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Archive for the ‘Cheer’ Category

The Arnold family (l to r) -- Courtney, Brett, Garrett, Sylvia and Scott.

The Arnold family (l to r) — Courtney, Brett, Garrett, Sylvia and Scott.

Hundreds of girls cheered for Sylvia Arnold over the last 20 years, but only one called her Mom at home.

Courtney Arnold has a unique perspective, and I thank her for being willing to offer it. Her thoughts on the woman who brought her into the world and taught her the power of cheer:

Cheering for my mom was one of the most rewarding experiences in high school because I got to witness, first hand, the consistency of her faith, morals and characters in all that she does.

Champions commit.

The phrase came to life during my junior and senior year on the team, but has always been a theme to her coaching.

Though my mom emphasized this in the competitive arena of cheerleading, especially when competitive cheerleading meant waking up for 6 AM practices, it carried over into the academic and social lives of all the cheerleaders.

My mom believes that champions commit to their studies, they commit to their community, they commit to their relationships – they commit to being the best in all facets of life.

My mom also taught the team that it doesn’t matter how many trophies you bring home to the show cases if you are not smart, kind, and respectable young women.

I do not think that I could ever fully express how much my mom has impacted the school through her involvement as a cheer coach.

Her impact is written on the stories of the cheerleaders’ and students’ lives she has touched with her words and actions.

She has loved more than just her cheer team; she has loved the entire school and community by the hours upon hours she has poured into behind the scenes work that often goes unnoticed.

She hardly ever takes credit for what she does and instead deflects the glory onto the beautiful girls she coaches and the school in its entirety.

There are too many moments that are special to me to just pick one.

Some of my favorite have been singing the national anthem with her at football games or watching her make a fool of herself in front of the junior cheer girls simply to bring them joy through laughter.

Over this last year it would have been easy for my mom to give up on coaching.

I know that in many ways she was physically absent from the cheer team during all that was going on, but I know that her heart never left the program or the girls.

In returning to coach this last year of cheerleading, she showed the high school and community what she stands for: commitment. Champions commit.

My mom is a champion, in every sense of the word.

She is continually committed to God, she is committed to her husband and family, and she has been committed to her role as a cheer coach for many years.

But now, that time is coming to an end.

It is hard to see her leave the sidelines, but I know that the heart and soul she has poured into the cheer program, the school, and the community will overflow into the years to come.

Her legacy will live on through the testimonies and stories of those she has coached, taught, and simply lived life with.

If I could say anything to conclude, it would be thank you.

Thank you for the countless hours you have put in without anyone knowing, thank you for challenging the stigma of cheerleading, thank you for pushing girls to be more than talented athletes but to also be respectable and smart young women, thank you for your constant smiles through the hardest of times, and thank you for modeling what it truly means to be a champion.

Mom, thank you.

Know that you are valued, loved, and appreciated.

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A blast from the past, with Sylvia Arnold and Sylvia Hurlburt, who is now a sophomore cheering for CHS. (Kristin Hurlburt photo)

   A blast from the past, with Sylvia Arnold and Sylvia Hurlburt, who is now a sophomore cheering for CHS. (Kristin Hurlburt photo)

Sylvia Arnold changed the way a town views its cheerleaders.

In her 20 years on the job, the Coupeville High School cheer coach — a force of nature whose enthusiasm has never wavered through good times and bad times — did something very few cheer coaches would even consider.

She welcomed everyone into the family.

There were no cuts, no competition for a few select spots. If you showed up, if you put your all in, you were one of her girls for life.

It didn’t matter if you fit the “classic” cheerleader profile or if you wore glasses, had multiple hair colors, were taller or shorter or heavier, were outgoing or painfully withdrawn at the start.

You were one of her girls, end of story.

Other schools seem to be constantly amazed with the size of the Wolf cheer squad. The radio announcers from King’s talked about it non-stop for an entire game last year.

There will be some who will tell you it got out of hand, that having more cheerleaders than football players on the sideline is embarrassing.

It must be tough to be wrong, but you are.

As Miss Sylvia prepares for her final regular season game this Friday, I firmly believe she has positively impacted more lives than any coach in this town over the past two decades.

Not just at the high school level, but with the countless elementary and middle school girls she worked with, many of whom returned to cheer for her in later years.

I have seen kids transformed, young women (and a few guys) who carried her lessons with them as they embarked on wonderful journeys that have taken them far from this Island, and often brought them back.

She has given countless teenagers a belief that they can be great, that they are part of something bigger than just themselves. That you don’t have to fit the stereotype to be successful.

You see it in their smiles. In their confidence. In the way they return to see her year after year.

When you look at what she has built, there is nothing but pride. Pride in a town. Pride in being positive, in helping pull up the sister on your right and on your left, because that makes you stronger.

She will tell us she doesn’t want any hoopla. That she doesn’t need to be celebrated.

Nice try, but that’s not how it’s going down.

The next time you see her, whether it’s at a game, at the store, at church, passing her on the street, stop and say two words.

Thank you.

Thank you for giving of yourself. Thank you for making your town better for your presence. Thank you for taking something simple, cheer, and making it pay off in incredibly complex ways.

