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Crystal Crump

Crystal Crump

Crystal Crump is a three-sport athlete, but Coupeville will only see her in two.

The Port Townsend High School senior-to-be swims, plays basketball and wraps the school year with her favorite sport, softball.

Since the Wolves don’t field a swim squad, though, they’ll have to wait until the winter to go toe-to-toe with the busy, talented Redhawk.

When they do meet her, CHS players and fans will find a young woman with a positive, make-it-happen personality.

“As an athlete, I think some of my greatest strengths are working hard and pushing through when things are challenging,” Crump said. “I always work to keep a positive attitude and motivate others to do the same.

“Being that I will be a senior next year I want to work on becoming even more of a leader to the younger kids.”

Crump has set a goal of qualifying for districts during her swim season, a sport in which you largely compete as an individual, especially during the postseason.

When she picks up her basketball and, later, her softball gear, she hopes to write a beautiful swan song to her final year of high school life.

“In basketball, I want to maintain a positive attitude and have fun,” Crump said. “For softball, I also want to have fun, but I want to play to the best of my ability.

“Softball is by far my favorite sport because I love being outside,” she added. “I also enjoy the technique that is required, and, of course, the sunflower seeds are the best!”

Playing three sports enables Crump to grow as an individual, while also building friendships with her teammates.

She then passes on some of those lessons when she works in Building Futures, her school’s mentoring program for young children.

“I like the feeling of belonging to a team and the relationships that are built through them,” she said. “I also like to challenge myself to keep getting better.”

While she plays sports year-round, there is far more to Crump than just athletics.

She loves to hike, is teaching herself the guitar and works for Dogspaw, a dog grooming business in Port Townsend. At school, Crump enjoys her language (English and Spanish) and science classes.

Before the new school year starts up, she will travel to Eugene for a five-week trail restoration program, which will allow her to enjoy her love of hiking and backpacking while helping to clean up trails in national parks.

Through it all, she treasures her family and friends, who provide her with the support necessary to pull off a busy, successful life. One person, in particular, is near and dear to her.

“My guardian, Shannon, has been a great support to me,” Crump said. “I wouldn’t be where I am at today without her. She is amazing!”

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Amanda d'Almeida celebrates her finish. (Dan d'Almeida photos)

Amanda d’Almeida celebrates her finish. (Dan d’Almeida photos)

D'Almeida and Neil Rixe, ready for the opening swim leg.

D’Almeida and Neil Rixe, ready for the opening swim leg.

Out of the water...

Out of the water…

and off on the bike, picking off stragglers as she goes.

And off on the bike, picking off stragglers as she goes.

Two-for-two.

Despite not doing much (if any) pre-training, Amanda d’Almeida grabbed second in the womens’ competition at the Deception Pass Challenge triathlon Saturday.

The recent Wolf grad, a valedictorian and Female Athlete of the Year, has claimed second both years the event has been waged.

The Challenge was comprised of a half-mile swim in Cranberry Lake, followed by a 13-mile bike ride over a mix of road and trail, then a four-mile run from West Beach to the top of Goose Rock.

Top finishers:

Women:

Susan Deschenes 2:12:34
d’Almeida 2:21:26
Marina Stoermer 2:21:28

Men:

Jacob Hartsoch 1:42:44
Michael Feist 1:43:08
David Deschenes 1:46:54

Team:

The Controllers 2:07:14
WIBC Derailleurs 2:13:18
Team Ferocity 2:13:51

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Streubel flies through the water.

Amanda Streubel flies through the water.

Her second family.

Her second family.

Streubel (fifth from left, back row) and the Bellingham Bulldog cheer squad.

Streubel (fifth from left, back row) and the Bellingham Bulldog cheer squad.

This is a story that starts in happiness, takes a dark turn, then comes out in an unexpected, and very satisfying place.

Amanda Streubel was a born swimmer, a young girl who lived in the water from age seven on.

She was good — very, very good — swimming the 100 backstroke at the highest level of Washington state high school competition, the 4A state meet.

And that was just the start.

At the peak of her career in the pool, she competed in the Western Zones Championships, which brings together the cream of the crop from 11 states.

“Swimming took me really far in my life,” Streubel said. “I enjoyed learning the skills and being in the water. It was such a big part of my life. I couldn’t live without swimming.”

Until the day she had to.

After years of built-up verbal abuse became too much and begin to strip away the joy she found in the pool, Streubel walked away.

“I was tired of the nastiness of the girls on the team,” she said. “Name-calling, ganging-up on. That’s what girls did.”

Instead of running away for good, however, Streubel took a sudden left-turn that caught many around her by surprise.

Having dropped swimming, she joined the Coupeville High School cheer squad, where every stereotype she might have had going in was promptly blown up.

She had found a second family.

“Everybody kept telling me ‘you’re jumping from the frying pan into the deep-fryer.’ Little did I know, cheerleaders are nicer than swimmers,” Streubel said. “There are nice swimmers and nice cheerleaders. But the ratio of the “nice girls” is astounding.

“From then on, I felt like I was part of something,” she added. “The girls really changed my life, and my outlook on all sports. Not everybody is mean. ”

Welcomed in by CHS cheer coach Sylvia Arnold and her team, Streubel blossomed, becoming a team leader and someone who has continued in the sport after her high school graduation in 2011.

“Cheer filled that part of me that felt empty,” Streubel said. “I love feeling like I belong.”

While attending Skagit Valley Community College and working toward a degree in the Practical Nursing program (after getting her LPN, she plans to become an RN and then go after her BSN), Streubel has been part of the cheer squad for the Bellingham Bulldogs, a semi-pro team that plays in the Pacific Football League.

While increased classwork kept her off the field this season, she doesn’t rule out returning to the sideline in the future.

“I really love the Bulldog ladies, and the friendships I have made,” Streubel said. “Mostly, I love stunting – the adrenaline rush of throwing and catching a person is just unbelievable.”

While her memories of her days as a swimmer are mixed, she has nothing but fondness for the man who helped her excel in the water.

“My swim coach, Neil Romney, is one of the biggest influences of my life,” Streubel said. “Taught me so much about hard work and dedication, perseverance, and being honest with myself.”

She also credits four teachers, three at CHS and one with the Cedar School homeschooling program, as having had a huge impact on her development as a student, and as a person.

“Mrs. Patsi Waller was always there when I felt stuck, and supported me through everything I tried,” Streubel said. “Ms. Barbara Ballard  taught me a lot of lessons in class that I’ve been able to use in my nursing classes as well as in life.

“Mr. Ryan Grenz  taught me to believe in myself,” she added. “The first thing I said to him when I met him was “I can’t do history.” His response was “we’ll see about that.” For the first time in my life, I liked history.”

And Streubel holds a special place in her heart for Kelly Beech.

“She worked with me when I got myself into a hole so deep,” Streubel said. “I’m convinced I wouldn’t have passed those classes if it wouldn’t have been for her.”

Now well on her way in a nursing career — she works at Summerhill Assisted Living in Oak Harbor while attending college — Streubel is a great example to current Wolf student/athletes. Keep persevering and you can find your place.

“Don’t let your GPA fall and don’t give up on your dreams,” Streubel said. “Just because you are the underdog, doesn’t mean there isn’t something there that shines.”

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Lily Doyle, out seeing the world.

Lily Doyle, out seeing the world.

Doyle (right), when she was ruling the pool as a high school swimmer.

Doyle (right), when she ruled the pool as a high school swimmer.

Did anyone stop to think about me?

Lily Doyle is off to Italy, to study and eat and drink and sight-see her way across the countryside. Proud mom Barbara Ballard gets a lot of great stories to tell her Coupeville High School students.

But me? The guy who waits patiently to hand transcribe Doyle’s swim results at Vassar and pass them on to the 1,892,252 members of the Lily Doyle Fan Club week in and week out — did anyone think about what this kind of break would mean to me?!?!

Yeah, probably not…

Anyway, I shall overcome my lost semester (though tears will be shed as my page views take a noticeable decline) and wish Ms. Doyle the best.

The CHS grad, who is now swimming and studying at Vassar, where she’s a junior, is off on an adventure right now. She’s taking a semester off from American school and swimming to travel abroad.

“Poor child is studying in Italy for a semester. This includes cooking classes, trips to Venice for carnival, and other tiresome activities,” Ballard said. “She’s had three years of Italian, and will be taking classes at the University of Bologna. Side trips to visit friends in France, Spain, and England. Apparently the Italians know how to cook, too.”

And for those of us left behind? I shall go eat some pasta in her honor and stop haunting the Vassar womens’ swim page for a bit.

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Lily Doyle (front) and some of her Vassar teammates.

Lily Doyle (front) and some of her Vassar teammates.

Lily Doyle is swimming with the big girls.

The Coupeville High School grad, now a junior at Vassar College, swam in four events at the Liberty League Swim & Dive Championships in Rochester, New York Friday and Saturday. The event, where Vassar finished sixth out of eight schools, brings an end to the 2012 portion of the Brewers’ swim schedule.

Doyle and her teammates won’t return to the water for a competition again until the middle of January.

Swimming over the weekend, Doyle finished 27th in the 200 backstroke (2 minutes, 28.92 seconds), 29th in the 100 back (1:08.78), 36th in the 200 IM (2:37.40) and 50th in the 50 free (28.87).

She is the daughter of Coupeville couple Richard Doyle and Barbara Ballard, who is better known to CHS students as the Gatekeeper to All Things College Related.

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