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Posts Tagged ‘Emily Kosderka’

Hall o' Fame inductees (clockwise, from bottom left) McKayla Bailey, Emily (Vracin) Kosderka, Dustin Van Velkinburgh and Mitch Aparicio.

   Hall o’ Fame inductees (clockwise, from bottom left) McKayla Bailey, Emily (Vracin) Kosderka, Dustin Van Velkinburgh and Mitch Aparicio.

Impact.

Real, solid, enduring impact.

It’s what the four members of the 12th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame all delivered.

They were athletes, they had their moments in the sun, but, after they had taken the uniform off for the final time, their legacies, their spirit, their lessons have lived on in the town they once represented.

It’s why they are true legends, and why you’ll now find their names at the top of this blog, enshrined under the tab marked … legends.

I give you, Mitch Aparicio, Emily (Vracin) Kosderka, Dustin Van Velkinburgh and McKayla Bailey.

We’ll kick if off with Coach V, who could have gone in as an athlete, but will get the call as a coach.

Dustin was a superb athlete (still is) who played multiple sports in his younger days, but he is also that rarity, a top-level stud who turned around and came back to coach at the school where he prospered.

He often talks about how much the coaches he had shaped his life, gave him hope and a purpose, and he has retained those lessons and passed them on in his work with CHS football and basketball players.

Young (and skilled) enough to still be able to break his players ankles on the court if necessary, but wise enough to know when to use that power and when to quietly impart wisdom and support, he has helped shape a generation of Wolves.

If they come out the same kind of man he is, what a boon for this community.

Joining him on the stage is Aparicio, an 11-time letter winner who put in work like no other.

A three-time Mr. Hustle award winner in basketball, who later married his coach’s daughter, Mitch was an all-star in football, basketball, baseball and track who could have a trophy room full of All-League honors — if that mattered to him.

Instead, the Class of 1987 alum, who carried his football squad to state three times, has always been content to focus on the small moments instead of the trophies.

“Looking back at it now, I believe the best memories I have are of living in a small town and being close to family,” he once told me. “Living in a small community was a great opportunity to be involved, to play everything and get recognized by your family and community.”

He’s given back, gifting CHS with talented daughters Sydney and Payton, and always being one of the school’s most visible boosters with wife Tami.

And while the high school ‘stache is gone, the huge grin is still there, lighting up the town he loves, which loves him right back.

Our third inductee is the single most cold-blooded killer I have ever covered in person.

Kosderka was Coupeville’s answer to Larry Bird on the basketball court, and I swear I never, ever saw her miss a shot at money time.

The Class of 1992 grad was a standout volleyball and softball star, as well, but it was on the hardwood that she truly excelled.

Need one shot to win? From anywhere on the court? With no time to even think or blink?

Boom. The ball would snap into her hands, fly out with a whisper and the small smile would play at the corner of her mouth as she was backpedaling before the ball hit nothing but the bottom of the net.

Post high school, she has devoted countless hours to helping other athletes as a trainer, and has two young children who may one day surpass their athletically-gifted parents (husband Matt is a college baseball Hall of Famer).

If so, one can only hope Emily brings them home to the town in which she scorched so many nets.

Our headliner, and the most recent athlete by far, is Miss Bailey, who departs for college this week.

A top-level softball player who also dazzled as a hoops star, a spiker and a booter, McKayla is going in to the Hall as a contributor, and it’s not meant as a slight on her athletic skills.

Girl could whip a fastball.

But, in McKayla’s case, her impact went so far beyond the diamond and I want to acknowledge her unique position.

It’s impossible to overstate how important The Photo Bomb Queen was to the growth of Coupeville Sports.

When she was a freshman, I called her a Diaper Dandy (after which I had to explain to mom Donna who Dick Vitale was and why the term was a GOOD THING, all while Donna chased me through the town waving the beatin’ stick).

For the final three years of her high school days — the first three years of this blog — McKayla was my absolute go-to gold standard for anything and everything.

She would pose for photos until the cows came home (and then corral the cows into some more photos), she perfected the art of photo-bombing like no other (yes, yes, lil’ sis McKenzie has mad skills too) and she would answer every stupid question I asked with style, wit and zing.

McKayla is a great athlete, but she is so much more.

She is smart, she is kind, she is graceful, a vibrant, good-hearted young woman who it was a genuine honor to write about.

I hope she goes out into the world and kicks an unholy amount of booty, whether on the field, in the classroom or just in every day life.

There have been a lot of talented athletes in Coupeville, past, present, and surely in the future. There are also a lot of very entertaining ones.

But McKayla, there will never, ever be another McKayla Bailey.

I am so glad I get the chance to honor you, even in this small way.

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Emily (Vracin) Kosderka and her children, Colby and Sydney.

Emily (Vracin) Kosderka was money.

There have been great basketball players at Coupeville High School over the years, but was there ever another Wolf player who you were more confident would absolutely, positively put that ball in the hoop at crunch time?

