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• FOOTBALL: Keldric Stokes’ journey takes him from UW-Stout quarterback to Thorp varsity coach • GIRLS HOCKEY: Sophomore Sidney Polzin emerges as Chippewa Falls/Menomonie’s top goal scorer
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TABLE OF
CONTENTS 4: Karlstad’s transformation after freshman injury is paying dividends for the Regis girls basketball team 7: Sophomore Polzin has emerged as Chippewa Falls/ Menomonie’s top goal scorer
10: Defending state champion Eau Claire Area Stars have plenty of depth in net 11: Stokes’ journey takes him from UW-Stout quarterback to Thorp varsity football coach 14: Urlaub joins Loomis on U.S. World Nordic Championships team
8: Posterized: Chippewa Falls’ Peyton Rogers Schmidt
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Regis’ Teryn Karlstad takes a shot over Thorp’s Brittany Rosemeyer (34) on Feb. 8 at Regis.
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BY SPENCER FLATEN
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our years ago, Teryn Karlstad was just looking to make her mark. The freshman had recently been called up to join the Regis varsity girls basketball team. In the eyes of coach Patrick Boughton, the skilled young guard was going to be another weapon on an already dangerous squad. In a practice late in the season, that all changed. Karlstad darted up the court on a fast break. Ball in hand, she came to a particularly jarring jump stop. “I just knew that something happened, that something was wrong,” Karlstad said. In one move, she had torn her ACL and meniscus and suffered a major bone bruise. All of a sudden, Karlstad continuing as a basketball player was far from a certainty. “When I had my injury, a lot of people didn’t think I’d make it back. Someone even suggested I take up swimming instead,” Karlstad said. “But for me, a big part of it was knowing that I could come back.” She knew she could, and she did. Thanks to her recovery, she added an element to her game that has taken her to levels unmatched by anyone in the Western Cloverbelt Conference. She was primarily a guard while growing up, but Regis moved Karlstad into the post as she worked to regain quickness lost by her path to recovery from the injury. In the paint, Karlstad has found a new home. She’s averaging 19.1 points and 14.9 rebounds per game as a senior, utilizing her hybrid skillset to be a threat from anywhere on the court. The transition wasn’t easy, but it was worth it. “I only ever really knew myself as a guard, and to be stuck down in the middle where you’re all congested, it was a hard transition,” Karlstad said. “But I knew that I had grown, and needed to do it for the team.” It was a team-first approach, something Boughton said is not uncommon from the senior.
STAFF PHOTO BY DAN REILAND
Regis High School basketball player Teryn Karlstad on Feb. 11. View more photos at LeaderTelegramPhotos.com.
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“A lot of kids would have said ‘I don’t want anything to do with that, I’m just a guard.’ But she was open to the idea,” Boughton said. “She comes to practice, listens and does what we ask of her.” Her recovery, like the transition between positions, was difficult. But she did it in remarkable time, returning to athletics five and a half months after suffering the injury. “As much as I hated going to (physical therapy), I just did what they gave me and kind of doubled it. It takes a lot of work, and I think the biggest part isn’t getting your leg better, it’s healing your mind,” Karlstad said. She credited her mother with helping keep her motivated during the recovery, and managed to make it back in time to try out for volleyball the next fall. But basketball is where she has pledged her future. This year, she committed to play Division III hoops at the University of St. Thomas in the Twin Cities. “She’s become so versatile, and a lot of colleges noticed that,” Boughton said. “She can spread the floor and she can go in there to get rebounds, post up smaller players. She has that ability to be used all over the floor.” That versatility is a big part of why she has risen up to become the next in line of talisman players leading the Ramblers each year.
PHOTO BY BRANDEN NALL
Regis’ Teryn Karlstad fights for positioning during a game against Thorp on Feb. 8 in Eau Claire.
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FILE PHOTO
Regis’ Teryn Karlstad grabs a rebound over Osseo-Fairchild’s Sophiah Filla during last season in Osseo.
In the past, Regis has had a standout player or two leading their charge to a conference title — the Ramblers have won four in a row. Whether it was Western Cloverbelt player of the year Hannah Anderson in 2016-17 or the duo of Amber Darge and Kate Seyer last year, the Ramblers have produced a dominant force in the league time after time. This year, it has been Karlstad’s turn. “There were a lot of great players before me, and I feel like I didn’t fully have my time,” she said.
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“This season, I got my chance.” The Ramblers have been knocked out of the Division 4 playoffs in the regional finals two years in a row. Those losses taught Karlstad some lessons she won’t forget heading into this postseason. “It showed that anything can happen, no matter what seed you are,” she said. “We can beat any team, and any team can beat us.” If the Ramblers are going to beat any team in mid-to-late February, Karlstad will likely be in the middle of it — wherever she’s needed on the court.
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Regis’ Teryn Karlstad takes a shot in a game against Thorp on Feb. 8 in Eau Claire.
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BUCKSHOT THE MAGAZINE | FEBRUARY 2019
MAKING A NAME
POLZIN EMERGES AS CF/M’S TOP GOAL SCORER BY SPENCER FLATEN LEADER-TELEGRAM STAFF
CHIPPEWA FALLS — Last season, Sidney Polzin’s goal-scoring exploits took place in a shadow. With Kaylee Frenette lighting up the scoreboard as one of the Chippewa Falls/ Menomonie co-op’s all-time best players, much of the spotlight was centered on her. That was no problem for Polzin, who was just a freshman last winter. She learned a thing or two from Frenette, and finished as the team’s second-best scorer. But this season, it’s been Polzin’s time to shine. The sophomore leads Chippewa Falls/ Menomonie in goals (14), assists (seven) and points (21). She is sixth in the ultra-competitive Big Rivers Conference in goals scored entering the postseason. “With a kid like Sid, her ability to just pick up the puck and go has been her strong suit,” Chippewa Falls/Menomonie coach Tony Menard said. “Just getting the puck on her stick and trying to capitalize on a shot opportunity. That’s where you see her most comfortable at.” Finding the back of the net hasn’t required any outrageous tricks or gimmicks for Polzin. Instead, a simple approach has garnered high-volume results. “It’s just shooting and getting rebounds,” Polzin said. “Shooting when I have the right opportunity, and taking the first shot.” It has worked so far. Heading into the playoffs, Polzin has 26 career goals and 24 career assists. That’s right around the same pace Frenette scored at in her first two seasons before going on to finish in the top five in co-op history for career points. Polzin has showcased plenty of consistency this season, tallying at least one point in 14 of the team’s 22 regular season games. She started out the winter remarkably well, with eight goals in the first four games of the season. “She’s been able to be that go-to player, whether it’s on the power play or carrying the puck up the ice,” Menard said. The power play has provided some quality looks for Polzin this season, and the team gives her a lot of freedom when
STAFF FILE PHOTO
Chippewa Falls/Menomonie’s Sidney Polzin skates during a game against Eau Claire Area at Hobbs Ice Center on Feb. 16, 2018.
that unit hits the ice. She has four power-play goals this winter. “She’s been quarterbacking our power play, so she’s getting a lot of quality looks from that,” Menard said. “You hate to put a lot of pressure on someone as a sophomore, but she’s handled it really well.” Pressure has been no issue for Polzin, who took it upon herself to grab a bigger role this season. “Knowing that we were losing some key players (entering the season), I wanted to step up into that leader role,” Polzin said. Chippewa Falls/Menomonie is a young team this season with only a couple of seniors on the squad, so a younger player taking a larger role was always a possibility. Knowing that would be the case, it was beneficial for someone like Polzin to learn from a veteran like Frenette when she had the chance. “It was nice having her paired with Kaylee on the same line last year, to be on the ice at the same time to see what she was doing to give herself opportunities,” Menard said. That was one of the places where she learned to hone her strong suit: getting the puck up the ice at a moment’s notice. “(I learned from Frenette) you may not always have your line-mates with you, but just take the puck and go,” Polzin said. With this much experience to her name already, Menard sees more big things to come for the sophomore forward. “Moving forward, if she continues to put in work in the offseason, there’s only going up from here,” Menard said.
