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Posts Tagged ‘Happy birthday’

Mitchell Carroll at work. (John Fisken photos)

Mitchell Carroll at work. (John Fisken photos)

Kid’s got moves.

Coupeville High School junior Mitchell Carroll, who celebrates a birthday today, is one of the slickest Wolves on campus.

Whether on the football field or the track oval, the multi-sport threat can turn on the afterburners and leave his foes grasping at air.

On the gridiron, he played both ways as a sophomore.

On a team deep in talent, Carroll finished 8th in total yards and 18th in tackles, and those numbers could take a large spike if he gets more playing time this fall.

During track season, he flexed some muscle (as depicted in the photo montage above) to go with the speed.

Occasionally working as a sprinter and relay runner, Mitchell excelled as a jumper, making his mark in all three events (triple, long and high jump).

Plus, he still found time to be a member of the school’s Homecoming royalty and has been known to grace the Honor Roll.

Not bad, and he’s still got two years to set the school afire.

So, from all of us at Coupeville Sports, happy birthday, Mr. Carroll!

Keep aiming for excellence and none of us will be surprised when you go blazing by, like a bright, shining star.

Cause that’s what you are.

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Jonathan Thurston (Shelli Trumbull and John Fisken photos)

Jonathan Thurston (Shelli Trumbull and John Fisken photos)

Jonathan Thurston bleeds red and black.

The Coupeville High School junior, who celebrates his 16th birthday today, is part of a pack of (still) young Wolves who have brought the noise and costumes back to the student cheering section.

Working with Aiden Crimmins, Uriel Liquidano, Jimmy Myers, Jacob Martin and others, Thurston has helped to reclaim both the loud and the proud part of being a CHS fan.

When he’s not busy on the field himself, of course, since he’s a baseball and football player for the Wolves.

As he celebrates his big day today, we want to wish him the best.

Stay loud. Stay proud. Keep on excelling, on and off the field, Mr. Thurston.

You are a key part of Wolf Nation, and it wouldn’t be the same without you being around.

May the next two years be your finest as an athlete, a student and a young man coming into his own.

Now, while the rest of the readers are busy gazing at the photo montage of your exploits, go grab some birthday cake and bask in the moment.

This way, I gave you a head start.

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Birthday boys CJ Smith (left) and Jerry Helm.

Birthday boys CJ Smith (left) and Jerry Helm.

One’s old enough to be the others dad … barely.

But while Jerry Helm and CJ Smith have an 18-year age gap, they share a lot in common, and not just a birthday.

One is a former Wolf star, the other a current one, and both have never been content with playing just one sport, or ever going half-speed.

Helm was a standout football, basketball and track athlete who also dabbled in baseball for a bit, while Smith has helped revive the “traditional” three-sport athlete at CHS.

After moving to Coupeville in the middle of his sophomore year, CJ, who will be a senior in the fall, has played football, basketball and baseball.

In the two previous years, not a single Wolf boy played all three traditional sports, with soccer, track and tennis luring away a number of athletes.

CJ, and younger brother Hunter, led the charge to change that during the school year that just ended, reviving memories of a time when it was common.

The comparisons between the two go deeper than just being multi-sport stars, however.

Both Jerry and CJ carry themselves with a quiet confidence, content to let their actions speak louder than their words.

That calmness and inner fire has led Helm through a meteoric rise in Central Whidbey Island Fire and Rescue and it allows Smith to very closely resemble outgoing Wolf star Aaron Curtin, another self-contained young man who prefers athletic success to scrambling to pose in pre-game photos.

I have a great deal of respect for how both of the birthday boys conduct themselves.

If you’re looking for sports role models, old school (well, not that old…) and new school, you can’t go wrong with Helm and Smith.

As they celebrate their joint cake day, united by the calendar, their success at CHS and their low-key style, we want to wish them both the best.

Happy birthday, gentlemen, and thank you for being class acts every day.

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Jose Marcos

Jose Marcos

Jose Marcos is a young man on the rise.

A strong two-sport (soccer, football) athlete, he’s one of those kids who plays his heart out on the field, then reverts to being an easy-going, friendly guy once the game is done.

