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Posts Tagged ‘Sid Otton’

Modern players like Tucker Hall are one part of the giant mosaic that is Coupeville athletics. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The calendar turns, and everyone looks back.

Some reflect on the past 12 months. Others on a decade about to end.

But hey, here at Coupeville Sports headquarters, where we have a lot more time on our hands, we’re going back a half century!

That’s right, mixing hubris and naivety, I am here to declare my opinion on 50 things which have defined Cow Town athletics across the last 50 years.

Technically, that’s 1970-2019, but with no one to reign me in, I’m slightly stretching it out to include the last few months of 1969.

Get to the end of this story and you’ll see why.

Athletes. Teams. Coaches. Moments. Changes, in the rule book and in society.

They’re all fair game, and I’m stupid enough to make my list and parade it in front of the world.

So, everyone click over to ALL CAPS and get ready to open fire.

We each have our own thoughts, and some will say I have certain things too high, or too low, or I focused too much on the modern era, or I’m just an idiot in general.

If so, let me know. Comment often, and as loudly as possible.

And away we go…

 

#50:

The creation and installation of the giant mural in the CHS gym.

No one seems to know who made it, or when it went up, but it looks back at me every time I camp in the stands at a game.

And my first and last thought — why does it look more like a sad coyote than a Wolf?

Sad Coyote, why do you haunt me so?

 

#49:

The 2019 Coupeville High School football team breaks a 13-year dry spell, finishing 5-4 to claim the program’s first winning record since 2005.

It was the longest active losing streak for any CHS program, covering a time period when the Wolves went through six coaches, from the end of Ron Bagby’s 26-year run to year two of the current Marcus Carr era.

A new day dawns.

 

#48:

CHS grad, and five-time state champ, Kyle King qualifies for the US Team Trials in the marathon.

Feb. 29, 2020, the former Wolf steps to the line in Atlanta, Georgia, one good race away from heading to Tokyo and the Olympics.

If he makes it, King joins Eldon Jenne, a pole vaulter in 1920, as the only athletes with a Coupeville connection to make it to the world’s biggest sporting stage.

 

#47:

The hiring of Cory Whitmore as CHS volleyball coach prior to the 2016 season.

Taking over a program a year removed from a one-win season, he has led the Wolves to 49 wins, back-to-back Olympic League titles followed by back-to-back second-place finishes (behind state power King’s) in the North Sound Conference, and a trip to state in 2017, the program’s first in 13 seasons.

 

#46:

Coupeville softball beats Oak Harbor 8-3 March 16, 2019.

One of the few times the Wolves, repping a 2B-sized school masquerading as 1A, have faced their 3A rivals straight-up in a varsity contest in any sport.

Presto, the Cow Town mashers won on the road, behind a mammoth home run from senior Veronica Crownover and electrifying pitching from freshman Izzy Wells.

 

#45:

Jon Chittim wins three titles at the 2006 state track and field meet.

Several other Wolves have gone to the top of the podium twice in one year, but only one has made the trip three times.

Chittim won the 200 and 400, while running a leg on Coupeville’s title-winning 4 x 400 relay unit, where he was joined by Kyle King, Chris Hutchinson, and Steven McDonald.

 

#44:

Mindy Horr and Taniel Lamb come within a set of toppling the private school aristocracy and winning a state title in tennis in 2005.

The Wolf duo claimed the first set 7-5 against Aimee Silver and Erica Lawrence of The Bush School, but fell 6-2, 6-3 after that.

The Blazers tandem went on to repeat as state champs in 2006, before Lawrence won a third title with a different partner in 2007.

In a sport dominated by private school players with access to indoor courts and personal coaches, Horr and Lamb’s run of success stands as a win for public schools everywhere.

Mindy Horr (left) and Taniel Lamb

 

#43:

Coupeville spiffs up Mickey Clark Field, adding a new track oval in 2016, followed by covered stands a year later.

As the old track broke down during its 35-year run, CHS lost the ability to host home track meets around 2008, while Wolf fans endured countless years of being buffeted by rain and wind in a variety of open-air bleachers.

No more, I say, no more.

 

#42:

Mia Littlejohn and Derek Leyva set CHS soccer single-season scoring records.

The former netted 27 goals in 2016, the latter 24 during the 2018 season, and Littlejohn’s record truly towers above the competition.

While Abraham Leyva tallied 20 goals in 2016, only two other Wolf girls (Kalia Littlejohn – 10 in 2015 and 15 in ’17 and Genna Wright – 10 in ’17) have ever broken double-digits.

 

#41:

CHS boys basketball coach Mick Vivian relieved of duties during the 1979-1980 season, during a time period when he was arrested and charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor for an alleged incident with a female student.

He was found not guilty during a trial, but never reclaimed his job after considerable protests from both sides.

The man who led the Wolves to a Cascade League title and a state tourney appearance in ’78-’79 never coached again, working as a delivery truck driver and process server in Mount Vernon until his death in 2006.

 

#40:

Lauren Rose rips off a service run like none I’ve seen.

