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When he's not raining down goal on the soccer pitch, Andre Avila is raining down new beats. (John Fisken photo)

   When he’s not raining down goals on the soccer pitch, Andre Avila is raining down new beats. (John Fisken photo)

Andre Avila’s musical career continues to soar upwards.

The Coupeville High School senior, currently midway through his soccer season, dropped a second hip-hop track on SoundCloud this week.

This time around, the song is called Whippin the Sauce and features support work by fellow CHS basketball players Risen Johnson and JJ Johnson.

It’s a follow-up to Trending, which featured fellow Wolf athlete Valen Trujillo, and hit back in March.

Avila records as Young Dre.

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Andre Avila (John Fisken photo)

Andre Avila (15), droppin’ baskets and droppin’ beats. (John Fisken photo)

Andre Avila is making his move.

The Coupeville High School senior, who just finished a strong basketball season, has reemerged today with the release of a new song.

Called “Trending,” it features all original work and a beat crafted by Avila, who is working as Young Dre.

His secret weapon?

Wolf junior Valen Trujillo, who, when she’s not smacking winners on the tennis and volleyball court, is quite the accomplished singer.

Avila has meshed her soaring vocals with his own verbal skills behind the mic, and the result, which is now available to listen to on SoundCloud, heralds the rise of a pair of talented musical marvels.

To hear the duo at work, pop over to:

https://soundcloud.com/young-dre-aka-andre/trending-by-young-dre-feat-valen-trujillo?utm_source=soundcloud&utm_campaign=share&utm_medium=facebook

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Luke Merriman (John Fisken photos)

Luke Merriman gets the offense out and running. (John Fisken photos)

Gabe Eck

   Gabe Eck (red shoes), effortlessly stylish while lounging. The kids next to him? Impressed, they are.

Brian Shank

Brian “The Destroyer” Shank, about to explode for two of his game-high 15.

Beauman Davis

Beauman Davis comes in hot.

team

Dare to challenge the Wolves? They will cold stare you down, fool.

Ty Eck

Ty Eck, using skills he picked up as a defensive back in football, denies the pass.

Every color of the rainbow is represented by CHS boys' basketball players.

Every color of the rainbow is represented by CHS boys’ basketball players.

Andre Avila

Andre Avila, a dribbling maniac.

Cruise control.

The Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball squad hit it early Friday night, thrashing visiting Concrete with a hail of three-point bombs launched from somewhere out in the parking lot.

In between the exploding treys, travelin’ camera man John Fisken snapped the pics above.

To see more (and possibly purchase some, thereby helping fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=10052&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

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Gabe Eck, seen here in an earlier game, was one of eight Wolves to score Friday as the JV romped to a win. (John Fisken photos)

   Gabe Eck, seen here in an earlier game, was one of eight Wolves to score as the JV romped to a win. (John Fisken photos)

Andre Avila (?)

   Andre Avila (32), playing defense earlier this season, was a wizard with the ball Friday night.

Brian Shank was feeling it.

As the ball sank through the net, another three-point bomb having hit pay dirt, the Wolf marksman looked at his fingertips like they were on fire, his eyes wide with glee.

Then he shook his head softly, grinned and headed back up-court.

It was that kind of night for Shank and his teammates, as the Coupeville High School JV boys’ basketball team shredded visiting Concrete 45-24.

Using the three-ball as their weapon of choice — four Wolves (Shank, Ty Eck, Beauman Davis and Luke Merriman) combined to net seven treys — Coupeville grabbed the lead a minute into the game and never looked back.

Trailing 3-0, the Wolves made their initial move in a hurry, knocking down three buckets in a 20-second span.

Shank banged home a rebound, Gabe Eck picked the pocket of a Lion ball-handler, then zipped in for a layup and then Shank capped things with a gorgeous trey off of an in-bounds play.

He wasn’t ready to stop there, adding a three-point play the hard way (slashing to the hoop for a bucket and an ensuing free throw), eventually raining down eight points in the first eight minutes.

But, even with Shank’s yeoman work, Coupeville was clinging to just a 15-13 lead after one quarter.

Enter Andre Avila and exit Concrete’s hopes.

The sweet-dribbling mighty mite brought his enthusiastic fan section to their feet with back-to-back highlight plays that broke the visitors will.

First Avila drew a pack of defenders, spun just out of their reach at the last second, and perfectly fed Merriman, who dropped a trey that barely ruffled the net as it went down.

On the next play, it was all Avila, as he spun, whirled, twirled, danced and broke approximately 17 ankles (maybe even his own) before dropping in the bucket of the night with a runner.

As the gym erupted and Concrete glumly called for a timeout, the hardest-working guy on the JV shot towards his bench, arms raised in the air, Rocky-style, huge smile on his face as Wolf varsity players chanted his name.

From there, it was put-the-hammer-down time, as Coupeville used a 22-6 tear over the second and third quarter to seal the win, which lifted the young guns to 2-4 on the season.

The Wolves got something from everyone on the roster, with Shank leading the way with a game-high 15.

Ty Eck added 13, including a team-high three treys, while Gabe Eck (6), Davis (3), Merriman (3), Avila (2), Ariah Bepler (2) and James Vidoni (1) all scored.

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Andre Avila

Andre Avila

Andre Avila plays to his own beat.

On the soccer pitch and off, where he’s pursuing a dream of making hip hop music, the Coupeville High School junior moves fast and furious.

“I love the intensity of the game. It brings out the competitive side of me when I’m in the game,” Avila said. “I think my strengths are my aggressiveness and speed.”

This is his first year as a soccer player, but it’s a sport that has a history in his family.

“I’ve always been interested in the sport, since my dad used to play and told me I should play,” Avila said. “I also was encouraged by friends to play, so it’s always been on my mind.

“I tried out for Oak Harbor High’s team (before) and didn’t make it, so you bet I’m out to prove something this season.”

In his short time on the pitch, he’s already developed a taste for scoring, something that tops his to-do list.

“One goal I have is to score a goal or goals this season, that’s my biggest goal,” Avila said. “My second is to play a couple varsity games and letter in soccer, which would require practice, so I will work as hard as I can this season to achieve that goal.”

He realizes he’ll have to fine-tune his skill set to make the jump up to the varsity squad, something he works on each day.

“I need to work on my ball handling,” Avila said “When I have the ball, I have a hard time controlling it, so I push myself to work on as much as I can in practice so I can translate that in games.”

Away from the pitch, he’s an avid hoops player and devotes a fair amount of time to pursuing his love of music.

“I’m really interested in making hip hop music now and as a career if possible,” Avila said. “I have a music production class in which I make music in and that’s one way I spend my time when I’m not in soccer.”

Whether he’s laying down beats or rampaging up-field with the ball, he knows his biggest fan will always be there for him.

“My grandma has been a huge impact on my life,” Avila said. “She has always been there for me no matter what, she really encourages me to better myself and want to achieve my goals in life and never give up even when I want to.

“She ultimately encourages me to do better and I love her for everything she does for me.”

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