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Posts Tagged ‘Wiley Hesselgrave’

Through highs, lows, and a t-shirt — 11 years later the blog is still going.

Somehow, it keeps rolling along.

I’ve tried to quit a few times, gone through stretches where I was angry at the world, and other stretches where I was singing kumbaya.

And here we are at the crack o’ dawn on Aug. 15, 2023, a full 11 years since Coupeville Sports first appeared on the internet.

This is story #10,355, while story #1, published Aug. 15, 2012, was titled “Hark! Fall sports approach!!!”

Four exclamation points in the headline, no photo on the story, and names were not yet in bold.

Little did I know at the time that the Wolf freshmen just beginning their first high school practices would turn out to form one of the most-successful classes in the history of this blog.

The CHS Class of 2016, with Makana Stone, Lathom Kelley, Sylvia Hurlburt, Wiley Hesselgrave, and many more, can stand with any, and came of age as Coupeville Sports “matured.”

What began as an angry response to the Coupeville Examiner being sold to the Evil Empire (and hundreds of my bylined stories vanishing) over time became something more positive.

Most days.

I am proud that Coupeville Sports played a major role in the creation of the Wall of Fame in the CHS gym and sparked the 101-year anniversary for CHS boys’ basketball, which brought countless hoops legends back to their hometown.

Beloved coach Bob Barker stepping through the door, clad in the clothes he wore while guiding the Wolves to the program’s biggest success in the early ’70s, is my “Elvis is in the building” moment.

But I’ve also stumbled more than once.

One which bothers me to this day was when CHS soccer coach Gary Manker unexpectedly passed away.

I rushed to get the news out, and, in doing so, stepped on the feelings of his family, taking away their chance to deal with the loss in private.

As someone who spent one summer attending back-to-back-to-back funerals for his dad, grandmother, and great aunt, I should have been more considerate.

While I have been blessed to be able to use photos from countless camera clicking members of Wolf Nation, Coupeville Sports is essentially a one-man operation.

I write it, I edit it, I choose what to run, and what not to run.

Sometimes I’m right, and sometimes I’m wrong. Every day is a new chance to soar, or to screw it all up.

There are more photos these days, and less exclamation points, than in the early moments of the blog, though the background layout largely remains the same in 2023 as it was in 2012.

That’s because I think my theme, while probably a bit outdated — WordPress retired it years ago, but I’m nothing if not stubborn — is fairly clean.

It offers an easy-to-read look with no pop-up ads cluttering things, which I detest.

And, 11 years and 10,355 articles later, it’s as free to read today as it was in its infancy.

Web sites which have pay walls can bite my pale white rump.

Of course, not charging a fee is a big part of why I don’t have an indoor/outdoor swimming pool with a waterfall in the middle connecting the two halves.

But I get by, thanks to the goodwill of the community.

If you want to support me typing on the shores of Penn Cove at 2:00 AM on a computer powered by a hamster running on a treadmill, there are several ways.

 

You can use PayPal:

https://paypal.me/DavidSvien?country.x=US&locale.x=en_US

 

You can Venmo me under @David-Svien at:

https://account.venmo.com/

 

You can snail mail me at 165 Sherman, Coupeville, WA, 98239 or cram money (or blueberries) into my hands, mobster-style, at a Wolf game.

Hopefully the blueberries are still inside a plastic container, and not just a hot mess of sticky sort-of jam…

Or you can just keep reading for free, for as long as this thing keeps going.

You do you, and I’ll keep pounding away on the keyboard. It’s (mostly) worked so far.

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CHS hoops hotshot Anthony Bergeron eyeballs mom Avis Mitchell. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

This blog turns nine years old August 15, and to mark the occasion, I’m picking what I view as the best nine Wolf athletes from each active CHS sport.

To be eligible, you had to play for the Wolves between Aug. 2012-Aug. 2021, AKA the “Coupeville Sports” years.

So here we go. Each day between Aug. 1-15, a different sport and (probably) a different argument.

 

Yes, I’m biased, and yes, basketball is the best sport.

It’s also one of the longest-running at Coupeville High School, with the boys program having put in 104 seasons and counting.

