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Posts Tagged ‘Ashley Smith’

Cherie, Willie, and Ashley Smith.

This one is for her hero.

Coupeville administrators are proposing numerous budget cuts, with one flashpoint being the idea of stripping Athletic Director duties from Willie Smith and giving them to an assistant principal whose own job will be cut from 216 days to 200.

Numerous other AD’s across the state have spoken out against the plan (and there are more to come), but now Ashley Smith is adding her thoughts to the conversation.

She is Willie’s niece and was raised by him and wife Cherie.

 

Normally I never feel the need to be protective over my family but think this time I should be.

To the community he is known as Willie Smith while others call him Mr. Smith.

But for me it’s hero, protector, the idol, but most of all, father.

Wasn’t always father; at nine years old I was to go into foster care, but my uncle said “No, I want her; we want her. So, she can stay in the family I will take that role.”

It’s a challenge adopting a child. But he was willing to become the dad I never had.

At the time he was raising three other kids while doing multiple roles – teaching middle school history and gym, coaching high school football and baseball, and, last but not least, athletic director.

My dad had community to help with raising me; so many people took me in like I had been part of its community for years.

Why? Because Mr. Willie Smith has helped raised more than just his kids, but the communities kids through his roles.

He went to college, got a master’s degree at WSU, started teaching at Coupeville while coaching with my mother Cherie Smith.

So how can outsiders come in saying they know what’s best for this community, but then remove Mr. Smith?

Growing up he taught not just his own kids but the community’s children to show sportsmanship on or off the field.

That even if you win or lose, you show respect to the opposing team.

That hard work pays off to get you back up when knocked down.

Being held accountable for your actions means you give academics first priority before sports.

Sometimes you slack, but my father reminds us that if you don’t get passing grades you won’t respect showing up for your team when it’s time to do so.

You have to show character; this means not being bullies or breaking rules.

My siblings and I were held to this very standard.

My father has taught that being an athlete is important.

That it helps builds friendships, gives you coaches who will push you to thrive for better, to understand to achieve goals you have to hold balance in academics like you would in a job.

It builds character.

My dad sacrificed so much to build this department.

He is the strongest person — your kids need him to model the path so they can succeed no matter what and no one is left out; anyone can play sports.

It would be a big mistake to remove my father as athletic director, to pass it off again to another assistant principal.

It’s a 24/7 job being the public figure of the sports program.

Willie Smith has taken something and evolved it to something that is recognized not just in Coupeville but around the state.

He has gained the respect, trust, and love of the people around.

By showing up to every home game to fighting for new improved sports fields, track, and gear.

To making sure that we get the ability to compete with bigger schools.

To making sure there are equal sports for girls and boys.

During Covid-19 he made sure students still got to play sports, while putting safety first.

Without my father there are no Coupeville sports.

So, I ask the community he’s done so much for now help make sure that outsiders don’t cut his job.

Sports or extracurricular activities help students get better grades.

Participating in extracurricular activities exposes students to new people, including classmates, teachers, coaches, and community leaders.

This allows students to build and maintain relationships, which can lead to valuable connections and opportunities in the future.

So, by cutting or budgeting that field it will cause bigger struggles on students’ abilities.

When you think it’s not up to us as a community, you’re wrong.

Our voices matter; your children’s voices matter.

If they cut his role, then your kids will lose more then you realize.

Write letters to the superintendent and school board, go to meetings, go and support the man who paved the way so all generations before and now those to come will succeed and have the opportunities to reach for the skies.

To find confidence, to build memories, to gain life changing skills that will carry them far in life.

My dad became my hero first, but he became other’s hero too.

No matter where I go, people know my family and my father.

I am proud to be his legacy, but I am also proud to see the legacy he’s created, which will be remembered decades after.

To a man who I love very much and am proud to be your daughter, this is to you.

And this goes out to those in my community — please remember your voice matters.

You have a say in matters of the education of your children — who goes or stays to help them.

Don’t let my dad’s sacrifice and devotion go to waste.

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Ashley Smith (John Fisken photos)

Ashley Smith is ready to tear up the soccer pitch. (John Fisken photos)

Smith

Not even an injured hand can slow down the high energy Smith.

She is the heir to the throne.

Ashley Smith, who will be a junior at Coupeville High School in the fall, follows in the footsteps of siblings who are highly accomplished Wolf athletes.

Megan, James and Ian Smith all were among the best in their respective classes, and now Ashley is here to tear up the soccer pitch.

A bright, super-friendly young woman who one time gave me so much (good-natured) grief over my plan to skip a boys’ JV soccer game that I gave up and stayed after all, the youngest Smith is a ball of fire.

As she celebrates her 17th birthday today, Ashley has a very bright future, both on and off the soccer pitch.

She is willing to get right in the middle of things as a defender, fighting for every loose ball, even when one of her hands is thickly wrapped in a bandage.

With the Wolves having lost several key players to graduation, Smith is primed to see even more playing time this fall, and I’m confident she will take advantage of the opportunity.

Off the field, she is kind, yet sarcastic, able to drop zingers on you while also embracing her friends and family.

Ashley, like all of her family, takes great delight in life and brightens up the world around her.

Happy birthday, Miss Smith. May your cake day be as awesome as you are.

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Freshman Ashley Smith enjoys the view.

Ashley Smith (John Fisken photo)

Ashley Smith is jumping right into the high school experience feet first, trying new things.

The Coupeville High School freshman, younger sister of three former Wolf star athletes (James, Megan and Ian Smith), is juggling drama and soccer during her first semester.

And while she played various sports during her middle school days, Smith is stepping back on the soccer pitch for the first time in years.

She played in third and fourth grade (“It was a way to spend time outdoors and it was very fun”), put the sport away for a bit and has now returned.

Smith, who is playing midfielder for the Wolves, is excited about getting back into the “beautiful game.”

“Since it’s really my first year, I am just learning the game right now,” she said. “I am really working on my possession with the ball.”

She is fond of “being part of a team and enjoying the journeys with the rest of the girls” and wants to “play as hard as I can for my teammates.”

Down the road, she would like to rise in the sport, eventually becoming a team captain.

That goal comes directly from the example set by her sister, an Athlete of the Year in multiple years and one of the best all-around athletes to ever wear the red and black.

“My older sister, Megan, has always encouraged me to do my best at things I do,” Smith said. “I’ve watched her play in sports; she was a good leader and I want to be just like her.”

Her life is about much more than just sports, however.

Smith enjoys her science, art and weight training classes and spends much of her free time “working on my artwork, reading tons of books or listening to music (just not classical) and practicing my dance moves.”

She plans to balance sports with academics, to be as well-rounded and prepared for the future as possible.

“My primary interests are keeping my grades up,” Smith said. “So I have more choices of colleges or to join the military after high school.”

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