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Archive for the ‘Ranting and Raving’ Category

Back in my younger days, I was a tennis bum.

Tennis kept me in school at a time when I drove numerous teachers nuts by missing as many days as possible.

The three seasons I played tennis at Tumwater High School were memorable — not necessarily for the wins, as I was always a better practice player than match player — but for all the intangibles.

Our coach, Lionel Barona, an easy-going Hawaiian who could beat every single one of us at any sport, ran our butts off during practice.

It was his way of maintaining control over a thirty-player team which he had to largely run by himself, only getting a former player to return as an unpaid assistant my senior season.

During those three years, I spent much of my time on the court.

I lived for practice, with the drills and inter-squad matches, played in summer tournaments and enjoyed my time immensely.

Especially when I spent five hours on a burning hot cement court slugging it out and bickering over line calls with my soon-to-be-estranged doubles partner, Ari Halpern, for a trophy I still have.

I played #1 singles once, at North Mason, and got my butt kicked by a foreign exchange player.

Back in town, playing Capitol, the rich school which sat just down the road from Tumwater, I played another foreign exchange student and almost started a riot.

Sure that his frequent bursts of foreign words were riddled with profanities, especially when he would punctuate his explosion by pointing at me and wagging his finger, I began to shout back at him.

As the words flew back and forth and we both tried to hit each other repeatedly in the head with the ball, suddenly our match became the one to watch.

Which is saying something, since the one thing THS tennis players never did was watch each other play. Most everyone on our squad loved to play tennis, but there was nothing as boring as watching other people play the sport.

With players from both sides hanging on the fence, I threatened to start an international incident with someone who could have — though I seriously doubt it — been loudly congratulating me on hitting a well-placed shot.

If I could have played on a regular basis with the fury and precision I displayed that afternoon, I would have been fighting for the top slot on the roster. Emerging with a rare victory and a parting shot of the two or three Norwegian cuss words I knew, I was a conquering hero for a good seven minutes.

All too often, though, I would feel sorry for my opponents and couldn’t summon the killer instinct in matches that I was able to display on a semi-regular basis in practice.

Which was fine, because with the exception of the incredibly-driven Darryl Pfaff, who we often tried to hit during practice — he would take an overhead to the groin, flex his chest and dare us to do it again and we were happy to oblige — none of us were going anywhere with our tennis games.

Without that pressure, the majority of the team was free to spend our time getting into mischief and trying to hit balls off the trucks which rumbled past our courts.

Which gave Mr. Barona reason to run our butts off again.

The topper came on our annual pilgrimage to Aberdeen, the town that would shortly thereafter come to be known to the world as the city that gave us Kurt Cobain and Nirvana.

At the time, it was merely the Town That Hope Went To When It Wanted to Die.

Actually, it’s still that…

The bus ride from Tumwater to Aberdeen was the longest one we took each season, other than the trek to Hoquiam, where they had open sewage running past the tennis courts.

Aberdeen had built their tennis courts high on a hill, which forced an already cranky, tired team to trudge up several flights of stairs before we could even begin playing.

Once at the top, we discovered the source of the smell which had been wafting its way down to us with each step. Some rocket scientist had poured gasoline all over their cracked cement courts, and a stench was slowly releasing from below.

As we started to play, the tennis balls progressively got grittier and puffed up with gasoline and dirt. In the spring afternoon, the haze of gasoline could be seen shimmering in multicolored waves.

Then the rocks started.

Junior high kids would storm up the hill and pelt us non-stop. Since Mr. Barona was way on the other side, happily watching Darryl play on the one court which seemed to have been spared from the gas, we took it upon ourselves to storm down the hill, beating the ruffians around the head with our tennis rackets.

This went on for ten hours…

The match finally done, thirty groggy, gassed-out-of-their-mind, covered in grass, dirt and scrapes, players climbed on a bus and made the trip to Aberdeen’s answer to fine dining — McDonald’s — while Mr. Barona and an adventurous/brown noser player or two went to the fish place next door.

Hamburgers and fries having partially soaked up the gasoline in our systems, the majority of the team was back on the bus when one or two of us began to get into a verbal altercation with some local football players.

Words were exchanged. People threatened to stick tennis rackets up someplace where they weren’t invited. The usual, until one local rammed his car into the front of our bus.