When I carved the rosters of the last nine campaigns down into one nine-man squad, more than one talented player got left behind.

But, as I assembled my roster, I went with a mix of big-time scorers and “hustle guys,” — players who won the day with steals, rebounds, charges taken, and a burning desire to do whatever was necessary to make the team better.

With this unit we can run, we can play in the paint, and we can beat the crud out of anyone who gets mouthy.

I like to call that well-rounded.

Nick Streubel, a force on both ends of the floor.

Anthony Bergeron — The feel-good success story, a young man who went from a shy role player to throwing down dunks and leading the Wolves in scoring his senior season. You love to see it.

Jordan Ford — Coupeville only had him for a single season, but he revived memories of dad David and uncle Tony. A perfect role player who led the squad in rebounding and was #2 in scoring, picking up most of his points off of put-backs and hustle plays.

Wiley Hesselgrave — Tough as they come, a four-year warrior who scored far more points than you remember, while rattling the teeth of everyone he guarded. Never one to toot his own horn, he came to the court ready to work, every day.

Risen Johnson — The man who brought style back to the floor for the Wolves, bobbing and weaving, flicking runners over outstretched hands or zipping flawless set-up passes to teammates. If you had to pay to watch, he was always worth the price of admission by himself.

Xavier Murdy — The glue, willing (and able) to fill whatever role is asked of him. Can pop the three-ball, but also a ferocious rebounder, a solid passer, and a hyper-intense defender. Always seem to play for the W, not the stats.

Hunter Smith — Finished as the #12 scorer across 104 seasons of Wolf hoops action, and would have been higher if injuries didn’t chip away at his floor time. Back-to-back 300+ point seasons, and a highly-revered athlete among coaches, fans, and his own teammates.

Nick Streubel — Even with refs often saddling him with atrocious fouls, based on his being the largest man on the floor, “The Big Hurt” was a rare bright spot during a tough stretch of time for the Wolf hoops program. The last man rivals wanted to see waiting for them in the paint, and a surprisingly nimble offensive threat.

Sean Toomey-Stout — Like Ford and Murdy, always played for the W over worrying about personal stats. Springy, with a motor which never stops, and a player who has all the intangibles which make coaches sleep easier at night.

Hawthorne Wolfe — Even with a pandemic cutting his junior season in half, is set to make a run at the program’s all-time scoring record. Can knife you with a three-ball from Damian Lillard distance, is a relentless gym rat, and is just flat-out entertaining to watch in action. Our version of Pistol Pete.

Hunter Smith slashes in for two of his 847 points.

 

Up next: We head to the courts to assemble the best female tennis players.

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   Three years after Wiley Hesselgrave lost a chance to participate in a playoff game, the WIAA may finally change the inane rule which prevented him from appealing. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The wheels of bureaucracy turn slowly.

Three years after Coupeville High School football star Wiley Hesselgrave was shafted by an asinine rule, the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association may finally change it.

Maybe.

During Senior Night against Concrete in 2015, Hesselgrave, a rock-solid guy who played the game as hard, clean, and full of passion as any Wolf ever, took a hand-off and went left, slashing for yardage.

Taken down by a tackler right in front of the press box, he was assaulted by a second Lion who launched themselves onto his prone body.

It was a blatant late hit and Concrete was flagged.

But…

Despite no evidence to support such a call, the ref ejected Hesselgrave, saying he threw a punch at a Concrete player as they got back up.

And I’m telling you, IT NEVER HAPPENED.

I’ve seen high school players throw punches, and, in one case, during an Oak Harbor girls basketball game, solidly connect, fist to chin.

Wiley didn’t even shove the Concrete player as he stood up, much less swing.

This wasn’t across the field. The entirety of the play was right smack-dab in front of me (and two former coaches who were also occupying the dilapidated old CHS press box.)

Wiley was innocent.

But the ref made a (poor) judgement call and Hesselgrave was tossed, and ejections merit an immediate one-game suspension.

Which meant no mini-playoff game the next week against Chimacum for Coupeville’s best player.

And there was nothing anyone could do about it, since WIAA rules specifically prohibit schools from appealing ejections on judgement calls by the refs.

