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Posts Tagged ‘Virgil Roehl’

Virgil Roehl, with dad Tom, missed a chunk of his senior football season in 1993 after suffering a broken leg. (Photo courtesy Noah Roehl)

In the prep sports world, November is a month of transition.

Normally.

In years without ongoing pandemics, November is when fall sports have their final moments, then everyone heads inside and starts work for the upcoming basketball season.

Now, 2020 is not normal, and we haven’t had live games in Coupeville, in any sport, since back in February.

And won’t for at least the rest of this calendar year.

But, thanks to old sports sections I kept from my days as Whidbey News-Times Sports Editor, we can look back at two Novembers — 1992 and 1993 — when things were still hoppin’.

I worked at the paper through ’94, but, by November of that year, was into a 12-year run behind the counter at Videoville.

Like I said, a month of transition.

But hop in the time machine and let’s go back.

 

November 1992:

The Wolf football team, which pulled off a stunning Homecoming win –https://coupevillesports.com/2020/10/28/under-siege-a-win-for-the-ages/ — finished 4-5 and earned this quote from coach Ron Bagby.

“I was a little disappointed that we didn’t win a few more games that we could have. But we played hard and surprised some people.”

Shifty QB Troy Blouin and bruising back Todd Brown led a seven-pack of departing seniors, but the table was far from bare, with junior Virgil Roehl and Kit Manzanares leading a strong group of underclassmen.

The duo, fellow junior Jeremiah Prater, and Brown all landed on the All-Cascade League squad.

In the gym, the CHS spikers were in a rebuilding year after losing All-League players Linda Cheshier and Emily Vracin, but a 2-13 record was a little misleading, as many matches were close.

Led by team MVP Kari Iverson, All-League pick Misty Sellgren, and rock-solid senior Joli Smith, the young Wolves surprised with a third-place finish at the late-season Darrington Tournament.

Marlys “The Masher” West claimed Outstanding Hitter at the team’s awards banquet, but coach Deb Whittaker was pleased to get production across the board.

“I thought we played well,” she said. “Each game it wasn’t one kid who got all the kills. We spread it around; that was exciting.”

Coupeville’s other fall squads sent multiple athletes to district, with six tennis players and two cross country runners advancing to the postseason.

For the Wolf netters, Keith Currier and Jon Crimmins excelled, while the harriers gave two of their three postseason awards to middle schoolers.

Gerald McIntosh, the lone senior on the ’92 team, was MVP.

Meanwhile, up-and-comers Paul Donnallen (Wolf Award) and Lily Gunn (Most Inspirational) led a middle school group which included future stars (in other sports) Marnie Bartelson and Scott Stuurmans.

Rounding out fall of ’92 was the CHS cheer squad, with Greta Robinett (Wolf Award), Gina Dozier (Coaches Award), and Dawn Caveness (Most Spirited) honored.

 

November 1993:

This was a rough fall for CHS, at least in terms of wins and losses, but there were moments, which now in hindsight, signaled much-better times around the corner.

The biggest of these was Kim Meche taking over the Wolf volleyball program.

The first person I ever inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, she launched a resurgence in the program, one which Toni Crebbin kept going after Meche left to take school administration jobs.

In ’93, the varsity spikers were led by Sellgren (Best Offense), Jenn Youngsman (Best Defense), and a pack of hard workers like Mika Hosek, West, Sara Griggs, and Natalie Slater.

Scroll down to the JV and C-Team awards for that season, and it’s dominated by names which have stood the test of time — Jen Canfield, Mimi Iverson, Vanessa Bodley, Emrie McCauslin, and Jacelyn Cobb.

Now, to be honest, back in those days, trying to balance Oak Harbor and Coupeville, I only covered varsity matches in person.

Which may be why I managed to screw up BOTH of Emrie’s names in my newspaper awards story, calling her “Emily McCaulsin.”

Yikes…

Hopefully I made up for it years later by always spelling daughter Maddy Hilkey’s name correctly (I think…) through her middle and high school athletic exploits.

Back in ’93, Kirk Sherrill replaced Chet Baker as coach, inheriting a team with virtually no playing experience.

But the Wolves had Chad Jones, a first-year player and senior, who did a really good imitation of Jim Carrey, so they had entertainment.

In a side note, Jones would go in to star in Dreamer, an award-winning (seriously, I have the certificate!) short film we made once I moved on to Videoville.

So, yeah.

Out on the prairie, Eileen Kennedy, who had previously played volleyball, emerged as Coupeville’s top cross country runner, starting down a path which would lead to joining Meche in our Hall o’ Fame.

Life on the gridiron wasn’t full of much joy in ’93, however, as a string of injuries and ineligible players gutted the roster.

None hurt as badly as when Wolf QB Virgil Roehl missed a considerable chunk of his senior year with a broken leg.

Still, despite playing in only a handful of games for a 1-8 team, he joined Prater in being named as a First-Team All-League pick on defense.

Other league honorees included Manzanares, Jason Hughes, Scott Kirkwood, Jimmy Bennett, Scott Gadbois, and Brad Miller.

Coupeville cheer was led by Sarah Engle (Coaches Award) and Lark Eelkema (Most Spirited), while the one Wolf athlete who truly had an outstanding fall wore a different uniform.

After much back-and-forth, CHS formed a “unified” girls soccer team with Oak Harbor High School, and a previously dormant program lurched to life, narrowly missing the state playoffs.

The squad, coached by Coupeville’s Carol Bartelson, swept arch-rival Cascade for the first time, scared powerhouse Snohomish, and put the state on notice.

Playing in OHHS uniforms, the Wildcats were stung by the loss of Amiee Montiel — one of the most dynamic athletes I’ve ever covered — when the explosive playmaker suffered a brutal broken nose that kept her on the bench for seven games.

But in her absence, Coupeville freshman Marnie Bartelson seized the spotlight, shattering the school scoring record by tallying 15 goals.

It was the start of something big … and a something big I missed out on.

I left the News-Times in mid-1994, went and toiled for a few months on the mussel rafts in Penn Cove (why??), then snuggled down in Videoville starting Oct. 4 – the same day the original Jurassic Park hit VHS.

Meanwhile, the OHHS/CHS girls soccer squad took off like a rocket, with Marnie and Co. running wild.

Behind her, dominating in the net, was a new goalie, and second player from Coupeville, one Amanda Allmer.

She and her family moved to The Rock after I left the WNT, just in time for her senior year, and Allmer rocked the joint as a soccer star and basketball supernova.

Led by their Wolves, the Wildcats made their first trip to the state tourney and made it a big one, winning two matches en route to a 4th place finish in 3A.

It was the first of three-straight trips to the big dance for the program, none of which I covered.

Instead, I was knee-deep in movies and spilled popcorn, living a different dream.

Oh well.

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   Defensive dynamo Cameron Toomey-Stout scored a season-high seven points Wednesday as Coupeville clobbered Chimacum. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It wasn’t especially pretty, but we’ll overlook that.

Bouncing back after a rough loss a night before, the Coupeville High School boys basketball squad used a fiery fourth quarter Wednesday at home to stuff pesky Chimacum, nabbing a 67-43 win.

The victory, which was finally sealed with a 20-6 run over the final eight minutes, lifts the Wolves to 2-1 in Olympic League play, 4-8 overall.

It also gives them sole possession of second-place in the four-team conference, a game off of league leader Port Townsend (4-1, 7-5), a team they have split two games with this season.

Klahowya (1-1, 4-7) and Chimacum (0-4, 0-8) currently bring up the rear.

Wednesday’s game, which featured a mind-numbing 52 free throws, almost half of which were missed, started like a rout, turned into a pitched battle, then became more of a runaway in the final moments.

After falling behind 2-1 a few seconds into the game — the only time it would trail all night — Coupeville went on a 12-1 run, highlighted by six points from Hunter Smith, and looked like it would cruise.

Even if not all their shots were falling, and the refs were already starting to call a LOT of fouls on both teams, the Wolves were in control and it didn’t appear the undermanned Cowboys had many answers.

Until they did.

While Chimacum wasn’t the sharpest-shooting team, or the slickest-passing, it did one thing very well — hit the boards and give itself second, third and fourth chances.

That helped the Cowboys slowly amass a 14-4 surge of their own, tying the game at 17-17 early in the second quarter.

Coupeville seemed intent on playing like a yo-yo for much of the game, snapping off sizzling runs, then handing back buckets in chunks to their win-less foes, leaving coach Brad Sherman frequently wearing a look of mild indigestion.

An 8-0 run in a matter of about eight seconds, capped by Smith hitting a breakaway layup, then immediately punching home a three-ball off of a tipped pass, eased the angina. A bit.