During a straight-sets sweep of visiting Chimacum, the Wolf junior wins 20 straight points on her serve to open the third set.

The Keebler Elf abides.

 

#39:

Kyle Rockwell gets legendary.

The Wolf big man, who has been blind in one eye since childhood, caps his senior year by making huge, season-defining plays in football and basketball, before unleashing the throw heard cross the prairie to help CHS win the 2018 baseball pennant.

You can read about it here: https://coupevillesports.com/2018/04/23/magic-on-the-prairie/

 

#38:

CHS hits the jackpot with two foreign exchange winners.

There has been a long history of visiting students from other countries playing for the Wolves, but a pair of one-season wonders stand way above the crowd.

Linde Maertens set numerous game and season records during the 2008 volleyball season, and even made local refs review the rules book after she used her legs, and not just her arms, to propel the ball over the net for points.

Spoiler alert: it’s legal.

Jump forward to 2010 and move to the tennis court, and Julia Sierra Castaño, the “Hard Court Assassin of Oviedo” didn’t drop a set at #1 singles until sub-districts, then tacked on a long run at the state tourney.

 

#37:

CHS volleyball pulls off a “birthday win” against archrival South Whidbey on the Falcons home court in 2018.

After the five-set win, every statistical breakdown was virtually dead-even, but the match was decided by the length of Emma Smith’s fingertips, as the Wolf captain celebrated turning 18 with the best performance of her stellar career.

You can read about it at: https://coupevillesports.com/2018/09/26/there-can-only-be-one/

Wolf spikers (l to r) Maya Toomey-Stout, Emma Smith, and Hannah Davidson came up big in a rivalry win. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

#36:

After much back-and-forth, some of it quite bitter, a combined girls soccer program is instituted between Oak Harbor and Coupeville in mid-1993.

With the two best players — leading scorer Marnie Bartelson and goaltender Amanda Allmer — being from CHS, the Wildcats claim 4th place at the 3A state tourney in 1994.

Years later, who can lay claim to the legacy of the program is still in dispute, as OHHS officials of the time say Coupeville never paid its full share.

The Wolves response? You never would have won diddly without our stars.

Either way, CHS launches its own soccer program in 2004.

 

#35:

Ben Etzell tabbed as 1A/2A Cascade Conference MVP for the 2014 baseball season.

Coupeville’s time in the league, when it faced-off with private school juggernauts Archbishop Thomas Murphy and King’s, and much-larger foes such as Lakewood and Cedarcrest, was often rough.

But Etzell, a double threat as a fastball-snappin’ pitcher and big-game hitter, was the lone Wolf to earn the league’s top honor, in any sport.

 

#34:

Making King’s cry, twice.

With the exception of University Prep tennis and its free pastries, I live to see private schools toppled, so this spot is a bit of a cheat, honoring two shots taken nearly 30 years apart.

But, like I said, they both made King’s cry, so we’re good.

The first comes February 9, 1979, when Steve Whitney hits a soft 16-foot jumper, off a pass from Keith Jameson, to lift the CHS boys hoops squad to a 55-53 win.

The second is a buzzer-beating three-ball banked home at the end of overtime by Kassie Lawson January 18, 2008, ensuring a 33-32 win.

Whitney’s shot gave CHS a league title, while Lawson’s bomb clinched a #1 playoff seed.

Plus, King’s cried.

 

#33:

CJ Smith pitches the CHS baseball team to the 2016 Olympic League crown, the first title in 25 seasons for the program.

You can read about the pennant-clinching win here: https://coupevillesports.com/2016/04/29/destiny-called-wolves-answered/

 

#32:

“The Torpedo” goes viral on the gridiron in 2018, with a little help from a furry friend.

Fielding a punt against King’s, Sean Toomey-Stout takes it to the house, with a wayward deer leading his blockers the length of the field.

Next thing you know, video of the play is everywhere from ESPN to CNN to the BBC, and, for a moment, Cow Town is the talk of the sports world.

 

#31:

Unlike other schools, CHS doesn’t have a real Hall of Fame, and it’s never been especially big on holding milestone celebrations.

That changed, at least for a night, Jan. 20, 2018, when, in the biggest thing Coupeville Sports has accomplished, the Wolves celebrated the 101st anniversary of boys basketball at the school.

The current Wolves destroyed Chimacum, while the stands were crammed, as virtually every major star in program history reunited.

The 1969-1970 team, which still holds every school record, was the centerpiece of the celebration, and when coach Bob Barker stepped into the gym, wearing the same jacket he wore on the Wolf bench, it was the closest I will ever come to knowing what it was like when Elvis entered the arena.

Legendary CHS basketball coach Bob Barker embraces one of his best players, Foster Faris. (Renae Mulholland photo)

 

#30:

Washington state institutes pitch count rules for high school baseball in 2017, preaching player safety and 99.99% guaranteeing no Wolf will ever touch Bob Rea’s school strikeout record.

Hucking the ball back in the Wild West days of 1964, a guy who built his arm strength throwing rocks on Whidbey beaches whiffed 27 batters across 16 innings in a 2-1 win at Darrington.

Never say never, but yeah, no modern-day Wolf will ever topple the mark.

 

#29:

After a two-decade-plus absence, cross country returns to CHS.

Tyler King won a state title in 2010, running as a lone Wolf while training and traveling with Oak Harbor, but a program which was very successful in the ’70s and ’80s finally is reborn inside the school in 2018.

Now, in two short seasons, coaches Natasha Bamberger (a CHS harrier state champ in ’85) and Luke Samford have numbers cresting upward, and have already sent one runner, Catherine Lhamon, to state.

 

#28:

The Central Whidbey Soccer Club debuts in 1976.

Still going strong, it has produced hundreds (thousands?) of players, while fueling a love for the sport in those children.

As any long-time reader knows, I’m still a work in progress when it comes to soccer. But the more I learn about the sport’s intricacies, the greater my appreciation.

CWSC, your work is being rewarded.

 

#27:

The day the music died.

Oct. 23, 2012, the celebration ended, after CHS officials brought an end to Wolf cheerleaders leading fans and players in a post-football game dance set to the Cab Calloway-influenced rap song “Wobble” by Atlanta’s own V.I.C.

One fan complaint, over semi-suggestive lyrics, brought the good times to an end, and CHS clock operator Joel Norris has never been the same since.

 

#26:

Mikayla Elfrank is a beast.

She made a career out of pulling off big plays, but her biggest moment came in 2017 when she smashed out-of-the-park softball home runs on consecutive pitches against Sequim, in games eight days apart in different towns.

After launching a moon shot in Coupeville, right before lightning ended play, Elfrank picked things right back up on the road.

Jumping on the very first pitch she saw, the Wolf slugger launched a ball over the center field fence in Sequim, denting a carnival ride, and earning free ice cream from the rival coach in the process.

 

#25:

That time when we got to hire a genuine, Grade-A big-timer.

Paul Mendes never toots his own horn, but as his unsanctioned PR man, I can tell you, when CHS landed him as a Spanish teacher and boys soccer coach, man, did they score.

A Brazilian who played alongside Pele, he was a four-year letterman and three-time All-Conference booter at the University of Washington, before being drafted by the Seattle Sounders in 1977.

Complications from a broken leg sent him into coaching, where he was an assistant on two national title teams at Seattle Pacific University, before a 24-year run at Newport High School which included two state titles.

In his eight years in charge of the Wolves, which ended in 2013, Mendes led them to state three times and was the epitome of class.

 

#24:

Lexie Black blocks 10 shots March 4, 2005, as the CHS girls basketball team beats Zillah 45-41 at the state tourney.

It’s a 1A state record, and, little known fact, when I went to launch this blog in 2012, I almost called it “Lexie Black’s Block Party” in honor of my former Videoville co-worker.

Lexie agreed to the use of her name, but told me she didn’t think people would get it (she was probably right), so we settled on the more mainstream Coupeville Sports.

The woman, the myth, the legend … Lexie Black. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

 

#23:

Maybe the biggest walk-off play in CHS history goes down in 2011, as Ian Smith banks in a buzzer-beater to send the Wolf boys basketball team to a win at South Whidbey.

The Falcons were sitting atop the Cascade Conference at the time, carrying a 10-game winning streak, and looking invincible.

The video decrees otherwise:

 

#22:

Wolves on the big stage.

CHS girls basketball won six games at the state tourney in three appearances across four seasons between 2001-2005, returning home with three trophies.

All three teams won twice in their trek to the big dance, but the 2001-2002 squad advanced the furthest, reaching the state semifinals after beating Onalaska and Overlake in their first two games.

The joy ride ended with a loss to eventual state champ Colfax, then another to Brewster, but that 6th place finish remains the best in program history.

 

#21:

The impossible becomes possible.

Down eight points with 58 seconds to go December 13, 2014, the CHS girls basketball team pulls off a stunning rally.

A sensational defensive play by Makana Stone gives the Wolves an unexpected final chance, and Kacie Kiel converts, hitting a three-ball from the corner to force OT.

Once in the extra frame, the Wolves hold 2A Sequim scoreless for five minutes, winning 42-39.

 

#20:

The deaths of Tom Roehl (2003) and Kim Meche (2013), two of the most-influential coaches in Coupeville history.

The former was a longtime CHS football assistant coach who also ran a youth basketball program which produced the players who made the ’90s a stellar decade for Wolf hoops.

The latter was a super-successful high school volleyball coach at Oak Harbor and Coupeville who inspired many, both on the court and through her off-court fight with cancer.

Both live on through the countless lives they impacted.

 

#19:

Brianne King sets the school scoring record in basketball between 1999-2003.

Pouring in 1,549 points across four seasons, the Wolf gunner sits 279 points ahead of runner-up Novi Barron (1,270), and 412 up on the highest-scoring CHS boys (Jeff Stone and Mike Bagby, tied with 1,137).

 

#18:

Maddie Big Time at her best, during the 2013-2014 season.

CHS girls basketball star Madeline Strasburg steals the ball, whirls and banks in a three-pointer from the left side at half-court as the third quarter buzzer sounds.

Two weeks later, Wolves return from Christmas break, and she does the same thing.

Same spot, same moment, same shot, back-to-back games, 17 days apart.

Un-freakin’-believable.

 

#17:

A Homecoming miracle.

CHS football scores three fourth-quarter touchdowns, then picks off a Hail Mary in the end zone at the final buzzer, turning a 21-6 deficit into a 25-21 win over Foster October 30, 1992.

 

#16:

Joe Whitney wins a state basketball title, plays alongside John Stockton at Gonzaga, then averages 21 points and 11 rebounds a night across seven seasons in Germany’s top pro league.

After leaving Coupeville…

The man who could have been the best Wolf boys hoops scorer of all time tallied 213 points in ’78-79 (brother Steve went off for 337 as a senior), then dropped 388 in ’79-’80.

In ’80-’81, he landed in Lynden, leading the Lions to a 27-0 mark, while Coupeville struggled through a one-win season without him.

 

#15:

Birth of the bomb.

The three-point shot was added to high school basketball for the 1987-1988 season, and the sport has never been the same.

There was a mini-boom in the ’90s and early 2000’s, a time when current CHS boys hoops coach Brad Sherman was the King of the Trey, but now, thanks to the NBA’s love of the three-ball, every team shoots it with wild abandon.

When modern-day gunners like Hawthorne Wolfe or Mason Grove or former Wolf Kailey Kellner are droppin’ daggers, it’s exciting and game-changing.

It’s also created a generation of middle schoolers who can launch (but not always hit) treys all day, but can’t hit a layup or free throw to save their lives.

 

#14:

A landmark win.

Guided by coaches Willie and Cherie Smith, the 1999-2000 CHS girls basketball team rallies to beat Freeman 46-42 Mar. 2, 2000.

Jaime Rasmussen hits the game-sealing free throws, and it’s the first time a Wolf girls team, in any sport, wins a game at a state tourney.

 

#13:

The Field of Dreams debuts.

CHS football hosts Sultan September 19, 1975 in the very-first contest played at the school’s new athletic field, which is dedicated for Mickey Clark.

Here we are, 44 years later, and football (plus soccer and track and field) are still going strong, while the school keeps alive the memory of a man who gave decades of service to Coupeville athletics, as a coach, ref, volunteer, and administrator.

 

#12:

A gridiron career like no other.

His own teammates sometimes dreaded facing him in practice, as Ian Barron, who played from 1997-2000, “hit us so dang hard.”

Despite missing a full season’s worth of games due to injuries (three in one year, seven another), he holds every rushing record in CHS football history.

That’s 320 yards and six touchdowns in a single game, 1,753 and 16 in a season, and 4,713 and 37 in a (shortened) career.

 

#11:

The trio arrives.

Coaches have come and gone at CHS, some staying for a hot moment, others for decades, but I think you have to give special notice to three who came to town in the mid-’80s to mid-’90s and remain at the school.

Ron Bagby showed up first, leaving Forks behind, then Randy King departed Cashmere, before Willie Smith bid adieu to Sequim.

The first and third have been Athletic Directors at CHS, while the middle guy is the dean of area coaches.

All put in long, memorable runs as the head of key programs – football and boys basketball, boys basketball and track, and girls basketball and baseball, respectively.

All three gave the school multiple sons and daughters who have been among the best athletes in school history.

And all three remain deeply interwoven into Wolf sports in 2019.

That’s true whether it’s Smith as the AD, King guiding the track program, or Bagby enjoying being a laid-back living legend, doling out wisdom to young punks who probably have no idea their gym coach was on his way to being a professional football player when an injury redirected him to Whidbey Island.

They are the trinity, the cornerstone of Wolf Nation, three guys who probably never thought they’d wind up in Cow Town, but once here, helped transform it for the better.

Clockwise, from left, Willie Smith, Randy King and Ron Bagby.

 

#10:

Toni Crebbin is the boss.

As far as I can tell, only one CHS team, in any sport, has ever been ranked #1 by a major state-wide poll, and it’s Crebbin’s 2004 volleyball team.

Those Wolves opened 10-0, won the Lopez Island Tournament, toppled top-ranked Bush to win districts, and made a stirring run at the state tourney, finishing with a program-record 14 wins.

It was a very good year.

Toni Crebbin

 

#9:

The biggest, boldest run at a state tourney ever.

The 2002 CHS softball team, playing fast-pitch for the first time, went 24-3, including winning four of five at the big dance, claiming 3rd place.

Led by fastball flingin’ hurler Sarah Mouw, best pitcher in program history, and diamond legends like Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, Tracy Taylor, and Erica Lamb, the Wolves only losses were to archrival ATM and eventual state champ Adna.

I’m missing stats from three games, but in the other 24, Coupeville outscored foes 247-80.

 

#8:

The team of destiny.

The 2010 Central Whidbey Little League Juniors (13-14) baseball squad overcame a gut-wrenching loss, then stormed from behind in the championship game to win a state title.

Three runs down with three outs to go, the Wolves made coach Chris Tumblin proud, rallying to force extra innings, before Aaron Trumbull plated Jake Tumblin with a title-winning RBI base-knock.

Facing teams which were true all-star squads, having combined multiple teams to form a roster, Coupeville went the distance with the same 13 players all season.

Eight of those Wolves would go on to play a full four years of baseball at CHS, and all 13 received a diploma from the school.

13 players. 1 dream. Forever the champs.

 

#7:

Jeff Fielding and Natasha Bamberger win the first state titles in CHS history.

Both do it as distance runners in track, with Fielding claiming the 3200 title in 1979, followed by Bamberger pulling off a double win in the 1600 and 3200 in 1984.

There have been nine state champs to wear the red and black, with Bamberger and Tyler King the only ones to achieve the feat in multiple sports, having won track and cross country crowns.

 

#6:

Makana Stone wins the first 28 races of her high school career.

No one else in CHS history has come remotely close to achieving what she did as a freshman in spring 2013 across a time period from March 21 to April 26.

Stone hit the tape first in the 100 (six times), 200 (five), 400 (four), 4 x 100 (three), 4 x 200 (five), and 4 x 400 (five), and it wasn’t until the epic Lake Washington Invitational that she trailed a high school rival.

In that mega-meet, facing off with runners from 2A, 3A, and 4A, to go along with her normal 1A rivals, Stone didn’t win, but still hit a season-best in the 400 and what would remain a PR in the 100.

Three years later, she would depart the Wolf track program as one of its most-decorated runners, with 84 wins and seven state meet medals.

 

#5:

One year of perfection.

The CHS football program only has two league titles to its credit, in 1974 and 1990, with the latter one going a flawless 9-0 under the guidance of Ron Bagby.

The Wolves were knocked out of the playoffs by Rainier, dropping a state quarterfinal bout at home on a very windy day, but the loss can’t dim the glow from that season.

Coupeville, with a stable full of big, battering running backs, and the steady arm of QB Jason McFadyen, outscored foes 258-107, achieving the kind of greatness the Wolf program hasn’t witnessed again over the next three decades.

Former Wolf QB Jason McFadyen works on plays during a practice in 1990.

 

#4:

Sylvia Arnold is the only coach in CHS history to bring home a team state title.

There are some who will argue over whether cheer is a sport or an activity, but I stand firmly on the side which decrees competitive cheer is a sport. So there.

Arnold’s 2006 squad emerged from the state meet with the biggest trophy, then she came dangerously close to going back-to-back in ’07, with the Wolves claiming 2nd place.

Even bigger than her state title? The impact she had over a 20-year run as Wolf coach, some of which I get across in this piece: https://coupevillesports.com/2013/10/31/miss-sylvia-walks-away-part-1-thank-you/

 

#3:

It’s the biggest what-if in Coupeville athletic history.

After beginning his high school coaching career with two years of football and baseball on Whidbey, Sid Otton left CHS after leading the Wolf baseball squad to a league crown in spring ’69.

Why is this important?

Because Otton, after taking a year off, moved on to coach Colfax football through four seasons and one state title, then Tumwater for 43 and five.

When he retired, he walked away with 394 gridiron wins, the most in state history, having taken Tumwater from an also-ran into one of the most-respected football programs in the country.

Otton was also my 9th grade health teacher at Tumwater (long before I knew what a Coupeville was), and I once whacked an overhead off of his son Brad’s face during tennis practice, the most-dramatic shot I hit in my middling prep net career.

So, what happens if he stays on Whidbey?

Does his system, full of NGUNNGU and GATA and ROTA, turn the Wolves into a state football power? Does CHS become the school which erects a statue to Otton out in front of their stadium, and not Tumwater?

And, if his sons don’t grow up as T-Birds, whose face is in Brad’s place that afternoon on the court, ready to catch the fury of my sizzlin’, if misdirected, overhead?!?

Darryl Pfaff, you could have been mine!

 

#2:

From rule changes to the length of shorts — basketball in 2019 isn’t the same it was in 1969.

And yet, all the three-balls in the world haven’t helped anyone match what the CHS boys hoops squad achieved 50 years ago.

Rampaging through a 20-4 season, the Wolves set three marks which haven’t been touched in five decades.

Jeff Stone, who would go on to be a college star before coming back around as a longtime teacher, coach, and administrator in Oak Harbor, tossed in 644 points during the 69-70 season, with a 48-point performance the night Coupeville won the district title.

He and his teammates toasted the nets for 1,836 points, outscoring their foes by an average of 76.5-48.1 that season.

The first Whidbey Island hoops team to win a district title, those 69-70 Wolves kick-started a basketball revolution, and the ’70s remains the best decade in program history.

Great stars like Randy Keefe, Jeff Rhubottom, and Bill Jarrell followed in the footsteps of Stone, Corey Cross and Co., with CHS making return visits to state in ’75, ’76, and ’79.

But here we are, 50 years later, and no one has matched the originals. That’s sort of amazing.

Jeff Stone torches the nets.

 

#1:

Title IX changed the playing field.

Whether we start in late ’69, or Jan. 1, 1970 for this story, one thing remains constant — Coupeville girls were denied the same opportunity as their male classmates for decades.

Later renamed the Patsy T. Mink Equal Opportunity in Education Act, in honor of the Congresswoman who made it a reality, Title IX passed in 1972, and the first CHS girls basketball team began play in 1974.

Even then, the Wolves were denied a chance to practice in the school’s gym like the boys, and were instead sent to Fort Casey for years.

Scoring stats for that 1974-1975 Wolf girls team?

I can’t tell you because Wallie Funk, the Whidbey News-Times Sports Editor of the day, wrote ONE PARAGRAPH about the squad all season.

Over time, things changed, in some areas quicker than others.

Jim Waller replaced Funk at the WNT sports desk, and reported on all the teams, early stars made names for themselves, such as Marie Grasser (now the same Mrs. Bagby current CHS students see each day), and the seeds were planted.

And how they have grown.

CHS boys have had athletic teams since the birth of the school in 1900, and yet, despite giving up 70+ years, it’s the Wolf girls who have the most league titles.

36-32.

Look it up.

Title IX opened doors for Marie (Grasser) Bagby in the ’70s …

and her spiritual heirs, like Chelsea Prescott, continue to seize the day.

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Coupeville Sports readers searched for a lot of things in 2016. Coming in at #4? CHS cheerleader Kiara Burdge. (John Fisken photo)

   Senior cheerleader Kiara Burdge was the most-searched athlete on Coupeville Sports this year. (John Fisken photos)

3rd

   Football fans celebrate Coupeville’s season-opening win over visiting South Whidbey in the #3 most-viewed photo of 2016.

Every day’s a surprise.

There are times when I’m sure a story will be well-read, and others when I think there was probably no reason to bother publishing what I just did, cause no one cares.

Both times, I’m usually wrong.

Case in point, the 6th most-read story here on Coupeville Sports in 2016 — https://coupevillesports.com/2016/12/09/it-makes-snow-sense/ — was a quickly tossed-off piece about snow cancelling a basketball game.

At the moment it was written I viewed it as little more than a quick public announcement, a way to alert local fans that the Wolf girls’ hoops team would not be in action that night as expected.

Imagine my surprise when the story started to spike almost immediately. Then really spike, then hit a completely unexpected level.

It made no sense. It was a nothing story.

At the time, I wrote it off as one of the quirks of having my work on WordPress.

From time to time, there are weird, brief, intense spikes that seem to have nothing to do with my actual readership.

Finally, maybe 6-8 hours down the road, it began to surface that Klahowya fans, having read that innocuous story, as well as some snarky side comments on Facebook and Twitter, were driving the readership spike on this particular story.

While Coupeville fans had shrugged and gone about their business, Eagle Nation had gotten its collective underwear into an epic twist, deciding I basically wanted to strap their daughters into a bus and send them to a fiery death over a snowy embankment.

As someone who has poked fan bases before (South Whidbey, ATM, King’s, the mouth-breathers in Sultan), I usually know when people are gonna get peeved.

This one, I did not see coming.

And frankly, still think is a fairly large pile of steamin’ crapola.

Having dissected that (very thin) story 100 different ways, I still fail to see how anyone with more than a fourth grade education sees anything offensive in THAT STORY.

But, ultimately, who am I to complain? Klahowya’s lack of reading comprehension/sense of humor brought in a fair amount of page views.

What else attracted eyeballs in 2016?

With eight days left, here are the top five most-viewed articles on Coupeville Sports:

Who wants it more?!?!

Come together for John Tristao!!

Brothers brew up new biz!!

Let’s burn a bridge or two…

The legend walks away!!

As you know, #6 is a snow job, while #7, #8 and #10 documented the ongoing issues in the CHS cheer world and #9 — https://coupevillesports.com/2016/09/03/the-bucket-is-back/ — celebrated Coupeville thumping South Whidbey on the gridiron.

What will pop in 2017? As proven this year, I have no idea.

Though I am pretty sure I will tick off at least one rival school next year, maybe more. Maybe even on purpose this time.

That seems to be a given.

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Sid Otton

   Sid Otton (center, back row), who started his career in Coupeville, is headed into his 49th and final season as a high school head football coach. (Photo property of Jamie Dowers/Tumwater High School Football)

The most successful coach to ever call Coupeville High School home is bringing an end to his legendary career.

Sid Otton, the winningest high school football coach in Washington state history, announced the coming season, his 49th in the game, will be his final one.

While most of his 384 wins, and five of his six state titles, have come at Tumwater (where he was my 9th grade health teacher), Otton’s first win came on Whidbey.

He got his start at Coupeville in 1967, where he coached the Wolf gridiron squad for two seasons.

During that time, he was also the baseball coach, leading CHS to a Northwest B League title in the spring of 1969.

After taking a year off to go back to college, Otton coached Colfax for four seasons, where his undefeated 1971 squad was tabbed by the Associated Press as state champs.

Back then, there were no postseason games.

After that, he moved to Tumwater, where he has been at the helm of the T-Birds since 1974, winning state titles in 1987, 1989, 1990, 1993 and 2010.

During his run as a football coach, Otton is 384-129, with six state titles, three second-place finishes, 25 league titles, 26 trips to state, three perfect seasons and 15 one-loss seasons.

He coached two sons (Tim and future USC quarterback Brad, who I once nailed in the face with a tennis ball during practice, the highlight of my prep net career) and several grandsons.

Otton is also, not that he probably cares, in the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

The end of the upcoming season will mark a huge change for Tumwater football, as Otton’s two longest-tenured assistants, Pat Alexander and Steve Shoun (my accounting teacher back in the day) will also retire.

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James Smith (top, left) is joined by fellow inductees (clockwise) Chris Hutchinson, Jon Chittim, Kyle King, Steven McDonald and Sid Otton.

   James Smith (top, left) is joined by fellow inductees (clockwise) Chris Hutchinson, Jon Chittim, Kyle King, Steven McDonald and Sid Otton.

Record-setters, one all all.

The six guys who comprise the 45th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame operated (and still do) at the highest levels of their sports.

Whether working as an individual, a team, or the commander of a dynasty, all of them have set standards which will be hard to surpass.

So, with that, we welcome James Smith, Sid Otton and the only CHS relay team to ever win a state title — the 2006 boys’ 4 x 400 unit of Chris Hutchinson, Jon Chittim, Kyle King and Steven McDonald.

After this, you’ll find them sitting atop the blog under the Legends tab.

Which is hardly a surprise.

Our first inductee, Otton, is the most famous of the bunch, and, admittedly, a large part of his success has come post-Coupeville.

But he started as a Wolf, and we’re claiming him.

Fresh on the job market, the former college football star landed his first coaching gig in Cow Town, where he ran the CHS football and baseball programs for two seasons.

While he was on Whidbey, he led the 1969 Wolf baseball squad to a Northwest B League title and the future was promising.

Then Wolf Nation lost Otton and he went and got all legendary at a couple of other stops on the road, most famously Tumwater, where he’s been the head football coach for 42 seasons and counting.

As well as being my 9th grade health teacher. Which was probably harder than all of his football seasons combined.

The winningest high school gridiron guru in state history, with 384 victories and five state titles, he’ll take the field for his 50th season overall this fall.

Before he does so, we’re giving him one more honor, while trying to ignore the age-old questions of “What if he hadn’t left? What if he had stayed in Coupeville? What if we were a dynasty?!?!”

As you all ponder that, we’ll skip on to our second inductee, which comes four men strong.

King won four individual state titles during his time at CHS (his five titles total ties Natasha Bamberger for most in school history) and Chittim snagged two, but they go in today with their oval brothers.

In 116 years of Coupeville High School history, only one time has a Wolf track relay unit stood astride the winner’s podium at the final meet of the season, and that foursome celebrates the 10-year anniversary of their accomplishment later this month.

On May 25-27 of 2006, the Wolves were darn near unstoppable, winning three individual state titles (Chittim in the 200 and 400 and King in the 3200), finishing a school-record fourth in the team standings.

In the premier relay event, Coupeville blasted all of their rivals, coasting to first in the prelims before savaging Goldendale, Charles Wright and a bunch of much-slower squads in the finale.

As the current girls 4 x 200 unit of Lauren Grove, Lindsey Roberts, Makana Stone and Sylvia Hurlburt aim to make their own history (they’re ranked #1 in 1A heading into the postseason), it’s a perfect time to bow in the direction of the original relay gods, who made the entire state Bow Down to Cow Town.

And then we reach our final inductee this week, a coach’s son (both mom Cherie and dad Willie) who joins his siblings in the hall.

James, like Megan and Ian, was a rock for the Wolves, a talented, hard-working athlete who excelled at every single sport that came his way.

A two-time CHS Male Athlete of the Year (2006-2007 and 2007-2008), Smith copped a ton of honors for his work on the gridiron, hard-court and diamond while operating as a captain in multiple years for all three of his sports.

Which was his strongest sport? It’s a toss-up.

Smith was tabbed as an All-League shortstop all four seasons, the first two in the 1A Northwest League, the last two in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference.

Toss in two All-League selections in basketball and three in football, where he was honored on both sides of the ball and was the First-Team QB in the Cascade Conference his senior season, and it’s an impressive body of work.

If I had to call it, I’d lean towards baseball, I guess.

It’s where he played under the watchful eye (and threat of wedgies) from a coach who he called dad away from the diamond, and he mixed power with panache.

