Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Track’ Category

Lauren Bayne (John Fisken photos)

Lauren Bayne (John Fisken photos)

There’s more than one superstar in the Bayne house.

While older brother Josh gets a lot of the publicity, what with being the Olympic League MVP in football and all, it might be easy to forget that lil’ sis Lauren is no slouch herself in the sports world.

Basketball, soccer, track — toss an athletic event at her and the junior version of the Bayne Train can more than hold her own.

Zipping across the soccer pitch, or around the track oval, she’s got speed to burn and a positive attitude that will carry her far.

She’s also branching out these days and working as a sports paparazzi, snapping photos of her CHS fellow athletes.

As Lauren celebrates a birthday today, we want to send her best wishes.

Whatever sports route she takes over the next few years, I have no doubt she’ll be aces at it.

That’s just a family tradition, and one Lauren upholds quite gracefully.

Read Full Post »

Marissa (Slater) Dixon, ready for snow patrol.

Marissa (Slater) Dixon, ready for snow patrol.

Dixon passed on the athletic gene to son Jacob and daughter

Dixon passed on the athletic gene to son Jacob and daughter Alicia.

One photo, tons 'o speed. Dixon (top) with

   One photo, tons ‘o speed. Dixon (top) with sister Natalie (middle, left), Misty Sellgren, Mina Khongsavanh (bottom, left) and Christina Palmquist.

Size doesn’t matter.

Marissa (Slater) Dixon might have been low to the ground, but that never stopped her from being one of the more accomplished athletes to come through Coupeville High School.

A true mighty mite, the proud Class of ’94 grad ran the anchor leg for a relay team that smashed the school record in the 4 x 400, went to state in the hurdles, was a strong basketball and soccer player and got college scholarships offers in two separate sports.

Big or small, the body doesn’t matter as much as the heart beating inside the chest of the athlete.

“Don’t let anyone tell you that you are too short for a sport! You prove them wrong,” Dixon said. “It’s not about your size, it’s about how bad you want it, the hard work and time you put into something and your heart.”

That will to win was never more evident than when she and her teammates put their names on the big board with the fastest time any Wolf girls’ relay team had posted up until then.

“I was the anchor and had to run my little heart out cause I can hear the crowd say go, go break that record,” Dixon said.

While she played soccer for ten years, accepting a scholarship to play at Skagit Valley College (she turned down a partial track scholarship to Vanderbilt to stay close to home), track was her passion.

“Track was by far my favorite,” Dixon said. “I love playing and being outside. Loved that it was both an individual and team sport.

“I remember listening to my Walkman sitting next to my boyfriend at the time and trying to think about my next race,” she added. “I loved the adrenaline.”

While running (and hanging out waiting for the next race) she made many life-long friends.

“The teammate that I remember the most is Ryan McManigle (high school sweetheart till my senior year),” Dixon said. “He always pushed me to run my races well. He was my biggest cheer leader.

“Also my close friend Susan Steele. She was also just as fast and Asian like me and we always would say use the ‘Asian Power’,” she added with a laugh. “I would also say Chelsea Grovdahl, Class of ’93 from OHHS. Without her speedy teaching of how to jump hurdles I would never of done so well and ran hurdles for the rest of my high school years.”

After playing soccer and running track at Oak Harbor as a freshman, Dixon transferred to Coupeville. The Wolves didn’t have a soccer program at the time, but Dixon picked up a basketball for two years, where she was a shooting guard “and shot lots of three-pointers.”

Whether the memories revolve around sports, academics or friends, Dixon remembers her time in Cow Town with great joy.

“My fondest memories of CHS were just plainly my entire graduating class of ’94. We were fun!,” Dixon said. “I loved high school; it was a lot of fun. So, too many things to mention.”

After graduating, Dixon went on to work as an airplane mechanic in Everett for a decade (“I loved it, but it gets pretty hard on the body”), and now lives in Illinois with her family.

“I love my life and my family,” she said. “I am married to an amazing man.”

The couple has two children, Alicia, 14, and Jacob, 12, who have both followed in their mom’s athletic footsteps.

Alicia plays volleyball and she is little like me, but she doesn’t care, she plays hard and loves the sport,” Dixon said. “She also loves to ski, which she is amazing at.

Jacob plays tackle football, basketball, volleyball and skis. He can play and excel at any sport.”

Now a stay at home mom, Dixon volunteers as a ski patroller and coaches volleyball.

Working as an assistant at Holy Family Catholic, she helped guide her team to an undefeated record this season, hot on the heels of a conference championship the year before.

Looking back on her high school years, Dixon can see where her teenage athletic success paid off later in life, teaching her discipline and a refusal to give in.

But she is also quick to stress that her accomplishments in the classroom meant just as much, if not more.

