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Mitch and Tami Aparicio

Mitch and Tami Aparicio

No 'stache, but tons of studliness

No ‘stache, but tons of studliness

Aparicio works his magic behind the drum kit. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Aparicio works his magic behind the drum kit. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Sydney Aparicio’s old man had some serious skills.

Long before his little girl became a three-sport star (volleyball, cheer, softball) for Coupeville High School, Mitch Aparicio was a ‘stache-rockin’, award-winnin’ beast with a motor that never stopped running at full-speed. A three-time Mr. Hustle award winner in basketball — while playing for his future father-in-law — he remains one of the most honored athletes in school history.

By the time he graduated CHS in 1987, a year before younger brother and fellow high school ‘stache enthusiast Marc, he was an 11-time letter winner (four in football, three apiece in basketball and baseball and one in track). Toss in All-League baseball honors as a sophomore and junior and a ton of football awards, including being selected as the team’s Defensive and Offensive Player of the Year in different seasons, and he had a nice run.

And, while he and his teams had big moments — football went to state three times in four seasons — it’s the memories he made that will stay with him long after the awards get dusty on the mantle.

“Looking back at it now, I believe the best memories I have are of living in a small town and being close to family,” Aparicio said. “Living in a small community was a great opportunity to be involved, to play everything and get recognized by your family and community.”

Ask him about his time on the gridiron, and the moments tumble out, one glorious memory after another.

“Football was my favorite sport because of the man time,” Aparicio said. “Lifting, goofing around, practicing, hanging out together, playing on Friday nights then watching game films on Monday.”

His favorite moments include big wins (“Beating the undefeated Darrington Loggers at Darrington. They were ranked in the top five of the state. We didn’t just beat them, we spanked them, 42-12!”), huge individual efforts (“Playing Orcas Island in the pouring down rain, I rushed 30 times for 194 yards and we won 12-0”) and transcendent plays by teammates (“Jay Roberts catching a fake punt pass in the mini-playoffs against La Conner to go to state. We ran that play twice in the two weeks! What a stud!”)

He also has two memories from his freshman year, of a lighter note, that remain burned in his brain.

Dan McCutcheon would dare that he would eat bugs and slugs during stretching to raise money and keep it light,” Aparicio said. “And when we were at La Conner and Scott McGraw and the center changed the play in the huddle and ran a fake hike play that went for like 60 yards and Coach Franz got so mad.”

The chance to play multiple sports with the same teammates cemented relationships, and the closeness of Coupeville itself has provided him with new friendships long after graduation.

“I have some great friendships from my high school years and with guys I didn’t know in high school, older or younger,” Aparicio said. “When I meet them years later as a former Coupeville grad, we would talk about how they looked up to me and the other way around, or, you know someone’s brother, etc.

“We have a connection to CHS through having experienced team sports together,” he added. “Scott Losey, Rusty Bailey, my brother, Marc, Jon and Jay Roberts, Rob and Rick Alexander, Dave and Tony Ford. A band of brothers and we didn’t even know it!”

Now a father (he married high school sweetheart Tami Stuurmans in 1991), he has had a chance to coach both of his daughters in various youth sports. Looking back on his own time as a young athlete, he realizes what an impact the teachers and coaches of his youth ended up having.

A talented drummer, he credits English teacher Steve Hill with giving him his big break musically. After joining the band Confessor as a high school junior, he played with them three years before quitting to play college football at Western Washington University, though he has continued to wield the sticks over the years in other groups.

On the playing fields, two men stand out — a football coach barely older than his players and a basketball dean who would go on to figure prominently in Aparicio’s life.

“I think having Ron Bagby come to coach football my sophomore year was a great fit!,” Aparicio said. “He looked like he was our age, but lightning fast and didn’t take any guff!

“I don’t remember any deep discussions with “Bags”, but you knew you were in for a battle as soon as you stepped on the field or court with him,” he added. “He had swagger. Coupeville needed an attitude adjustment back then and we got just what we needed when Ron and his group of buddies arrived in ’84.

A scrapper and hustler on the basketball court, Aparicio worked his butt off for the man whose family he would later join.

“As far as having a favorite coach, it would have to have been Cec Stuurmans,” Aparicio said. “He knew I didn’t have graceful skills on the b-ball court, but he knew I would do what he asked and he trusted me out on the court to put the hammer down on unsuspecting opponents.

“Plus, I married his oldest daughter, Tami, so I want to make sure I stay in his will!,” he added with a huge laugh.

A 25-year vet of the IT infrastructure and network operations industry, Aparicio enjoys watching his daughters follow in the footsteps of their parents (Sydney gets her cheerleader genes straight from mom). While careful not to push them too hard (“We looked at it as an opportunity to get with friends and run around, so that was the main focus, having fun”), he does feel the old juices flowing.

“Sitting in the stands is tough, because I’m very competitive,” Aparicio said. “I get very frustrated at the high school level watching teams that don’t have solid fundamentals. Not sure if it’s just the way kids are today, but I don’t think they have that same level of competitiveness for sports. Seems like it’s more important that everyone had fun, but losing is not fun, so not sure how you turn that around.

“I love to see how the kids experience the games, growing as individuals and learning how to work together, developing a strategy to get something accomplished,” he added. “It’s so awesome when that all comes together.”

Now clean-shaven, the man who helped usher in ‘staches to the Wolf squads of the ’80s (one photo from the period shows half the CHS boys’ basketball team sporting fuzzy lip action), Aparicio is content to let others carry on the mission today.

“I don’t miss it, but I can appreciate guys who can grow and support a gnarley ‘stache!”

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Two generations of Wolf star athletes, Aimee Bishop (left) and daughter Breeanna Messner.

Two generations of Wolf star athletes, Aimee Bishop (left) and daughter Breeanna Messner.

Mother and daughter in earlier times.

Mother and daughter in earlier times.

Bishop and sisters Christi Messner (lower left) and Barbi Ford (upper left) and father Paul "Santa" Messner.

        Bishop and sisters Christi Messner (lower left) and Barbi Ford (upper left) and father Paul “Santa” Messner.

Aimee Bishop is proof you can go home again.

A successful three-sport athlete during her days at Coupeville High School, she was anxious to flee small town living when she graduated in 1988. So she spent the next seven years seeing the USA, including a stint working at Walt Disney World in Florida (“I had an amazing time!”), before returning to Coupeville.

Now employed by the Coupeville School District, a constant presence at Wolf sporting events and the proud mom of her own three-sport star, Breeanna Messner, Bishop couldn’t be happier to be back in the place she once longed to flee.

“I love this Island as an adult,” Bishop said. “Funny thing is I could not wait to get off “The Rock” when I was in high school.”

It wasn’t that she didn’t enjoy her time at CHS, where she played volleyball and basketball and ran track for the Wolves. But, like a lot of other kids, the outside world loomed large and inviting compared to her hometown.

Now married to Island County Coroner Robert Bishop, she worked as a paralegal before making a full circle back, becoming part of a crack team that now runs sports events in the same venues she once called home as an athlete.

The transition specialist for the Island Juvenile Detention program by day, she can be found at virtually every home Wolf game, often hopping between multiple events in the same day.

If someone is shooting a basketball or flinging a football, she and her cohort in crime (“My wonderful friend Kim Andrews“) are there on the scene, making sure the lights stay on, referees show up and Kole Kellison doesn’t fall off of any rain-slicked press box roofs.

Playing a vital role in keeping CHS athletics humming along offers Bishop two opportunities — one, to relive her own high school sports days a bit, and two, to watch her daughter play out her own memories.

Still a strong athlete who runs religiously, Bishop fondly remembers her time on the hard court.

“My junior year in basketball was my favorite. We had a lot of fun that year,” Bishop said. “It was the last year that Coach (Phyllis) Textor coached basketball.

“My favorite sport was basketball,” she added. “I loved the adrenaline and the fast-paced game.”

It was Textor and a young track coach fairly new to the school who inspired her the most.

“Two coaches that stand out are Coach Textor, who coached me in volleyball and basketball and Coach (Ron) Bagby, who was my track coach,” Bishop said. “I remember Bagby making us run the mile at practice. I would complain because I was a sprinter, NOT a distance runner. Now I run marathons. Go figure.”

Regardless of the sport, the life lessons she picked up have stayed with her throughout life after high school.

“What I love about team sports is you learn to rely on your teammates, you work together and NEVER give up!,” Bishop said. “I love pushing beyond what you thought you could do.”

One of her greatest joys these days comes from watching her daughter, a junior who is a standout volleyball, basketball and softball player. While she tried to play fair and offer Breeanna many options growing up, Bishop always hoped the apple wouldn’t fall far from the tree.

“I have an amazing daughter,” Bishop said. “I always secretly wanted Bree to play sports, but I did put her in ballet, tap, tumbling, horse riding, guitar lessons and drama performances when she was little.

“She enjoyed sports the most. LUCKY ME!,” she added. “I love watching her play. I am a very nervous spectator, though. She is super fun to watch play.”

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Jared Helmstadler, left, applies intense defensive pressure during a game against Sultan. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Jared Helmstadter, left, applies intense defensive pressure during a game against Sultan. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Jared Helmstadter is a walking, talking miracle.

Watching the six-foot Coupeville High School freshman crash through the paint, hauling in rebounds and terrorizing opposing shooters, you would have no clue at what a transformation you are seeing.

At how you are watching a young man who not only has the heart to compete on the court, but possesses the fight to survive in real life, as well.

Born prematurely at 26 weeks, Helmstadter came into the world weighing just two pounds.

“They didn’t expect me to live.”

They were wrong, many times over.

He not only survived, he thrived, fighting through the loss of his vision in his left eye (“I can see some shadows out of it, but that’s about it”) to become a hard-working student and a four-sport athlete (tennis, basketball, baseball and track).

Playing for a Wolf JV basketball squad that went into Christmas break on a two-game winning streak, he is a bolt of energy slashing across the floor. Whether as a starter or off the bench, once Helmstadter is inserted into the game, the intensity always ratchets up several notches.

“I have come a long way since I first started playing basketball,” Helmstadter said. “I think my biggest strength that has changed is being aggressive.

“I use to be afraid when I would play that I would be too aggressive and hurt somebody,” he added. “My parents and Coach V have said that they like seeing me be aggressive.”

Helmstadter, who flops between the wing and the post (“I like playing post the best. I don’t have to remember as much. I have scored most of my points inside the key, so I am happy about that”), first picked up the sport in fifth grade. It’s been a mutual love affair ever since.

“Ever since I started watching basketball on TV I have always thought that ‘this is the sport to play’,” Helmstadter said. “I love being part of the team. The boys here are like family. They pick me up and help me if I’m doing something wrong. They make basketball fun.”

A hard worker, he is continually fine-tuning his skill set. Whether watching his favorite NBA teams, the Miami Heat and Los Angeles Clippers, or hitting the court in his free time, he is always looking for that next upgrade.

“There are lots of my game that I need to work on,” Helmstadter said. “The main one is my ball handling. I probably have one of the worst handling skills on the team. My weakness is going to the right. I have a hard time doing anything with my right hand, so I prefer to go to the left.

“I need to improve on my man-to-man defense,” he added. “Also, I would like to improve my jump shot as well.”

A big fan of the film “The Hurricane Season,” which documents the rebirth of a high school football team after Hurricane Katrina, Helmstadter also finds time for excelling in the classroom as well as on the court.

“I love welding,” he said. “I decided to try it this year as something new. So far, it has been lots of fun.”

After playing tennis in the fall, he plans to try his hand at track in the spring, with an eye on running sprints.

For the moment, at least, he will leave behind the baseball diamond, where he and younger brother Grey Rische (a star on the eighth grade Coupeville Middle School hoops squad) have been known as Thunder and Lightning. Since his part of the nickname derived from his speed, fans may still be using it as he runs track.

“My parents came up with that nickname many years ago during baseball,” Helmstadter said. “I’m Lightning and Grey is Thunder.

“They called me Lightning because I was so fast at stealing bases and they called Grey Thunder because of the power he had when he hit the ball,” he added. “We always played on the same little league teams so everyone started using the nicknames and they just stuck ever since.”

Family plays a large part in Helmstadter’s life. They can be found in the top row of the bleachers during his basketball games, sister Camilla Rische, a Wolf volleyballer, is quick to inform reporters on the correct spelling of her brother’s name and his grandmother is always sure to have a post-game meal waiting for him when he exits the locker room.

“My parents have been a big part in my life. They have always been there for me,” Helmstadter said. “They have helped me with sports and school. They push me on school work. They want me to do good in school and so far it has helped. I never thought that I could have good grades and do sports.”

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Caleb Valko, lookin' all GQ.

Caleb Valko, lookin’ all GQ.

Coupevillesports.com would be nothing, nothing I say, without Caleb Valko.

He is my own personal Willy Wonka gold ticket, the boy with the Justin Bieber eyes, the one-true Page Hit King (now that Hunter Hammer is semi-retired), a young man willing to talk smack, get greasy and run over refs, all to make my stories more exciting.

There are many athletes at Coupeville High School, some with some serious skills, and a few who work their butts off on the playing field.

Caleb, who celebrates his birthday today, has all that, and just a touch more.

Mr. Valko may not want to hear this, but he is NOT the most talented athlete to currently pull on a Wolf jersey. He does not have the raw speed of Madison Tisa McPhee, the size of Nick Streubel, the intangibles of Jake Tumblin or the career accomplishments of Amanda d’Almeida and Bessie Walstad.

What he does have is character, commitment, a sense of leadership and a heart that does not quit. The kid keeps on coming, in good games and bad, and he exemplifies what a Wolf should be, through and through.

When he leaves for college and beyond, there will be a large hole left behind.

It will be a hole left not just by the memories of Mr. Valko crushing the line in pursuit of a quarterback, or of him rampaging through the paint on a mad charge to the hoop.

It will be the memory of him standing off to the side on a muddy field at Chimacum, arms crossed, face a mixture of anger and sadness, as the final moments of his high school football career played out without him, a casualty of a Napoleonic ref, but an unbowed captain to the end.

He fought for his teammates, and they fought for him. After rumbling up-field, flicking would-be tacklers away like tiny gnats, Streubel, covered in mud, emerged from a pile and looked for his fellow lineman, who was supposed to have had that rare offensive play as a senior night farewell, and he flashed the thumbs-up to his partner in the trenches.

There were people crying in the stands that night, and there will be people crying in the stands when Mr. Valko throws his final shot put heave in the spring.

Many people have worn the red and black for Coupeville. Few have done it with the class and determination of Caleb Valko.

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Legendary.

Legendary.

People ask me what it takes to be a high-level Division 1 college athlete, and the answer is simple.

I’m sure hard work, dedication and a lot of natural talent helps, but there is one thing, and one thing only, that truly sets apart the greats. And that is the ability to be freakin’ awesome in a robe.

Good thing Coupeville High School grad and all-time Wolf legend Kyle King knows the secret. Otherwise he’d be running cross country and track for Middle Tennessee State and not national power Oklahoma.

But he’s running for the Sooners, cause he (and his robe) are awesome like that.

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