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Posts Tagged ‘Homecoming’

Cheridan Eck was in her third season as head cheer coach at Coupeville High School. (John Fisken photo)

   Cheridan Eck is in her third season as head cheer coach at Coupeville High School. (John Fisken photo)

It is the disappearing act no one will talk about. On the record at least.

Coupeville High School cheer coach Cheridan Eck hasn’t been on the sideline during the past two Wolf football games.

She was absent Sept. 30, a home game against Vashon Island, and CHS principal Duane Baumann was in her place.

A week rolled by, and CHS assistant principal Melissa Rohr stood in for Eck during Friday’s Homecoming game against Port Townsend.

Without a credentialed cheer coach in place, the Wolf cheerleaders did no stunting at either game.

School officials have not responded to requests for comment.

Multiple Wolf cheerleaders, speaking on condition of anonymity, confirmed they have been interviewed by school officials, and were asked about their experiences working with Eck.

The cheer coach declined to comment, saying she had been told by the school not to speak publicly on the matter.

Eck is in her third season as head coach, running the CHS program through both football and basketball seasons.

Before that, she was an assistant coach under Sylvia Arnold, who retired in 2013.

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Mckenzie Meyer (John Fisken photos)

Mckenzie Meyer is here to rock … and roll. (John Fisken photos)

Allison Wenzel works on Jesse Hester's makeup, before they join the Mulan float.

   Allison Wenzel works on Jesse Hester’s makeup, before they both join the Mulan float.

Lauren Grove scrambles to catch up with the soccer float.

Lauren Grove scrambles to catch up with the soccer float.

Homecoming Duchess Arlana Nielsen and Duke Chad Felgar prepare to hit the open road.

   Homecoming Duchess Arlana Nielsen and Duke Chad Felgar prepare to hit the open road in style.

Payton Aparicio

   CHS spikers (l to r) Lauren Rose, Payton Aparicio and Lucy Sandahl enjoy the brief sunshine.

Booster Club

Fueled by way too much sugar, the Booster Club peels out.

Nick Blalock

Nick Blalock stands ready to let loose with some musical stylings.

seniors

   Senior royalty (l to r) Uriel Liquidano, Jacob Martin and Ethan Marx bask in their moment of glory.

John Fisken sacrificed for us.

Like I said yesterday, the ever-affable paparazzi pulled himself out of his sick bed (and stopped searching WebMD for disturbing new diseases) and trekked down to Coupeville to shoot the Homecoming Parade.

With that kind of effort, we can’t sell him short, so we’re back for round two of his parade pix.

And seriously, next time you see Fisken, buy him a Diet Coke.

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Jacob Zettle was in the thick of things on defense all night. (John Fisken photo)

   Jacob Zettle was in the thick of things on defense all night Friday, doing his best to slow down Port Townsend’s very slippery QB. (John Fisken photo)

Dear Alex Heilig,

We know each other by sight, if little else.

You were an assistant football coach at Coupeville High School for a bit, but my conversations at the time were with your boss and not you.

You were also briefly the track coach at CMS, but largely ignored me when I tried to get meet results.

Which is neither here nor there.

You were busy, a teacher, coach and new husband, then new father. And I know for a fact I can be annoying.

I feel the need to tread sort of carefully here, as your wife, Ashley, is one of my favorite people in the entire world.

I knew her before you did, when she was one of the best athletes our town has ever seen, and when we worked together behind the counter at Videoville.

She is a truly wonderful person, and I think the world of her. If she’s married to you, I have no doubt you’re a good guy.

Which is why, instead of calling you names or flinging anger at you, I would instead like to merely express my disappointment.

When you became head football coach at Port Townsend this year, after a year as an assistant at South Whidbey and a year as head coach at Granite Falls, you scored. Big time.

The RedHawks have a proud football tradition, and when you stepped in, you inherited some stellar athletes like Berkley Hill, Detrius Kelsall and Gerry Coker.

You’ve taken what was given you, and you’ve done well, going 4-2 (a play away from 5-1).

Friday night your team came to Coupeville, with you, the prodigal son returning on Homecoming, and you waxed the Wolves 57-0.

It was a classic example of one-sided football.

