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Archive for the ‘Happy birthday’ Category

Cole Payne? he's kind of a big deal. (John Fisken and Shelli Trumbull photos)

Cole Payne? He’s kind of a big deal. (John Fisken and Shelli Trumbull photos)

He is more myth than man, more legend than reality.

Wherever he goes, whatever he does, the screams of his fans threaten to rip the roof off the building.

He is legend. He is Cole Payne.

As the Coupeville High School senior celebrates a birthday today, you need to stop and realize — we only get one more year of the awesomeness here in Cow Town before he’s off to spread the gospel of Cole world-wide.

Appreciate the talent. Bow to the coolness factor. Respect the game.

Baseball. Football. Basketball. And now, according to the buzz, tennis.

Payne can do it all and he can do it all well.

It’s not his fault. He was just born talented.

As he prepares for his final year at CHS, we just want to say a quick thank you to Mr. Payne, for the on-field thrills he’s delivered so far, and the highlight reel still to come this year.

Happy birthday, Cole. Stay legendary.

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Skyy Lippo

Skyy Lippo, talented ballerina and car enthusiast. (submitted photo)

Joey Lippo

   Joey Lippo is one of the few baseball players on the Island to have played for teams in Coupeville, Oak Harbor and South Whidbey. (John Fisken photo)

Rabbit rescuers, and the closest Joey will come to smiling for the camera ... ever. (Joe Lippo photo)

Rabbit rescuers, and maybe the closest Joey will come to smiling for the camera … ever. (Joe Lippo photo)

Is there any down time in Lippo Land?

I ask because it seems at times that twins Skyy and Joey Lippo, Coupeville High School sophomore sensations who celebrate a joint birthday Sunday, are always busy.

Joey is a three-sport athlete at CHS, one of the few to uphold the old tradition, and plays tennis, basketball and baseball for the Wolves.

His sister owns most of the family’s battle scars, however, competing in the much-more cutthroat world of dance.

A ballet star, Skyy was recently named as the youngest company captain in Whidbey Island Dance Theatre history, and has already performed in productions of The Nutcracker and Giselle.

Both have hit the road for their loves, with Joey attending national spring training for athletes in his age bracket, while Skyy went to Texas to study ballet.

And, both have a yen for projects out of the spotlight as well, with Joey doing time as an accomplished salmon fisher and Skyy having recently acquired a ’72 Charger that she and dad Joe will be working on.

Now, at this point we could go on and on with a very long list of their other accomplishments, but we do have to leave their proud papa with something to put on his Twitter.

From the outside looking in, my perspective on the Lippo twins is this — they’re good people.

Both Skyy and Joey are personable (though getting the Zen-like Joey to smile for the camera is lodged firmly on the list of hardest things for a professional photographer to accomplish) and excel in a quiet, do your job manner.

They accomplish a lot, but don’t spend much time boasting about their exploits or unnecessarily thumping themselves on the chests.

Runway ego doesn’t seem to be a problem for them, and the duo are happy to let others rant and rave about their awesomeness.

So, having elbowed their dad out of the way for a moment (it’s easy when he’s looking down at his fingers while tweeting), I’m here to do just that.

Take my word for it, the Lippo twins are among the brightest lights we have shining in Coupeville right now.

As they go forward and stack those accomplishments to the ceiling in the years to come, I look forward to writing much more about them.

Cause, first and foremost, unlike fellow Wolf twin terrors Jake and Josh Lord or Ana and Ivy Luvera, I can actually tell Skyy and Joey apart, which is HUGE for a somewhat lazy reporter.

But, most of all, it’s always so much easier to write about people you genuinely like.

And the Lippo twins? They’re killin’ it on the likability charts.

So, happy birthday, Skyy. Happy birthday, Joey.

Keep on keepin’ on, cause what you’re doin’? It’s working.

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Sydney Autio

Sydney Autio (John Fisken photos)

Autio shares a moment with former CHS cheer coach Sylvia Arnold.

Autio shares a moment with former CHS cheer coach Sylvia Arnold.

Sydney Autio has moxie.

Plus spunk, spirit, talent and a heart as big as all get out.

The Coupeville High School senior, who celebrates a birthday today, has been front and center in three sports for the Wolves during her time in the red and black.

Whether operating as a spiker, a netter or a cheerleader, Autio’s love of life shines through every time.

Sydney always seems to enjoy herself and her positive spirit shines through even when injury sidelines her, as it did for a bit last season.

As she charges into her final year at CHS, ready to help lead the Wolf volleyball squad in a bid to unseat the other squads in the 1A Olympic League, we want to wish her the best.

Happy birthday, Miss Autio.

May your day, your year, shine as brightly as you do.

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Wynter Thorne: Many photos, one star.

Wynter Thorne: Many photos, one star.

Wynter is going.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball and tennis teams (and photographers everywhere) will have a huge hole to fill with the departure of Wynter Thorne.

The camera-friendly whiz kid, who celebrates a birthday today, is off to Western Washington University and new adventures.

She’ll leave an enduring legacy behind her, though.

Along with McKenzie Bailey, Wynter was one of just two Wolves to play for both the CHS varsity netters and hoops squad in 2014-2015, the year those programs shattered a 13-year school-wide cold streak by winning 1A Olympic League titles.

Miss Thorne was at the heart of both teams, a gritty, hard-charging whirlwind who never backed down in the middle of a brawl.

Not that she didn’t enjoy her down time, however, as she was one of the most reliable go-to Wolves when it came to pre-game and post-game photo shoots.

Smile beaming, generally in the direction of a teammate like Kacie Kiel or Julia Myers, Wynter was a young woman who seemed to enjoy every moment she had as a high school athlete.

Her fans, and they are a far larger crowd than she might realize, appreciated her, as a scrappy, can-do fighter and as a serene off-court presence.

But, you have to let them all go at some point, so from all of us out there, Happy birthday Wynter, thank you and may your journey just get better and better the farther you go.

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Valen Trujillo: one woman, many talents.

Valen Trujillo: one woman, many talents.

The first time I saw Valen Trujillo, she made two girls cry, and it was beautiful.

And we should probably stop right there for a second, cause that makes her sound like a brute, and, in reality, she is as far from that as you could possibly imagine, and then some.

Miss Trujillo, in her everyday life, is a muffin-bakin’, sweet song-singin’, hyper-intelligent, well-spoken, kind and thoughtful ray of sunshine, someone who makes those who know her extremely proud.

And, since she has an ever-expanding group of friends, what with being super friendly to all, it pretty much means the whole world is proud of Valen and all she is accomplishing.

But, back to the crying for a moment.

My introduction to Valen, who celebrates a birthday today, came when she was a middle school basketball player.

Coupeville was playing King’s (the most dastardly of schools) and, in keeping with that school’s time-honored tradition, the Knights were using a style known as “smack your foe with an elbow at all times, then act all pious afterwards.”

Enter Miss Trujillo, who, soft smile still intact, opened a can of whup-ass on King’s.

Nothing illegal.

Just one whirlwind crashing across the court, fighting like a wild beast for every rebound, every loose ball, with an intensity that would have made the Detroit Piston “Bad Boys” of the ’80s and early ’90s weep with joy.

At one point, she wrested a ball from a King’s player with such a determined jerk, she sent the Knight airborne, and then, running out of the gym, sobbing.

That Knight was soon joined by a teammate, followed by Valen politely handing the ball to a ref, the smallest of grins on her face.

For someone who has seen way too many Coupeville kids play timidly on the court, this was a landmark moment.

And then, in what would become her trademark style — though I didn’t yet know it — when the game was done, Valen, on her way up into the stands to see her parents, Craig and Amy, stopped as she passed me.

“Thank you for coming to see my game.”

First time in 20 years a teen athlete had said that to me, and, as I have discovered since, true to how Valen conducts herself every time I see her.

She is as ferocious a competitor as any I have seen wear a Wolf uniform, but she also goes to great lengths to show respect and kindness to her teammates, her opponents and those who come to watch her play.

The day she decided not to play basketball in high school was a dark day, the day Coupeville Sports almost shut down in mourning (am I joking … maybe, maybe not).

But Valen is super-busy and has many irons in the fire, and basketball wasn’t something she wanted to continue. So be it, even if I cry at the start of every new season.

She has taken that white-hot intensity to the volleyball court, where she is the queen of the floor burn, and tennis, where we all fear she will be the queen of the court burn.

We get two more years of her at CHS, and then she’ll be off to impress new fan bases, either as an athlete, or a singer, or a baker, or any of a million other talents she possesses.

Valen is a bright, blazing star, and, from what I’ve seen, all my words won’t make her puff up with pride and start acting the diva.

She is centered and knows herself. She is proud of what she can accomplish without lording it over others.

She is the real deal, and we are all lucky to be a sliver of her life.

Happy birthday, Valen. I hope this day, like all of your days, is wonderful.

P.S. — A new high school basketball season starts Nov. 16. Just sayin’…

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