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Posts Tagged ‘Willie Smith’

David Rochin

David Rochin

Amanda Allmer

Amanda Allmer (far left). (Photo courtesy Jon Crimmins)

There are good players, great players and then ones who really dominate.

The two superstars who form the 78th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame both firmly fall into that latter category.

Amanda Allmer only had one year at CHS, while David Rochin had two, but both left a sizable impact, and are fondly remembered by their coach, Willie Smith, who is taking the dais today to welcome them into the Hall.

After this you’ll find the duo up at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

First though, let’s take a few moments to bask in the afterglow of their vaunted prep careers.

Allmer joined CHS classmate Marnie Bartelson in traveling up to Oak Harbor to play for the Wildcats at a time before Coupeville had its own soccer program.

Anchoring the team in goal, she helped lead OHHS to a league title and a 4th place finish at the 1994 state tourney, then came back to CHS for basketball season, which is where Smith became the happiest coach in all the land at the news of her arrival.

Amanda Allmer, the only true center I ever had play for me and it was in my first year.

Great transfer from Juanita, parents bought, or had owned, the restaurant at the ferry and moved here her senior year.

As a first year coach, having a senior, who was not only extremely talented, but one of the finest leaders I ever had, was a godsend.

She was an extremely hard worker who never quit no matter what the score was.

She was an inside presence that allowed Zenovia Barron, Jen Canfield and Mika Hosek to operate on the perimeter; without Amanda in the middle the development of those three kids takes a lot longer.

She was a great role model for all of our future stars that played with her: in addition to those three we had Ann Pettit, Jen Eelkema and Vanessa Bodley, who all watched her toughness and ended up playing as hard as she did.

She was pretty unstoppable in the middle, and that was when we played in the Cascade Conference in some of the hey-days of the programs.

Sultan, Lakewood, and King’s were perennial league champs and had very strong programs and Amanda was an easy First-Team pick during that time.

As tough as she was on the court, she was as nice and respectful off of it; a great student, superb leader, and even better person.

I feel pretty fortunate to have got to coach her.

Jump forward into the early 2000s and Smith, firmly entrenched as Coupeville’s baseball coach, lucked into his second unexpected superstar.

David (daveed) Rochin (rochine): lived with one of our families here and was not a foreign exchange student as he attended both his junior and senior years.

I would say the best pure baseball player I got to coach here.

He played shortstop and pitcher for us and was unbelievable.

He had a rifle of an arm, great range, and was a great hitter (power and average) ending up hitting .455 his junior year then “dropping off” to .377 his senior year and leading the way in RBI’s and extra base hits both years.

What made him so special was he made everything look so effortless; to say he was smooth would be an understatement. It was just so fun to watch him play.

And he loved to play.

Intense but always with a smile and a quip, he combined with Justin Barnes, Ty Blouin and affable Jacob Henderson as perhaps the greatest quartet of one-liners and greatest goofs I’ve ever coached.

The four of them umpired our Little League baseball games, showing the backbone of our program’s future stars — James Smith, Casey Larson, Kyle Wilcox, Alex Evans, Zach Hauser, Jared Murdy, etc. — how fun the game could be (as well as how hard you needed to work).

The greatest moment for me, and I think for those four seniors was the first game of the year their senior year.

We had had a student transfer to South Whidbey for baseball and it just so happened that we played them first that year.

The game was close and we were up by a run or two in the top of the seventh with two outs and a runner at second; Barnes is on the mound with David at short, Ty at third, and Hendo at first.

As fate would have it, their former teammate steps up the plate; he squibbles a grounder to short and David comes in to make the play.

As he fields the ball, his feet go out from under him; the kid’s hustling down the line so instead of panicking, David simply raises to his knees and throws the kid out by two steps and we go berserk.

Of course David has a big ole grin on his face as he gets mobbed.

One of the nicest kids, perhaps best baseball player I have had, and one of the most memorable moments of my baseball coaching career.

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Chelsea Prescott (John Fisken photo)

   Get hired tomorrow and help shape the volleyball future of players like Chelsea Prescott. (John Fisken photo)

Want to break into the coaching biz?

There’s no better time than now, especially if you have some volleyball knowledge.

With the start of school less than a month away, Coupeville Middle School is hot to trot to add a coach to the program, and time is of the essence.

The first day of practice for CMS sports is Sept. 6, also the first day of school.

The job would be ideal for someone seeking their first coaching job, though no one’s going to turn you away if you, say, won a handful of NCAA and Olympics titles and are now looking for a quiet retirement gig.

Hey, could happen.

If interested, contact CHS/CMS Athletic Director Willie Smith at wsmith@coupeville.k12.wa.us.

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Ashley Smith (John Fisken photos)

Ashley Smith is ready to tear up the soccer pitch. (John Fisken photos)

Smith

Not even an injured hand can slow down the high energy Smith.

She is the heir to the throne.

Ashley Smith, who will be a junior at Coupeville High School in the fall, follows in the footsteps of siblings who are highly accomplished Wolf athletes.

Megan, James and Ian Smith all were among the best in their respective classes, and now Ashley is here to tear up the soccer pitch.

A bright, super-friendly young woman who one time gave me so much (good-natured) grief over my plan to skip a boys’ JV soccer game that I gave up and stayed after all, the youngest Smith is a ball of fire.

As she celebrates her 17th birthday today, Ashley has a very bright future, both on and off the soccer pitch.

She is willing to get right in the middle of things as a defender, fighting for every loose ball, even when one of her hands is thickly wrapped in a bandage.

With the Wolves having lost several key players to graduation, Smith is primed to see even more playing time this fall, and I’m confident she will take advantage of the opportunity.

Off the field, she is kind, yet sarcastic, able to drop zingers on you while also embracing her friends and family.

Ashley, like all of her family, takes great delight in life and brightens up the world around her.

Happy birthday, Miss Smith. May your cake day be as awesome as you are.

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"No autographs today!!"

“No autographs today!!” (John Fisken photo)

The Man comes around again.

Less than a year after stepping down as head baseball coach at Coupeville High School, Willie Smith is returning to his old duties.

No, not those duties.

Being a fan again instead of a hardball guru allows Smith to stroll away in the third inning of a game now and take wife Cherie to dinner, and that puts a huge smile on his face.

So, what is he returning to, you ask?

Smith will be reclaiming the title of Athletic Director at CHS, starting with the 2016-2017 school year.

He replaces Duane Baumann, who will let go of the job when he rises to become Principal at the school next year.

Dr. Jim Shank has been operating as both Superintendent for Coupeville Schools and Principal, but will now be able to focus his time and energy more fully on his original job.

Both appointments have been announced internally and are confirmed by multiple sources.

Smith stepped down as the school’s AD in 2009, after a five-year run in the position.

During his time at CHS, he has been a near-constant presence on the sidelines, with 19 seasons as varsity baseball coach, 17 as an assistant football coach and seven as varsity girls’ basketball coach.

His 1999-2000 hoops squad was the first girls team in school history to win a game at state in any sport.

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Maureen Wetmore (Photos courtesy the Willie Smith Archives) CAMERA

   Maureen Wetmore gets ready to break some fools in half. (Photos courtesy Willie Smith)

Willie Smith

CHS round-ball guru Willie Smith imparts wisdom to his squad.

They were the trailblazers.

As the current incarnation of the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad returns to state for the first time in a decade, we’re going back 18 years to honor the first Wolf girls’ hoops team to make that trek.

The 35th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame is a one-team affair, as we welcome the 1997-1998 CHS girls’ basketball team to these hallowed digital walls.

After this, they will sit at the top of the blog under the Legends tab.

And that’s what they are, legends.

When Willie Smith showed up from the wilds of Sequim and took over the Wolf girls program four years earlier, he was inheriting a bit of a mess.

Not that far removed from an 0-20 season, Coupeville had rarely been a strong contender in girls hoops.

That began to change immediately, as Smith and a pack of freshmen led by soon-to-be all-time-greats Novi Barron and Ann Pettit started the uphill climb.

Four years later, with six seniors headlining an 11-player squad, the Wolves smashed all their accomplishments from the past.

The first league title in program history, a third-place finish at tri-districts, 18 wins and their first-ever appearance in the state tourney.

Once in Tacoma, they ran into a brutal schedule, having to face seventh-ranked Toledo and sixth-ranked Dayton, and, while they fought like beasts on both days, eventually bowed out.

But the seeds were planted, and two short seasons later the Wolf girls would capture their first-ever win at state in 2000.

Two players — Jaime Rasmussen and Rachelle Solomon — appeared on both squads, and the manager on the ’97-’98 team, eighth grader Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, would grow up to be a First-Team All-League player as a sophomore on the 2000 squad.

She learned from the best, watching Barron (versus Granite Falls) and Pettit (Vashon Island) each drop 29 points in a game in ’97-’98.

Ellsworth-Bagby also picked up her scrappy defensive style from a then-junior who she would join on the court the following year.

Maureen Wetmore was a tough as nails guard who wasn’t afraid to do the dirty work,” Smith said. “Great defender and as a senior, Ashley’s freshman year, became leading scorer and mentor to Ashley and the rest of the team.”

From top to bottom, the ’97-’98 team were ball-hawks, tough-nosed young women on the court who took on the persona of their coach and changed the way Coupeville girls’ basketball was viewed.

Now, 18 years later, their legend still looms large and provides inspiration to the current Wolves.

When you stand tall and expect to win, when you prepare and play to win, when you refuse to listen to the past and embrace the future, anything is possible.

Back together, as a team, which was how they always played, the 1997-1998 CHS girls’ basketball team:

Willie Smith (coach)
Cherie Smith (assistant coach)
Novi Barron
Stephanie Kipp
Hilary Kortuem
Ann Pettit
Jennifer Pettit
Jaime Rasmussen
Jess Roundy
Rachelle Solomon
Danielle Vracin
Kim Warder
Maureen Wetmore
Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby (manager)

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