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Posts Tagged ‘Tom Roehl Roundball Classic’

V and White (John Fisken photos)

   Dustin Van Velkinburgh (left) drops some defense on Greg White in the championship game. (John Fisken photos)

After all these years, I still remember how to spell Boom Phomvongkoth. Point, me.

   After all these years, I still remember how to spell Boom Phomvongkoth. Point, me.

Ben Etzell

Back from college for a moment, Ben Etzell is droppin’ shots like they’re hot.

Jerry Helm

   Jerry Helm finds himself in a sticky situation, as Mike Vaughan (left) and White make him the middle of their defense sandwich.

Jason Bagby

Jason Bagby (right) has instituted a no-fly zone.

Noah Roehl

   One of the rare times tourney organizer Noah Roehl sat down during the nine-hour-plus day.

Gavin Keohane

   The current Coupeville Middle School gym never existed when Gavin Keohane (right) played for the Wolves, but he adapted quickly, torching the joint.

Cody Peters

Cody Peters (and his magnificent beard) gets ready to rumble, old school style.

Brad Sherman

Brad Sherman, slicin’ ‘n dicin’ just like he used to back in the day.

Scott Stuurmans

Titans meet, as Scott Stuurmans rises up to deny Bagby.

Monday hits and they’ve gone back to the real world.

Perfect time to pull out some of the best photos from Saturday’s 8th annual Tom Roehl Roundball Classic, a time when former Coupeville hoops stars (and guys from other programs) assembled to once again run the hardwood.

The photos above are courtesy John Fisken, and I’ve chosen to go heavy on former Wolves, since this is … Coupeville Sports.

But never fear, Oak Town ballers and off-Islanders.

Simply pop over to the link below (once you get there it’s nicely broken down by individual games) and you’ll see all of Fisken’s pics.

Purchase some and you’ll help the fundraising, as 10% of all sales will go back to the Roehls for their foundation, which provides college scholarships each year.

https://www.shutterfly.com/progal/gallery.jsp?gid=768a5498ce7ff6ad922f

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Scott Stuurmans

   Scott Stuurmans floats like a butterfly and stings like a bee. (John Fisken photos)

Red Pride (John Fisken photo)

   Da champs. L to r, Jordan Schisel, Greg White, Dom Kiblinger, Gavin Keohane, tourney organizer Noah Roehl, Stuurmans, Mike Vaughan, Pete Petrov. In front: Samantha and Jodi Roehl.

The old guys still have it.

The third-oldest team in a 10-team field, the Red Pride were flawless Saturday, rolling to their fourth title in five years at the Tom Roehl Roundball Classic.

The all-day alumni/charity basketball extravaganza, held to fund college scholarships in honor of a longtime high school/youth coach, drew a record turnout in its eighth go-round.

But even with more teams in the field than ever before, none could match a band of players who mostly ruled the CHS courts in the late ’90s.

After failing to win the title last year, snapping a three-year run at the top, Red Pride went into the archives and plucked out Pete Petrov, adding the ’97 Wolf grad to their roster.

He paid immediate dividends, making a splash in his Roundball debut with a game-high 20 in a semifinal win and 17 in the championship game.

The Red Pride had one of the shorter benches in the tourney, with just seven players on their roster, but they also had no weaknesses and were consistently the best team when it came to fundamentals.

On a day when a lot of street ball took center court — some of it very entertaining, some of it wild and out of control — the Red Pride spent the day making cuts, hitting crisp passes, rockin’ guys on defense, boxing out and truly flowing as a team.

All seven guys scored in the semifinals, a 67-29 thrashing of last year’s champs, the Cows.

Gavin Keohane, who earlier had won the three-point shooting contest by drilling his last five shots in perfect rhythm, each shot flicking silently through the twines, backed up Petrov with 19.

After that there was something for everyone, with Jordan Schisel dropping eight, Greg White banging home seven, Scott Stuurmans singing the nets for six and Mike Vaughan crashing through the paint for four.

