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Posts Tagged ‘Amy King’

Amy King in her natural habitat. (John Fisken photo)

Amy King in her natural habitat. (John Fisken photo)

The view of Mt. Rainier from King's hospital room. (Amy King photo)

The view of Mt. Rainier from King’s hospital room. (Amy King photo)

No softball today.

A scheduled doubleheader in Sultan has been postponed for now, after Coupeville High School softball co-coach Amy King was admitted to the hospital over the weekend.

King, who had been sick for several days, went to the ER with a 103 temperature.

After tests at Whidbey General revealed an abscess in her abdomen, she was transferred to Swedish Medical Center in Seattle.

In typical low-key style, she handled the set-back without missing a beat, snapping photos from her hospital window.

Meanwhile, as she’s waiting for the doctors to take the next step, she’s chafing to get back on the ball field, especially at a time when Whidbey is awash in sun.

So I got a fun trip in an ambulance to the specialists,” King said. “They are hoping to put me out and drain it. Hope that’s all they need to do!

“We have softball games to play!!”

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Wolf coaches (l to r) Amy King, David King and Brittany Black. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

   Wolf coaches (l to r) Amy King, David King and Brittany Black. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

The softball gurus.

The softball gurus.

The Kings are unique.

Of all the Coupeville High School coaches, the husband/wife team of David and Amy King stands out. Whether it’s girls’ basketball or softball (Amy also coaches volleyball), they work as a seamless team.

While other sports have good varsity/JV coaching combos who work well together, the duo bring something special to the field and court, working as a unit but both retaining their own style.

Plus Amy King is the absolute best ever at sending in detailed write-ups on her team’s performances when they’re playing on the road.

BEST EVER. End of conversation.

As they briefly wind down from having coached their squads to the best records of any Whidbey Island high school hoops teams this past season, softball is just around the corner.

A perfect time for David King to gush (a little) about his on-court and off-court partner in crime (and a couple of other people just for good measure.)

Mr. King, you have the floor:

Besides the players that made this season so successful, there are many others that contributed to our success.

Jae (LeVine) as our manager and keeping score at away games.

Then there was Brittany (Black). She stepped in with the JV team for the first three or so weeks and really helped Amy out while she was recovering from surgery.

Between the two, Amy provided direction and Brittany provided a huge lift with direction on the court and then bench during games.

Once Amy felt well enough, Brittany then was able to help more on the varsity side. Her help was appreciated by Amy and me.

There are others to thank, from those helping set up and cleaning up the gym, driving the buses and those in the office keeping us on the right path with paperwork and schedules.

But for me, my biggest thanks goes to Amy.

She is one that does not like the spotlight directed towards her. With that said, she deserves the spotlight, at least this one time!

She coached the JV volleyball team this year, then between volleyball and basketball she had a surgery.

While planning the surgery she always had the players and team in mind as to when the best time was for her surgery so she would miss the least amount of time.

We had a week of practice, she had her surgery and missed three practices and was there the day after Thanksgiving for practice.

Not many people would do this. I had no doubt she would be there. She has always put others ahead of herself.

I am the luckiest varsity coach out there.

What Amy brings to this program is an organizational skill set that is second to none.

She is the one that types up our practice plans, gets all of the important paperwork to the players. And since I’m not on Facebook, she is part secretary for me as well and relays information to the players for me through Facebook.

She also makes sure we have what is needed for every game.

These are just a few of the things she does behind the scenes that allows me to be me and to allow our program to thrive. And I haven’t even talked about her coaching success.

As a coach, she treats each and every player the same. With respect. And the players respect right back.

A player may be very skilled or maybe a player is new to the sport, either way she gives each player the same opportunity and time.

It is very hard to juggle a JV team when you have at times 13-15 players and be able to keep them all happy and still find a way to improve their skills.

She knows the game, once an outstanding player and now an outstanding coach.

She gets the players to play hard, play as a team and gets them ready to compete on game day. She gets after them when they need and knows when to approach with a softer side.