EVEN IF YOU HAVE CRYSTAL-CLEAR VIDEOTAPE PROOF THE REF IS BLIND.

But, that may be changing.

The WIAA Representative Assembly (35 high school delegates and 19 middle school delegates) will vote on a whole new raft of amendments between April 27-May 4.

A 60% vote of approval is necessary for an amendment to pass. Those that do go into effect Aug. 1.

A lot of the possible changes are minor, or affect things which have little to no impact on Coupeville.

But ML/HS Amendment #10 wants to strike right at the heart of this doozy from the current WIAA rule book:

Ejections resulting from a judgment call by a contest official may NOT be appealed. Pictures, video evidence and/or replay recording devices may not be used.

Instead, it would be replaced with this:

Ejections resulting from a misinterpretation or misapplication on the part of the ejecting contest official(s), or a judgment call that resulted in an ejection, may be appealed.

School approved video evidence, submitted by the principal or designee, may be used to determine whether an ejection was due to judgment, misinterpretation or misapplication on the part of the ejecting contest official(s).

I understand the desire to protect refs by their association. They have a hard job as it is, and are constantly being second, third and fourth-guessed.

But not allowing schools to show video evidence, when it would prove an ejection and suspension was unwarranted, does the athletes a great disservice.

This is something which has needed to change for a very long time, and I give big props to to the Mid-Columbia Conference and the Greater Spokane League for stepping up and submitting this amendment.

In their rationale for the move, they say:

High school and middle level officials at times make mistakes in judgment that lead to the ejections of players.

To not have a source of appeal, with these decisions directly impacting student/athletes, is wrong.

If we are kid-first than we are responsible to provide DUE PROCESS, a process that increases fairness and prudency.

They also point out other states, such as Oregon, allow the use of video when appealing ejections during high school play.

And, obviously, professional and collegiate officials have existed for many years with an appeal system in place.

There is no reason Washington state high school sports should be any different.

If the ejection is valid, there would be no appeal. End of story.

But to deny a player such as Hesselgrave a chance to have an obvious correctable wrong reversed leaves a bad taste in everyone’s mouths.

Time for the WIAA to rinse, spit and embrace rightful change.

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   Coupeville sophomore Jered Brown netted five points Friday against Orcas Island. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

These are the days to learn lessons.

Working its way through a tough non-conference schedule, which includes a 69-53 home loss to Orcas Island Friday, the Coupeville High School varsity boys basketball squad is preparing for the stretch run.

That’ll come when the Wolves return to the floor in 2018 — kicking things off Jan. 5-6 with back-to-back home games.

After going 3-6 in 2017, absorbing some dings against top-quality foes, CHS will close the regular season with eight Olympic League games in their final 11 contests.

Sitting in a first-place tie with Klahowya at 1-0, the Wolves, who should finally have a complete roster for the first time with the start of the new year, are ready to make a run.

Or, at least that’s the plan.

“Eight league games in front of us,” said first-year Coupeville coach Brad Sherman. “About to get real.”

When they clash with Klahowya, Port Townsend and Chimacum for playoff berths and a league title, the Wolves will be able to look back at games like the one they played Friday and build on what went right, while tweaking what went wrong.

In many ways, Coupeville didn’t lose as much as Orcas simply won.

The Vikings were a very-precise, very-sound, virtually error-free squad which shot a staggering percentage from the field, made every pass count and committed very few turnovers.

Trying to answer, the Wolves played a faster and looser game, and, when it worked, they made the nets jump. But, too many times they gave their seasoned foes extra opportunities.

“Orcas played a good game with a balanced scoring attack,” Sherman said. “I thought at times we got a little careless with the ball, so that’s an area we need to focus on.”

The game was much closer than the final score might indicate, as a game-clinching 12-0 Orcas run in the fourth quarter warped things a bit.

Coupeville never led in the game, but hung around within four to six points for most of the night.

The two teams traded blows early, with Orcas dropping in four successful bombs from behind the three-point arc in the first quarter.

CHS responded with a pair of its own treys, from Ethan Spark and Jered Brown, while Hunter Smith began to work on his game-high 25 points with a pair of artful runs at the bucket.

On the first one, the senior shooting star tiptoed through a mob of defenders in the paint, slapping home a layup over outstretched arms, while on the second one he committed, if not murder, at least manslaughter.

Isolated one-on-one against an Orcas defender, Smith abused the Viking so bad on the ensuing play, the kid’s dead ancestors at least three generations back will feel the shame tonight.

To say he broke both of the defender’s ankles, shredded his soul and made him burst out crying (on the inside at least) is an understatement.

Trailing just 19-16 at the first break, Coupeville went to the three-ball attack in the second quarter, while Orcas countered with a string of short, and very precise, jumpers in the paint.

Smith and Spark hit a pair of treys, with Smith going off for 10 points in the quarter, and the Wolves were down 37-32 at the half.

Orcas tried to pull away a bit in the third, stretching the lead into double digits for the first time, but several more buckets from Smith and a put-back by Hunter Downes kept things semi-reasonable.

Downes bucket came off of a rebound in which the scrappiest of all Wolves ripped the ball free with such force he nearly tore the arm off of an Orcas player’s body.

The sheer precision with which the Vikings played finally became too much to deal with in the fourth. A 12-0 run stretched the lead to 64-44, effectively ending things.

To their credit, the Wolves closed on a 9-5 tear, with Smith getting three the easy way (a long trey) and three the hard way (a slash to the bucket for a layup and the ensuing foul shot after getting hammered.)

His 25-point performance carried Smith past three more former Wolf greats.

Now sitting with 639 career points, he passed Wiley Hesselgrave (632), Kramer O’Keefe (636) and Rich Morris (637) Friday and sits #24 on the Wolf boys basketball all-time scoring list.

Spark knocked down 16 points, including four treys, to back Smith up, while Brown (5), Downes (4) and Mason Grove (3) chipped in to the scoring effort.

Dane Lucero, Gavin Knoblich and Ulrik Wells, whose rebounding was praised by Sherman, all saw floor times, as well.

JV sidelined:

While three of Coupeville’s four hoops teams played Friday, the Wolf JV boys sat, as Orcas was unable to field a second squad.

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The man who makes the scoreboard do what she does, Mr. Joel Norris (top left), is joined by Wiley Hesselgrave, Samantha Roehl

   The man who makes the scoreboard do what it does, Joel Norris (top left), is joined by Wiley Hesselgrave, Steve Whitney’s title-winning shot and Samantha Roehl.

Shawn (Evrard) Christensen

   Shawn (Evrard) Christensen — center, bottom row, back in her cheer days, and, at right, modern-day.

Moments, big and small.

We’re covering all the bases today, as we celebrate the headline-makers and the behind-the-scenes moments which all come together to weave the tapestry that is Wolf Nation’s sports legacy.

As we open the doors to two athletic stars, a key contributor and two magnificent moments, we celebrate the 60th class to join the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Forever encased inside these hallowed digital walls now are Shawn (Evrard) Christensen, Wiley Hesselgrave, Joel Norris, Samantha Roehl’s sacrifice and Steve Whitney’s title-clinching jumper.

After this, you’ll find them all nestled atop the blog, under the Legends tab, alongside their brethren.

Our first inductee, the Ice Cream Man, is one of the often unsung warriors who make CHS sports run smoothly.

When he’s not doling out scoops (and stories) at Kapaw’s, Norris is the master of the scoreboard for Wolf football and basketball games.

Watch almost anyone else try to keep the board going (“BUT I PUSHED THE BUTTON SEVEN TIMES AND IT STILL WON’T WORK!!!!!”) and you’ll appreciate his nimble finger work even more.

But what pushes Norris from super-competent to awe-inspiring is his ability to lay down low-key verbal smack all game (while keeping his mouth just far enough away from Willie Smith’s mic to not be heard by the football crowd) and his joy in needling Seahawk fans.

Toss in his old-school dance moves (at least back before The Wobble was outlawed as a post-game song) and he’s more entertaining than most the games he works.

Whether camped out in the cramped former football press box (RIP, ramshackle, dead bee-filled hunk o’ junk) or tripping people as they try to sneak by on the basketball sideline, Norris is a joy to behold.