“Always help others and cheer on those who need cheering. Work hard, have fun and always be a good teammate,” Dixon said. “Always remember education. It is the most important thing first.

“Your education you receive will last a lifetime.”

Read Full Post »

Former Wolf star Ben Biskovich and wife Karin compete in a raceLake Massabesic in New Hampshire

Former Wolf star Ben Biskovich and wife Karin compete in a race around Lake Massabesic in New Hampshire.

The Biskovich family hang out at Banff National Park.

The Biskovich family hang out at Banff National Park.

“I was never the most gifted athlete on the field, but I always felt like I was the smartest and best prepared. No one was going to out work or out hustle me.”

By the time he graduated in 1991, Ben Biskovich had left an indelible mark on Coupeville High School.

A three-sport athlete (co-captain in football and basketball and a state finalist in the 110 high hurdles in track), he might not have been the star (“I was never the MVP, I always got Most Inspirational or the Coach’s Award”), but he was the kind of rock-solid, never-back-down competitor who opponents remember years later.

His example is one that should resonate with every current Wolf.

“Have a great time, it goes fast,” Biskovich said. “Train, practice and play like you’ve got something to prove, like you’re fighting for a roster spot and don’t want to be taken off the field or court, so that afterwards you have no regrets.

“Win or lose you can look at yourself in the mirror and say, “I could not have done anything more”,” he added. “Then take that same attitude and effort into the class room and then the work force.”

Driven by that attitude, Biskovich was a constant surprise, often soaring to heights even he didn’t quite expect.

During his junior year of basketball he was aiming to be the sixth man for the Wolves, only to be tabbed as the team’s starting center over a senior who had a solid four inches on him.

At six-foot-one (“on a good day”), Biskovich was suddenly manning the middle for CHS.

“Everyone was surprised. Was there a shorter team in school history?,” Biskovich said with a chuckle. “I wasn’t a great shooter, they didn’t run any plays to get me open, but I did my job.

“I blocked out, I was tenacious trying to deny my much taller counterpart the ball, I trailed fast breaks at full speed just in case, and I fouled out quite a bit,” he added. “I worked my tail off for that starting spot and continued to do so because I didn’t want to lose it.”

Win or lose, one thing was for certain — Biskovich was going to be up in your grill all night long. Even when the Wolves faced off with Bush, whose SHORTEST player stood six-foot-five.

“If we were losing a basketball game, I would basically do a one-man full-court press and be completely worn out by the end,” he said. “You know, trying to leave it all out on the court, so after the game I could hold my head high and say, I gave it everything, there was nothing else I could have done. They were just better than us tonight.”

His work ethic and competitiveness probably reached its zenith during football, however, when Biskovich led the team in receptions and interceptions his senior season.

That 1990 squad was a perfect 9-0 in the regular season, including a landmark butt-whuppin’ of arch-rival Concrete, and went into the playoffs ranked fifth in the state.

While things ended prematurely, with a windblown home loss in their playoff opener, that Coupeville gridiron team ranks as perhaps the best in school history.

Running “speed demon tailback” Todd Brown behind bruising linemen that included Frank Marti, Brad Haslam, Matt Cross, Todd Smith, Nate Steele, Mark Lester and Chris Frey, the Wolves were hard to stop.

If a team stepped up, quarterback Jason McFadyen was an expert at using a play action pass, often with Biskovich as the target, to tear off huge chunks of yardage.

While the wins were huge, two other things remain as big or bigger in Biskovich’s memory.

The chance to play in front of his family, including his father, who had a long commute, and his mother, who still sports a “#1 Wolf Fan” license plate on her car, was huge.

“My dad drove up from Medford, Oregon to watch every single football game my senior year. Each way traveling nine hours to Coupeville, even farther to Darrington, Concrete and Friday Harbor,” Biskovich said. “When I look back at that season, that’s what stands out most.”

Football also brought him face-to-face with Ron Bagby, the coach who had the deepest impact on him as a young athlete.

“I loved Coach Bagby. I never remember him yelling at us, maybe raising his voice to get our attention, but never grabbing our face-masks and belittling us,” Biskovich said. “I wanted to practice hard and play well because I didn’t want to disappoint him.”

During his sophomore season, Biskovich was brought up from JV after the team’s starting tight end got in trouble. Stepping on the field for the last home game of the 1988 season remains one of his greatest sports memories.

“I had just turned 15. I hadn’t thought about that in a long time, but as I recall, it’s pretty awesome to get called out in front of your home crowd  on a Friday night under the lights for the first time,” he said. “I was so nervous, I just didn’t want to false start.”

During the week of practice leading up to that game, Biskovich ran a route the way he thought Bagby wanted it run, only to have the coach not agree. It became a learning moment for him, one which helped drive him over the next two seasons.

“He called me over, put his arm around me and said, “Biskovich, I thought you were the one kid on this team I would never have to repeat myself to.” Wind out of my sails; I had disappointed him. I would like to think I never did again.”

The lessons he learned during his time at CHS have carried over into real life for Biskovich.

“I use the teamwork analogy all the time at work and in my marriage,” he said. “Everybody has to do their job and trust that everyone else is as well.

“Work ethic — working all summer lifting weights, running and practicing until you throw up, to achieve a goal six months down the road,” Biskovich added. “After being at my current job for a couple of years, I was talking with my boss at a Christmas party and it came up that I played high school football.

“He smiled and said, I should have known as much. Football players know what hard work and teamwork are all about.”

After high school, Biskovich went on to graduate from the University of Washington with a BS in Psychology. He later added a Master’s degree in physical therapy, meeting wife Karin, a high-level triathlete, in grad school.

They now live in New Hampshire with two young daughters and are partners in three physical therapy clinics.

His wife, who finished second in her age group at both the 2014 USAT National Championships and ITU World Championships, spurred Biskovich back into competitive sports.

While he had been a successful short distance man in high school, he had refused to run distance races as an adult (“It’s boring and bad for your knees”), but finally caved and ran a 4th of July 5K.

And he was back.

“I finished OK, I think around 23 or 24 minutes and I was like, “I can do better than that!” I was hooked. I had forgotten how much I missed competition.”

Now Biskovich runs about a dozen road races a year, from 5Ks with daughters Violet and Brynn, to marathons, including the 2013 New York City Marathon.

“I ran a 3:30 this last year in Hartford, which leaves me five minutes from my long term goal of qualifying for Boston … if I was 4 years older,” Biskovich said. “That’s what I love about running. It gives me a something outside of work and kids that I can actually control, short and long term goals.”

With both parents being passionate athletes, the Biskovich children have already picked up a healthy lifestyle. The hardest working man in Wolf Nation is delighted to see his progeny following in his footsteps.

“Work ethic, team work, healthy lifestyle, fun and friends in no particular order,” he said. “They’ve both tried a ton of different sports, you name them, gymnastics, soccer, swim team, 5Ks, triathlons, softball, skiing and most recently basketball and flag football.

Violet is the only girl on the football team and she loves it!”

And why not? It’s a family tradition.

Read Full Post »

The multi-talented Lauren Grove

The multi-talented Lauren Grove

She is kinda like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.

Put Lauren Grove in a Wolf uniform — be it volleyball, basketball or track — and the CHS sophomore has a motor that rarely, if ever, stops running.

She swarms on defense, she attacks on offense, she sacrifices her body for the good of her team and is always among the first to fly into a huddle, encouraging and congratulating those around her.

Lauren leads by example on the playing surface, and that example is one of a sometimes wild woman. In the best way possible.

Yet get her off the court, where she is quick to slap on the jammies, jump in the stands and dote upon her younger siblings and she presents another face — that of the sweet-natured, deeply-caring big sis.

And it is that mix that makes her one of the most vibrant young sports stars in Cow Town.

A genuinely friendly, smart, outgoing young woman, Lauren shines in the heat of athletic play and away from it.

She may not be the tallest or the fastest (though she is pretty quick) but she takes a backseat to no one when it comes to heart and hustle.

As she celebrates her big day, our best wishes to one of our best.

You make more than just your mom proud every time you shine, Lauren.

Read Full Post »

Joel Walstad

Joel Walstad

Kyle King

Kyle King

They are old school (well, not that old…) and new school, united by a love of athletics, an alma mater and a birthday.

Kyle King is the grizzled vet, a former state champ track star at Coupeville High School who went on to run, very successfully, at two D-1 colleges.

Joel Walstad is the current leader of the pack, a heat-flingin’ quarterback who’s currently putting up sweet numbers for the Wolf football squad. After that, basketball and soccer seasons beckon.

Both are part of successful athletic families, with King’s siblings Brianne and Tyler and Joel’s bro and sis Tim and Bessie forming potent trios in CHS sports history.

The two guys celebrating a joint birthday today also share a laid-back attitude (the dudes abide) and a penchant for being at the forefront of cheering on their fellow athletes.

If there’s a student section rocking the house, King is smack dab in the middle of it, a trait shared by Walstad, who’s quite fond of the face paint and screaming like a banshee.

While they’ve followed different athletic paths (though Kyle did suit up as a gridiron warrior for a bit), and only one of them has sported a spectacular porn star-style ‘stache for a bit (spoiler: it was the college guy), the duo both deserve big props.

Strong athletes and students who happen to be quality people, they give Coupeville a good name.

Let’s return the favor and wish them well on their big day.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »