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Archive for the ‘soccer’ Category

Michelle and Reese Cernick. (Submitted photo)

From despair has come hope.

Reese and Michelle Cernick have overcome great hardship, bringing their family to Whidbey in 2013 and, once here, setting themselves up as key contributors in both the sports and business worlds.

The couple coach co-ed teams through the Central Whidbey Soccer Club, with their son Chris, a freshman at CHS, and twin 14-year-old daughters Autumn and Aurora, all having played for their parents.

Michelle is also a frequent volunteer with the local schools and joins up with Lori Taylor to run a Girls Scout troop.

And now, having worked in the field for the past two years, Reese launched Whidbey Pest Control in March.

“I hope that I never take for granted how blessed we are to see such beauty every day,” Michelle said. “We love Coupeville and have met some of the nicest people.

“This is the first place that Reese and I have lived in our 16 and a half years of marriage that has really felt like home,” she added. “Our children love it here and have made some terrific friends.”

The move to Whidbey might never have taken place if a 2008 road rage incident in Nevada, which left Reese severely injured, hadn’t thrown the family into a spiral.

Reese was working as an underground gold miner in Elko (“the middle of nowhere”) when a semi-truck driver intentionally slammed into the back of the vehicle in which he was riding.

Having turned his head right as the impact occurred, he took a severe shot, and had trouble walking after the accident.

Reese endured an endless string of tests, many of them after traveling several hours, with few answers, until a chiropractor in Idaho was able to make a break-through.

The integrity of the muscles in his back were compromised, and while the chiropractor was able to get him walking upright after three weeks, he continued to endure overnight trips to have his back worked on.

With her husband unable to work for some time, Michelle babysat fellow miner’s kids.

“I had kids in my house seven days a week, 24/7, and I still couldn’t get us out of debt.”

Even as his back got better, Reese had to face the reality he would be limited on doing any kind of serious manual labor.

He eventually returned to work at a car dealership, and the couple were working full-time, trying to pull themselves out of the financial hole created by the accident, when they visited Whidbey.

Reese’s mother and grandmother, who both fight severe illness, live on The Rock, and once here, the Cernicks decided the time to relocate was upon them.

“When we were here that summer we had talked about what it would be like to retire to Whidbey one day, but never in our wildest dreams did we ever imagine moving here as soon as we did,” Michelle said. “We are so grateful to be living in such a beautiful place.”

Once here, the duo quickly became part of the booming youth soccer scene.

Their daughters wanted to play, CWSC needed volunteers, and a perfect union was formed.

The Cernicks began with a U12 team (Reese coached, Michelle was manager), then they bounced up to create a U14 co-ed squad as their children got older.

“This team had all of our children on it — fun times,” said Michelle. “The co-ed team started out so small and we only had one team from week to week to play out of Oak Harbor, but it has really grown.

“Coupeville now has two full teams and Oak Harbor has three.”

Reese is also on the board of directors for the league, while Michelle does a little bit of everything.

“I don’t have an official title and have never been voted in,” she said with a laugh. “I just do whatever needs to be done.

“I love to be able to contribute my time to these kids.”

Chris made the jump to high school soccer this spring, playing for the Wolf JV, and his sisters will make the same transition in the fall.

That doesn’t mean their parents will desert CWSC.

“This is the last year that we get to coach our girls, but Reese and I fully intend to continue coaching, because we love it,” Michelle said. “We have so many kids on our team that work really hard and it shows in our games.”

Along with soccer, Girl Scouts and school activities, the Cernicks have branched out further in the community by making the decision to open their own business.

Building on the experience he picked up working the bug-hunting biz for another company the last two years, Reese has found his niche.

“We wanted a business with flexible scheduling, because soccer is life, and one that Reese could physically handle,” Michelle said. “We wanted a business where we could work closely with people and treat them fairly.”

They have 60-day warranties on most services, handle about any kind of pest you can name (maybe not blind soccer refs…) and offer free inspections.

Invite them to your home or business, and the Cernicks try and make the experience more than just a quick scan and bid.

“When we come to your house we don’t just inspect, write you a bid, and leave,” Michelle said. “We both greet you with a friendly smile and handshake.

“We tell you a little about ourselves and our company. We explain everything we are going to do before we do it so that you are as comfortable with us as you are the process,” she added. “We don’t want our customers to feel like just another job to us.

“We want them to feel like family.”

That attitude, and the duo’s love of volunteering, led to them donating their services to Ryan’s House, a youth outreach program in Coupeville.

Michelle’s Girl Scouts are joining the effort.

“We have a terrific group of girls and they are are so excited they get to help out,” Michelle said. “Ryan’s House has so many wonderful people that volunteer there and they shouldn’t have to worry about ants or any other critters invading their space.”

Whidbey Pest Control operates 8-5 Mon-Fri and can be reached at (360) 632-9080 or whidbeypestcontrol@gmail.com.

 

Full Disclosure: Whidbey Pest Control is a supporter of Coupeville Sports, but I would have written this article even if it wasn’t.

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coed soccer

   Central Whidbey players (in blue) mix it up on the pitch last season. (Jennifer Moody photo)

coed

  Last year’s debut U14 co-ed squad. (Island Life photo courtesy Michelle Cernick)

Something for everyone.

The Central Whidbey Soccer Club needs players for a U14 co-ed squad, and they’re putting out the call to players of all skill levels.

The squad is open to boys and girls born in 2003-2004, and will start its fall season in mid-to-late Sept.

Schedule-wise, the season consists of eight games (played on Saturdays) against teams from Oak Harbor.

