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Posts Tagged ‘Idaho’

Gabriella Gebhard continues to rack up wins on the dog show circuit. (Photos courtesy Stephanie Gebhard)

They’re on a tear.

Coupeville High School sophomore Gabriella Gebhard and her trusty canine companion, Walker – Set’r Ridge’s Legend in the Making, are picking up wins at every stop on the dog show circuit.

The duo, who hit the big time earlier this spring at the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show — the premier pooch event in the USA — captured their eighth Best Junior award last weekend in Coer d’Alene, Idaho.

Striking that judge-pleasing pose.

That makes it four straight victories and counting for Gebhard, who sits two wins away from making the jump from Open Senior to Master Class.

Oh, and she’s already booked a return trip to Westminster for 2024, as win #7 of the season clinched that.

Smoochie-boochies for a good boy.

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Abby Mulholland delivers a thunderous serve. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Coupeville grad Abby Mulholland was seriously injured in a rollover car crash Thursday morning.

The former Wolf, who played volleyball, basketball, and tennis during her time at CHS, is in the intensive care unit at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Lewiston, Idaho.

Mulholland, who was a passenger in the back seat, was ejected from the vehicle and suffered extensive injuries, according to family.

These include two neck fractures, a brain bleed — which has shown signs of improvement — a broken arm, broken pelvis, hip fracture, liver laceration, spleen laceration, deep knee cuts, and a bruised lung.

Mulholland is alert and talking, and family have been able to join her in Idaho.

“We give all thanks to God that she is alive and gets a second chance at life,” the family said in a statement on Facebook.

“We appreciate all thoughts and prayers.”

Mulholland is a vital part of one of Coupeville’s most well-known athletic families.

Dad Moose is the voice of Wolf sports, delivering smooth wordplay on the mic at many contests, while mom Renae is part of the Keefe clan, which has produced a steady stream of star athletes over the years.

Hanging out with mom Renae on basketball’s Senior Night.

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   Coupeville Schools Superintendent Dr. Jim Shank is leaving Whidbey after five years. He’s accepted a new position in Idaho. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

   The dapper doctor entertains CHS Principal Duane Baumann (left) and Athletic Director Willie Smith.

Dr. Shank and daughter Ashlie hang out at a game.

Elvis is leaving the building.

Dr. Jim Shank, the pride of Wolf Nation, is leaving the Coupeville School District.

The best Superintendent this cow town has seen in my memory is moving on and moving up, leaving Whidbey for Burley, Idaho.

The Cassia County School Board, which is replacing retiring Superintendent Gaylen Smyer, officially offered Dr. Shank the position Monday at a board meeting.

After being selected from a field of three finalists, Shank will start his new position July 1.

His departure will also cost the Wolves an athlete, as youngest daughter Ashlie, a basketball and track star, is currently a junior.

Dr. Shank has been the head honcho in Coupeville for five years, during which time he has been front and center as the district has made numerous improvements.

Just from a sports standpoint, his tenure has produced a laundry list of great new additions.

A new track oval and facilities, new bleachers in the gym, a new stadium at Mickey Clark Field, and that’s just the start.

The dapper Dr. Shank always found time to make an appearance at nearly every sports event played at Coupeville High School, and, while there, was willing to take time to talk to anyone with concerns or questions.

On a personal note, he was hugely instrumental in helping my push to create and install the Wall of Fame in the CHS gym.

If you’re expecting an impartial story here, I’m sure the News-Times will have one soon.

I, on the other hand, am a devoted Shankaholic, and hope people realize how much he has done for this town, and these schools.

The man worked his rear off, knew when to glad-hand and when to stand firm, and will leave our schools in far better condition than he found them in.

Cassia County is getting a great Superintendent and a better man.

With that comes wife Sallie, and their family, who were all great additions to our community.

Three of their six children – Matt, Brian and Ashlie –  attended Coupeville schools, and all were athletes who delivered big moments while also shining as students and people.

If I had to choose one word for the Shanks, it is this – class.

They will all be missed, and I, like many others, wish Dr. Shank and his family all the best as they tackle new adventures.

 

To see the official word from Cassia Schools, pop over to: 

https://www.cassiaschools.org/site/default.aspx?PageType=3&DomainID=4&ModuleInstanceID=7383&ViewID=6446EE88-D30C-497E-9316-3F8874B3E108&RenderLoc=0&FlexDataID=8868&PageID=1

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   Coupeville Schools Superintendent Dr. Jim Shank enjoys a Wolf volleyball match with daughter Ashlie. (John Fisken photo)

This means war.

Idaho is coming for our leader, as multiple media outlets are reporting Coupeville Schools Superintendent Dr. Jim Shank is one of three finalists for a similar job in Twin Falls.

Trustees narrowed their choices and announced them Saturday.

The finalists are Brady Dickinson, Twin Falls’ current director of operations, Monte Wollstenhulme, Superintendent of the Teton School District in Driggs, Idaho and Shank, the silver-haired, silver-tongued sage of the prairie.

Father to two current Coupeville High School students, Brian, a senior, and Ashlie, a sophomore, Dr. Shank came to Whidbey in 2013 after previously running the Juab School District in Utah.

During his tenure in Cow Town, he has spearheaded numerous improvements and been unfailingly polite, friendly and willing to work with the community in a manner some previous Superintendents were not.

From a sports angle, Dr. Shank was the driving force behind Coupeville passing a levy which has paid for new bleachers in the gym, improvements on the baseball and softball fields, a shiny new modern track oval (and accompanying facilities) and the upcoming new football bleachers.

The final round of interviews in Twin Falls are set for later this month, with a meet and greet Mar. 31. Trustees are expected to choose a replacement for the retiring Wiley Dobbs Apr. 3.

If you’ve been reading Coupeville Sports for any length of time (like, say … a day) you know I am not impartial.

So let me just say this — if Dr. Shank gets the new job and we lose my matinee idol (and his family) to the wilds of Idaho, I will congratulate him and wish him the best.

And then cry for three days straight.

Is that what you want, Dr. Shank? Is it?

Cause I will buy you more desserts at Christopher’s on Whidbey, if that tilts anything in our favor. Just sayin’.

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