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Jazmine Franklin, lighting up the universe every day. (John Fisken and Jazmine Franklin photos)

   Jazmine Franklin, lighting up the universe every day. (John Fisken and Jazmine Franklin photos)

Most days at Coupeville High School, it seems like there are two suns hung in the heavens.

There’s the real sun, and then there’s Jazmine Franklin, who easily outshines the star above.

The Wolf senior, who celebrates her birthday today, radiates pure joy every time I see her.

Even when she’s fully invested in playing the role of a stone cold killer while posing for photos with cheer running mate/best bud Maddy Neitzel, Jazmine can’t help it — she makes the world a happier place with her presence.

Frankly, there’s nothing Franklin can’t accomplish when she sets her mind to it (at least as far as I’ve seen).

Bouncing madly from cheer to tennis to guiding the school’s executive board, she nails everything she does, while dispensing dollops of joy everywhere she goes.

Every single time I have seen Jazmine, the first thing you notice is how everyone in her immediate vicinity is smiling. It never fails.

She seems to bring out happiness in others, and she remains one of the most enduring fans her fellow Wolf athletes have.

If there’s an event, she’s there, game in, game out, and not just for a quick moment or two.

She’s loyal to her friends and classmates and backs them every step of the way.

Based on what I see and hear, I can’t help but think that, as talented as she is now, we have only begun to see the tip of what Jazmine will accomplish.

We turn around a few years from now, as she wows the entire world, and it will be easy to say, “Told you so.”

I don’t see any limits on where she goes and what she accomplishes.

Miss Franklin is truly one of those rare people who will soar as high as she chooses to reach.

And the best part is, how happy all of us will be for her, because she emits such serene joy into the universe and deserves to receive it back.

Happy birthday, Jazmine.

I hope your cake day is an awesome one, and I hope you keep spreading joy for many more.

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Barring a major plot twist come track season, Jared Helmstadter will be the only CHS senior to have played 12 sports. (John Fisken photo)

   Barring a major plot twist come track season, Jared Helmstadter will be the only CHS senior to have played 12 seasons. (John Fisken photo)

I want to take a moment to tip my hat to Jared Helmstadter.

Why, you ask?

Well, there’s a lot of reasons. The Coupeville High School senior is a hard worker, a good teammate, a solid citizen, capable of being a cut-up or serious and has always seemed like just a good dude.

But, for the moment, we want to pay tribute to him for an achievement on the horizon.

Unless Jared suddenly takes an unexpected detour on us, when he turns out for track this spring he will become the ONLY person in the CHS Class of 2016 to have played the maximum 12 seasons in his prep career.

From the moment he stepped on campus, Mr. Helmstadter has played tennis and basketball and run track, season after season, a three-sport athlete for four years.

Coupeville Sports hit the internet in August, 2012, right as Jared was about to become a freshman, and he has never let me down.

At a school as tiny as CHS (smallest 1A school in the state), extra bodies on the bench is not always a luxury.

Coupeville needs every athlete it can get, especially those who choose to commit themselves year-round.

In the first year of this blog, 18 Wolves played three sports.

That jumped to 23 in 2013-2014, then retreated a bit the next year, falling to 20.

This year, as we sit in the middle of the school year, there are currently 22 Wolves — 12 girls and 10 boys — who have played both a fall and a winter sport.

How many will add a spring sport and fully punch the clock? Always a good question.

You never know when injuries will occur, and, as they get closer to graduation, some seniors opt to let go of athletics.

Looking at the list, I see at least three athletes who did not play a spring sport last year, and you never really know which way the freshmen will go (there are eight on the list currently) until we actually get there.

In a perfect world, we would hold and have 22 three-sport athletes come spring.

Reality says we could be looking at our lowest total in the last four years.

And that would be a shame for a lot of reasons. And also even more of a reason to hail Jared for his commitment in bucking the trend and leading by example.

The biggest argument for not playing three sports these days is “we’re in an era of specialization.”

Which is a load of crap big-city select coaches use to get money from parents.

I’m going to break it to you right now — barring a miracle, there’s not a single athlete currently at CHS who will see a single day as a professional athlete. Not one.

I would love for one of you to prove me wrong, and, if you do, I will stand next to the overpass wearing a huge sign that says “I’m an idiot!!” in your honor.

But, there ARE a lot of you who could go on to play college sports at various levels.

And guess what? If we look at the former Wolves who are currently doing just that, guess what they all had in common?

Yep, they played multiple sports in high school.

Joel Walstad, Ben Etzell, Nick Streubel, Mitch Pelroy, Hailey Hammer, Monica Vidoni and the only D-1 scholarship athlete we currently have — Tyler King — all were three-sport athletes at CHS.

Jake Tumblin and Josh Bayne spent most of their high school days as two-sport athletes, while softballer Madeline Roberts, the only “specialist” in the bunch, was also a cheerleader.

Of course, when she got to college, she went and surprised everyone by picking up basketball and becoming a two-sport star again for awhile.

Whether you dream of a D1 scholarship or just hope to keep playing at a community college, coaches at every level are adamant that they seek out athletes who play multiple sports.

And you know, I have no clue if Jared plans to play any of his sports after high school.

If he does, he has established work traits a coach desires.

If not, his days as a high school athlete, a time when he showed commitment, loyalty, a willingness to work with others, a desire to participate, will help him in whatever direction he goes in.

Either way, he wins.

I hope as many Wolf athletes as possible, current and future, look to Helmstadter, and match him.

Stretch yourself. Try something new. Your future will be brighter for the effort.

And the rest of us? We’ll be over here raising our glasses to you, Jared. You make your school, your town, your family, your coaches, your fans proud.

P.S. — Don’t skip track season, man. Or else I go back to misspelling your last name again!

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Stacie Farmer

Stacie Farmer in her natural habitat. (Photo courtesy Farmer family)

Stacie Farmer continues to impact lives near and far.

Five years after she passed away on her 25th birthday as a result of injuries suffered in an accident, the former Coupeville High School softball star and force for good in the world is still with us, in memory and spirit.

And, as a story out of Virginia attests, her decision to donate her organs has made an immeasurable impact on people she never met.

People who will carry a part of Stacie with them forever.

To read the story about Stacie’s mom, Cathi, and sister, Lisa, getting to meet those who benefited from her decision, pop over to:

http://www.fox5dc.com/health/57452852-story

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So all these folks (and a few3 billion more) showed up at my duplex for Thanksgiving.

One man. One Roku. One recliner. 24 hours.

Thanksgiving ain’t Thanksgiving until you’ve watched back-to-back-to-back Wham! videos at 2:30 AM, then immediately skidded off into a showing of Airplane vs Volcano starring former TV Superman Dean Cain.

I regret nothing!!!!!

I regret everything…

But I stuck the landing, so that’s … something.

I’ve made decent runs at abusing my eyeballs before (I once watched 13 movies in just a hair over 19 hours), but until 7:03 AM Friday morning, I had never delivered the full-on, continuous, 24-hour viewing festival.

Never say never.

Home alone for Turkey day (I’m seeing my nephews at Christmas and Skyped them the night before), I listened to the words of wisdom once warbled by Whitesnake’s David Coverdale:

Here I go again on my own
Goin’ down the only road I’ve ever known
Like a drifter I was born to walk alone
An’ I’ve made up my mind, I ain’t wasting no more time

Armed with a Roku (the best $45 I have ever spent), plenty of water (proper hydration is key to sitting on your butt for a day, a night and the next day), a soft recliner and my blankies (I’m no savage), I disappeared into a strange land from which no man returns un-scarred, popping out just long enough to feed the landlord’s cats.

Nothing comes between those cats and their food. Nothing. I’ve learned that lesson.

24 hours later, haunted, haggard and forever changed (nah, not really, but it sounds better that way), I stumbled to my bed as a new day dawned.

Somewhere, children sang and scampered across the fresh frost, and all I wished for was one thing — for said kids to SHUT THE HECK UP cause both of my eyes were twitching.

My head hit the pillow and … crap … back up to feed the cats, who were pacing under my bedroom window like prison guards.

