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Posts Tagged ‘Athletic Director’

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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Willie Smith – the body may be at rest, but the brain is constantly firing at 100 MPH. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“It’s a terrible idea.”

Friday Harbor High School Athletic Director Brock Hauck is not a fan of a proposed Coupeville Schools budget cut which would remove Willie Smith as AD, and hand his duties off to an already-busy assistant principal.

Hauck and Smith have become friends over the years, but the Friday Harbor AD is all about the business when he looks at the potential fallout of such a move.

“I don’t think most people are aware of the time and effort put in by AD’s behind the scenes,” Hauck said. “With the constant phone calls and emails, it’s almost a 24/7 job.”

Asking an assistant principal to balance the AD job with their other duties would make for a juggling act, one which Hauck doesn’t believe would benefit Coupeville, or the Northwest 2B/1B League.

Smith is currently president of the NWL and works to solve issues for the other six schools as well as his own.

Willie is very valuable, not just to Coupeville, but to our league,” Hauck said. “He has a lot of knowledge, a great networking system, and is always consistent.

“(Losing him) would be a big loss for our league, and our teams in general,” he added. “He’s a quality man.

“I don’t believe it will go well, and I think you will see sports programs fall off without him.”

While Hauck, like all coaches and athletic directors, appreciates that budget cuts often have to be made, he doesn’t think the relatively small savings Coupeville would generate from the switch balances out with the repercussions.

“I just don’t think that’s the place to cut.”

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Somewhere, someone is talking about Willie Smith. It makes his spider sense tingle. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The brotherhood (and sisterhood) of athletic directors has his back.

Coupeville Schools administrators are contemplating budget cuts, and one proposal — to remove athletic director duties from Willie Smith and add them to an assistant principal’s already long list of duties — has received considerable blowback from the community.

But it’s not just locals who have responded.

Smith’s fellow athletic directors, who know the 10,001 skills the job requires, and what Willie has accomplished during his tenure — are speaking out.

Our first AD hails from a Western Washington school which has had big-time athletic success while facing many of the same challenges Coupeville does.

They requested anonymity, saying “I believe everything I wrote, I just don’t want to be wrapped up in the politics.”

 

AD #1 statement:

 

It’s fantastic you are advocating for Willie. He deserves it.

I have first-hand seen Willie Smith’s Coupeville transformation.

This truly is what Willie has done, transformed Coupeville athletics.

It’s an unfortunate situation that most districts across the state are facing — budget cuts.

With that, some individuals matter more than a position. They affect culture and leadership and bring identity.

This is who Willie is for Coupeville. He’s a transformational leader.

Willie has guided Coupeville into the Northwest League.

He’s headed consistent programs across the board that are always competitive.

Sport after sport, Coupeville has large participation numbers, is competing for a state berth, and has brought excitement into the community.

These are student-athletes who volunteer time to impact the younger students, have high GPA’s, and always give back.

Go to a home event in Coupeville, and the community shows up.

The community supports and wants the best for its athletes. The athletes show up and compete exceptionally well.

This is entirely a change that has happened since Willie came in.

Willie has guided Coupeville back into the Northwest League, increased participation numbers, has built athletic programs up despite COVID, is an excellent president for the Northwest League, and has formed a unity with Coupeville’s programs.

Where Coupeville athletics was to where it is now is transformational in its identity, character, and representation of what small-town athletic programs should be like.

What makes this even more impressive, Willie has guided Coupeville through tough times before and has done so with consistency and excellence.

Willie is a great athletic director, and I hope there’s an opportunity to retain Willie.

He is a highly fair, positive, consistent, and proven leader who deserves to be held as an athletic director.

Coupeville has an excellent administration.

Mr. (Steve) King, Mr. (Geoff) Kappes, and Mr. (Leonard) Edlund have guided the secondary schools very well.

They’ll continue to impact Coupeville’s students positively.

Mr. King has always been someone who I have had the utmost respect for, and I trust that he is doing everything he can to continue impacting Coupeville positively and keeping Coupeville a great place.

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Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith, killin’ it as a male model. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This is not the way.

Sports didn’t get you into this financial hole, and taking arguably the most-efficiently run program in the Coupeville School District and kneecapping it isn’t going to solve anything.

We have one of the most-respected Athletic Directors in the state in Willie Smith, a man who is currently the Northwest 2B/1B League President.

A man who has decades in the game, a man who knows everyone and can get things done with a phone call, an email, or a nod of the head from across the prairie.

He absorbs any and all criticism, remains unflappable and upbeat, even in the worst of times, and has built strong, successful programs even as other schools around us struggle mightily to maintain numbers.

