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Zane Bundy

Zane Bundy, through the years.

The best-dressed booter in the biz. (John Fisken photo)

The best-dressed booter in the biz. (John Fisken photos)

Bundy

Doin’ what he does.

Zane Bundy is special.

The Coupeville High School senior, who celebrates a birthday today, is a rarity, in many ways.

I’ve seen him grow up seemingly for all of his life, because in his early days he was a fixture at Videoville and David’s DVD Den, the constant companion to mom Janine or dad Mark.

Whether he was knee-deep in the video game section, trying to fast-talk his way to renting a questionable movie that he absolutely, positively needed to see or scampering around the aisles, Zane was a friendly ball o’ fire.

As he grew, both in age and shooting up like a weed in height, young Mr. Bundy picked up the mantle of soccer star and ran with it.

Both as a select player and high school booter, he’s been one of the most consistent stars we’ve had in Coupeville in the last decade.

Zane had a nose for goal-scoring, but also showed an extremely deft touch with the ball when setting others up for the shot.

And, despite always being a pretty dang skinny kid, he has never been afraid to rumble in the scrums, taking and exchanging body blows with the burliest of foes.

Proving people can always surprise you, Bundy slipped off the pitch as a senior to join the CHS football team for the first time.

Utilizing his booming leg, he led the Wolves in scoring and was among the best prep field goal kickers in the state.

He even snagged himself a tackle late in the season, which delighted Zane and coach Ryan King, while causing his mom to (momentarily) hyperventilate.

And lo and behold, it’s football, not soccer, which he’ll be playing in college.

Who saw that coming?

Through it all, whether he was playing “the beautiful game” or staying one step ahead of grunting, 300-pound would-be tacklers, Bundy has never changed as a person.

And that, ultimately, is what has always made him one of my favorite athletes, on and off the field.

He remains today the same fresh-faced, super-friendly person he was as a young boy, though now, as a young man set to graduate high school in a week, he’s become quite the fashion fiend.

Athletes come and athletes go, and a few will always rise above the crowd, for any number of reasons. Some positive, some negative.

With Zane, it has been nothing but positive, from day one to his final moments as a Wolf.

I hope he goes down to Santa Barbara City College and makes a big splash with the Vaqueros gridiron squad. That goes without saying.

But regardless of how his entree into college football goes, this is a young man who will be a success in life, and that’s far more important.

He is too kind, too smart, too friendly, too talented, not to do well.

Today is a small sliver of his life, and I hope his cake day is a smashing one. But I also hope every day around his birthday is equally winning.

Face it, Zane, you’re a pretty awesome guy.

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Makana Stone signs to play college basketball. (John Fisken photos)

Makana Stone signs to play college basketball. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Wiley Hesselgrave spins towards the basket, a second away from another bucket.

   Wiley Hesselgrave spins towards the basket, a second away from another bucket. (John Fisken photos)

The dynamic duo during their junior year.

The dynamic duo during their junior year.

Makana and Wiley.

Wiley and Makana.

For the entire run of Coupeville Sports, from Aug. 16, 2012, when they were days away from entering CHS as freshmen, until today, when they are days away from graduation, Miss Stone and Mr. Hesselgrave have been the absolute gold standard.

Stars from day one, their exploits have been stellar, and their character, even more so.

The news the duo was tabbed as the 2015-2016 CHS Athlete of the Year winners Thursday was hardly a surprise.

But it is perfectly appropriate.

Stone, a transcendent basketball and track athlete, was honored for the second consecutive year, allowing her to join a relatively short list of Wolves, male or female, who earned the award more than once.

Hesselgrave, a true four-year letter-man on the gridiron and the leading scorer two years running for the Wolf boys’ basketball squad, received the top award for the first time.

While there were several other athletes who were certainly in the conversation, rarely has the award felt more like a slam dunk.

Unlike some other years, when the winners (or non-winners) could be, and were, heavily debated, Stone and Hesselgrave are perfect fits for the honor.

I’ve known Wiley a far less time than Makana — a young woman who I’ve known virtually since birth — and we never had a sit-down interview during his time as a Wolf.

That’s on me.

I’m not the most social person, and I really don’t like butting too far into the athlete’s personal lives. Especially when they seem content having it remain that way.

Wiley always seemed like a really self-contained guy. He showed up, put the work in day after day, then went home.

Rarely on social media, and not one to goof around for the cameraman, he never sought out the spotlight, but he always deserved it.

Whether he knows it or not, I have huge respect for Hesselgrave, and how he conducted himself.

From the freshman who snatched a touchdown pass in a playoff game way down in Blaine to the relentless senior who dropped his head and hurtled time and again into the pack — in both his sports — Wiley left it all on the field.

As he heads off to the next stage in his life, on his way to being a successful businessman, I wish him nothing but the best.

It was a true pleasure to watch you play for the past four seasons, Mr. Hesselgrave.

With Makana, I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again — she is, without a doubt, the most impressive athlete I have covered in 26 years of writing about high school sports.

She was amazing in soccer, back when she used to play. She is phenomenal in basketball. She is other-worldly on the track oval.

We could list all the awards she’s rightfully won. The league MVP’s. The All-State games.

Or, we could dissect the extraordinary plays she made, plays which I’ve never seen any Coupeville athlete, male or female, pull off.

But, in the end, what has always set Makana apart, at the exact same time it has drawn everyone closer, is her bliss.

