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Archive for November, 2013

Breeanna Messner (5) feels the burn, as she joins Amanda Fabrizi (3) and McKayla Bailey in some stretches.

Breeanna Messner (5) feels the burn, as she joins Amanda Fabrizi (3) and McKayla Bailey in some stretches. (John Fisken photos)

Madeline Strasburg, one of the Wolves most dangerous scorers, explodes to the hoop.

The always-dangerous Madeline Strasburg explodes to the hoop.

There's always time for a little flexing.

There’s always time for a little flexing.

Soccer star Jenn Spark makes the jump to the hardwood.

Soccer star Jennifer Spark makes the jump to the hardwood.

Fabrizi, Messner and foreign exchange students Sophia Jebrail (18) and Aura Corredor.

 Fabrizi, Messner and foreign exchange students Sophia Jebrail (18) and Aura Corredor.

Back after missing her sophomore season with a leg injury, Julia Myers is ready to dominate.

Back after missing her sophomore season with a leg injury, Julia Myers is ready to dominate.

High-flying Makana Stone will team with Hailey Hammer to give CHS a potent scoring attack.

   High-flying Makana Stone will team with Hailey Hammer to give CHS a potent inside scoring attack.

Prepare for war.

Led by hard-nosed senior leaders Amanda Fabrizi and Breeanna Messner (sweet off the court, tough on the hardwood), the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad is chock full of warriors ready to rumble.

But, before they get a chance to go toe-to-toe with any opponents, the Wolves have to survive the always-tough (but necessary) training regime of coaches David and Amy King.

So, day one Monday was mainly about survival and bringing enough water to make it through practice.

Traveling photographer John Fisken popped into the gym to capture these photos, the first taste of the season to come.

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Gabe Wynn

Freshman Gabe Wynn goes hard to the hoop. (John Fisken photos)

Wolf players get ready to run, and then run some more.

Wolf players get ready to run, and then run some more.

Wiley Hesselgrave finishes up a sprint.

Wiley Hesselgrave finishes up a sprint.

Seniors (l to r) Payne, Anthony Bergeron and Nick Streubel. Gavin O'Keefe is rehabbing a broken leg and will rejoin the team soon.

Seniors (l to r) Morgan Payne, Anthony Bergeron and Nick Streubel.

Freshman ? Mitchell stops and pops.

Dante Mitchell stops and pops.

The Big Hurt rumbles through a running drill.

The Big Hurt rumbles through a running drill.

Freshman Gabe Wynn slashes to the bucket. (John Fisken photos)

Wynn goes air-borne.

Day one of practice for a new basketball season is all about conditioning.

You may get to shoot a few balls, but you will certainly run your butt off. That is for dang sure.

The photos above, courtesy John Fisken, capture the start of a new hoops season for Coupeville High School’s boys’ basketball squad.

Head man Anthony Smith is back for a third season, and with trusty assistant Dustin Van Velkinburgh at his side, the duo put their charges through the wringer Monday.

Pain today, wins tomorrow. It’s a simple plan, but a very effective one.

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"I am the one who plays the bass!"

Savanna Dohner: American Badass (Jenn Dohner photos)

Savanna Dohner, American badass. (Jenn Dohner photos)

“I am the one who plays the bass!”

Rock star disguised as a high school student.

Rock star disguised as a high school student.

Savanna Dohner was born to be a star.

With two outgoing parents to set an example, including a mom who spends many of her nights shooting cutting-edge rockers live on stage with her ever-clicking camera, she had a great start.

Toss in a gaggle of older sisters, all fairly creative in their own right, and the stage was set.

A natural wonder with a bass in her hands, and the rare ninth-grader who looks like she stepped off a fashion runway while still acting like the goofy teenager next door, Dohner will put Coupeville on the map. It’s only a matter of time.

She works with professional axe man Jeff Rouse, who has played bass for bands such as Alien Crime Syndicate and Duff McKagen’s Loaded, and has already received offers to step up off the Island and play in the big city.

