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Play as a team, win as a team. (John Fisken photo)

Play as a team, win as a team. (John Fisken photo)

The great unknown.

That’s where the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad was sailing this season.

For four seasons the Wolves always had #23 to rely on, and knowing Makana Stone was running the court alongside you (OK, almost always ahead of you … she’s fast) had to be a great comfort.

When she graduated and went off to play college ball, it was a major transitional moment.

Makana. Novi Barron. Brianne King. Lexie Black. Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby.

Those are arguably, in whatever order you want to put them today, the five greatest female hoops stars to ever wear a CHS uniform.

Yes, I know, Megan Smith, Sarah Mouw, Marlene Grasser, Ann Pettit, Amanda Allmer, Amy Mouw, Jen Canfield and Tina Lyness are also in the conversation, as are many others.

But those five — Stone, Barron, King, Lex and Ash — are my picks (for today, at least).

Losing one leaves a gaping hole in the program, and that’s what David and Amy King faced this season. Replacing the irreplaceable.

Barring a fully-formed Sarah Mouw suddenly showing up on your doorstep, ready to play her senior season in your cow town, it’s an impossible task.

So the Kings tinkered and cajoled, exhorted and drove, and got 13 players to realize that, while they couldn’t replace Makana on their own, they each could chip in with a valuable sliver of the pie.

And here they stand now, the 2016-2017 Wolf girls hoops squad, having matched last year’s Makana-led team by going 15-4 overall, 9-0 in Olympic League play.

With Klahowya, Chimacum and Port Townsend united in trying to overthrow the “Evil Empire,” every night was a test for Coupeville. And it responded.

And that’s why the team, and I put an emphasis on TEAM, is being inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame today, the sole member of the 84th class to enter these hallowed digital hallways.

Regardless of how they do in the postseason, these Wolves will forever be enshrined up at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

Because they have, almost without fail, accepted their roles.

Sacrificed where needed, risen up both as individual players and supportive teammates. Realized they are part of something bigger than just themselves.

Bought into “one team, one dream.”

We’re talking about 13 players here, 12 of whom are still with the team, and all of them are very intelligent, driven young women with their own hopes, desires and dreams.

Every player, in their heart, wants to be the “star.” Otherwise, why play?

To be successful as a basketball team, though, athletes have to sacrifice.

To sell out on defense every play, while others get the momentary buzz of scoring baskets.

To make the extra pass, set a screen like it’s life or death, accept constructive criticism from a coach, cheer on a teammate’s success even at a moment when you desperately wish it was you on the court, and not them.

Doing all that is harder than just shuffling off in a corner, pulling back within yourself and wallowing in self-pity.

But it’s also a thousand times more rewarding in the end.

I’m not in the locker room. I’m not in these players homes. I can only go on what I observe from the stands and what I hear.

And based on that, I believe a large part of this team’s success is precisely because 99% of the time, they have truly bought into “One Team, One Dream.”

It’s why they are where they are, a three-time league champ carrying a #1 seed into the playoffs. And it will be the key to any success they have at the next level, both as a team and individuals.

So, congratulations for all have you accomplished, and for the success that still lies ahead, Wolves.

A single player can shine in the moment, but to truly succeed, it takes a team.

Inducted together, as a TEAM:

David King (head coach)
Amy King (assistant coach)
Kyla Briscoe
Tiffany Briscoe
Mikayla Elfrank
Lauren Grove
Kailey Kellner
Charlotte Langille
Kalia Littlejohn
Mia Littlejohn
Lindsey Roberts
Lauren Rose
Ema Smith
Allison Wenzel
Sarah Wright
Skyler Lawrence
(manager)
Peytin Vondrak (manager)

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The man who makes the scoreboard do what she does, Mr. Joel Norris (top left), is joined by Wiley Hesselgrave, Samantha Roehl

   The man who makes the scoreboard do what it does, Joel Norris (top left), is joined by Wiley Hesselgrave, Steve Whitney’s title-winning shot and Samantha Roehl.

Shawn (Evrard) Christensen

   Shawn (Evrard) Christensen — center, bottom row, back in her cheer days, and, at right, modern-day.

Moments, big and small.

We’re covering all the bases today, as we celebrate the headline-makers and the behind-the-scenes moments which all come together to weave the tapestry that is Wolf Nation’s sports legacy.

