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Archive for May, 2013

Two medals is twice as nice for Madison Tisa McPhee. (Photo courtesy Mad Dawg productions)

Two medals is twice as nice for Madison Tisa McPhee. (Photo courtesy Mad Dawg Productions)

The 4 x 200 squad on the victory stand. (Kristin Hurlburt photos)

The 4 x 200 squad on the victory stand. (Kristin Hurlburt photos)

The big board makes it seem more official.

The big board makes it seem more official.

Coupeville's warriors enter the arena.

Coupeville’s warriors enter the arena.

Tisa McPhee shares a light moment with a rival before things get serious.

Tisa McPhee shares a light moment with a rival before things get serious.

Tisa McPhee and South Whidbey's Anna Hood, kickin' butt for Whidbey Island.

    Tisa McPhee and South Whidbey’s Anna Hood, jointly kickin’ butt for Whidbey Island. (Photo courtesy Mad Dawg Productions)

It was the time of their lives.

For the six Coupeville High School student athletes who went to Cheney this weekend for the 1A state track meet (Madison Tisa McPhee, Jai’Lysa Hoskins, Marisa Etzell, Sylvia Hurlburt, Makana Stone and Kirsten Pelroy), their coaches and their proud parents, it will be two days that will stay with them for a long time.

For their fans back at home, cheering on the news that Tisa McPhee had claimed 3rd in the 100 hurdles and the 4 x 200 relay team had taken 5th, it was a final bit of great news from a sensational season.

Now, they return home, medals in hand. Tisa McPhee and Hoskins will graduate in two weeks, while the other four — a sophomore and three freshmen — could conceivably make the trip East a yearly occurrence.

Regardless of where they go from this point, though, they will always have this weekend, when they stood tall, when they stood together, when they stood as Wolves.

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On to state! (Eileen Stone photo)

Sorry, South Whidbey. You can’t catch us! (Eileen Stone photo)

Madison Tisa McPhee went out with two Top-5 finishes at her final state track meet.

Wolf senior Madison Tisa McPhee went out with two Top-5 finishes at her final state track meet.

They were the perfect mix of experience and youth.

Using two seniors and two freshmen, and backed up by a sophomore and another freshman, the Coupeville High School 4 x 200 relay squad stepped onto the track oval at the 1A state meet in Cheney Saturday and proved they belonged.

Dropping their time from Friday’s prelims by nearly two seconds, the quartet of Madison Tisa McPhee, Jai’Lysa Hoskins, Sylvia Hurlburt and Makana Stone exploded to a fifth-place finish.

They leapfrogged three teams — including Island rival South Whidbey — after grabbing the eighth and final spot in the finals a day before.

Their time of one minute, 47.65 seconds was shy of the school record they set earlier this year, but less than two seconds off the winning time put up by Connell (1:45.98).

The strong showing capped off a stellar state meet, and track career, for Tisa McPhee.

Returning to the site of where she had finished 8th in 1A in the 100 hurdles as a sophomore, the senior went toe-to-toe with the best and refused to back off.

Battling eventual champ Arielle Walden of Newport (15.55) and runner-up Courtney Porter of Bellevue Christian to the tape, she claimed 3rd in 16.23, while South Whidbey freshman Tera Applegate finished 6th.

“It was a really fun two races,” Tisa McPhee said.

As a team, Coupeville finished 26th out of 47 teams. Cedar Park Christian/Bothell won the team title.

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Jordan Wilcox and mom Mindy.

Jordan Wilcox and mom Mindy.

The smallest school in the field is a step closer to winning a national title.

Sparked by Coupeville High School grad Jordan Wilcox, the Western Washington University baseball team erupted for a nine-run eighth inning Friday in Tampa, shocking second-seeded Illinois 14-6 in its opening game at the National Club Baseball Association Division 1 World Series.

The Vikings will now play Sunday afternoon against James Madison, which toppled third-seeded Iowa.

The tourney is a complicated double-elimination format, but the easiest way to break things down would be for WWU to win three straight from here out and give Wilcox and Co. a title.

The former Wolf, who starts at second base for the Vikings, banged out two hits, knocked in two runs, scored twice, stole a base and had three assists in the field Friday.

Western crunched 17 hits in an offensive-happy game.