She is that true rarity, a stubborn, committed, break-you-in-half winner who brings out the best in her teammates and, even when they’re being thrashed, her foes.

On her Senior Night during basketball season, the entire Klahowya team, without telling their coach in advance, ran over to Stone to hug her goodbye, to wish her the best moments before she decimated them.

It was the most touching moment I have witnessed in high school sports.

As this duo, who have given me so much to write about, prepare to depart CHS, I know there are other athletes eager to move up and take their places.

There will be great performances to come, from great performers.

Some will emulate Makana and Wiley’s skills, others their class and grace.

If we’re lucky, we’ll get some who will combine it all, like this duo did.

But, if we take what Magic Johnson said about Larry Bird on the night of his retirement and tweak the words slightly, we capture my feelings at this moment.

“You only told me one lie. You said there will be another Makana, another Wiley. There will never, ever be another Makana, another Wiley.”

Thank you both, for four years worth of memories.

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After four years teaching and coaching at CHS, Brett Smedley is returning to work at his alma mater, Columbia River. (John Fisken photo)

   After four years teaching and coaching at CHS, Brett Smedley is returning to work at his alma mater, Columbia River. (John Fisken photo)

Coupeville was rocked Thursday morning by news popular coaches Brett and Breanne Smedley were leaving and heading home to Vancouver.

The pair will teach and coach at Columbia River High School.

Breanne will take over as head coach for a volleyball program which finished second at state in 3A, while Brett will be the defensive coordinator for a Chieftains squad which won a league title in 2015.

Taking a moment out from his work in the classroom, Brett issued the following thank-you to the community.

As you have heard Breanne and I are taking teaching and coaching jobs at Columbia River High School in Vancouver, WA.

This was a very hard decision to make, but one we felt we couldn’t pass up.

It is also an opportunity for me to coach and teach at my alma mater and give back to the community that helped to raise me.

The Coupeville community has been amazing at welcoming Breanne and I into the community and making us feel as though we were part of the family.

For this I can not thank Coupeville enough.

I would also like to thank the students, staff, and athletes at Coupeville that I have had a chance to work with.

It has been a lot of fun and a great learning experience for me.

They have been extremely influential in my development as a teacher/coach/person. For that I am extremely thankful.

Lastly, I would like to thank Ron Bagby and Willie Smith for an amazing four years.

They have been huge mentors in my life and Breanne and I are extremely thankful for all they have done for us, and the friendships that have been created.

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Coupeville High School volleyball coach Breanne Smedley is leaving to take a job in Vancouver. (John Fisken photos)

   Coupeville High School volleyball coach Breanne Smedley is leaving to take a job in Vancouver. (John Fisken photos)

Husband Brett will be joining her at Columbia River.

Husband Brett will be joining her at Columbia River.

This is not an April Fools.

Four months out from a new season, Coupeville High School just lost half of its roster of fall sports coaches.

Brett and Breanne Smedley have accepted coaching and teaching jobs in their hometown and are leaving Whidbey Island to return to Vancouver.

Both will teach at Columbia River High School, with Breanne taking over as head volleyball coach.

Brett will be the school’s football defensive coordinator.

Columbia River is a 3A school and plays in the Greater St. Helen’s League, along with Fort Vancouver, Kelso and Prairie.

Both Chieftains programs won league titles this school year.

“This has been an extremely difficult decision, but ultimately we were presented with an opportunity we felt we couldn’t pass up,” Breanne Smedley said. “I am saddened to leave this team and community, but I am confident the program is in a great place to be successful next year and beyond.”

She has been the head volleyball coach at CHS the past two seasons, leading the Wolves to a tie for second-place in the 1A Olympic League this past season.

The Wolves upended Seattle Christian for their first playoff win in a decade.

With her departure, the Wolf volleyball program is two coaches down, as JV coach Heidi Wyman stepped down earlier in the year to focus on family and club coaching.

Brett Smedley worked as an assistant football coach under Tony Maggio before taking over the program last year.

Working with an extremely young roster, he went 1-10, but his team played aggressively and showed considerable signs of growth under his tutelage.

While the move gives the couple a chance to return to their roots, they will treasure their time on Whidbey.

“I couldn’t have asked for a better community to start our careers and begin our lives together,” Breanne Smedley said. “As I told the players, the relationships we have made here go beyond the volleyball court and I will continue to be available as a mentor and friend for these girls.

“Thank you again for the opportunity to coach and teach these amazing young women.”

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Wolf players showed up Friday to hold a flag football clinic for kids from the Boys and Girls Club. (Photo courtesy Jacob Martin)

   Wolf players showed up Friday to hold a flag football clinic for kids from the Boys and Girls Club. (Photo courtesy Jacob Martin)

The strength of the Wolf is the pack.

Proving that to be true, 20 Coupeville High School football players showed up Friday — on a day when there was no school — to help their coaches run a flag football clinic for local children.

The event, put on through the Coupeville Boys and Girls Club, drew 28 participants, said CHS head football coach Brett Smedley.

“We had a great turn out and they had a great time!” he said.

Drawing in both girls and boys on a sunny afternoon, the clinic featured a mix of lessons and fun.

As he continues to build his own program at the high school, Smedley is also reaching out to the sport at other levels.

Getting assistance from a wide range of helpers was invaluable, he said.

“I’d like to thank the Boys and Girls Club, Coupeville Elementary, the CHS Football Team, Coach (Bob) Martin, and Coach (Ryan) King for putting this on!”

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