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Posts Tagged ‘Tom Roehl’

Ann Pettit (top, left) joins her fellow inductees (bottom, l to r) Tom Roehl, Amy Briscoe, Dalton Engle and Mitch Pelroy.

   Ann Pettit (top, left) joins fellow inductees (bottom, l to r) Tom Roehl (with son Virgil), Amy Briscoe, Dalton Engle (with dad Michael) and Mitch Pelroy.

The 2014-2015 CHS varsity girls' hoops squad. (John Fisken photos)

The 2014-2015 CHS varsity girls’ hoops squad. (John Fisken photos)

The 2014-2015 Wolf JV squad, which went 9-0 in league play to match the varsity.

The 2014-2015 Wolf JV squad, which went 9-0 in league play to match the varsity.

How do you choose who goes in the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame?

Bribes. It’s all about the bribes. So start baking those chocolate chip cookies…

Now that we’ve gotten that out of the way, it’s time to welcome the 10th class into these hallowed digital walls, forever to live on at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

Welcome to the stage Dalton Engle, Ann Pettit, Mitch Pelroy, Tom Roehl, Amy Briscoe and (no, it’s not too soon) the 2014-2015 Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team.

Leading us off is the most unsung of the group, the glue who helps hold Wolf athletics together, Mrs. Briscoe.

The ultimate den mother, Amy is the sort of indispensable, take no crap but love ’em all parent every school needs.

That CHS has her is a huge win.

She’s given the Wolves two talented daughters, Tiffany and Kyla, but she goes in to the Hall for the way she takes care of all of her daughters (and sons).

A fierce fighter and protector of every kid who crosses her path, Amy knows when to hug and when to put her foot between someone’s butt cheeks, and she does both with compassion and heart (and fresh baked brownies).

Wolf Nation, and its athletes, could have no finer force ‘o nature watching over them, day and night.

Joining her in entering the hall is another larger than life presence, the late Tom Roehl.

Like Amy, he spent countless hours helping the children of Coupeville.

From his years as Ron Bagby’s right-hand man with the CHS football program to the time he poured into keeping youth basketball hoppin’ in Cow Town, he gave his all.

And, while his passing left a huge hole, his family has kept his memory and his lessons alive over the years, giving out numerous scholarships in his name through their foundation.

Coach Roehl’s impact will filter down through generations to come, and it is an honor to add him to our little club.

The Wolf football program that he dedicated so much time to has produced a long list of stellar players, and two of the best in recent memory go into the Hall with him.

Engle, who followed the path set by his dad Michael, is on the school record board for the most career tackles, but it was his leadership which shone above all else.

A quiet, confident guy who led by example and never backed down on the field, he was a rock for the Wolves.

Pelroy was just as important, a zippy, highlight-reel-producing receiver and defensive back who excelled in the return game, a track star leaving would-be tacklers in his dust.

His speed, and his hard work, carried him to college, where he continues to shine for Montana Western while rockin’ the best hair in the biz.

Our fifth inductee is one of the best basketball players to ever rep the red and black. And it ain’t even close.

A two-time Offensive Player of the Year (1996, 1997) and the team’s MVP in 1998, Pettit scored in bursts and teamed with Zenovia Barron to form arguably the most dangerous one-two attack Wolf hoops has ever had.

How potent was she?

In her varsity debut as a sophomore, she entered the game in the third quarter … then ripped off 18 points.

CHS coach Willie Smith, in one of his many brilliant moves, started Pettit every game for the rest of her career.

Her brightest moment may have come during her senior season, when Coupeville upended Bellevue Christian to reach the state tourney, with Pettit shutting down BC’s Cathrine Kraayeveld (currently in her 11th season in the WNBA).

Shutting people down was the hallmark of our final inductee, last year’s Wolf girls’ basketball team.

Led by league MVP Makana Stone and a six-pack of skilled seniors, Coupeville romped to a title in the inaugural season of the 1A Olympic League, hanging the first new championship banner in the CHS gym in 13 years.

Young women who had not seen their school win a title in any sport since they were kindergartners made an epic statement, and they did it in style, winning all nine league games by 15 or more points.

Even more impressively, the Wolf JV also went 9-0, drilling Klahowya, Port Townsend and Chimacum and we are honoring the entire squad today.

For going 18-0 in league play. For sweeping away the past and kick-starting a new era, an era in which the howl of the Wolves sends shivers down the spines of other teams.

Inducted, together, as a team, the 2014-2015 CHS girls’ basketball squad:

David King (coach)
Amy King (coach)
McKenzie Bailey
Kyla Briscoe
Tiffany Briscoe
Lauren Grove
Hailey Hammer

Brisa Herrera
Kailey Kellner

Kacie Kiel
Skyler Lawrence
Mia Littlejohn
Mattea Miller
Julia Myers
Lauren Rose
Makana Stone
Madeline Strasburg
Wynter Thorne
Monica Vidoni
Allison Wenzel

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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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Virgil Roehl (left) and dad Tom, back in the day. (Photos courtesy Tom Roehl Archives)

Former Wolf QB Virgil Roehl (left) and dad Tom Roehl, back in the day. (Photos courtesy Noah Roehl)

The glory days of Wolf football. 1990? 1991?

The glory days of Wolf football. 1990? 1991?

Call me Indiana Svien.

As we enter the dead area for sports (AKA early August), I have obtained a potential gold mine.

Thanks to former CHS star Noah Roehl, I now have in my possession the long-rumored, but never-before-plundered Tom Roehl archives.

The longtime coach, a local legend whose memory is honored through the scholarships given out by a foundation run by his children, kept extensive notes.

He also kept stats, photos and all sorts of goodies that should help us capture a clearer look back at Wolf football in the ’80s and ’90s.

As anyone who has tried to track down the athletic history of Coupeville High School can vouch for, it’s not the easiest thing to do.

Unlike some other schools, CHS has no magic room where all the records sit all nice and tidy and ready to be reviewed.

The history is out there, but it’s in a million little pieces.

So, as I go through the collection, I’ll be publishing a series of articles.

How many stories? About just what?

We’ll see, because the archives will lead us where they want to go. We just need to follow.

Pretty safe bet, though, that if the stats are as complete as we think they are, there could a call to adjust some of the names and numbers on the new record board that the Wolf football program just installed.

Ian Barron, Brad Haslam and Co., you shall be remembered.

The adventure begins…

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Jason McFadyen with daughters Kate (left) and Pearl.

Jason McFadyen with daughters Kate (left) and Pearl.

The Four Amigos -- back (l to r) Ben Biskovich, Frank Marti, front (Sean Dillon, McFadyen).

The Four Amigos — back (l to r) Ben Biskovich, Frank Marti, front (Sean Dillon, McFadyen).

It is one of the most memorable images in Coupeville High School sports history.

The photo, from late 1990, shows Wolf football coach Ron Bagby tilting into the wind, watching perhaps the greatest gridiron squad in school history fall in a home playoff game.

The look on his face is one of hope fighting with resignation, and it defines what was a 20+ year career.

CHS was undefeated and ranked fifth in the state going into that playoff game, due in no small part to senior quarterback Jason McFadyen.

A captain who lettered in four sports (football, basketball, track and baseball) while winning numerous awards before graduating in 1991, he remains one of the best to ever carry the Wolf logo into battle.

25 years later, one moment remains firmly lodged in McFadyen’s memory.

“The game that stands out the most is the game at Concrete,” he said. “They were Coupeville’s biggest rival until we switched leagues in the early/mid ’90s.

“Unless I’m mistaken, until we beat them that year no Wolf team had done so — and we beat them handily.”

While he sparkled on the gridiron, the hard-court is where McFadyen’s heart has always lived.

A team captain, he was named First-Team All-Conference as a senior and was the team MVP his final two seasons. His defensive prowess was legendary, twice netting him a position on the league’s All-Defensive team.

“I just always loved it, from my childhood days of shooting hoops till midnight in my backyard with my best friend, Chad, to the days when I “found” a key to the gym and was able to shoot late at night there,” McFadyen said.

And yet, as the years have passed, he has discovered that, as much as he loves basketball, football is the sport that leaves the deepest ache.

“Funny thing is, I thought I’d miss basketball the most after high school, but the sport I missed the most was football,” McFadyen said. “You can play basketball at anytime, join leagues, open gym, but you’ll probably never play full-contact football again…”

McFadyen had a chance to return to his old court this past weekend, when he played on the title-winning team in the annual Tom Roehl Roundball Classic.

