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Emily Licence

Emily Licence

Softball is out for now, but she’ll always have dance.

Former Coupeville High School diamond star (and noted cookie baker) Emily Licence is now a sophomore at Chaparral High School in California.

While a knee injury has sidelined her softball career for a moment, the scrappy third-baseman, who helped lead the Wolves to state for the first time in 12 years during her freshman season, is continuing to dance.

She recently performed as one of the lead dancers in a night that combined talent from Chaparral, a 4A school, and neighboring rival Temecula Valley.

The dancers opened with a modern dance set to “Chandelier” by Sia, which was dedicated to Licence’s teacher, in memory of a friend she had lost.

They then switched up the mood with a Christmas performance set to “Santa Baby” that included pointe ballet.

“The performance went great and the audience was very encouraging!,” Licence said.

No word on whether she’s still baking cookies, cause, you know, UPS and Fed Ex deliver and … yep, I’ll see myself out now.

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Emma Laurion (Tara Templeton photo)

Emma Laurion (Tara Templeton photo)

Laurion (right) during her Coupeville soccer days. (Blaine Laurion photo)

Laurion (right) during her Coupeville soccer days. (Blaine Laurion photo)

What could have been.

Subtract one family move and Coupeville High School might currently have one of the best soccer players in the state on its roster.

But the military gives and the military takes, and Emma Laurion was swept away, leaving The Rock in 2005, just as her life on the pitch was taking off.

Now, having grown up from a mighty mite to being a high school senior, she’s a star at Crosspoint Academy in Silverdale, the defending 2B state champs.

Laurion has merely scored 82 goals and handed out 62 assists in the first three seasons of her stellar high school career. So it’s little wonder she’s been a First-Team All-State player each of those seasons.

Oh, and did we mention she actually plays two sports in the same season? Yep, she’s an All-League volleyball player, as well.

And now, thanks to some work by the two school’s Athletic Directors, Laurion will get a chance to reunite with some of the girls she once played with during her youth soccer days, current Wolves such as Marisa Etzell and Julia Myers.

The original idea, broached by her dad, Blaine Laurion, was to have Crosspoint travel to Whidbey, but, when that didn’t pan out, the schools agreed to send the Wolves to Silverdale.

The non-conference game is slated for Saturday, Oct. 11.

While her soccer career has been stuffed to the brim with highlights, getting the chance to reunite with some of the girls from her earliest days on the pitch has Laurion thrilled.

“I am SO beyond excited to play those girls!!,” she said. “I’ve already messaged a couple of them, and I’m hoping we can all go out to dinner after the game or something.”

Laurion was six when she started playing in Coupeville’s coed rec league, and the sport claimed her heart from the start.

“I don’t remember what made me want to play, but I remember how much I loved it and how it brought many people from the community together!,” she said.

The three seasons she spent chasing a soccer ball around Cow Town remain cherished memories.

“I was young so I don’t remember too much,” Laurion said. “How much I loved spending time with my closest friends (Julia, Rosie, Riley, Marisa, Paige), walking downtown and getting ice cream, playing baseball in an all boys league, and going to a writer’s conference for “young authors”.

“The one event that stands out the most to me was racing my second grade teacher around the track and “beating” him and then proceeding to give my autograph to all my classmates,” she added. “Hilarious, I know, but that was the “cool” thing to do back at that age.”

Crosspoint started to allow its athletes to play multiple sports in the same season during her junior year and Laurion jumped at the chance to bring volleyball, which she had played in middle school, back into her life.

“I had a blast and both of my parents coached and played, so it is in my blood,” she said. “My dad coaches soccer and my mom coaches volleyball, so we make everything work and I couldn’t be happier with the decision to play.”

But, as much as she enjoys life on the court, her heart ultimately calls her back to the pitch.

“I have such a passion for soccer. I have played for as long as I can remember and I don’t think I will ever stop playing,” Laurion said. “Soccer is the world’s sport, I believe, and it just brings everyone together, that’s what inspires me the most to keep playing.

“I go on mission trips to Mazatlan every summer and play soccer with the kids,” she added. “Having a connection with them is amazing and only makes me want to continue playing.”

Known for having ferocious foot work (“My kick is literally my strength. I take all the free kicks”) and a strong work ethic (“I guess my competitive drive could be considered a strength in that I am constantly doing anything to win”), Laurion has big goals for her final season.

