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Posts Tagged ‘Madeline Strasburg’

“We await the ruling down on the field. Who are the nine best Wolf athletes from 2012-2021?” (David Stern photo)

This blog turns nine years old August 15, and to mark the occasion, I’m picking what I view as the best nine Wolf athletes from each active CHS sport.

To be eligible, you had to play for the Wolves between Aug. 2012-Aug. 2021, AKA the “Coupeville Sports” years.

So here we go. Each day between Aug. 1-15, a different sport and (probably) a different argument.

 

And thus we arrive at the end of our little exercise.

Having selected the top nine players from each active sport at Coupeville High School, or at least the top nine from my blogging days, we land on the actual birthday of this here site.

With that, we pull back, cast an eye on all sports, and select the best nine athletes at CHS between 2012-2021, period.

This time it’s not just a battle but a full-on war, male and female athletes pitted against each other

Many enter the arena, but these nine are the ones to exit, forming our dream team.

And unlike the previous stories, where I listed athletes in alphabetic order, this time I’m going #9-#1.

Let the bodies hit the floor, and the arguments never end.

 

Valen Trujillo (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

#9 — Valen Trujillo

Record-setter in volleyball, top ace on the tennis court, but there’s a third sport which puts her over the top, pushing her just ahead of a pack of really strong contenders.

And it’s a sport she never played in high school.

One of my saddest days as a sportswriter was when Valen “retired” from basketball — where she was a wild woman who made two different King’s players cry during middle school games.

I understood her choice, but it doesn’t mean I can’t mourn what was lost.

 

Lathom Kelley

#8 — Lathom Kelley

Dude could do anything, and always with a daredevil smile on his face.

Ferocious on the football field, able to pick up and dominate any event in the world of track and field, and prone to doing flying backflips off of gym walls just to amuse bystanders.

Plus, he once came barreling down from the stands to fill in for missing parents during a basketball Senior Night, grabbing the lonely player in a bearhug while screaming, “My boy, you’ve made me so proud!!”

The Man.

 

Lindsey Roberts

#7 — Lindsey Roberts

A 12-time letter winner who never spent a second on JV in any of her three sports, she also has the most state track and field medals of any girl in Coupeville High School history.

Joined both mom Sherry Bonacci and dad Jon Roberts in being honored as a CHS Athlete of the Year, while being an impact player from the first day of middle school to her final track meet in high school.

One game to win, who do you call? Lou, that’s who.

 

Sean Toomey-Stout

#6 — Sean Toomey-Stout 

Second most-talented twin in his family, a viral video star (for outracing a deer during a 95-yard touchdown run vs. King’s) who’s now on the U-Dub football roster.

Did everything on the football field, filled every stat box on the basketball court, and ran like a jaguar for the Wolf track and field team.

All while training like a madman, and being the guy who tried to sneak back on the field, while injured, so he could support his teammates in the final seconds of a game long before decided.

 

Maya Toomey-Stout

#5 — Maya Toomey-Stout

“The Gazelle,” because she flowed when she ran, on the track oval, on the basketball court, and on the softball field, where she stole base after base in little league.

All those purloined bags? Accomplished without ever garnering a throw from the catcher, as she would be camped on second before the catcher could spring from their crouch.

And we haven’t even discussed volleyball, where she would bound in the air, reach over her head to snag a wayward ball, then smash the life out of the orb before softly floating back to Earth.

 

Madeline Strasburg

#4 — Madeline Strasburg

The female version of Lathom Kelley, a young woman who could play any sport and be genuinely electrifying at it with little to no practice.

Soared on the volleyball court, the basketball court, and the softball field.

She was Maddie Big Time because she feared no rival, never seemed bothered by stress, and bopped through life to her own sweet tune.

Awesome in the extreme.

 

Josh Bayne

#3 — Josh Bayne

The best 1A football player in the state as a senior, no matter what big-city voters might have thought, mixing barn-burner speed with deft hands, and the ability to destroy souls every time he slammed into a rival player.

On the baseball field, he had power, speed, and rock star charisma.