The help she provides me on the varsity bench is priceless and during the game she also has the uncanny skill to help me coach and keep stats for me. She makes my job fluid and so very easy.

Over the years she has touched so many players lives.

She cares about them as basketball players and more importantly as young women.

Every day we are in the gym the kids come up to her and greet her with huge smiles and hugs. They are so excited that they have the opportunity to be coached by her.

She is a tireless worker, has her normal job, has already coached two full high school seasons and in less than two weeks will be out there on the softball field making the upcoming season a success.

She deserves the biggest thank you of them all. Thank you!

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Tiffany Briscoe, one of many promising freshmen on this year's Wolf JV squad. (John Fisken photos)

  Tiffany Briscoe, one of many promising freshmen on this year’s Wolf JV squad. (John Fisken photos)

Erin Josue: "No, YOU may not have MY basketball. Silly girl..."

Erin Josue: “No, YOU may not have MY basketball. Silly girl…”

(Amy King photo)

    Back row (left to right) Aura Corredor, Kailey Kellner, Erin Josue, Mattea Miller, Jenn Spark, McKenzie Bailey, Skyler Lawrence. Front: Lauren Grove, Emily Coulter, Sophia Jebrail, Tiffany Briscoe. (Amy King photo)

And their normal personalities...

And their normal personalities…

“The score doesn’t tell the story of the game.”

That’s a lesson Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball coach Amy King imparted to her squad after they closed out their season Saturday with a 40-19 loss at King’s.

A bumped-up schedule, to allow for rest days before the start of the district playoffs for the Wolf varsity, forced Coupeville to play back-to-back games in less than 24 hours.

Than, there’s the reality that, after blasting Granite Falls Friday night, the Wolves were facing a King’s JV squad that could hold its own, or beat, several of the varsity teams in the Cascade Conference.

Sure enough, the host Knights came out ramped-up, scoring six before Coupeville managed to get a shot off.

But then, as they have done in almost every game this season, the Wolves reached down, found their composure and got tough. They might not have been able to hang with the sports factory children of privilege for the entire game, but they didn’t roll over.

“One thing I love about this team is that any of us coaches instruct them on the floor, during quarter breaks or during time outs and they just go out and perform,” King said. “During the game we could tell that we were getting in King’s heads.

“We scored in every quarter, we hustled our butts off the entire game and we forced turn-overs.”

The scrappiness went to the very final play, as, instead of conceding an easy bucket at the buzzer, sophomore Jenn Spark chased down and denied a runaway Knight.

“They got a steal and one of their players driving towards their basket and right behind her came JennJenn was flying!,” King said. “She caught up, got her hand in for a steal of her own, both players went down and the ball rolled out of bounds.

“So much better than a King’s shot!”

Spark’s play was symbolic of the never-say-die effort that came from every Wolf up and down the roster. It’s been that way all season and nothing changed in the finale.

Lauren (Grove) was a dynamo on defense all night,” King said. “She stayed on their ball handlers, slowing them down, taking a few steals off them and causing turn-overs.

“Tonight we had many defenders that just made me so proud,” she added. “Sophia (Jebrail) took a charge in the second half. Kailey (Kellner) stole the ball several times, driving it down the floor. McKenzie (Bailey), Lauren and Emily (Coulter) got loud on their defense, I’m sure making sure the people they were guarding knew they were there.”

When the ball came off the rim, freshmen Skyler Lawrence and Tiffany Briscoe flew to the ball.

“I have never seen Skyler play the level of defense she did tonight in the second half. She was everywhere!,” King said. “And when she pulled a defensive rebound she did not wait to find a guard to pass it to — she drove it to safety before passing it off.

“In the fourth quarter every possession that King’s had was challenged,” she added. “Tiffany turned up her defensive effort, if that is even possible. As our girls subbed in and out, every one of them took over where the other left off.”

Kellner paced the Wolf scoring attack, hitting for six, while Coulter joined her in banging down a long trey. Carlie Rosenkrance, Mattea Miller, Jebrail, Spark and Lawrence each chipped in with a bucket.

“Our girl’s confidence and skills have come so far from those first few games,” King said. “That effort was there all night from every Coupeville player.

“I am truly going to miss this group of girls!”

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Happy Wolves (l to r) McKayla Bailey, Breeanna Messner and Amanda Fabrizi.

Happy Wolves (l to r) McKayla Bailey, Breeanna Messner and Amanda Fabrizi. (Amy King photos)

(L to r) Jennifer Spark, McKenzie Bailey, Kailey Kellner, Jae LeVine.

(L to r) Jennifer Spark, McKenzie Bailey, Kailey Kellner, Jae LeVine.

Lauren Grove (left) and Emily Coulter.

Lauren Grove (left) and Emily Coulter.

Kacie Kiel

   (L to r) Kacie Kiel, Monica Vidoni, Wynter Thorne, Makana Stone, Carlie Rosenkrance, Mattea Miller.

Erin Josue (left) and Tiffany Briscoe.

Erin Josue (left) and Tiffany Briscoe.

Josue, Briscoe, Sophia Jebrail, Skyler Lawrence.

Josue, Briscoe, Sophia Jebrail, Skyler Lawrence.

(L to r) Hailey Hammer, Julia Myers, Madeline Strasburg.

(L to r) Hailey Hammer, Coulter, Julia Myers (with goggles), Madeline Strasburg.

Record-wise, they are the best basketball team on Whidbey Island.

With eight wins this season — and three regular-season games left to play — the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad stands atop the heap, bettering anything compiled by Oak Harbor or South Whidbey, boys or girls.

And it’s not just the Wolf varsity that’s successful, as the CHS JV girls’ are a pack of defensive dynamos who have held two separate teams scoreless for an entire half this season.

As captured in the above photos by Coupeville JV coach Amy King, the Wolves are a team off the floor as well as on.

For the strength of the pack is the Wolf, and the strength of the Wolf is the pack.

Not just a school motto, but a way of life.

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Erin Josue, seen here in an earlier game, and her teammates rallied in the second half Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

   Erin Josue, seen here in an earlier game, and her teammates rallied in the second half Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

Call it a split.

After badly losing the first half Tuesday at South Whidbey, the Coupeville High School JV girls’ basketball team responded to a halftime talk from coach Amy King and came out and convincingly won the second half.

Unfortunately, when both scores were added together, the first-half deficit was too much for the Wolves to overcome, as they fell 30-21. Still, the second half rally was a positive.

“I guess my stern motherly tone did something to them at halftime,” King said with a laugh. “Because we came out and played a much better half!”

Trailing 22-6 coming out of the break, Coupeville turned up its defensive heat, keyed by freshmen Lauren Grove and Mattea Miller.

“They did a great job on defense – Lauren put pressure on the ball and Mattea picked them up when they got past Lauren,” King said. “Mattea, Tiffany (Briscoe) and Kailey (Kellner) came up with some key stops and steals later in the game.

“We settled down a little on our offense and actually ran the plays, making better and stronger passes and better choices,” she added. “The girls who often forget to look at scoring started looking at the basket.”

Kellner and fellow frosh Skyler Lawrence controlled the boards in the second half, as the Wolves put a little bit of fear into the Falcons.

Skyler had great rebounds and proved that when she wants the ball, just stay out of her way,” King said. “Kailey also went in for some hard-fought rebounds.

“A South Whidbey player made the mistake of trying to grab onto one that Kailey had and paid the price with landing on the floor. Hard.”

The second-half intensity made up for a “pretty flat” opening 16 minutes, and bodes well for Coupeville as they prepare to face off with Friday Harbor in a non-conference game Wednesday.

Miller paced the Wolves against South Whidbey with seven points, while Carlie Rosenkrance drained all six of her points in the fourth quarter. McKayla Bailey popped for four and Grove and Kellner each chipped in with a bucket.

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