Our parked bus.

Having dented the front of their car and thoroughly ruffled our bus driver, who had been a man of few words until this moment — and now showcased an ability to string together cuss words in great, greasy gobs — the Aberdeen brain trust sped away.

Exiting the fish establishment, Mr. Barona let out a deep sigh, pulled his cap down low and promptly went to sleep. The bus driver continued his tirade most of the way back.

Our principal, a sleazy gent, sided with the unknown Aberdeen players and made us jam 30 players into a “short bus” for our next couple of trips out of town. He figured the grief we would get for this would be our punishment.

Other schools found it hilarious, especially when we traveled to a private academy where all their players drove cars worth more than our entire school.

We laughed last, “liberating” the fancy welcome rug which sat outside their school.

We ran a lot after that.

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   The Sultan knuckle-draggers who harassed these young women should know this — there are some CHS moms who came very close to punching you in the pie hole. Remember that next time you visit Whidbey Island. (Pamela Headridge photo)

Yeah, our vuvuzela horns are so, so terrible…

For the one or two fans who have complained that Coupeville High School’s student section is out of control, I give you Sultan High School football fans — pure class, if you just erase the C and the L.

On a rainy night when their football team won, Turk jerks, apparently still upset that Coupeville thrashed them in volleyball (twice) and girls soccer, vented their hatred all game long. In particular, they took out their frustration with their own failed lives and directed their hate at the Wolf cheer squad.

“Just love being called gay and booed by kids. Thank you Sultan. From, a kid who never wants to go back now,” said one Wolf underclassmen cheerleader.

“We actually had middle school boys follow us and boo us and yell mean things the whole game, no matter where we went,” the cheerleader added. “When we got there, the Sultan cheer coach actually warned us about them.”

One Coupeville parent, whose son is a football player, went after the Sultan brain trust, shouting them down for a moment.

Afterward, she was still ticked at the reception the CHS cheerleaders received, which she thought went way beyond normal inter-school razzing.

The cheerleaders should get some recognition for putting up with the foul mouth little brat Turks that were yelling obscenities at them,” said the CHS mom. “My children are never far from a reprimand. If this is the way they behave in public, maybe they should be kenneled.

“Our cheerleaders were full of grace as always.

A second mother of a football player was equally unamused.

“There were some kids that came down by us and kept saying Coupeville sucks,” said mom #2. “I announced loudly that where we come from, kids were hung from the ceiling by their toenails for that. They left.

“They came back though and one of our moms started yelling at them to leave, go back to their parents and leave our cheerleaders alone. Then someone from Sultan went out and talked to the cheer squad,” she added. “It’s just a totally different mentality there. Sportsmanship is apparently not something they teach.”

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      Debbie, meet Nick Streubel. Debbie … prepare to die an unholy death. (Robert Pelant photos)

“The computer picked AGAINST you?!?!? I am shocked! Shocked I say!”

26-17? Oh Debbie, you tease, you.

For those who don’t know, “Debbie” is the evil, evil tramp of a football game-pickin’ computer that hangs out with Scott Odiorne, the ScoreCzar (https://sites.google.com/a/scoreczar.com/scoreczar/washington-football), who seems like a genuinely nice, extremely smart guy — except for that whole hanging out with evil, evil computers thing.

I first became aware of Mr. Odiorne, a number crunching pigskin guru of impeccable taste and Debbie, that slattern, after she picked Coupeville to lose 40-0 to King’s last week.

I invoked the spirit of Ferris Bueller in what turned out to be a futile bid to spark The Upset of the Century (the Wolves fell 51-7, scoring a touchdown to spite that harlot, Debbie) and may have said one or two negative things about Debbie, that trollop.

To his credit, Mr. Odiorne, who is really quite good at what he does, appreciated my sense of humor. Debbie, that woman of ill repute, I’m not so sure about. She mumbled something about messing with my credit report, then cackled for several minutes.

Well, the joke’s on her, as my credit report already makes grown men weep. You can’t make that thing any worse than it already is…

But back to present day, and Debbie, that wench, has decreed that Coupeville will fall 26-17 at Sultan this Friday in the regular season finale.

To which I say, are we going to let that … that hussy, get the better of Wolf Nation two weeks in a row?!?!?

I say win, Coupeville. Not for the Gipper, but to make Debbie, that mechanical tart, blow a gasket.