Jeff is pretty much the raddest guy I know. He completely gets me as a musician and a person,” Dohner said. “When I play with him we come up with the most wicked bass lines and songs.

“He has taught me not only how to play like a rocker, but how to hold myself in the business, because the music business is definitely a scary place,” she added. “As far as bands go, I have promised myself to wait until the right one comes along. But I’m just gonna go with the flow and see where life takes me.”

It’s a journey she knew she always wanted to take, right from the days when she started working the crowd in kindergarten.

“Music is the only thing I’ve every shown interest in and it makes me feel more alive than anything else can,” Dohner said. “Even when I was about five I cut out pieces of paper and wrote in crayon “1 free concert ticket to see Savanna” and handed them out EVERYWHERE.

“I know it’s a hard business to get into but I’ll make it work; it’ll take dedication, time, and hope,” she added. “But I’ll make it happen because it’s the only thing I will ever be happy doing; music has my heart and it always will.”

Along with her work with Rouse, and often following mom Jenn Dohner into the camera pits at rock shows, Savanna finds time to fine-tune her musical skills with her classmates as well.

She’s in her fourth year of playing with the school band, and has dabbled with drums and keyboards, while always returning to her beloved bass.

“I started mainly because I love music. I always have and I always will,” Dohner said. “I’ve been raised on music, whether it was punk, rap, country, classic, jazz or alternative. I was exposed to it all.

“I enjoy learning a different aspect of music; without band I’d probably just be reading tabs constantly,” she added. “Even though I really hated learning to read music and learning the notes, it’s improved my playing by 100%.”

But, while she plays what the class requires, there’s a rocker always waiting to break free and get the long, golden hair swinging.

When the CHS freshmen put together a ’90s-themed float for Homecoming, some of the participants might have been just pretending to be playing along to the music.

Dohner was windmilling the bass for real, hair flying in the fog in a scene that would have brought a tear of joy to the members of Soundgarden and Pearl Jam if they wandered by.

“I love the sensation you get in a song when you hit a gnarly bass line that just makes your fingers feel on fire!,” Dohner exclaimed. “That’s the music that makes me forget quite literally everything except me, my bass and the music I’m playing and that’s an extraordinary thing to feel.

“It’s what I’ll be playing forever!”

While she still has most of her high school days to get through, Dohner already has her sights set firmly on the future. The moment the diploma hits her hands, she plans to be on the ferry to Seattle, bass in hand.

Wherever the music takes her, she has her head set right, and knows the value of those who have, and will continue to, support her, financially and emotionally.

“I’ve had so many impacts on my life, so obviously I’ll start with my family; without them I’d be nowhere,” Dohner said. “That’s quite literal too; without my dad (Brent) supporting my crazy dreams and helping a little financially (maybe not just a little…) I’d be without all my gorgeous gear.”

She also gives big props to two families who have helped shape her budding career, the Kertsons, which includes son Jason, a rising singer who she’s worked with, and the Savoias, who are music photographers.

“I have had the honor to jam with Jason Kertson a few times and learned so many things from his mad skills,” Dohner said. “Then became friends with his mom whom I absolutely ADORE and his dad, who is pretty hardcore himself. The Savoias have supported me and my career completely and totally.”

But the figure that looms largest in her life is her mother, the woman who opened her ears to the possibilities of music and has been there beside her daughter every step of the way.

“She has been so forgiving of the countless times I have kept her up at night rocking out, saying “Please mom! Just five more minutes!,” Dohner said. “Along with driving me hours on end to lessons, jam sessions, and band tryouts.

“This girl has been through heck to support me and get me to where I am! Thanks mom!”

While she plays the game when it comes to school (“I always strive to get the best grades possible because better grades means happier parents. Ha!”), music is her life. Plain and simple.

“My time is mainly used to either daydream about my career of being a rocker, along with actually doing the things that will make it happen.”

She reels off an impressive list of favorite bands, with Weezer, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Sick Puppies, 30 Seconds To Mars, Nirvana, The Ramones, Guns ‘n Roses and Blink-182 the first ones to rumble from her lips.

