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Christine Fields, hitting off the ice during winter training.

Christine Fields, hitting off the ice during winter training.

A little layoff didn’t hurt Christine Fields.

A combination of rain-outs and a trip with her family have kept the Coupeville High School junior a bit limited when it comes to actual competition on the golf course this spring.

But, when she has been out on the links, the two-time state meet competitor has been as good as anyone on Whidbey Island.

Thursday, playing against Sultan and her training companions from South Whidbey at Useless Bay Golf and Country Club, the lone Wolf carded a 23 using Stableford scoring, finishing second in the individual competition.

Fields has five matches left on the schedule before postseason play kicks off in early May.

She and the Falcons play host to Archbishop Thomas Murphy Monday, April 21, travel to Cedarcrest (April 24), King’s (May 1) and Sultan (May 5), then return back to Useless Bay for the season finale against Lakewood May 7.

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"Fear the putter, fools!!"

“All your trophies are mine, mortals!!”

Six for six.

Coupeville High School’s lone golfer, junior Christine Fields, had to wait while baseball, softball, track, girls’ tennis and boys’ soccer all got a chance to play this spring.

Rain-outs washed away her first two scheduled matches, as she and South Whidbey, who she trains and travels with, never got to face Overlake and Bush.

Thursday, the rain finally parted for her, and guess what? Just like the other five CHS sports, she opened with a win in her first go-round.

Playing at the Battle Creek Golf Course, Fields carded a 26 over nine holes, using modified Stableford scoring, edging South Whidbey’s Rosie Portillo (25) to take the individual crown.

The Falcons, who also got a 21 from Tara Moore, thumped host Archbishop Thomas Murphy 81-41 to capture the team title.

Fields can’t win any team titles — since she doesn’t have four other teammates wearing the red and black who would help her pick up points.

But winning an individual title first time out bodes well as she attempts a run at qualifying for the state tourney for a third consecutive season.

She’ll next tee it up, weather permitting, Monday, March 31, when Cedarcrest comes to Whidbey and visits the Useless Bay Golf and Country Club.

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Zepher Loesch (Photos courtesy Tom Loesch)

Zepher Loesch (Photos courtesy Tom Loesch)

Breakin' ankles and takin' names while playing college ball.

Breakin’ ankles and takin’ names in college.

The early days of a gym rat.

Birth of a gym rat.

Loesch with sisters Mia (left) and Kalia in 2008. (Dawn Hesselgrave photo)

Loesch with sisters Mia (left) and Kalia in 2008. (Dawn Hesselgrave photo)

Duct tape made Zepher Loesch a better basketball player.

The 2009 Coupeville High School grad, who could shoot out the lights during his days as a Wolf and went on to play college ball at Linfield, was the very definition of a gym rat.

He and teammate Cody Peters would have lived on the basketball court if allowed. So, they did a little something extra from time to time to make sure they got more time in the gym than the authorities were giving them.

“Coach (Randy) King, (Ron) Bagby and (Willie) Smith were constantly kicking Cody and I out of the gym, and we knew it was coming but that was our life at that point and time,” Loesch said. “Sometimes we’d put duct tape on the inside of the door so we could get into the gym early before coaches or teachers showed up.”

That dedication paid off, as Loesch, even after missing a huge chunk of his senior season with a broken hand, earned Cascade Conference honors during a season in which the Wolves pulled off a milestone win that has stayed with him.

After dropping their first five meetings with league power King’s, the Wolves shocked the Knights 54-52 in double overtime Jan. 30, 2009, proving once and for all Coupeville could play with the big boys.

Loesch was a two-sport star, teeing it up with the Oak Harbor High School golf team (since CHS doesn’t field a team), but hoops was the driving force in his life.

“Basketball is and always will be my favorite,” Loesch said. “Academics taught me the basics, but basketball was my avenue for it all. If I didn’t have above a 3.2 I couldn’t play sports. It was the only way my parents could get me out of the gym and into the classroom.

“I can definitely say that the life I had through basketball and the events it carried me through are what effected they way I live my life more than anything except my family’s own impact.”

He credits teachers (“Mrs. (Barbara) Ballard and Mr. (Kyle) Nelson were the first ones that challenged me enough to pay any attention in class; their classes were more difficult then some college classes simply because you could tell it was their goal to prepare kids for college”) and his family for helping shape him.

“My father (Tom Loesch) taught me everything I needed to know to compete competitively and my mom (Dawn Hesselgrave) taught me all the basics starting from a younger age,” Loesch said.

His friendship with Peters, the big man in the paint next to his three-point bombing presence on the perimeter, was, and remains, a huge part of his life.

Cody is and always will be like a brother to me,” Loesch said. “Off the court we are two totally different people but we grew up doing what we both loved more than anything at the time; no one can change that.

“We have been teammates forever and it’s something that will never change.”

He learned early, though, that no one can drive a person to success quite as much as the guy looking back at you in the mirror.

“You have to push yourself harder than anyone else will push you to make it to the next level,” Loesch said. “No one will make you get there, you have to take it upon yourself. There is an answer to every excuse.”

After playing college ball at Linfield, Loesch moved into the financial industry, first in Bellevue and now in the sunny surroundings of Maui.

He’s a busy guy, juggling work as an investment analyst for Wealth Strategy Partners with growing his own company, All Island Printworks and Design — now the largest custom merchandise manufacturing company in Hawaii.

While he’s far away from Coupeville these days, Loesch does keep a proud eye on the growth of younger sisters Mia and Kalia Littlejohn, who have torn up the courts as CMS players.

The pair learned their style of playing (New Jersey street ball style is what I call it, and I’m stickin’ with that) from their older brother, who schooled them on the court from an early age. Watching them burn down the nets, he couldn’t be happier.

“I hope they remember my sisters more than they will ever remember me,” Loesch said. “These years are about them; they have worked hard since they could walk to be athletes and I have no doubt in my mind that they’ll be in the record books.

“It feels great to know they are successful at what they love to do and that they allocate some of that towards myself,” he added. “They will both out-perform anything I ever did very easily; I couldn’t express how proud of them I am.”

Seeing their confidence and swagger on the court reminds him of his own days in the red and black. Never back down, never give up, never give in — all family traits.

“They won’t let anyone out hustle or out work them,” Loesch said. “The crazy part to me is how easy it is for them right now.

“They are a lot like me in the sense that they perform when they need to perform; I am excited to see how they perform outside of school ball where the competition is much more realistic to the next level,” he added. “Mia and Kalia are everything to me, just to see them starting to be successful is more than enough for me.”

And when he does see them, he’ll be a dutiful older brother and continue to impress on them the lessons he learned.

“Confidence is avoiding all thoughts that weaken you,” Loesch said. “This is something I tried to instill in my little sisters since they were toddlers; it has definitely stuck as they play with an attitude day in and day out.

“As a family we take pride in that.”

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YOur 2014 CHS softball squad. (Amy King photo)

 Your 2014 CHS softball squad. Back (l to r): McKayla Bailey, Breeanna Messner, Tiffany Briscoe, Monica Vidoni, Hailey Hammer, Madeline Strasburg, Haley Sherman. Front: Erin Josue, Robin Cedillo, Jae LeVine, Madeline Roberts, Emily Licence, Emily Coulter. (Amy King photo)

Cue the rain. Cue the wind. It’s time for spring sports on Whidbey.

Did you really think the gentle, balmy, blue sky-drenched weather that we’ve seen the last week would last into the start of the actual seasons?

Oh, you sad, sad fool…

Well, weather or not, the 2014 spring sports season — the last one for Coupeville High School in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference — officially kicks off today, when the Wolf boys’ soccer squad hosts a jamboree (2 PM) at Micky Clark Field.

Lake Stevens and South Whidbey are in town, the event officially puts a stamp on Kyle Nelson’s hiring as Wolf coach (replacing the retired legend, Paul Mendes), and it will go on, regardless of weather.

Soccer doesn’t stop for anything short of a hurricane, and then it depends on what category of hurricane we’re talking about.

The lone CHS golfer, two-time state meet qualifier Christine Fields, was actually supposed to kick off the new season Friday, but excess rain caused a scheduled match at Useless Bay Golf and Country Club between South Whidbey, Overlake and the Lone Wolf to be postponed.

Monday, weather permitting, the season will move into being a full-on reality, with baseball traveling to South Whidbey, softball hopping across to Port Townsend and girls’ tennis welcoming Port Townsend to town.

Tuesday, Friday Harbor comes to Coupeville for soccer and tennis, Fields and her Falcon traveling mates go to Bush and softball squares off at home with arch-rival South Whidbey and its new coach.

Get your bets in now. How many games will be postponed and rescheduled due to weather in ’14?

I’m saying 71, and I feel pretty confident in that number.

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Christine Fields

Christine Fields, pride of the pack.

There’s no one to fall back on. It’s all her.

Christine Fields is unique at Coupeville High School, the only golfer to tee off repping the red and black. And with back-to-back top 15 finishes at the 1A state tournament, the junior has more than held her own.

Since CHS doesn’t field a team, Fields trains and travels with South Whidbey, but competes as a one-woman Wolf wrecking crew.

The past two seasons, when she placed 8th and 15th at state, older brother Austin, a state meet regular himself, made the trek down Island with her.

He’s a freshman at New Mexico State University this year, so she’s flying solo now.

Having a well-established relationship with her friendly rivals at SWHS helps.

“The Falcon team has been REALLY welcoming to me and my golf game,” Fields said. “Falcon coach Tom Sage has been so understanding and definitely has my back in the golf season!

“I never feel that much like an opponent until I’m on the course; even then I’m still cheered on by them and I give props to the girls on the Falcon team as well!,” she added. “They’re fun to travel and practice with! But, in the end, I’m without a doubt a Wolf!”

On the course she has been a consistent winner since day one, and while she can’t carry Coupeville to any team wins playing one-on-five, she can, and does, consistently medal by shooting the low score in matches.

Fields credits her memory, or better still, the ability to not use her memory at times.

“A strength that I don’t see too often in the field, that I have, is being able to not keep a shot-by-shot score in my head,” she said. “It allows me to focus on each shot instead of the ending round score.”

As she heads into her third season on the high school links, Fields is aiming for a return to the state meet and taking another crack at a top ten finish. Making the All-Cascade Conference team would be a good kick-off to her postseason.

Having worked hard on improving every facet of her game, she still has areas she’d like to tweak a bit.

“This year I’m especially looking to up my short game skill, which is really what makes the low scores, as well as the consistency in my swing.”

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