Athletic programs which largely pay their own way, in terms of ticket sales and coaches being willing to give back money from their budgets to help cover transportation costs.

But when it comes time to propose the opening cuts in Budget Wars 2023, we’re going to bounce Willie from his AD job and replace him with an already stretched-thin assistant principal whose own hours would then be cut?

Poppycock, as the kids would say.

Well, maybe the kids from the 1920’s, not the 2020’s, but anyway.

This is by no means an attack on Leonard Edlund, the aforementioned assistant principal.

He is a righteous dude who, in my opinion, has been a great hire for the district.

Working with CHS/CMS principal Geoff Kappes, he does the never-ending work to keep our upper schools operating in a safe, efficient, productive manner.

The last thing he needs is to be asked to do twice as much work for less money, while having to navigate a complex state-wide web of AD’s, coaches, athletic secretaries, bus barn bigwigs, administrators, athletes, and parents who Willie is already on a first-name basis with.

And we’re not even talking about how many new emails and/or texts the man would have to delete on a daily basis from me alone.

That part of the job alone is staggering, and something no other AD in the state has to endure.

Let Mr. Edlund do what he was hired to do – be an assistant principal. Don’t subject him to my inane ranting!

And let Willie do what he does – run an athletic program which, unlike some other departments in Cow Town schools, is a booming success.

I’m not just talking about wins and losses, or league titles, or the fact football and boys’ basketball broke 30-year dry spells and returned to the state tourney with Willie at the helm of Wolf athletics.

We are not, have never been, and likely never will be, a true athletic powerhouse in the state.

We’re not King’s or Archbishop Thomas Murphy – private schools funded (allegedly) by money from blood diamond mines owned by local parents.

And we’re not Lynden or Lynden Christian, where seemingly waves of genetically flawless teenagers emerge from the haze (or a mad doctor’s laboratory), every ponytail, every chin cleft, identical.

We’re scrappy, a farm town where not that many of the kids actually work on farms anymore, but where we can open a can of whup ass on entitled rivals every now and then.

Where Willie’s greatest success as an AD has come has been in maximizing what he has, of getting coaches and players to buy in to his plan to be competitive, and to do it in the right way.

The pandemic crushed athletics at many schools, but thanks to his leadership, Coupeville has emerged stronger on the other side.

Just look at Wolf teams this spring.

The track and field rosters, at both the high school and middle school, are the biggest they’ve been in decades.

High school baseball and softball are able to field win-happy varsity and JV teams while many league rivals are struggling to field just one squad, and girls’ tennis has no issue filling all of its varsity slots.

It’s been that way all school year for almost every sport, with football, in particular, being a bounce-back story.

After several years of rosters which could barely withstand the loss of a player here or there to injury, the Wolves topped 30 players this season and drew in massive, ticket-buying, crowds.

Look, I get it.

Schools are here for education, not sports.

But sports, especially when attention is paid to both the All-State player and the kid who has never run a lap around a track in their life, is invaluable.

Coming out of a pandemic, with mental health issues for teens a huge concern, getting kids out of their bedroom and into the sun (OK, into the prairie wind and rain…), making them a part of something bigger than themselves, is invaluable.

Sports are not bigger than education, but sports keep kids in school, and they are a lifeline for many teens.

I may not fully remember that algebra equation I solved in Mr. Luikko’s class at Tumwater back in the late 80’s.

But that time I shocked my own coach by thumping a rich-school kid on the tennis court — literally drilling him with the ball three times in my win — while my teammates climbed up the fence encircling the court?

That I remember.

And I was that kid who only stayed in school so I could play a sport, any sport.

If you’ve read any of my thousands of stories, I’m a writer thanks to hitting future Rose Bowl-winning quarterback Brad Otton in the face with an overhead during practice.

If I wanted to keep doing that, I had to stop skipping school, and what the heck, my tennis coach, Lionel Barona, was also the journalism teacher.

So, I’m just saying, my writing heir is out there right now, and he or she is probably the kid throwing worms at their friends during practice.

And if there is any AD in this state who will embrace his worm throwers and help them grow into semi-normal adults, it’s Willie freakin’ Smith.

The man, the myth, the ever-grinning legend endured a pandemic to show us the way.

Respect his authoritah!

ADs and coaches across the state fell by the wayside in a dark time, but in Coupeville, I watched as Willie refused to buckle.

He dealt with all the crap thrown at him, enforcing pandemic rules dictated by state officials, and did it in a way that Coupeville, unlike some other districts, never erupted into a full-on culture war.

