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Posts Tagged ‘Happy birthday’

Coach V

Coach V

Coupeville is blessed with a strong group of coaches.

Across the board, regardless of the sport, at the high school, middle school, youth or select team levels, Cow Town has a group of men and women who show great commitment to their athletes and work with them on both a sports and a personal level.

One of the best of the group, Dustin Van Velkinburgh, aka Coach V, hits the big 3-0 today.

And, while his advancing years may require him to seek out a walker and a stiff shot of prune juice (says a guy 13 years older…), there is no quit in the guy.

A very talented athlete in his day (football, basketball, soccer and on and on), he can still kick the pampered rears of most, if not all, of his players.

But, while that reality lingers out there, Coach V is the perfect example of a player’s coach.

One who knows when to be a kid’s best friend and when to be the guy in charge. When to console and cheer and when to push.

He remembers what it was like to be a young man without a father figure.

What it was like to find guidance and the (occasional) kick in the rear from coaches like Ron Bagby and Randy King during his own days as a Wolf.

It made him a man, one who has gone on to raise a swarm of happy children with wife Jessica.

Coupeville gave him much in his younger days, something he speaks of often. And he has returned the favor over the years, giving back to the children of a community he deeply loves.

There is no artifice. No question dodging. He remains the same after a big win as after a horrifying loss.

A small smile, a quiet word off to the side to one kid, a public calling-out of another.

He finds out how they tick, what will drive them and what will crumple them, and he hits all the right notes, fitting his lesson to them as individuals, not faceless cogs in an athletic factory.

Coach V, and others like him, are doing more than making athletes. They are given teenagers and they do their best to help them prepare for life after the cheers and pep rallies.

If they win games, great, but the bigger victories come years later, when the next Coach V stays in town (or returns) and picks up the mantle. The man makes a kid a man and he pays it forward.

Every community worth its salt has a coach like Dustin. That one guy who is his town through and through.

Who, only years later, when you see his legacy in full, do you realize the impact he had. The lives he steered in the right direction, the kids he gave a last chance to, the way he altered destinies, sometimes subtly and sometimes with a bold hand.

In Coupeville, we call him Coach V, and we should be very, very grateful we have him.

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Skyy and Joey Lippo.

Skyy and Joey Lippo.

The next wave of Wolf athletic stars are on their way.

In less than two weeks, a new school year will kick off in Coupeville, with CHS being deluged with a fresh crop of ninth graders.

A lot of them will be intent on proving they can build new legends to replace the ones left behind by the stars of yesterday.

One duo that could be at the forefront of the new renaissance are celebrating a joint birthday today, and, in way of getting in good with them BEFORE they hit the big time, we send out our best wishes.

Skyy and Joey Lippo are multi-talented threats, but one field calls each of them the most.

For Joey, who will be trying his hand at tennis this fall, it’s being one of the boys of summer.

He’s a sweet-swingin’, slick-fieldin’ baseball star who has excelled on whatever team he ends up reppin’. Central or North Whidbey, the clothes don’t matter, cause the talent shines through.

This spring, he’ll be in red and black, trying to follow in the footsteps of recent Wolf stars like Ben Etzell and Morgan Payne, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he makes an immediate impact.

His sister, though, may be the brightest shining star in the family, as she has already scored in one of the toughest fields there is — the art of the dance.

No one is going to call ballet a sport, but everyone should acknowledge that it’s tougher to pull off than 97.4% of what are called sports.

The hours of hard work, sweat and sheer freakin’ pain dancers like Skyy or CHS junior Sylvia Hurlburt put in on the stage is remarkable. And, unlike most athletes, they have to smile through it all.

So, as the Lippo kids prepare for their entrance into the spotlight (with dad Joe live-tweeting the whole way), take a moment to send well wishes their way.

Then, maybe, just maybe, they’ll remember us “little people” when they hit the Big Time.

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Jodi Crimmins

Jodi Crimmins, literature connoisseur.

Jodi (right) in her early days, hanging out with siblings Jenny and Billy.

Jodi (right) in her early days, hanging out with siblings Jenny and Billy.

Jodi, daughter Maggie, son Aiden and her square-jawed, matinee idol husband, Jon.

Jodi, daughter Maggie, son Aiden and her square-jawed, matinee idol husband, Jon.

The smile was deceptive. She lived to rip arms off.

The smile was deceptive. She lived to rip arms off.

No one is flawless.

That being said, Jodi (Christensen) Crimmins comes pretty dang close.

The legend of her as a basketball player still echoes down the hallways at Coupeville High School.

They say when the wind blows off of the prairie, shoots through a window at CHS and creates an eerie sound, that it’s actually the long-repressed wail of one of her former basketball teammates.

The doomed girl wanders the hallways, still looking for the arm they lost that time they tried to reach for a loose ball at the same time Jodi, a one-woman Wolf wrecking crew, latched on to it.

She was a beast. A beast, I say.

If the basketball was anywhere in play during those days, Jodi was a split-second away from snatching it, elbows flying like Ginsu knives, nostrils flarin’, eyes rollin’ in the back of her head.

There are grown women who still cry, to this day, when they try to explain the terror she made blossom in their hearts.

And that’s just her teammates who had to go up against her in rebounding drills… (ooh, rim shot).

Which is amazing, because, off the court, you will never find a more genuinely sweet, caring, lovely, wonderful woman.

My mom, who worked with Jodi in the kitchen at Camp Casey when Mrs. Crimmins was a young lass, adored her.

Rarely did a day go by when she didn’t gush about Jodi, and rightfully so.

Over the years, from the time I wrote a feature article about her for The Whidbey News-Times during her basketball glory days, to the time period where we worked together at Videoville and Miriam’s Espresso, to today, when she spreads joy and learning as an elementary school teacher, she remains the same.

Oh, she’s gotten married, had two children, and made a lot of other people gush about her along the way.

But Jodi, who celebrates her birthday today, remains that bright, shining light in the sky to everyone who has been blessed to know her.

All you need to know is my mom adored her, and my mom was a very good judge of character.

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Sydney Autio

Sydney Autio

Sydney Autio made her move last year.

Just a sophomore at the time, she became a key member of both the Coupeville High School volleyball and girls’ tennis squads, beaming out her mega-watt smile as she soared in both sports.

On the volleyball court, Autio took over at a key spot, holding down the setter position for the Wolves, directing traffic and setting up her teammates with her precision passing.

When spring rolled around she went a step or two further, advancing to the postseason, where she teamed up with senior Sydney Aparicio to form a deadly doubles duo known as Sydney Squared.

Oh yeah, and she also did double duty at times, scraping out the time to be part of the Wolf cheer squad while still competing in another sport at the same time.

With two years left in her high school career, the sky is the limit for the talented, bubbly Autio.

As she celebrates her birthday today, let’s take the opportunity to get in on the ground floor of her fan club.

And now is the right time to do so, because if she continues to play with the passion and joy she’s exhibited so far, that fan club will be very, very crowded by the time she reaches her various Senior Night festivities.

Happy birthday, Sydney.

You’re a joy to watch play and here’s hoping your fun never stops.

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Bob Martin, at work and rest.

Bob Martin, at work and rest.

Bob Martin is the unsung backbone of Coupeville sports.

Whether coaching football and basketball, working with the high school boosters or the Boys and Girls Club, volunteering for Race the Reserve road crew work or simply making sure the lights stay on and the PA system works in the CHS gym during games, he’s everywhere at once.

In a small town, you need people like Bob, who are willing to put a lot of time and work in for very little pay, to make things work.

He may not always be in the spotlight, which he seems quite happy about, but he is indispensable.

Plus, he upholds a proud tradition honored by myself and Wolf football coach Tony Maggio, among others, of wearing shorts almost 24-7-365, rain and/or snow be danged.

Good man.

So, on this, his birthday, take a moment to give a hand to the quiet man of Coupeville sports, the guy who helps keep everything running while building for the next generation.

There is a landmark that sits in front of the CHS gym — a rock that is spray painted every time someone has something to get off their chest.

When it comes to Wolf sports, from the pee wees to the big kids, Bob Martin is the real-life embodiment of that rock.

Just don’t go spray painting him any time soon…

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