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Posts Tagged ‘Aimee Bishop’

(Photo courtesy Moose Moran)

The 1984 fightin’ Wolves. (Photo courtesy Moose Moran)

The Wayback Machine continues to find treasures from the past.

As we bop around through Coupeville High School’s athletic history, we find a bit here, a bit there.

Some stats, a handful of memories, and, once in awhile, a pristine photo of what once was.

That’s what we’ve got for you today, as we present an unearthed snapshot of the 1984 CHS girls’ hoops squad.

Enjoy.

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So much going on in one photo.

   So much going on in the life of Emma Smith (seated). Ashlie Shank shows her a photo, Ally Roberts does her hair and Lauren Rose uses her forehead as a target. (John Fisken photos)

Briscoe

Kailey Kellner (left) and Tiffany Briscoe ain’t afraid of no cameras.

Meyer

   She’s a soccer player. She’s a cheerleader. She’s a classroom juggernaut and a superhero. She’s Videoville alumni McKenzie Meyer.

Allison

Allison Wenzel holds a clinic on proper hitting technique.

Jimmy Myers

   Fall and a young man’s thoughts turn to mixing ballet with tennis. It’s Jimmy Myers, Renaissance man.

newspaper

   How do we know this is staged? High school kids don’t read newspapers anymore. Ooh, zing, “Evil” Canadian corporate newspaper overlords.

Sylvia

   CHS cheerleader Sylvia Hurlburt (left) and super fan Kristi Etzell are animated (if cold) during a Wolf soccer game.

face

Not all fans embrace the photo op in the same way…

aimee

Aimee Bishop, eternally thrilled to see the paparazzi.

We’re going to find every last one of them. Maybe.

As we twiddle our thumbs a bit in the period between fall and winter sports, it’s been a good time to go through all the pics from the previous season and look for some interesting ones which fell through the cracks.

John Fisken clicks hard for the money (or Diet Coke, as it were), so let’s not let too many of them get away.

To the photo vault, boys!

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Hall o' Fame inductees (top to bottom) Aimee Bishop, Jennie Prince, Ron Bagby, Marlene Grasser

  Hall o’ Fame inductees (top to bottom) Aimee (Messner) Bishop, Jennie (Cross) Prince, Ron Bagby and Marlene Grasser stack up next to an old school Sherry (Bonacci) Roberts.

And that's how you play defense. (Photo courtesy Sherry Roberts)

And that’s how you play defense. (Photos courtesy Sherry Roberts)

Three Hall o' Famers in one photo

   Four Hall o’ Famers (so far) in one photo, as Grasser (24), Bishop (32) and Roberts (30) join their already-inducted coach, Phyllis Textor.

Roberts (

   Modern-day Wolf spikers? Roberts (4) and Prince (12) could probably still thump you.

The page hits? They’re never gonna end on this story.

The 11th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame manages to incorporate some of the most beloved, reader-friendly legends in the history of this here town.

It’s almost like I planned it that way…

So, without any further ado, rising up to live under the Legends tab at the top of the blog, I give you Marlene Grasser, Jennie (Cross) Prince, Sherry (Bonacci) Roberts, Aimee (Messner) Bishop and Ron Bagby.

And we just broke the internet.

Our first inductee, Bagby, was the CHS football coach for 25+ years and that alone would probably grant him access to these hallowed digital walls.

He produced an unbeaten team in 1990 and shaped generations of gridiron warriors, but there was, of course, much more to the man.

Basketball and track coach, athletic director and, before that, the dude who led the ENTIRE NATION in punt returns during his sophomore year at the University of Puget Sound.

Bagby in a football uniform was all Forks had going for it before they discovered twinkly vampires, and, barring a leg injury, he was slated to be drafted by the United States Football League, the NFL rival that gave us Doug Flutie, Herschel Walker and Donald Trump.

Instead, Coupeville got him and the rest is (Wolf) history.

Joining him are four of the most talented athletes to traverse the hallways at CHS in the late ’80s, all of whom have gone on to spectacular post-high school success.

Grasser (Class of ’87) was a two-time Athlete of the Year who sparkled in four sports (volleyball, basketball, softball and track) before going on to play college volleyball.

Her running mate, Roberts, once said this about her:

Marlene was my athletic role model. She was such an amazing and gifted athlete and one of the nicest people ever. She always helped me and encouraged me to strive for excellence and become the best I could be.”

Grasser flipped the switch, revealing she still had, and treasured, letters of encouragement Roberts (Class of 1989) wrote her in their younger days.

“I’m the one who thought of Sherry as my role model. She was always so bright and cheery and made the best of any situation. I admired that and strove to be that way too!”

The one-time Bonacci was a four-year letter winner in basketball and volleyball who also went on to play college ball.

An Athlete of the Year honoree herself, the Mrs. Hustle winner later married a Mr. Hustle Winner (Jon Roberts) and their daughter Lindsey is now a CHS freshman poised to wipe out all of their records while flashing the epic smile inherited from her ever-bubbly mom.

If Roberts was usually smiling, Prince (Class of 1990), living up to the Cross family tradition, was a little more intense when glaring at opponents (and sometimes, teammates).

A supremely nice woman off the court, Carson Risner’s mom made no bones about it — she was gonna break you in half and feel damn fine about doing it.

One of the most committed competitors the Wolves have ever had, she was a 12-time letter winner (four each in basketball and volleyball, three in track and one in softball) and her school records in the shot put and discus have never been touched.

Want to capture Jennie back in the day?

In the words of former teammate Georgie Smith:

“I lived in terror of volleyball practice in high school. Bump – set – spike with Jennie and the evil grin she would get when it was her turn to spike!”

And they were friends…

Rounding out our quartet is Bishop (Class of 1988), a three-sport athlete (volleyball, basketball, track) who has gone on to be a very successful (and frequent) runner.

Along the way she produced an Athlete of the Year winner in daughter (and future Hall o’ Famer) Breeanna Messner, earned huge internet fame as the most dependable photo subject in the history of Coupeville Sports and proven herself indispensable keeping Wolf athletics up and running.

And that’s actually how we’re going to induct her into the Hall, as a contributor.

It’s not meant to diminish her athletic accomplishments, but Bishop has made a huge impact as an athletic coordinator at CHS.

All you have to do is go to a game at a different school (say, football at South Whidbey…) and you realize how efficiently she does her job.

The lights stay on, the programs get printed, ice gets to injured players and everyone, and I mean EVERYONE, gets a smile along the way.

Putting her in as a contributor re-links her with her former running mate behind the scenes, Kim Andrews, who was already inducted.

The Kim ‘n Aimee Show, still playing up in the Hall o’ Fame.

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Kalia

“I’m Kalia Littlejohn and you’ve entered a dimension not only of sight and sound, but of mind. That’s a signpost up ahead. Your next stop: The Photo Zone.” (John Fisken photos)

buddy

Five of the six Wolf seniors, representing. Back (l to r), Monica Vidoni, Madeline Strasburg, Kacie Kiel, Julia Myers. Front: Wynter Thorne. MIA: Hailey Hammer.

Some (not all) of the people who make Coupeville High School basketball games run smoothly.

Some (not all) of the people who make Coupeville High School basketball games run smoothly.

Eileen

   The woman who makes CHS sports roll, Eileen Stone, in the one single moment when she’s not busy doing 12,000 things.

Mini cheer

  CHS cheer coach Cheridan Eck leads a group of young cheerleaders to the floor for their halftime show.

coaches

   Wolf hoops coaches Anthony Smith (left) and Bob Martin have a meeting of the minds.

Wynter

Kiel and Thorne pose for a classy senior portrait.

Mia

Like a moth to a flame, the click of the camera draws in Mia Littlejohn.

freshmen...

Freshmen…

"I'm just here so I don't get fined." Aaron Curtin sweeps us away.

“I’m just here so I don’t get fined.” Aaron Curtin sweeps us away.

A million little details go into every Coupeville High School basketball game.

The Wolf players have to be present, of course, but so do the support crew, the fans, maybe even the press (both professional and fly-by-night).

Busy photo man John Fisken, bouncing between two towns in the same night (he still insists on shooting some photos in Oak Harbor for some reason…) captured all of the hullabaloo for you.

Glossy photos. Easier than reading.

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Uriel

Uriel Liquidano delights the crowd with his balancing skills. (John Fisken photos)

Sylvia

   Sylvia Hurlburt (left) and Makana Stone enjoy some quality, eye-rolling time together.

Aimee

Aimee Bishop, Queen of Shenanigans.

kacie

Wolf hoops stars Kacie Kiel (left) and Mia Littlejohn bask in the glow of their league title.

Jimmy

   Always protect the sunglasses! Jimmy Myers perfects the one-armed half-court heave.

jae

Jae “Crusher” LeVine puts Hailey Hammer in a friendly(?) headlock.

massage train

The Wolves get a massage train going.

sophomores

  “Hey, where’s my free neck massage?!?! I’ve been moving these shoulders all game!!”

On the court, history was being made.

When the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team crunched Klahowya Friday, it clinched the first league title for a Wolf hoops team since 2002.

Off the court, the action was hoppin’ as well, as travelin’ photo man John Fisken swung his lens around on the fans, school officials and a few of the players themselves.

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