The only thing which keeps him at #3? He chose to not play basketball, allowing the three-sport star ahead of him to slip past by the narrowest of margins.

 

Hunter Smith

#2 — Hunter Smith

Record setter in football — on both sides of the ball — one of the best scorers in CHS basketball history, and arguably the top Wolf baseball player since Bob Rea was striking out 27 batters in a single game decades ago.

Through it all, the two-time CHS Athlete of the year remained one of the most humble teenagers I’ve ever met, more concerned with making sure his teammates and siblings got their proper due than worrying about his own PR.

Class with a capitol C.

 

Makana Stone

#1 — Makana Stone

The best, male or female, I have written about, not just in the blog years, but going all the way back to my first story in the Whidbey News-Times in 1990.

As an athlete, and a person.

It’s not just what she accomplished as a soccer, basketball, and track star, in high school and college, but of how high the numbers could have gone if she didn’t care so much about her teammates.

She fought for her own success, and it means a great deal to her, but Kana’s smile is the biggest when those around her prosper and get their fair share of the limelight.

The athlete every young Wolf, boy or girl, should emulate.

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Julia Myers, here to wreck you. (Original photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This blog turns nine years old August 15, and to mark the occasion, I’m picking what I view as the best nine Wolf athletes from each active CHS sport.

To be eligible, you had to play for the Wolves between Aug. 2012-Aug. 2021, AKA the “Coupeville Sports” years.

So here we go. Each day between Aug. 1-15, a different sport and (probably) a different argument.

 

A proud tradition, upheld quite nicely.

Girls basketball has some of the biggest banners in the CHS gym, and the last nine years have featured teams which won league titles, went to state, and frequently scorched other schools.

Looking at those squads, there’s little (none, really) debate over who the best player of the blog era is, but there’s a lot of depth behind that one transcendent superstar.

As always, there’s several missing Wolves out there who could make an argument for inclusion on this roster, but I’m limited to nine players.

And what a nine this is, with a mix of young women who can fill the bucket up, and others who made their living playing defense and providing all the intangibles a coach loves.

Throw the jump ball up. We’re ready to kick some fanny.

The woman. The myth. The always-smiling legend. Kacie Kiel.

Amanda Fabrizi — Tough as they come, and the owner of a deadly-effective sweet lil’ running hook shot, which was money in the bank. Never afraid to put the ball up under pressure, and always played her best the more-important the game was.

Kailey Kellner — Biggest surprise of the blog era — a shy young woman when she arrived from overseas, who then blossomed into a deadly three-ball artist. Her best moment, however, came in a must-win playoff game, when she morphed into a rebound machine, tearing the ball free and freakin’ the Seattle girls out.

Kacie Kiel — So deceptive, in the best way possible. Rivals would look at this slender young woman and assume she was a pushover, then she would go off on them, snatching every contested rebound, hitting the floor for every loose ball, knocking down gut-check three-balls, and playing like a demon on defense. Has a 1,000-pound heart, and truly deserves every bit of praise she gets.

Mia Littlejohn — Played like she was on a New Jersey playground from day one, and I loved it. Had the razzle, had the dazzle, could bank in a runner or pull back for a jumper, could dish on the move, or pick your pocket. All with a lil’ strut that was classic Mia.

Breeanna Messner — Lived and breathed for team, doing the dirty work, always scrambling, always fighting like a wild woman, which was a bit surprising, as she’s so serene off the court. Would get knocked down, face slamming on the floor, then calmly get back up, drain a three-ball in a rival’s face, and move back on defense, eyes locked on that girl until she mentally crumbled.

Julia Myers — She would mess a fool up, then stalk away, her smile erupting to chants of “Judy! Judy!” Had a sweet lil’ jump shot, but best known as a defensive banger who earned the nickname “Elbows,” cause that’s the last thing the girls from King’s saw before they hit the floor.

Lindsey Roberts — Something for everyone. Could be the go-to scorer, or could be a role player, and always seemed equally happy in either situation. Long arms, track star speed, and a burning desire to win all melded together to make Lou a terrifically-efficient weapon.

Makana Stone — The best I’ve seen in person, boy or girl. Almost 1,200 points, 1000+ rebounds, several plays of such an awesome nature they broke my brain, and the ultimate PR agent for her teammates, who she endlessly praised, in public and private.

Madeline Strasburg — The irrepressible, the incredible, Maddie Big Time. Shot out of a rocket right before tipoff, she would rampage from baseline to baseline, creating havoc. Once hit three-balls from half court at the third-quarter buzzer in consecutive games … 17 days apart thanks to winter break. And she called glass both times.

Mia Littlejohn dares you to try and score. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

Up next: Back to the tennis court, this time with the boys.

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Ray Cook

   Ray Cook (blue shirt) and Madeline Strasburg are joined by part of the 2014-15 CHS girls hoops team — l to r, Makana Stone, Kacie Kiel, Wynter Thorne and Hailey Hammer.

Maddie Big Time

Maddie Big Time (Robert Bishop photo)

They were the biggest of big-time performances.

As we usher in the 48th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, we’re focusing on an athlete who always lived up to the nickname Big Time, and two performances which were otherworldly.

The afternoon Ray Cook whiffed 21 batters and a basketball game in which Coupeville came from eight down with 58 seconds to play share the stage with one of the most electrifying figures in sports entertainment — Maddie Big Time, AKA Madeline Strasburg.

After this, both performances and our one-of-a-kind athlete will be found at the top of this blog, enshrined under the Legends tab.

First up we’re honoring Cook, who is already in the Hall for his body of work.

Today we’re paying tribute to his performance as a high school junior in the 1976 district baseball title game.

The best strikeout-tossin’ hurler in CHS history, hands down, Cook had already racked up games with 17 and 16 K’s.

This time out, though, he threw an unbelievable 13 innings (nearly the equal of two regular seven-inning high school games), setting school records for K’s and innings that haven’t been touched in 40 years.

The closest anyone has come was Brad Miller, who sent 19 batters back to the bench crying in a 1995 game.

The 13 innings from one pitcher? A modern-day coach would be nationally lambasted.

The ’76 title game win propelled Coupeville to state, and the 21 whiffed batters sent Cook, already a legend, into Wolf immortality.

In terms of one-time “wow factor,” his work on the mound is matched by the best comeback I ever witnessed in person.

It was a Saturday in late 2014 (Dec. 13 if you’re checking the calendar) and the CHS girls’ basketball squad, at the time repping the smallest 1A school in the state, was hosting Sequim, a larger 2A school which came to town bearing a snazzy 3-1 record.

The Wolf girls would win a league title that season, but, on this day, they stunk for a good chunk of time.

Wolf coach David King was speechless at the half, his players were visibly frustrated, and it was a wonder the game wasn’t more of a blowout.

But, somehow, Coupeville hung around, just long enough for the magic to happen.

And when it hit, it was so unbelievable it still seems like a fever dream to this day.

Down 39-31 with 58 seconds to play, things were beyond dire.

Key the greatest minute in Wolf hoops history.

Kacie Kiel dropped in a free throw, Wynter Thorne knocked down a jumper (her first points of the day), then Makana Stone jumped in front of a Sequim pass and took it back for a layup.

The visitors looked rattled and promptly shanked the front end of a 1-and-1 off the rim, but CHS couldn’t take advantage.

At a time when EVERY single play was going to have to go Coupeville’s way, the Wolves, down by three, threw the ball away with eight ticks on the clock.

A trickle of fans headed for the exits (trying to beat the “crushing” Cow Town traffic, maybe?) but Stone wasn’t having it.

Bellowing “no fouls! no fouls!,” the soft-spoken junior forced a turnover in the back-court, then found Kiel curling into the deepest part of the right corner.

So far out in the weeds she was practically sitting in the bleachers, the Wolf senior, an ever-smiling assassin, drilled the bottom out of the net with an impossibly high, arcing three-ball that set off pandemonium.

Overtime was pointless, but sweet.

Sequim’s players were already crying on the bench before the extra period even tipped off, and Coupeville held the visitors scoreless for five minutes to put the cap on a 42-39 win.