Dom Kiblinger, the youngest guy on the roster and the only non-Coupeville grad (he’s dating Stuurman’s niece, Sydney Aparicio, so is an honorary Wolf), rounded out the scoring with three.

Coming off of a tough quarterfinal win, the Cows came out cold in the semis and had several players head to the sidelines after getting banged up.

They were led by Brad Sherman, who popped for five.

Once in the final, Red Pride went toe-to-toe with the Central Whidbey Ballers.

While the final was closer than the semifinal — they led just 25-17 at the half — Red Pride led from opening tip to final whistle, rolling to an eventual 46-31 win.

Petrov (17), Keohane (11), White (9), Vaughan (5), Stuurmans (3) and Kiblinger (1) spread out the offense, while Rodrick Rumble was a one-man wrecking crew for the Ballers, pouring in 14.

Rumble, the former OHHS standout, had to fight like a beast for every one of those points, though, as he got little help in the championship game.

Central Whidbey got to the final game with a mix of high-flying theatrics and long-range gunning, but, in the final, key players like Drew Washington came up empty at crunch time, wilting against a Red Pride team that played as a seamless unit.

The title win capped a day in which I sat through 10 (yes, 10) games, witnessing four slam dunks, one windmill dunk that hit the back of the rim and shot the length of the floor, two technical fouls and three (count ’em) treys that beat the buzzer by a second or less.

It was a day the Roehl family and everyone involved can be truly proud of pulling off.

A taste of how my fanny went flat on the rock-hard bleachers:

Game 1: Red Pride downed Oak Town’s Finest 33-24, giving us all a glimpse of what was to come. All seven guys scored, led by Keohane’s 10, and they moved with a precision that would be unmatched.

Game 2: OhvO nipped Whos Ball Is It Anyways, a squad that included a ton of fairly recent CHS grads like Aaron Trumbull, Joel Walstad, Ben Etzell, Aaron Curtin, Jake Tumblin and Josiah Campbell.

Etzell started the game with a trey and Walstad nailed two late three-balls to keep things close, but missed free throws with five seconds to go led to a breakaway bucket at the buzzer and a 39-35 win for the non-Wolves.

Game 3: Central Whidbey Ballers, which despite their name — a carry-over from previous years — had only two Coupeville players (Dustin Van Velkinburgh and Nick Streubel), clobbered the Podunk Scrubs 62-40.

In a game in which three-pointers rained down from everywhere, the best came from Alex Evans of the Scrubs, who hit one while being knocked backwards three rows into the bleachers by a Baller defender.

Game 4: OhvO rallied from behind to knock off the Beast Squad 46-44. Best shot: a trey that beat the halftime buzzer by a millisecond, even though the shooter got knocked on his rear as he let the ball go.

Game 5: The Cows rode a huge second-half surge (30-14) and Sherman’s hot shooting to upend The SeaChickens 52-39.

Game 6: The Seachickens returned and eliminated Air Roehl 53-34. Former Wolf stars Gabe McMurray and Boom Phomvongkoth played strongly in defeat.

Game 7: A rematch between Central and Podunk, and this time Trent Diamanti and his Scrubs came closer, before falling 54-43.

Van Velkinburgh stuck a dagger in with a late first-half trey, but Gavin O’Keefe responded by hurtling down the floor, launching a trey of his own, and, while missing it, was body-slammed by a trio of defenders.

Popping right back up, he drilled all three freebies to stake the Scrubs to a 19-18 halftime lead, but the Ballers used their superior depth to snatch the game away in the second half.

Game 8: The only real upset of the afternoon, as the SeaChickens, who finished seeding play ranked #7, upended the #2 squad, OhvO, 53-47, to reach the semifinals.

And then we’re back to where we began, with the Red Pride running wild and my rear-end insisting it will never forgive me.

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"Let's get it on!!!!!" (John Fiskern photo)

“Let’s get it on!!!!!” (John Fisken photo)

10 teams. One day. All the bragging rights.

