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Posts Tagged ‘Robert Engle’

Sarah Stuurmans (left) is joined by Matt Shank and Class of '25 alumni Robert Engle and Mary Sherman.

   Sarah Stuurmans (left) is joined by Matt Shank and Class of ’25 alumni Robert Engle and Mary Sherman.

We’re going (way) old school and (relatively) new school today.

As we welcome our 76th class to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, it’s comprised of three athletes and one coach (who was an amazing athlete herself, just not here on Whidbey) from vastly different time frames.

So, let’s swing the door open to these hallowed digital hallways and usher in Robert “Fat” Engle, Sarah Stuurmans, Mary Sherman and Matt Shank.

After this, you’ll find them up at the top of the blog under the Legends tab, hanging out with their fellow inductees.

Our first two inductees, Engle and Sherman, graduated from Coupeville High School in 1925, a time when the school’s sports teams were still referred to as the Cardinals and not the Wolves.

Sherman, who was the class Valedictorian, was a trailblazer, the captain of a CHS girls’ basketball team that played decades before Title IX evened things out a bit.

Perusing the school’s 1925 annual, The Clarion, is a look into a different time.

The only girls sports team at CHS (boys had football, basketball, baseball and track), the female hoops stars practiced three times a week and shrank from 20 players to a final 11 who are listed as letter winners.

The highlight of the season was a win over Island rival Langley, and Sherman was hailed for her work as captain, proving “very capable” of her duties.

Her classmate, Engle, was a four-sport athlete who played for three teams that won county championships his senior season.

In football, he was an imposing lineman for a squad which roughed up Oak Harbor 23-6 and 25-7, while in basketball he was the team captain as the Cards swept two games apiece from their two Island foes.

CHS appears to have won a district title, downing Index, then went on to play three games at the Northwest Tournament before moving on to spring.

Once there Coupeville won a county championship in track (Engle was a beast in the shot put) and came within a win of capturing a baseball crown and making it 4-for-4 that year.

Many decades later, our third inductee, Shank, showed up in Cow Town after his dad, Jim, was hired as Coupeville’s Superintendent.

During his time as a Wolf, Matt played football, basketball and track and his induction into the Hall is a testament to his work ethic.

While he didn’t set any records at CHS, Shank will loom large for years as the kind of athlete coaches love to point to when they talk about the value of role players.

Whether anchoring the line for the gridiron squad, fighting for rebounds down in the paint or hurling the javelin, he was a team player, first, last and always, a guy who fought the same during razor-tight wins and blowout losses.

Shank was part of the Class of 2015, but, ultimately, he was a throwback to old school athletes.

He played in a time dominated by cell phones and social media, but carried himself like the guys who played in the “old days,” more concerned with his team’s progress than his own numbers or how many times he could be photographed.

Shank’s younger siblings, Brian and Ashlie, play very much like their brother, so I kind of think it’s a family trait. And an admirable one at that.

Our final inductee today, Stuurmans, goes in to the Hall as a coach, if only because this is not Tenino Sports.

Growing up as a Hollingsworth, she was a key player (earning All-Conference honors) on dominant Tenino High School squads which made runs at state in basketball and soccer.

In a moment of kismet, she and her hoops team finished 6th in 2A at state in 2001-2002, winning their first two games to advance to the semifinals.

At the same time, in the 1A tourney? Coupeville won its first two games, also fell in the semis and also finished 6th.

After marriage to former Wolf hoops star Scott Stuurmans, Sarah pulled stints as a basketball coach for Coupeville Middle School.

While there she helped kick-start the careers of players like Mia Littlejohn, Lauren Grove, Joey Lippo and Cameron Toomey-Stout, to name just a few.

Makana Stone, arguably the best female player in town history, hails Stuurmans as being the coach who first unlocked her love of basketball.

Plus, Sarah is one of the best interview subjects ever, which always tilts the chances of getting inducted into Hall of Fames run by ink-stained “journalists.”

While a teaching position in Oak Harbor (and wanting to spend time with her family) has denied us the chance to have Stuurmans on the bench the last year or two, there’s always the hope she may return one day.

If not, she remains one of the most faithful of Wolf fans and boosters, and could probably still take to the court (after the upcoming birth of children #3 and #4, who are arriving together) and teach the current players a few lessons.

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Hall o' Fame inductees (clockwise, from bottom left) Jim Wheat, Craig Pedlar, Rich Wilson and, representing the 1924-25 CHS boys' hoops team, captain Robert Engle.

   Hall o’ Fame inductees (clockwise, from bottom left) Jim Wheat, Craig Pedlar, Rich Wilson and, representing the 1924-25 CHS boys’ hoops team, captain Robert Engle.

A little something for everyone.

When you take a look at the 65th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, diversity is the name of the game.

An athlete, a coach, a contributor and a team all come together today, ready to be enshrined inside these hallowed digital walls.

So, with that, we welcome to the podium Craig Pedlar, Jim Wheat, Rich Wilson and the 1924-1925 Coupeville High School boys’ basketball squad.

After this, you’ll find them with their brethren atop the blog, under the Legends tab.

Our first inductee, Wilson, was a two-sport sensation who still holds a CHS track and field record 16 years after his graduation.

His mark of six feet, four inches in the high jump in 2000 hasn’t been topped since, leaving him just three years shy of matching his predecessor.

When he broke the mark, it had stood since 1981, the year of Wilson’s own birth.

And, in a fun side fact, his wife Yashmeen (Knox) Wilson, already a Hall o’ Famer, holds the CHS record in the same event on the girls side.

Her mark of 5-02 has held since 1999.

Track wasn’t Wilson’s only area of expertise, however, as he was a bruising two-way star on the gridiron who racked up tons of tackles and churned out big yardage.

The only thing keeping his offensive numbers down a bit was his career crossed paths with that of Coupeville’s greatest weapon, school career rushing leader Ian Barron.

But if you look at the time period when Barron went down with a broken ankle, Wilson seizes the spotlight and runs with it, one of the best backs to ever wear the red and black.

Our second inductee, Pedlar, has a strong history at two Island schools, and he was in the prime of his Oak Harbor days when I worked with him while I was a young Sports Editor at the Whidbey News-Times.

But, as much success as he achieved at OHHS, his CHS days stack up quite nicely.

He was an assistant basketball coach, working along side legendary hoops guru Bob Barker, but his biggest impact probably came in his stints working with Wolf runners.

The cross country program, which boasts a deep collection of league, district and state meet accomplishments as part of the school’s new Wall of Fame, was his baby and he turned it into a powerhouse.

A big part of his success came from his skill at reaching each individual runner and finding what they personally needed to succeed.

Natasha Bamberger, who went on to win a state title in cross country, and four others in track (making her the only five-time individual state champ in CHS history), vouches for Pedlar’s impact.

“Feeling believed in is very powerful,” she said. “I never felt that before and I credit those coaches with it, all starting with Coach P.”

Our next inductee, Wheat, could go in as a coach (he was a key part of the staff of the 2002 CHS softball squad which finished 3rd at state), but today we’re inducting him as a contributor for his work as an umpire.

He has a sterling touch on the field, where he is highly-respected for his game-calling skills, but he continues to make an even bigger impact as the head of umpires for Central Whidbey Little League.

Whether it’s recruiting and training other umps, working with them on the field, or all the work he puts in behind the scenes helping to keep CWLL a roaring success, Wheat is The Man.

Putting him in the Hall o’ Fame? It’s just the right call.

Wrapping up our class we’re reaching back in time to induct the earliest team yet to enter the Hall.

The 1924-1925 CHS boys’ hoops squad, led by high-scoring (for the day) Roy Armstrong, won a county championship, drubbing Oak Harbor and Langley twice each, then found a bit of postseason glory.

A 13-10 win over Index gave the Wolf farm boys a district title and sent them on to the Northwest Tournament, where they went 1-2 against big-city schools.

While the name of their coach is lost to time (at least it’s not listed in the 1925 CHS yearbook), we want to reach back and honor the letter winners from that early round-ball juggernaut.

Inducted, together, as a team:

Roy Armstrong
Lewis Berry
Robert Cushen
Robert Engle
(captain)
Sam Kieth
Joe Libbey
Marion Sill

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The 1925 Coupeville High School yearbook, only the fifth the school produced in its first quarter century. (Jack Sell photos)

   The 1925 Coupeville High School yearbook, only the fifth the school produced in its first quarter century. (Jack Sell photos)

Mollie Bailey's great-grandfather headlined the nine graduates.

   Mollie Bailey’s great-grandfather, Robert “Fat” Engle, headlined the nine graduates.

1925 was a golden time in Coupeville.

The farm boys were the undisputed titans of Island County 91 years ago, besting Oak Harbor and Langley to nab county championships in three of the four sports played in those days.

Football, basketball and track all belonged to the Wolves, whose players bore nicknames like “Fat,” “Cushy,” “Beans” and “Sockee.”

Only baseball eluded their grasp, when a narrow 3-0 loss to Oak Harbor left them in second-place, a game back, at seasons end.

I learned all that, and much more, thanks to a fairly pristine copy of the 1925 Coupeville High School yearbook, the “Clarion,” which landed in my hands thanks to local library legend Leslie Franzen.

Dotted with just as many Engles, Shermans, Grassers and Libbeys as you would expect, the yearbook was the fifth published in school history (CHS started in 1900) and the first in many years.

It’s also easily one of the most detailed I’ve seen, sports-wise, from any time period.

All the scores are there, with neatly-ordered little write-ups on each game, providing a crystal clear window into prairie sports of the past.

So, grab your seat in the Wayback Machine and let’s skip back to a time when the faculty numbered three, the graduating class hit nine, and the athletic wins topped both combined.

Football:

An 18-man squad, led by captain Robert “Cushy” Cushen, quarterback Marion “Buster” Sill and lineman Robert “Fat” Engle, aka current CMS star Mollie Bailey’s great-grandfather, stuffed Oak Harbor twice to be hailed as county champs.

The Wolves finished 3-3, splitting games with Anacortes and falling to Burlington and Fairhaven, but frankly, none of that mattered as long as they crushed the interlopers from up North.

And they did, rolling to 23-6 and 25-7 wins.

Playing in a time before face masks were en vogue, Coupeville got touchdowns from Cushen, Sill and Joe Bruzas and a “well-directed” field goal from their captain in the first win.

The second time around, the two teams played in front of an estimated 400 fans, all of whom saw that Oak Harbor’s line “was like paper and their offense easily stopped.”

Langley apparently sat football season out.

Basketball:

The Falcons returned in the winter, but the hot streak continued for the Wolves, who went a flawless 4-0 against their Island rivals.

Tripped up a bit by bigger off-Island schools, Coupeville finished 6-5, but played four postseason games.

After beating Index 13-10 in a battle to decide which team from the district would advance to the Northwest Tournament, they went 1-2 at the tourney.

Which raises the question, not easily answerable, if that ’25 squad should be regarded as district champs, 45 years before the 1970 Wolf squad was hailed as the first Whidbey boys’ hoops team to win a district title.

What we do know for sure was Coupeville drilled Oak Harbor (22-10 and 16-12) and Langley (19-11 and 28-17), and center Roy Armstrong was the Jeff Stone of his day, dropping in 80 of his team’s 177 points that season.

On a side note, 47 years before Title IX kicked in, CHS fielded a girls hoops squad as well, though it almost ran out of players before the season was finished.

Still,  led by captain Mary Sherman, the Wolves did pull off one victory, nipping Langley 12-9.

Baseball:

The Wolves were denied a third-straight county championship, losing a 3-0 pitcher’s duel to Oak Harbor on the final day of the season.

Joe Libbey struck out 11 over nine innings, but he was matched by North end hurler Ely (no first name listed), who benefited from a three-run eighth inning rally by his teammates.

The win left Oak Harbor, which took two of three from the Wolves, at 4-1, while Coupeville finished 3-2 (4-3 overall).

Langley, which did NOT have a great 1925, struggled in at 0-4, being blown out 18-4 and 13-4 by the Central Whidbey sluggers.

Track:

The Island County Track Meet was dominated by the farm boys, with Coupeville’s 70 points more than Langley (28) and Oak Harbor (21) combined.

Sill, a four-sport letter winner as a junior, won three events, taking the 50, 100 and 220 races.

Dean Edmundson won the discus and high jump, while Armstrong (pole vault), Lewis Berry (shot put) and Stanley Bruzas (mile) also came in as victors.

Coupeville capped off its stellar 1924-1925 campaign by handing out athletic letters to:

Football:

Roy Armstrong
La Verne Arnold
Melvin Arnold
Lewis Berry
Joe Bruzas
Stanley Bruzas
Robert Cushen
Wesley Dickinson
Dean Edmundson
Robert Engle
Melvin Grasser
Aron Grove
Melvin Holbrook
Roland Jenne
Sam Kieth
Fred Lovejoy
Marion Sill

Basketball:

Armstrong
L. Berry
Cushen
Engle
Kieth
Joe Libbey
Sill

Jennie Capaan
Maxine Fowler
Marvel Howard
Eunice Libbey
Jessie Libbey
Daisy Race
Frances Race
Mary Sherman
Beulah Sullivan
Alice Winterburn
Luella Zylstra

Baseball:

L. Arnold
Burley Berry
L. Berry
J. Bruzas
S. Bruzas
Cushen
Grasser
Kieth
Libbey
Lovejoy
Sill

Track:

Armstrong
L. Berry
J. Bruzas
S. Bruzas
Edmundson
Kieth
Sill

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