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Archive for the ‘Softball’ Category

"I stare into the abyss. I need a miracle to prove that spring approaches..." (Shelli Trumbull photo)

“I stare into the abyss. I need a miracle to prove that spring approaches…”

"I got you, Messner! I'll throw this ball out of winter..." (John Fisken photo)

“I got you, Messner! I’ll throw this ball out of winter…”

"And catch it in spring!!" (Chris Chan photo)

“And catch it in spring!!”

"Hot dang!!"

“Hot dang!!”

As you stare out into a gray, rainy February afternoon, the thought that baseball and softball and track and all the other spring sports will soon be upon us probably seems slightly ridiculous.

But it’s true. 16 days from now (Monday, Feb. 25 — the day after the Oscars), Wolf athletes will hit the great outdoors for the first day of practice.

Led by Paul Mendes (boys’ soccer), Willie Smith (baseball), Randy King (track), Ken Stange (girls’ tennis) and David and Amy King (softball), CHS athletes will head into a new season, full of promise and hope.

At the same time, Wolf golfers Austin and Christine Fields will pack their clubs in the family car and head South, as they will train and travel with South Whidbey, since Coupeville doesn’t have a links program.

Storylines abound.

Will Madison Tisa McPhee return to dominating in the hurdles? Just how fast is Makana Stone? Can the Fields return to the state meet (senior Austin has been twice, sophomore Christine is 1-for-1)? Will a baseball team led by the players who won a state title in little league make a splash at the high school level?

But, that’s why they play the games.

First home contest is a girls’ tennis match Wednesday, March 13, followed by baseball games Friday and Saturday, March 15-16.

Hopefully Whidbey will have rained itself out by then.

P.S. — I didn’t want to ruin the flow of the photos above with extra words. Picture #1 is by Shelli Trumbull, #3 by Chris Chan and #2 and #4 by John Fisken.

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David King patrols the basketball sidelines. (John Fisken photo)

David King patrols the basketball sidelines. (John Fisken photo)

Amy King (kneeling, far right) guides the Wolf JV girls' squad, the most successful hoops team in town this year.

Amy King (kneeling, far right) guides the Wolf JV girls’ squad, the most successful hoops team in town this year.

It’s a 2-for-1 deal.

David and Amy King were officially tabbed Friday morning as co-coaches for the upcoming Coupeville High School softball season.

Coming off a successful run as Wolf basketball coaches this winter, the duo replace Jackie Calkins, who had to resign due to family responsibilities. The Kings have been involved with local softball for some time, with David King coaching road games last year when Calkins was unable to be there.

While the first day of turn-outs is not until Monday, Feb. 25 — giving the Kings a brief moment to decompress — excitement already bubbles around the Wolf softball program.

Lights-out hurler McKayla Bailey and big bopper Hailey Hammer, both standouts as freshmen a year ago, are expected to lead a strong returning cast that could also include high-profile stars like senior Bessie Walstad, juniors Breeanna Messner and Madeline Roberts and sophomore Madeline Strasburg.

Intrigue swirls around whether senior Maria Rockwell will return to team with Bailey and give the Wolves a powerful one-two pitching combo. A flame thrower as a freshman, Rockwell played in Florida as a sophomore, then sat out last year to focus on academics.

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The greatest moment in Central Whidbey Little League history, as coach Chris Tumblin charges the pile after his squad won a state title.

     The greatest moment in Central Whidbey Little League history, as coach Chris Tumblin charges the pile after his squad wins the 2010 state title.

Just squint your eyes and pretend it looks like spring outside.

It may still be winter, but signups for little league baseball and softball begins this weekend. Central Whidbey Little League, which offers teams for players age 5-16, will have four registration days and two tryout days over the next month.

Registration, which will be held at the Coupeville High School gym, is set for the next two Saturdays (Feb. 9 and 16) from 9-11:30 AM.

The following two Sundays (Feb. 24 and March 3) will be set aside for tryouts and additional registration. All players nine or older need to take part in tryouts, which are set for 3 PM (baseball) and 4 PM (softball).

Divisions offered include:

Tee Ball (5-7)
Baseball Rookies (7-8)
Softball Instructional (8-12)
Baseball Instructional (9-12)
Softball Majors (9-12)
Baseball Majors (9-12)
Softball Juniors (13-14)
Baseball Juniors (13-14)
Baseball Seniors (15-16)

Tee Ball is $55 per player, Juniors and Seniors are $80 and everything else is $65.

For more information go to http://www.centralwhidbeylittleleague.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1&Itemid=2

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Stacie "Farm Dog" Farmer.