Joy could be the middle name of our second inductee, the former Miss Evrard.

Shawn, who joins sister-in-law Jodi Christensen in the Hall, exudes great bursts of radiant joy, something both of her daughters have inherited from their mom (and husband Billy, who’s pretty cheery himself.)

As a Wolf cheer captain, she was one of the best and brightest to ever soar under the tutelage of CHS coach Sylvia Arnold, and she did so at a time when Coupeville was a competition cheer squad.

From her days at Videoville and Miriam’s Espresso, where she was one of my favorite co-workers of all time, to today, Shawn has never changed where it matters most — at her core.

She was kind and caring, charging full-force into life with a brightness of spirit, regardless of conditions around her, from day one, and she’s still that way.

Both of her and Billy’s daughters reflect the inherent goodness of their parents, and are truly a testament to awesome parenting by a remarkable couple.

Everyone in the Hall o’ Fame left behind (or are still leaving) a mark on their school and community, but Shawn truly towers as a one-of-a-kind legend.

While Hesselgrave just departed CHS, having graduated in June, there’s no reason to wait for time to pass before induction.

For the past four years, Wiley was the best male athlete at CHS, a standout football and basketball player who bopped along to his own rhythm.

While others scrambled around to catch the attention of photographers, Hesselgrave just put his head down and kicked ass.

He was a rampaging wild man on the gridiron, doing whatever was asked of him, and doing it with a passion and conviction which was genuinely old-school.

That carried over to hoops, where he led the Wolves in scoring his last two seasons, getting a surprising amount of his buckets by putting his head down and bull-rushing the defense, daring anyone to stand up to being socked in the mouth by his shoulder.

And then, when his prep career was done, he simply walked away, ready to move on and pursue a business degree.

Hesselgrave is one of the most self-contained athletes I have covered in the last 26 years, and one of the few modern-day guys who genuinely played like he was from a different era.

It was refreshing to see, and I mean this as the highest compliment — the guy would have been successful in any decade, because his heart and drive are remarkable.

We wrap up our induction with two great moments from the past, one big as it happened, one that grows with time.

The obvious highlight came Feb. 9, 1979, when Steve Whitney hit a soft 16-foot jumper, off a pass from Keith Jameson, to lift the CHS boys hoops squad to a 55-53 win over King’s Garden.

The victory over the private school power — these days known simply as King’s — and their all-world freshman Joe Buchanan, clinched the Cascade League title for Coupeville.

The program’s fifth league title in the decade, it was the end of an era, even though no one knew it at the moment. It would take nearly 20 years before the Wolf boys’ hoops squad won another title in 1998.

Whitney’s bucket kicked off a wild postseason that saw the Wolves advance all the way to the state tourney, where they beat Montesano 62-51 in the middle of three games.

That win matched the 1975-1976 Wolves and remains one of only two times that a Coupeville boys’ hoops squad has won a game at the big dance.

The lesser-known moment came in 2003, with the CHS girls’ hoops team fighting for postseason success.

A year after going 23-5 and finishing 6th at state, the Wolves would finish the 2002-2003 campaign at 20-8, bringing home an 8th place state banner.

To get there, though, Coupeville had to pull out three wins in four games at tri-districts, including a victory in a game where they almost lost their #2 scorer, Amy Mouw.

A sliced finger soaked her jersey in blood, and despite the best bathroom-scrubbing efforts of CHS assistant coach Amy King, Mouw’s uniform refused to get clean enough for the star to come back into the game.

Enter Roehl, a role player who turned down the chance to enter the game herself, instead sacrificing her own uniform to get her teammate back on the floor.

With Mouw (now clad in a dry, blood-free jersey) rejoining fellow gunner Brianne King, the Wolves surged to a huge win, while forever making an impact on the coaches who saw it all play out.

Sammie was a good teammate,” Greg Oldham said.

Amy King has taken it further, using the moment as a teaching lesson throughout her career as a volleyball, softball and hoops coach.

“When I get a team that gets a little full of themselves, that starts to forget that everyone on the team truly matters, from the top of the rotation to the last body on the bench, I pull that story out,” she said. “It, to me, is what high school sports are supposed to be about.”

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