McKaya Bailey is the accidental goalie.
The Coupeville High School sophomore, a pitching phenom on the softball field and also a pretty darn good basketball and volleyball player, wandered into high school soccer with no plans to make it her own. She originally attended off-season scrimmages with the team as a way to stay in shape for volleyball, only to change her mind and trade in her volleyball knee pads for goalie gloves when the school year actually rolled around.
“This was truly my rookie season, because I had never played soccer before,” Bailey said. “I’m pretty sure the first time I actually touched a ball was this past summer. At first it was just for fun to keep in shape, but then I started thinking it might be something I would have fun doing.”
Her sudden immersion into life on the pitch took a dramatic turn when she decided to accept Wolf coach Dan d’Ameida’s challenge and move into the net. While she did discuss the move with her parents, there was an ulterior motive for Bailey being so willing to take on the new position.
“What it really came down to was that it’s the only place on the field where I can use my hands!,” Bailey said. “With my softball, basketball, and volleyball backgrounds there isn’t really any hand-eye-foot coordination.
“I’m sure that anyone watching could tell when we first started to do footwork drills,” she added. “Without the ball I was perfectly fine, then they threw one in there and it was a bit of a disaster.”
She stuck it out though and worked extensively with assistant coach Gary Manker, whose daughter, Ashley, was a stellar net-minder for Coupeville.
“Working with Manker was probably the greatest part of going to soccer practice everyday,” Bailey said. “He helped me so much this season and I’m absolutely sure that without him I would not have been as successful as I was.
“From day one he pushed me to work my hardest and be my best, no excuses,” she added. “Something I heard a lot was, “Remember, body language. It’s okay to be tired, but you don’t let the other team know that.” That was probably the first thing he told me about being a keeper.”
While her raw athletic ability — Bailey is an electrifying fast-pitch softball hurler — carried her part of the way, working with Manker helped her to refine her skills. While Coupeville struggled to mount a consistent offensive attack this season, Bailey’s play behind a strong defensive line led by Anna Bailey, Kelsey Miranda and Marisa Etzell, kept the Wolves in most of their games.
“Technique, technique, technique. I had the basics down, but then it was time for me to fine tune everything,” Bailey said. “By the end I finally started to run out for one-on-one breakaways, talking to my back-line, and I was less concerned with hitting the ground and hurting myself and more concerned with not letting the ball past me. I think that was my biggest improvement. Risking my body to stop the ball and not being afraid to hit the ground.
And while the move required a lot of time and effort, and a few bruises and flattened noses, she would still step forward and accept the job.
“I definitely would still say yes to becoming goalie,” Bailey said. “Sure, I was constantly covered in bruises and most mornings could barely get out of bed, but it was so much fun, which is exactly why I wanted to play soccer in the first place.
“Not that volleyball was ever bad, but it just stopped being fun for me,” she added. “Instead of wanting to go to practice, it almost felt like a chore. Being goalie, practice everyday was different and new. Even though the drills were all the same, you never make the same save twice and that’s what drives me to keep getting in the net. I want to make that amazing save that brings the crowd to their feet.”
She picks the team’s victory over Sultan as the high-point of her year (“I had some of my best saves during that game. One, unfortunately, was actually stopped with my nose.”) and views the next two years as her time to make true believers out of local soccer fans (“My biggest goal is to go from a good keeper to a great keeper.”)
Still, deep down, she has to admit softball will always have the top spot in her sports-happy heart.
“I think the reason I like softball so much is because every aspect of it is fun. It doesn’t matter if it’s just playing catch or if we’re in the batting cages,” Bailey said. “But the best part of it all is pitching. I’ve been doing it for so long that it’s almost second nature.
“Sometimes I’ll be pitching and I’m not even thinking about what I’m doing; I just do it, when I turn off my mind and just go,” she added. “That’s why if I’m having a bad day, I ask my dad if we can go to the field and pitch. Not only is there some sort of sick satisfaction that comes from throwing a ball as hard as you can, but it gives me a chance to shut off my mind and forget what’s bothering me.”
The oldest of three sisters (“My sister McKenzie and I are partners in crime. She’s like a best friend that never leaves my house and always eats my food. My little sister Mollie and I have the same personality, so we usually get along pretty well.”), Bailey enjoys history class (“Not because I actually like history, but there is rarely homework assigned in that class.”) and is a movie addict.