For humans everywhere!!

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     Bob was not impressed with my 15 seconds of internet fame and threatened to leap to his death if I told the story again. So I ate him and we both got what we wanted.

So, apparently, King’s High School football coach Jim Shapiro knows who I am. Sort of.

Imagine my surprise this morning when I went to watch a bit of the recorded version of last night’s live internet stream (https://new.livestream.com/accounts/1336759/events/1619511) of the Coupeville-King’s football game and five minutes in, the King’s announcers were name-dropping me (and pronouncing my last name correctly!)

Seems that Shapiro had read one of my articles here on the site, the one where I called for Coupeville to pull off the upset of the century, and had passed the piece around. So, now, the announcers were talking about it, and, starting at the 31:20 mark, read the entire piece on-air.

I am blushing over here.

And, I also have to say, the announcers (there was a Tom and another guy — never caught any last names) were pretty entertaining, even when they weren’t talking about me. They had an easy-going stream of consciousness going on, sort of like Caleb Valko and Kole Kellison deliver from the press box during Wolf JV football games, and it was fun.

Sure, they were mildly condescending when they talked about the Wolves, other than a nice word or two about Jake Tumblin and Anthony Maggio. But, when your team is rolling to a 51-7 victory and, by the middle of the first quarter, you’re already looking ahead to a battle of unbeaten teams the following week, with King’s hosting Lakewood for the Cascade Conference title, it was obvious they weren’t paying complete attention to the action on the field.

But listen to them long enough and you got:

“We will not talk about nachos tonight!”

“I can not read this program. Man, they used a weird font on this program … or maybe I’m just getting old.”

“It’s good to see coach in shorts two weeks in a row now. No pants! Hey, tell that holy butt pants story…”

“I had the weirdest dream last night. There were UFOs…”

In between, they gushed about the dinner of Penn Cove mussels and Wasabi burgers they had eaten at a local restaurant, reminisced about the time one of them had come to Coupeville as a junior high basketball coach and ticked off the locals by having his players repeatedly foul the Coupeville kids and paid tribute to the admittedly large Wolf cheer squad.

“They’ve got like what, 30 girls over there? About as many girls as they have in the whole town?”

Then they read my story.

They might be an acquired taste if you’re not a King’s diehard, but, hey, I’m a fan now.

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Wolf Nation will never bow down, even if you take its horns!!!

Dear Washington Interscholastic Activities Association and Cascade Conference,

With all due respect, bite me.

In your effort to legislate every last bit of genuine excitement out of high school sports, you have apparently decided that Coupeville High School, and its student cheering section, is out of control. The Wolves are enemy number one.

Are you morons?

If you attended a single CHS volleyball game and you witnessed Danny “Shaman” Savalza lead his band of rough ‘n ready rowdies through their paces, you would see one thing: a group of students who have reawakened dormant school spirit, a group that supports their fellow students, a “mob” that is loud, proud and bleeds red and black.

You would not see an abusive crowd, you would not see athletes who willfully make illegal hits and then want their opponents to pray with them after the game. You would see the very thing you want to promote — kids taking pride in their school.

But that won’t do for the fun police, who won’t be happy until every high school sporting event resembles a day at the country club, where no one raises their voice above a whisper, lest a golfer have his tender psyche shattered by a patron burping during his back swing.

Which is not a slam on CHS golfers Austin and Christine Fields, who, like most Wolves, are made of hardier stock than that.

But you hear one or two complaints from parents from other schools — parents mad because their kids lost a game — that the big, bad Wolves are too loud, too proud and you swoop in to take away our kids’ vuvuzela horns, you tell them not to bang brooms on the ground during volleyball games or wave the Wolf flag, you want them to sit down, shut up and be good little Stepford children.

Which is bull.

You allow verbally abusive parents to remain in the stands, regardless of whether they berate the coaches and officials or their own daughters.

But have a group of students take pride in their town, their school, their classmates, and you get your panties in a bunch. Can’t have that! Got to shut it down before that spirit spreads!

So, I dare you — get out of your seats, leave your swanky offices and come to Coupeville (it’s on a rock in the middle of the water, kinda hard to miss), watch what Savalza and crew do, and then try to explain to us how exactly they’re the bad guys.

And then give them back their horns!

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