Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘OHHS Wildcats’

The only mascot you’ll ever need. (John Fisken photo)

I am a big ol’ hypocrite.

Let’s just get that out of the way right off the bat.

On one hand, I openly campaign for athletes at other schools to consider the benefits of playing for Coupeville.

It’s a small 1A school, with a no-cut policy, which means whatever your skill level, your chance of playing (and making a substantial impact) are greater than at a school with a larger student base.

I personally think we have stellar coaches, both in the newbies and grizzled vets, our uniforms are snazzier than other schools, our prairie is prettier than some of the hell-holes other schools occupy, and, last, but certainly not least, media attention, baby.

Play for a school like Klahowya and you’re fighting to get the briefest sniff from the Kitsap Sun, which has a ton of 2A and 3A schools in its area.

Find yourself in Port Townsend (where Seran Dances won three state track titles in May, yet not a word has appeared on the local paper’s website) or South Whidbey (more than a week to read anything on-line about softball’s adventure at the state tourney), and things get really dire.

Not to toot my own horn too much, but I am relentless, and will shower you with coverage morning, noon and night, even if you’re the last player on the JV bench.

So, just imagine the tsunami of articles you can print and clip if you’re actually a big-time star.

College scholarships? A bigger school is not the mecca some think they are.

There may be more Wildcats than Wolves playing college sports overall, but that’s mainly due to the bigger student body from where those athletes came.

Take the last decade and Oak Harbor (a 3A high school) and Coupeville have exactly the same number of athletes who received scholarship money while playing for a major D-1 college program.

It’s Wolves Tyler King (U-Dub) and Kyle King (Oklahoma) vs. Wildcats Marshall Lobbestael (Wazzu) and Heidi McNeill (U-Dub).

With Oak Harbor housing 1,132 students to Coupeville’s 227 in the last classification counts, I’m not sure earning a draw isn’t more of a loss.

If you want to play college sports, you can, and it has little to do with the size of your high school.

In the end, talent, hard work and absolute commitment means more than a fancy name on your high school jersey (unless maybe it says ATM, Bellevue or Garfield).

You have to find your niche, whether it’s D-1 or a small community college, and there will be a chance to compete.

I’m not saying you’re guaranteed a scholarship, or even a chance to play. But you find the right place, be it Alabama or Skagit Valley, you can get a shot, and then it’s up to you to do what you can with that shot.

In the end, though, this all comes down to one thing.

I write about COUPEVILLE, and the better the Wolves do, the easier my job.

There are no conflicts of interest. I don’t work for the school district, they don’t give me a penny, and they have little say in what or who I write about.

If I want to shamelessly recruit, it’s my call, and it makes perfect sense.

I have shed any form of journalistic impartiality. I want, and need, Coupeville teams and athletes to do well. End of story.

And yet, as I said, I’m a hypocrite.

Because, at the same time I openly try and convince people to leave other towns, other schools, behind, I piss and moan when the exact opposite happens.

When we head into the new school year in the fall, there will be at least four very talented athletes playing for Oak Harbor High School who could still be wearing the red and black of CHS.

These are not athletes whose families moved to a different school district, necessitating a change.

That happens, for many different reasons, and I can name a whole string of top-level athletes who were very successful at other schools after landing at their new home.

Volleyball spiker Jessica Riddle, who holds the CHS single-game record for kills and aces, led Anacortes to back-to-back 5th place trophies in 2A as a junior and senior.

Two who moved before high school are Kwamane Bowens, who went on to earn a D-1 football scholarship and Emma Laurion, who scored 118 goals and won back-to-back state soccer titles for Crosspoint Academy.

Huge losses for Wolf Nation. Huge “what if they didn’t move?” scenarios.

The current Wolves masquerading as Wildcats, though, didn’t move. Their families have simply chosen to let them attend, and play for one school, while living in another district.

Which is their right.

As long as both schools, and the WIAA, have no issue with what they’re doing, who am I to question their choices?

Parents should be allowed to make whatever decision they think benefits their children.

Especially when I would openly glad-hand those who made a similar choice … if it benefited Coupeville.

I could be pissy. I could be whiny. Wouldn’t be the first time.

While none of these athletes are the next Kobe Bryant or Mia Hamm, if they played for CHS, they would give me plenty to write about. So, on a personal note, these decisions hit me.

Which sounds really whiny. I get it.

Once again, this blog is not called Oak Harbor Sports or the Klahowya Klarion, or Up with Chimacum.

So let me marinate in my pool of tears over here.

I want athletes to jump to Coupeville, not away. I may understand when the opposite happens, but I don’t have to be thrilled.

Like I said, I’m a big ol’ hypocrite.

Read Full Post »

   Oak Harbor High School junior James Besaw, seen here in his Washington Rush uniform. (Photos courtesy Teresa Besaw)

Besaw gets ready to rip one during select ball.

