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Archive for the ‘South Whidbey: Not the Antichrist’ Category

Hadley Eager slices to the hoop for two, leading off a collection of South Whidbey(!) basketball pics. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Falcons on Coupeville Sports?????

It’s true, we’re crossing Island lines for a day, highlighting South Whidbey High School basketball, thanks to the camera work of ever-wanderin’ photo whiz kid John Fisken.

His pics showcase the Falcons as they face off with Eastside Prep in a Saturday doubleheader.

I can tell you the SWHS girls won 50-16, raising their record to 1-2 on the season, while the S-Dub boys fell 76-53 to go to 0-2.

Want more than that? Convince the local newspapers which cover that region to get on their game.

Or, convince your parents to let you transfer to Coupeville — just imagine how much coverage you’d get then.

Just sayin’.

Till then, in the spirit of an olive branch in the eternal battle of the Whidbey version of the Hatfields and the McCoys, some photo glossiness as the weekend fades.

To see everything Fisken shot, and possibly purchase some glossies for the grandparents, pop over to:

 

Girls:

GBB 2021-05-22 vs Eastside Prep – John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

Boys:

BBB 2021-05-22 vs Eastside Prep – John’s Photos (johnsphotos.net)

 

Josh Sterba looks for an opening.

Nikki Murnane eyeballs the defense.

Elijah Dixon gets artful in the paint.

Liz Haines kicks the offense into overdrive.

Sterling Patton eyeballs a free throw.

Madi Knauer rolls to the hoop.

Lucas Taksony goes up strong.

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Exploding on the takeoff in the long jump.

Maia Sparkman explodes on the takeoff in the long jump. (John Fisken photos)

Maia Sparkman, bein' really, really fast. (John Fisken photos)

“I must destroy you!!”

Stickin' the landing.

Stickin’ the landing.

Yes, this is Coupeville Sports, but, let’s take one last moment to pay honor to our favorite Falcon.

South Whidbey High School senior Maia Sparkman, who was the first athlete from her school to agree to an interview with me back in the days when I picked on the Falcons a lot, is a class act through and through.

So it’s nice to see her do so well in her final moments as a high school athlete.

Competing at the 1A state track meet in Cheney Friday and Saturday, Sparkman brought home three medals, the most of any Whidbey Island athlete this spring.

She opened state by placing 7th in the long jump, hitting the sand at sixteen feet, 8.50 inches, then ran legs on two Falcon relay teams that brought home medals.

Her 4 x 100 relay squad, which included Anna Leski, Bailey Forsyth and Madi Boyd, claimed 7th in 50.75 seconds, while her 4 x 400 unit (Boyd, Jaime Rodden, Mackenzie Hezel and Sparkman) finished 4th in 4:03.34.

Well done, Miss Sparkman. Well done.

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Exploding on the takeoff in the long jump.

Maia Sparkman explodes on the takeoff in the long jump. (John Fisken photo)

Coupeville coach Willie Smith and South Whidbey baseball guru Tom Fallon chat with the umps. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

  Coupeville coach Willie Smith and South Whidbey baseball guru Tom Fallon chat with the umps. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Well played, South Whidbey, well played.

This blog is called Coupeville Sports for a reason, but there are times when even the most die-hard of Cow Town folks can take a moment and tip our hats to the folks down in Langley.

We live on an Island, and as much as the Wolves and Falcons have always been, and will always be, the best of rivals, we can celebrate each others triumphs.

Lord knows the ATM’s and King’s of the world, and their brethren, need a paddle taken to their entitled, pompous rears as often as possible, and any win for a Whidbey athlete is a win for all of us “hicks.”

So take a moment with me to send congrats to a couple of South Whidbey people who I have found to be class acts all the way. They may not wear the red and black — our loss — but I wish them well all the same.

Tom Fallon guided his SWHS baseball team to its first trip to state in decades, where the Falcons and Wolves, who split their four games this year, accounted for 1/8th of the field at the 1A tourney.

South Whidbey opened with a 10-5 win over Tenino Saturday, then fell 1-0 to Richland in the afternoon to end its season, while Coupeville was nipped 2-1 by Rochester.

If Richland and Rochester win their state semifinals next weekend and play for the title game, they will do so with the knowledge they barely escaped the wonder twin power of Whidbey’s best.

Meanwhile, over in the heart of the beast (King’s home stadium), Whidbey track runners stepped up and made a huge impact at Tri-Districts.

We’re hugely enthusiastic about CHS sophomore Makana Stone advancing to state in the 400. She has the third-fastest time in 1A and is a second away from pulling off an upset and winning a state title.

But let’s also send a big thumbs up to South Whidbey senior Maia Sparkman, who qualified for state in the long jump and as a member of 4 x 100 and 4 x 400 relay teams.