“Movies are my weakness. I love a good comedy, but one of my best friends, Micky LeVine, is always having me watch scary ones. Honestly though, no movie night is complete without “Mean Girls.” It’s my absolute favorite and ‘so fetch’,” Bailey said. “If I’m not spending my weekends at softball, I’m usually with my friends or hanging out with the fam bam. I am really close with my family.
“My parents are always there for me and I’m surprised that they actually have the patience to deal with my craziness and constant movie quoting,” she added. “I think that sports are really a big factor in us all being so close. Whether its my select softball tournament, or if it’s a Seahawks game on TV, we’re all there. And everyone knows it too; we’re not exactly the quietest bunch. I guess that’s what happens when your mom’s an Engle and your dad’s a Bailey!”
Archive for the ‘Girls Soccer’ Category
Bailey “so fetch” on the soccer pitch!!
Posted in Girls Basketball, Girls Soccer, Softball, Volleyball on November 2, 2012| Leave a Comment »
Soccer injuries can’t slow down rising star Julia Myers!!
Posted in Girls Soccer on November 2, 2012| Leave a Comment »

Julia Myers skies to knock a ball over the top of the net while manning the goal for her select soccer squad.
One of the more talented soccer players in Coupeville didn’t get to play this season.
Battling back from her second knee injury in two years, Wolf sophomore Julia Myers spent the season in the stands, a bulky brace on her leg slowing the movements of the normally explosive goalkeeper.
A star in select soccer, where she mans the nets for Sean LeVine’s Whidbey Islanders squad, Myers was tripped up (literally), when a girl took her knees out in a game, resulting in a torn ACL, surgery and nine months of recovery. Barely back from that, she went airborne for a ball this summer in a tournament and tore the meniscus in the same knee.
Now, as she works back through the recovery from her second surgery (she’ll wear the brace until her physical therapist signs off on her knee being strong enough to go without), she just hopes to be recovered in time for tennis in the spring.
The two-sport athlete is more than ready to trade the stands for the flow of action.
“All of my coaches know how anxious I am to get back!” Myers said.
And, even with the set-back from the injuries, Myers’ love for life on the pitch has barely abated. She plans to be back out there directing action as soon as possible.
“My favorite sport is probably soccer just because I love the intensity and how aggressive you have to be,” Myers said. “It helps relieve stress when I’m on the soccer field; I forget about everything and just focus on the task in front of me.
“I hope one day to be able to play soccer in college, so my knee is a set back, but it only makes me want to work harder,” she added. “My team is like a family, so it’s always great to see us working together on the field and pushing each other to get better.”
It’s the team concept, the chance to spend time playing with her friends, that drives Myers through rehab. She always has one eye set firmly on making it back to the pitch and is willing to put in the work necessary to make that happen again.
“I enjoy being able to be around all my team. We’re like a family; we get along really well, we’ve been playing together since middle school,” Myers said. “I always look forward to going to soccer practice every day. I always bring a optimistic attitude to practice; I have fun but I’m also there to work and get better and help other people on my team get better.”
Myers, who enjoys her biology and history classes (“There is so much to learn”), spends her weekends hobbling around the Keystone Cafe.
“There are so many great people I get to work with and I’m so lucky to have gotten the opportunity to work with all of them!” Myers said.
And while Myers has a lot of people she likes, topping her list are her select soccer coaches, two men who have been there for her through good times and bad.
“Probably my coaches, Sean LeVine and Scott Rosenkranz. They have been with me through all of the obstacles I have had to face and whenever I’m ready to play again, they just go right back into it like I have never left in the first place,” Myers said. “I enjoy playing for both of them because they always come to practice with something new to teach me to help improve.”
Kim Andrews thanks ‘the little people!!’
Posted in Football, Girls Soccer, Middle School, Volleyball on October 30, 2012| Leave a Comment »

Fall sports MVP Kole Kellison, who did play-by-play, scoreboard operating, speaker removal and just about everything else … except when he was on his lunch break. (Robert Pelant photo)
Kim Andrews is everywhere at once.
At least it seems that way, as Coupeville High School’s athletic coordinator/supervisor, usually joined at the hip by partner Aimee Bishop, bounces from soccer game to volleyball match to football game and back again, constantly going in a circle and keeping everything running.
Whether eyeballing Kole “Does this school have good insurance?” Kellison as he climbs on a rainy press box roof to remove speakers, trying to keep rowdy, vuvuzela horn-demanding Wolf fans in reasonable check or making the middle school football players get off the field in time for the CHS girls’ soccer squad to take their place, she’s a whirlwind.
