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Archive for the ‘A freakin’ American hero’ Category

Breeanna Messner

Breeanna Messner

Breeanna Messner (Robert Bishop photo)

Four sports and a ton of books — no problem for Breezy. (Robert Bishop photo)

Her dad calls her Breezy, and she has been like a breath of fresh air.

There may have been more physically talented athletes who have walked the hallways at Coupeville High School over the years, but few, if any, have ever put it all together like Wolf senior Breeanna Messner.

Two days after playing the final game of an incredible four-year, four-sport run in the red and black, bowing out at the 1A state softball tourney Friday, Miss Messner turns 18 today.

In less than a week she will graduate.

College calls, and, after that, much, much more. She will do great things in her life, of that I have no doubt.

She is talented, she works her rear off, she is committed and she does it all with a quiet sweetness that is greatly endearing.

It did not matter the sport. Volleyball, cheer, basketball, softball. She played them all and excelled at them all.

She upheld the family honor, keeping alive the flame lit by her mom, Aimee (Messner) Bishop, and her aunts. The Messner name stands proudly in CHS lore, and Breezy played a large part in that.

She hit big shots.

There was a moment when she got poked in the eye (rather deliberately) during a basketball game and brought to her knees.

Instead of getting mad and starting a fight, she collected herself, stood up and, after a slight grimace, nailed back-to-back three-point bombs to thoroughly deflate the opposing team.

Only afterwards, with her head bowed, did she crack a small (very small) smile just for herself, never one to show up an opposing player.

She was the teammate who reached out to every player on her team. The young woman who always stopped to say hi to former coaches in the stands.

The one who would stop her own game preparation to sprint over and scoop up her young cousin, Katie, when she entered the gym.

What I have seen, what I have heard, makes me think this — Breeanna Messner is the gold standard for Coupeville student/athletes.

I have covered sports on this Island for longer than she has been alive, and she stands out as a rarity.

And I hope that she knows how CHS fans, how the people of Central Whidbey, feel about her.

I hope, that as the years pass, she realizes why people cheered for her so hard.

We watched a young woman, bold and brilliant, shy at times, but capable of great passion, who aimed for the stars in everything and flew as high as anyone who has ever put on a Coupeville uniform.

She worked for our respect. For our admiration. She more than earned it all.

Breezy deserves nothing less.

I hope that you have an incredible birthday, Miss Messner, and that you go forward in your life content in the knowledge that you have a town, an Island, a world, behind you.

You are amazing, and there will never be another one like you.

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Willie Smith, ladies and gentlemen.

Willie Smith, ladies and gentlemen.

He is The Man.

The only coach at Coupeville High School who tosses candy at opposing players while camped out in the third base coaching box, Wolf hardball guru Willie Smith is perhaps the most entertaining man in the CHS sports world.

The master of the zippy quote (31% of which we’re allowed to actually publish … wink, wink, nudge, nudge), he’s a dream come true for anyone writing about baseball, or anything to do with sports on Whidbey Island.

So happy 47th, Big Willie. Keep on keepin’ on.

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Ashley (Ellsworth-Bagby) Heilig, still feisty.

Ashley (Ellsworth-Bagby) Heilig, still feisty.

"Ma'am, yes ma'am!!" (Amy King photo)

“Ma’am, yes ma’am!!” (Amy King photo)

Twelve years ago, Coupeville shocked the world.

Led by the feisty, pigtail-rockin’ Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, the Wolf softball squad traveled to the state tourney and almost won the entire thing in their first go-round.

Four wins in five games later (the only loss to eventual champ Adna) and the 2002 team was forever immortalized, their third-place banner hanging prominently in the CHS gym. It’s the best finish by a team in school history.

Now, led by the triple threat trio of seniors Breeanna Messner, Madeline Roberts and Haley Sherman, who were in first grade back then, Coupeville is headed back to state this weekend.

Win or lose, the trip through the playoffs has been electric, filled with epic home runs (Maddie Big Time is dialed in), gut-check pitching from McKayla Bailey, who has thrown 99.2% of the pitches this season, and contributions from every girl on the 13-member squad.

As David and Amy King and their miracle squad get ready for the trip to Richland, the star of the 2002 team, now going by Ashley Heilig after her recent marriage, stopped by to deliver a few words unto her successors.

The feisty one speaks:

Congratulations, ladies!

You have worked so hard, you deserve this!

I can remember back in 2002 what an exciting time it was for us to make it to state.

It was the first year we switched from slow pitch to fast pitch so there was a huge learning curve, so we were shocked to even have made it that far.

We were lucky to have such a talented team of girls and so are you!

Now that you have made it this far, this is where the real work begins. Don’t let up. Play from the heart and make some amazing history for Coupeville Softball.

Let’s see if you can do better then 3rd place!

Ashley Heilig

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The woman, the myth, the legend ... Lexie Black. (John Fisken photo)

The woman, the myth, the legend … Lexie Black. (John Fisken photo)

The Black 'n Blue Sisters, Lexie (left) and Brittany Black.

The Black ‘n Blue Sisters, Lexie (left) and Brittany Black.

Superstar.

Superstar.

Some people are like rays of sunshine, sent into the world to fight against the darkness.

Lexie Black is one of those people.

A radiant burst of joy come to life, Miss Black, who celebrates her 27th birthday today, is one of my favorite people in the world. Without question or qualification.

I remember her as a young woman, slouched behind the counter at Videoville while we worked together, thumbing through fashion magazines and trying to pretend she wasn’t the tallest person in the room.

Already a dead-ringer for Milla Jovovich, even in her teens, Lexie was only missing one thing the “Resident Evil” star possessed — confidence.

But it arrived, maybe not in one day, but over time.

There was a moment when Lexie stepped onto a basketball court, snapped to her full height and realized she could, and would, kick unholy amounts of booty, Jovovich-style.

The queen of the blocked shot — she still holds the record with ten rejections in a single 1A girls’ state playoff game — Lexie was a beast on the hardwood.

She did it with hard work. With grit. With a refusal to ever back down, to ever look at an opposing team’s uniform and assume she had to lose because that uniform said ATM or King’s.

Lexie was graceful in both victory or defeat, but she was going to make damn sure either way you knew you had been in a war.

Running along side lil’ sis Brittany as half of the Black ‘n Blue Sisters, she helped spark the greatest sustained run in any sport in Coupeville High School history.

The duo would go on to play college hoops in Alaska — enduring a new home where their eyelashes would often freeze in the brief time it took to go from car to gym — and the awesomeness grew.

It’s not just sports, though. It’s in all aspects of her life.

I see Lexie today, standing tall and proud, full of joy, proof you can look like a super model, be a goofball and excel at everything you do and I see a lesson for every young female athlete who wears the red and black.

Be proud of yourself. Believe in yourself. Fight hard for what you want.

Know that when you lay it on the line every game and play your heart and soul out, that you will make lifelong fans, people who will be there to support you long after you stop playing.

And yes, she was probably rolling her eyes several paragraphs back, but face it, Lexie, we think the world of you.

You made this town proud. You made your family proud. You continue to make everyone who calls you a friend proud.

You are the best, Lexie, every day, in every way.

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Bam.

Bam.

Ben Etzell can still lift his arm, so it's all good. (Sylvia Arnold photo)

Ben Etzell can still lift his arm, so it’s all good. (Sylvia Arnold photo)

He was carrying them to state, even if his arm fell off.

Coupeville High School senior right hander Ben Etzell was flat-out brilliant (once again) Saturday, crushin’ it in the hottest spotlight.

With his team’s first trip to state in six seasons hanging in the balance, he hucked 143 pitches over eight innings against Overlake in a tri-district game.

As Wolf reliever Aaron Trumbull warmed up, the Wolves came through in the bottom of the eighth to send Etzell out a winner.

When Kurtis Smith smoked a single back up the middle, Jake Tumblin went from zero to 90 in .03 of a second, singeing the base paths as he tore from second to home with the game-winning run in a 1-0 thriller.

Now, Etzell has a week to ice his arm down and get ready for Rochester in the opening game of the state tourney.

16 teams left alive, and one of them is because of the dude who hit 143 on the counter.

P.S. — Rochester had a pitcher, Dylan Fosnacht, throw 194 pitches over 15 innings in a district game last week, garnering national attention.

Let’s get ready to rumble!!

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