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Posts Tagged ‘Nick Guay’

Nick Guay, having a really good hair day. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

“Eh, it’s OK, but man Lyla, when I was his age, my hair was straight fire!!” “Daaaaaaaadddd…”

John Fisken may be obsessed with Nick Guay.

Just sayin’…

The wanderin’ photo clicker captured a whole bunch of pics featuring the lanky Coupeville High School senior Tuesday as he helped lead the Wolves in thrashing South Whidbey.

Maybe it’s Guay’s mad hoops skills.

Or maybe it’s his photo-ready mane of hair, practically begging to sign its own contract with L’Oreal’s men’s division.

I mean, if they made a biography of Guay, would they take the title of Kevin Bacon’s 1994 hoops flick, add an H and make it “The Hair Up There?”

Yes, yes, I’ll see myself out now.

“Fire in the hole!”

“Sweet mama!! My tender vittles!!”

“This hurts a lot less than the last play…”

Off to conquer new worlds (and book that shampoo ad).

But first, a smile of approval from mom Dina (left).

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The stands are different colors in every new road gym, but Coupeville wins in them all. (Michelle Glass photo)

It’s the little things.

A senior-heavy Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball team has shot out to a 5-1 record, with all the wins coming on the road, by doing the sorts of things which warm a coach’s heart.

Like taking offensive charges, grabbing rebounds in traffic, and staying composed when tempers start to fray.

That veteran mindset was on full display Friday on Friday Harbor, as the Wolves overcame a malfunctioning scoreboard and a chippy Wolverines squad to claim a 63-55 win.

The victory lifts CHS to 1-0 in Northwest 2B/1B League play, putting it a half-game off of early frontrunner Mount Vernon Christian (2-0), which comes to Coupeville Jan. 19 for a royal rumble.

Friday’s tense tilt lived up to expectations, as something weird always seems to happen when the Wolves travel to the outer islands.

This time it was a badly misfiring scoreboard which went kaput, momentarily roared to life to the musical strains of The Final Countdown, then crashed again.

That left everyone guessing as to the score, the team fouls, and the time left to play, before Friday Harbor finally got the hamster back up to full speed on the treadmill which allegedly powers its board.

Wandering along in a game with a sort of streetball feel for much of the first half, Coupeville got three-balls from Logan Downes and Chase Anderson early but trailed 12-8 at the first break.

Cue a defensive surge, as the steal-happy Wolves got up in people’s grills and dominated for much of the second quarter to reclaim the lead.

Hunter Bronec, having the best offensive performance of his varsity hoops career, crashed hard to the hoop for back-to-back buckets, before Downes started picking pockets and turning what he found into breakaway layups.

Friday Harbor’s defense tried to throttle Coupeville’s main scoring option?

He promptly kicked the ball to running mate Ryan Blouin, who sank the first of his three treys on the night, each long range bomb a dart that deflated the Wolverines hopes and dreams.

Frustrating and flummoxing their foes, the Wolves ran the lead out to 30-20, then gave a bit back right before the half to head into the locker room up 30-25.

The third quarter was vintage “Let’s make Brad Sherman’s goatee go grey,” as his team surged to a 14-point lead, gave back half of that advantage, then re-stretched things back out to 50-39 by the end of the frame.

Cole White was a one-man highlight reel in the quarter, twisting and turning in midair while being banged around, yet still dropping in clutch buckets.

When the shot wasn’t there, the senior point guard was going all John Stockton on us, flinging an outlet pass from end to end, dropping the ball onto Anderson’s waiting fingertips as he flew by the Wolverines.

Coupeville’s seniors are built for this moment. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The tension in the joint noticeably raised in the second half, as both teams, while not playing dirty, did get more elbowy and “was that my knee that hit your groin?”

The refs stopped things to lecture both teams after a push and shove exchange briefly threatened to become more, and it seemed to work, as nobody got a technical or dropped a haymaker.

Instead, Coupeville reserved its kill shots for good old-fashioned hardnosed plays which were smart, and well-timed.

Clinging to a 54-50 lead, the Wolves got a HUGE rebound and putback from Hurlee Bronec, who completed the play by calmly flicking a free throw through the net while staring down the entire island.