But, she would be the first to tell you that she couldn’t accomplish all that she does without the help of a crew of dedicated, and often unsung, volunteers. Today, she sings their praises, in her own version of an Oscars speech.
And no, she never really called them “the little people.”
Volleyball:
Scorekeepers/Announcers — Beverly Chan, Susan Boonstra, Tauni Moody.
Ticket Taker — Garrett Parker (“New this year, did a great job!”)
Football:
Ticket Taker — Sarah Stuurmans — “My all time dependable ticket taker for football!”
Ticket helpers — Tim Quinn, Jacob Lovell (“Always available to help where ever needed”), Bobbie Massengale.
Announcers/Scorekeepers — “Long time favorites Gary Hall and Joel Norris.”
JV/Middle School Scoreboard — “Kole Kellison did a fabulous job for his first time running the scoreboard.”
JV Announcers — “New to the circuit this year, Caleb Valko and Kellison. Very amusing; this could be their calling!”
Chain Gang — Mike Etzell, Randy Payne, Jim Stolee, John Thompson.
Soccer:
Scorekeeper — Luke Pelant (“A guy you can always count on!”) and Kellison.
Announcer — Quinn and a guest appearance by Lovell.
Middle School Volleyball:
Scorekeeper — Lovell (“A BIG thanks for sticking through the season with the boisterous MS VB crowd! He took it all in stride.”)
“And a HUGE thank you to Kole and Ray Kellison for helping put the very heavy speakers on top of the booth most every game. They are also working on a permanent solution to our new sound system.”
“And, of course, thank you to my co-supervisor, Aimee Bishop, who makes the job super fun! WE are an intimidating pair…”
So long, and thanks for all the memories!!
Posted in Girls Soccer on October 25, 2012| Leave a Comment »

Amanda d’Almeida and seven Wolf teammates finished their high school soccer days Wednesday. (Robert Pelant photo)
The miracle will have to wait until next season.
Playing without one of its most explosive offensive stars — senior Madison Tisa McPhee, who was out with a broken nose — the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer team was unable to mount much of an offensive charge Wednesday night.
With just one shot on goal, the Wolves fell 6-0 to host Lynden Christian in the first round of the 1A Northwest district tournament, ending their season at 1-16.
The Lyncs, who entered the eight-team tourney as the number one seed, rained down shots on Coupeville from all sides, peppering Wolf goalie McKayla Bailey with 15 shots on goal.
The sophomore, a first-year keeper, made eight strong saves, but it wasn’t enough.
The trio of Haley Hollander, Lexi Vander Griend and Sierra De Vries each recorded two goals apiece as Lynden Christian moved into a semifinal match-up with Blaine, which edged South Whidbey 1-0.
In the other half of the draw, King’s obliterated Friday Harbor 9-0 Wednesday and Meridian bounced Mount Baker 3-0.
The loss was the final high school game for a strong group of Wolf seniors, who led by example all season.
While Coupeville struggled offensively at times, they were very competitive in the second half of the season, grabbing a win over Sultan and pushing several teams to the final minutes of game.
Departing are team captains Amanda d’Almeida, Anna Bailey and Haley Marx, as well as Kelsey Pape, Vanessa Bernales, Rachel Wenzel, Kelsey Miranda and Tisa McPhee.
Keep on keepin’ on, Wolf booters!!
Posted in Girls Soccer on October 23, 2012| Leave a Comment »
One win equals at least three more games.
That’s the mathematical equation facing the Coupeville High School girls’ soccer squad as it heads to Lynden Wednesday for the start of the district playoffs. Knock off host Lynden Christian tomorrow, and the Wolves are guaranteed two more games at districts and a berth at tri-districts next week.
It won’t be easy, with the Lyncs coming in at 9-6-1 and the Wolves at 1-15, but Coupeville has been gelling as the season goes, and anything can happen on the pitch.
Lose and it’s time to turn in uniforms. Win and the Wolves advance to play the winner of South Whidbey-Blaine Friday in the district semifinals. The winner of that match plays for the district title Saturday, while the loser will square off in the third-place game earlier that day.
The winner of districts gets an automatic bid to the state tourney, while the second through fourth place finishers will need to win at least one game at tri-districts to advance to the big dance.
In addition to the Coupeville and South Whidbey games, King’s will host Friday Harbor and Meridian will host Mount Baker on the top half of the bracket.














































