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Archive for the ‘Cheer’ Category

Ja’Tarya Hoskins leads off a final batch of Wolf fall sports portraits. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Zoe Trujillo

Mica Shipley

Abby Mulholland

Keahi Sorrows

Coral Caveness

Noelle Daigneault

Isabel Hucke

Eryn Wood

The final batch.

At the start of the fall sports season, candid camera clicker John Fisken shot portraits of virtually every Coupeville High School athlete.

While a few Wolves were missing on their photo day, he managed to capture a solid 98.6% of those who turned out for soccer, cheer, cross country, tennis, volleyball and football.

And, over the course of the season, I managed to run just about every one of the portraits he sent me.

Today’s group, consisting of four cheerleaders, four spikers and one gridiron warrior, brings my mission to an end.

So with that, it’s on to winter, where, with just basketball, both of our jobs will take a lot less time and effort.

We think…

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Moira Reed is one of three CHS senior cheerleaders honored Thursday. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Kaley Grigsby shares the moment with her family.

Julie Bucio, loud ‘n proud to the end.

Reed and her support crew.

Grigsby basks in the spotlight.

Bucio and her biggest fans.

The terrific trio bow out.

Loud ‘n proud to the end.

Coupeville High School senior cheerleaders Julie Bucio, Moira Reed and Kaley Grigsby bowed out Thursday, but not before bringing their customary spirit to the proceedings.

The trio were honored before the Wolves clashed with Granite Falls, hailed for making it through their final season and for all they brought to the program.

While they might have been front and center at football games, none of the three could have accomplished what they did without the support of many, something for which they were all thankful.

“This has been an amazing experience and I’m glad I joined my freshman year and stuck with it till my senior year,” Bucio wrote in her farewell message.

“I’ve learned a lot throughout these past years,” she added. “I couldn’t have done it without those people who showed me their ways and certain people who took me under their wing since freshman year and helped me not get lost in high school.”

Grigsby and Reed offered similar sentiments, with the latter capturing what cheer has meant to all of them.

“I never joined the team for the popularity, the uniform or for the title of being a cheerleader,” Reed said. “I joined to have a family away from home.

“To my fellow cheerleaders, keep your head high and your chin up. Thanks for all the memories and making my senior year the best.”

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Coupeville High School cheerleader Ashleigh Battaglia (center) gets ready to leave the surly bonds of Earth. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The freshman have arrived. Left to right, it’s Grady Rickner, Caleb Meyer, Hawthorne Wolfe and Kiara Contreras.

With help from two layers of Wolves, Mica Shipley touches the heavens.

“I’m telling you, we can still beat those lil’ punks…”

The new CHS grandstand packs them in.

The pregame pizza delivery makes for happy cheerleaders.

One photo, much talent, as Wolf volleyball aces Emma Smith (left) and Ashley Menges (center) and horse-riding supernova Madison Krieg swing by the stadium.

One team, one dream.

There are many people playing many roles, as each week’s edition of Friday Night Lights unfolds.

You have to have football players of course, but cheerleaders and fans play a huge part in making the festivities truly … festive.

Another key role is played by the paparazzi, who stop by to snap away on their cameras, as John Fisken is inclined to do from time to time.

The pics seen above, which come from Coupeville’s 13-0 win over visiting Vashon Island Friday, are courtesy the mad clicker.

To see everything he shot, including pre-game and in-game action shots, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Football-2018-2019/FB-2018-09-07-vs-Vashon

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Marenna Rebischke-Smith kicks off our 2018 Coupeville High School cheer portraits. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ja’Kenya Hoskins

Melia Welling

Loud ‘n proud.

Ashleigh Battaglia

Moira Reed

Bella Velasco

The secret is out, as Cassidy Moody reveals the woman beneath the Wolf mask.

It’s not official until they take your portrait.

Once you get your close-up from John Fisken, then a new season starts seeming a little more real.

Thursday afternoon it was time for the Coupeville High School cheer squad and new coach BreAnna Boon to spend some quality time with the photo flicker, and the pics above are part of what was shot.

Before the season is done, I’ll run all 17 photos from the shoot, but today you get a first taste.

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New CHS cheer coach BreAnna Boon reacts to the news of her hiring. (Photos courtesy Boon)

Boon was a state and national champ as an Oak Harbor cheerleader.