Willie was firm, but he was fair – even to the asshats who deserved to be kicked where the good Lord split them.

He kept his coaches invested, he kept his athletes active, he found creative ways to honor those who lost games and seasons, he gave hope to a town at a time when it needed it most.

In the best of times, being an athletic director is never-ending work.

The schedules for next school year? Already largely in place, thanks to Willie’s work.

And then Mother Nature laughs, especially in a state and on an island bathed in liquid sunshine, and you have to scramble to rip everything up, and put it back together.

League rules change, state rules change, and ding, another 10,001 emails from the guy blogging at 2:00 AM.

All handled with a calm ease.

I have known Willie for many years, from back in the Videoville days when he first stepped off the ferry from Sequim.

As a coach, a teacher, an AD, and a father, husband, and man about town, he remains one of the best I have ever dealt with.

He is a straight shooter who can be brutally honest (in a good way), someone who doesn’t dodge responsibility, a man who has given a chunk of his life to Coupeville and made our schools immeasurably better.

We’ve already gone through this once before, where a misguided rush to save a few bucks pushed Willie out of the AD’s office.

It did NOT WORK OUT WELL.

Then, things were tweaked, he returned to the job, and guess what? Things got much better, even when the world shut down around him.

The $15,000 you “save” by stripping Willie’s AD duties is not enough to justify the lasting damage you will do.

If Mr. Edlund is the man trying to ignore my emails next year, he will give it his all. I have no doubt of that.

But it doesn’t have to be like that.

Edlund should be allowed to focus on holding the front line at our schools, and Willie, the man with the plan, the man whose athletic department is the gold standard in the district, should be leaning back in his chair, making things hum.

Saving a penny to set the bank on fire?

This is not the way.

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Coupeville HS/MS Athletic Director Willie Smith. (John Fisken photo)

The man in the head office has a few words for you.

Willie Smith has spent two decades-plus at Coupeville High School, working as a teacher, coach and Athletic Director.

This is his second time around as AD, having re-assumed the post at the start of the 2016-2017 school year. He previously held the position for five years, stepping away in 2009.

Today’s column marks the launch of “ADD: Athletic Director Directives,” which will give Smith a chance to impart the “thoughts and musings of a small-town AD with big-time dreams.”

Is this mic on?

Whenever a new leader, supervisor, head man, big cheese, whatever you want to call it, takes over, there is a period of transition and philosophical change that occurs and that is what we are in currently.

My goal, in writing this, as well as follow-up articles, is to give all of you insight into what the goals are for our athletic program and to let you in on how those goals came to be; however, fair warning that entering into my world, especially my head, may not always be advisable.

First, my role as I see it, is to be an advocate in all aspects of our athletic program: student athletes, coaches, parents, and administration.

I have coached for over 20 years, been part of building two different programs from the elementary level up, am unafraid to ask questions and speak up, am extremely competitive, and am fiercely loyal to our schools, kids, and coaches.

I am not political, nor always politically correct, whatever that means, but I am never demeaning, nor crass in my opinions or decisions.

I am what you see and what you hear (well, depending on the person telling you what I am) but I am not going to tell you one thing and do another.

In forming who I was as a coach and a player, I had some very good coaches, and some very poor coaches; I played at the state level, and went win-less for an entire season.

As a coach, I stressed the fundamentals, had high expectations of myself, players, and coaches; I even yelled every now and then, but always tried to be the first to congratulate when kids did it right.

I have no idea what my overall win/loss record is but am super proud that my teams improved from the beginning of the year to the end, had high character, didn’t make excuses, outworked most other teams, and got to experience a lot of successes, both at league level and state level.

I believe that middle and high school athletics can be the most rewarding experience in a student’s life.

There is no book, quiz, or state test in the education system that can teach you so many different lessons and put you in so many life experiences.

In any given game or contest you can rise to euphoria and in the next instant, be brought to your knees.

You have to work as a team, experience a wide array of personalities, deal with adversity and conflict, confront your emotions, and ultimately, be able to talk with and come to tenable solutions with those that are in charge of you.

Those that say, “Winning isn’t everything” are correct (though it is a lot of fun); there are many other successes that kids, coaches, and communities can embrace: high character, work ethic, teamwork, commitment, service, accountability.

I truly believe that if our students, coaches, parents, and community embrace these things winning takes care of itself, and even if it doesn’t, these are values that we should all aspire to.

This is the vision of the Athletic Department, it is at the bottom of each of the Athletic Director emails:

CHARACTER LEADERSHIP ACCOUNTABILITY SPORTSMANSHIP SERVICE

These are the values, the basis of all decisions, and the vision moving forward.

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