As we open the doors to two athletic stars, a key contributor and two magnificent moments, we celebrate the 60th class to join the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Forever encased inside these hallowed digital walls now are Shawn (Evrard) Christensen, Wiley Hesselgrave, Joel Norris, Samantha Roehl’s sacrifice and Steve Whitney’s title-clinching jumper.

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

Our first inductee, the Ice Cream Man, is one of the often unsung warriors who make CHS sports run smoothly.

When he’s not doling out scoops (and stories) at Kapaw’s, Norris is the master of the scoreboard for Wolf football and basketball games.

Watch almost anyone else try to keep the board going (“BUT I PUSHED THE BUTTON SEVEN TIMES AND IT STILL WON’T WORK!!!!!”) and you’ll appreciate his nimble finger work even more.

But what pushes Norris from super-competent to awe-inspiring is his ability to lay down low-key verbal smack all game (while keeping his mouth just far enough away from Willie Smith’s mic to not be heard by the football crowd) and his joy in needling Seahawk fans.

Toss in his old-school dance moves (at least back before The Wobble was outlawed as a post-game song) and he’s more entertaining than most the games he works.

Whether camped out in the cramped former football press box (RIP, ramshackle, dead bee-filled hunk o’ junk) or tripping people as they try to sneak by on the basketball sideline, Norris is a joy to behold.

Joy could be the middle name of our second inductee, the former Miss Evrard.

Shawn, who joins sister-in-law Jodi Christensen in the Hall, exudes great bursts of radiant joy, something both of her daughters have inherited from their mom (and husband Billy, who’s pretty cheery himself.)

As a Wolf cheer captain, she was one of the best and brightest to ever soar under the tutelage of CHS coach Sylvia Arnold, and she did so at a time when Coupeville was a competition cheer squad.

From her days at Videoville and Miriam’s Espresso, where she was one of my favorite co-workers of all time, to today, Shawn has never changed where it matters most — at her core.

She was kind and caring, charging full-force into life with a brightness of spirit, regardless of conditions around her, from day one, and she’s still that way.

Both of her and Billy’s daughters reflect the inherent goodness of their parents, and are truly a testament to awesome parenting by a remarkable couple.

Everyone in the Hall o’ Fame left behind (or are still leaving) a mark on their school and community, but Shawn truly towers as a one-of-a-kind legend.

While Hesselgrave just departed CHS, having graduated in June, there’s no reason to wait for time to pass before induction.

For the past four years, Wiley was the best male athlete at CHS, a standout football and basketball player who bopped along to his own rhythm.

While others scrambled around to catch the attention of photographers, Hesselgrave just put his head down and kicked ass.

He was a rampaging wild man on the gridiron, doing whatever was asked of him, and doing it with a passion and conviction which was genuinely old-school.

That carried over to hoops, where he led the Wolves in scoring his last two seasons, getting a surprising amount of his buckets by putting his head down and bull-rushing the defense, daring anyone to stand up to being socked in the mouth by his shoulder.

And then, when his prep career was done, he simply walked away, ready to move on and pursue a business degree.

Hesselgrave is one of the most self-contained athletes I have covered in the last 26 years, and one of the few modern-day guys who genuinely played like he was from a different era.

It was refreshing to see, and I mean this as the highest compliment — the guy would have been successful in any decade, because his heart and drive are remarkable.

We wrap up our induction with two great moments from the past, one big as it happened, one that grows with time.

The obvious highlight came Feb. 9, 1979, when Steve Whitney hit a soft 16-foot jumper, off a pass from Keith Jameson, to lift the CHS boys hoops squad to a 55-53 win over King’s Garden.

The victory over the private school power — these days known simply as King’s — and their all-world freshman Joe Buchanan, clinched the Cascade League title for Coupeville.

The program’s fifth league title in the decade, it was the end of an era, even though no one knew it at the moment. It would take nearly 20 years before the Wolf boys’ hoops squad won another title in 1998.

Whitney’s bucket kicked off a wild postseason that saw the Wolves advance all the way to the state tourney, where they beat Montesano 62-51 in the middle of three games.

That win matched the 1975-1976 Wolves and remains one of only two times that a Coupeville boys’ hoops squad has won a game at the big dance.

The lesser-known moment came in 2003, with the CHS girls’ hoops team fighting for postseason success.

A year after going 23-5 and finishing 6th at state, the Wolves would finish the 2002-2003 campaign at 20-8, bringing home an 8th place state banner.

To get there, though, Coupeville had to pull out three wins in four games at tri-districts, including a victory in a game where they almost lost their #2 scorer, Amy Mouw.

