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Posts Tagged ‘Nick Streubel’

Nick "The Big Hurt" Streubel (John Fisken photo)

Nick “The Big Hurt” Streubel — ready to rumble. (John Fisken photo)

You, the average fan, are not the only one that thought the referees who hung out at Coupeville High School basketball games this year were a motley crew.

The players down there in the trenches agree.

“Can’t forget about the reffing, which was God-awful!!,” said Wolf senior Nick Streubel with a laugh.

Frequently whistled for imaginary fouls, as refs assumed the biggest guy on the court had to be the culprit, the six-foot-three, 295-pound post — who is also quite nimble on his feet and not prone to plowing defenders over — often took the brunt of the bad calls.

Basketball, more than any other sport, has suffered from atrocious calls made by possibly blind and incompetent refs the past two seasons.

With Coupeville moving from the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, where they have been viewed as the ugly step child to the slick Everett and Seattle big money schools, to the 1A Olympic League, there could be a change in refs, and reffing styles, next season.

Not that Streubel will be around to benefit, as The Big Hurt will be playing college football at Central Washington University on scholarship by then.

Still, he’ll have his memories, and not just of the reffing. A lot of what he witnessed was far more positive.

“God, this season was crazy! It had its ups and downs, and some wins,” Streubel said. “The highlight of this season for me is beating Lakewood at their house, when in the previous years, they tried to put a hundred points on us, and winning our first conference game in a long time.”

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Nick Streubel puts autograph to paper Wednesday morning. (Amanda Streubel photo)

  Nick Streubel puts autograph to paper Wednesday morning. (Amanda Streubel photo)

And it's a done deal. (David Streubel photo)

And it’s a done deal. (David Streubel photo)

Streubel Tuesday during Senior Night for boys' basketball with his parents and grandmother. (John Fisken photo)

Streubel Tuesday during Senior Night for boys’ basketball with his parents and grandmother. (John Fisken photo)

Nick Streubel dotted all his I’s and crossed his T’s and is now a Wildcat.

The Coupeville High School senior lineman, a 1A All-State player this year, officially signed his letter of intent Wednesday morning to play football for Central Washington University next fall.

The Big Hurt will be on scholarship at the D-2 school, which has a new coach in Ian Shoemaker.

CWU has won the conference championship in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference seven of the last 11 seasons. They went 7-4 in 2013.

To see who else has signed with CWU, a list that already includes quarterback Jayden Croft, the grandson of Tumwater coach Sid Otton, the winningest high school coach in state history and my 9th grade Health teacher, head over to:

http://wildcatsports.com/news/2014/2/5/FB_0205143249.aspx

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Jake Tumblin and big sister Ashlyn Cronin. (John Fisken photo)

Jake Tumblin and big sister Ashlyn Cronin. (John Fisken photo)

Jake Tumblin followed Nick Streubel’s blocks on the football field.

Now, the Coupeville High School senior running back would like to follow his fellow gridiron warrior to Central Washington University to play college football.

Streubel, a 1A All-State lineman, is signing his letter of intent with CWU Wednesday, Feb. 5 (National Signing Day), having accepted their scholarship offer.

Tumblin was invited to Ellensburg last weekend to participate in a tryout for Wildcat coaches, and, while he will have to wait for a few days to find out if CWU is interested (“They said between Wednesday and the weekend”), Tumblin left the tryout in good spirits.

“It was good! Felt like I did well,” he said. “They just wanted us to do some drills, see us move a little bit.”

Tumblin was tested in a twenty-yard dash and vertical jump, then did positional drills. For him, that meant putting in work as both a defensive back and running back.

Afterwards he and the others took a tour of the campus.

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Wolf seniors (l to r) Morgan Payne, Gavin O'Keefe, Nick Streubel and Anthony Bergeron with CHS coach Anthony Smith. (John Fisken photo)

 Wolf seniors (l to r) Morgan Payne, Gavin O’Keefe, Nick Streubel and Anthony Bergeron with CHS coach Anthony Smith. (John Fisken photo)

Nick Streubel went out like the gridiron beast he is.

Three years of sacrificing his lineman’s body on the basketball hardwood came to 99.8% of an end Tuesday night, as The Big Hurt and three fellow Coupeville High School seniors played at home for the last time.

And while their almost-swan song (they have a final road game at Granite Falls Thursday) didn’t end with a win, it ended with a bang.

Or, more aptly, a sonic boom as Streubel launched himself onto the floor in pursuit of a loose ball, knocking three Archbishop Thomas Murphy players out of his way and off their feet as he relentlessly pursued the fumble.

And then, as it has ever been so for three years, the refs called a foul on the biggest kid on the floor for being, well, the biggest kid on the floor.

