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Posts Tagged ‘3-sport athletes’

Barring a major plot twist come track season, Jared Helmstadter will be the only CHS senior to have played 12 sports. (John Fisken photo)

   Barring a major plot twist come track season, Jared Helmstadter will be the only CHS senior to have played 12 seasons. (John Fisken photo)

I want to take a moment to tip my hat to Jared Helmstadter.

Why, you ask?

Well, there’s a lot of reasons. The Coupeville High School senior is a hard worker, a good teammate, a solid citizen, capable of being a cut-up or serious and has always seemed like just a good dude.

But, for the moment, we want to pay tribute to him for an achievement on the horizon.

Unless Jared suddenly takes an unexpected detour on us, when he turns out for track this spring he will become the ONLY person in the CHS Class of 2016 to have played the maximum 12 seasons in his prep career.

From the moment he stepped on campus, Mr. Helmstadter has played tennis and basketball and run track, season after season, a three-sport athlete for four years.

Coupeville Sports hit the internet in August, 2012, right as Jared was about to become a freshman, and he has never let me down.

At a school as tiny as CHS (smallest 1A school in the state), extra bodies on the bench is not always a luxury.

Coupeville needs every athlete it can get, especially those who choose to commit themselves year-round.

In the first year of this blog, 18 Wolves played three sports.

That jumped to 23 in 2013-2014, then retreated a bit the next year, falling to 20.

This year, as we sit in the middle of the school year, there are currently 22 Wolves — 12 girls and 10 boys — who have played both a fall and a winter sport.

How many will add a spring sport and fully punch the clock? Always a good question.

You never know when injuries will occur, and, as they get closer to graduation, some seniors opt to let go of athletics.

Looking at the list, I see at least three athletes who did not play a spring sport last year, and you never really know which way the freshmen will go (there are eight on the list currently) until we actually get there.

In a perfect world, we would hold and have 22 three-sport athletes come spring.

Reality says we could be looking at our lowest total in the last four years.

And that would be a shame for a lot of reasons. And also even more of a reason to hail Jared for his commitment in bucking the trend and leading by example.

The biggest argument for not playing three sports these days is “we’re in an era of specialization.”

Which is a load of crap big-city select coaches use to get money from parents.

I’m going to break it to you right now — barring a miracle, there’s not a single athlete currently at CHS who will see a single day as a professional athlete. Not one.

I would love for one of you to prove me wrong, and, if you do, I will stand next to the overpass wearing a huge sign that says “I’m an idiot!!” in your honor.

But, there ARE a lot of you who could go on to play college sports at various levels.

And guess what? If we look at the former Wolves who are currently doing just that, guess what they all had in common?

Yep, they played multiple sports in high school.

Joel Walstad, Ben Etzell, Nick Streubel, Mitch Pelroy, Hailey Hammer, Monica Vidoni and the only D-1 scholarship athlete we currently have — Tyler King — all were three-sport athletes at CHS.

Jake Tumblin and Josh Bayne spent most of their high school days as two-sport athletes, while softballer Madeline Roberts, the only “specialist” in the bunch, was also a cheerleader.

Of course, when she got to college, she went and surprised everyone by picking up basketball and becoming a two-sport star again for awhile.

Whether you dream of a D1 scholarship or just hope to keep playing at a community college, coaches at every level are adamant that they seek out athletes who play multiple sports.

And you know, I have no clue if Jared plans to play any of his sports after high school.

If he does, he has established work traits a coach desires.

If not, his days as a high school athlete, a time when he showed commitment, loyalty, a willingness to work with others, a desire to participate, will help him in whatever direction he goes in.

Either way, he wins.

I hope as many Wolf athletes as possible, current and future, look to Helmstadter, and match him.

Stretch yourself. Try something new. Your future will be brighter for the effort.

And the rest of us? We’ll be over here raising our glasses to you, Jared. You make your school, your town, your family, your coaches, your fans proud.

P.S. — Don’t skip track season, man. Or else I go back to misspelling your last name again!

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Four Wolves have played three sports for all three years Coupeville Sports has existed. Clockwise, from top left, McKenzie Bailey, Hailey Hammer, Jared Helmstadter and Monica Vidoni. (John Fisken photos)

Four Wolves have played three sports each of the last three years. Clockwise, from top left, McKenzie Bailey, Hailey Hammer, Jared Helmstadter, Monica Vidoni. (John Fisken photos)

There is no off-season.

Playing for the smallest 1A school in the state, 20 Coupeville High School athletes (12 boys and eight girls) made themselves invaluable by playing a full three sports this year.

That’s down slightly from last year, when 23 completed the task, but up from the first year of Coupeville Sports (2012-2013), when the number stood at 18.

There were a couple of quirks this year, as well.

After back-to-back years that saw only two seniors finish as three-sport athletes, five did so this year.

Also, for the first time in the three years I’ve been documenting stuff on this here blog, a Wolf boy played the three traditional sports — football, basketball and baseball. And not just one, but five of them.

Three of those five are freshmen, and the ninth graders, full of enthusiasm, had the most three-sport athletes with nine.

Overall, eight athletes were repeaters from last year’s list, with a few prominent names no-shows for a variety of reasons.

The ultimate warriors?

Seniors Hailey Hammer and Monica Vidoni and juniors McKenzie Bailey and Jared Helmstadter, the only four who have been three-sport athletes every year that Coupeville Sports has been around.

With the pool of athletes such a small one at CHS, I have the greatest admiration for those who are playing three sports.

It’s easy to come in for one sport a year.

It’s much more of an accomplishment to spend the entire year doing homework on buses and ferries, going to practice every day, and, sometimes, playing a sport that’s not your personal favorite to be there for your teammates and coaches.

I applaud you all, and expect to see most of you right back here next year.

Girls:

McKenzie Bailey — Volleyball, basketball, tennis
Kyla Briscoe
— Volleyball, basketball, softball
Tiffany Briscoe
— Volleyball, basketball, softball
Lauren Grove
— Volleyball, basketball, track
Hailey Hammer
— Volleyball, basketball, softball
Lauren Rose
— Volleyball, basketball, softball
Monica Vidoni
— Volleyball, basketball, softball
Allison Wenzel
— Volleyball, basketball, track

Boys:

Aaron Curtin — Tennis, basketball, baseball
Nick Etzell — Tennis, basketball, baseball
Jared Helmstadter — Tennis, basketball, track
Joey Lippo — Tennis, basketball, baseball
CJ Smith — Football, basketball, baseball
Hunter Smith — Football, basketball, baseball
Ethan Spark — Tennis, basketball, soccer
Cameron Toomey-Stout — Football, basketball, baseball
Isaac Vargas — Football, basketball, soccer
James Vidoni — Football, basketball, baseball
Joel Walstad — Football, basketball, soccer
Gabe Wynn — Football, basketball, baseball

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The warriors of CHS -- 23 strong.

The warriors of CHS — 23 strong.

There is hope.

Small schools (and Coupeville is the smallest 1A school in the state) need kids to play more than one sport.

In a time when largely unnecessary specialization and year-round play have come to dominate, an “old school” work ethic — where you play three sports because there’s three seasons — is the lifeblood of smaller schools.

So, it’s nice to see that 23 Wolves — 13 girls and 10 boys — played three sports in 2013-2014, up from 18 the year before.

Now, for the second straight year, only two seniors IN THE ENTIRE SCHOOL completed the journey.

Last year it was Caleb Valko and Bessie Walstad, this time around Nick Streubel and Breeanna Messner.

But that means a sizable chunk of those who embraced the three-sport model were freshmen and sophomores.

If they stay the route — and 11 CHS athletes who achieved that in 2012-2013 came back to repeat in ’13-’14 — the numbers will continue to build.

One oddity (at least for someone who graduated high school in ’89, when it was commonplace) is the fact that, for a second straight year, no CHS boy played the traditional three-sport run of football, basketball and baseball.

In fact, only one of the 10 three-sport boys, freshman Gabe Wynn, even played baseball.

By contrast, six girls played the traditional run of volleyball, basketball and softball.

What that means, I don’t know.

Now, of course, there are reasons for some athletes not playing three sports.

Injuries and illness cost a couple, while some people simply don’t want to play basketball, which is the only sport Coupeville plays in the winter.

But we’re not here to talk about the shouldas and the couldas. We’re here to honor those who did suit up every season. The warriors.

P.S. — An asterisk means they also played three sports for CHS in 2012-2013.

GIRLS:

McKayla Bailey (*) — Soccer, basketball, softball
McKenzie Bailey (*) — Volleyball, basketball, tennis
Tiffany Briscoe — Volleyball, basketball, softball
Aura Corredor — Volleyball, basketball, tennis
Emily Coulter — Volleyball, basketball, softball
Lauren Grove — Volleyball, basketball, track
Hailey Hammer (*) — Volleyball, basketball, softball
Breeanna Messner (*) — Volleyball, basketball, softball
Mattea Miller — Soccer, basketball, track
Carlie Rosenkrance — Soccer, basketball, track
Makana Stone (*) — Soccer, basketball, track
Madeline Strasburg (*) — Volleyball, basketball, softball
Monica Vidoni  (*) — Volleyball, basketball, softball

Boys:

Beauman Davis — Tennis, basketball, soccer
Jared Helmstadter
(*) — Tennis, basketball, track
Oscar Liquidano
(*) — Football, basketball, soccer
Dalton Martin
(*) — Tennis, basketball, track
Grey Rische
— Tennis, basketball, track
Brian Shank
— Football, basketball, track
Matt Shank
— Football, basketball, track
Nick Streubel
(*) — Football, basketball, track
Joel Walstad
— Football, basketball, soccer
Gabe Wynn
— Tennis, basketball, baseball

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