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Archive for the ‘Big Time Secrets’ Category

Courtney Arnold, on right, and co-captain Tyler Potts, during their days as Wolves.

Football fans will get a little somethin’ extra this Friday.

Inside sources (very hush-hush!!) tell me that former Wolf cheer captain Courtney Arnold, one of the best to ever scream her lungs out on a Friday night sideline, will be in town and back to bring her non-stop energy to this year’s squad.

Arnold, who is currently attending Azusu Pacific University in California, has been working with the current Wolf cheerleaders on a routine which they will debut during Coupeville’s clash with Orcas Island.

So, mark the date on the calender. Plan accordingly. But remember, you didn’t hear it from me.

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“I’m gonna need a new diaper!!”

Two losses were apparently two too many.

With his team reeling from unprecedented back-to-back blowout losses to King’s (40-15) and Lakewood (49-0), Archbishop Thomas Murphy football coach and associate athletic director Bill Marsh has “resigned” his position after just four games.

Marsh had previously put together a very successful ten-year run as head coach at Eastside Catholic, winning 68 games.

He inherited the spot formerly held by Dave Ward, a state-title winner at Oak Harbor High School, who lost the ATM job after four years, 47 wins, back-to-back trips to the state final and one nasty round of back-room infighting among big bucks donors.

ATM opened its season with two strong wins, but the back-to-back blowouts marked the first time the Wildcats have suffered two Cascade Conference losses in the same season. The Lakewood loss was the first time ATM had been shut out since 2001.

Marsh will be replaced by assistant coach Mike Allison, but the staff  Marsh brought with him will remain in place.

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Christy Kellison, second from right, takes a brief moment of rest during her whirlwind work as one of the driving forces behind the Coupeville High School Booster Club.

I come not to annoy the publishers at other papers, but to honor one of Coupeville’s best.

And yes, there will probably be a few people miffed at me for putting this on my blog before they had the chance to put it in their Canadian-funded newspaper, but hey, you had two days and it’s public knowledge now and popping up all over Facebook. If I can write six articles in a day and your much-better-paid staff can’t do one, it is what it is.

But, as I said, this is not about me or the 12,432nd bridge I just burnt. This is about Christy Kellison.

Kellison, the heart and the soul of the Coupeville Booster Club, was recently honored with the Dave DuVall Award, which the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association gives out to honor individuals who are “over a long period of time, instrumental in serving a Northwest Interscholastic Activities Association school or school district.”

All one has to do is watch Kellison as she flies around Coupeville, helping to keep Wolf athletics and fan activities running as smoothly as they do, to see her impact. Or, you can read the nominating letter that was submitted in her honor.

“Coupeville High School would like to nominate Christy Kellison for this award. Christy has been the Coupeville Booster Club president for the past three years. Before that she served on the board and been an active member. She goes above and beyond with her service to the Coupeville athletic program. She organizes team dinners for football and soccer and “goody bag” stuffing for all athletes as they move into district tournaments. She takes charge of putting out spirit flags in front of the school prior to home games and was a key person in organizing our first annual homecoming parade through the town of Coupeville.

As the Booster President, she organizes all the fundraisers for the Booster Club, including an annual golf tournament as well as the annual Crab Feed and Auction. She also organizes an annual dinner for all Coupeville athletes and coaches every spring.

Christy is constantly thinking up ways to contribute to our athletic department and the school and is heavily involved in all of our sports programs. If there is a home game going on, you’ll always see Christy in the stands cheering the team on. Every year, with every team, she purchases roses for the senior night, so students can show appreciation to their parents for their support during their school years and athletic careers.

She is currently working on getting a wolf mural painted in our gymnasium and procuring a much needed new sound system for our stadium.

I can’t say enough about Christy and her involvement to our school and community and how she rallies the community around her to get involved. It is people like her who keep the spirit alive in our small town of Coupeville.”

To that, what can we add, but this — well done, Mrs. Kellison. Well done.

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Carson Risner (left) and Aaron Trumbull and the photo that launched a web site.

Aaron Trumbull was having a bad day.

That’s the truth behind the best sports photo that local mom/insurance whiz/shutter bug Shelli Trumbull has snapped in recent memory. As much as I like her pic of baseball coach Chris Tumblin glaring down an ump, and her photo of Wolf softball catcher Kenzie Kooch in the aftermath of a close playoff loss is a haunting image, it was this pic that HAD to be the header for coupevillesports.com.

As seen above, it captures Wolf hurler Aaron Trumbull and catcher Carson Risner in a light moment, sharing a private joke on the pitcher’s mound. But, as I said, it was a light moment that started out a bit darker, as we reveal in this EXCLUSIVE edition of “Behind the Photo.

We let Risner set up the moment for you:

Aaron and I watched a comedian on my i-pod before the game and when we were done watching it, I told him that if he was having a hard time on the mound that I would call a timeout and tell him one of his jokes. I didn’t even have to tell him the joke, we were already laughing. Joke was not appropriate to share.

And from Trumbull’s perspective:

Well, I was having trouble throwing accurately, so I was getting frustrated and that was only making me throw worse, so coach (Willie) Smith told Carson that if I got angry and walked a batter, to call a time out to come talk to me.”

“So I ended up walking a guy and Carson came up to me and told me he was glad that I didn’t hit the guy, because I was throwing as hard as I could. I smiled at that, but he told me a joke that I can’t really remember, but it definitely made me laugh and that’s what I need on the mound, relaxation.”

“So the next batter, I either struck him out out or it was a grounder to the infield. For the rest of the time I threw, I threw a lot better because he’d repeat the catch-line of the joke every time we went to the field and it relaxed me completely. I guess a joke is all you need to change the way you play a game.”

So, now you know, and knowing is half the battle.

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