“My major goal is to decide where I want to play for college,” she said. “But, besides that, I plan to break 100 career goals and win as defending state champions for high school.

“In volleyball, I hope to make an all-league team again and get the team to the Yakima tournament,” Laurion added. “And I am really hoping to just glorify God in all of my athletics this year.”

That aspect of the game is vitally important to the booter, who combines year-round sports with strong academic work (she’s in the National Honor Society), while always looking to stay strong in her faith.

“I’m not like a usual teenager out on the weekends,” Laurion said. “Because I spend almost every night doing sports I set aside time to spend with my family, but I also love trying to get together with friends.

“My favorite day of the week is probably Wednesday because that’s the day I have youth group (Newlife Youth) and I get to see all the friends I have from other schools and just spend time worshiping God,” she added. “I like going out and just finding the beauty in nature and thanking God for the opportunity to witness it.”

Laurion is thankful every day for her support crew, whether they be family, friends, fans, or all of the above combined.

“My whole family and friend base has made me the person I am today,” she said. “The love and support my parents have given me throughout the years has been amazing. We went through a lot of tough times but they still came out of it with hearts for God and blessed my brother and I with amazing childhoods/teenage years.

“All of my grandparents, as well, have always been supportive coming to my games and I would say my grandma is probably the strongest person I know,” Laurion added. “My brother and I are best friends and I don’t think I could get through a lot of stuff without him.

“And finally, my friends. They’re my world. I literally do not know what I would do if I didn’t have them. We do everything together.”

Which makes it even sweeter that come Oct. 11, Laurion will get a chance to introduce her new friends to some old friends.

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Shelby Kulz

Shelby Kulz

Shelby Kulz was always a good shot.

During her days on the hardwood for Coupeville High School, the 2012 grad drained her fair share of jumpers for the Wolf girls’ basketball squad.

Now she’s taken her keen shooting eye and turned it in the direction of film-making.

Kulz, who works as a picker on the harvest boat for Penn Cove Shellfish, just posted to YouTube a five-minute documentary film she shot depicting life and work on the water.

It’s the continuation of a skill she also showcased while at CHS.

“When I was in high school I did documentaries for History Day, but this is my first movie with all of my own footage,” Kulz said. “I plan on making more movies for Penn Cove in the near future, focusing on different parts of the company such as the warehouse and seed crew.”

When she’s not shooting, Kulz works in the heart of the mussel harvesting operation.

“What happens is when the mussel is pulled and goes through all the machines, it’s poured onto a conveyer belt and we have to pick out all the broken mussel, the barnacles, and the clumps of mussel called byss,” Kulz said. “From there it’s bagged out and sent to the warehouse.”

To see her film, “Penn Cove Shellfish: a GoPro documentary,” pop over to:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kg7TpfU_EP8

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Former CHS hoops star Tina (Lyness) Joiner and Gracen.

Tina (Lyness) Joiner and the very dapper Gracen.

Kassie (Lawson) O'Neil and sons Liam (left) and Abel.

Kassie (Lawson) O’Neil and sons Liam (left) and Abel.

Abel hangs out with aunt Katie Smith, another former Wolf hoops sensation.

Abel hangs out with aunt Katie Smith, another former Wolf hoops sensation.

Courtney Boyd and super-cutie daughter Ruby Folkestad.

Courtney Boyd and super-cutie daughter Ruby Folkestad.

"Bow! Bow before my cuteness!!"

“Bow! Bow before my cuteness!!”

He's got lines for days.

He’s got lines for days.

Basketball players and babies, they go together like peanut butter and jelly.

Take a look at former Coupeville High School hoops sensations and a ton of them have one thing in common these days — they have produced a photogenic next generation.

You could do many things with your Monday. Smiling at pics of babies should always be high on that list.

You’re welcome.

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Zepher Loesch (Photos courtesy Tom Loesch)

Zepher Loesch (Photos courtesy Tom Loesch)

Breakin' ankles and takin' names while playing college ball.

Breakin’ ankles and takin’ names in college.

The early days of a gym rat.

Birth of a gym rat.

Loesch with sisters Mia (left) and Kalia in 2008. (Dawn Hesselgrave photo)

Loesch with sisters Mia (left) and Kalia in 2008. (Dawn Hesselgrave photo)

Duct tape made Zepher Loesch a better basketball player.

The 2009 Coupeville High School grad, who could shoot out the lights during his days as a Wolf and went on to play college ball at Linfield, was the very definition of a gym rat.

He and teammate Cody Peters would have lived on the basketball court if allowed. So, they did a little something extra from time to time to make sure they got more time in the gym than the authorities were giving them.

“Coach (Randy) King, (Ron) Bagby and (Willie) Smith were constantly kicking Cody and I out of the gym, and we knew it was coming but that was our life at that point and time,” Loesch said. “Sometimes we’d put duct tape on the inside of the door so we could get into the gym early before coaches or teachers showed up.”

That dedication paid off, as Loesch, even after missing a huge chunk of his senior season with a broken hand, earned Cascade Conference honors during a season in which the Wolves pulled off a milestone win that has stayed with him.

After dropping their first five meetings with league power King’s, the Wolves shocked the Knights 54-52 in double overtime Jan. 30, 2009, proving once and for all Coupeville could play with the big boys.

Loesch was a two-sport star, teeing it up with the Oak Harbor High School golf team (since CHS doesn’t field a team), but hoops was the driving force in his life.

“Basketball is and always will be my favorite,” Loesch said. “Academics taught me the basics, but basketball was my avenue for it all. If I didn’t have above a 3.2 I couldn’t play sports. It was the only way my parents could get me out of the gym and into the classroom.

“I can definitely say that the life I had through basketball and the events it carried me through are what effected they way I live my life more than anything except my family’s own impact.”

He credits teachers (“Mrs. (Barbara) Ballard and Mr. (Kyle) Nelson were the first ones that challenged me enough to pay any attention in class; their classes were more difficult then some college classes simply because you could tell it was their goal to prepare kids for college”) and his family for helping shape him.

“My father (Tom Loesch) taught me everything I needed to know to compete competitively and my mom (Dawn Hesselgrave) taught me all the basics starting from a younger age,” Loesch said.

His friendship with Peters, the big man in the paint next to his three-point bombing presence on the perimeter, was, and remains, a huge part of his life.

Cody is and always will be like a brother to me,” Loesch said. “Off the court we are two totally different people but we grew up doing what we both loved more than anything at the time; no one can change that.

“We have been teammates forever and it’s something that will never change.”

He learned early, though, that no one can drive a person to success quite as much as the guy looking back at you in the mirror.

“You have to push yourself harder than anyone else will push you to make it to the next level,” Loesch said. “No one will make you get there, you have to take it upon yourself. There is an answer to every excuse.”

After playing college ball at Linfield, Loesch moved into the financial industry, first in Bellevue and now in the sunny surroundings of Maui.

He’s a busy guy, juggling work as an investment analyst for Wealth Strategy Partners with growing his own company, All Island Printworks and Design — now the largest custom merchandise manufacturing company in Hawaii.

While he’s far away from Coupeville these days, Loesch does keep a proud eye on the growth of younger sisters Mia and Kalia Littlejohn, who have torn up the courts as CMS players.

The pair learned their style of playing (New Jersey street ball style is what I call it, and I’m stickin’ with that) from their older brother, who schooled them on the court from an early age. Watching them burn down the nets, he couldn’t be happier.

“I hope they remember my sisters more than they will ever remember me,” Loesch said. “These years are about them; they have worked hard since they could walk to be athletes and I have no doubt in my mind that they’ll be in the record books.

“It feels great to know they are successful at what they love to do and that they allocate some of that towards myself,” he added. “They will both out-perform anything I ever did very easily; I couldn’t express how proud of them I am.”

Seeing their confidence and swagger on the court reminds him of his own days in the red and black. Never back down, never give up, never give in — all family traits.

“They won’t let anyone out hustle or out work them,” Loesch said. “The crazy part to me is how easy it is for them right now.

“They are a lot like me in the sense that they perform when they need to perform; I am excited to see how they perform outside of school ball where the competition is much more realistic to the next level,” he added. “Mia and Kalia are everything to me, just to see them starting to be successful is more than enough for me.”

And when he does see them, he’ll be a dutiful older brother and continue to impress on them the lessons he learned.

“Confidence is avoiding all thoughts that weaken you,” Loesch said. “This is something I tried to instill in my little sisters since they were toddlers; it has definitely stuck as they play with an attitude day in and day out.

“As a family we take pride in that.”

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