At a time when I poked the Falcons frequently, Miss Sparkman was gracious enough to consent to an interview (https://coupevillesports.com/2013/06/30/the-falcons-are-alright-maia-sparkman-sparkles/), when she could have blown me off as several South Whidbey athletes did.

Fallon and Sparkman — class acts through and through, even if I think they’re wearing the wrong colors.

But deep down, the colors don’t always matter.

What does is one Whidbey, kickin’ ass and takin’ names. Always.

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Maia Sparkman, bein' really, really fast. (John Fisken photos)

Maia Sparkman, bein’ really, really fast. (John Fisken photos)

Exploding on the takeoff in the long jump.

Exploding on the takeoff in the long jump.

Stickin' the landing.

Stickin’ the landing.

She just jumped over the freakin' fence (sort of...)!!!

She just jumped over the freakin’ fence (sort of…)!!!

Please keep it down — the Canadian-owned “local” papers are trying to take a nap.

But while they’re snoozing and losing, it is up to us, the rogues of Coupeville Sports, to swoop and scoop.

Thanks to travelin’ photo man John Fisken, who ended up down in Lynden Wednesday for Day 1 of the 1A District 1 track championships, we have not just photos of Coupeville High School students, but (bite me, South Whidbey Record!), snappy pics of Falcon senior supernova Maia Sparkman.

Why her, you ask?

Because, at a time when I was cheesing off most of the South End of Whidbey, Ms. Sparkman was gracious enough to consent to do an interview and allow me to write a feature story about her (https://coupevillesports.com/2013/06/30/the-falcons-are-alright-maia-sparkman-sparkles/) and maybe soften my frosty relationship with Langley … a bit.

She didn’t have to, but she did. And she didn’t have to be so smart and well-spoken in her comments, but I kind of think that’s her natural persona.

So, while she may not wear the red and black, Ms. Sparkman remains one of my favorites, a young woman of grace and refinement who mixes book smarts with athletic prowess.

A young woman we all should be proud of, regardless of what part of the Island we live on.

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Ricky Muzzy goes airborne as Coupeville's Korbin Korzan slides into the bag. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Ricky Muzzy goes airborne as Coupeville’s Korbin Korzan slides into the bag. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Muzzy prepares to unload on a hapless pitcher.

Muzzy prepares to unload on a hapless pitcher.

I am often accused of picking on South Whidbey (and it’s mostly true), so, from time to time, I offer an olive branch to Coupeville’s closest rival.

While I don’t exactly want the Falcons to beat the Wolves at anything, the reality is there are a lot of very talented, very smart young men and women wearing the blue and white.

Let’s take a moment to acknowledge them.

Cause Lord knows the Canadian-owned South Whidbey Record isn’t exactly doing a bang-up job at it.

The legend of Ricky Muzzy is growing.

The South Whidbey High School sophomore, a two-sport star for the Falcons, delivered the biggest hit in recent Whidbey Island baseball history Monday.

When he lashed a two-out, bottom of the seventh RBI single, plating Jake Sladky, Muzzy lifted the Langley diamond men to their first win over Cascade Conference royalty Archbishop Thomas Murphy in seven seasons.

Then, since the 1-0 win felt so good, Muzzy and the Falcons went back out Wednesday, this time in Everett, and bounced ATM 5-4 to become the first team to knock off the Wildcats twice this season.

Now 11-5 on the season (9-5 in league play) South Whidbey has bounced back from losing its season-opening series to Coupeville to take firm hold of the race between the two 1A schools for a #1 playoff seed.

It’s been a fun ride for Muzzy, who, while he enjoys his time on the basketball court, where he plays guard for the Falcons, gets the most excited when he takes the field and sprints out to play shortstop.

“My athletic strength is baseball!,” Muzzy said. “I love it because of the relationships you build with your teammates and coaches, and just the game itself is great.”

His walk off base knock against ATM has found a spot on his personal highlight reel, along with “my first varsity baseball start, and home run last year.”

Muzzy hails his family for helping him succeed, both in sports and in life.

“My parents, for teaching me how to work hard and making me into the young man I am today,” he said. “All my friends, all of my coaches, as well.”

A big fan of his biology, Algebra 2 and Spanish classes (“I love all my teachers!”), Muzzy keeps a strong focus on his class work.

Though he still has more than half his high school career to go, he’s already looking ahead at the future.

“I’d like to go to a good college and study sports medicine,” Muzzy said. “And yes, it has always been my dream to play baseball at the college level.”

When he’s not on the baseball diamond, he keeps his skills sharp by playing Wiffle ball during the summer.

A fan of Jack Johnson’s music, his favorite movie is “probably “The Hobbit”.”

And, while Wolf fans can ponder how nice it would be to have the sweet-swinging, crisp-fielding Muzzy camped out in the middle of the infield if his family were to suddenly move, he seems quite content down South.

“South Whidbey has a lot of nice people, good coaches, good teachers,” Muzzy said. “Overall, it’s just a really enjoyable place to go to school!”

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