   A throwback to little league days, with James (center) hanging out with sister Kenzie and brother David.

Passing on the love of the game to a new generation.

“I think baseball has helped me out in life and kept me out of trouble.”

An athlete for all seasons, James Besaw has played just about every sport possible over the years, but at a certain point baseball became his true passion.

“I enjoy playing and watching the game,” he said. “I don’t dislike any teams or players, I like to watch them all.

“It’s having fun, doing something I love. I like being part of a team.”

A junior at Oak Harbor High School, Besaw, who flips between first base and the outfield, has been all-in on baseball the past three years.

High school ball in the spring, select ball in the summer, then fall ball, before rolling right into workouts to get ready for another season of high school and select play.

When he’s not wearing the gold and purple for OHHS, Besaw pulls on the uniform of the Washington Rush these days. Tournament play, which kicks off in Tacoma this weekend, keeps him busy.

The youngest of seven (he has three sisters and three brothers), Besaw made his diamond debut at four, inspired by his older siblings.

“I wanted to play ball like my big brother David,” he said.

Over the years, he’s honed his work ethic and it’s helped him tremendously.

Besaw lists his strengths as “speed, hitting and (being) one of the hardest-working people on the team,” but, with an eye on playing college ball at a school “that has a good medical program,” he’s always striving to get just a little bit better.

“Areas I would like to work on are just continuing to train and get better,” he said. “I hope to have my best year my senior year and I hope to be a good leader to the younger players.”

He’s already excelling at that, quietly helping one freshman with his algebra while also finding time to assist a sophomore in getting some extra practice time.

As is typical for the low-key Besaw, he doesn’t call attention to his behind-the-scenes work, but his mother notices.

“I am biased and think he is a great kid, of course,” said mom Teresa. “He is quiet and mature. I think having all those older brothers and sisters is why he is so mature for his age.

“Some find him hard to read, but if you get to know him, you know he is funny and has a great smile. He loves to teach kids to play ball and also likes to help his younger teammates.”

Besaw, who has earned academic letters to go with his athletic ones (requiring a 3.5 or higher GPA for two semesters in a row), enjoys hanging out with his friends, watching sports movies (“mostly the real-life story kind”) and his science class.

He plans to go into the medical field after school, but is still debating exactly what part of that field to pursue.

“I am still figuring out where to go with that,” Besaw said. “Thinking about physical therapy or sports medicine.”

Through baseball, school and everything else, he greatly appreciates the support and encouragement he’s received from his large family, though he singles his parents out for special praise.

“They have helped me do well in school and supported me with whatever I need for school and sports.”

Read Full Post »

Jon Diem heads to the hoop while playing for Oak Harbor High School. (Photos courtesy Sherry Roberts)

   Jon Diem heads to the hoop while playing for Oak Harbor High School. (Photos courtesy Sherry Roberts)

The basketball slides along the young boy’s fingertips for a moment, and then, in one smooth motion, it arcs skyward.

The young boy holds his breath, the ball hits nothing but the bottom of the net, and the young boy exhales, a superstar already on the cracked cement court.

And then the young boy is a young man, and now he’s wearing his school’s uniform, but the look in his eyes, the smile on his face, the feeling of the ball slipping off his fingertips, are all the same.

This time, when the ball hits the bottom of the net, a referee’s hands shoot skyward, the young man’s friends, family and classmates go crazy and the young man is a superstar again, but in a different world.

And then the young man is a grown man, living in the real world, helping nurture the daughter who will continue to carry his name forward, and he is a superstar still.

One day, the grown man, who has endured much hardship in his life, but has remained, against all odds, a kind, caring soul described as “the most talented and humble athlete I have ever known,” leaves our world, too soon.

The sound of the basketball rhythmically hitting the court, the baseball thunking into his mitt, fades, but his memory does not.

For his family, and his friends — which included everyone he played with and against — Jon Diem will always be here.

Diem, who passed away just weeks shy of his 45th birthday, leaves behind seven siblings — brothers David, Michael and Robert and sisters Mary, Cathie, Nancy and Shawn — his father Charles and his beloved daughter Lexie.

Diem and daughter

Jon and daughter Lexie.

He was preceded in death by his mother, Sara, and will be laid to rest next to her at Coupeville’s Sunnyside Cemetery.

From the moment he popped into the world Feb. 26, 1972, Jon brought a light with him.

One of the most gifted athletes Coupeville has ever seen, he moved up to the big city (Oak Harbor) for high school.

A standout basketball and baseball player while wearing the purple and gold Wildcat uniforms, Diem graduated with the OHHS Class of 1991.

On the hard-court, Jon was a lights-out shooter from long range, a three-ball king in short shorts who lit up the scoreboards while running alongside teammates such as Tony Midyette, Manny Martucci, Pat Herms and Trig Johnson.

