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Posts Tagged ‘Cheer’

Robin Cedillo and the trout that dared to challenge her.

Robin Cedillo and the trout that dared to challenge her.

All smiles in the car.

All smiles in the car.

"It is too dang early to be out of my warm bed..."

“It is too dang early to be out of my warm bed…”

Cedillo (right), braves a rain out during softball season with teammates Emily Coulter (left) and Erin Josue.

  Cedillo (right), braves a rain out during softball season with teammates Emily Coulter (left) and Erin Josue. (Amy King photo)

Robin Cedillo is taking over the sports world.

The Coupeville High School sophomore, who played softball and was one of the peppiest of all cheerleaders for two Wolf squads during her first year of high school, is now a champion fish wrangler.

She spent part of Saturday hauling in trout with her dad, proving she is a young woman of many talents.

Bow fishies, bow before your one true queen, Miss Robin “The Smilin’ Assassin” Cedillo!

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Tori Wellman was one of 50 CHS students to play soccer in 2013-2014. (John Fisken photos)

  Tori Wellman was one of 50 CHS students to play soccer in 2013-2014. (John Fisken photos)

The Wolf cheer squad, which included Robin Cedillo

  Cheer drew in 51 girls over two seasons, including Robin Cedillo, who would also go on to play softball for the Wolves.

Soccer was the most popular sport at Coupeville High School during the 2013-2014 school year.

At least in terms of how many students played the sport, and, if we don’t consider cheer a sport — which school officials don’t.

If cheer was given a little more respect, the 51 girls who participated over the course of the fall and winter seasons would top the list.

But, since cheer is considered an activity, soccer, with 50 players (30 boys, 20 girls), rules the roost.

The numbers for the eight sports CHS offers:

Soccer (50) — 30 boys, 20 girls
Tennis (45) — 29 boys, 16 girls
Basketball (44) — 21 boys, 23 girls
Track (40) — 22 boys, 18 girls
Football (39)
Volleyball (21)
Baseball (19)
Softball (13)

Coupeville also had one golfer, junior Christine Fields, who finished 5th at the 1A state tourney. CHS doesn’t offer golf, but Fields trains and travels with South Whidbey while competing as a Wolf.

At the middle school level, Coupeville offers four sports, with hoops drawing the most participants.

CMS sports numbers:

Basketball (45) — 23 boys, 22 girls
Track (42) — 24 boys, 18 girls
Volleyball (33)
Football (15) — 14 boys, 1 girl

Among non-sports activities, drama was one of the biggest draws.

CHS:

Cheer (51)
National Honor Society (43) — 18 boys, 25 girls
Drama (38) — 10 boys, 28 girls
Science Olympiad (14) — 11 boys, 3 girls
ASB Executive Board (8) — 3 boys, 5 girls
History Day (4) — 3 boys, 1 girl
Jazz Band (3) — 3 boys

CMS:

Drama (65) — 18 boys, 47 girls
Natural Helpers (33) — 13 boys, 20 girls
History Day (6) — 2 boys, 4 girls
Jazz Band (5) — 4 boys, 1 girl

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Megan Meyer, all grown up and super classy.

Megan Meyer, all grown up and super classy.

You know, it’s not always about sports.

Megan Meyer, who celebrates her 24th birthday today, was an athlete during her time at Coupeville High School. A cheerleader — during the time when the Wolves were a competition squad — and a tennis player.

So, there’s a sports connection there.

But Meggie Moo is more than that. Much more.

She is the little girl who I saw grow up into an amazing young woman. Sweet-natured, generous, a wonderful person in every way.

Her first day of preschool was my first day working for her mom, Miriam, at Videoville, back when it was still a little shack sitting in the parking lot of what is now an Oriental food store.

A year later, the little shack was torn down and replaced with what seemed to be a colossus of a store that combined Videoville with the newly-created Miriam’s Espresso.

I rented videos, haphazardly stood in as a backup barista on occasion and got paid to goof off there for nearly the entire length of Megan’s school career in Coupeville.

The little girl with the curly hair who we sometimes jammed into the rolling box we used under the video drop slot — so she could reach up and freak people out by grabbing their hands through the slot — was who I saw “George of the Jungle” with in theaters.

Then, one day, she was working behind the counter with me.

She stayed on video for awhile, until she overcame her fear of being burned by a splatter of hot milk on the espresso side of the business, before becoming a talented barista.

Now, she’s a college grad, off saving the small villages of the world and dispensing kindness wherever she goes.

At one point or another, I butted heads with every one of Miriam’s multiple children — because I can be an ass and they’re all feisty in nature … yeah, mainly the former — but never Meggie.

She is one of the most genuinely lovable people I have ever known. Her mere presence causes the heavens to open, the sun to shine and small animals to dance with little children.

You are incredibly special, Miss Meyer. I hope you know how much everyone thinks of you, how much joy you have brought into all of our lives.

I want nothing less than the absolute best for you, no matter where you go or what miracles you work in your life.

You will always be that little girl with the huge smile.

The package may have gotten bigger, but you were awesome from day one, Megster.

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Breeanna Messner

Breeanna Messner

Breeanna Messner (Robert Bishop photo)

Four sports and a ton of books — no problem for Breezy. (Robert Bishop photo)

Her dad calls her Breezy, and she has been like a breath of fresh air.

There may have been more physically talented athletes who have walked the hallways at Coupeville High School over the years, but few, if any, have ever put it all together like Wolf senior Breeanna Messner.

Two days after playing the final game of an incredible four-year, four-sport run in the red and black, bowing out at the 1A state softball tourney Friday, Miss Messner turns 18 today.

In less than a week she will graduate.

College calls, and, after that, much, much more. She will do great things in her life, of that I have no doubt.

She is talented, she works her rear off, she is committed and she does it all with a quiet sweetness that is greatly endearing.

It did not matter the sport. Volleyball, cheer, basketball, softball. She played them all and excelled at them all.

She upheld the family honor, keeping alive the flame lit by her mom, Aimee (Messner) Bishop, and her aunts. The Messner name stands proudly in CHS lore, and Breezy played a large part in that.

She hit big shots.

There was a moment when she got poked in the eye (rather deliberately) during a basketball game and brought to her knees.

Instead of getting mad and starting a fight, she collected herself, stood up and, after a slight grimace, nailed back-to-back three-point bombs to thoroughly deflate the opposing team.

Only afterwards, with her head bowed, did she crack a small (very small) smile just for herself, never one to show up an opposing player.

She was the teammate who reached out to every player on her team. The young woman who always stopped to say hi to former coaches in the stands.

The one who would stop her own game preparation to sprint over and scoop up her young cousin, Katie, when she entered the gym.

What I have seen, what I have heard, makes me think this — Breeanna Messner is the gold standard for Coupeville student/athletes.

I have covered sports on this Island for longer than she has been alive, and she stands out as a rarity.

And I hope that she knows how CHS fans, how the people of Central Whidbey, feel about her.

I hope, that as the years pass, she realizes why people cheered for her so hard.

We watched a young woman, bold and brilliant, shy at times, but capable of great passion, who aimed for the stars in everything and flew as high as anyone who has ever put on a Coupeville uniform.

She worked for our respect. For our admiration. She more than earned it all.

Breezy deserves nothing less.

I hope that you have an incredible birthday, Miss Messner, and that you go forward in your life content in the knowledge that you have a town, an Island, a world, behind you.

You are amazing, and there will never be another one like you.

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Robin Cedillo: A ray of sunshine in the CHS sports world.

Robin Cedillo: A ray of sunshine in the CHS sports world.

I have never, ever seen Robin Cedillo without a smile.

The peppy, irrepressible Coupeville High School freshman, who celebrates her birthday today, has a grin that lights up the universe.

Whether anchoring the Wolf cheer squad through the fall and winter seasons, where she was joined by big sis Bella, or bouncing up and down in the dugout, bellowing support to her CHS softball teammates all the way to the state tourney, Cedillo is a freakin’ ray of sunshine everywhere she goes.

I can’t say that I know her all that well, but, in the time period that our paths have crossed, she has always come across as the real deal — a genuinely sweet, carefree young woman who gives her all always, whether playing or cheering for the red and black.

Through rain or sun, her smile never wavered. Never buckled. Never seemed forced.

Robin seems like one of those people who approaches each day determined to be as friendly, as outgoing, as embracing of life and their friends as possibe.

It’s a beautiful way to be.

I hope you have an astonishing birthday, Miss Cedillo. One worthy of the awesomeness that flows out of you on a daily basis.

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