Afterwards, the visiting coach sat on the floor, motionless, his back against the scorer’s table, looking like someone who had just witnessed the end of the world.

Around him, Coupeville players went bonkers, and the die-hard Wolf supporters (the ones who didn’t ankle to the exits early) joined them, led by leather-lunged super fan Steve Kiel, who hit levels of screaming joy never before witnessed.

Wins come and wins go, but this one? My goodness.

So let’s give a shout-out to coaches David and Amy King and the eight Wolves who played in the game — Stone, Kiel, Thorne, Monica Vidoni, Hailey Hammer, McKenzie Bailey, Mia Littlejohn and Julia Myers.

Now, there should have been another Wolf on the court that day, but Strasburg was battling back through an injury and was instead an unpaid, but highly-enthusiastic assistant coach.

When she was healthy, which was most of the time, Maddie Big Time was a three-way terror (volleyball, basketball, softball) who delighted in rising to the occasion.

If she hit a home run, it wasn’t going to be a little poocher that rolled around in the outfield, it was going to be a majestic moon shot that left the prairie and headed down South to land at the ferry dock.

Want a spike, a teeth-rattling, knee-buckling laser that had to be perfectly flawless or else the entire match would end on the spot?

Cue Strasburg, who would come barreling in, screaming like a banshee as she elevated and decimated.

And basketball? She was like lightning in a bottle.

At one point, she hit half-court three-point bombs in consecutive games, from the same exact spot on the floor, at the same exact moment (final play of the third quarter) … 17 days apart.

Always among the most personable and free-wheeling of athletes, Maddie was a delight in every way, on and off the court, truly unforgettable.

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Madeline Strasburg gets mobbed after blasting a home run. (John Fisken photos)

Madeline Strasburg gets mobbed after blasting a home run. (John Fisken photos)

Getting stretched with Kacie Kiel.

Getting stretched with Kacie Kiel.

Afraid of the camera? Not likely.

Afraid of the camera? Not likely.

Pursuing a second career as a paparazzi.

Pursuing a second career as a paparazzi.

She is big time. Every time.

Coupeville High School senior Madeline Strasburg, AKA Maddie Big Time, earned that nickname by being at her best when it counted the most.

Feisty as all get out, hilarious, a vocal leader who thumped her teammates on the back in joy at times, and pulled them close and whispered quietly in their ear at others, she is like a walking, talking burst of pure energy.

I have covered a lot of athletes in 25 years of on-again, off-again sports coverage on Whidbey, but Maddie is in the 1% of the most electrifying I have witnessed on a daily basis.

Some athletes hum along, calm and serene, at the same level at all times.

That is not Strasburg.

During her remarkable three-sport (volleyball, basketball, softball) career at CHS, she hit huge lows and huge highs.

When she hit those lows, when she got good and pissed, is when she came flying back like few other Wolves ever have, or ever will.

When that look dropped on her face, you knew butt-whuppin’ time was comin’.

Elbow her? Knee her? Try and make her look bad?

She would crack you in half and then fly by, her glare o’ death replaced by the biggest smile you could possibly imagine.

Last year, during her junior basketball season, she did something I have never seen another high school athlete do.

Right at the tail end of the third quarter, she stole the ball, spun and fired up a buzzer-beater from almost half court that banked off the glass and dropped in.

Cue the Maddie dance to the bench, where she high-fived all of her teammates, her coaches and any spectators wandering by, regardless of whether she knew them or not.

So, great shot. It happens.

Except…

The Wolves then went on winter break and didn’t play another game for almost two weeks.

First game back, end of the third quarter, same time, same place … Maddie Big Time steals the ball, spins, fires from the same freakin’ spot on the court and banks in another buzzer-beater, then runs off screaming like a woman gone wild.

Two impossible shots, from the same place, the same angle, the same moment in the game … two weeks apart.

Damn.

Of course, it wasn’t just basketball.

She would jack home runs over the fence in softball, then spend time on defense hanging out in center field talking (loudly) to herself (and left fielder Haley Sherman, if she wandered too close), keeping up a running commentary on life.

Fearless as an athlete, and one of the quickest to embrace each and every chance to have her photo taken, Miss Strasburg has been a God-send for Coupeville Sports.

As she celebrates a birthday today, the future is limitless for this one.

In the words of John Locke on Lost, “Don’t tell me what I can’t do!!”

I fully believe Maddie will accomplish whatever she desires.

If she doesn’t want to do it, no amount of nagging will get her to change her mind.

But, if she wants something, she will go after it like a heat-seeking missile and woe unto those who are stupid enough to try and stop her.

She is whip smart, she is kind and caring and she has the heart of a lion.

Will she play ball in college? Will she become a coach herself one day (I think she’d be awesome at it)?

Or, will she throw everything away and travel the world, sporting dreadlocks and spreading the gospel of Maddie Big Time to the farthest reaches of the known world, her exuberant laugh trailing her?

Whatever she does, however she does it, she is going to be a huge, raging success. Of this I have no doubt.

And we’ll all look back, one day, and say, we were there at the beginning of the legend.

We were lucky enough to witness a young woman of great talent, grace and style rise up and begin to claim her place.

We were all witnesses to Maddie Big Time, and it was a lot of fun.

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Led by MVp Makana Stone

  Paced by Makana Stone (32) and Hailey Hammer, Coupeville went 9-0 in league play, winning every game by 15+ points. (John Fisken photos)

Kailey Kellner led the JV to a 14-5 record.

Kailey Kellner led the JV to a 14-5 record.

The nine letter winners

   The letter winners. Row 1 (l to r), Madeline Strasburg, Monica Vidoni, McKenzie Bailey. Row 2: Wynter Thorne, Stone, Julia Myers. Row 3: Kacie Kiel, Mia Littlejohn, Hammer.

Coupeville is the new King’s.

Having bounced from the 2A/1A Cascade Conference to the new 1A Olympic League this season, the CHS girls’ basketball squads flat-out dominated their foes.

Both the varsity and JV went 9-0 in league play, with the varsity finishing 15-7 (most wins in a decade-plus) and capturing the first league title for a Wolf hoops team, girls or boys, since 2002.

All of that domination paid off handsomely, with Coupeville taking a ton o’ awards, headed up by league MVP Makana Stone and Coach of the Year David King.

Stone, a junior who threw down 367 points in 22 games, was a slam dunk choice, while senior starters Julia Myers and Madeline Strasburg were also tabbed as First Team All-League picks.

Seniors Hailey Hammer and Kacie Kiel earned Honorable Mention (the league doesn’t have a Second Team) and the Wolves claimed the league’s Sportsmanship Award as well.

Those awards and others were handed out to players Tuesday at the season-ending banquet.

Team awards:

Senior 4-Year Participation Certificates:

Kiel
Strasburg
Wynter Thorne
Monica Vidoni

4 Years on Varsity Certificate:

Hammer

JV Captain Awards:

Tiffany Briscoe
Lauren Grove
Kailey Kellner

Varsity Captain Awards:

Kiel
Stone
Strasburg

Best Defense JV:

Kyla Briscoe
Skyler Lawrence

Best Defense Varsity:

Hammer

Best Offense JV:

Kellner

Best Offense Varsity:

Myers
Stone

Best Newcomer JV:

Lauren Rose

Best Newcomer Varsity:

Mia Littlejohn

Most Improved JV:

Allison Wenzel

Most Improved Varsity:

Thorne

Most Inspirational JV:

T. Briscoe

Most Inspirational Varsity:

Stone
Strasburg

Wolf Pride JV:

Grove

Wolf Pride Varsity:

Kiel

Leader of the Pack:

Stone

JV Participation Certificates:

K. Briscoe
T. Briscoe
Grove
Brisa Herrera
Kellner
Lawrence
Rose
Wenzel

Varsity Participation Certificate:

Kellner

Varsity Letter Winners:

McKenzie Bailey (1st time for basketball)
Hammer
Kiel
Littlejohn (1st time for basketball)
Myers

Stone
Strasburg
Thorne
Vidoni

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