But what the heck, if we have a time machine and need a win in any of those sports, I’m super-confident if I see James striding out there, huge grin in place, ready to kick tushie and take names.

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Jim Hosek

   Jim Hosek, the most successful baseball coach in Coupeville High School history. (Clipping courtesy Keith Jameson)

What if?

Today’s tale is of three coaches, one from each of the three primary boys sports, who all, at one point, were employed by Coupeville High School.

As I start to plow through the athletic history of CHS, one is left to wonder how many more championships the school might own if one, two, or all three of these men had NOT left Cow Town.

We start with the biggie.

Sid Otton came to Coupeville straight from college (he was the first All-American selection in Weber State history while holding the line at tackle), after a brief tango with two NFL teams.

While on Whidbey, the young upstart was the school’s football and baseball coach for two seasons, winning the 1969 Northwest B League title on the diamond.

And then we lost him to different pastures.

Two years getting a Master’s degree at Utah State, a four-year run as head football coach at Colfax (and an unofficial state title in ’71), and then Otton settled down with his family in Tumwater.

From that point on, he got historic.

Now 42 years into the job as T-Bird head coach (with most of the same assistant coaches the whole way), Otton is the winningest high school football coach in state history — by a lot — and has raised six state title banners.

He also suffered through a semester with me, when I was a THS freshman taking health.

The class he taught in was in a room inside the bottom of the school’s football stadium, a place with no windows where time stood still.

Entombed in cement, we ventured out at the end of class every day pretty dang sure nuclear disaster had torn the Earth apart and we would be the only survivors walking into a desolate, “Mad Max” world.

Then we would see the sun again and cry tears of joy, until the next time.

Winning football games was nothing compared to putting up with a pack of 14-year-olds going stir crazy, I’m tell you what.

Now, Coupeville has had some decent coaches after Otton, with Ron Bagby putting in a strong 26-year run.

But, what it?

What if Otton stays, and the NGUNNGU (Never Give Up, Never Never Give Up) flags fly in Coupeville? What if I don’t meet him in high school, but instead as a young reporter after the move to Whidbey?

What if the Wolves had six state titles? What if the prairie was where the premier gridiron program in the state lived?

What if?

And then we move to Jim Hosek, a much-loved teacher and coach who didn’t leave the Island, but was forced into leaving his role of shepherding the Wolves.

During his six-year run as head baseball coach at CHS (1973-1978), Hosek won 103 games, five straight league titles and four district crowns.

Year after year the Wolves were either in the state tourney or on the cusp of it, and then it ended when Hosek resigned as a teacher to focus on his family’s novelty business.

He offered to remain on as the school’s baseball coach, but the school board of the time was fairly strict about wanting teachers as coaches and went in a different direction.

Fun fact: today, in 2016, eight of the 11 head coaching positions at CHS are currently filled by men and women who are not teachers at the school.

Only Randy King (track), Brett Smedley (football) and Kyle Nelson (boys soccer) would fit the old guidelines.

In ’78, though, the school went away from their hardball guru, and he ended up going on to excel as a coach at Skagit Valley College.

Again, the Wolves have done OK since his departure — Willie Smith had an especially strong run — but, what if?

What if the man who had built the start of a dynasty had been given the chance to complete the job?

What if Wolf baseball continued to rampage under Hosek, piling up more titles, more (non-existent) banners, maybe even finish the job of winning a state title or two?

What if?

Our last man in this trio is a bit of a mystery.

Archie Mick Vivian was the boys’ basketball coach for less than three full seasons, but the Wolves flew high during his time at the helm.

In his second campaign (’78’-’79), Coupeville upended King’s for the Cascade A League title, then became one of just two Wolf boys hoops team to ever win a game at the state tourney.

But, during his third season, as injuries and the death of a key player’s father ripped apart his squad, Vivian was forced to suddenly step down.

The newspaper reports at the time are vague, hinting that it had to do with an alleged incident with a female student who he gave a ride home, then nothing more is to be found.

Vivian’s players, now in their early ’50s, stand by their coach, calling him one of the best they ever played for, and believe he was exonerated shortly afterwards.

After his time at Coupeville, he taught English in Mount Vernon, drove a delivery truck and worked as a process server until he passed away in 2006.

In an online tribute story I found, he is remembered as one of the greatest athletes to ever come out of Kalama, and remains, to this day, the only guard in Washington state prep basketball history to play in four consecutive state title games.

The story lists no other coaching jobs for Vivian after his time at CHS.

I wasn’t on Whidbey in the late ’70s. I can’t claim to know the whole story about Vivian’s departure.

What I do know is this. Sports fans are a curious lot.

Give us a hint of what a coach could do, of what a coach might have been, and you can’t help but wonder.

What if Vivian had stayed in Coupeville and continued to build on his strong start?

Wolf boys’ basketball has only made it back to state one time in the 36 years since his departure. Would that have changed if he had remained?

You can’t help but wonder, the same as we do with Otton and Hosek.

What if?

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