When Streubel made his final walk back to the bench near the end of a 78-50 loss, the Wolf fans rose and gave him a sustained standing ovation, tribute to a young man who kept on coming back, game after game, loss after loss, for three years.

A guy who has a college football scholarship waiting to sign Wednesday, but would not, could not, leave his friends behind.

Shortly after Streubel fouled out, Wolf coach Anthony Smith pulled his other three seniors so they could exit as a group.

Morgan Payne, one of the hardest working players you will ever see, and the overwhelming choice of Brian Norris and the Bad-ass Party as the next President.

Anthony Bergeron, who in only two years of organized ball went from a polite, soft-spoken diamond in the rough to a high-flying, shot-blocking, point-scoring whirlwind … while still being polite and soft-spoken.

Gavin O’Keefe, who looked like he stepped out of the movie “Hoosiers” and, unfortunately, lost way too much time over the last season-and-a-half to two broken legs.

When he was on the court, he was electric. I wish we could have seen him more.

Playing one of the better teams in the Cascade Conference, the Wolf seniors and their younger teammates never collapsed Tuesday. There was no one big quarter, just a steady drip-drip-drip of ATM baskets that eventually became too much to overcome.

Coupeville stayed within 10 for much of the first half, but every time the Wolves made a mini-run, the visiting Wildcats would answer with two or three buckets in a row off of quick, slashing drives to the hoop.

ATM’s full-court press ruffled Coupeville, as well, forcing 24 turnovers and turning most of them into baskets.

Wolf sophomore Wiley Hesselgrave scored 10 of his team-high 16 in the second half, while Bergeron threw down 11, including a long three-point bomb.

Joel Walstad hit a pair of treys on his way to eight, while Streubel pounded home six and Aaron Trumbull, Matt Shank and O’Keefe each hit for three.

JV loses: In the night’s opening game, Coupeville got 12 from CJ Smith and 11 from Jared Helmstadter, but lost 78-36 in a game that got way out of hand at the end.

Dante Mitchell and Gabe Wynn each popped for four, DeAndre Mitchell banked home three and Oscar Liquidano drained a turn-around jumper off the glass for two.

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Brian Norris (with sign), Colin Be (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Brian Norris (with sign), Colin Belliveau (left) and Cole Payne (right) implore Wolf senior guard Morgan Payne to accept the endorsement of the Bad-ass Party. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Second verse, same as the first.

Less than 24 hours after falling at South Whidbey, the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball team laced up their sneakers again and welcomed Friday Harbor to town Wednesday for a non-conference game.

Unfortunately, they don’t seem to have learned from their mistakes, as the Wolves played essentially the same game as they did a night before.

Fall into a big hole, come roaring back but don’t get quite all the way there, and watch in frustration as time runs out, leaving a team tired of moral victories saddled with yet another one.

A 20-11 run to close the game — with Nick Streubel scoring nine of the points while playing with four fouls — got the crowd rocking.

But, with CHS starting the fourth quarter down 16, it wasn’t enough to stave off an eventual 62-55 loss.

Now 3-14 on the year, the Wolves have triple the “real” victories than they had last season, but too many “moral” victories for coach Anthony Smith’s taste.

“32 minutes. We need to put together 32 minutes,” Smith said. “We had great moments, but we need 32 minutes.”

Streubel, who picked up two fouls in the first 51 seconds of the game from overly-sensitive refs and sat the rest of the first half, took over the game down the stretch.

With Wiley Hesselgrave having fouled out and fellow Wolf guard Joel Walstad soon to follow, The Big Hurt staved off his own elimination and played with wild abandon, converting three offensive boards into buckets.

Coupeville pulled to within 55-49 on back-to-back buckets from Gavin O’Keefe and Anthony Bergeron, but Friday Harbor closed out the game at the free throw line and never wavered.

Bergeron poured in seven of his team-high 20 in the late run, including a late three-pointer.

The silky senior had another big run in the second quarter, when he threw down nine points on a variety of shots.

Two buckets came off of offensive rebounds, as he used his spring-loaded legs to out-jump the defenders, while another came on a scorching drive through the paint, where he twisted through a mass of bodies while being hammered.

After trailing by double digits for much of the game, Coupeville cut the lead to seven late in the third, only to suffer a crippling lapse.

After three consecutive missed free throws by the Wolves, Friday Harbor went on a 9-0 surge to close the quarter, staking itself to a 47-31 lead.

With the Wolves throwing down almost as many points in the fourth (24) as they did in the first three quarters combined (31), the visiting Wolverines ended up needing every point in the end.

Streubel banged away for 15 to back-up Bergeron, who became the first Coupeville player, boy or girl, to score 20+ points twice this season.

Both he and Makana Stone have had games of 23 this year, while Jared Helmstadter scored 21 in a JV boys’ game.

O’Keefe hit for nine, Hesselgrave popped for seven and Walstad swished home four.

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