If you register (https://coupevillesoccer.org/) and pay your $75, it doesn’t matter if you’re a grizzled vet who has been running the pitch for years or a newbie who’s never put foot to soccer ball.

Players see equal time on the field, regardless of skill level or gender.

Co-ed soccer offers a different challenge, one young players have embraced.

“Playing co-ed makes me play harder, because boys are more unpredictable,” Autumn Cernick said. “It makes it more fun.”

While boys and girls tend to approach the game differently (CWSC coaches said boys tend to be more technical and girls more aggressive), play doesn’t always favor one side.

“Sometimes the boys underestimate the aggression of the girls and what we’re capable of,” Aurora Cernick said.

Having a co-ed team is essential, as the U14 age group is an especially hard one at which to pull together a complete girls or boys squad.

Last year’s team, which had three boys, was the first time CWSC had fielded a co-ed U14 team.

“In the very beginning the boys walk on the field feeling confident that the girls are no competition for them. They have severely underestimated the capability of their teammates,” Michelle Cernick said. “Then we have our first soccer scrimmage to see what each player is capable of.

“The boys start out with the ball and moving across the field doing tricks with the ball and acting like they own it. Next thing you know the girls start getting in there and knocking the boys around,” she added. “Boys meet female aggression and you are about to get body checked because you have what said female wants … the ball.

“Welcome to coed soccer.”

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Mallory Kortuem (Photo courtesy Kourtuem)

   Wolf frosh Mallory Kortuem is ready to add to her family’s history of athletic success. (Submitted photo)

Mallory Kortuem is shooting for the stars.

As she prepares for her freshman year at Coupeville High School, she’s ready to make an impact, and fast.

Following in the footsteps of her athletic inspiration — former Wolf great Erin Rosenkranz Kortuem is aiming to soar in both of her sports.

She’ll kick off the year by joining the CHS girls’ soccer squad, with plans to run track in the spring when the school christens its new oval.

With both sports, Kortuem is ready to jump into the spotlight from day one.

“My goal for track is to get on the number one women’s 4 x 100 relay team freshman year,” she said. “One of my goals for soccer is to make varsity freshman year.”

While she enjoys both sports, it’s the pitch life, where she follows older brother Keegan, that enchants her.

“My favorite sport would be soccer because I have played since I was four years old,” Kortuem said. “And I really enjoy the challenge of contact sports.”

Her brother’s girlfriend, Rosenkranz, a rock for the Wolf soccer and track squads before graduating in 2015, is her biggest inspiration.

Erin is my role model for sports and school and generally how to be an awesome human being,” Kortuem said.

Away from sports, the Wolf frosh enjoys rock climbing, hiking with her family and dancing with friends.

Musically she bounces from pop to rap to Latin dance music, and movie-wise, teen comedy “The DUFF” is her favorite.

As she makes her run at soccer success this fall, Kortuem is eager to add to her already strong skill-set.

“My strengths are speed and aggressiveness,” she said. “I need to work on ball handling at speed.

“I am working on increasing my overall level of skill.”

And while she may still be young, don’t discount the size of her heart and her burning desire to blaze her own successful trail.

“I love the physical challenge,” Kortuem said. “I love being fit and strong and am a very competitive person.”

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Loren Nelson (John Fisken photos)

   CHS teammates Loren Nelson (red) and Connor McCormick find themselves on opposite sides of the battle for once. (John Fisken photos)

Micky LeVine

   Back from college, former Wolf star Micky “Two Fists” LeVine returns to kick some fanny on the pitch.

Kyle Nelson

CHS boys’ soccer coach Kyle Nelson (17) proves he can kick as well as coach.

kid

“I’m coming for all the goals! All of them!!”

Hunter Downes

   “I am the law.” CHS quarterback Hunter Downes gets a view of the game from the other side of the ball.

Connor

McCormick looks for a little help as Zack Nall closes in on him.

Tanner Kircher

Tanner Kircher’s power lies in his silky, flowing locks.

Sean LeVine

   The “old man” can still gun it in the open field. Whidbey Islander coach Sean LeVine may be sore tomorrow, but he’s on fire today.

They came, they saw, they played a little soccer.

Well, actually a lot of soccer.

Memorial Day weekend kicked off in style in Oak Harbor as the North Whidbey Soccer Club held its 11th annual “Rock On! 3v3” tourney Saturday and Sunday.

A ton of current, former and future Coupeville High School players took part, from Micky LeVine to Abraham Leyva to Jake Mitten and far beyond.

The tourney featured fast-paced, high-scoring play, with action taking place on a field 40 yards long by 30 yards wide.

Each team played with three players and there were no goalies.

Bouncing back and forth from field to field to capture a little taste of everything was wanderin’ photo man John Fisken, who provides us with the pics seen above.

To see more (and possibly purchase some, thereby keeping him clickin’ away) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Rock-On-3v3-soccer-20160529/

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Mike Thornton

Mike Thornton

Once a Wolf, always a Wolf.

Former Coupeville High School girls’ soccer coach Mike Thornton lives with his family in Texas now, but he is fondly remembered for his time at the helm of the CHS program.

Thornton, a 1990 graduate of Oak Harbor High School, is currently battling stage two Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, which he was diagnosed with in early March.

He and his family have set up a GoFundMe page to help with medical expenses, and he is keeping fans and friends updated on his fight through that page.

I worked with Thornton during my time covering sports for the Whidbey Examiner, and always found him to be a friendly, rock-solid guy, both as a coach and person.

It would be great if as many Coupeville people as possible could pop over and take a look at his page, help out financially and/or send encouragement.

https://www.gofundme.com/9huymw64

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