Mount Hood

The Motown Throwdown

By: Burke De Boer
Sports Editor

In the far-out year of 1975, a motley pack of punks set upon the Old PE Building to beat one another bloody. Hundreds of Western students, then called the Oregon College of Education students, came together to dig on the wild fist dishing and watch Tim Hundley reign supreme.

This was the TKB Smoker: an annual boxing tournament, hosted in May or June of each year. A trip to the archives at Hamersly Library unpacked the details of this event that has long since disappeared from the campus.

The host of these spring season rumbles was a fraternity, of sorts. They called themselves TKB and were neither affiliated with a national Greek organization nor sanctioned as a club by the university.

In the 1962 intramural football tournament, their team was billed as Theta Kappa Beta. In the days of short haircuts and picket fences, there was still an attempt to be respectable.

But by the 1970s, after a decade of political protests and the advent of heavy metal, the era of renegades was upon the nation. When the campus newspaper covered the Smoker in 1971, they proudly went by the name they were truly known as: Tappa Kegga Beer.

Tappa Kegga membership consisted primarily of players on the Wolves football team. Players such as the 1972 offensive captain and running back, Doug Trice. Trice’s 5,416-career all-purpose yards is a school record nobody’s come close to touching. And Terry Watkins, the defensive line captain.

And Tim Hundley, who played at safety and linebacker as an All-American.

In addition to playing intercollegiate ball, TKB would organize a team for the intramural football tournament every year. In all the archived intramural coverage, TKB’s teams never lost.

The gridiron gang did not fare as well in the boxing ring though. The set up, advertised to entice any and all challengers, was that a TKB member would be matched up in weight class with any non-member. Hundley, Trice, Watkins: you, too, have a chance to flatten their noses.

Every year, Tappa Kegga brawlers wound up on the losing side of the overall head-to-head records. In 1973, they won five of the 12 fights, which was a pretty good year.

They could scrap together a few wins and Tim Hundley would lead the charge. He boasted five wins in a six-year span, as he transitioned from a football player and began his coaching career as a graduate program assistant.

One of Hundley’s most reliable defensive teammates was a player named Jack Flitcraft. From 1969 to 1973, Flitcraft was a Wolves icon. In his time, he set the school record for interceptions in a career. His record still stands at 21. For perspective, the career interceptions leader among the currently active roster is redshirt senior linebacker Tyler Johnson, who has four.

Flitcraft also played baseball, leading the team in runs, hits and RBIs. He was known as an all-around athlete, affectionately called “Flit.” He was not a member of Tappa Kegga Beer.

In June of 1971, Hundley drew Flit. Hundley had 10 pounds on his teammate, and was considered the favorite.

The bout opened as expected, with Hundley landing heavy hits. But Flit was more formidable than expected. A quicker, fleet-footed fighter, Flitcraft showed the speed that would lead to his school interceptions record.

When the final bell rang, it was Flit’s glove that was raised. By decision, the upset was complete.

Mike Haglund, a campus reporter who was in attendance, described the aftermath; “Tim just smiled and gave his congrats to Jack and they left the ring together.”

Tim Hundley fought for six years through annual matches with only one loss. And Jack Flitcraft would go down as the man who delivered it.

By the end of the ‘70s, the event had grown to being, by the account of the 1978 newspapers, “the most popular campus activity of the year.”

And, by this time, a new Tappa Kegga brother had risen from his ranks to lead his fraternity of fighters; Lee Reed, who in ‘78 was called “The Muhammad Ali of TKB,” strung together his own streak of smashing victories.

Gill Boardman, a campus newspaper staff writer, covered the ‘77 Smoker by saying, “The highlight of the evening had to be whether Lee Reed would put his opponent down in the first or second round.”

Then, in 1979, it all came crashing down. Or, at least, the boxing ring did. Before a crowd of 900, the floor of the ring collapsed.
It was repaired, and the bouts continued. Mark Smith, as a spokesman from the fraternity, later explained that they didn’t have the time to check the safety of the ring.

But in the 1980 intramural football tournament, no TKB team competed.
No mention of Tappa Kegga was found in the Reagan era papers. With no clue as to how it happened, the club disappeared. Perhaps the spirit of the ‘70s simply kept them bound to that happenin’ decade.

So who exactly was the best TKB boxer? As they were fraternity brothers, Hundley and Reed never duked it out. But if they had, the overlap would have landed right when one was a graduate student and the other fresh out of high school.

Hundley may have been one tough dude during his tenure as a pugilist, but something worth noting is Reed’s accomplishments after the fall of the Smokers. The Wolves Taekwondo club competed in Portland in 1980 and 1981, and Reed took the Northwest heavyweight black belt championship both times.

Taekwondo and boxing are, admittedly, different beasts, but it’s no wonder that Reed was so accomplished in the ring. For as long as his time lasted, at least, then he was off to prove his mettle in other arenas.

The ‘70s ended, so did the Smokers. And so did Tappa Kegga Beer.

Contact the author at journalsports@wou.edu

Wolves’ top five

By: Burke De Boer
Sports Editor

Indoor track team sets a Division II record
The indoor track season was a dominant one for Western Oregon track and field, capped off by a record-setting national title for the men’s distance medley relay.

Sophomore Dustin Nading, juniors AJ Holmberg and Josh Dempsey and junior David Ribich at anchor made up the team. They traveled to Birmingham, Alabama as part of the Wolves team that competed in the NCAA Division II national championships.

They ran a photo finish race, beating reigning relay champions Adams State by .001 second to win the national trophy.

Their finishing time was 9:40.144, which set a new Division II indoor track national record.

Baseball crowned conference champs
After a two year title drought, Wolves baseball reclaimed their place on top of the conference.

The baseball team only played a total of four games at home this year, as the baseball field didn’t dry out until the final week of the regular season. But the team used those few games to secure the GNAC regular season title in front of home fans.

They then went on to play in the conference playoffs and swept their way to the championship victory.

Road Warriors softball makes a late-season stand
While baseball got to play four games at home, softball was not so lucky.

They adopted the nickname the Road Warriors, as weather kept softball out of Monmouth. They also battled injuries early on, and after their first two months of play they were dead last in the conference.

But at the start of April the Wolves flipped a switch. Thirteen wins in April secured the final spot in the GNAC tournament.

The fourth-seeded Wolves were able to knock off top-seeded Central Washington, who had entered the tournament as the reigning champions. They ultimately finished second in the tournament, falling to Western Washington.

Football’s underdog upset
The football team finished 4-6, the first losing record since head coach Arne Ferguson first took over the program in 2005. The first game of the year, however, set the standard for competition from the team, as they toppled Division I Sacramento State, 38-30.

On offense, the game enshrined what could be accomplished by the dual-quarterback system of juniors Nick Duckworth and Phillip Fenumiai. Junior wide receiver Paul Revis amassed 175 all-purpose yards.

The winning touchdown came from first-year student Torreahno Sweet, a two-sport athlete who played both baseball and football this year. After starting from their own 20 late in the fourth quarter, the Wolves drove down the field and Sweet broke tackles to pic up the touchdown on a 30-yard run.

Men’s basketball makes a playoff run
The men’s basketball team took a 16-12 record into the GNAC playoffs for a third-place seed. They rode the playoff bracket all the way to the conference championship game.

The 2016 team had won the GNAC, won the NCAA west regional playoff and advanced to the national elite eight. 2017 was not as successful of a year, but the Wolves proved themselves a legitimate threat to the conference title yet again.

The Wolves came in as a three seed, and junior Tanner Omlid had two consecutive double-doubles to help lead the team to the championship final, where the Wolves surprised number one seed Western Washington and took an eight point lead into halftime.

Western Washington regrouped and went on a late scoring spree. The Wolves fell in the final seconds, 69-71, as sophomore Malik Leaks’ three-pointer missed and time ran out.

Contact the author at journalsports@wou.edu

Incoming recruits look to make the cut

By: Burke De Boer
Sports Editor

Every season in student athletics, players graduate and the next season sees new players join the team in their place. Next year’s crop of first-year students features some players who could make impacts on their teams sooner rather than later.
Taisha Thomas is a center transferring to the women’s basketball team from Peninsula College. She was named to her conference’s all-defensive team, averaging 8.8 PPG and 6.8 RPG last season. Jessie Brown is another center, coming from Castle Rock, Colorado where was a three-year letterwinner in basketball.

Olivia Denton is a guard from Auburn, Washington, bringing three point skills with a 9.8 PPG average last year.

Joining the baseball team is Zach Griffin, a right handed pitcher from Phoenix, Arizona.

Two local catcher recruits are coming in, looking to help replace senior catcher Boog Leach; Anthony Zellner is a left handed batter from West Salem High School and James Anderson was named to the all-state team playing for Crescent Valley High School in Corvallis and is a utility player who also plays first base.

The football team will be reinforcing its numbers with a large incoming class, as 31 student athletes declared their intention to become Wolves.

Tyler Sweet, younger brother of first-year dual-sport standout Torreahno Sweet, will be playing wide receiver. He recorded 26 receptions for 366 yards and a touchdown as a senior in Upland, California.

Jash Allen is a running back recruit from Tigard High School. He ran for 1,501 yards and 28 touchdowns in his career, notching 7.6 yards per rush attempt for the Tigers. His breakaway speed helped him pick up many big runs last year, including a 74-yard touchdown against Tualatin.

On defense, Jonah Land will be coming to the defensive line from Waldport High School. Over his career for the Irish he made a total of 244 tackles, including 97 solo and forced four fumbles.

Joining the sturdy linebacker core is Kyle Otis from Toledo. Otis recorded 239 total tackles in his career and was named the all-league defensive MVP.

Ryan Worthley is one of the quarterback recruits, and played ball with Jash Allen at Tigard. Worthley threw for 2,137 yards and 20 touchdowns as a senior to become MaxPreps’s fourth-ranked quarterback in the state. He has a calm presence in the pocket, and threw a 47-yard touchdown pass while he was getting hit against Newberg.

Contact the author at journalsports@wou.edu

Outdoor track has national success

By: Burke De Boer
Sports Editor

For the second time this year, junior David Ribich is a national champion.

After anchoring the indoor distance medley relay team that won the indoor national championship, Ribich added more hardware to the trophy room with an outdoor 1,500-meter title.

It was the first outdoor track title in Western Oregon history.
On May 27, the finals were held at the NCAA Division II outdoor track and field championships IMG Academy in Bradentown, Florida. Ribich ran the race alongside sophomore Dustin Nading. Sophomore Olivia Woods also ran the championship race of the women’s 800-meter.

All three earned All-American honors.

The first day of competition was Thursday May 25. Nading and Ribich qualified for the championship race with times of 3:50.76 and 3:51.85, respectively.

The second day featured the final contest of the triple jump, with senior Wesley Gray taking his last leap for the Wolves. His distance of 14.93 meters earned him 17th place.

The middle distance trio of sophomore Olivia Woods and juniors Megan Rose and Suzanne Van De Grift have represented Western Oregon consistently in the 800-meter this season. The 800-meter preliminary was also held on the second day of the meet.

Woods broke her own school record, as she finished in first place of the third heat with a time of 2:07.82. Her previous record was 2:08.46.

Rose and Van De Grift ran the first heat of the race but failed to qualify for the championship race. Rose’s time of 2:09.94 took her to 13th place. Van De Grift soon followed her across the finish line with a time of 2:10.64 for 16th place.

Sophomore Sheila Limas De La Cruz was the first of the Wolves team to compete on championship Saturday, representing in the javelin contest. She threw for a distance of 38.4 meters, coming in 21st place.

Olivia Woods came in third to make it to the podium for the 800-meter race.

She had fallen to seventh place at the 400-meter mark, but after passing the halfway point she dialed up the intensity and passed four runners in front of her.

Her final time was 2:07.38, and for the second day in a row she broke her own school record.

Ribich and Nading then competed in the men’s 1,500-meter.

Ribich took the lead halfway through and held on to finish 0.22 of a second ahead of the second-place runner. To seal the victory, Ribich finished in 3:49.64.

Nading came in sixth place with a 3:51.50 finish.

The only two runners competing for the Wolves men’s team on title day, Ribich and Nading picked up a total of 13 total points to earn Western Oregon men the 17th place finish on the day. Woods’ solo effort earned 6 points for the women’s team to earn 37th place overall.

Contact the author at journalsports@wou.edu

Crunk at the crossroads

By: Burke De Boer
Sports Editor

“It takes you forever to find a good walk-up song,” said the designated hitter. “It’s a very big deal. I actually didn’t decide until like the last week before our first spring games, when I had to make a decision.”

The man who agonized over his soundtrack is Joey Crunkilton, who played his final season in 2017. He walked up to the stadium country song “People Back Home” by Florida Georgia Line.
His music in 2016 was a hard reggae track: “Vampire” by Tribal Seeds.

It’s easy to understand why Crunkilton would pay special attention to his music. In addition to playing Wolves baseball, he has played cymbals for the Western drumline.

“I saw a poster, ‘Western Oregon drumline: If you know how to read music call this number, we need people.’ And I was like, ‘Well, s—, I play the drums,’” he laughs. “So I called them and ended up playing football games and stuff. That was kicka–.”

This is the can-do spirit that Crunkilton brings to his game. His positive attitude reverberated through the team this year.

“Crunk is a great guy to be around,” said Nyles Nygaard, junior third baseman. “He always has the biggest smile on his face and is a guy people can go to for anything.”

Roll back the clock a year and we would be talking about a different Crunk.

Western Oregon is his third college team, after a successful run at Western Nevada College and a less successful run at UC Santa Barbara.

“Baseball was the thing, and my ticket to get my way through school,” he says. “Because I’m a good student, but not a great student.”

Western Nevada was happy to punch the not-great-student’s ticket. For two years, Crunkilton took a scholarship to play ball in the desert mountains. Both years he earned all-conference honors. But a junior college is only a launching pad.

“I had offers from random schools,” said Crunkilton. “And I wasn’t sure, I wasn’t getting a gut feeling on where I wanted to go. So I ended up sending my own info out to WOU, and they were like ‘Yeah, we want you.’”

Then UC Santa Barbara called. “I wanted to go to a Division I school more than anything.”

Santa Barbara, however, did not go according to plan.

“Division I was much more cutthroat. I kind of got chewed up and spit out by the team. It was an eye-opening year. It’s very competitive, and if you don’t stand up and prove yourself then you get forgotten about quickly. Then they redshirted me.”
After a year of practicing and not playing, Joey Crunkilton was in a funk.

“I was talking to the coach and he was like ‘You’re probably gonna be a backup if you come back. Probably in a similar spot to where you are right now. Not a ton of playing time.’”

So he packed his bags. He had left Western waiting, but the howling of the Wolves would wait no longer.

Crunk announced himself with a home run in his debut game, a two-run smash that would prove the game winner over Azusa Pacific on Feb. 4, 2016.

Unfortunately, it would be his only homer all season. In the 13 games he played in April, he went hitless in nine. He finished the season with a .245 average, one of the worst on the team.

“I didn’t play much towards the end,” he took a pause. “I got a little nihilistic last year. It was kind of a ‘Whatever’ attitude as I stopped playing.”

As a fifth-year senior, that all changed.

“I had the thought, this is my last year. If I only play one game I’m still gonna go for it and do my best.”

For his efforts, he helped the team earn a conference championship and sweep the playoffs.

The semi-final rally against Central Washington is what Crunkilton says he’ll take away most from the season.

He recalls watching the Wildcats bat from the dugout. “I was freakin’ out. They go base hit, score a run. ‘All right, 1-1.’ Home run, 3-1. ‘S—.’ Another home run, 5-1, hit, hit, 7-1. I just got this sense of calm. We were like, ‘Screw it, let’s break some hearts.’”

Which is what they did, scoring 12 runs in the final three innings. Crunkilton scored two and added an RBI.

“And you could see Central was like ‘What the hell just happened?’” He laughed. “That game was the coolest. That was the best way to cap off the season.”

With the season done and graduation imminent, Joey faces uncertainty once more.

“I want to get out of the house, dude. Just quick as possible. Find a job first and then you can get a career later.”

What would this career be? He spitballs a few ideal career paths, from a fitness business to an online marketing company.
“I want to do something more with music. I want to really learn how to play the drumset well, and then I want to join a band. Absolute dream job: being in a rock band. That would be very fun, I think,” he nodded as he thought it over. “I also really want to learn how to fight, like boxing or jiu jitsu. I was a wrestler growing up and that was always fun. It was so much just brute effort.”

Maybe one day, Joey Crunkilton will be picking music to come out of the tunnel for a fight. Or maybe some future baseball player will walk up to the batter’s box while a Crunkilton drum solo plays.

Or maybe neither of these things. Whatever happens, you get the sense when you talk to Crunk, it’s going to be fun.

“I guess my dream would be to just make something, create a business or a product or something, that just makes people’s lives better and makes me money. Pretty simple,” and he laughed again.

Contact the author at journalsports@wou.edu

Turbulence and triumph

By: Burke De Boer
Sports Editor

In 1982, Wolves volleyball won only one game.

For their final home game, they hosted the Hawaii-Hilo Vulcans, who had won the 1981 national championship. The Vulcans trashed the Wolves 2-15, 2-15, 1-15.

Despite the margins, head coach Joe Caligure said after the game, “They didn’t impress me as being number one.”

1983 saw the program hire its third new coach in three years. The team needed a solution, and Gene Krieger was chosen to solve it.
He brought in a number of high profile recruits and transfer students.

His high rate of recruitment helped the Wolves boom from a 1-22 record in 1982 to 20-15.

Joining the ranks in 1984 was all-state high school recruit setter Jody Sunde.

To test their mettle, the Wolves traveled to Hawaii to open the season. Foremost among their competitors were third-time national champions Hawaii-Hilo. The Wolves held their own and split matches, and Krieger said they should be considered among the top 10 in the nation.

Such notoriety was slow to come. To get the attention of the NAIA polls, they had to earn it. And so they did.

By Oct. 11 they had strung together a series of blowouts: 17 wins, including an eight game streak where they didn’t lose a single set.

At the end of the year they won the conference title. Krieger was voted coach of the year and the Wolves were ranked eighth in the nation.

They opened the District 2 playoffs with finesse, taking down Pacific University, 15-8, 15-7, 15-1. They further bullied their second opponents, beating George Fox 15-7, 15-10, 15-4. For the semi-final they beat second-seed Portland 15-5, 15-12, 15-7.

The playoffs were double elimination, and Portland was still alive to face the Wolves again. This time Western fell, 6-15, 11-15, 10-15.

A sudden-death final match would decide the district title.

The Wolves pulled out a tight win, 15-13, to become champions. The road to their first ever national tournament now lay in front of them: a tri-district regional playoff.

First they faced Gonzaga, and the Wolves were easily favorited over the unranked Bulldogs. The real test would be Hawaii-Hilo, who awaited the Western Oregon-Gonzaga winner.

That test would never come. The Wolves dropped the game to Gonzaga over five sets, 14-16, 15-10, 8-15, 15-3, 8-15.

There was still great pride in what the program had accomplished in such a short amount of time: from heavy underdogs to heavy favorites in two years.

In Feb. 1985, it was revealed that coach Krieger had given money to recruits. The Wolfpack Athletic Club was forming as a way to give athletes financial aid. The money its sponsors were donating had been an important part of Krieger’s recruiting, but the club was not yet active.

“I told the kids there would be money,” Krieger said in a statement. “What was I to do? Wait for the club to get together and not give the kids the money I had promised, or give it out myself? Everything was documented. I didn’t try to hide anything.”

Above board or not, the NAIA forbade “the provision of money to players by coaches.” Krieger resigned.

He was tapped by Nevada Reno to take over their coaching job, and Jody Sunde and the all-league Sue Denison intended to transfer to Reno with him. Ultimately, Reno passed on Krieger and Sunde stayed in Monmouth. Denison still left.

The 1985 Wolves, under new head coach Jim Callender, repeated their district championship and again faced Gonzaga. This time it was a bi-district playoff. This time the Wolves only had to win once to make nationals.

This time they did.

They traveled to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the first Western Oregon volleyball team to play in the national tournament.

Come 1987, Jim Callender took a new job at Division I Memphis and the Western Oregon coaching door continued to revolve. A local was selected this time: Judy Lovre, who had coached Corvallis High to four state titles.

Lovre inherited an experienced team. Only one player was lost to graduation, and she was replaced by Washington Huskies transfer Lori Sappington.

At the end of the 1987 regular season, Judy Lovre’s Wolves were ranked fourth in the nation, the first Western team to crack the top five. They won the conference and district tournaments. And they went all the way to the national championship game.

Though they lost to BYU-Hawaii, who picked up their second consecutive national title, the Wolves returned to Monmouth with another kind of victory. At second in the nation, no Western Oregon team in any sport had ever accomplished so much.

Jody Sunde and Lori Sappington were named All-Americans. They returned, for their senior year, the veterans on a team that lost many to graduation.
Despite a high turnover in players, the Wolves didn’t backslide. In fact, when they made it to the national tournament in 1988, they did even better, and won every single set in their group stage.

They advanced through the double-elimination bracket with ease until they faced Hawaii-Hilo. The Wolves lost to the Vulcans, 7-15, 11-15. They rebounded with a three-set win over Hawaii Pacific and met Hawaii-Hilo for the national title.

For the second year in a row, the Wolves earned second place. Jody Sunde was even named the Reebok player of the year.

Lovre remained head coach of Wolves volleyball until 2004. Over that time she amassed 489 victories, becoming the winningest coach in Western Oregon history. Lovre’s Wolves were the country’s most fearsome mainland team – the 41 NAIA tournament wins that Western Oregon recorded were third only to BYU-Hawaii and Hawaii-Hilo.

Gene Krieger made his coaching rebound at Westmont College in 1987, and since then has helmed many teams. In March, 2017, he landed a new gig. Beginning this fall, he will be the head coach of the Hawaii-Hilo Vulcans.

Contact the author at journal sports@wou.edu

Stealing Victory

By: Burke De Boer
Sports Editor

The Victory Bell rises over the Werner University Center. It hangs dormant in its tower above Allegro Cafe as an audio file plays to announce each hour.

But there was a time when the bell rang regularly. The bell was so named because it was rang in celebration after every home win. Old college newspapers, collected in the archives at Hamersly Library, called it the “Queen of Victory.” On Jan. 16, 1953, the Queen was kidnapped.

The men’s basketball team hosted the Portland State Vikings that night. Portland State was playing their first-ever year of competitive basketball and the Wolves were happy to whip the inaugural Vikings, 77-60. A dance was held in Maple Hall after the game. Maple Hall, where the Victory Bell was then kept.

After the Oregon Collegiate Conference was founded in 1950, the bell rang often.

The 1952-1953 year accounted for the football team’s fourth consecutive conference championship, including a 40-7 victory over Portland State. Wolves volleyball won their third straight title as well.

Evidently, the Portland State kids were sick of it.

While students from the two schools mixed at the Maple Hall dance, a crew of Vikings made the bell their plunder and vanished into the wintery night.

The alumni newspaper reported, “Rumors were many and varied at the dance … But there was no trace of the bell.”

Dr. Roy E. Lieuallen, for whom the administration building is named, was registrar at the time. He received a phone call from Portland State on Monday morning, Jan. 19. It was Dr. Stephen Epler. Both men had served as officers in the Navy in World War II, and the message was passed from one old sailor to the other: we have your bell.

It was returned on Feb. 11. The Portland State students returning it brought with them a small replica to serve as a trophy between the schools, changing hands with every victory.

That night the Wolves beat the Vikings 69-55. On Feb. 24, the Wolves beat them again, 63-61.

After the final game, the Vikings pillaged their hosts once more. This time Portland State upstarts made off with the Victory Bell’s clapper, muting the bell until it too, was returned.

Men’s basketball backslid for a few years. Seasons ranged from mediocre to abysmal. The low point was 1957-1958, when the Wolves went 1-20. The only win, a 58-43 walloping of Portland State.

No matter the results, the Victory Bell remained safe in Monmouth. Today, above the corner of Church Street and Monmouth Avenue, the Queen of Victory still reigns.

Contact the author at journalsports@wou.edu