Mere seconds later, Downes, seemingly drifting aimlessly, suddenly shot forward, slicing between snoozing defenders, taking an inbounds pass and slapping home the gut shot that put Friday Harbor out of its misery.

Sort of like in Of Mice and Men, when George caps Lennie behind the barn while he’s still rambling on about the rabbits.

Just with a hardwood twist to things, and no actual bloodshed.

While Friday Harbor did hit a three-ball right at the buzzer to cut the final margin to single digits, it was much too little, much too late.

Like Lennie, the Wolverines ain’t coming back from that walk in the woods.

Now, Coupeville gets a few unexpected days off, after South Whidbey had to postpone its trip to Cow Town Saturday due to a lack of eligible players.

The Wolves will get that elusive home game, but not until next Tuesday, Dec. 19, when Forks make the long trek out from the deep, dark woods.

While they rest up, fine tune their games, and possibly go read Of Mice and Men for the first time, the Wolves can also marinate in being part of history.

With his game-high 25 points Friday, Downes reaches a new personal milestone.

Now with 920 points and counting, he passes Pete Petrov (917) to claim 7th on the CHS career scoring list and is within range of Bill Riley (934) for 6th.

And Downes wasn’t the only Wolf to hit a round number, as Nick Guay cracked the 150-point club on a second quarter putback.

Nick Guay has deliveries to make, and the basket awaits. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville got points from seven different players, with Blouin (9), Anderson (8), Hunter Bronec (8), White (6), Hurlee Bronec (4), and Guay (3) also scoring.

William Davidson was the lone Wolf on the floor not to tally a point, but the senior big man came up big in those coach-pleasing intangibles we mentioned earlier, such as when he made a superb pass to set up Hunter Bronec for a bucket.

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Wolf seniors Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim (left) and Cole White are cold-blooded killers on the hardwood. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They keep this up, they’re going to turn their coach’s beard white.

We’re only one game into a new season, and already the Coupeville High School varsity boys’ basketball squad has a thriller and a chiller in the book.

Good thing is it turned out alright in the end, as the Wolves frittered away a 14-point lead late at Mount Baker Monday but came up with a series of huge gut-check plays in the waning moments to snatch back a 58-52 win.

Now someone go and check on Brad Sherman’s stubble before CHS gets back on the bus Wednesday to go play The Bush School in Seattle.

Monday’s rumble was controlled by Coupeville most of the way, before things got frantic late.

Down by 14 early in the second half, and still trailing by 10 in the fourth quarter, Mount Baker went on an 11-0 run to claim the lead at 50-49 with a fraction over three minutes to play.

That gave the Mountaineers their first advantage since way back at 10-9 and could have fractured the Wolves.

Except a team which features nine seniors, several of whom won a league title and went to state as sophomores, seems to be pretty battle-tested and not prone to flinching.

Instead, Coupeville responded with a three-minute master class in being the kind of closers Alec Baldwin loved in Glengarry Glen Ross.

While that’s probably not a movie reference many of the current Wolves will get, we can keep it simple and say it means this — be a killer.

And Sherman’s hoops assassins were.

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim came off the bench, literally pushed onto the floor by his coach, and immediately hauled down a key rebound in the middle of a scrum.

Cole White, the wiry guard who has a huge Facebook following thanks to mom Morgan’s live broadcasts, made off with a steal and drew a HUGE foul on his foe, nimbly crashing hard to the floor while absorbing pain to get the call on an offensive charge.

And then there was Nick Guay, who hadn’t scored, drilling the bottom of the net out on a three-ball from the left corner to immediately put Coupeville back in front at 52-50.

Mount Baker slid one more layup through the net to knot things up, before the Wolves iced them the rest of the way.

Logan Downes went coast to coast for a swooping layup to stake his squad to a lead it wouldn’t relinquish, before Downes and White closed out the game at the line.

The Mountaineers had two charity shots of their own in the waning seconds but loudly clanged both of them off the rim to the delight of the Wolf fan section, which was much more vocal than the locals.

White opened the game, and the season, with a pullup jumper off a pass from William Davidson, then Downes and running mate Ryan Blouin traded buckets as Coupeville surged to a 20-12 lead at the first break.

Blouin was calm, composed, and a weapon of mass destruction.

