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Posts Tagged ‘Courtney Arnold’

Hall o' Fame inductees Steve Smith (left), Courtney Arnold and Chris Chan (in baseball cap).

   Hall o’ Fame inductees Steve Smith (left), Courtney Arnold and Chris Chan (in baseball cap).

The three people who comprise the 59th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame all left a visible mark.

On and off the field, the trio shone brightly, reflecting extremely well on the community they sprang from, while setting a path to excellence for others to follow.

So today, we welcome Steve Smith, Courtney Arnold and Chris Chan to these hallowed digital walls.

After this, they join their brethren at the top of the blog, enshrined under the Legends tab.

Our first inductee, Chan, is a true Wolf lifer who we’re honoring as a contributor, a tidy way of sweeping all of his many accomplishments into one neat lil’ pile.

As an athlete, maybe his greatest claim to fame is as a member of the 1978-1979 CHS boys’ basketball squad, which upset King’s Garden to claim the Cascade League title.

Even bigger, those Wolves went on to play three games at the state tourney, and their 62-51 win over Montesano Mar. 1, 1979 remains the last time a Coupeville boys’ hoops team won a game at the big dance.

In the years after he helped tickle the twines, Chan has been everywhere his alma mater needed him.

Working with wife Beverly, he gave the school two outstanding children — Laura and Drew — while also finding time to be a hardball guru as part of Willie Smith’s top-tier baseball coaching staff.

His biggest impact, though, probably comes from his time on the Coupeville School Board, where he’s worked tirelessly for the last eight years to give the next generation the best chance to succeed.

Every community, every school, needs those people who are the “glue,” the men and women who give of themselves, never asking for praise, so that things will be better when they’re done.

Chris Chan is one of those unsung greats, and, as a town, Coupeville is very lucky to have experienced him in all his roles — athlete, student, father, coach, school board stalwart.

He’s just a good dude all around, and very worthy of being in any Hall of Fame we might be running around these parts.

Our second inductee, Arnold, joins her mom, former CHS cheer coach Sylvia, in the Hall, but she punched her ticket on her own.

A pretty darn good basketball player during her time in the red and black, Courtney made her biggest mark in the cheer game.

As a captain, she led her team with a light hand, rallying her girls with impassioned speeches which combined her mom’s cheertastic outlook with dad Garrett’s calming words from the church pulpit.

Deeply committed to her faith, her family and her teammates, Arnold led the Wolves when they were still a competition cheer squad, bringing home the program’s third (and so far, final) state meet trophy in 2011.

She’s moved on since those days, sailing through college while continuing to light up the universe around her, but her impact, like her mom’s, is still very much on display.

Young girls who learned their love of the sport from Courtney can be found everywhere in Coupeville, from the high school squad down through youth cheer.

A generation grew up wanting to be like her, to follow her example, as cheerleaders and smart, strong young women, and her legacy is bright and blossoming on the prairie, even if she’s no longer here every day.

Our final inductee, Smith, is quite simply, a legend.

Trying to track down stats from the “olden” days of CHS sports is nigh impossible, except for those moments when someone uncovers a dusty box of clippings from the attic.

But people talk, and when they tell tales of former Wolf greats, Smith’s name is one which comes up often.

He was one of the most physically imposing athletes to ever play for Coupeville, a smash-mouth football player who also had a nimble touch with a tennis racket.

Ask others about him and you hear things along the line of “He was an Adonis in those short shorts they wore in the ’70s” or “He tore people in half, and that was just in practice!”

Smith, who I came to know during my long stretch behind the counter at Videoville, went on to play a little college ball (injuries hurt, however) before serving his country admirably as a medic in Vietnam.

The stories of his exploits in combat (which come from family members and friends, as Steve is not one to blow his own horn) are astonishing and just add to the legend of a larger-than-life guy.

Like Chan, he gave his alma mater children who rose to be athletic stars themselves, including one, daughter Joli (Smith) Bartell, who is already in the Hall herself.

And, like both his fellow inductees, Steve stands tall.

For their exploits during their younger days, and for their exploits after graduation, it’s a trio which should make us all proud.

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The 1974 CHS football squad is joined by fellow inductees (l to r) Mert Waller, Cavan Simonson, June (Blouin) Mazdra and members of the 2010-2011 Wolf cheer squad.

   The 1974 CHS football squad is joined by fellow inductees (l to r) Mert Waller, Cavan Simonson, June Mazdra and members of the 2010-2011 Wolf cheer squad.

We have a crowded stage today.

With two teams anchoring the 18th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, that’s a given.

But the Hall is a big one, with room for all within these hallowed digital walls (you can find it at the top of this blog, under the Legends tab), so no problem.

Let’s hear the stage groan as we welcome Mert Waller, June Mazdra, Cavan Simonson, the 2010-2011 Coupeville High School competitive cheer squad and the 1974 CHS football team.

The first two inductees are classic examples of hard-working, community-minded folk who dedicated a chunk of their lives to Cow Town.

Waller, father of current Whidbey News-Times Sports Editor Jim Waller, was once the coach at CHS.

And I do mean THE coach.

When Waller and family hit the Island in the ’50s, he was hired to coach all four of the Wolf varsity sports teams, including two in the same season.

Football, basketball and then double duty in the spring, running baseball and track (there were no high school sports for girls at the time), Waller did it all, and did it all with a deft touch.

Coupeville eventually lost him (and his sons) to the lure of the big city, where he coached basketball (boys and girls), track, cross country and softball at Oak Harbor, while serving as the school’s AD for a decade.

My path crossed Mert’s when he was assisting son Jim, my journalism teacher at OHHS, who was putting together a career that would land him in a real Hall of Fame as the Wildcat baseball coach.

His knowledge was all-encompassing, but his spirit, his kindness and his wit were also unrivaled. Wolf or Wildcat, Mert Waller was the real deal, a king among men.

And, if he was a king, Mazdra is a queen among women, a supremely sweet-natured woman who has continued to shine light on her alma mater.

A class of ’75 grad, she returned to the scorekeeper’s table in later years and has put in 20 years doing the score-books for Wolf girls’ basketball squads.

That has put her front and center for the most successful sports program the school has had in that time period, with her precise notations documenting the careers of legends such as Zenovia Barron, Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, Brianne King, Lexie Black, Kacie Kiel and Makana Stone, just to name a handful.

She’s had a front row seat to teams that brought home state banners and broke school records and she remains the indispensable glue that holds everything together.

Without her, stats would be going everywhere and the media? We’d be even more lost than normal.

Our third inductee, Simonson, was a stellar cheerleader during her days at CHS and a pretty talented barista at Miriam’s Espresso. Athletically, though, her greatest accomplishments may have come after high school.

Cavan has transformed herself in recent years, morphing into a high-level kick-butt artiste in the world of bodybuilding and fitness figure competition.

Her dedication and drive is uncanny, yet she remains the same sweet ray o’ sunshine she was as a teen, while now being able to crush walnuts with her abs.

Pay tribute now, so when Cav-Cav hits the really big time (a slam dunk certainty), she might remember all of us peons from her early days.

And then we arrive at our teams, two squads that showed you can become first-class in a very short time period.

The 2010-2011 CHS cheer squad returned to competitive cheer after several years of staying on the sidelines and made an immediate impact.

In their first time back on the mat, the Wolves brought home a championship trophy, winning the Seahawk Cheer Challenge at Peninsula High School.

That surprise finish qualified them for state, where they would go on to claim 6th place in a field dominated by big city schools.

It was a reminder of past glory for Coupeville cheer, which has a chunk of hardware in the school’s trophy case, and a challenge to future teams, should the Wolves return one day to competition.

Put in the work and you can excel. It’s not the size of the school, but the size of your athlete’s hearts.

Inducted, as a group, together one more time:

Sylvia Arnold (coach)
Courtney Arnold
(captain)
Nicole Becker
Emily Clay
Kim Farage
Jai’Lysa Hoskins
Teri Lee
Kaitlyn Marcus
Jessica Ornburn
Tyler Potts
(captain)
Madeline Roberts
Kristin Sim
Amanda Streubel

Rounding out our inductees is the ’74 Wolf gridiron squad, which bounced from a one-win season to a one-loss season, becoming the first CHS football team to make it to state since 1939.

A pack of fast-living, hard-partying (allegedly) guys who gelled as a team under a coaching staff that employed techniques which might be frowned upon in modern touchy-feely times, those Wolves shocked the pigskin world (and, maybe, themselves).

While they fell 12-0 to Willapa Valley at state, they left their mark and no gridiron team would match them for 12 seasons, when the 1986 squad also made it to the big dance.

They may no longer look like an outtake from Dazed and Confused, and most have gone on to have rock-solid lives as upstanding citizens, but those freewheeling Wolves will always stand tall.

Now give me 300 grass drills, gentlemen.

Inducted, as a team:

Larry Ankney
Mike Ankney
Chris Ceci
Charlie Cook
Raymond Cook
Mike Dunn
Ron Eastlick
Foster Faris
Scotty Franzen
Kevin Haga
Chuck Hardee
Tom Hardin
Randy Keefe
Pat Leach
David McDaniel
Frank Mueller
Ron Naddy
Ted Pyles
Terry Pyles
Mark Sem
Don Stevens

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Courtney Arnold (left), during her days as a Wolf cheer captain.

Courtney Arnold (left), during her days as a Wolf cheer captain.

Sherry Roberts (right),spending quality time with Sydney Aparicio.

Sherry Roberts (right), spending quality time with Sydney Aparicio.

How perfect is it that these two share a birthday Friday?

Former Wolf greats Sherry (Bonacci) Roberts and Courtney Arnold may be the two sunniest people in the entire known universe.

People seeking a tan in Washington state can head to a tanning bed.

Or, they can hang around the dynamic duo for a bit and soak in the invisible Vitamin D that comes out of every pore each time Sherry and Courtney smile.

Which is about once every 1.3 seconds.

Courtney was born to be a cheerleader, the daughter of the original sunny delight herself, former CHS cheer guru Sylvia Arnold.

She walked in big footsteps, but Courtney made a name for herself, becoming a cheer captain and leading her team not only on the sidelines but also in full-scale cheer competitions.

Now she’s off at college, in sunny Cali, and hitting the big 2-2.

One thing has never changed, however. She remains an irrepressible, shining star, a young woman who combines grace and beauty with a sweet spirit and a genuinely caring heart.

The same could be said of Mrs. Roberts, who may be a few years older but has lost none of her teenage sparkle.

Her face is on the wall of honor in the hallway of the CHS gym, acknowledging her days when she was tabbed as the school’s Female Athlete of the Year.

The same gym-filling smile is usually on display, live and in person, at every basketball game, as she watches her successors play the sport she so excelled at.

One of those successors is daughter Lindsey, a star on the court and in front of the paparazzi camera for the Coupeville Middle School 8th grade squad.

With talent handed down from both parents (dad Jon Roberts was also a CHS Athlete of the Year) and the same feisty attitude on the court that her mom proudly displayed, the younger Roberts is coming for all her mom’s records.

When she gets there, no one will be prouder than Sherry, who is quick to bestow her approval and love to as many as possible.

Courtney and Sherry share a birthday, a sweetness of spirit, a love of life and everything that comes with it.

Any town would be lucky to claim one of them as its own. To have both is a blessing.

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Courtney Arnold Kayla Rose

Courtney Arnold (left) loves Kayla Rose. But she loves giving noogies more. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The lesson not having taken,

“Relax, I’m a professional … this will open up all your airways!”

Serious

“You can mess with Texas … just not with Miss Rose. She will cut a girl, figuratively speaking.”

"Yoinks!!"

Lauren Rose (22) launches Operation Turnover. ETA — 0.3 seconds.

hhhh

“TOLD YA!!”

The second most radiant person in Coupeville High School cheer squad history is back in town for a few days.

No one is ever likely to take down the Queen herself, former Wolf coach Sylvia Arnold, when it comes to dispensing sunshine out of every pore.

BUT, if someone ever does, it’ll likely be daughter Courtney, former CHS cheer captain extraordinaire.

The living embodiment of joy, junior division, has a few days off from her senior year of college, so she’s been hitting basketball games at her old stomping grounds.

Leaving behind her a trail of never-ending hugs to one and all, Courtney has also found time to support and good-naturedly harass the next generation of Wolves.

The pics above capture her with the Rose sisters, Lauren and Kayla, as she acts like a proud mama shepherding (and roughing up) her flock.

Try and find a bigger, brighter, happier smile. I dare you.

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Mattea

“Scuse me … pardon me … get out of my way, fool!!” The ever-polite Mattea Miller would like to get to the basket. (John Fisken photos)

team

Shenanigans, 24/7/365.

Kyla

Kyla Briscoe has got the world (or at least the basketball) by the fingertips.

engle/arnold

   Super-enthusiastic fans Amy (Craggs) Engle (left) and Courtney Arnold show off their sign-making skills.

Skyler

When it comes to snaring rebounds, Skyler Lawrence has the Grip O’ Steel.

Kacie

Kacie Kiel would like a little help. Like maybe today.

tiff

   After seeing this catch, CHS football coaches came running out of the stands to recruit Tiffany Briscoe for next season.

Katie

Former Wolf hoopsters Katie Kiel (left) and Jai’Lysa Hoskins, reunited and it feels so good.

Best team in the league. The whole league.

The Coupeville High School girls’ basketball squad sits at 4-2 after their stunning come-from-behind win over 2A Sequim Saturday.

Not only do the Wolves have the most wins of any of the four 1A schools in the league, they would also top any of the seven 2A schools.

Plus, they take pretty good pictures. So, there’s that.

John Fisken snapped the pics which reside above, a mix of the varsity and the almost-as-successful Wolf JV (3-3).

Want to see more? Pop over to:

Varsity — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=7488&league=21&page_name=photo_store&school=24&sport=0

JV — http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=7483&league=21&page_name=photo_store&school=24&school_year=2014-15&sport=0

As always, purchases help fund college scholarships for CHS senior student/athletes.

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