Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Wolf Nation’

“Your wallet, take it over there, son!” (Mandi Black photo)

We did it.

Working together as a community, as Wolf Nation, we turned a negative into a positive.

Budget cuts originally claimed the Athletic Trainer position at Coupeville High School, but we weren’t having it.

Thanks to contributions through GoFundMe and in person, we made a solid run at collecting the $8,600 necessary to fund the job for the 2023-2024 school year.

Then, Sunday, spurred by a large group of volunteers, a car wash got us the rest of the way.

The district agreed to accept a donation from the public to fund the position.

The Athletic Trainer’s direct supervisor, Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith, has confirmed Wolf grad Jessica Caselden will remain in the position.

When Sept. 1 rolls around, and the Wolves host Klahowya in the football opener, a daughter of the prairie will be exactly where she should be — providing care and inspiration to your children.

Take a victory lap, Wolf Nation. You deserve it.

Surviving the smog for a good cause. (Mandi Black photo)

“Let the sponges hit the floor!” (Dina Guay photo)

Smooth operators. (Mandi Black photo)

Future CHS athletic stars make a stand in support of one of their best role models. (Mandi Black photo)

They will … rock you. (Mandi Black photo)

Jessica Caselden (in red shirt) with some of her many fans. (Dina Guay photo)

Read Full Post »

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.

Read Full Post »

banner

   We move closer and closer to making the top photo a reality, but here in Coupeville.

Legacy is huge.

Tim Duncan’s retirement from the NBA today is proof of that.

For 19 years, the Big Fundamental played the game with such precision, such honor, that his bidding farewell to the game at age 40 is like a (quiet) meteor ripping through the sports world.

The five championships, the unparalleled success (19 straight playoff berths, 18 seasons of 50+ wins) the San Antonio Spurs enjoyed with Timmmmmmaaaayyyyyy as their centerpiece, are remarkable.

But it’s the man who will be remembered, for the way he conducted himself, on the court and off. Class personified.

As I’ve pounded out 4,400+ articles here on Coupeville Sports (the four-year anniversary, Aug. 16, approaches), I’ve tried to leave some legacy behind myself.

But, a blog on the internet is not necessarily the best way to do so, as it all kind of evaporates a day or two after a particular story runs.

There is the Hall o’ Fame up at the top of the blog, but even that is a bit gossamer.

Which is why I started the project which is, against all odds, careening towards being a reality.

It’s easy to complain about the limited number of title banners which hang in the CHS gym, but replacing them with something more concrete, more complete, entailed a fair amount of work.

First I had to delve deep into the past (CHS started in 1900, or 90 years before the first banner currently gracing its gym), which required help.

The Whidbey News-Times has archives going back to the 1800’s, but those archives (bound volumes of newspapers, not microfiche or computer files) are locked down these days, in an effort to preserve crumbling, but vital history.

The paper’s head honcho, Publisher/Editor Keven R. Graves, was nice enough to overlook my past poking of his Canadian bosses, and allowed me access, probably against his better judgement.

As I spent days glazing over, flipping through pages looking for a bit of info here, a nugget of history there, News-Times Sports Editor Jim Waller (my high school journalism teacher) was always around to check on my progress, offer advice and help guide me.

Son of a legendary coach (Mert Waller) who got his start in Coupeville, Jim Waller grew up to be a standout athlete in Oak Harbor, then put in 30+ years as a Hall of Fame coach, and his guidance and knowledge of Island sports history is invaluable.

As the research came together, school officials — Superintendent Dr. Jim Shank and Principal Duane Baumann — were open to the idea of installing sports boards similar to what Oak Harbor High School has in its gym.

By doing so, we could fully honor the 109 titles I found (a figure that grows as the discussion over whether to add competition cheer is underway) lurking in the past.

The biggest stumbling block in going from essentially zero to putting 116 years of history on the wall in one fell swoop is, of course, money.

And yet that hurdle has largely fallen, with the Coupeville Booster Club pledging $2,500 and a GoFundMe I started having cleared $3,000 so far.

Now, Whidbey Signs is preparing to craft and install the signs, with a goal of having them in place prior to the start of a new school year.

It probably won’t feel real until the day arrives when the signs are unveiled and I can stand back and say, “This. As a community, as a Wolf Nation, we did this.”

I look forward to that day, because at that moment, with the help of so many, Coupeville Sports will have left something of a lasting legacy.

Something real. Something tangible.

To help us, pop over to:

https://www.gofundme.com/2bzt6x76

Read Full Post »

Ariah Bepler (right) heads off to track practice with partner in crime Hunter downes. (John Fisken photos)

   Ariah Bepler (right) heads off to track practice with partner in crime Hunter Downes. (John Fisken photo)

Ariah Bepler is Wolf Nation royalty.

His parents (Mark and Kim (Stuurmans) Bepler) were both strong athletes during their time at Coupeville High School, and you spread out from there.

Uncles, brothers of uncles, aunts, cousins, all the way to grandpa Cec Stuurmans, who is one of the best-regarded coaches in school history, and it’s obvious athletic success is in the bloodlines.

Which was why it was so nice to see Ariah and his family return to Whidbey Island before the start of this school year, allowing the ever-growing sophomore to rejoin the family business.

He’s made an immediate impact this year, playing basketball in the winter and competing in track and field this spring.

Bepler has taken full advantage of the freedom track offers, trying nine events this year, with his best work in the 300 meter hurdles.

“This was my year to try out all the events I think I might like,” he said. “I like the freedom of choices, and the giant group of friends working together as a team.”

“I haven’t honed in on anything in particular this year. Just feeling like a jack of all trades right now,” Bepler added. “I’ll know more about my strengths and specialize more next year.

“I’d like to find the event that suits me best so I can focus more attention on that for the upcoming years.”

Bepler first picked up the sport as a seventh grader in Oregon, where he was lured in by getting to spend time with classmates.

“It was a huge team and I wanted to compete with a fun group of friends.”

The move back to his parents old stomping grounds has reunited him with much of his sprawling family, while offering Bepler the chance to shine in a more intimate arena.

“Being in Coupeville offers me more choices than the bigger schools I have attended previously,” he said. “It makes school so much more fun to be able to participate.”

Bepler greatly enjoyed his time on the hard-court, as well (“I played basketball this year and love that sport”) and is considering picking up a fall sport for his junior year.

Regardless of which sports he ends up in, he’s guaranteed a large fan base, for which he is appreciative.

“All my family has played sports in Coupeville, but my parents have had the biggest impact encouraging me,” Bepler said.

Away from the games, he enjoys action/adventure movies (“in particular well-choreographed fight scenes”), hanging out with friends and his engineering class, where he gets to apply his design and architecture skills.

He also has a lesser-known talent of which he is justifiably proud.

“I love to make up and draw animated characters and story lines.”

Read Full Post »

Ryan (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Ryan Griggs watches the ball, while his foe prepares to swallow it whole. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Wiley (ST)

That moment when Wiley Hesselgrave becomes a panther. (ST)

team (ST)

The Wolves huddle before the tip-off. (ST)

locker room (Joey Lippo photo)

   CHS coaches Anthony Smith (front) and Dustin Van Velkinburgh deliver a pre-game talk. (Joey Lippo photo)

Marie (Mark)

   Big sis Marie Hesselgrave taught Wiley everything he knows about being a beast on the court. (Mark Hesselgrave photo)

opening (Bob Martin)

Anticipation is in the air moments before tip-off. (Bob Martin)

book 9ST)

Extra glossy. (ST)

Gabe (ST)

Gabe Wynn has big news. “Dude, there’s a snack machine IN THE GYM!!” (ST)

The mission was simple, and it worked.

With the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball team on the road in Puyallup Saturday for their playoff opener, I put the word out — get me photos.

Action? Great. Behind the scenes? Excellent.

The eight pics above, courtesy four different photographers, capture some of the many facets of the game that were on display, on the court and off.

Now, the challenge goes out to the Wolf girls and their fans, parents and hanger-ons.

Monday, the league champs will take their 15-5 record to Sumner High School for a rematch with Bellevue Christian, a team they lost a 52-51 gut-wrencher to Dec. 6.

Get your cameras out. Your phones out. Maybe get a pencil and draw something.

I want it.

Players getting ready. Eating their pre-game meal. On the bus. Selfies. Whatever.

I have huge faith in these Wolf girls, who love having their photos taken as much as any group I have ever seen.

Make me proud, ladies.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts