Boys basketball: Glasser steps down as Sequim’s hoops leader

The hoops leader who has the longest tenure of any head coach in Sequim High boys basketball history in the past eight decades — and possibly the longest ever — is stepping down.

Greg Glasser, coach of the boys’ Wolves since the 2007-2008 campaign, resigned his position with the district this spring, after leading Sequim’s prep program for 15 seasons.

“I feel pretty blessed to coach that long,” Glasser said last week.

“It was a tough decision, because I really enjoy working with the kids. It came down to being there’s so much more than the coaching — it’s the planning and the fundraising — [they] just kind of take their toll after 15 years. I’m looking for a bit of a break from all that.”

Outgoing SHS athletic director Dave Ditlefsen said last week the position had been posted for a couple of weeks and would be filled soon.

Glasser led the Wolves to 10 postseason tournaments and two state tourneys (2009, 2013), finishing with 175 victories in 353 contests.

Greg Glasser, Sequim High boys basketball head coach, talks with his team in a game against Ferndale at the Crush the Slush tournament in Port Townsend in December 2018. Sequim Gazette file photo by Michael Dashiell

Greg Glasser, Sequim High boys basketball head coach, talks with his team in a game against Ferndale at the Crush the Slush tournament in Port Townsend in December 2018. Sequim Gazette file photo by Michael Dashiell

His win total is second only to the state Hall of Fame coach Rick Kaps, who tallied 201 wins in 14 seasons. His 15-year tenure is the longest stretch in school history since whole records were kept in the mid-1930s.

“He brought consistency, a lot of passion,” said Art Green, a former SHS hoops standout who worked as an assistant under Glasser for several years. “He got a lot out of the kids … a lot like [Rick] Kaps. The kids wanted to play hard for Greg through his whole time there.”

Glasser came to the Sequim School District in 2003 after positions in Bellingham, Burlington-Edison and Puyallup districts, and coached the Sequim Middle School’s boys and girls hoops programs before moving on to the high school.

His first year on Sequim High’s campus (2006-2007) saw Glasser take leadership of a talent-laden SHS girls team that went 13-12 overall and earned a spot in the class 2A state tournament.

Sequim’s boys were also a state-caliber team but were in the throes of a coaching conundrum: Matt Thacker led Sequim the first five games before being replaced by longtime assistant (and former SHS head coach Larry Hill).

By the end of that season, Hill had already decided he didn’t want to lead that team another year, not with his son Evan coming on to the squad. Instead, he and other coaches convinced Glasser to take the reins of the boys’ team.

“We had to volunteer [with the youth program] to make sure we would support him,” Hill recalled.

“We didn’t know how long we’d get him. Fifteen years … not bad, considering we had to coerce him into doing it.”

In Glasser’s first season with SHS’s boys in 2007-2008, Sequim went 6-14 and missed the postseason. But the following winter, despite a sub-500 record, the Wolves got hot at the end of the season and returned to state, event earning a win over Tumwater thanks to the hot hand of sharpshooter Ary Webb and defense from long-limbed John Textor.

“Greg really had a great feel for what kids could do on the floor,” said Hill, who stayed on to coach for a couple of years under Glasser.

“That’s what made him so good. Plus, he’s a great guy … the kind of guy you want to have your kids around.”

The Wolves hit their collective stride under Glasser from 2010-2011 to the 2014-2015 seasons, when he led Sequim to an 85-40 record.

Greg Glasser, Sequim High boys basketball head coach, and coaches talks with the team in a game against East Jefferson in May 2021. Sequim Gazette file photo by Michael Dashiell

Greg Glasser, Sequim High boys basketball head coach, and coaches talks with the team in a game against East Jefferson in May 2021. Sequim Gazette file photo by Michael Dashiell

That stretch included a 2012-2013 season that saw Sequim amass a 15-1 league record (and a league title), a second place finish at districts and state 2A tourney berth, where they placed sixth. Overall, the Wolves finished 22-6 that season.

Glasser was named the Olympic League’s co-Coach of the Year in 2014-2015 as his Wolves went 16-8 and missed a state berth by one win.

“Greg … just loves basketball; he always has,” Hill said. “As a coach, he’s very intuitive about players, about very intuitive about the game.

“He always had the ability to communicate with kids. He was really good at keeping things relatively simple for them.”

Along with dozens of all-Olympic League players, he coached two all-state players (Jayson Brocklesby, 2012-2013, and Payton Glasser, 2017-2018) and a league MVP (Alex Barry, 2014-2015).

Along the way, Glasser got to coach his two sons, Payton (2015-2018) and Pryce (2019-2022).

Glasser said while he enjoyed coaching his sons he does regret not being able to see games of or coach his daughter Hope, a standout at SHS in multiple sports and one of Peninsula College’s top hoops players.

Greg Glasser talks with his team following the West Central District championship game against Clover Park in 2013. Sequim gazette file photo by Michael Dashiell

Greg Glasser talks with his team following the West Central District championship game against Clover Park in 2013. Sequim gazette file photo by Michael Dashiell

“It was a real special time for myself and my family; at the same time, I had to sacrifice something for that,” Glasser said.

“I really enjoyed watching her play [at Peninsula College]. Looking back, I wish I would have had a chance to coach her a little bit more.”

Glasser said he was appreciative of a number of key figures supporting his role as head coach, from athletic directors and administrators to a number of assistant coaches, parents of players and in particular his wife, Kim Glasser.

“None of this is possible without the support of my wife: There’s a lot … she had to endure, sitting in the stands, she’s the mother of a player … she had to deal with quite a bit,” Greg Glasser said.

The Wolves struggled in the past several seasons, and in 2021-2022 Sequim was 4-10 in league play, 6-14 overall.

“Greg went through some hard years with the pandemic,” Hill said.

“It’s not surprising he lasted as long as he did,” Hill said. “The kids loved him. Parents, too.”

Green, who plays on a Port Angeles city league basketball team with Glasser, said, “I’m really excited for him to go on to whatever [he does]. He put in an amazing fifteen years.”

As for the future? Glasser said, “I’m not going to say ‘I’m not ever going to coach again.’”