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Mitchell Carroll (left) and Nick Dion celebrate a state title in Science Olympiad.

Best in the biz.

Coupeville High School seniors Nick Dion and Mitchell Carroll beat competitors from 21 other schools Saturday to claim a title in Robot Arm at the Science Olympiad state championships.

The duo also finished fourth in Electric Vehicle, while teammates Josh Robinson and Luke Carlson claimed third place in Write It, Do It.

Sparked by their three top-five finishes, the Wolves finished 18th as a team, one spot better than they did in 2015, their last trip to state.

Camas won the team title.

Nationals are in Dayton, Ohio in May, but the season is done for Coupeville, as only the top teams, and not individual winners, advance to the big dance.

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"How do you like them apples, experts?" (John Fisken photo)

“How do you like them apples, experts?” (John Fisken photo)

Perception is a funny thing.

After the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad went two and out at the district playoffs, losing to Seattle Christian and Cascade Christian, there were some who felt the Wolves 15-4 record entering the postseason was suspect.

That CHS was “hurt by playing in the worst 1A league in the state.”

Which, as the numbers will show, isn’t even remotely close, but hold that thought for a second.

On the other side of our argument is Seattle Academy, which, at 17-3, is headed to state.

So, perception, at least from the outside, is that the Cardinals must be a great team.

Except…

Coupeville and Seattle Academy met head-to-head on a neutral court during the Friday Harbor Tip-Off Classic, and the Wolves won in a romp, 44-31.

Yet, all season long, the ScoreCzar computer ranked the Cardinals ahead of the Wolves.

Mention Coupeville’s better statistical numbers and harder schedule, both in terms of opponents winning percentage and the fact CHS played 14 of 21 away from home, and the computer had only one thing to fall back on — Seattle Academy’s point differential.

And this is where perception starts to be absolutely wrong.

And why I firmly believe if we flipped Coupeville to Seattle Academy’s Emerald City League and SA to the Olympic League, we would see an exact reversal of fortune.

Seattle Academy’s 17-3 record looks great, until we realize the Cardinals are only 2-3 against out-of-league competition.

Of the 10 leagues to play 1A ball in the state, the nine-team, private-school ECL had the worst winning percentage against non-league foes by a mile.

Counting its four playoff losses (so far), we’re talking 8-25.

A .242 winning percentage when every other 1A league hit .400 or better.

Outside its safety zone, Seattle Academy lost by double digits to Coupeville, Bellevue Christian and Lynden Christian.

Inside, against marginal teams, it dominated, winning many of its 15 league games by 30+ points.

Against mediocre teams that couldn’t beat anyone other than other mediocre teams in their own league.

Which, to a computer, apparently looks great.

And, since the ECL champ automatically advances to state, welcome to the big dance, Cardinals. Now try not to get hurt.

Seriously, as league champs, Seattle Academy skipped right to the championship game of bi-districts (there are no playoffs in District 2), so, win or lose, they were state-bound.

Their foe in that game, Lynden Christian, had to get through perennial powers Meridian and King’s to escape District 1, then promptly slaughtered the Cardinals 62-37.

The other three ECL teams to make the playoffs also skipped districts, qualified for a loser-out game at bi-districts and were squished one-two-three.

Mount Baker took out both #2 University Prep (61-28) and #4 Overlake (47-25), while Meridian mashed #3 Annie Wright (61-35).

Seattle Academy’s first-round foe at state? Meridian. It’s not going to be pretty.

And now we jump back to Coupeville, which finished off a third consecutive 9-0 season to remain the big dog in the Olympic League.

Seven of those league wins were of the double-digit variety, ranging from 10-18 points, while the other two were eight and nine-point wins.

For the season, they knocked off their closest rivals by an average of 11.6 points a night, down from 22.0 in 2014-2015 and 18.1 in 2015-2016.

The computers were wowed by Seattle Academy’s point differential and underwhelmed by Coupeville’s, while missing the pertinent point.

The Wolves didn’t romp to 30-point wins in league play like the Cardinals because their league was better. Their foes were tougher. They had a harder fight night in and night out.

It’s right there in the numbers.