Stacie “Farm Dog” Farmer.

Farmer and Wolf teammates Andrea Larson (center) and Laura "L-Train" Crandall.

Farmer and teammates Andrea Larson (center) and Laura “L-Train” Crandall.

Through good times and bad, through pain and joy, play on.

Through good times and bad, through pain and joy, play on.

I have a dream.

In this dream the town of Coupeville, its school and its leaders come together and honor one of our own. A young woman who blazed a trail of love and joy, of happiness and gentleness of spirit, of athletic accomplishment and friendship for all.

In this dream, when the Coupeville High School softball team arrives this spring, when Breeanna Messner and McKayla Bailey and Madeline Roberts and Hailey Hammer and many others take the field of their youthful dreams, they will step onto a field named in honor of a fallen compatriot.

Stacie Farmer was a standout ball player in her time in the red and black, and so much more than that. Everywhere she went in her too-short 24 years on this planet, she spread the gospel of Farm Dog.

And what is that gospel?

Bhavuta sabba mangalam. May all beings be happy.

From the mountains to the woods, from the rivers of West Virginia to the Island she once called home, she lived and she prospered by that simple statement. Her passing, on the same day she turned 24, came because her body couldn’t withstand the physical pain of injuries suffered when she was hit by a car while crossing a West Virginia highway with her bike.

Her spirit has never died.

It is still alive in her friends. In her family. In people she met once in passing. In people who never met her but have come to know about her only in the two plus years since that day.

We have very few athletic fields in this town named after someone. The football field honors longtime local Micky Clark, and the baseball field, though few know it, is named in honor of Bobby Sherman, who died from injuries suffered when he was beaned in a game decades ago.

When you name a field for someone, when you put that plaque or sign down and say, “This. This was one of the best of us,” you say to future generations, we remember. We embrace our town’s history, its peoples, its legacy.

We do not forget.

It is a little thing and a huge thing. It is a necessary thing.

It is something Stacie Farmer, and this town, this community, needs.

When young women, years from now, step onto the field, wearing the same uniform Farm Dog once wore, if they take a moment, a small sliver of time, to pay tribute to someone who they will never have the chance to meet but can be inspired by, it was worth it.

If a fan from off the Island stops and asks a local, “Who was Stacie Farmer?” and hears the stories of one of the best of us and carries a small piece of her life back home with them, it will be worth it.

If Stacie’s family and friends (and she was friends with everyone she met) find a moment of solace, a moment when they can see what their daughter meant to others, it is worth it.

We must do what we can. Visit the Facebook page we have had for the past two years and add your name to the roll call by hitting the “like” button.

Contact the members of the school board and let them know this matters.

Do not be quiet. Be polite but be firm.

Dreams come true when you don’t let go of them.

==============================================

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Name-the-CHS-softball-field-for-Stacie-Farmer/180461272015937

School board members:

Don Sherman — donsherman@coupeville.k12.wa.us
Chris Chan — cchan@coupeville.k12.wa.us
Glenda Merwine — gmerwine@coupeville.k12.wa.us
Jeff Tasoff — jtasoff@coupeville.k12.wa.us
Kathleen Anderson — kanderson@coupeville.k12.wa.us

Or mail to:

Board of Directors
Coupeville School District
2 South Main Street
Coupeville, WA 98239

Or fax to:

360-678-4834

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Former Wolf star Marlene Grasser and husband Jim.

Former Wolf star Marlene Grasser and husband Jim.

CHS basketball in '87. Back row, l to r, are Tina Barker, Sarah Powell, Terri Perkins, Marlene Grasser, Carol Estes, Coach Phyllis Textor. Front row: Aimee Messner, Trudy Eaton, Cheryl Pangburn, Sally Biskovich and Sherry Bonacci.

CHS hoops ’87. Back, l to r: Tina Barker, Sarah Powell, Terri Perkins, Marlene Grasser, Carol Estes, Phyllis Textor. Front: Aimee Messner, Trudy Eaton, Cheryl Pangburn, Sally Biskovich, Sherry Bonacci.

Grasser and Bonacci -- not to be trifled with.

Grasser and Bonacci — not to be trifled with.

I want every athlete at Coupeville High School to listen and really hear Marlene Grasser’s words.

This is coming from one of the best athletes to ever wear a Wolf uniform. A four-sport (volleyball, basketball, softball, track) star. A two-time Female Athlete of the Year. A woman who played college volleyball after she graduated from CHS in 1987.

She did everything you want to. She was the star you want to be. So listen to what she says and learn.