“Winning or losing, cheer teaches you to find the silver lining in every situation.”

Now, there’s been a lot of winning in BreAnna Boon’s career, but Coupeville High School’s new cheer coach wants her athletes to be prepared for anything that comes their way.

Having been tabbed for the job just as a new season kicks into gear — she replaces Emily Stevens, who resigned to spend more time with family — Boon, a repeat state champion during her own prep days, is all about preaching positive reinforcement.

“This may sound odd, but what I enjoy most about cheer is the positive spirit it promotes,” she said. “Learning how to stay positive is a great life lesson you learn in cheer.

“Team bonding is another great aspect that you achieve in cheer. The bonds that are created between teammates are some of the strongest around,” Boon added. “It teaches the squad how to work well with each other.

“I coach my kids to be kind, be proud, have fun and be a part of something greater than themselves.”

Boon achieved that goal during her days at Oak Harbor High School, capping a nine-year run as a cheerleader that began way back in third grade.

She was a team captain for the 2006 Wildcat fall cheer squad which was operating at full force when OHHS won a 4A state football title.

The ‘Cat cheer squad actually outdid the football team, winning state titles all four years Boon was in high school and adding a national championship in 2006.

“I enjoyed some incredibly exciting years as a cheerleader,” she said.

After graduation from OHHS, she kept her love affair with cheer going as a coach, continuing a pattern she had started while still in school.

During her days in the purple and gold, Boon operated as a volunteer coach with the local youth program.

That later blossomed into working as a coach and cheer director. In recent years, she worked at Anacortes High School and the Mount Vernon Christian School.

Boon, whose husband Tyson is part of an all-new coaching staff for the CHS football program, jumped when the opportunity to coach the Wolves unexpectedly opened.

“My goal has always been to acquire a position here on Whidbey Island, as this is my home,” she said. “I love the small-town feel that Coupeville has to offer.

“A small town means a tight-knit community. And a tight-knit community means everyone stands proud together,” Boon added. “Cheerleading is a activity that helps bring together a school and community in a unique way – around sports.”

The idea of community, of giving back, of having people work together to create something bigger than themselves, is very important to the new Wolf coach.

“My goals are to unite cheerleading with all the other sports teams,” Boon said. “I want the teams to know that the squad has their back no matter what. Win or lose, we will always show our support and pride.

“As a coach, one of my goals is to teach the cheerleaders to take pride in their community,” she added. “I am huge on community service and being able to give back in one way or another, is very important.

“The community does a lot for the school, and this is our way of saying thank you. So contact me if you have some community service for us!”

In the past, Coupeville cheer operated both on the sidelines and in competition. With her own extensive background in competitive cheer, Boon has an eye on bringing back those days, but admits it won’t happen tomorrow.

“Right now fall season is just starting, so I am 100% focused on that,” she said. “I want to build a strong squad that will be ready for whatever season it is.

“We will work starting from the ground up in order to put forth a top-notch cheer program,” Boon added. “Competition season is another incredible side to cheer. I would eventually like to bring competition back to CHS, but for now we are doing one step at a time!”

As she begins to work with her cheerleaders, Boon will be putting down the building blocks for the future.

Like former longtime CHS cheer guru Sylvia Arnold, she wants an inclusive squad which brings pride to its community, in game and out.

“I want to show the town of Coupeville that cheerleading is so much more than the stereotypical stigma that follows it,” Boon said. “It’s about how the squad can impact and make a significant difference not only in the school but the community as well.

“They are cheerLEADERS. We may be cheering on the sidelines, but I expect them to have LEADING roles at all times,” she added. “They are role models, in uniform or not. The squad will be setting the bar pretty high with our leadership on and off the field.”

Whether they are with her for one season or four, Boon’s goal is for each of her athletes to exit head held high, proud of what they accomplished and able to look back on their prep careers with the same joy she feels when she remembers her own journey.

“My goal for these kids, is to help them grow not only as a cheerleader, but also as an individual,” she said. “I hope to help them see the greatness in themselves as well as each other and to be able to appreciate it.

“Everyone who is on the squad is an important part of a very big team,” Boon added. “I want them to be able to take away great friendships and memories that will last throughout the years.”

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