Many of the first games I covered for the Whidbey News-Times, in my fledgling journalism career, involved watching Diem drop bombs from all angles against teams like Marysville-Pilchuck or Shorewood.

There wasn’t a spot on the floor on which he didn’t feel confident launching a trey, and he hit an astonishing number of his efforts.

On the baseball field, he was a two-way threat, adept with the bat and his glove while roaming the infield for the ‘Cats.

baseball

Diem comes in hot during his diamond days.

Jon played baseball at OHHS from 1988-1991 and was the starting second baseman and cleanup hitter on the Wildcat team that placed second at the 3A state tourney in 1990.

“The thing I remember most about Jon after all these years was his gentleness,” said former longtime OHHS baseball coach Jim Waller. “Teenage boys probably don’t want to be called sweet, but that is the best way to describe him.

“He was quiet and thoughtful, selfless and caring. Although he was shy around the coaching staff, he liked to laugh and would play practical jokes on his teammates.”

As an athlete, Diem had raw talent for days, but it was his work ethic which caught his coach’s attention.

“He was a graceful athlete, one of those players who moved so fluidly that it appeared sports came easily to them,” Waller said. “Yes, he had natural talent, but his success wasn’t solely from his innate ability but from his hard work and dedication to the game.

“He had the qualities all coaches want in an athlete — a strong work ethic, a willingness to put the team first, a willingness to be coached, an ability to laugh and laugh at himself, a hunger to win, a respect for his opponents,” he added. “And, more importantly, those qualities are a mark of a good person as well as a high-character athlete.”

In the days after Jon’s passing, friends and former teammates poured out their love for him on Facebook, and their words paint a picture of a gifted athlete who was a better person.

Of a man who ultimately cared as much, or more, about others accomplishments as his own.

“He was such a stud,” wrote former CHS athletic star Ben Biskovich, who grew up alongside Diem in Coupeville. “Always the best athlete on the field and always so humble.

“When we were picking teams, I always wanted to be on his team.”

That was a thought echoed by Jason LaMont, whose own athletic experiences landed on a different side of the spectrum from Biskovich.

“He (Jon) always treated everyone nice, even me, who sucked at sports,” LaMont said. “Even as a kid, he was building people up.”

For Chris Potts, who stayed in contact with Diem long after high school, it was Diem’s approach to life, and not just sports, which made him so memorable.

“He was an amazing soul, with a humble confidence,” Potts said. “A happy-go-lucky approach to life.

“An amazing sense of humor that was punctuated by a crooked grin and a laugh that invited everyone to join in,” he added. “He had a heart just a chosen few are given in this life.”

Jon’s ability to be the best athlete in the room, or on the field, and yet never make anyone feel like he was lording it over them, carried on after his prep athletic career had ended.

He continued to play in his adult years, making new friends every step of the way.

“Playing together as an adult when it was for the pure love of the game and not the pressures of school, but back to the feeling of being a kid for a few hours,” Steve Van Rensum said.

“Rest easy old friend, teammate and brother. Sit fastball and don’t get cheated.”

In the distance, you can hear it, a soft sound at first that grows with each heartbeat.

The young boy twirls the basketball on his fingertip, then lets it drop into his palm. His breath slips out in a ragged burst and the ball slides off his hands, arcing skyward.

A soft bang as it hits the backboard, a softer swish as it drops through the hoop.

The young boy continues to shoot long after the sky has turned from afternoon into early evening.

It is his escape. It is his love.

The ball drops through the hoop, again and again, and he never stops shooting.

Tonight, and every night, Jon Diem lives on, out there on that court or diamond, in all of our memories.

Jon Diem (1972-2017)

Jon Diem (1972-2017)

A service for Jon Diem will be held at 11 AM Friday, Feb. 3 at Saint Augustine’s Catholic Church in Oak Harbor. It will be followed by a graveside burial at Sunnyside Cemetery in Coupeville.

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to Boeing Employee Credit Union.

A college fund has been set up for Jon’s daughter, Lexi Diem. It’s at Bank of America Acct: Lexie Diem college fund; routing #: 125000024; account #: 138122330559.

Read Full Post »

David and Amy King (John Fisken photo)

   Amy and David King are the masterminds behind Whidbey Island’s most successful high school hoops program. (John Fisken photo)

Wins and losses don’t lie; Whidbey Island is in the middle of a basketball funk.

With one noticeable exception — the Coupeville girls — our six high school varsity hoops squads have spent the past five years doing one thing, and one thing only, on a consistent basis.

Lose.

This is not opinion, this is fact.

There are the CHS girls, who have won 61 games and counting (they’re 14-3 this season) and then you fall off a cliff and keep rolling until the bottom.

From 2012-2013 to today, these are the numbers for the past five seasons for the Coupeville, Oak Harbor and South Whidbey programs:

Team Wins Winning seasons Seasons with 10+ wins Playoff wins
CP girls 61 3 4 2
SW girls 38 0 2 1
SW boys 36 0 0 2
OH boys 26 1 1 2
CP boys 23 0 0 0
OH girls 21 0 0 0

So, that’s four winning seasons out of a possible 30, with the Wolf girls having ripped off three straight and the only other one coming courtesy of the 2012-2013 Oak Harbor boys.

There’s a chance the South Whidbey girls will hold on to notch a fifth winning season, but the odds are stacked against the Falcons.

They’re 10-9 right now, but face juggernaut King’s in their regular season finale, which means it’s 99.2% likely they’re at .500 heading into the playoffs.

Bothered greatly by injuries, it appears unlikely South Whidbey has the depth to make a sustained playoff run, so a winning season is not getting very good odds in Vegas right now.

So, why is one team doing so well when the other five are not?

It’s true that the Coupeville girls benefited from having a transcendent player the past four seasons in Makana Stone, but other programs have been blessed with skilled hoops stars during the same time frame.

South Whidbey had Hayley Newman, Chase White and Lewis Pope, Oak Harbor suited up Dyllan Harris and Brynn Langrock and Coupeville had Wiley Hesselgrave and Mia Littlejohn.

You could argue those players were and are good, sometimes very good, but not truly great like all-timers Lindsey Newman, Pete Petrov or Brannon Stone, who led their teams to big-time success on and off Whidbey back in the day.

So, with apologies to Pope, who certainly seems to be getting there, we’ll say Stone is the one true all-timer to play on Whidbey in the past five years.

But, while say, South Whidbey fell sharply off after Hayley Newman’s departure in 2013, the Coupeville girls have responded to Stone’s graduation with a ten-game winning streak, a third-straight league title and strong hopes of a return visit to state.

So I think the Wolf girls success springs from something deeper.

All of our local coaches, at all three schools, seem to be hard workers, often innovators and deeply committed to their programs.

I’m not dogging on any of them, but I am giving a shout-out to David and Amy King, who have run the CHS girls program for five seasons now.

Their style works, and it shows both in wins and losses and in the way the Wolves are booming in numbers.

Players are staying for the full four years, new players are joining, players (on both varsity and the equally successful JV) are buying in to a team-first, every-player-has-a-role-and-accepts-it mantra.

Maybe it’s the unique situation of having a husband/wife duo running a program, maybe it’s their backgrounds as life-long hoops players and coaches, maybe they just have a magic touch.

So, other coaches, my suggestion? Study what the Wolf duo is doing. Take notes and maybe think about implementing some of their ideas into your own programs.

Cause right now, over the past five years? They’re the ones doing things right.

Read Full Post »

Samantha Shulock (John Fisken photo)

   OHHS grad Samantha Shulock has been hired as an assistant girls soccer coach at Coupeville High School. (John Fisken photo)

Coupeville High School’s newest soccer coach vividly remembers what it was like to be a player.

“I still have the players perspective fresh in my mind and can make that connection between coach and player,” said Samantha Shulock.

The 2008 Oak Harbor grad, who went on to play college ball after high school, has joined Troy Cowan’s staff as an assistant this year.

She replaces Nicholas Dziminowicz, who departed after a year in the position to focus full-time on his work with premier teams through Northwest United.

Shulock, who made her Wolf debut Thursday during a four-team jamboree on her old field at Oak Harbor’s Wildcat Memorial Stadium, played for 15 years.

After hanging up the purple and gold at OHHS, she went on to play two years at Skagit Valley College, then wrapped her career with a stint on the women’s club soccer team at Washington State University.

Back on Whidbey, she couldn’t resist the siren call of the pitch.

“I recently moved to Coupeville and saw this as the best opportunity to stay involved in soccer,” Shulock said. “Overall I’m here for the girls.

“My goal is they feel like they played the best season they could have and continue to learn about the game.”

She’ll work with the players on both sides of the ball, though says “defense has always been my comfort zone.”

One lesson she’ll try and pass on is how important it is for each Wolf to rely on the player next to them.

“This is a team sport; support is key,” Shulock said. “Any game is meant to be fun and if you want to take it to the next level you need to make sure it makes you happy every time you step onto the field with your teammates.”

As the Wolves prep for their regular-season opener (Sept. 8 at home vs. South Whidbey), their newest coach is counting down the days.

“I’m excited to be a part of it,” Shulock said. “I see myself in a lot of the girls and hope I’m a positive influence on each one.

“I’m coming in completely from the outside with no ties to this community,” she added. “My best wishes are always with the girls and their families and that every soccer experience is a positive one.”

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »