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Carmen McFadyen and granddaughter Kate hang out in Anacortes.

Talent runs deep in the family.

Kate McFadyen was honored as an Athlete of the Month for January by Anacortes High School.

The Seahawk freshman is front and center for the school’s cheer squad and has been during both football and basketball season.

But this blog is called Coupeville Sports, and not the Anacortes Gazette, or some other such nonsense, you say.

So why do we stop to pay tribute to Kate the Great?

Because her Coupeville roots run deep.

While she and older sister Pearl attend Anacortes schools, dad Jason McFadyen and aunt Aleshia Mitten are both CHS grads.

Pops was a three-sport star in his days, leading the Wolf football team to an undefeated regular season in 1990 while also torching the nets as a hoops sensation.

Kate’s cousin, Ava Mitten, is a track star and talented artist well on her way to graduating from Coupeville, while Ava’s older bother, Jake, was a standout Coupeville Middle School athlete before transferring to Oak Harbor for high school.

And then there’s her grandparents, Carmen and the late, great Jack, who, like their children, have spent decades being super-supportive of me first at Videoville and now on the sports blogger beat.

So, while Kate may not currently wear a Wolf uniform, she is prairie royalty, born and raised.

How could we not praise her?

They want to help you keep your child active.

Island County Public Health, in conjunction with other local organizations, is offering “Healthy Island Youth Initiative Physical Activity Scholarships” to Whidbey student/athletes in need.

The scholarships, which can be requested to cover things such as registration fees and equipment vouchers, are intended to provide confidential support to youth who might otherwise be unable to participate in physical activities.

They are available to students eligible for free or reduced lunch.

Funds have been donated by the Goosefoot Foundation, Island Thrift, the South Whidbey Parks and Aquatic Foundation, and Whidbey Telecom.

There is a limit of one scholarship per quarter per individual ($200), with a maximum amount of $500 per year.

Individuals may apply for consecutive quarters, but priority is given to new applicants.

To be eligible, a student must be a primary resident of Island County and commit to attend a minimum of 80% of scheduled practices and games/lessons.

No double-dipping, as those already being served by an existing scholarship or fee waiver program that covers the full cost of participation are not eligible.

If you are eligible for free school lunch, you can receive 100% towards registration/equipment fees.

Those who receive reduced school lunch are eligible to receive 50% towards their fees.

 

For more info, to apply, or to donate to the scholarship fund, pop over to:

https://www.islandcountywa.gov/Health/AHC/Pages/HIYI-Scholarship.aspx

Pamela Morrell hits maximum altitude. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

They continue to raise (and sometimes touch) the roof.

The Coupeville High School cheer squad has been busy during basketball season, working both road and home games in support of their fellow Wolves.

The pics seen above and below come to us courtesy John Fisken and his wanderin’ cameras.

Drum on, Jake, always

Jake Ryder-Johnson

The gumball machine was the center of the universe.

There was once a video store stashed in a small town in the middle of a rock in the water up on the left side of the Pacific Northwest.

From 1994-2006, Miriam Meyer paid me very well, and gave me access to thousands of movies (and a free, brand-new DVD player which still works despite my best efforts to overheat it), as long as I hung around Videoville.

There were buckets of slushy mocha granita at hand, mountains of free merch from movie studios anxious to get in good with every video store dude (and dudette) who might be the next Quinten Tarantino, and Bugsy Malone played on the store’s TV screens.

And up front by the door, sending out a siren song to every lil’ kid in town, was the giant gumball machine, offering entertainment and rock-hard tooth rattlers for a quarter a pop.

Slip your coin in the slot, and round and round the brightly colored ball would go as it travelled its path to your waiting hand.

Or, in the case of a lot of the wee ones, to be left in the slot, unclaimed.

They wanted to watch the gumball whizz around and around, and their abandoned candy waited to be snatched up by video store employees.

Out the back door we went, carrying golf clubs and tees, and we smacked the liberated gumballs at a fellow teenaged employee as he ran back and forth, daring us to hit him.

This was — for young’uns who don’t even know what a video store was, much less that one held down the building now housing Harada Physical Therapy — in a time before The Pizza Factory was plopped down.

These days, we’d bust some windows.

Back then it was all open fields and B.C. Wells screaming “Not the nads! Not my precious nads!!” as we aimed, ALWAYS, for his crotch with our tee shots.

No worries, though. He’s gone on to father multiple children, so it all worked out.

But why do I bring this up now?

Because back then, in between the quarters slipping into the slot, and gumballs crackin’ off people’s private parts, the gumball machine was also where you’d find Jake Ryder-Johnson holding court.

He was a high school kid, a musician, a dreamer, forever boppin’ along to a song only he could hear.

Jake was in a car accident with my sister one time, but they both walked away unhurt, and he returned to hangin’ out at Videoville, a sleepy smile on his face.

“I got something for you, Dave. One time thing,” he said.

And then Jake, drumming with his fingers on top of the gumball machine, played, perfectly, the theme song to Scooby-Doo.

It wasn’t the first time he knocked a musical moment out of the park, and not the last time, but it’s the one which has stuck with me, all these years later.

Jake was a little bit Matthew McConaughey, before we knew who McConaughey was, a little bit Spicoli in Fast Times at Ridgemont High, and a whole lot of just himself, unique in every way.

His life wasn’t always the easiest, and it’s been a bit since I last saw him in person, but he’s one of those dudes whose memory doesn’t fade.

Jake died unexpectedly a few weeks back, and that truly sucks.

But he’s always going to be part of my memories of my Videoville years, the one time in my life when my job didn’t seem like work at all.

I’m behind the counter trying to convince the world Bottle Rocket is a classic, the Reese’s Pieces are close by, an opera just kicked into gear on the TV’s (messin’ with the customers…), and Jake?

He’s drumming the theme to Scooby-Doo on the gumball machine, now and forever.

 

To help Jake’s family and friends, check out:

https://www.gofundme.com/f/fundraiser-for-the-family-of-jake-ryder-johnson?qid=884aea6161f2e9f4f37526b4cf2ac9e3

With a little help from current Wolf cheerleaders, Coupeville’s youth cheer squad ruled the hardwood. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Tomorrow’s cheerleaders were ready for their closeups today.

After putting in the practice, 30 junior cheer participants took control of the hardwood Friday at halftime of the Coupeville High School boys’ basketball game.

Working with the current Wolf cheerleaders, the young women wearing “Power Cheer” shirts debuted to the click-click-click of a million lil’ cameras.

One of those belonged to John Fisken, who delivers us the pics seen above and below.