Your team won every battle, blowing people off the lines and letting your super-slippery QB, Hill, slice through the Wolf defense, scoring four touchdowns on the ground and tossing a fifth through the air.

Kelsall also scored three times, twice on the ground and once on that Hill pass.

Other than a 30-yard run off a fake punt by Clay Reilly and some late-game heroics by freshman running back Sean Toomey-Stout, who went 15 yards on his first varsity carry, it was not an especially bright night for CHS.

The Wolves are now 2-4 overall, 1-2 in league play, a team that looks great at times and like a work in progress at others.

But this is where it gets sticky.

It’s not that you won 57-0 that bothers me. Good teams often score a lot of points.

It’s the way you chose to stick the knife in and twist it that irritates me (and probably a lot of other people.)

When you’re up 41-0 at the break, on a running clock in the second half and your opponent has pulled all of its primary starters on both sides of the ball in the final quarter, what compels you to leave your (probably) All-League QB in to run up the score?

There’s 6:44 to play, the game is 50-0, Coupeville’s defense is all second-stringers and yet you leave your first-string offense in to ram home one more score.

Why?

Like I said, we’ve never really talked, so I’d just be guessing.

I understand your backup QB is a freshman. He’s also maybe the best pure athlete on your team.

He probably would have scored himself, given the opportunity to go under center some time before the 1:55 mark of the game.

To someone who really doesn’t know you, leaving Hill and his line in to score a meaningless touchdown against JV players reeked of bush league.

You didn’t need to do it that way. You chose to do it that way.

And like I said, I adore Ashley and if she vouches for you, I don’t really have a problem with you.

It’s your team, it’s your style, and so be it.

You’re a coach, I’m an idiot blogger in another town, you don’t really need to lose much sleep over what I think.

But, if, in a few weeks, your team gets blown out by Cascade Christian (as I’m now hoping), I’m not going to feel real sorry for you, that’s for sure.

Sincerely,

David Svien

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(John Fisken photos)

   Allison Wenzel (cleverly disguised as Mu-Shu) and Jacob Smith headline Mulan, the junior class float. (John Fisken photos)

Volleyball

Wolf spikers ride high.

Grey

Grey Rische, dressed for excitement, dressed for danger.

sophomores

The sophomores fly away, Peter Pan-style.

crab

She was actually in a pretty good mood, and not at all … crabby.

senior princesses

   Senior princesses (l to r) Valen Trujillo, Bree Daigneault and Ally Roberts are old pros at getting their photo taken.

Jae

If it rains, no problem. They’re ready to live under the sea.

soccer

The Wolf booters get ready to hit the open road.

Robin Cedillo

Robin Cedillo’s super power? Her spirit.

Clay

King Clay Reilly and Queen Kiara Burdge enjoy their first ride as royalty.

Lazurus lives!

Climbing off his death bed, everyone’s favorite camera clicker, John Fisken, staggered down to Coupeville and ignored being sick long enough to snap a ton of pics at this afternoon’s CHS Homecoming parade.

Next time you see him (if we didn’t just put him in the hospital…), maybe buy the guy a Diet Coke to say thanks.

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(John Fisken photo)

   Since I don’t have a ton of dress-related photos, a fresh pic of CHS spikers (l to r) Emma Smith, Payton Aparicio, Lauren Rose and Ally Roberts, who have all been known to wear dresses from time to time. (John Fisken photo)

Dress fever grips the nation.

We sit two weeks out from ye olde annual Coupeville High School Homecoming dance and the race is on to obtain garments for said night.

Enter the queen of the haberdashery, the titan of teal, the Tim Gunn of Cow Town, Amy Briscoe.

The mom of CHS spikers Tiffany and Kyla Briscoe, who also doubles as a reasonably-priced dress merchant in her work with My Fairy Godmother, is back at it.

Briscoe (and her 2,709 dresses) will be camped out in the school’s commons area Sept. 30-Oct. 1 (next Friday and Saturday) from 12-6 PM, making with the Homecoming dress rental.

Cost is just $20 (a steal, I say) and Briscoe offers a dazzling variety of styles and sizes.

You can also bring in a formal dress and slice $10 off the rental fee. Thrifty and fashion forward.

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