Watching him interact with his soccer mates in the stands before and after games, you can see his sunny personality shine through. He’s just a good dude.

As Jose celebrates a birthday today, we want to wish him all the best.

May cake rain down on you all day long.

And, for those who want to know a bit more about him, pop over and take a look at this story I wrote back in early 2014:

https://coupevillesports.com/2014/03/19/fueled-by-friends-marcos-thrives-in-two-sports/

Now you know. And knowing is half the battle.

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Kate Harbour, doin' whatever the heck she wants.

Kate Harbour, doin’ whatever the heck she wants.

The Wonder Twins, Hayley Waterman (left) and Kate Harbour, back in the video store days.

   The Wonder Twins, Hayley Waterman (left) and Kate Harbour, back in the video store days.

This has nothing to do with sports, nothing.

But it’s my blog and I’ll do whatever I want.

So, on the birthday of one Kate Harbour, national treasure, I offer this excerpt from my book, “Memoirs of an Idiot” (you can order it from Amazon — there’s a link on the top right side of this page … yes, seriously).

Happy birthday, Kate, Katey, KAAAAAATTTTTTTTTTTEEEEEE!

 

Many employees came and went during my 12+ years at Videoville, but I hold a special place in my memories for the “Wonder Twins.”

Kate and Hayley were many things — scary-smart, incredibly knowledgeable about films, sarcastic, slightly devious, hard-working, warmhearted yet capable of delivering soul-crushing verbal barbs — and they operated on the sort of secret wavelength that twins do.

They may have had different parents, but only their brains could operate on whatever fantastic frequency they were tuned into during those days.

Kate was a ninja, silent and deadly as she flashed by, yanking the DVD out of the player and replacing it with one of her own without even pausing to hit the eject button.

She detested country music, and I would try to have Waylon Jennings or Johnny Cash concerts playing when I knew she was due in for her shift.

One second, “Ring of Fire,” then the next moment “Shortbus” was scandalizing everyone in the store, and Kate had rappelled up between the storage shelves, ready to drop on the heads of unsuspecting baristas when they walked by.

As she would remind me with a long sigh, large amounts of eye-rolling and a drawn-out “Daaaaa-viiiiddd” whenever I forgot, she had been the first to be hired, but things weren’t in their proper proportion until Hayley joined her behind the counter.

The only person I’ve ever met who could do literally everything in the world at once, and do them all quite well, Hayley was the giggly one of the pair, prone to hiding in the rolling cart that went under the night drop box and grabbing people’s hands when they went to drop off a film.

She was a perfect counterpoint to Kate’s drier, precision-hit style of humor.

There are many tales to tell of the pair, only some of which involve a young boy in a Santa hat licking an ice cream cone while looking for movies, but I’ll leave you with one you can share in mixed company.

We had gotten a new film called “The Brown Bunny,” a self-indulgent piece of tripe about a man driving cross country while thinking about his lost love.

90 eyeball-glazing minutes with the camera looking out through a bug-streaked windshield, and then, out of nowhere, a fully XXX scene of Chloe Sevigny delivering some uncomfortable oral lovin’.

When the store owner discovered this, we were told not to rent the film, which then disappeared into the hands of the Wonder Twins, never to be seen again.

Until one morning when a customer walked up and asked me if this new movie “The Brown Bunny” was any good. Seeing as how we had close to 50 copies, we must of liked it, right?

Thinking the customer had lost it (which frequently happened in our store), I went around the corner of a video standee with them, my eyes coming up to see a full display of “The Brown Bunny,” row after row of boxes with the movie’s bright yellow cover looking back at me.

And, at the top, a nicely-lettered little sign saying “David’s Pick of the Week!!”

As I opened a few empty cases, which all held a photocopy of the real DVD’s artwork, I heard giggling coming from deep within the store, then the stealthy patter of feet making an escape.

Suddenly Merle Haggard’s voice vanished in mid-song, a barista on her way to get more milk screamed as something dropped on her from above, and tires squealed out of the parking lot outside.

We all worked in a video store, but we lived in the Wonder Twins’ world.

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