Yowling, hissing prison guards who looked into my eyes, and then looked away, shaking their heads in silent disgust with me.

They knew.

They knew I had watched not one, but two Wang Chung music videos, a fan movie starring kindergartners as Batman, Robin and the Joker, Bugs Bunny in a bra and that five-minute zombie film from Bangladesh that didn’t even have any subtitles.

Well, I could live with that and … oh no, what if they knew I had sat through the entire video for Warrant’s “Heaven Isn’t Too Far Away?!?!?”

Oh, they knew. And they judged. Oh, did they judge.

To which I say, who hasn’t watched a Thompson Twins video at 4:47 AM in the morning while eating English muffins, chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream and cranberry sauce and wondering where it all started to go wrong?

Me. Just me? Well then…

As I crawled off to bed, the strains from an encore of Chumbawamba’s “Tubthumping” still echoing in my ears, I thrust my hand to the sky, “Rocky“-style.

And somewhere a cat snickered (the little jerk).

My “adventure:”

7:01 AM Thursday, Nov. 26 to 7:03 AM Friday, Nov. 27

14 channels, five movies, 16 TV episodes, 55 music videos, six cartoons, two short documentaries, seven short films, one sports special and one stand-up comedy special.

Bob’s Burgers: Season 3, Episode 13 — “My Fuzzy Valentine” (Netflix)
Bob’s Burgers: S-3, E-14 — “Lindapendent Woman”
LL Cool J — “Jinglin Baby” (Flashback ’80s)
The Call — “Everywhere I Go”
Debbie Gibson — “Lost in Your Eyes”
“The Galaxy Invader” (B-Movie TV)
Journey — “Send Her My Love” (Flashback ’80s)
Hall and Oates — “No Can Do”
Madonna — “True Blue”
The Geto Boys — “Mind Playing Tricks On Me”
The Cure — “Just Like Heaven”
DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince — “Parents Just Don’t Understand”
America — “You Can Do Magic”
Poison — “Every Rose Has Its Thorn”
“My Homie Sells Homies” (VICE)
“Mr. Cherry: The Buttcracker”
“The Tuba Tooter” (Viki)
“Dhaka-pocalypse”
“Living in Seduced Circumstances” (Asian Crush)
Bob’s Burgers: S-3, E-15 “O.T. The Outside Toilet” (Netflix)
Bob’s Burgers: S-3, E-16 “Topsy”
Bob Burgers’s: S-3, E-17 “Two for Tina”
Survivor — “The Search is Over” (’80s Flashback)
Billy Idol — “Eyes Without a Face”
Darryl Hall — “One on One”
Madonna — “Express Yourself”
Warrant — “Heaven Isn’t Too Far Away”
Dexy’s Midnight Runners — “Come On Eileen”
“Duran Duran: Unstaged” (Netflix)
“Hyde and Hare” (Looney Tunes Network)
“The Big Bad Wolf”
“Tortoise Wins by a Hare”
“The Brave Tin Soldier”
“Corny Concerto”
Guns ‘n Roses — “Sweet Child ‘o Mine” (VEVO)
Adele — “Hello”
Def Leppard — “Armageddon It”
Whitesnake — “Here I Go Again”
Aqua — “Barbie Girl”
OMC — “How Bizarre”
George Strait — “Amarillo by Morning”
Night Ranger — “Sister Christian”
The Tick: S-1, E-1 “The Pilot” (Crackle)
All in the Family: S-1, E-1 “Meet the Bunkers”
Haloo Helsinki — “Pulp Fiction” (VEVO)
George Strait — “The Seashores of Old Mexico”
George Canyon — “Ring of Fire”
The Statler Brothers — “I’ll go to My Grave Loving You”
Alabama — “Song of the South”
Juice Newton — “Angel of the Morning”
Chumbawamba — “Tubthumping”
Brooke Forman — “Crazy”
Joan Osborne — “Right Hand Man”
Nicole Atkins — “Maybe Tonight”
Nicole Atkins — “The Way It Is”
“American Ultra” (Vudu)
Brett Favre retirement ceremony (NBC Sports Extra)
“Genius Directors in 3 Minutes: Quentin Tarantino” (IndieWire)
“Paul Thomas Anderson: From a Distance”
Super Mansion: “Babes in the Wood” (Crackle)
The Walking Dead: S-6, E-7 “Heads Up” (Vudu)
Planet P Project — “Why Me” (’80s Flashback)
Tommy Tutone — “867-5309/Jenny”
Paul McCartney and Michael Jackson — “Say Say Say”
Bob’s Burgers: S-3, E-18 “It Takes a Village” (Netflix)
Bob’s Burgers: S-3, E-19 “Family Fracas”
Bob’s Burgers: S-3, E-20: “Kids Run the Restaurant”
Louis C.K.: Live at the Beacon Theater
REO Speedwagon — “Can’t Fight This Feeling” (VEVO)
Joan Osborne — “St. Teresa”
Wham! — “Bad Boys”
Wham! — “Wake Me Up Before You Go Go”
Wham! — “Freedom”
“Indiana Jones and the Search for the Lost Idol” (Fydo)
“The Amazing Adventures of Little Batman”
“Airplane vs. Volcano” (Netflix)
Bob’s Burgers: S-3, E-21 “Boys 4 Now”
Bob’s Burgers: S-3, E-22 “Carpe Museum”
Bob’s Burgers: S-3, E-23 “The Unnatural”
Guns ‘n Roses — “Welcome to the Jungle” (Vevo)
Wang Chung — “Dance Hall Days”
The Thompson Twins — “Hold Me Now”
Wang Chung — “Everyone Have Fun Tonight”
Journey — “Wheel in the Sky”
The Beatles — “Penny Lane”
Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee: Jim Carrey (Crackle)
“Cheddar” (Gustafer Yellowgold: Minnesota Chronicles)
“Question Marks”
Robson and Jerome — “What Becomes of the Broken Hearted” (VEVO)
Tears for Fears — “Everyone Wants to Rule the World”
Mr. Mister — “Is it Love”
Def Leppard — “Hysteria”
Chumbawamba — “Tubthumping”

P.S. — Glenn surviving by crawling under the dumpster? Pure and utter bull-pucky.

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Messner

Paul Messner, the beast of the gridiron, circa 1965. (Photo from Messner family archives)

Santa and his three daughters (clockwoise from lower left) Christi, Barbi and Aimee.

Santa and daughters (clockwise from lower left) Christi, Barbi and Aimee.

Jump back to opening day from football season for a moment.

Coupeville was on the road, facing off with arch-rival South Whidbey down Langley way, and Jordan Ford, heir to a proud athletic tradition from both sides of his family, made an explosive debut as a Wolf.

Recovering a fumble, he took it to the house for a touchdown that, momentarily, put CHS ahead and turned the tide of the game.

While the play was called back, thanks to a Wolf blocker getting nailed with a penalty flag for an illegal hit, it was a signal that Ford, whose family had moved back to Whidbey for his senior year, would be a bright spot for Coupeville.

And he was, racking up fumble recoveries and sacks on defense, while doubling as one of Wolf quarterback Gabe Eck’s top targets.

In the stands that night, proudly watching his grandson play, was Coupeville’s answer to Santa Claus, the fun-lovin’ force of life known as Paul Messner.

The question is, how many others in the stands knew that the guy with the white beard and the mile-wide grin was once one of the best to ever stride the gridiron for the Wolves?

How many know about his senior year, when, exactly 50 years before his grandson’s heroics, Messner put together one of the most impressive campaigns in school history?

Santa was a Superman, and the 1965 season, which started in glory and ended in pain, is one of the great long-lost legends in Wolf sports history.

Pull up a chair and let me tell you about a different time, a time when legends walked the land.

Or, in Messner’s case, when they slammed head-long into the line, scattering would-be tacklers and tearing off huge chunks of yardage like a man possessed.

How scary was he? Other teams refused to play the Wolves after dark on their home field.

Well, OK, that may have been because the CHS football stadium didn’t have lights at the time … but, we’re sticking with the legend. Sounds better.

The ’65 Wolves were thin in numbers, but coach Terry Paoletti had a 5-foot-11, 180-pound battering ram in Messner and he used him often behind a line that included guys like Dick Bogardus, Fred Salmon, Jim Henry and my future landlord, Jack Sell.

Jim Faris operated under center, while Bill Losey joined Messner at halfback.

The spotlight quickly landed on Messner, a two-year letterman entering the season, who was tabbed as the team’s captain.

He erupted for 185 yards on 15 carries, while also snagging 13 tackles in Coupeville’s opening game, a narrow 22-12 loss at Darrington.

Newspaper accounts at the time talk about the Wolves struggling a bit to adapt to the “high altitude of the mountain town,” but that hardly slowed the two-way beast of Cow Town.

Bringing his game back down to the lowlands, Messner went on a rampage the next week, savaging Chimacum for 208 yards on 19 carries. He also accumulated 17 tackles as Coupeville throttled the Cowboys 21-6.

With Messner rolling, the Wolves ripped off two more wins the next two weeks, rising to #7 in the state polls.

Coupeville beat La Conner 12-0 (Messner rolled up 223 yards) and nipped Granite Falls 13-7 (Messner tallied 154 yards rushing and took a kickoff back 90 yards for a touchdown) and, at 3-1, was atop the Northwest B League standings.

The win over Granite Falls, which featured a Tiger, Dan Maik, being ejected for “non-official roughing” of Wolf Terry Hesselgesser, was probably the most thrilling of the season.

Unfortunately, with Hesselgesser going to the sidelines with an injury, it also signaled the beginning of the end for a CHS team that barely had enough bodies BEFORE injuries wreaked havoc on the roster.

In the moment, however, the win was epic, with Coupeville rallying from behind at home, in the daylight, with a mixture of trickery and grit.

Facing a punt at midfield, the Wolves pulled off a fake, with their kicker, Henry, — who was the Clay Reilly of the time, with a 67-yard punt to his credit — hitting Sell on a 25-yard pass.

Messner took it from there, carrying the ball three straight times, with the final coming on a bull-rush up the gut for the go-ahead score.

Even then, Coupeville needed a miracle at the end to escape.

Granite Falls drove to the Wolf three-yard line with four seconds to go, before Bogardus crashed through the line on the final play, hauling down the ball-carrier to end the game.

As the Wolves celebrated, however, the specter of the injuries to come hung heavy.

According to an on-the-scene report by Whidbey News-Times legend Wallie Funk, CHS student Jim Keith, a sideline volunteer, took a lineman’s pole to the noggin mid-game.

His head bleeding from the wound inflicted by the metal pole, Keith passed out. His mom, having rushed to the field, promptly fainted as well.

Keith’s dad grabbed his son and headed for the doctor’s office. Unfortunately, the doctor had been called and was en route to the stadium, and the two cars passed before anyone realized what was going on.

Everyone came out of the situation fairly dandy (the wound was bloody but superficial), but maybe it should have been a sign.

Halfway through the season, Messner had nearly 800 rushing yards, the Seattle papers were starting to pay attention and then … disaster.

Game five was a match-up against the Oak Harbor JV, and things took a nasty turn early when Messner went down with a kidney injury less than five minutes in.

Bogardus was the next to go, and the injuries mounted in the second half, a time when Oak Harbor, clinging to a 6-0 lead, apparently ran in varsity players to save face.

By the time the Wildcat “JV” had pulled off a 26-6 win, the season was effectively done for the Wolves.

Coupeville cancelled a scheduled game against the Snohomish JV, then, racked by injuries, fell to Chimacum and Darrington, finishing a game behind the Loggers for the league title.

Messner had 770 yards before the injury and gutted out 41 more in the scant time he was able to play afterwards, forever leaving Wolf fans to wonder “what if?”

Still, while the second half pain put a bit of a damper on the season, ’65 remains a landmark year in Wolf football history.

Ten seniors — Messner, Bogardus, Sell, Faris, Salmon, Gary Bass, Mike Thompson, Steve Wilson, Lee Milheim and Tom Kroon — went on a final run, that, even now, 50 years later, looms large.

It was a time of legends, two-way warriors led by a good-natured beast who would grow up to become Santa Claus.

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