Getting a chance to play in the alumni tourney, and honor one of his former coaches, is special for the former Wolf star.

“Coach Roehl was a good coach and an even better person — you can see that in the kind of kids he raised,” McFadyen said. “You don’t really appreciate people at a younger age, but looking back he was definitely someone who deserved respect and appreciation from the kids he coached.

“More speed! Anyone who played for him will recognize that classic quote and repeat it in their best Coach Roehl voice.”

All of his coaches had a big impact on his life, but maybe none more so than Bagby, who ran both the football and basketball programs at the time.

“He always pushed me to be better and work harder,” McFadyen said. “That wasn’t always something we agreed on, but he was the coach, so agree or not, he was right. To this day we remain close friends.

Not that the two didn’t have their moments. But now, years down the road, McFadyen can see what his coach was trying to accomplish.

“One day senior year I got to basketball practice and he was all over me when I didn’t dive for a ball that I could have gotten and he lost it. I mean, it was practice!,” McFadyen said. “For the next two weeks it was like I couldn’t do anything right; he was constantly riding me.

“Finally, we were at Watson Groen and he cornered me in the locker room after the rest of the team had gone out for warm-ups. He asked me what my problem was; I replied, you’re all over me for no reason! What’s YOUR problem, coach??

“He said, “I expect more from you than I do everybody else. Right then, at that moment, I got it. I have never thanked him for that, but I need to.”

But, even with strong coaches, most of life’s lessons came from home, where parents Jack and Carmen McFadyen raised Jason and big sis Aleshia (McFadyen) Mitten.

Along with his All-League honors and MVP awards, McFadyen was an Honorable Mention Academic All American, a US Army Reserve National Scholar Athlete and a member of the National Honor Society.

That dual success, mixing athletics and academics, sprang from the lessons learned from his parents.

“The real mentors in my life were my parents. They taught me responsibility, showed me love, and what it means to be a good person, and eventually a good parent,” McFadyen said. “There wasn’t one game they weren’t at; even if it meant taking off work to drive to Darrington to sit in the rain to watch me play, they were always there.

“I believe I am a good father because of my parents, because of the parents they were.”

McFadyen is now raising two young daughters of his own, eight-year-old Pearl and seven-year-old Kate, and passing on those same lessons.

A licensed Realtor for 12 years, he has worked for Windermere, first in Redmond then back on The Rock that he once fervently sought to escape.

“I was always the guy who wanted to get the Hell off the Island the day after high school and didn’t see myself ever coming back,” McFadyen said. “But, once you get off the Island, you realize there’s no better place to live and raise kids than back home … so I moved back home.”

He’s now happily entrenched on Whidbey with his daughters and “the woman who owns my heart,” Annie Cash.

McFadyen runs Windermere’s property management division, which has taken Best of Whidbey two years running.

He has also served on the Realtor board of directors and the Island County Housing Board and is in his second term as President of the Greater Oak Harbor Chamber of Commerce.

When not working, he stays busy with the women in his life.

And, if his offspring choose to follow in his athletic footsteps, he will be there for them the way his parents were for him.

“We enjoy time on our boat, traveling, golf, and whatever else the girls may think up that day,” McFadyen said.

“I would support my daughters should they decide to get into sports. Both are athletic, and I have coached their T-ball teams,” he added. “But if they decide to get into something other than sports, I will support them completely.”

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Brad Sherman (a participant in previous Roundball Classics) hangs out with dad Don. (Sherry Roberts photo)

   Brad Sherman (a participant in previous Roundball Classics) hangs out with dad Don. (Sherry Roberts photo)

Tom Roehl

Tom Roehl

Embrace your inner Larry Bird.

With the annual Tom Roehl Roundball Classic less than four weeks away (Saturday, Dec. 27 — 12-6:30 PM), the community basketball tourney/fundraiser has added a few new wrinkles this year.

Foremost is the inclusion of a three-point shooting contest and an exhibition game aimed at players 40+.

The two new additions will be on top of the usual tournament play, which draws Coupeville High School alumni and one-time rivals from other schools intent on recapturing their hardwood glory days.

The classic, run by the children of the late Wolf coach who it’s named for, raises money for scholarships which are dispersed by the Tom Roehl Foundation.

For more info on the various events that will be included this year and register (either as a team or as a free agent), hop over to:

http://www.tjroehl.org/

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