hitter of the season) to a 10-0 victory in their Olympic League opener.

The victory left Coupeville sitting atop the league standings at 1-0, 2-2 overall.

And, while the disparity is sort of odd, CHS coach Willie Smith can appreciate it.

“Yeah, you have a problem with that???,” he asked with a huge laugh. “And yes, we either score or we don’t, but as an ever positive and cheery person, I like to think of it as our outscoring our opponents 20-9 in the first four games and not worry about the fact we are just .500 in those games.”

The Wolves didn’t need all those runs with Curtin dealing wicked high, hard cheese.

The senior hurler struck out nine Redhawks while walking just one. The only ball Port Townsend got good aluminum on was hit right at Wolf shortstop Josh Bayne, who snared it for the out.

Curtin has thrown 11 shutout innings over three appearances this season.

“They never really had a chance against him. Aaron was just dominant,” Smith said.

While they might not have needed the offense, the Wolves were still quite happy to capitalize on their chances, drilling Port Townsend for five runs in the first.

Cole Payne spanked an RBI double, Kyle Bodamer whacked a two-run double and senior Carson Risner, playing in his first game since his freshman year, crunched a two-run single.

Not content to sit on its lead, Coupeville tacked on two more in the second when Bodamer’s double squeeze was so successful that both Bayne and Payne were able to stroll home.

Bodamer was an RBI machine, knocking in four, while freshman Jake Hoagland, making his first-ever start, chipped in with three RBIs.

Payne, Bodamer, Risner and Hoagland each had two hits.

“Overall, we came out very focused and executed what we needed to do on offense,” Smith said.

Coupeville will try to keep its hot streak at the plate going when it travels to Everett today to face a familiar foe in former Cascade Conference rival Archbishop Thomas Murphy.

The Wolf JV travels even further, with a date in Blaine.

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The swings looked good, but the Wolves spent most of Monday being baffled by Sultan hurler Tyler. (John Fisken photo)

   The swings looked good, but the Wolves spent most of Monday being baffled by Sultan hurler Tyler Ohlson. (John Fisken photo)

“As good as things went Saturday, they went bad today!”

Willie Smith was still smiling in the parking lot after the game, but it was the strained smile of a coach blessed with a very young team that will be incredible some days, and soul-searing on others.

After a sublime Opening Day win over Blaine, Smith’s Coupeville High School baseball squad took a step back Monday, falling 6-0 to visiting Sultan in a game that had few highlights for the Wolf faithful.

For one thing, the non-conference loss came to a Turk squad that went winless a year ago.

Last year, when the two schools shared Cascade Conference residency, the Wolves swept three from Sultan.

This time around, the only one doing the sweeping was Turk hurler Tyler Ohlson.

Using 92 pitches, he blanked Coupeville, now in the Olympic League, on three hits and a walk while striking out four.

The biggest blow the Wolves landed was a double off of the bat of senior Kyle Bodamer, but he was stranded.

Adding insult to injury, Bodamer’s last name was changed to Budnaer in the game report that currently sits on the Everett Herald’s web site.

Oh, Herald, with your never-ending love of misspelling Coupeville names, never change.

After Aaron Curtin and Aaron Trumbull combined to toss a no-hitter against Blaine, Wolf hurlers CJ Smith and Julian Welling were decent, but not quite as effective.

Smith surrendered runs in the first and second, before Sultan tacked on two more in both the fifth and seventh against Welling.

Coupeville, now 1-1 on the young season, gets a chance to get back on the winning track when they travel to Willie Smith’s alma mater, Sequim, Wednesday.

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Joey Lippo teamed with fellow Wolf frosh William Nelson to grab the deciding win Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

Joey Lippo teamed with fellow Wolf frosh William Nelson to grab the deciding win Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

The freshmen came through with the clincher.

With Tuesday’s home match against non-conference foe North Mason knotted at 3-3, William Nelson and Joey Lippo were the last Wolves standing.

Even though no one told them how important their #3 doubles match was until later, the duo were on-point, drilling their foes in straight sets and lifting the Wolves to their first team win of the still-young season.

William and Joey, my fab frosh duo, have gelled and are playing more like a single player, as opposed to a doubles team,” CHS coach Ken Stange said. “This should bode well as we finish the season, and as they move toward their sophomore campaign.

“If I can keep them together as a pair, they could do some serious damage in the coming years.”

The 4-3 victory improved Coupeville to 1-4 heading into a road match against a combined Chimacum/Port Townsend squad Thursday.

Using balance across the boards, the Wolves won two singles matches (Sebastian Davis, Kyle Bodamer) and two doubles matches, while surviving missing half of their top doubles duo.

Loren Nelson was out sick, but Jimmy Myers vaulted up from the JV and combined with Connor McCormick for a win.

While Stange was impressed with all of his winners (“Sebastian played extremely consistent tennis and Kyle was on and off the court before I could even watch more than a few points”), he gave the biggest props to a duo that barely came out on the short end of the stick.

Joseph Wedekind and John McClarin split sets at #1 doubles before falling in a dramatic 10-8 tiebreaker. The Wolves had the lead at 8-7, but couldn’t find a final shot to put the match away.

“Even though they lost, John and Joseph provided the day’s most dramatic match,” Stange said.

“After last season, I watched those two young men play tennis almost every day, rain or shine. They even tried taking up court space during the girls’ season,” he added. “They then played all summer long. I really admire their effort and work ethic.”

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Aaron Curtin lost to Beau Eddy 6-3, 6-3

2nd Singles — Sebastian Davis beat Danny Plankenhorn 6-0, 6-3

3rd Singles — Kyle Bodamer beat Blake Manke 6-0, 6-0

1st Doubles — Joseph Wedekind/John McClarin lost to Erik Villar/Steven Settlemeir 4-6, 6-1, 10-8

2nd Doubles — Grey Rische/Jared Helmstadter lost to Cole Tilten/Tanner Hill 6-3, 6-3

3rd Doubles — William Nelson/Joey Lippo beat Jared Curtis/Brad Billington 6-2, 6-2

4th Doubles — Connor McCormick/Jimmy Myers beat Nick Vatour/Justin Rock 6-1, 6-0

JV:

Alex Schmakeit/Jeremiah Pace beat Zack Gamblin/Aiden Wielander 6-1

Ethan Spark/Ethan Marx beat Dalton Emmerick/Christian Kluseman 6-0

Lilan Sekigawa/Nick Dion lost to Tanner Hall/Levi Handyside 6-2

Nick Etzell/Spark beat Dalton Emmerick/Christian Kluseman 6-0

**The Wolf duos of Garrett Compton/Geoffrey McClarin and Brian Shank/Aiden Crimmins had their matches called midway through, when North Mason had to leave to catch a ferry.

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