But CHS couldn’t seem to put Chimacum away, taking a 14-point lead early in the third, only to then hand back more than half their advantage in the matter of a few plays.

Suddenly clinging to a 43-37 lead with under a minute to play in the third, the Wolves finally found their knockout punch, or punches.

They came courtesy Dane Lucero and Hunter Downes, hard-working rebound hounds, who converted on back-to-back put-backs to end the quarter.

Toss in a patented “Rock Block,” a soundly-rejected shot by senior big man Kyle Rockwell, and the Wolf bruisers fully earned their stripes against a rough-and-tumble Cowboy squad.

Back up by 10, Coupeville found a new gear in the fourth, ripping off 20 points, with five different players scoring, while limiting Chimacum to a single field goal.

“We came out on fire in that fourth quarter and rebounded really well,” Sherman said. “We needed to do that; it was a nice way to finish.”

While the team’s leading scorers this season, Smith and Ethan Spark, combined for 11 points in the fourth, CHS also got big contributions from their fellow battle-hardened seniors.

Defensive dynamo Cameron Toomey-Stout, a pass-first set-up man, went off for five points in the quarter, including a long three-ball, while Downes picked up assists with a pair of sweet dishes to Lucero and Spark.

Smith paced the Wolves, who scored their most points of the season, with 25.

That lifts him to 695, and he passed Virgil Roehl (674), Gavin Keohane (677) and Chris Good (688) Wednesday to claim 17th place on the Wolf boys basketball career scoring list.

Spark rattled home 17, including three treys, while Downes banked home eight (while snatching 12 rebounds) and Toomey-Stout sank a season-high seven.

Lucero (4), Joey Lippo (4) and Rockwell (2) rounded out the scoring.

Coupeville was very effective in disrupting the Cowboy offense, pilfering 20 steals. Smith led the assault with eight, while Spark made off with four.

In a game in which the refs called a foul after a Chimacum player out on the break fell down under his own power, with the nearest Wolf five feet away, the two teams spent an inordinate amount of time at the free-throw line.

The Cowboys shot a slightly better percentage (55% to 52%), but also missed more, hitting 17 of 31 compared to Coupeville’s 11-21.

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(Photo courtesy Moose Moran)

The ’72-’73 Wolves in their prime. (Photo courtesy Moose Moran)

(Photo courtesy Bill Jarrell)

Off to the state tourney for the ’75-76 Wolves. (Photo courtesy Bill Jarrell)

Flash forward to the early '90s. (Photo courtesy the Randy King Archives)

   Flash forward to the early ’90s and we’re in color … but still in short shorts. (Photo courtesy the Randy King Archives)

Old school basketball, when fundamentals out-ruled showy theatrics, are known for one thing above all else.

Short shorts.

Today, when the shorts sometimes are so long and flowing they could pass as dresses, it might be hard for some to remember there was a time when basketball was a game of exposed thighs.

Take a trip in the Wayback Machine with these three photos — two from the ’70s and one from the early ’90s — and marinate in the sartorial beauty of it all.

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The woman. The myth. The always-smiling legend. Kacie Kiel.

The woman. The myth. The always-smiling legend. Kacie Kiel.

Hall o' Fame inductees (clockwise from left) Kim Andrews, Jodi (Christensen) Crimmins, Virgil Roehl, Amanda (Streubel) Jones and Casey Larson.

Hall o’ Fame inductees (clockwise from left) Kim Andrews, Jodi (Christensen) Crimmins, Virgil Roehl, Amanda (Streubel) Jones and Casey Larson.

Passion.

A simple word that means so much, seven letters that unite the members of the fifth class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

There have been athletes with more talent, perhaps. Who have bigger trophies, perhaps.

But, if you measure them by the size of their hearts, few can match up to today’s honorees — Jodi (Christensen) Crimmins, Virgil Roehl, Casey Larson, Amanda (Streubel) Jones, Kacie Kiel and Kim Andrews.

First up is the one who is rolling her eyes super-hard at me right now, the one-time power behind the throne, the “retired”-but-never-forgotten Mrs. Andrews.

A sports scheduler extraordinaire, Kim is being honored as a contributor for two reasons.

One, she was the person who kept CHS sports events clicking along with crack precision during her time in the athletic office.

But, maybe more importantly, she is the person most responsible for making me stop and look at the direction I was headed in the early days of Coupeville Sports.

With a few subtle words, she made me reconsider my early love of attacking other schools, such as South Whidbey, and nudged me in the direction of reaching out and being far more inclusive.