If you say yes, you’re lying.

Now married and a mother of two, the 1992 grad — who also played some pretty dang good volleyball and softball during her days in the red and black — was among the best basketball players I have seen play for CHS in the 22 seasons I have been on this Island.

You can make arguments for Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, Brianne King, Lexie and Brittany Black, Tina Joiner, Linda Currier and a couple of others.

Mike Bagby, Cody Peters, Hunter Hammer and Virgil Roehl are in the argument as well.

But Kosderka was Coupeville’s answer to Larry Bird. If she didn’t have ice water in her veins, she was close.

Modest, too.

“Ha! Oh, I doubt anyone remembers me from back in the day, but on the off chance they do, I hope they remember me as you did,” Kosderka said. “Honestly, I take that as a huge compliment, because that is how I hoped to be perceived — very confident, but a team player.

Magic Johnson once said that during his playing days, he approached the game “with effort and joy” and it made me smile because I could really identify with that,” she added. “In fact, to this day, it’s pretty much my approach to life in general.”

And she agrees with the Bird comparison, to a point.

“It’s funny that you bring up Larry Bird,” Kosderka said. “One of my favorite quotes of all time is from him — ‘In the closing seconds of every game, I want the ball in my hands for that last shot – not in anybody else’s, not in anybody else’s in the world.’ And that doesn’t come from a place of cockiness, but of confidence.”

She retains fond memories of her days as a Wolf, recalling how each of her coaches imparted lessons that have stayed with her and helped shape her as she has gone through life.

Phyllis Textor (basketball), Deb Cummings (volleyball), and Pam Jampsa (softball) were all extremely influential on me and each in their own ways,” Kosderka said. “They had very different coaching styles, but each took the time to teach me a lot about the game, but more importantly about life.

“And now that I really sit down and think about it, other than the flex offense and deny defense, it’s the life stuff that I remember the most,” she added. “After spending the last 20 years in athletics, and realizing how much the game has to teach about life, it’s easy to say that they did it right.”

Having been taught well by her coaches and teachers (“Mr. Engel, Dr. Whittaker, Mr. Bagby, and Ms. Erbaland were some of the most amazing people and I am grateful to them almost on a daily basis, even after all these years. There is no better feeling than to know that someone truly, truly believes in you, and the education they provided extended much further than the classroom.”) Kosderka made a successful leap to college.

She played basketball for two years at Willamette University and then moved into sports medicine, getting a Masters in Kinesiology from Indiana University.

After three years as an assistant athletic trainer with Lewis & Clark College, she made the jump to Concordia University, where she has been the head athletic trainer and taught since 2001.

Married for 10 years to Matt Kosderka, and the mother of a six-year old (Sydney) and four-year old (Colby), she is content with where life has led her. And she firmly believes her days on the diamond and the court helped make her strong enough to weather the storm of changes over the years.

“I could write a novel on the lessons learned through sport,” Kosderka said. “Sport molded me and shaped me into who I am today.

“I learned to compete, to compromise, to revel in the success of others, to work within a team, to respect the officials, to take direction, to be a leader, to always be open to learn, to win gracefully and to lose graciously (most of the time), to endure pain, to manage heartache, to strive for success and to struggle to obtain it, to recognize the unequivocal joy of reaching a goal that you had to work really hard to obtain, and the fact that the best part of it all are the people you are in it with,” she added. “That is what sport gives us. These are the lessons it can teach.”

There is still one lesson to learn, however, and that is how she will deal with being the mom of an athlete (or not).

“Do I want my kids to follow in my athletic footsteps? That is a big question with a complex answer,” Kosderka said. “It sounds cliche, I know, but my greatest hope is that my kids find their passion, whatever that may be.

Matt and I talk about that all the time,” she added. “We wonder what it is that they will connect with and love and are excited to watch them discover that. Will it be sport? Or will it be music? The arts? Dance? Karate? Auto shop?”

While she still believes sports have a lot to teach, she is a bit leery of a hyper-competitive world of travel squads and year-round dedication to one sport, as opposed to “the good old days” when you rotated sports and played with your friends all year.

“I remember the days of little league in Coupeville when we played on crappy fields on Saturdays,” Kosderka said. “We wore polyester uniforms that were five years old, our parents sat on folding chairs, our coaches were dads who just wanted to help kids learn the game, and our competition was the kid down the street. It all seemed so simple, and unfortunately it just isn’t that simple anymore.

“So, we will see. If Colby’s heart beats for baseball and Sydney is determined to shoot 100 free throws every night, then it will be on their own volition,” she added. “In many ways, I hope they do. I hope they get to learn the lessons sport has to teach. I hope they learn to be good leaders, to rely on their teammates, to respect their coaches, to strive and to struggle, and to know the great exuberance of a big win.”

Lessons their mom learned every time she stepped on the court, and reasons why she will never be forgotten by Wolf fans.

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