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Posts Tagged ‘1A Olympic League’

Chimacum's most famous export.

Chimacum’s most famous export.

Small talk. It’s a big game.

As Coupeville prepares to move into a new league this fall, you may find yourself face-to-face with fans from new schools, trying to find a common ground.

Of course, you want to be prepared, ready to pepper your conversation with little tidbits of info that make the person on the other side think you know their town inside out.

You might be bluffing, but they’ll never know.

So, here we go, some meaningless facts on the three towns which will send schools into the new 1A Olympic League to vie with your Wolves for athletic supremacy.

You’re welcome.

Chimacum:

*Despite the town being named for the American Indians who once occupied the land (the Chimakum tribe) the school mascot is … the Cowboys. Awkward.

*Author Betty MacDonald grew up on a local chicken farm and turned her childhood into a best-selling book, “The Egg and I.” Later, the book was transformed into an Oscar-nominated film in 1947 starring Fred MacMurray and Claudette Colbert.

Ma and Pa Kettle, who were supporting characters in the original film, spun off into their own series. Nine movies were produced starring Marjorie Main and Percy Kilbride, and the series was so popular it saved Universal Studios from bankruptcy.

Given second life, the studio went on to release “Jaws,” “E.T.” and “Jurassic Park” in later years and celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2012.

*’70s folk singer Linda Perhacs, who worked with Daft Punk on their 2006 film “Electroma,” recorded a song called “Chimacum Rain.” You can listen to it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qb59WCJTs_Q

Port Townsend:

*Forget about Cowboys. The school nickname for 88 years was the Redskins, until a change (amid much heated debate on both sides) this year.

During the search for a new nickname, one of the finalists was Sasquatch, but it wasn’t to be, as the more mundane Redhawks won out.

*Legendary sci-fi writer Frank Herbert (“Dune“) and mountain climber Jim Whittaker, the first American to summit Mt. Everest, both called the town home at one point.

*Glass, a progressive rock trio that played in the ’60s and ’70s, including at the first Jimi Hendrix Memorial Concert, consists of three PTHS grads (Jeff Sherman, Greg Sherman, Jerry Cook).

After being bumped out by disco and punk, they vanished for a bit, then resurfaced in time for Y2K and are back at it again.

To sample some of their recent work, which has a “Twin Peaks” goes to church vibe, try: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Su_5AEpSuy0

Klahowya:

*Officially known as the Klahowya Secondary School, and servicing grades 7-12 in Silverdale, the school was a 2A school up through last year, and just slid under the cutoff to drop to 1A when the new counts were taken in the spring.

*The youngest of the four schools which will call the Olympic League home, KSS was opened for the 1996-1997 school year, and claimed a 2A state title in girls’ soccer in 1999.

*”Klahowya” is Chinook for “Greetings” and the name is currently plastered on an 800-passenger, 87-car ferry that plies the waters in the San Juans. It also graced a sternwheel steamer that operated on the Columbia River from 1910-1915.

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Marisa Etzell (left) should return to help lead the Wolves into a new league. (John Fisken photo)

Marisa Etzell should return to help lead the Wolves into a new league. (John Fisken photos)

Sebastian Davis

Sebastian Davis could be one of the top returning netters.

Young volleyball stars (l to r) Miranda Engle, Tiffany Briscoe and Valen Trujillo celebrate a point last year.

Young volleyball stars (left to right) Miranda Engle, Tiffany Briscoe and Valen Trujillo celebrate a point.

ATM is 99.2% gone and King’s is nowhere to be seen, so that’s a start.

The schedules for Coupeville High School’s first season in the 1A Olympic League are out, and, despite the fact that there could still be plenty of tweaks before we reach September, they make for interesting reading.

With the exception of one boys’ tennis match with Archbishop Thomas Murphy, the only team the Wolves will face from their former league, the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, is Island rival South Whidbey.

The two Whidbey schools will continue to meet in all four fall sports, keeping the rivalry strong, though the games will now be non-conference affairs.

Still, Wolves gotta eat Falcon meat.

Coupeville will play each of its new league rivals — Chimacum, Port Townsend and Klahowya — home and away, while picking up some old-school rivals again like Concrete and Darrington for non-league games.

Also, the first person to figure out where first-time soccer foe Crosspoint Academy is located gets a gold star.

OK, it’s in Bremerton. Now I know, and knowing is half the battle.

The schedules as they stand on June 18:

 

VOLLEYBALL:

9-6 @ Oak Harbor Jamboree
9-9 @ South Whidbey
9-11 Friday Harbor
9-18 @ Orcas Island
9-20 @ South Whidbey Invite
9-25 Mount Vernon Christian
10-7 Bellevue Christian
10-14 @ Klahowya
10-15 Darrington
10-16 Chimacum
10-21 Port Townsend
10-23 @ Chimacum
10-27 Klahowya
10-28 @ Port Townsend

 

GIRLS SOCCER:

9-9 South Whidbey
9-13 @ Sequim
9-16 Bellevue Christian
9-18 @ Orcas Island
9-30 Mount Vernon Christian
10-9 @ Bremerton
10-11 @ Crosspoint Academy
10-16 Chimacum
10-18 @ Klahowya
10-21 Port Townsend
10-23 @ Chimacum
10-27 Klahowya
10-28 @ Port Townsend

 

BOYS TENNIS:

**Port Townsend and Chimacum combine for tennis**

9-10 @ ATM
9-18 Klahowya
9-25 @ South Whidbey
9-30 North Mason
10-2 @ Port Townsend
10-10 Port Townsend
10-13 @ Klahowya
10-15 @ Sequim
10-17 @ Port Townsend

 

To see the football schedule, hop over to:

https://coupevillesports.com/2014/06/13/84-days-til-lathom-kelley-cracks-heads/

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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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Chimacum's Kyah McKinlay

Chimacum’s Kyah McKinlay

With Coupeville leaving the 1A/2A Cascade Conference and joining Port Townsend, Chimacum and Klahowya in the 1A Olympic League this fall, now is a great time to learn a bit about some of the players who will face off with the Wolves in the future.

Kyah McKinlay is an equal opportunity athlete.

The Chimacum High School junior-to-be plays year round, bouncing from soccer to basketball to track, where she throws the javelin, discus and shot put and her favorite sport changes with the season.

“I don’t have a favorite sport, I love every sport I play,” McKinlay said. “I enjoy how many friends I get to make. Also the memories we make as a team.”

A strong student who enjoys a wide range of classes (“My favorites are biology, history, Spanish, leadership and English”), she’s also involved in her school’s ASB.

On the field or court McKinlay prides herself on being receptive to the advice she receives from her coaches.

“My athletic strengths are being a coachable person,” she said. “I’m willing to work hard.

“I would like to work on my physical strength.”

With the Cowboys going head-to-head with their arch-rivals from Port Townsend, as well as new league mates Coupeville and Klahowya, McKinlay would like to be one of the building blocks in Chimacum becoming an athletic power.

“My goals for next year are to win more games and get more commitment out of my teams,” she said.

McKinlay credits her coaches for helping her develop her skills and for always being there for her, win or loss.

“My family, my basketball coaches, Trevor Huntingford and Mike Dowling, and my track coaches, Tony Haddenham and Josh Chapman, have helped me improve throughout the seasons and helped me keep my head up after tough losses.”

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Lathom Kelley, poppin' collars and knockin' helmets off. (Sylvia Arnold photo)

Lathom Kelley, poppin’ collars and knockin’ helmets off. (Sylvia Arnold photo)

Joel Walstad is the favorite to be under center when the Wolves kick off the 2014 season. (John Fisken photo)

Joel Walstad is the favorite to be under center when the Wolves kick off. (John Fisken photo)

Let the countdown begin.

A mere 84 days from now, the Coupeville High School football team will step onto its home turf to kick off a new gridiron season.

And when Lathom Kelley, Wiley Hesselgrave, Josh Bayne and Co. take the field, it’ll be a whole new game for the Wolves.

After eight seasons of being the smallest team, by far, in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference, Coupeville will be on a somewhat more level playing field.

The Wolves will still rep the smallest 1A school in the state. Actually, having lost several students AFTER the classifications were set for the next two years, CHS will  have fewer students than several 2B schools.

But, their new opponents in the 1A Olympic League will be much closer in size to them than Cedarcrest or Lakewood in years past.

Coupeville will play home-and-away against their three new league rivals — Chimacum, Port Townsend and Klahowya — while retaining the Island rivalry for The Bucket with South Whidbey.

That matchup, which kicks off the season, will be one of three non-conference tilts.

The Wolves will play one 2A school, Sequim, which went 0-10 a season ago, and one 2B squad, with a revival of an old school rivalry with Concrete on Halloween.

The schedule as it stands now has CHS home for four straight to kick off the year:

 

9-5 South Whidbey
9-12 Sequim
9-19 Chimacum
9-26 Port Townsend
10-3 @ Klahowya
10-10 @ Port Townsend
10-17 @ Chimacum
10-24 Klahowya
10-31 @ Concrete

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