Thank you, Miss Sylvia, for being you.

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Wolf super fan Lisa Roberts-Edlin will have an extra chance to watch daughter Madeline Roberts cheer from the sideline.

Wolf super fan Lisa Roberts-Edlin will have an extra chance to watch daughter Madeline Roberts cheer from the sideline.

The tacklin' is not done just yet. (John Fisken photo)

The tacklin’ is not done just yet. (John Fisken photos)

Seriously.

Seriously.

The schedule says this Friday is the end for 12 Coupeville High School senior football players and 11 senior Wolf cheerleaders.

The schedule lies.

While the Coupeville High School football team wraps its regular season with Senior Night against Sultan (7 PM at Mickey Clark Field) tomorrow night, that won’t be the end of things.

Since Washington state high school gridiron squads are allowed as many as 10 games, not counting playoff action, the Wolves (3-4) — who did not qualify for postseason play — will get an additional game.

All that’s known right now is that it will be at home, it should be Friday, Nov. 8 and an opponent will be determined after games are played this week.

Possible foes mentioned so far include Chimacum, Life Christian, Vashon Island and Bellevue Christian.

Regardless of who they play, that should give at least one Wolf senior a second shot at a swan song.

Speedy wing Jake Tumblin, who has ripped off 200-plus-yards rushing totals twice this season, is expected to miss the Sultan game as he recovers from a concussion suffered against King’s.

With an extra week of rest, he is expected to be ready in time for the second-chance finale.

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Clockwise. starting in the upper left, are Julia Felici, Kenzie Kooch, Heni Barnes and Emilee Crichton.

Clockwise, starting upper left, are Homecoming Queen nominees Julia Felici, Kenzie Kooch, Heni Barnes, and Emilee Crichton.

The field has been narrowed to four.

After initial votes were counted, three Wolf cheerleaders and a national History Day winner are the final four senior girls standing, as Coupeville High School works its way towards picking a Homecoming King and Queen.

Kenzie Kooch, Julia Felici, Emilee Crichton and Heni Barnes will battle it out for the crown, while Nick Streubel, Jake Tumblin, Ben Etzell and Brett Arnold are vying for the title of King.

Other nominees:

Junior girls: Wynter Thorne, Ana Luvera, Ivy Luvera, Merle Fitzenhagen.

Junior boys: Josh Bayne, Oscar Liquidano, Isaac Vargas, Aaron Wright.

Sophomore girls: Makana Stone, Jovanah Foote, McKenzie Bailey, Jennifer Spark.

Sophomore boys: Lathom Kelley, Dalton Martin, Zane Bundy, Wiley Hesselgrave.

Freshmen girls: Valen Trujillo, Payton Wilson, Emily Licence, Tiffany Briscoe, Mattea Miller, Carlie Rosenkrance.

Freshmen boys: Gabe Wynn, Clay Reilly, Ethan Marx, Bailey Rosenthal.

The Homecoming game is 7 PM Friday, Oct. 19 at Mickey Clark Field. The opponent is dastardly South Whidbey and both ownership of The Bucket for the next year and playoff hopes will be on the line.

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Nicole Becker

Nicole Becker

Becker during her senior season, with fellow cheerleaders Iris Ryckaert (middle) and Emily Clay. (Robert Bishop photo)

Becker during her senior season, with fellow cheerleaders Iris Ryckaert (middle) and Emily Clay. (Robert Bishop photo)

Walking away is never easy to do.

But one of the nice things about the Coupeville High School cheer squad is that once you’ve been a part of the team, you never really leave the squad. You move on with life, to college, work and beyond, but you can always come home and be welcomed back.

For Nicole Becker, this football season has been a new experience, one of being on the outside looking in at what she used to be a huge part of.

Last year she was a senior captain for the Wolves, capping a long run that started in elementary school. This season she’s in the stands as a fan, but will always be a part of something bigger than herself, something she will look back on fondly.

Becker’s thoughts on the transition:

When I moved to Coupeville in fourth grade I knew I wanted to be one of those cheerleaders you saw on those red and white boxes Friday night.

I cheered elementary school and a middle school program; that secured my thoughts to be a Coupeville High School cheerleader. Cheering four years and over eight seasons gives you a big family.

While I spent my time on one of those boxes for two years and constantly having football guys turn around to tell me to “shut up” was comforting, also knowing that those girls that stood beside me had my back was the icing on the cake to me.

Now being graduated and going to home football games is weird to me; I’m used to showing up at 6:15 PM and prepping for the game, but this time I showed up at 7. Wow, was that different.

Seeing familiar faces and hugging everyone was still the same, but I wasn’t in a uniform with sparkly eye shadow all over my face. I was me.

I have a loud voice that carries, so still being loud enough to have some of the football players turn around was a great feeling, but not being around a family was kind of lonely.

I have no doubt in my mind that those girls on the sideline are doing CHS proud.

Do I wish to be back up on a box under those Friday night lights? No, not really, I had my time. I’m needed elsewhere.

I have good memories being a part of the CHS cheer team, which will never be forgotten.

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