One day, soon, other highly-creative young women looking for influences will be adding her name to the play-list.

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Mckenzie Meyer, hanging out with cousin Leroy Meyer.

Mckenzie Meyer, hanging out with cousin Leroy Meyer.

Whenever Mckenzie Meyer sings, she remembers her older brother, Kyle.

The Coupeville Middle School eighth-grader, who deftly balances sports, drama and band in a busy life, first found music thanks to her older sibling, who passed away recently.

It will be a link that will always keep the two connected.

Kyle got me into music and I never let go,” Meyer said. “He taught me to sing, which I find is the easiest way to express my emotion, so without him I wouldn’t be the same and I probably wouldn’t be in band.”

Now in her third year of band, Meyer started on the clarinet, before bouncing over to the saxophone.

Regardless of what kind of music she’s playing, it’s a world she enjoys at all times.

“I like all the types of music we play, especially in jazz band,” Meyer said. “I love music and band seemed like the perfect place.”

Like all musicians, she’s a work in progress, and would like to improve “definitely my sight-reading and knowing my notes. I need to work on tone.”

Away from the band, she’s always active (“I spend my spare time listening to music and climbing trees”) and has played volleyball, basketball and track for CMS, while also taking part in the school’s drama club.

Since the middle school doesn’t offer soccer, Meyer kicks up her heels playing for a team out of Oak Harbor, but is already looking forward to joining the Wolf pitch squad next year when she becomes a CHS freshman.

“I can’t wait to play in high school next year!”

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"Go forth my costume-clad, bleacher-bouncing children, and make Big Poppa proud!!"

“Go forth my costume-clad, bleacher-bouncing Wolf children, and make Big Poppa proud!!”

Coupeville High School is caught in a battle right now, a fight between a boisterous student cheering section and the people who, all too often, would shush them.

Both sides have their points, but when visiting fans are routinely allowed to out-scream Wolf students, it’s easy to believe, as one parent put it, “You are killing the spirit of this school!”

But, let me get off the stage and hand the mike over to one of the mad men who made the CHS student section the once-feared entity it was.

Wolf grad Will Butela, currently gracing the stages of comedy clubs everywhere, was a towering presence at games, his curly hair bobbing in the air and his lungs exhorting all.

His thoughts, a call to arms, as we head towards basketball season:

Michael Jordan
once dunked a basketball from the free throw line. That happened.

But it wouldn’t have been the same had he done it in his driveway.

The scene required the camera flashes behind him, the cartoonish giddiness of the contest’s judges, and yes, the crazy screams of the fans.

Otherwise professional basketball players reverted back to bright eyed school children amazed at what ‘His Airness’ had just done.

Reggie Jackson hit three home runs in a single World Series game in 1977.

Had he completed this feat in his backyard no one would have cared. No one would have caught the balls. No one would tell their grandchildren the true story of how they saw the impossible happen.

Fans are a prerequisite for almost any worthwhile sport.

Historically nothing great has ever happened without witnesses; this is entirely because the retelling of something amazing is almost as fun and important as witnessing it firsthand.

Enthusiastic fans are a distinct competitive advantage to any team and make sports what they are today.

Why would you not paint your face and act like an idiot if given the opportunity??

Millions of Americans would love to have a reason to do just that; sadly however, reasons for general debauchery and tomfoolery are few and far between.

As high school students you stand at an important fork in the road: sit quietly in the stands glancing at Facebook every few minutes on your phone to see if someone new has commented on your sports related status update.

Or put that wit and fandom into the real world in the form of cleverly-worded, thinly-veiled insults to the opposing team, chants and waves supporting your own team, and general noise-making in an effort to tell all of your classmates on that court/field that for better or for worse, win or lose, you’ll see them in 3rd period tomorrow.

I leave you with this thought — few regret the times they acted with their heart, purchased a wolf mask at a local party store and created their own school mascot, but all regret the times they didn’t.

Life is too short to not let it all hang out my friends, and after all, what’s the worst that could happen? It’s only high school.

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