Without beating me with a stick — though she probably considered it at times — Kim convinced me I’d get a bigger readership by being a uniter and not a divider.

And you know what? As always, she was right.

Our second honoree, Amanda Streubel, was a standout student, a devoted big sister to The Big Hurt (Wolf football man mountain Nick Streubel) and a stellar cheerleader.

But she goes in to the hall in a way no other CHS athlete may ever repeat — as a swimmer.

We don’t have a pool in Cow Town (well, at least not at the high school), but, for a few years, the Wolves were allowed to swim with Oak Harbor.

During that time, Streubel, though only a sophomore, went to state in the 100 backstroke at the state’s highest level, class 4A.

It was an impressive achievement, not equaled before or after by a Wolf swimmer. For that, and for the grace she showed under fire, Amanda splashes into the Hall.

Up third is Casey Larson, a multi-sport athlete who goes in for football.

He was nominated by current CHS assistant football coach Ryan King, who played under Friday Night lights with Casey.

King’s thoughts on his former teammate:

Casey and I graduated together in 2007 and I played football with him for three years and man, you talk about one of the toughest players to wear a Wolves jersey, it had to be Casey.

He was a big part of our success in our last two years making the playoffs. He was our (Josh) Bayne and (Jake) Tumblin. Granted, probably not as fast, but that boy was tough.

He was an all-around running back (though he played fullback) and he was a great outside linebacker.

He was the definition of iron man football; there were a few games Casey wouldn’t leave the field.

He never quit on us.

He was a captain with me our senior year; he, like me, cared a lot about our team and he was a very inspirational leader and a very vocal leader.

Our next two athletes, Virgil and Jodi, impressed me greatly during my early days as a Sports Editor at the Whidbey News-Times.

Roehl played his heart out in every sport, but his greatest accomplishment came during his hardest season.

With a coaching change setting the table, the Wolf boys’ basketball team lost any potential senior leadership prior to his freshman season.

A painfully young, inexperienced team got thrown on the floor that year, and they endured some horrifying beatings en route to an 0-20 season.

Roehl, though, never backed down.

He battled, he fought, he took the brunt of the abuse from rival teams and never wavered. And, slowly, that team jelled around him and when they won the next year, it made for a beautiful moment.

Coupeville went uphill each year after that 0-20 mark, and Roehl grew as a leader each season. But, for me, his grit and commitment under duress had already marked him as a winner.

Jodi is a mystery wrapped in an enigma.

Off the basketball court, she is, arguably, the single nicest person I have ever met in my life. As wonderful a human as you will ever meet, full of joy and life and sunshine exploding out of every dimple.

On the court, though, she was a beast unleashed. And it was freakin’ beautiful.

Every loose ball was hers. Every rebound belonged to her.

Get in her way and she would rip your head off (even if you were her teammate and best friend), elbows flying like razor-tipped daggers as she cleared a carnage-riddled path.

If every Wolf played like Jodi, the banners on the gym wall would never end.

Of course, the early ’90s were a different time, when refs let players play and swallowed their whistles a lot more. In today’s ultra-sensitive era, she would probably foul out in the first minute of the game.

But dang, it would be a one heck of a first minute!

And then we arrive at our final honoree, our headliner, a young woman whose CHS career ended just a heart-beat ago.

There may be some who will say it is too early to honor Kacie. To them I say, with great sincerity, blow it out your pie hole.

Miss Kiel was a talented volleyball and basketball player, and she never shied away from the big moment.

Her three-point bomb at the buzzer to cap a comeback for the ages against Sequim during her senior hoops season will live in our memory banks for a very long time.

But she goes in on this day because I can honestly say I don’t think I have ever seen a player enjoy themselves more than Kacie did.

She loved, loved, LOVED to have her picture taken with her teammates before games, but, if you look at the shots taken DURING those games, that’s where you’ll see what I mean.

In the toughest moments, under the most pressure, when those around her threatened to crack, every picture of Kiel in action shows the same thing — an epic, radiant, quietly confident grin.

The joy of competing, the joy of being out there with her sisters, the joy of being tough, of being strong, of being proud of all she and her friends accomplished, the joy of seizing every moment, floods those photos.

When her time as a Wolf was done, Kacie cried.

But they weren’t tears of regret, but of joy, shed by an incredibly brilliant young woman who will look back on her time in the red and black with a huge smile.

Almost as big of a smile as the rest of us had watching her play.

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