A sliced finger soaked her jersey in blood, and despite the best bathroom-scrubbing efforts of CHS assistant coach Amy King, Mouw’s uniform refused to get clean enough for the star to come back into the game.

Enter Roehl, a role player who turned down the chance to enter the game herself, instead sacrificing her own uniform to get her teammate back on the floor.

With Mouw (now clad in a dry, blood-free jersey) rejoining fellow gunner Brianne King, the Wolves surged to a huge win, while forever making an impact on the coaches who saw it all play out.

Sammie was a good teammate,” Greg Oldham said.

Amy King has taken it further, using the moment as a teaching lesson throughout her career as a volleyball, softball and hoops coach.

“When I get a team that gets a little full of themselves, that starts to forget that everyone on the team truly matters, from the top of the rotation to the last body on the bench, I pull that story out,” she said. “It, to me, is what high school sports are supposed to be about.”

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When CHS hoops coach Amy King needs to teach a lesson...

When CHS hoops coach Amy King needs to teach a lesson about teamwork…

she tells the story of the time Amy Mouw helped the Wolves advance to state thanks to...

   she tells the story of the time Amy Mouw helped the Wolves advance to the state tourney thanks to…

Samantha Roehl.

an unexpected decision by her teammate, Samantha Roehl.

Amy King has seen a lot in 20 seasons as a high school coach.

But there’s one story she pulls out when times are tough, when teams are starting to fracture, when her players need to know the difference between being just an athlete and being a true teammate.

It comes from the 2002-2003 girls’ basketball season, when she was an assistant coach working with Greg Oldham at Coupeville High School.

The Wolves were coming off the best performance in program history, having gone 23-5 and finished 6th at state the previous year.

And while they had lost big weapons Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, Tracy Taylor and Sarah Mouw to graduation, they still had tons ‘o talent.

Brianne King, who still holds Coupeville’s career scoring record for girls (1,546 points) was heading into her senior season, and she was joined by Amy Mouw, Carly Guillory, Erica and Taniel Lamb, Vanessa Davis and a shot-blocking sophomore and future league MVP named Lexie Black.

The squad was so deep future college hoops player Brittany Black (admittedly just a freshman at the time) only saw action in 12 of 28 games.

The Wolves roared through the regular season at a 15-5 clip, finishing 8-2 in the Northwest A League, bested only by Archbishop Thomas Murphy twice.

Once they hit tri-districts, they got even hotter, winning three of four — losing only to the state’s #1-ranked team, King’s — then won two of four games at state (where they pushed eventual 1A champ Brewster to the wire), claiming 8th place.

But lost in the hubbub about a 20-8 record and another banner to hang on the wall was a small, but very important, moment at tri-districts.

Mouw, who was the team’s #2 scorer behind Brianne King, was helping to lead the Coupeville charge, until someone noticed she had blood all over her uniform — a big no-no in the days of heightened disease awareness.

“I remember the game and discovering during a timeout that I had blood all over,” Mouw said. “Amy King, Coach Oldham’s wife and I all ran down to the locker room and one of them washed out my jersey top and the other my shorts in the sinks trying to get the blood out while I tried to figure out where I was bleeding.

“Ended up just being a cut on my pinkie finger that bled like crazy.”

Despite the scrub-job, the blood wasn’t responding to the water and it looked like Mouw might be sidelined at a crucial moment.

At which point Samantha Roehl, who, in tribute to her last name, was a role player on a team full of stars, stepped up and did something few high school athletes would do.

She turned down the chance to replace Mouw on the floor and instead sacrificed her chance to play.

“She told us, she needs that uniform more than I do,” Amy King said. “And she immediately went and swapped out what Amy needed so she could return.”

“I do remember that pretty clearly and that’s about exactly what happened,” Roehl said. “They were going to put me in, but, because I hadn’t played in the game yet, technically my number hadn’t had any points or fouls against it, so I offered that they use my jersey for Amy so that she could keep playing with a fresh number.”

Oldham was caught up in the game at the time and missed most of the shuffle, but looking back now, he could see it happening.

Sammie was a good teammate,” he said.

For Amy King, who has since gone on to coach volleyball, softball and much more basketball at CHS, Roehl’s decision is one she has treasured.

“When I get a team that gets a little full of themselves, that starts to forget that everyone on the team truly matters, from the top of the rotation to the last body on the bench, I pull that story out,” she said. “It, to me, is what high school sports are supposed to be about.”

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