Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Central Whidbey Soccer Club’

   Trust me, it may be dry right now, but come fall, the soccer pitch will be this wet again. (John Fisken photo)

Don’t throw away your shot (at scoring a lot of goals).

Registration for Central Whidbey Soccer Club’s fall rec season is underway and the clock is ticking.

Girls, boys and co-ed teams are offered, with openings from U8 to U15.

Registration ends Sept. 8, with games starting Sept. 16.

Cost is $75 per player, which includes uniform. The league also offers practice squad participation for $30 for those who can’t play in Saturday games.

Scholarships are available for those who can show a need for financial assistance.

To sign up your child, pop over to the league website and use the green Register button on the top right.

http://www.centralwhidbeysoccer.com/Default.aspx?tabid=1508117

Read Full Post »

Michelle and Reese Cernick. (Submitted photo)

From despair has come hope.

Reese and Michelle Cernick have overcome great hardship, bringing their family to Whidbey in 2013 and, once here, setting themselves up as key contributors in both the sports and business worlds.

The couple coach co-ed teams through the Central Whidbey Soccer Club, with their son Chris, a freshman at CHS, and twin 14-year-old daughters Autumn and Aurora, all having played for their parents.

Michelle is also a frequent volunteer with the local schools and joins up with Lori Taylor to run a Girls Scout troop.

And now, having worked in the field for the past two years, Reese launched Whidbey Pest Control in March.

“I hope that I never take for granted how blessed we are to see such beauty every day,” Michelle said. “We love Coupeville and have met some of the nicest people.

“This is the first place that Reese and I have lived in our 16 and a half years of marriage that has really felt like home,” she added. “Our children love it here and have made some terrific friends.”

The move to Whidbey might never have taken place if a 2008 road rage incident in Nevada, which left Reese severely injured, hadn’t thrown the family into a spiral.

Reese was working as an underground gold miner in Elko (“the middle of nowhere”) when a semi-truck driver intentionally slammed into the back of the vehicle in which he was riding.

Having turned his head right as the impact occurred, he took a severe shot, and had trouble walking after the accident.

Reese endured an endless string of tests, many of them after traveling several hours, with few answers, until a chiropractor in Idaho was able to make a break-through.

The integrity of the muscles in his back were compromised, and while the chiropractor was able to get him walking upright after three weeks, he continued to endure overnight trips to have his back worked on.

With her husband unable to work for some time, Michelle babysat fellow miner’s kids.

“I had kids in my house seven days a week, 24/7, and I still couldn’t get us out of debt.”

Even as his back got better, Reese had to face the reality he would be limited on doing any kind of serious manual labor.

He eventually returned to work at a car dealership, and the couple were working full-time, trying to pull themselves out of the financial hole created by the accident, when they visited Whidbey.

Reese’s mother and grandmother, who both fight severe illness, live on The Rock, and once here, the Cernicks decided the time to relocate was upon them.

“When we were here that summer we had talked about what it would be like to retire to Whidbey one day, but never in our wildest dreams did we ever imagine moving here as soon as we did,” Michelle said. “We are so grateful to be living in such a beautiful place.”

Once here, the duo quickly became part of the booming youth soccer scene.

Their daughters wanted to play, CWSC needed volunteers, and a perfect union was formed.

The Cernicks began with a U12 team (Reese coached, Michelle was manager), then they bounced up to create a U14 co-ed squad as their children got older.

“This team had all of our children on it — fun times,” said Michelle. “The co-ed team started out so small and we only had one team from week to week to play out of Oak Harbor, but it has really grown.

“Coupeville now has two full teams and Oak Harbor has three.”

Reese is also on the board of directors for the league, while Michelle does a little bit of everything.

“I don’t have an official title and have never been voted in,” she said with a laugh. “I just do whatever needs to be done.

“I love to be able to contribute my time to these kids.”

Chris made the jump to high school soccer this spring, playing for the Wolf JV, and his sisters will make the same transition in the fall.

That doesn’t mean their parents will desert CWSC.

“This is the last year that we get to coach our girls, but Reese and I fully intend to continue coaching, because we love it,” Michelle said. “We have so many kids on our team that work really hard and it shows in our games.”

Along with soccer, Girl Scouts and school activities, the Cernicks have branched out further in the community by making the decision to open their own business.

Building on the experience he picked up working the bug-hunting biz for another company the last two years, Reese has found his niche.

“We wanted a business with flexible scheduling, because soccer is life, and one that Reese could physically handle,” Michelle said. “We wanted a business where we could work closely with people and treat them fairly.”

They have 60-day warranties on most services, handle about any kind of pest you can name (maybe not blind soccer refs…) and offer free inspections.

Invite them to your home or business, and the Cernicks try and make the experience more than just a quick scan and bid.

“When we come to your house we don’t just inspect, write you a bid, and leave,” Michelle said. “We both greet you with a friendly smile and handshake.

“We tell you a little about ourselves and our company. We explain everything we are going to do before we do it so that you are as comfortable with us as you are the process,” she added. “We don’t want our customers to feel like just another job to us.

“We want them to feel like family.”

That attitude, and the duo’s love of volunteering, led to them donating their services to Ryan’s House, a youth outreach program in Coupeville.

Michelle’s Girl Scouts are joining the effort.

“We have a terrific group of girls and they are are so excited they get to help out,” Michelle said. “Ryan’s House has so many wonderful people that volunteer there and they shouldn’t have to worry about ants or any other critters invading their space.”

Whidbey Pest Control operates 8-5 Mon-Fri and can be reached at (360) 632-9080 or whidbeypestcontrol@gmail.com.

 

Full Disclosure: Whidbey Pest Control is a supporter of Coupeville Sports, but I would have written this article even if it wasn’t.

Read Full Post »

coed soccer

   Central Whidbey players (in blue) mix it up on the pitch last season. (Jennifer Moody photo)

coed

  Last year’s debut U14 co-ed squad. (Island Life photo courtesy Michelle Cernick)

Something for everyone.

The Central Whidbey Soccer Club needs players for a U14 co-ed squad, and they’re putting out the call to players of all skill levels.

The squad is open to boys and girls born in 2003-2004, and will start its fall season in mid-to-late Sept.

Schedule-wise, the season consists of eight games (played on Saturdays) against teams from Oak Harbor.

If you register (https://coupevillesoccer.org/) and pay your $75, it doesn’t matter if you’re a grizzled vet who has been running the pitch for years or a newbie who’s never put foot to soccer ball.

Players see equal time on the field, regardless of skill level or gender.

Co-ed soccer offers a different challenge, one young players have embraced.

“Playing co-ed makes me play harder, because boys are more unpredictable,” Autumn Cernick said. “It makes it more fun.”

While boys and girls tend to approach the game differently (CWSC coaches said boys tend to be more technical and girls more aggressive), play doesn’t always favor one side.

“Sometimes the boys underestimate the aggression of the girls and what we’re capable of,” Aurora Cernick said.

Having a co-ed team is essential, as the U14 age group is an especially hard one at which to pull together a complete girls or boys squad.

Last year’s team, which had three boys, was the first time CWSC had fielded a co-ed U14 team.

“In the very beginning the boys walk on the field feeling confident that the girls are no competition for them. They have severely underestimated the capability of their teammates,” Michelle Cernick said. “Then we have our first soccer scrimmage to see what each player is capable of.

“The boys start out with the ball and moving across the field doing tricks with the ball and acting like they own it. Next thing you know the girls start getting in there and knocking the boys around,” she added. “Boys meet female aggression and you are about to get body checked because you have what said female wants … the ball.

“Welcome to coed soccer.”

Read Full Post »

Central Whidbey Soccer Club participants learn the game early.

Central Whidbey Soccer Club participants learn the game early.

Word has come down from the top.

Coupeville Mayor Nancy Conard has issued a response to those who contacted her after a furor broke out over the non-profit Central Whidbey Soccer Club being ordered to remove its banner sign from the fence next to the overpass at Highway 20.

Her email in full:

Thank you for contacting us with your concern.

Yesterday there was communication between our new Town Planner and representatives of the Central Whidbey Soccer Organization.

As the communication continued, Tammy and I talked and realized there was some misunderstanding and miscommunication.

Tammy forwarded a clarification and apology to the two people with whom she was communicating. It appears her original communications were shared with others, but not the subsequent clarification and apology.

A copy of her email follows:

“After discussing this matter more at length with the Mayor I have come to realize that we have had a communication issue on this. At issue is not that the sign itself is wrong or illegal, it is that it is located on Town property.

The informal practice on signs on the Town/DOT fence has been to allow local non-profits to put up signs for events/activities for up to a week.

It has been observed that this sign has been up for a couple of weeks and we believe that it is time for it to come down.

As I have already discussed with Robert Wood, we are asking that it be taken down by Monday at the latest.

I apologize for the miscommunication. I am new to the community and I am still trying to learn all the rules and policies that govern the Town. I ask that you be patient and bear with me.”

For the last 20 years that I have been mayor, we have had an informal policy of allowing signs to be placed on the fence, and have requested they be limited to about a week.

The time limit is necessary to allow the many organizations who would like this opportunity a chance to put up a sign, and to ensure that the information posted is “fresh.”

Although we informally allow the signs, they are not to be wrapped around the fence and parallel to Hwy 20. DOT will remove signs in that location.

If this explanation does not adequately address your concerns, please let me know. Feel free to share this email with others who may have received some of the communications, but not all.

Thank you.

In a follow-up email, Conard was asked if the CWSC would be allowed to hang their banner in the future, under the one-week time limit. Her response was short and to the point.

“You bet!”

Read Full Post »

Jake Mitten (John Fisken photo)

Jake Mitten prepares to fire the ball in during a soccer game. (John Fisken photo)

38 years of building up the youth of Central Whidbey, on the field and off.

38 years of building up the youth of Central Whidbey, on the field and off.

Coupeville’s new Town Planner has only been on the job since May, but already is making waves.

One of Tammy Baraconi’s first acts has been to inform the Central Whidbey Soccer Club that, after 10+ years, it is no longer allowed to hang a banner on the Department of Transportation-owned fence next to the overpass that crosses Highway 20 in Coupeville.

There is a disagreement over how the banner — which is hung in the summer and again in late winter to get kids signed up for fall and spring soccer seasons run by the non-profit club — is classified under the town’s sign code.

For the previous decade, the club was told by town officials that the banner was considered an Event-Orientated Sign — Coupeville Town Code 16.28.020 (B) (11) — which allows signs to hang for a period of not more than six weeks before the event and be removed not later than one week following the event.

Baraconi now says the banner falls under Off-Premise Advertising — CTC 16.28.020(C)(8) — which is not permitted, since the Soccer Club does not have a field or office at the location the sign is being hung.

At this point, since this is not a “professional newspaper” and I do not have to be neutral, let me be clear — while this change is well-intentioned (I assume), it is asinine.

Has anyone ever complained about the banner being hung there?

I doubt it.

Has there ever been an accident caused by the placing of the banner there?

I doubt it.

Has the soccer club been an invaluable asset to this community? Has it spurred an incredible growth in soccer among Central Whidbey youths? Is it performing a valuable service?

Yes, yes, and yes once again.

Again and again we hear how we need to give the youth more opportunities, more chances to find constructive things in life to do, to get them off their phones, away from their TVs and computers and outside.

The Central Whidbey Soccer Club, and the countless men and women who donate their time and skill-sets to teach this town’s children, to give them an outlet, to make them better people and athletes (but people first) deserve our praise, our support, our help.

Pulling down a banner that has no negative effect and no longer allowing it to be hung in the one place in town every parent will see it, is narrow-minded at best, rank stupidity at worst.

I call upon everyone who has ever had a child in the CWSC, every coach and athlete at CHS and CMS, soccer or otherwise, every fan, every reader to reach out and tell Town of Coupeville officials they are making a mistake.

But one they can still correct.

 

To contact Baraconi, email her at planner@townofcoupeville.org

To contact Mayor Nancy Conard, email her at mayor@townofcoupeville.org

To contact the Washington State Department of Transportation, Highway Advertising office, call them at (360) 705-7296.

 

UPDATE:

As of late morning Friday, town officials have softened their stance a bit, telling the Central Whidbey Soccer Club that its sign is not “wrong or illegal,” but that the issue is its location on city property.

Citing an “informal practice” of allowing non-profits to put up signs for events/activities for a week, the town still wants the sign removed by Monday, July 13 at the latest.

There has been no word on whether the sign can be re-posted in the future.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »