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Posts Tagged ‘Tony Maggio’

Orson Christensen (left) and Tony Maggio, football lifers. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Brain Trust is back in business.

Former Coupeville High School football coaches Tony Maggio and Orson Christensen are back in the game, only at a different school.

Maggio, who was the head coach at CHS from 2012-2014, is the new Defensive Coordinator at Oak Harbor High School, while Christensen will help break down game film for his running mate.

“Like Batman and Robin!,” said Maggio, and you could hear the smile in his voice through the text message.

Oak Harbor’s coaching staff had almost a complete turnover after longtime head coach Jay Turner stepped down after last season.

The new man in charge is Marcus Hughes, who arrives on Whidbey having coached previously at both the high school and college levels.

For Maggio, it’s a return to a school where he was previously an assistant coach.

After jumping to Coupeville from Oak Harbor to work with Jay Silver, he later moved up to the head coaching gig and had a successful three-year run.

Of the five head coaches the Wolves have employed over the past decade, Maggio had the longest tenure, beat arch-rival South Whidbey twice, and improved the team’s win/loss record each season.

He capped his time on the job with a 5-5 record in 2014, the only time Coupeville football has posted a non-losing season since 2005.

Working alongside him during those Coupeville days was Christensen, who knows the game inside-out, and then some.

A 1957 graduate of Oak Harbor High School — where he was a four-sport letter winner — he went on to play both ways on the line for Pacific Lutheran University before starting a 50+ year coaching career.

CHS was the 16th stop on Christensen’s coaching journey, one on which he’s won eight titles and been named a Coach of the Year five times.

The duo were inducted together into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame in 2017, an honor they get to keep, even if they are sporting different team colors now.

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   A small fraction of those who make Coupeville Sports what it is. (Photos by Shelli Trumbull, John Fisken, Charlotte Young, Joe Lippo and Sylvia Arnold)

Coupeville Sports is old enough to go to kindergarten.

Born on Aug. 15, 2012, this blog turns five years old Tuesday with much fanfare.

OK, maybe a little fanfare.

Um, any fanfare? Cake maybe?

Bueller? Bueller??

What a long, strange trip it’s been, from the early days, when I was scrappy and argumentative and fond of cheesing off South Whidbey and ATM and King’s and the Canuck-owned “local” newspapers to now, when I’m responsible and serene and … and … what do you mean Klahowya is still mad?!?!

Well, if nothing else, the past five years has shown that “reading” and “reading comprehension” don’t always go hand in hand.

Or that I can be a really annoying pain in the tushie…

One of the two. Probably the latter.

Anyway, having survived through 5,430 articles (“It’s not the years, it’s the mileage…”), I’m still going strong, my readership numbers continue to grow and, hopefully, I’ve found a groove.

This five-years-and-counting journey began because I was mad the Coupeville Examiner was sold and all my (hundreds upon hundreds of) stories were erased from its web site.

Today, that matters far less (or at least I say so in public) and it’s much more about throwing a spotlight on others, uncovering history and documenting day-to-day life in Cow Town.

If you look back at the beginnings of Coupeville Sports, some things were in place from the word go, while others took time to develop.

My first story — “Hark! Fall Sports approach!!!” — was a scintillating look at CHS sports schedules. Scintillating, I say.

Way to come out of the gate, guns blazing, David.

The double exclamation point in the headline, which drives some bonkers, was already present, though, for reasons, unknown, I actually went for a triple hit that first time out.

Four, if you count the exclamation point after “hark.”

What wasn’t present was a photo, as it took me until the third story before I realized how much pics would elevate even the most mundane piece.

My habit of putting people’s names in bold also wasn’t present at the start, not appearing until article #7 and not becoming standard until article #20.

There are those who will shake their head wisely, regard you like you’re a small child, and tell you exclamation points in the headlines and bold face names is a crime against journalism.

Those people need to loosen up. It’s easier to sit comfortably when the stick ain’t crammed up where it’s not supposed to go.

From the start, I have always regarded newspapers as the father sitting in his leather reading chair, puffing on a pipe as he slowly turns the pages.

Every once in a while, he lowers the paper, arches an eyebrow and tells you the scores.

Meanwhile, Coupeville Sports is the kid who’s crawled up to the top of the fence outside your window, and, as he’s tottering back and forth, screams, “Hey, guess what I heard?!?!?!?”

Then, seconds, after dispensing all the juicy gossip and wildly overblown hyperbole, he falls and lands on his head, before bouncing back up and staggering away, waving his arms over his head, “Rocky“-style.

I’m still on my feet, even if my head is pretty lumpy at this point, able to gaze back at where I came from, and look forward to the future.

The first person whose name appeared on this blog? Tony Maggio, who was entering his first season as CHS football coach.

First person to appear in a photo? Caleb Valko, who would quickly become my first breakout star.

First person to get a feature story? Little League state champ turned Wolf football star Wade Schaef.

First game to be covered in Coupeville Sports? A 23-18 loss on the gridiron to Bellevue Christian, five days before the 2012-2013 school year began.

Brett Arnold ran for 166 yards on 19 carries, while Bryce Fleming scored all three of Coupeville’s touchdowns. Gunnar Langvold was the QB, Nick Streubel recovered a fumble and Josh Bayne made off with a pick.

First time I ticked someone off? Chastising ATM for firing former OHHS coach Dave Ward.

The richer and more smugly self-satisfied they are, the thinner skin they have.

First time Coupeville Sports was ejected from the local press box?

I blame Brian Norris and his love of sweet, sweet vuvuzela horns. Or my own lack of self control.

One of the two. Probably the latter.

First (and only) time I had to shut down the comments on a story? Hayley Newman walking away from the South Whidbey girls basketball team two games before the playoffs.

Of course, telling Falcon fans I was “taking away their crayons” probably didn’t do much to calm the situation.

Live and learn.

Averaging more than 1,000 articles a year for five years, I’ve had some strong articles and a few that … maybe should have been thought out more carefully.

I’ve survived a short-lived, whiny attack from another “blog” — https://southwhidbeysportsblog.wordpress.com/ — the final death of The Coupeville Examiner (a sad day) and the agony of those rare times where I had absolutely nothing of substance to write about.

Which didn’t stop me from nattering on.

Where do we go from here?

It would be nice to say I’ll stay on a responsible, mature path, but we all know, at some point, I’m likely to say the wrong thing and inflame a rival fan base.

Especially if it snows anywhere around the grounds of Klahowya High School…

So strap in, hold on and keep your wits about you as we head into year six.

It’s going to be a bumpy ride, and I would have it no other way.

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   Orson Christensen (left) and Tony Maggio, always discussing strategy, even in the stands. (John Fisken photo)

The Brain Trust.

Tony Maggio and Orson Christensen could probably finish each other’s sentences, and the two football coaches were a perfect match during their time stalking the sidelines at Coupeville High School.

With Maggio abusing his baseball cap as a fiery, but lovable head coach and gridiron lifer Christensen gliding by his side, providing a calm, cool voice of well-earned wisdom, the 2014 Wolves put together the best season in program history in more than a decade.

Utilizing the game-breaking running of Josh Bayne and the pinpoint passing of Joel Walstad, that CHS squad put up team offensive numbers never before seen in these parts.

It’s for that season, and a million other reasons, we welcome the ol’ ball coaches to the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame today.

After this you’ll find the duo of Maggio and Christensen hanging out at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

We’ll start with the whippersnapper, Maggio, who accomplished a ton in a three-year run as Wolf gridiron head coach.

After working his way up after stints as an assistant with Oak Harbor and his predecessor at CHS, Jay Silver, the man in the #00 jersey fired up a Wolf program in the doldrums.

Two wins over arch-rival South Whidbey put the spring back in Coupeville’s step, and Maggio got the roster numbers up while also increasing his team’s wins.

He brought out the best in players from stars like Jake Tumblin and Nick Streubel on down to the last guys on the end of the bench.

And he did it by genuinely caring about his guys in ways both visible to the public and private.

Since he didn’t teach at CHS, Maggio kept a regular presence at the school by attending nearly every home sporting event the Wolves played.

He showed considerable support for his guys when they played other sports, but he was also front and center, holding court in the stands, for a ton of sports that involved kids he never coached.

The man bled red and black (and still does, frequently popping in even during his “retirement” days) and lordy, he stormed a sideline like few others.

There was one game where the refs were particularly cruel to the Wolves, and the press box had great fun counting how many times the ball cap came off and hit the turf.

But then, in typical Maggio fashion, after slapping his cap against his chest 237 times on one play, shortly afterwards he was standing next to a ref, cracking wise and making the guy smile.

Wins and losses matter, but to really build a high school program you have to invest in the students and see them as more than just athletes, something Tony always did.

We may not have gotten decades out of him, but his impact will be felt for a long time in Coupeville.

The same can be said of Christensen, a ’57 Oak Harbor grad (he was a four-sport letter-man for the ‘Cats) who played both ways on the line for Pacific Lutheran University before starting a 50+ year coaching career.

CHS was the 16th stop on his journey, one on which he’s won eight titles and been named a Coach of the Year five times.

Splitting his time between college and high school coaching jobs, Christensen, an innovator and a people person in equal measures, has been successful everywhere he’s twirled a whistle.

Virtually every coaching position he accepted has had similar trappings — a program which hadn’t been successful for several years prior to his arrival, which then became a winning one while he was employed.

Christensen is a treasure trove of football knowledge and has never been shy about sharing what he’s learned with fellow coaches, players or idiots who write blogs.

He knows the game inside out and it has always been a pleasure to talk with him, or linger in the background and listen to him imparting wisdom.

Like Maggio, Christensen has always seen his athletes as people first, and the respect accorded to him by players, coaches and fans is remarkable, and justified.

Even take away the epic football achievements, and he’s just a truly nice guy, one of the best I’ve met in my sports writing career.

So, today, with a great deal of respect for both men, based on how they conduct themselves on and off the gridiron, I welcome the dynamic duo to my lil’ Hall o’ Fame.

You earned it, gentlemen. You earned it.

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Brett Smedley (John Fisken photos)

Wolf head coach Brett Smedley watches his players at work. (John Fisken photos)

Christi Messner

Sisters Christi Messner (left) and Aimee Bishop grant a photo op.

coaches

Coach corner, as gridiron guru Orson Christensen (front in blue), former CHS head man Tony Maggio (red jersey) and state baseball Hall of Famer Jim Waller (back, in cap) congregate.

assistant coach

CHS assistant coach Dylan Schachtner shows the Badgers some love.

parents

  Nice weather and the sound of football helmets hitting draw out a collection of Wolf parents and fans.

bbq

   Grill master Lincoln Kelly (black CHS shirt) fires up the grill, as Wolf parents prepare for a post-scrimmage BBQ.

If it’s July 25, it’s football season.

Sort of.

With summer workouts winding down, Coupeville High School got a chance to run plays against a real foe Saturday, with Lakeside coming to town for a scrimmage.

Traveling photo man John Fisken was nice enough to grace us with his presence, and the photos above are courtesy him.

This batch focuses on Coupeville coaches and fans, while the next article will feature Wolf players in action.

Oh, and if you’re curious, the first day of real practice?

Wednesday, Aug. 19 — a mere 25 days from now.

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Ayanna Jeter

Ayanna Jeter (John Fisken photos)

Mckenzie Meyer

Mckenzie Meyer

Tony Maggio

Tony Maggio

Tomorrow, somewhere in Coupeville, birthday cake will be eaten.

With three prominent Wolves — Tony Maggio, Ayanna Jeter and Mckenzie Meyer — sharing July 19 as the day they entered the world, that’s a given.

While the trio all hail from different sports, they share some common traits — friendliness, serenity of spirit and undying commitment to perfecting their craft.

Maggio ran the CHS football program for three years, increasing the school’s win total each year and beating South Whidbey twice.

And while he’s stepped aside now, to spend more time with family and focus on his job at Sherwin-Williams, the ol’ ball coach will still have an impact on the Wolves for years to come.

He helped stars like Josh Bayne, Nick Streubel and Jake Tumblin to reach their full potential, while also not forgetting the last guy on his roster.

One of those coaches who always seemed to genuinely care for all of his players, taking a personal interest in their lives off the field as well, he attended more games than any other coach at CHS.

If there was a volleyball match, or a baseball game, he was there, to root for every kid who wore the red and black.

And, while he won’t be mashing his ball cap into the gridiron on any more Friday nights after a ref tries to screw his team, I expect we’ll still see a lot of him out and about. As always, he’ll be a welcome presence.

Jeter, like a lot of cheerleaders, is an irresistible force of nature.

Quiet and composed off the field, but loud ‘n proud on the sidelines, Ayanna won Rookie of the Year honors during her freshman season last year, and it’s easy to see why.

A flier, she would go airborne with a smile splashed across her face that could light up the entire prairie.

A genuinely sweet young woman, Miss Jeter radiates intelligence, warmth and spirit in everything she does, and if you want to put a face to Wolf spirit, you couldn’t make a better choice than Ayanna.

And then we come to the final member of our trio, and the one I’ve actually seen grow up before my eyes.

Long before Mckenzie Meyer became a tennis hot shot, a soccer sensation, and, if recent photos of are to be believed, a cheerleader, she was the little girl who hung out sometimes at Videoville and Miriam’s Espresso.

The granddaughter of Miriam, the woman who paid me to goof off for 12+ years, Mckenzie went from stalking the gumball machine at the store I called a second home, to being the brilliant ball o’ fire she is today.

Smart as all get out, prodigiously talented (both as an athlete and on the stage), fiercely loyal and protective of her brothers Caleb and Kyle, the little girl has grown into a remarkable young woman.

Her aunts and uncles, who I worked with, have all grown up to be strong adults, and I can see some of all of them in Mckenzie.

She has Mike’s strength, Jenn’s pluck, Kathryn’s feistiness and Megan’s compassion and Mckenzie makes it all work, boppin’ through life and leaving a trail of happiness behind her.

Our birthday trio are united by many things — a school, a fighting spirit, a desire to make life happier for those around them — and we are lucky to claim all three.

They’ll celebrate birthdays Sunday, but the real winner every day? Us.

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