“I don’t remember awards, but do remember the fantastic experiences with my teammates,” Grasser said. “My best memories are all involving team sports. I looked forward to practices every day and the games were a blast.

“I loved my teammates and our mutual competitiveness and cohesiveness,” she added. “It is probably what I miss the most and was the hardest to let go of when I graduated.”

It was a feeling she carried through her final days of high school life, as a trip to the state track meet cost her and her teammates the senior class trip to Disneyland. Instead of being upset, the track squad found a different way to mark the end of their run in Coupeville.

“We went white water rafting together and had a great time!,” Grasser said.

The camaraderie that she enjoyed during her playing days is something she hopes the current generation of Wolf athletes will find for themselves.

“Enjoy this time with your teammates. This may be the most competitive time of your life, so give it your all,” Grasser said. “At the same time, recognize as important as sports are, they are not going to be your life, so it is critical that you do well in school and keep the goal of college at the forefront.”

Volleyball and a scholarship to study in the medical arena carried Grasser to Central Washington University, but it wasn’t long before she ended up taking a U-turn.

“I went there and played a lot while studying very little,” Grasser said. “I quickly realized that I was in over my head academically and shifted my priorities from sports to life.”

She became a triage nurse, eventually ended up at a healthcare software company and has two children (Lance, 12 and Erika, 16) with her husband, Jim.

Through it all, her times in the red and black remain cherished memories.

“Volleyball was my favorite sport, but I have the best memories of playing basketball,” Grasser said. “Our team was so intense; we played our guts out every single game, especially our senior year when we went to tri-districts with a record of 14-6.

“Working hard as an individual in order to support my team as effectively as possible (no excuses) was a huge lesson,” she added. “Also, being coachable has been incredibly important in helping me get jobs and move up the ladder quickly. At the same time, Georgie Smith taught me not to take sports seriously. If not for her humor and influence I may have missed that lesson and I needed that my second year at Central when the new coach and I didn’t click.”

She did click with her high school coaches, and fondly remembers many of them, from Phyllis Textor (“Ms. Textor was one of the biggest influences on me and I feel incredibly lucky to have had her in my life. I still impart her lesson, “excuses don’t mean anything” on my kids, but she really taught me so much more about life”) to Ron Bagby (“My awesome track coach who always made practice fun — even though, to this day, I hate running”) and many more.

“Our assistant coach in basketball and track was Larrie Ford (David and Tony’s dad), who was great as an encourager to all of us. He never let me get down if I was struggling and always knew what to say to make me feel better,” Grasser said. “Also, two coaches who had huge influences on me in elementary school were Mr. Libby (Tricia’s dad) and Mr. Messner (Barbi/Aimee’s dad). In hindsight I just can’t believe their patience with us girls year after year on the Lee’s Lions softball team! Those were good years and I loved those two guys.”

And then there were the girls she played with day in and day out.

“My teammates who I would do anything for were Sarah Powell, Terri Perkins, Tina Barker, Sherry Bonacci, Georgie, Aimee Messner, Sally Biskovich, Carol Estes, Cheryl Pangburn and Trudy Eaton,” Grasser said. “We had some great times together with the guy athletes on the bus and ferry rides.

“When certain songs come on the radio like AC/DC’s “Back in Black” or Def Leppard’s “Photograph,” I go right back to 1986-7!,” she added. “My hurdles buddy in track was Chad Gale and I remain in awe of Tina Barker’s 400. She barfed after every race … ew!”

Bonacci, who would go on to marry fellow Wolf athletic star Jon Roberts, said this about Grasser:

Marlene was my athletic role model. She was such an amazing and gifted athlete and one of the nicest people ever. She always helped me and encouraged me to strive for excellence and become the best I could be.”

Grasser remembers it often being the other way around.

“I love Sherry,” she said. “I was looking through stuff to try to find an old photo and came across about a dozen letters of encouragement and advice from her.”

Here is an excerpt (dated Feb 12, 1986):

“Smile!  You didn’t look too happy last night when I saw you. You’re always smiling.

I’m really sorry about you guys losing. I know I’m not much comfort but you guys tried and you lost by just a few mistakes that you know you won’t make again, right?

So always look to the bright side! Marlene, like I always say, don’t be too hard on yourself. It’s not good!

I was really sad we lost too. It’s so frustrating, especially when you are sitting on the bench from fouling out, you haven’t made any baskets and you turned the ball over a couple times (that’s what I did!)”

“I’m the one who thought of Sherry as my role model. She was always so bright and cheery and made the best of any situation. I admired that and strove to be that way too!”

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