He fired up a trio of three-balls in the first quarter, and netted all three, with the net barely rippling as each dagger sank through with a happy little sigh.

For his part, Downes worked his magic at the free throw line, accounting for five of his nine points while everyone else was standing still.

Once he got going, he was hard to stop, raining down 13 of Coupeville’s 15 points in the second quarter as the Wolves stretched their lead to 35-23.

Downes banged home his own trio of treys in the second frame, with the third one giving him exactly 800 career points, tying him with noted three-ball terror Hawthorne Wolfe.

The lone second quarter bucket not to come off of Downes fingertips came from Hunter Bronec, who banked in a layup off of a lob from Downes.

White was already busy on the defensive end, drawing an offensive charge to blunt a Baker fastbreak, while Zane Oldenstadt picked the pocket of a fellow big man for a crucial steal.

Coupeville looked like it would send the game into blowout territory after Davidson, channeling Hakeem Olajuwon for one play, snared a rebound and flipped the ball back up and in to kick off the second half.

Up 37-23, the Wolves were cruising in the yacht, only to hit some unexpected, choppy waters,

Mount Baker popped a pair of three-balls, turned up the heat a bit and closed back within four points late in the third quarter.

Well, actually within two, only to have the officials wave off a field goal due to offensive goaltending.

While the Mountaineers weren’t happy to lose the bucket, they barely complained, knowing and accepting that the botched play was so obvious even a pack of high school refs could see it.

White and Downes closed the third with a pair of free throws apiece, packaged around a steal from Simpson-Pilgrim, to push the lead out to 47-39.

A turnaround jumper from White to open the fourth put the lead back into double-digits, and you know where it goes from there.

Downes finished with a game-high 31 points, eventually passing Wolfe to move into 14th on the CHS boys’ basketball career scoring list.

With 809 and counting, he heads to Seattle just a bucket away from tying ’70s star Corey Cross (811) for 13th, with Hunter Smith (847) and Bill Jarrell (855) next up on the list after that.

White rippled the nets for 11 Monday, with Blouin (9), Guay (3), Davidson (2), and Bronec (2) rounding out the offensive attack.

Oldenstadt, Simpson-Pilgrim, and Hurlee Bronec also saw floor time, with Mikey Robinett, Timothy Nitta and Chase Anderson providing vocal support from the bench.

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Logan Downes is ready to bust records and take names. (Andrew Williams photo)

Logan Downes has a chance to get legendary.

The Coupeville High School senior enters a new basketball season on the cusp of breaking some of the biggest records in school history.

Even with Covid limiting the Wolves to 12 games during his freshman campaign, Downes sits with 778 career points, good for 15th all-time for a boys’ hoops program which started in 1917.

He’s 89 points from cracking the top 10, and 360 from passing Jeff Stone and Mike Bagby to become the #1 male scorer in school history with 1,138 points.

Now to top Brianne King (1549) and be the ultimate #1 at CHS, he’d have to virtually double his stats, adding 772 points as a senior.

Before we rule out that being a possibility, remember that Downes poured in 554 points as a junior, in a season where Coupeville missed the state tourney.

That was just 90 points shy of Stone’s school single season record of 644 from 1969-1970, and almost 100 more than the previous #2 (Jeff Rhubottom with 459 in 1977-1978).

While Downes record chase will be ongoing point of interest, there are nine other active Wolf boys who have scored in a varsity contest.

Seniors Cole White (200) and Nick Guay (136) lead that pack, giving CHS coach Brad Sherman plenty of scoring options.

Nick Guay runs away from soccer and towards basketball. (Jackie Saia photo)

With the first game Nov. 27 at Mount Baker, an up-to-the-moment (though not complete, as I remain haunted by Tom Sahli’s missing sophomore season in 1951-1952) career scoring list.

It features 413 players, with active ones in bold.