Three of the four OL teams (Coupeville, Port Townsend and Chimacum) had winning non-conference records, and all four league teams (including cellar dweller Klahowya) beat 2A teams this season.

Overall, the league was #6 of 10 in terms of record against non-league opponents, way ahead of #10 ECL.

Chimacum, which is barely bigger than Coupeville in student body size, won four times against 2A schools, in fact.

Frankly, a nine-point win against the Cowboys, a solid squad that won a district playoff game, means far more than Seattle Academy rolling by 40 against Eastside Prep, which finished 0-19.

Go outside the league and Coupeville won six times, including beating two state-bound teams (Seattle Academy and Friday Harbor) while playing twice in less than 24 hours on the road.

The Cardinals have no wins against state-bound teams.

If you flip Coupeville into the ECL, I’m willing to bet they also go 15-0 and win most of their games in a romp.

Why not? The Wolves already played the best that league had to offer this year and toasted them.

So why would they fear The Bush School or Bear Creek?

Put Seattle Academy in the OL and does it go 9-0 against Kaitlyn Meek and the Nisbet sisters? I’m not quite as convinced.

I could be wrong, but, if they stayed undefeated (in a tougher league), then congratulations, Cardinals. But I’ll believe it when I see it.

Now, all of this changes nothing.

Seattle Academy, despite playing in one postseason game (and taking a 25-point loss), is state-bound.

And I’m not trying to rag on the Cardinals. Seriously.

As a wise hoops coach once said, “we are in the league we are in,” and that’s very true.

Seattle Academy did everything it was supposed to do to earn a state berth. The Cardinals shouldn’t be faulted, in the slightest.

Meanwhile, Coupeville, despite being a better team where it mattered — on the floor, head-to-head — had a poor playoff run in a district where you have to actually win to advance, and its players have turned in their uniforms.

If it comes across as sour grapes to bemoan the tougher path the Wolves faced, no one should really give that much credence.

CHS knew what it faced, and while it completed the run during league, it most assuredly did not in the playoffs.

Based on those district losses, the Wolves can not argue in the slightest they deserve to be state-bound.

But it all goes back to perception, which is what’s bothering me right now.

People on the outside make snap judgements, without looking closer at what the numbers truly say or taking all the variables into consideration, and a lot of times they’re just flat wrong.

And yes, it’s very possible my own fairly limited knowledge of Seattle Academy basketball could mean I’m missing some pertinent info, as well.

Maybe while the Wolves were on the road (almost) every night, the Cardinals had to play in a home gym where the thermometer was permanently stuck at 17 degrees, or had to wear ’80s-style short shorts.

It’s certainly possible, if not probable.

In the end, we are where we are and all my nattering changes not a thing. Except maybe your perception.

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Carly Guillory (left) is joined by Drew Chan (top) and Heni Barnes.

Carly Guillory (left) is joined by Drew Chan (top) and Heni Barnes.

Underrated.

The three athletes who comprise the 85th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame may not have always gotten the headlines that some of their teammates did, but they were invaluable to what their teams accomplished.

Carly Guillory, Drew Chan and Heni Barnes all left sizable marks during their time at CHS, and all will be remembered for the way they attacked each new day.

So, let’s swing open the doors and welcome them to our little digital world of fame and glory.

After this, you’ll find the trio under the Legends tab at the top of the blog.

Our first inductee, Barnes, was the best female thrower the Wolf track team had during her time in red and black, regularly lofting the shot put, discus and javelin.

She went to districts in two of her three events, but, truth be told, Heni will most be remembered for having the biggest brain this side of some guy named Albert Einstein.

Barnes did everything in her time at CHS — Jazz Band, ASB president, Science Olympiad, National Honor Society, student rep to the School Board, National Humanities Scholar, and that’s just the start — but National History Day was her peak.

She won a gold medal and pocketed $5,000 from the History Channel for her work in crafting the documentary “Striking a Turning Point: The 1917 Pacific Northwest Lumber Strike.”

It stands as one of the great achievements by a Cow Town student, and is the primary driving force behind today’s induction of Heni into the Hall o’ Fame.

A true scholar/athlete, she remains one of the brightest stars to ever blaze across our prairie skies.

Joining her is Guillory, a 2003 CHS grad who spent much of her career traveling to state tournaments.

Playing during the most successful run Wolf athletes have ever had, she didn’t get as much notice as teammates like Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby or Sarah Mouw, but her achievements were invaluable.

On the basketball court, she was a fiend on the boards (who could also drop buckets when gunners like Brianne King needed backup), while on the softball diamond, Guillory cranked out more than her fair share of RBIs.

Carly is actually already in the Hall, as a member of the 2002 CHS softball team, which won four of five (losing a nail-biter to eventual champ Adna) to finish 3rd at state.

In the program’s FIRST year as a fast-pitch program, I might add.

Today, Guillory gets the full treatment, honored for her hustle, worth ethic and willingness to sacrifice for her teammates.

And PS, before anyone mentions it — yes, I’m pretty sure Carly also played volleyball for the Wolves, which would mean she went to state in three different sports.

But I was deep in video store life during her prep days and I can’t find any Whidbey News-Times articles online to prove my hazy memory is true.

First person to tell me I’m right gets a special No Prize … prize.

Our final inductee, Chan, was the absolute embodiment of grit and determination.

A team captain for both baseball and basketball, he, like Barnes, had a ton of academic pursuits going while in school, but what I will most remember him for is one night on the hard-court.

It was opening night, big, bad Blaine was in town and all but one CHS hoops player (the only one to not eat a hamburger during a team outing) was raging sick.

Chan spent the entire JV game lying motionless and green next to the bench, seemingly dead, while all around him the gym was alive with the sound of retching.

Yet, somehow, when it was time for the varsity to take the floor, with all six players who could halfway stand, there was Chan, front and center, refusing to take the night off.

Blaine had a bench of approximately 237 players, and ran them in platoon-style, while Coupeville’s guys took turns coming off and barfing while the other five Wolves flopped around like extras on The Walking Dead.

It remains one of the most memorable evenings I’ve witnessed in the CHS gym (the smell will never leave my nostrils), and not in a good way.

Except I give Chan tremendous credit.

Not just for playing, but for hauling tail down the court every play, even when the game was way out of hand, refusing to back down for any reason.

That was Drew, on the hard-court, on the diamond — where he had a slick glove at second base and an aggressive swing at the plate — and in real life.

Like Barnes and Guillory, Chan was, and is, a gamer, a proud Wolf to his core, and now, a Hall o’ Famer.

 

UPDATE: Yes, Carly played volleyball. My memory is better than I thought. Her entry under the Legends tab has been updated.

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Lauren Rose

   Lauren Rose and the Wolves host, and play in, the district tourney Saturday. (John Fisken photos)

team

“Our gym, our time!”

Welcome to volleyball’s version of Thunderdome.

Four teams enter, two emerge happy.

The stakes are high Saturday, as Coupeville High School hosts, and plays in, the 1A West Central District tourney.

Win two matches, while not losing more than one, and the Wolves are off to state for the first time since 2004.

Here’s some basic info as we sit a day away from the madness.

What: district volleyball playoffs.

When: Saturday, Nov. 5

Where: Coupeville High School and Middle School gyms.

There are two matches at 1:30 (one in each gym, which are part of the same complex, separated by a hallway), two more at 3:30 and one at 5:30 in the big gym.

CHS opens in the HS gym against Charles Wright Academy, while Cascade Christian and Klahowya play in the MS gym.

The two winners clash in the HS gym at 3:30, with the district title and a berth to state at stake.

Meanwhile, match #1 losers move to the MS gym for a loser-out battle.

The survivor of that bout returns to the HS gym at 5:30 to play the loser of the title tilt for the second, and final, berth to state.

Admission (good for all day):

$8 Adults/Non-ASB
$5 Students with ASB
$5 Sr. Citizens (62+)
$4 Elementary

 

Team capsules:

 

Coupeville:

Season record: 11-4

Vs. district foes: 2-1

Sets W/L: 36-18

Coach: Cory Whitmore

Mascot: Wolves

MaxPreps ranking: #25 in 1A

 

Cascade Christian:

Season record: 12-1

Vs. district foes: 2-1

Sets W/L: 37-10

Coach: Matt Cruzan

Mascot: Cougars

MaxPreps ranking: #9 in 1A

 

Charles Wright Academy:

Season record: 13-4

Vs. district foes: 1-1

Sets W/L: 44-18

Coach: Mindy McGrath

Mascot: Tarriers

MaxPreps ranking: #8 in 1A

 

Klahowya:

Season record: 8-7

Vs. district foes: 1-3

Sets W/L: 28-27

Coach: Kim Renken

Mascot: Eagles

MaxPreps ranking: #38 in 1A

 

To see the bracket, pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=2069&sport=10

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Marc Aparicio (John Fisken photo)

   Marc Aparicio, now the baseball coach at CHS, played on the ’87-’88 Wolf boys’ basketball team, the last one to make it to state. (John Fisken photo)

It has been 10,404 days since a Coupeville High School boys’ basketball team last played in the state tourney.

When the Wolf hoops squad exited the floor Thursday, Mar. 3, 1988, after taking a 77-46 loss to Bridgeport, it brought an end to one of the best seasons in program history.

And yet, now, 28 years, five months and 24 days later, it’s a team largely forgotten.

Which is a shame.

Even with the brand spanking new Wall of Fame which went up in the CHS gym this week, the ’87-’88 boys’ basketball players remain largely out of the spotlight, as they came a game short of sharing a league title.

Still, this was a team which went 17-2 in the regular season under coaches Ron Bagby, Sandy Roberts and Cec Stuurmans, undefeated in non-league play and 10-2 in Northwest B League action.

They split with La Conner, winning the second match-up in overtime, giving the eventual league champs (11-1), who finished 5th at state, their only league loss.

What killed Coupeville was an eight-point loss at mid-season to Friday Harbor, the third-best team in a seven-team league.

A very balanced squad — four Wolves (Timm Orsborn, Dan Nieder, Brad Brown and Joe Tessaro) averaged double figures — CHS split four games at Tri-Districts (which it hosted), then went 0-2 at state.

A 55-35 loss to NW Christian (Colbert), followed by their defeat at the hands of Bridgeport, sent the Wolves to the showers at 19-6.

Which stands with pretty much any boys basketball squad in school history.

The program has seven league titles, spread out from 1970 to 2002, one district title (1970), and is 2-10 in five trips to state.

While ’87-’88 can’t claim any of those eight titles, its win total is among the best single-season performances by a Wolf boys squad.

And, until a modern-day crew gets its act together, the players on that roster — Orsborn, Nieder, Brown, Tessaro, Chad Gale, Marc Aparicio, Morgan Roehl, Andrew Bird, Tom Conard, Tony Ford and Brandy Ambrose — stand as the last CHS boys hoops stars to punch a ticket to the Big Dance.

Going through boxes crammed full of random paperwork that were rescued from a back room in the CHS gym complex, I stumbled over a complete stats breakdown for ’87-’88.

In honor of their achievements back then, and their enduring legacy, let’s take a look, shall we?

The stats:

Player GM FG 3PT FT OREB DREB AST TO STL PF PTS PPG
Gale 25 95 35 42 59 42 45 49 57 225 9.0
Brown 24 71 26 33 14 32 61 91 47 49 253 10.5
Nieder 24 102 14 65 35 72 91 84 58 70 311 13.0
Orsborn 25 138 71 91 142 28 44 39 65 347 13.9
Tessaro 25 114 32 103 127 14 54 24 79 260 10.4
Ford 15 35 10 38 31 8 21 10 26 80 5.3
Conard 23 30 4 15 32 21 36 18 18 64 2.8
Aparicio 25 22 4 16 30 18 47 22 30 48 1.9
Ambrose 13 2 2 9 5 15 6 12 4 0.3
Bird 12 2 3 4 2 7 1 4 0.3
Roehl 11 2 6 7 1 6 1 4 0.4
TOTALS 25 613 40 254 365 545 291 450 275 406 1600 64.0

And PS, Marc Aparicio, if you’re wondering where your letter certificate is for that year, it was buried in the back of a file cabinet.

You want it back, you know where I am.

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