Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Phyllis Textor’

Judy Marti, who still holds the single-game scoring record for CHS girls, was fondly remembered by family and friends. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

One more time in the gym together.

Former coaches, players, and support staff joined fans of all time periods Saturday as Coupeville High School celebrated 50 years of girls’ basketball.

The top 15 scorers in program history were honored, as was the 1999-2000 team, which was the first to win a game at state.

As two games and the festivities played out, wanderin’ photo snapper John Fisken captured a wide variety of pics, some of which are seen here.

To view everything he’s posting, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2023-2024/GBB-2023-12-16-vs-South-Whidbey/

“The Cardiac Kids” reunite with coaches Willie and Cherie Smith.

Ron Bagby and Phyllis Textor reminisce about when they used to run this joint.

Sharpshooter Brittany Black, one half of the Black ‘n Blue Sisters.

Legends, one and all.

Bob Barker, still wowin’ them.

Makana Stone was playing pro ball in Norway Saturday, but the next generation of her family stood in for the #3 scorer in school history.

Buzzer-beater queen “Maddie Big Time” shows her son where the magic happened.

Hardwood gurus David and Amy King, enjoying life without having to spend any time talking to refs.

Need a crunch-time bucket? Emily (Vracin) Kosderka was your woman.

Marie (Hesselgrave) Hanshaw, one of the hardest-working players to ever pull on a Coupeville uniform.

Tracy (Taylor) Corona (left) and the greatest scorer in school history, Brianne King, reunite with Cherie Smith.

Read Full Post »

(John Fisken photo)

   Joey “Aces” Lippo lived up to his nickname, closing out Monday’s doubles win with partner William Nelson by slamming an ace past a Sequim rival. (John Fisken photo)

Monday afternoon offered a bit of everything for tennis fans.

A sun-splashed day that felt more like mid-summer than mid-September. Visiting royalty. Even a win for the Wolves.

Just not the right Wolves.

Despite putting up a strong fight against much-bigger competition, the Coupeville netters eventually fell 5-2 to visiting Sequim in a non-conference tilt.

Now 0-3 on the young season, the Whidbey Island version of the Wolves are learning under fire, having faced a pair of 2A schools and a private school power.

With Sequim, Coupeville faced off with a tennis squad coached by Mark Textor.

Along for the trip, his sister Phyllis, a Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Famer who spent 25 years working in the Coupeville school district and did just about every job possible — teacher, Principal, Athletic Director, volleyball and basketball coach to name a few.

It was a reunion, as she was the administrator who hired CHS tennis coach Ken Stange, now in his 11th year at the helm of the Wolf net programs.

His current boys squad didn’t go down without a fight, taking two matches outright while coming dangerously close to winning another two.

The titanic doubles duo of Will “The Thrill” Nelson and Joey “Aces” Lippo remained flawless on the season, controlling the net and slicin’ ‘n dicin’ a third straight foe in the match of the afternoon.

Hot on their heels was Grey Rische and Jimmy Myers, who improved to 3-0 as partners, dispatching their foes in straight sets with a mix of graceful shots (Rische) and booming, chest-flexing winners (Myers).

Two other matches came close to tipping Coupeville’s way, as the team’s top two singles players put up strong fights.

Nile Lockwood took the opening set in his match at second singles, but couldn’t hold off a late comeback and fell in a third-set tiebreaker.

Meanwhile, top singles ace Nick Etzell bounced back after a rough first set to pin his opponent down and thoroughly fluster him in a rough-and-tumble second set.

Up 5-1 in a second set tiebreaker, the Wolf junior hit a rough patch with his serve, however, allowing his Sequim counterpart to slip away.

Both Lockwood and Etzell will get another crack at sealing the deal, as Coupeville travels to Sequim Oct. 11 for a rematch.

Complete Monday results:

Varsity:

1st singlesNick Etzell lost to Steve Prorok 6-1, 7-6(9-7)

2nd singlesNile Lockwood lost to Dillon Liebert 5-7, 6-1, 10-7

3rd singlesJakobi Baumann lost to Raymond Lamb 6-2, 6-1

1st doublesJoseph Wedekind/John McClarin lost to Blake Wiker/Justin Porter 6-0, 6-2

2nd doublesWilliam Nelson/Joey Lippo beat Thomas Hughes/Damon Little 6-3, 6-1

3rd doublesJimmy Myers/Grey Rische beat Tim Porter/Paul Jacobsen 7-5, 6-4

4th doublesAiden Crimmins/Nick Blalock lost to Liam Payne/Brenton Barnes 6-2, 7-5

JV:

5th doubles Mason Grove/Tiger Johnson beat Jake Ryan/Sam Frymeyer 6-4

6th doublesJaschon Baumann/Koby Schreiber lost to Liam Bratten/Aaron Jackson 6-2

7th doubles Elliot Johnson/Grove beat Xavier Conway/Ben Wright 6-3

8th doublesLockwood/T. Johnson beat Nick D’Amico/Jonathan Hertz 6-1

Read Full Post »

Mindy (Horr) Sorenson and Taniel (Lamb) Proctor

Mindy (Horr) Sorenson and Taniel (Lamb) Proctor, back in the day.

Phyllis Textor

   Former CHS coach Phyllis Textor (top, blue shirt) and fellow inductees (l to r) Danny Savalza (Bow Down hat), Julia Sierra Castano, Ian Barron and Nick Streubel.

Best class … ever?

Each time I say it, I kind of think it’s true and then I go and put another class together, sit back and say, “Wow, this is the one!”

So, whether the seventh class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame is the best-ever or not (I’m leaning towards yes…), it is star-studded and memory-making.

The rushing king, a duo who made Coupeville’s biggest-ever splash at the state tennis tourney, another netter who went an entire regular season without dropping a set, and that’s just the start.

Without further ado, we welcome Ian Barron, Mindy (Horr) Sorenson, Taniel (Lamb) Proctor, Julia Sierra Castaño, Phyllis Textor, Danny Savalza and Nick Streubel to the Hall.

In the future, look at the Legends tab atop this blog and that’s where you’ll find them.

To get the crowd going, we open with Savalza, a CHS football/soccer player who is being inducted as a contributor.

While he played his tail off on the field for the Wolves, it was when he wasn’t playing that Danny made his biggest impact.

Donning a thrift store-bought dress and a “Bow Down” hat, he revved school spirit to an all-time high and made the student section bounce to his merry tune.

Never afraid to take the show on the road, outshouting South Whidbey in their own gym, Savalza was a master show man and, as he enters the Hall, we all bow down to his one-of-a-kind spirit and skills.

Joining him is Streubel, AKA The Big Hurt, a three-sport star who, for the moment at least, is being inducted for pulling off a truly memorable play.

It came at the end of a ferocious season-ending battle at Chimacum in a game played on a mud bog of a field that reeked all night like cow manure.

Late in the game, the Wolves were planning on running an offensive play for a lineman, and with senior captain Caleb Valko suddenly sidelined by a jerk of a ref, the ball went to Streubel.

Listed on the roster at six-foot-three and 300 pounds, The Big Hurt carried seven screaming Cowboys on his back as he barreled head-first into a sideline mud puddle that resembled a sink hole.

In the end, it was the mud, and not the tacklers, that finally brought him down, and, when Streubel finally re-emerged, he was covered helmet-to-cleats in muck.

Then he turned towards the sidelines, caught Valko’s eye and silently raised a thumb in salute to his line-mate.

Capping the play?

Coupeville had to run to catch the ferry, so the players didn’t have time to shower, and Streubel chased coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh all the way down the dock, begging for a hug. Several years later, Coach V is still running…

Our third inductee never stopped running, and now, finally, may be getting some long-overdue recognition for his achievements.

When his former teammates describe Barron’s playing style on the football field, they say things like “He was unstoppable. The other teams didn’t want to try and tackle him. They were scared he was going to hurt them.”

Over four years, he rushed for 4,713 yards, more than twice as many yards as any other Wolf running back ever. That he did that while only playing three games as a junior (he broke his foot) is amazing.

Just as eye-popping was Sierra Castaño’s run in 2010 after joining the CHS girls’ tennis squad as a foreign exchange student.

Not only did she go undefeated while playing #1 singles during the regular season, she didn’t drop a set.

Her first loss didn’t come until sub-districts, and she made it through three matches at the state tourney, only being derailed by private school players.

But, maybe even better was the way she embraced her short-time teammates.

A lot of dominant tennis players do what they do, then depart. Not Julia, who stayed until the end of every team match, cheering for the last girl on the roster as they finished their JV contests.

She was class personified, on and off the court, and it is a genuine pleasure to once again hail the Hard Court Assassin of Oviedo.

Our fifth inductee was one of the first coaches I worked with back in my Whidbey News-Times Sports Editor days, a woman who made a huge impact on generations of Wolf athletes and students.

During her run at CHS (1980-2005), Textor did just about everything, from coaching to teaching to being an Athletic Director to being first a vice principal then principal.

She wasn’t showy, never looking for the spotlight, but she was a rock.

Coupeville’s loss became Sehome’s gain, and she has spent the past decade there as a principal, recently announcing that her 35th year in education would be her final one.

I am sure they will honor her this year, but we’re going to get the jump on them. She was Coupeville’s first, and she’ll always have a spot in our hearts.

And then we come to our final inductees, and a twist.

Mindy and Taniel would both make the Hall as individuals, as the duo were superb multi-sport athletes, great leaders, and truly wonderful people. Both had, and still have, a glow that exudes from their inner souls that is breath-taking.

But, instead of breaking them up, we’re going to induct them as a pair, a tribute to 2005, when the dazzling duo came within a set of winning a state tennis title.

CHS has a string of state champions in track, and two in cross country, but jump away from running and the closest any Wolf has come to being a champ came when Sorenson and Proctor faced off with Aimee Silver and Erica Lawrence of Bush for the 1A doubles crown.

The Wolves took the first set 7-5, before the Bush duo rebounded to snatch 6-2 and 6-3 sets for the win.

It was an admirable battle against a juggernaut — Silver and Lawrence captured a second-straight title the next year, before Lawrence added a third title in 2007 with a new partner — and stands as one of the defining moments in Wolf sports history.

In the decade since, Mindy and Taniel have both gotten married and spread joy through the world. Their post-high school accomplishments are staggering, but hardly unexpected.

They have been winners, together and apart, two of the finest this town has ever produced.

Read Full Post »