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Mica Shipley

Mica Shipley (Submitted photo)

Mica Shipley knew early on she wanted to be a cheerleader.

“I’ve been doing All-Star cheer since I was six,” she said. “I started because I was so mesmerized by all that was going on and I wanted to do that.”

Shipley will be moving to the next level this fall, when she enters Coupeville High School as a freshman.

A two-sport athlete (she also competes in track and field), she has embraced the opportunity to join the Wolf cheer squad.

“My favorite thing about cheer is tumbling and flying,” Shipley said.

She credits her mom with having “a huge impact in my life” and enjoys spending time with family and friends when she’s not busy with cheer.

“My mom is such an inspiration in my life,” Shipley said. “She is an inspiration because she never gives up and she encourages me to do the same.

“I got hurt very badly a while back and I was going to give up on cheer and if it wasn’t for my mom I wouldn’t be the person or cheerleader that I am today.”

In school, Shipley looks forward to her creative writing class, while away from the classroom she tries to spend as much time at the beach as possible.

While the battle over whether cheer should be viewed as a sport or an activity will probably rage on forever, there is no doubt how the Wolf frosh feels on the subject.

“I think that cheer is a sport, because even though we are not competing against a team we are doing just as much, maybe even more work then the football players,” Shipley said. “For example, we have to lift people in the air, which takes a lot of strength and conditioning.”

There’s also the intensive amount of work the Wolves put in under coach Cheridan Eck.

“We also have to tumble, which means a lot of practice and we have to learn all the cheers perfectly and we have to do jumps which takes a lot of stretching,” Shipley said. “So, even though we do not go against anyone, we practice like we are.

“We are going against ourselves to get better and better each game,” she added. “In my opinion, that’s a sport.”

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Maya Toomey-Stout (Amy King photos)

Maya Toomey-Stout is a creepin’ and a crawlin’. (Amy King photos)

Ashlie Shank

   Ashlie Shank, on the other hand, is not so sure about potentially being attacked by the Sandy Hand o’ Danger.

sand

An empire rises.

crab

Two crabs, standing in for the CHS coaches, lord over the kingdom.

trench

   Trench work continues as CHS coach David King daydreams of sleeping for 48 hours straight after this 4-day, 16-game marathon ends.

frosh

The freshmen and juniors pose with their work of art.

seniors

The sophomores/seniors squad is confident they have a winner.

Saying goodbye to the beach.

Saying goodbye to the beach.

Basketball camp is not just for basketball.

Every year, when the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad heads to Ocean Shores, they go in knowing they’ll be spending a lot of time on the courts over the course of four days.

But they also know coaches David and Amy King will take them to the beach for some down time, and that sand castle-building, team-bonding experience is often the highlight of the trip.

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Natalie Hollrigel (Submitted photo)

Natalie Hollrigel (Submitted photo)

Get the first one, you often get the second one.

It’s been a good rule of thumb for the Coupeville High School cheer squad over the years, as younger sisters frequently follow their older siblings into the sport.

Having seen her big sis Kaela enjoy herself immensely as a Wolf cheerleader, Natalie Hollrigel is the latest to keep the tradition alive.

“This is my first year cheering and I started cheering because of my sister,” she said. “And all of the many amazing girls who showed me how fun it was to be a part of such a tight-knit group of girls.”

Hollrigel, who will be a freshman at CHS in the fall, is diving in feet-first.

“My favorite part of cheer is learning a new cheer and being able to practice that cheer until I get it down,” she said.

A two-sport star during her middle school days, when she competed in volleyball and track, Hollrigel firmly falls into the camp of those who appreciate the time, effort and hard work which goes into cheer.

“In my opinion cheerleading is a sport,” she said. “The definition of a sport is “an activity involving physical exertion” and, at every practice, everyone tries their hardest to stay in shape and to be able to lift those girls into a stunt without them falling.

“Also, during cheers most people think that you just have to follow the motions, but for the cheer to look good you have to sharpen your movements which means to tighten your muscles,” Hollrigel added.

“At every practice our muscles become sore, whether it is the running we do at every practice or the stunting we do.”

When she’s not at practice, Hollrigel enjoys hanging out with friends and going to the beach. At school she looks forward to her science and gym classes.

Along with various group leaders and coaches who have impacted her, she gets encouragement and advice from Kaela and mom Diana Bedford.

The duo are strong role models in Hollrigel’s life.

“They have taught me to be strong, confident, and have a good time during all the activities I do.”

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Kalia (Amy King photos)

Super-serious basketball players (l to r) Kalia Littlejohn, Kailey Kellner and Kyla Briscoe model the latest in headwear. (Amy King photos)

team

11 hoops stars, zero fears of the camera.

Tiffany Briscoe

Tiffany Briscoe needs the time off to gaze in wonder at the latest in a long string of bruises she’s picked up on various basketball courts.

beach

On to the beach!

shoes

And off with the shoes!

feet

Leaving their mark in the sand.

wolf

A Wolf or two went this way.

charlie's angels

A brief bit of yoga, Charlie’s Angels-style.

You can not live by basketball alone.

In between playing five games in two days at a camp in Ocean Shores, Coupeville High School girls’ basketball players are also getting some down time.

Trips to the beach and various tourist traps are always on the itinerary, as Wolf coaches David and Amy King work on team-bonding as much as on-court development.

The photos above, courtesy the more click-happy of the duo (that would be Mrs. King) capture a bit of the summer hoops life for those of us not there.

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