 

Jeff Stone – 1137
Mike Bagby – 1137
Randy Keefe – 1088
Mike Criscoula – 1031
Jeff Rhubottom – 1012
Bill Riley – 934
Pete Petrov – 917
Brad Sherman – 874
Denny Clark – 869
Arik Garthwaite – 867

Bill Jarrell – 855
Hunter Smith – 847
Corey Cross – 811
Hawthorne Wolfe – 800
Logan Downes – 778
Jack Elzinga – 770
Barry Brown – 769
Hunter Hammer – 755
Steve Whitney – 730
Dan Nieder – 729

Tom Sahli – 719 (**MISSING SEASON**)
Chris Good – 688
Gavin Keohane – 677
Virgil Roehl – 674
Foster Faris – 668
Pat Bennett – 659
Wade Ellsworth – 659
Jason McFadyen – 654
Rich Morris – 637
Kramer O’Keefe – 636

Wiley Hesselgrave – 632
John O’Grady – 611
Greg White – 604
Denny Zylstra – 602
Joe Whitney – 601
Brian Miller – 597
Mike Syreen – 594
Gabe McMurray – 592
Pat Clark – 583
Randy Duggan – 552

Roy Marti – 551
Jim Syreen – 550
Marc Bissett – 549
Gary Hammons – 533
Jerry Zylstra – 527
Brad Miller – 526
Gary Faris – 524
JJ Marti – 520
Cody Peters – 518
David Lortz – 502

Jason Bagby – 499
Xavier Murdy – 482
Pat O’Grady – 472
Harold Buckner – 469
Sean Dillon – 469
Frank Marti – 462
Alex Murdy – 448
Del O’Shell – 440
Tony Ford – 432
Caleb Powell – 421

Mason Grove – 414
Ben Biskovich – 407
Casey Clark – 407
Nick Sellgren – 406
Blaine Ghormley – 393
Tom Logan – 385
James Smith – 382
Don Cook – 377
Chad Gale – 373
Mike Millenbach – 373

JD Wilcox – 373
Ty Blouin – 369
Caesar Kortuem – 369
Ray Harvey – 368
Pat Brown – 355
Dick Smith – 352
Ethan Spark – 352
Glenn Losey – 350
Timm Orsborn – 345
Robin Larson – 342

Byron Fellstrom – 340
Kevin Faris – 339
Michael Vaughan – 337
Jim Yake – 331
Aaron Trumbull – 330
Brad Brown – 328
Charlie Tessaro – 328
Utz Conard – 326
Ian Smith – 324
David Ford – 323

Bob Rea – 320
Chris Marti – 319
Gabe Wynn – 316
Nick Streubel – 314
Ben Hayes – 306
Allen Black – 305
Noah Roehl – 301
Blake Day – 299
Noel Criscoula – 298
John Beasley – 293

Risen Johnson – 291
Brian Fakkema – 290
Matt Frost – 290
Mike Mallo – 282
Keith Jameson – 277
Terry Roberts – 277
Kit Manzanares – 275
Boom Phomvongkoth – 275
Zepher Loesch – 274
Alex Evans – 272

Aaron Curtin – 271
Tyler King – 270
Joe Tessaro – 270
Eric Hopkins – 265
Harvey Wainio – 265
Rick Keefe – 259
Troy Blouin – 256
Sean Callahan – 256
Greg Fellstrom – 248
Richard Hammons – 248

Casey Larson – 247
Don Schreiber – 247
Brandon Huff – 245
Grady Rickner – 245
Brad Haslam – 235
Sean Toomey-Stout – 235
Geoff Hageman – 227
Curt Youderian – 226
Rich Vaughan – 219
Ed Wood – 219

Joel Walstad – 217
Richard Cook – 216
Ryan Keefe – 214
Jordan Ford – 210
Andrew Mouw – 204
Vance Huffman – 203
Tim Quenzer – 202
Cole White – 200
Alan Hancock – 198
Shawn Ryan – 197

Mitch Aparicio – 195
John Engstrom – 195
Trevor Tucker – 194
Roy Mattox – 191
Dale Sherman – 188
Scott Stuurmans – 188
Pat Millenbach – 181
Caleb Meyer – 179
Wayne Hardie – 178
Chris Cox – 177

Evan Tingstad – 177
Jerry VandWerfhorst – 177
Anthony Bergeron – 176
Mike Ankney – 173
Ron Naddy – 172
Dale Libbey – 169
Roger Sherman – 168
Tim Walstad – 168
Randy Blindauer – 166
Mark Bepler – 165

Chad Brookhouse – 163
Jered Brown – 156
Monty Moore – 155
Geoff Wacker – 154
Bill Baas – 153
Ulrik Wells – 152
Jim Faris – 151
Steve Konek – 149
Gavin O’Keefe – 149
Ryan McManigle – 148

Ryan Griggs – 147
Hugh Abell – 145
George Libbey – 142
Nick Guay – 136
Sandy Roberts – 134
Craig Anderson – 132
Scott Franzen – 129
Ben Etzell – 127
Gavin Knoblich – 126
Len Buckner – 125

Brian Shank – 125
Joey Lippo – 121
Jessie Smith – 119
Scott McGraw – 116
Christian Townsdin – 116
Mitch Pelroy – 115
Taylor Ebersole – 114
Eric Taylor – 112
Jim Casey – 111
Jacobi Pilgrim – 111

Jonathan Valenzuela – 110
Brian Barr – 108
Joe Donellon – 101
Jason McManigle – 101
Bryan Hamilton – 99
Brian Knoll – 98
Morgan Payne – 96
Christian Lyness – 95
Koa Davison – 94
Ted Weber – 91

Hunter Downes – 89
James Meek – 89
Dan Miller – 89
Steve Bissett – 87
Andrew Cashen – 87
Carson Risner – 86
John Sinema – 86
Nick Morris – 83
Dominic Coffman – 81
Logan Martin – 81

Roy Armstrong – 80
Cameron Toomey-Stout – 80
Caleb Valko – 78
Ross Buckner – 77
Matt Shank – 77
JJ Johnson – 76
Duane Score – 76
Quinten Farmer – 75
Matt Ortega – 75
Mike Ellsworth – 74

Don Spangler – 72
John Zimmerman – 72
Joe Bruzas – 71
Jason Fisher – 71
Tony Prosser – 70
Les Jacobson – 69
Tom Conard – 68
Dean Grasser – 68
Matt Bepler – 67
Zack Swerdfeger – 66

Ron Lanphere – 65
Sage Downes – 64
Ben Hancock – 63
Randy Stone – 63
Mike Brown – 62
Jason McDavid – 62
Jeremy Staples – 62
Brian Hageman – 61
Erik King – 61
David Davis – 60

Tom Mueller – 59
Brandy Ambrose – 58
Sam Kieth – 58
Steve Smith – 58
Martin Walsh – 58
Matt Helm – 57
Dennis Terrell – 57
Drew Chan – 56
DeAndre Mitchell – 56
Daniel Olson – 56

Ellis Schultz – 56
Dave Stoddard – 56
Chase Anderson – 55
CJ Smith – 54
Larry Zylstra – 54
Asa Owensby – 52
Marc Aparicio – 51
Chris Chan – 51
Joe Kelley – 51
Marvin Darst – 50

Troy Hurlburt – 49
Ryan Blouin – 48
Stanley Bruzas – 48
Dalton Engle – 48
Jerry Helm – 48
Dalton Martin – 47
Eddie Fasolo – 45
Doug Speers – 45
Banky Fisher – 44
Keith Dunnagan – 42

Gaylord Stidham – 41
Erick Harada – 40
James Jorgensen – 40
Nevin Miranda – 40
Jeff Thomas – 40
John Wyatt – 40
John Moskeland – 39
Danny Bonacci – 36
Chuck Ruthford – 36
Charlie Toth – 36

Jim Marti – 35
Zeb Williams – 35
Robert Cushen – 34
Dante Mitchell – 34
Sid Mudgett – 34
Dave Brandt – 33
Ryan Kelley – 33
Brian Roundy – 32
Richard Barber – 31
Joe Libbey – 31

Ray Cook – 29
Tim Leese – 29
Ralph Lindsay – 29
Kyle Rockwell – 29
Rick Marti – 28
Toby Martinez – 28
Daniel McDonald – 28
Joe Rojas – 28
Todd Smith – 28
Scott Sollars – 28

Richard Benson – 27
Mike Duke – 27
John Holmes – 26
Lewis Berry – 25
Mark Short – 25
Tim Youderian – 25
Jared Helmstadter – 24
Trent Diamanti – 23
Trevor Mueller – 22
Dan Schleiffers – 22

Jay Roberts – 21
Dustin Van Velkinburgh – 21
Matt Douglas – 20
Jordan Emerson – 20
Dane Lucero – 20
Dean Strom – 20
Scott Fisher – 19
Scott Losey – 19
Bud Merryman – 19
Matt Petrich – 19

Jason Raymond – 19
Rob Blouin – 18
Rick Keith – 18
Marvin Mitchell – 18
Guy Walker – 18
Gary Boyke – 17
Jim Keith – 17
Jean Lund-Olsen – 17
Cedric McIntosh – 17
TJ Rickner – 17

Rick Frieze – 16
Chad Nixon – 16
Josh Wilsey – 16
Steven Cope – 15
Eric Dyer – 15
Mike Lester – 15
Zane Oldenstadt – 15
Brad Rogers – 15
Henry Edwards – 14
Todd Brown – 13

DJ Kim – 13
LaVerne Arnold – 12
Mike Eaton – 12
Guy George – 12
Kole Kellison – 12
Glen Lanphere – 12
Desmond Bell – 11
Bill Hamilton – 11
Ken Pickard – 11
Jon Roberts – 11

Chris Squires – 11
Ben Winkes – 11
Jermiah Copeland – 10
Ron Edwards – 10
Travis Hooker – 10
Daniel Graham – 9
Kyle King – 9
Bruce Seiger – 9
Jimmy Sullivan – 9
Fred Wyatt – 9

Erik Anderson – 8
Dave Bowers – 8
Rob Fasolo – 8
Kraig Gordon – 8
Cody Roberts – 8
Robert Shafer – 8
Dave Wells – 8
Charlie Cook – 7
William Davidson – 7
Bobby Engle – 7

Brian Folkestad – 7
Wayne Hesselgrave – 7
Ed Cook – 6
Tucker Hall – 6
Chuck Hardee – 6
Kevin King – 6
Robert Kirkwood – 6
George Smith – 6
Nic Anthony – 5
Ariah Bepler – 5

Scott Davidson – 5
JD Myers – 5
Nate Steele – 5
Andrew Bird – 4
Bill Boze – 4
Miles Davidson – 4
Ralph Engle – 4
Jason Legat – 4
Mikey Robinett – 4
Morgan Roehl – 4

Rusty Bailey – 3
Luke Currier – 3
Frank Mueller – 3
Tracy Wilson – 3
Teo Benson – 2
Hunter Bronec – 2
Norm Enders – 2
Chris Locke – 2
Jeremy McCormick – 2
Rich McCormick – 2

Denny Moss – 2
Tony Sherman – 2
Marion Sill – 2
Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim – 2
Stephen Stietenroth – 2
Robbie Wanamaker – 2
Paul Baher – 1
Bill Engle – 1
Robert Engle – 1
Bob Franzen – 1

Meryl Gordon – 1
Oscar Liquidano – 1
Raleigh Sherman – 1

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Wolf Moms hail their soccer-playing sons. (Photo courtesy Morgan White)

“Soccer has always been a beautiful game!”

Coupeville High School booter Cole White led off his Senior Night speech with that sentiment, capturing the feelings of all involved.

The Wolves bid adieu to five pitch vets Friday, with White joined by Andrew Williams, Hank Milnes, Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim, and Nick Guay.

Mixing joy with some tears (mainly from Wolf moms and dads), Coupeville blanked visiting La Conner 2-0 to keep alive its playoff hopes.

But it was the halftime festivities which resonated, as CHS coach Robert Wood, now in his fourth season, honored the first guys to play all the way with him.

That honor falls to Williams and Guay, with White, Milnes, and Simpson-Pilgrim having joined CHS soccer in ensuing years.

Whether they’ve played four years, or one season, the departing Wolves all seem to have benefitted from the experience.

“I wish that I played this sport all four years of high school,” Simpson-Pilgrim said.

“But I’m glad that I least got one good year in with all these cool amazing people.”

Hank Milnes leads off Senior Night portraits. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Quinten Simpson-Pilgrim is joined by family members. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Cole White’s fan club honors both the modern-day and old-school versions of the pitch ace. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Nick Guay is joined by his dad’s amazing beard. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Andrew Williams gets some love. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The turnout for Cole White included gramps — legendary former CHS Principal Rock White. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The senior crew pose with coach Robert Wood. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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