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Stars’ Naomi Stow makes space for two more for reigning state champs BY DERRICK WOLF LEADER-TELEGRAM STAFF
Skaters weren’t going to be the question with the Eau Claire Area Stars last season thanks to the team bringing back 13 skaters from a team that went to the sectional semifinals. Between the pipes was another story after the graduation of top goaltender Annamarie Holtz. Enter Naomi Stow. The freshman goaltender started all 24 games for the Stars, going 20-3 with a 1.59 goals against average, .908 save percentage and six shutouts. She came up big in the sectional final, making 21 saves on 22 shots to send the Stars to the state tournament for the first time ever. In Madison, she saved 17 of 20 shots to help the Stars win their first state championship. Stow has kept up a similar form this season, but this time she’s had to share her time on the ice. The crease is busy for an ECA team looking to repeat. Her main competition comes from Alesha Smith, a freshman from Altoona. She’s currently 6-1 with two shutouts, a 1.53
PHOTOS BY STEVE KINDERMAN/
Above: ECA Stars goalie Naomi Stow reads the play during a game against Hudson on Jan. 3 at Hobbs Ice Center. At right: ECA Stars goalie Naomi Stow eyes the puck before making one of her saves in a scoreless first period versus Hudson on Jan. 3 at Hobbs Ice Center.
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goals against average and a .906 save percentage. Smith, jumping up from the middle school level, got her first varsity start against Hayward and saved all nine shots she saw. “It was an adjustment at first, but I think I got used to it,” Smith said. And she got used to it quickly. She followed up her debut with 11 saves on 11 shots in a relief effort against the Central Wisconsin Storm, currently ranked No. 3 in the latest WIPH/Coaches Poll. In the Stars’ next game vs. Onalaska junior Julia Drath got the win, showing coach Tom Bernhardt has yet another card to play. “The luxury we have is we’ve got goaltenders that are pushing each other,” Bernhardt said. And they’ve pushed each other pretty well, holding opponents to one or less goals in 13 of their games during the regular season. Stow has been the steady hand as of late, partly due having a season under her pads. “I’m way more confidence in goal,” Stow said. “I think last year’s wins and our trip to state helped a lot.” With three capable goalies, Bernhardt has a good set of options and he takes it day-by-day.
“We’ve kinda approached the goaltending situation game-by game,” he said. On days where the Stars face opponents with varsity and JV squads it’s not to uncommon for Stow to start the varsity game and Smith get the start in the JV game. Smith knows the value of facing shooters at any level. “It’s different going from varsity to JV, but it’s good to see different styles of shots,” Smith said. Smith most recently got the win against Superior, saving all six shots before Drath closed out the third period. The quality goaltenders also help the offense at practice, giving the shooters a chance to go against that completion. “It helps us as shooters to go against and see goaltenders who are going to push them as shooters,” Bernhardt said. It seems to be carrying over to games. Ava Kison and Charlotte Akervik are both in the top 15 in the state for points. It also keeps Stow honest knowing her margin of error is smaller. “It makes me want to play even better because I know only have a certain amount of chances unlike last year,” Stow said.
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THE NEXT CHAPTER STOKES’ JOURNEY BRINGS HIM FROM UW-STOUT QB TO THORP HEAD COACH STAFF PHOTO BY DAN REILAND
Keldric Stokes, new football coach at Thorp High School, posed in the school’s new weight room in early February. View more photos at LeaderTelegramPhotos.com.
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By JACK GOODS LEADER-TELEGRAM STAFF Football has taken Keldric Stokes all over the map. He killed countless hours on buses travelling the Midwest as the UW-Stout and Chippewa Valley Predators quarterback and overcame culture shock when he spent nearly a year playing ball in Norway. That’s before mentioning stops in Duluth, South Dakota and Oklahoma. The one place he didn’t think he’d end up was Thorp, even though his wife Shayla was from there. Too small, he would say. But a successful house search changed his mind, igniting a love for the community and setting him up for an impressively speedy rise in the coaching ranks. Stokes, previously an assistant middle school coach at Thorp starting last year, was named the head coach of the Cardinals’ varsity team this week just three years after his swan song in the Northern Elite Football League with the Predators. He succeeds Shannon Broda. “I didn’t think I’d be the varsity coach this quickly,” said Stokes, originally from Ohio. “I’m pretty excited about it.” A signal caller for the Blue Devils for one year and Predators for eight, Stokes brings a quarterback mindset to the position. He was a stalwart on Chippewa Valley, winning an Elite Bowl with the squad while consistently showed his ability to lead. “The thing with Keldric is his positive energy and loyalty speaks volumes,” said Altoona coach Martin Adams, who coached Stokes when he was the head man for the Predators. “Players can rally behind that type of attitude.” That was Stokes greatest asset, because while he has coached various sports at different levels, including everything from local t-ball to serving as an assistant with the Blue Devils, his prior head coaching experience is limited to an under-16 team in Europe. He worried that would hinder his chances when the Thorp job opened up. “I thought, ‘They’re probably going to ask me about my head coaching experience and see that there isn’t much.’ But my football experience, I think I have a vast knowledge of football. I have a philosophy that’s proven to work.
FILE PHOTO
Chippewa Valley Predator quarterback Keldric Stokes looks downfield in the first quarter of Elite Bowl IX Aug. 13, 2016 at Carson Park.
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“I knew that my knowledge, if I could just get in front of the parents, the teachers and even the students, I can show them why I should be the coach. Just give me the chance.” So he put on his best recruiting face, selling himself to the Thorp administration. And he impressed in his interview. “We were really looking for someone who obviously knew their X’s and O’s on the field, but the most important thing for me was someone who wanted to take their role as a mentor seriously,” Thorp athletic director Adrian Foster said. “In KD, that’s what he sees as his calling in life, a chance to reach out to young men and be an example to them.” Stokes inherits a team that’s struggled lately, to put it lightly. The Cardinals went 0-8 last season, their eighth straight season under .500. With years of struggle comes a need to reset the players’ mindset, eliminating the fear or expectation of losing. “It starts with culture,” Stokes said. “We have to learn how to compete again. Practice is going to be very up-tempo, energetic, with everybody competing. If you can compete in
practice, the game becomes simple.” He’s started laying down the foundation by meeting with players and is on his third attempt to set up a teamwide meeting, with the prior two disrupted by the recent weather. To compensate for his lack of experience as a head man, he’s been reaching out to old coaches over the phone most nights. When his wife heads to bed, he switches over from husband to coach. “And she goes to bed early,” Stokes said. “8:30, it’s football time for the next three or four hours.” He’s anxious to start the next chapter of his football career in this area, already imagining that first win, which he’ll be able to soak in since he can see the scoreboard from his house, and the day he’ll be able to coach his sons at the school. If everything goes well, he’s in for the long haul. “It’s been a dream of mine to be a head coach,” Stokes said. “I would love to stay at high school and be here for 10, 15, 20 years. I’m really excited for this task because I remember my wife telling me about how good the football program was and how games used to be fun. … I want to leave this place better than where I found it.”
STAFF FILE PHOTO
Keldric Stokes plays for UW-Stout against UW-Eau Claire in 2005.
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WELL REPRESENTED Memorial senior Urlaub joins fellow Eau Claire native Loomis on World Nordic Championships team BY RON BUCKLI LEADER-TELEGRAM STAFF
PHOTO BY STEVE KINDERMAN
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Andrew Urlaub holds his skis in January 2016 at the Mount Washington Nordic Ski Center in Eau Claire.
It’s a great time to be a Flying Eagle. Eau Claire’s ski jumping club will be represented by two athletes in the upcoming World Nordic Championships in Austria and four younger skiers have been named to the Central Team for the Junior National championships to be held in Park City, Ut. The World Championship teams were announced this month from U.S. Ski Team headquarters in Park City. In that Ben Loomis, last year’s Olympian, was a shoe-in for the Nordic Combined team, the biggest news was the naming of Andrew Urlaub to the four-man jumping team that will compete in Seefeld, Austria February 22 through March 2. The 17-year old Urlaub, who recently placed 27th in the World Junior championships in Finland, joins veterans Kevin Bickner and Casey Larson along with newcomer Pat Gasienica, all of Chicago Norge, on the jumping squad. “I’m quite excited about skiing with the best in the world,” said Urlaub, who will be one of the youngest in the event. “I’ll just to the best I can and try to make the (30-man) cut.” It’s a tall order for Urlaub, the Eau Claire Memorial senior, who has come on strong this year and scored Continental Cup points in the process. “He is getting closer to the best jumpers in the world his age,” Coach Jan Druzina said. “The main goal for the young guys is to perform well in their first big event of their lives and to learn from the best in the world.” Urlaub, who tied for the U.S. Cup series
Ben Loomis
championship last year and is the first city World championship jumper since Reed Zuehlke in the 1980s, will be skiing this week in Continental Cup competition at Iron Mountain, Mich. There will skiers from 15 nations competing. Loomis, 20, got a taste of Olympic competition in South Korea last winter and has come on to score World Cup points after a slow start this season. “I’m definitely feeling more confident,” said Loomis, getting a training break back at his winter home in Park City before returning to Europe to train before the big event.
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CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
Eau Claire native Ben Loomis represented the U.S. in last year’s Olympics in South Korea.
“The top 30 is my goal and I feel that is realistic. This will be similar to World Cup, or even less competitive in that nation’s can only enter four skiers.” He said his jumping, which slipped some from being his strong point, is getting back to where it can be although a little inconsistent. He joins Taylor Fletcher, Jasper Good, Jared Shumate and Grant Andrews, all of Steamboat Springs, Colo., on the combined team. “Each guy has something to bring to the table and this team has a lot of good momentum right now,” said Coach Martin Bayer. The women’s ski jumping team includes Nita Englund, Iron Mountain; Tara Geraghty-Moats and Nina Lussi, Lake Placid, N.Y., and Logan Sankey, Steamboat Springs. Landon Lee heads a group of four juniors who will be out to carry the colors of the Flying Eagles on a national basis at Park City, Feb. 26-March 2. The 16-year old is believed to be the leader in the U.S. Cup series
heading into two final competitions in the Eastern Division and will be a strong contender in the U20 class. He most recently placed first and second at Westby with a long jump of 105 meters or 344 feet. Also in the U20 class is Logan Gundry, who has come on strong this season. Others include August Schini, Westby; Lucas Nichols and Jacob Fuller, Chicago; Aric David, Coleraine, Minn.; Woody Waugh, Cloquet, Minn., and Tim Ziegler, Ishpeming, Mich. Stewart Gundry and Carter Lee, both among leaders in Central competition this winter, are strong candidates in U16 class. They join Shane Koucher, Isak Nichols and Maxim Glyvka, all of Chicago, on the team. Stewart and Logan Gundry are also Nordic Combined entries. Female jumpers include Adeline Swanson and Daisy Foster of St. Paul and Mollie Immens of Chicago. The team was selected on the basis of qualifying tournaments and announced by Central Coach Scott Smith of Chicago.
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