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They ran fast, then they went to Denny's. (Kristin Hurlburt photo)

They ran fast, then they went to Denny’s. (Kristin Hurlburt photo)

One day in, and Mad Dawg has them exactly where she wants them.

Staring down what might have been the final day of her high school track career Friday, Coupeville High School senior Madison Tisa McPhee instead lived to run another time, qualifying for the finals in two of her three events at the 1B/2B/1A state championships in Cheney.

Tisa McPhee had the third-fastest time of the day in her premium event — the 100 hurdles — while running a leg on the Wolf 4 x 200 squad, which grabbed the final spot in Saturday’s showcase.

The top eight times in each event advanced to the final, with Tisa McPhee being eliminated in the 300 hurdles. Also falling just short was Coupeville’s 4 x 100 relay team.

Mad Dawg finished 8th at state in the 100 hurdles as a sophomore. Saturday, she’ll have one final run to make personal-best history.

Complete Friday prelims results:

100 hurdles — Madison Tisa McPhee (3rd) 16.75

300 hurdles — Tisa McPhee (12th) 49.91

4 x 100 — Jai’Lysa Hoskins, Marisa Etzell, Sylvia Hurlburt, Makana Stone (11th) 52.09

4 x 200 — Tisa McPhee, Hoskins, Hurlburt, Stone (8th) 1:49.06

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Gunnar Langvold

Gunnar Langvold

The kid can be an idiot at times.

Let’s just get that out of the way first thing.

Which is why Coupeville High School senior-to-be Gunnar Langvold missed a chunk of his junior season and is fighting to redeem himself in the eyes of his coaches, teammates and fans, while trying to win back his job as a starting quarterback.

But he is not, and has never been, a bad kid. He has made bad decisions, yes, but America is a land of second and third and fourth chances for those who try to change their lives.

And it seems these days that he really is committed to a change. He has led the way in off-season workouts, he has tried to be the leader his coaches need to see, he has tried not to be derailed the way he let himself fall in 2012.

“I don’t want to be that guy who lets everyone down,” Langvold says, and the youthful bravado slips out of his voice, replaced by something deeper, hopefully more mature. “I don’t want to let my coaches and my teammates down. I can’t be that guy. I can’t.”

He knows what you’ve heard, what you think.

That he loves to drive too fast, that he could have seriously hurt himself or others when he was suspended last year after a crash during a car race with a teammate.

That, if the steering wheel lands an inch or two the other way when he slams into the tree, instead of walking away to be ticketed and booted in the butt by a teammate’s mother, he could have been injured, paralyzed, died in the middle of a field that night.

Like all teenagers, he laughs at the danger, but, of late, there seems to be more of a sense at times that the memory lingers with him. His eyes cloud over a bit when he talks about that night, and the jokes slow down, and you hope he realizes.

It’s a tricky balance.

You want a quarterback who is brave under fire, who can change calls at the line, who can whip passes to fleet-footed targets like Jake Tumblin, Bryce Fleming and Wade Schaef, who is not afraid.

But, back in real life, when you work with the guy and see him as more than just a ball player, you want him to get it. To realize that more people than he knows care about him and want to see him do well.

When you bring that up, he seems surprised, and it cuts through his patter. It sets him back in his chair for a moment.

Gunnar wants to be wanted. He wants to be liked. He wants, like any teenager, to know that people care about him, no matter how many times he screws up.

Do I think he’s totally there? Will the guy who got in trouble for hitting a coach’s car in the parking lot while goofing around, got suspended for the high-speed accident, tried too hard to grab back his job when he returned and took a concussion and missed more time, will he be the in-control leader the Wolves need?

I’d like to hope so. I can’t say for sure.

I see growth there. I see maturity there (sometimes). I see boundless bravado, with something deeper beginning to build around the edges.

I see a kid who wants, desperately, to live up to the legend laid down by his older brothers when they repped the red and black on the gridiron. He is very proud of them, and what they have done with their lives, and he wants, deeply, for them to be proud of what he does.

I also see a guy who is still fighting the idiot inside, the one that says “Lets go drive 104 MPH.” The one that has to realize what he sometimes spews on Facebook affects how his coaches view him.

He is not perfect, but his heart is right and his mind is getting there. He is bringing the work, and I hope he gets the payoff.

Gunnar Langvold is a work in progress and I am rooting for him.

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