Cow Town’s biggest annual alumni throw-down — the Tom Roehl Roundball Classic — kicks off at 10:30 AM this Saturday in the Coupeville High School (and middle school) gyms.

The tourney will open with a seeding round in which each of the 10 teams play twice.

That will be followed by a three-point shooting contest open to all at 2:30, then single-elimination tourney round play leading up to the championship game at 5:30.

If you’re wondering, I’m feeling like an idiot and am considering seeing if I can sit through an entire day of basketball.

On the rock-hard CHS bleachers!!

My butt will never forgive me…

If I camp out just in the high school gym, I could see 10 games and the three-point shoot-out, or go insane.

Or both.

Want to join me, for part or all? Let’s make this happen.

To see the schedule, pop over to:

http://www.tjroehl.org/uploads/4/0/3/8/4038403/2015_bballclassic_tournamentschedule.pdf

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Gavin O' Keefe (John Fisken photos)

   Gavin O’ Keefe gets welcomed to the club at last year’s tourney. (John Fisken photos)

Jason McFadyen

Jason McFadyen, still poster-worthy after all these years.

Ten days until things get real.

Alumni from Coupeville, Oak Harbor and South Whidbey are expected for the annual Tom Roehl Roundball Classic, set for Dec. 26 from 10:30-6:00 in the Coupeville High School gym.

The event raises money for scholarships given to local students by the foundation run by the legendary former coach’s family.

Roehl was an assistant football coach at CHS and helped run the Central Whidbey Youth Athletic Association for two decades before his passing in 2003.

The tourney has six teams currently registered, with at least two more on the cusp of joining the fray.

Red Pride (anchored by Mike Vaughn and Scott Stuurmans), The Coupeville Cows (featuring a collection of Shermans and Bagbys) and Central Ballers (led by CHS boys’ JV basketball coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh) will all be returning.

Tourney director Noah Roehl has also pulled together two coups.

The first is the return of Pete Petrov, standout former Wolf point guard, who is returning to make his tourney debut with the Red Pride.

Will it be enough to lift Red Pride back into the title picture?

After winning three straight titles, the Pride fell last year, with the Cows, led by tourney MVP Jason Bagby, beating the Central Ballers in the final.

The second coup is getting a team of relatively younger players to take a chance on making a run at the “old school” legends who have held court the last couple years.

The new squad, made up of players from 2010-2015, will feature Joel and Tim Walstad, among others.

The tourney will kick off with seeding play at 10:30, with the tournament round set tentatively for 2 and the championship game at 4:45.

A popular three-point shooting contest, which debuted last year, will go between the opening rounds.

The Round-Ball Classic helps to fund two scholarships, one which goes to a CHS grad and one to a graduate from South Whidbey High School.

Community support is provided by Harada Physical Therapy, Island Periodontics, Cascade Custom Homes, Jason Joiner with Windermere Commercial and DCG Engineering.

Admission to the tourney is free, but donations may be made to help the foundation’s work.

For more info, pop over to:

http://www.tjroehl.org/

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(John Fisken photos)

   “Don’t mind me, nothing to see … just gonna stroll on by you for a quick layup.” (John Fisken photos)

woman

Much respect to this unnamed female warrior — the only woman in the tournament it seems. Every other picture shows her cold-cocking folks on ‘d’, so she held her own nicely.

McFadyen

Jason McFadyen, slicin’ ‘n dicin’, old school style.

kiss

Jordan Schisel lets the Wolf kiss the ball for good luck as he goes in for two.

Wynter

Current Wolf stars Wynter Thorne and Joel Walstad never pass up a photo op. Ever.

up strong

   Look up the phrase “going up strong in the paint” in the dictionary. This photo is there.

mouth

“Dang son, gotta be quicker than that to catch me!!”

Nick

Nick Streubel, a lineman with a soft shooting touch.

You thought we were done? You were wrong.

OK … now we’re done.

Putting the final capper on another successful Tom Roehl Roundball Classic, we present one final medley of John Fisken photos from Saturday’s hoops extravaganza.

The action was hot ‘n heavy, the camera madly clickin’.

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