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Posts Tagged ‘football’

Carson Risner (left) anchoring the line for the Wolves. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Carson Risner (left), anchoring the line for the Wolves. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Risner (bottom left) and other captains from the CHS squad celebrate during the team's awards dinner in the fall. (Sylvia Arnold photo)

Risner (bottom left) and other CHS captains celebrate during the football team’s awards dinner. (Sylvia Arnold photo)

And then some snipping was done. (Jennie Prince photo)

And then some snipping was done. (Jennie Prince photo)

A little snip here. A little shave there.

Doctors cleaned up the injured leg of Coupeville High School football captain Carson Risner recently, getting the junior back on-target for being ready for his senior season on the gridiron.

Risner, a two-way starter on the line for the Wolves, was injured during a practice midway through the football season, and is currently sitting out the basketball season while working as a manager for the boys’ hoops team.

He hopes to be back and healthy in time to throw during the track season.

“His surgeon threw discus in college and asked if we wanted a rubber-band and some springs added while he was in there, so he could really get a good launch,” mom Jennie Prince said with a laugh.

“The surgeon was hoping he could play the end of the season of basketball, but our season is over too soon,” she added. “He cannot bend his knee past 90 degrees for six weeks. Then he should be fine. He will take it slow and needs to rebuild his quad muscles. He’s hoping to throw.”

Doctors shaved Risner’s torn-up patella and repaired a 28mm meniscus tear. A medial ligament attached to his patella that keeps it from dislocating is still torn.

Surgery on that would require a six-month recovery time, so the family is waiting to see if it will heal itself, which is very possible.

“He can play with a nice tape job and a patella tracking brace,” Prince said. “If it dislocates again he will consider fixing it, but it still may heal if he’s nice to it.

“His torn MCL from football looks like it never happened,” she added. “Happy about that. ACL is perfect too.”

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Caleb Valko (left) and Kwamane Bowens, old-school style.

Caleb Valko (left) and Kwamane Bowens, old-school style.

All grown up.

    All grown up. (Left photo copyright recruit757.com, right photo by Jennifer Morrell)

What could of been.

Elementary school buds, Caleb Valko and Kwamane Bowens never got the chance to play out their high school football careers in the same town.

Valko stayed in Coupeville and went out as a senior captain, pile-driving hapless runners to the end. Now he’s an assistant coach with the Coupeville Middle School football squad.

Bowens ended up playing high school ball way across the country after a family move and is currently playing D-1 football on scholarship at the University of Hawaii.

Both have been successful in their own way, and the duo remain in touch today, forever linked by the friendship of youth.

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Chris and Shannon Tumblin

Chris and Shannon Tumblin

Tumblin (right) during his days as a wrestling stud.

Tumblin (right) during his days as a wrestling stud.

Today is the birthday of the greatest quote machine known to man.

Well, at least he was until his wife, Shannon, made him stop giving quotes to the press.

Ladies and gentlemen, Whidbey paramedic, football/baseball coach and silver-tongued devil Chris Tumblin:

Josh had one tackle on a receiver, folded him in half like a cheap hooker who was punched in the gut by her pimp. He had to sit out for awhile and wait for his liver to start working again.”

Happy 46th, Mr. T.

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Dalton (left) and Mike Engle, two generations of hard-hitting Wolf linebackers.

#58 in your program and #1 in your hearts.

There are some who question the emphasis placed on sports in high school.

To those people, I offer the case of Mike Engle.

Father of three, career firefighter, rock in the community he grew up in, and a kid who became a success because of the joy and positive rewards sports offered him.

“I think the best memories were my friends and sports. Sports were the one thing I put my whole heart and soul into,” Engle said. “It was the one thing I felt I was good at, and it was the one thing that gave me confidence, made me feel like I was as good as everyone else somehow.

“That’s one of the reasons I believe sports are so important for kids,” he added. “Especially the ones that struggle with academics like I did.”

The Coupeville High School Class of 1982 grad, the Athlete of the Year his senior season, remains one of the standout Wolves of all time, even 30 years after graduation.

He lettered three years in football (the only sophomore to do so), where he was a Second-Team All-Conference pick at linebacker two seasons, played basketball and baseball and went to state in track as a two-sport threat (shot put and discus).

At his graduation, he held CHS records in the shot put, discus and javelin.

Through it all, football was the sport nearest and dearest to his heart.

His senior season he had 60+ tackles through four games, before an injury cost him the rest of the season. Still, those four games were enough to net him Second-Team All-Conference, a sign opposing coaches recognized what a terror he was, even in limited duty.

“I loved the “zone” that you get into during the game,” Engle said. “Figuring out what the opposing coach was going to call, based on down and distance.

“The game against La Conner I had 17 or 18 tackles and a fumble recovery,” he added. “I loved being so focused that you didn’t hear the crowd or what quarter it was. I still get excited thinking about it.”

Living out his dreams on the gridiron gave Engle a chance to taste what life was like for the “big boys” who he had watched from afar as a kid.

“I remember when I was in junior high how cool the high schoolers seemed, i.e. the ‘jocks’,” Engle said. “There were a few (Bill Jareld, Keith Jameson) that were encouraging, which led me to believe I might have what it took to succeed.

“Other than that, I just remember my classmates/friends making it a fun year, even if we didn’t win a game,” he added.

Injuries cut short a football career at Wenatchee Valley College and Engle transitioned into teaching — getting a Bachelor of Science degree in physical education from Washington State University — before moving into full-time firefighting as a career.

Along the way, he helped to bring Coupeville and Oak Harbor together by marrying the former MaryAnn Fakkema, and the couple have had three children, daughters Erin and Miranda and middle son Dalton.

Seeing his own children take their parents athletic heritages and expand upon them has been one of the biggest blessings of his life.

Dalton followed his dad most closely, playing football with the same passion and in a “weird but cool” twist repeating his father’s twin selection as Homecoming King and Athlete of the Year as a senior.

“Watching our kids play has been awesome,” Engle said. “Of course, you always want your kid to have a lot of playing time so they can get better, but the best part is seeing the confidence increase and them get it.

“It’s hard to describe the emotion you feel when your kid makes a great play and contributes to the team,” he added. “We felt that keeping our kids active was part of being good parents, and it was a great way to spend quality time with our kids.”

If his children eclipse their dad one day, he’s fine with that. Just being remembered for his own accomplishments is enough.

“When Dalton was a freshman or sophomore, we were at a home game and I said I hope he ends up better than I was,” Engle said. “Dale Folkestad said ‘you were a hell of a linebacker, he’d do well to be as good as you were.’

“I guess that’s how I want to be remembered,” he added. “I think I just wanted to have earned any accolades. There were some good athletes at our school.”

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First they came for our vuvuzela horns. Then the Fun Police came for the Wobble. (Melissa Zimmerman-Losey photos)

Wobble on, Wolf Nation, wobble on…

Until the break of dawn.

To everything there is a season, and that season has passed for The Wobble.

After closing every home football game with a cheerleader-led hustle to the catchy, Cab Calloway-influenced rap song “Wobble” by Atlanta’s own V.I.C., a routine that would invariably pull in most of the remaining people in the stands, the dance is no more.

Despite the fact the song is a catchy tune, and the dance is one anyone from a little kid to a crusty 80-year-old could do, a complaint (over some semi-suggestive lyrics) led CHS cheer coach Sylvia Arnold to replace the routine in last Friday’s final home game.

The Wobble will not go inside for basketball season, disappointing much of Wolf Nation.

Which is too bad, since Arnold and assistant coach Cheridan Boyd-Eck had tailored the dance to keep it family-friendly, foregoing the original music video’s butts-in-your-face approach.

“We chose to keep focused on the fun of the “worldwide” dance that was all over YouTube,” Arnold said.

“People have flash mobbed that routine all over the place, and our girls and the crowd loved it!!”

But, ONE family complained, and, to avoid controversy, the Wobble went the way of the Hammer dance and the cha-cha, replaced by an energetic Zumba routine, “Dance! Dance! Dance!” crafted by Boyd-Eck.

“Everyone seemed to like it, even with the pouring rain,” Boyd-Eck said.

And that persistent rain may have helped, as the crowd hit the exits faster than normal.

Though, as he went, one sardonic scoreboard operator did stop, look around and bellow “I wanna wobble!!”

His plea went unanswered, so he bopped in place by himself for a few moments, shrugged, then headed off into the downpour.

Wobble on, sir, wobble on.

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