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Posts Tagged ‘rushing records’

Ian Barron

   Ian Barron, the current CHS football record board and the documents which prove the identity of the one true rushing king.

Coupeville High School is making impressive strides with its athletic programs these days.

New bleachers in the gym, a sparkling new track oval blossoming before our eyes, and, of course, the project which has consumed me for the past year-plus about to come to fruition.

Next week 112 title boards will be installed on a wall inside the CHS gym, documenting league and district titles as well as state accomplishments won by the Wolves.

Finally, the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s, and the athletes and teams of those eras, will get their moment in the spotlight.

But, since I like tilting at windmills, before we finish with that epic endeavor (which has only been possible with the help of a ton of people inside and outside the school) I want to raise another issue.

And that is Ian Barron.

Or, more precisely, the indisputable fact he should be at the top of the football record board which greets visitors to the CHS gym complex.

The board is what it is, an honorable attempt to finally document some Wolf gridiron history in much the same manner the track record board has done for years.

It was a good start, though an incomplete one.

Records for CHS sports are notoriously hard to find, and I give the previous football coaching staff credit for doing what they could.

But Barron’s omission, while not being intentional, is glaring.

First, because his rushing marks, both for a season and a career, are so far ahead of what is currently listed as the records, and, secondly, because it is so easy to prove.

I have in my possession a two-page letter, signed by longtime Wolf coaches Ron Bagby and Tom Roehl, which breaks down precisely what kind of numbers Barron put up.

And, with all due respect to Josh Bayne, who is currently listed as the school record holder and was a beast on the gridiron and a quality guy off the field, those slots rightfully belong to Ian.

Bayne’s marks of 1,528 yards in his senior season and 2,154 for his stellar career currently sit atop the board.

Barron blows those away, however, even though he missed all but three games as a junior after breaking his leg.

His marks:

1997 — 425 yards
1998 — 1,753
1999 — 1,087 (in only three games)
2000 — 1,448

Career — 4,713

It’s right there in black and white, documented in a letter Roehl sent to the Everett Herald when CHS coaches were nominating Barron for the All-Area football team.

There’s no question of whether Ian deserves to be on the board, just a question of whether someone will do something about it.

So, as we welcome a new coaching staff to Wolf football, I’m calling on them to join me in asking the school and the booster club to make things right.

The board is up there to honor the past, while giving current CHS athletes a target. Let’s make sure it’s the right target.

Ian Barron is the one true rushing king, and he should be recognized as such.

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Ian Barron, the one true CHS rushing king. (Photo courtesy Devyn Barron Nixon)

   Ian Barron, the one true Coupeville High School rushing king. (Photo courtesy Devyn Barron Nixon)

The CHS football record board as it stands today. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

The CHS football record board as it stands today. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

This 2000 letter from Tom Roehl to the Everett Herald backs (David Svien photo)

   This 2000 letter from Tom Roehl to the Everett Herald backs the long-held belief that Barron truly holds the school records. (David Svien photo)

I’m sorry, but the record board is wrong.

When Coupeville High School recently installed glossy new boards to honor Wolf football and volleyball players from years past, it was a huge step forward for the school.

I give the coaches and those who went through the records they had, all the credit in the world.

They did the best they could with the limited records they could retrieve.

But I have to semi-officially blow up two of those records right now.

With all due respect to Josh Bayne, who was an electrifying rusher and exited as the 1A Olympic League MVP last year, you don’t own the school’s single season and career rushing marks.

Sorry.

You’re still one of the best players I have personally seen play in the past 25 years, Mr. Bayne, a back-cracker on ‘d’ and a wild man with the ball.

But, having obtained a great deal of paperwork once owned by longtime CHS football assistant coach Tom Roehl, I discovered a smoking gun today.

It’s a two-page letter from Roehl and Wolf head coach Ron Bagby to Everett Herald Prep Editor John McDonald, sent in 2000 in support of senior running back Ian Barron.

In the document, Roehl details Barron’s remarkable four-year run at CHS, and the numbers don’t lie. But they do astound.

Barron, and not Bayne, owns both the single season and career rushing records. And it’s not even close.

Bayne is listed with 2,154 yards gained in his stellar career. Which is dang impressive.

But Barron had 2,178 yards … at the halfway point of his career.

He gained 425 yards as a freshman, then put together a 1,753-yard campaign (the true school record) as a sophomore.

If he never played another down after that, he would still rightfully own the record.

But Ian did take the field again, tossing up 1,087 yards as a junior … in just three games.

A broken ankle in the second half against Chief Leschi ended his season prematurely, otherwise he would have likely scorched his sophomore mark. Can you say 2,000+ yards, cause I certainly can.

Barron came back strong as a senior, gutting out an additional 1,448 yards to run his all-time total to 4,713 yards, more than double the mark that currently owns the top slot on the board.

The CHS record boards were a long time coming. They are a great addition to keeping Wolf athletic history alive.

But they are a work in progress.

The next step in that progress — paying homage to the one true rushing king.

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