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Posts Tagged ‘Jacki Ginnings’

Jazmine Franklin (front) and McKenzie Bailey blossomed as tennis players under the guidance of Ken Stange. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The mission is complete … for now.

Ken Stange recently wrapped an 18-year run as Coupeville High School tennis coach, leading the Wolves through two seasons most years.

As he marinates in his “retirement” down at Bailey’s Corner Store, he’s sharing memories, deep thoughts, and (maybe) clues to where the bodies are buried.

A nine-part odyssey inside the mind of the man, the myth, the always-entertaining net guru:

 

My first girls season, in the spring of 2006, was much like my fall season with the boys, in that the players were short on experience.

Eighteen kids showed up that spring, which was double that of the boys in the fall.

Most of them had never played a competitive tennis point in their lives.

We lost so many matches that year.

They were excited, though. Much fun was had at practice, and several players were working diligently on their games.

Looking at the team photo from that season, more than half the kids were 10th and 11th graders from the classes of 2008-2009 and they ended up having long and productive high school tennis careers.

Those kids set a standard that future players would follow and eventually exceed.

They took ownership of the team and held each other accountable.

There were two players who stood out … players who decided to make tennis their sport.

They made tennis cool.

They worked hard, won bunches of matches, and even went to state during their junior season.

Hannah (Merrell) Bush and Megan (Monroe) Mindemann showed up that first year and they loved it. They put 100% of their athletic focus on tennis.

They recruited friends and got younger athletes to join.

They were the mothers of my incarnation of the CHS tennis program.

They set the example that other players would follow and when future leaders emerged, Hannah and Megan took them under their wings, and the process continued for a very long time, with each leadership group passing the torch to the next group.

Big wins and tasty ice cream — the Wolf way. (Photo courtesy Ken Stange)

The line of leadership lineage of the CHS girls’ program is long.

Hannah and Megan, along with Ashley Sanders, passed the torch along to Jordan Akins and Jessica Blanchette, who passed it along to Amanda d’Almeida.

There were more: Jacki Ginnings, Wynter Thorne, McKenzie Bailey and Jazmine Franklin, Valen (Trujillo) Printz, Sage Renninger and Payton Aparicio, Avalon Renninger and Tia Wurzrainer, Genna Wright, Abby Mulholland, Noelle Daigneault, and finally, Helen Strelow.

I’m sure that with both the boys and the girls, I’ve missed a few.

The net guru works on his tan while his crew prepares to kick some fanny. (Photo courtesy Ken Stange)

It seemed that for a long time, the level of play increased from year to year.

That made coaching the girls’ team extra fun.

With the girls, there was a season within the season, in that the kids were always competing for spots in the lineup and looking to get better than the person or pair in front of them.

That kind of mentality gave us lots of wins and league titles.

Despite the in-team competition, the girls also genuinely cared about how everyone else did.

They always remembered the team component that existed within individual sports.

Kids were willing to play a different spot in the lineup to better ensure a team win.

With that kind of attitude, I’m not surprised by the numbers the girls put up during my time as coach.

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Hall o' Fame inductees (clockwise from lower left) Sean Donley, Ian Smith, Jacki Ginnings and Austin Fields.

   Hall o’ Fame inductees (clockwise from lower left) Sean Donley, Ian Smith, Jacki Ginnings and Austin Fields.

Strong athletes, better people.

The four Wolf alumni in the 42nd class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame had many different athletic pursuits in their time in the red and black, yet all left a lasting legacy for two reasons.

They were very, very good at their chosen sports, and they handled their affairs with great class.

So, with open arms, we welcome Jacki Ginnings, Austin Fields, Sean Donley and Ian Smith into these hallowed digital walls.

After this, you will find them at the top of the blog under the Legends tab, which shouldn’t be a surprise.

Our first inductee, Donley, was a standout on the soccer field, a team leader who worked his rear off on the pitch and was named team MVP for his efforts.

A deadly goal scorer who was also always willing to do the less glamorous work whenever necessary, Sean was the kind of player every coach was thrilled to see on the first day of practice.

Off the field, he was a sterling co-worker at Christopher’s on Whidbey, never complaining, always looking on the bright side of life, and his piano-playing chops?

Pretty dang impressive.

Donley’s low-key, smooth operator personality was matched by our second inductee, sweet-swinging golf ace Fields.

Son of a pro, and older brother to fellow Hall o’ Fame duffer Christine, Austin went to state three times during his tenure at CHS, while having to drive a harder road than most of his fellow Wolf athletes.

Without a team at Coupeville, Fields trucked himself back and forth, playing first with Oak Harbor, then South Whidbey, over the course of his four years, while always staying out in front of his Wildcat and Falcon “teammates” when it came time to post scores on the course.

Now studying to take over the golfing world as a course designer, Austin is going to continue to etch his name on the world. Of that, I have no doubt.

Our third inductee, Smith, is one of the most accomplished athletes in recent CHS sports history, a three-sport star (football, basketball, baseball) who more than held his own in a family of big-time performers.

He had a history of coming up big in the spotlight (ask South Whidbey about the time he plunged a knife through the heart of their boys’ basketball program with a buzzer-beater), but it’s his versatility which truly set him apart.

Smith was named an All-Cascade Conference football player five times from 2008-2010, while being honored at three different positions.

His work in the secondary was noted all three seasons, while he appeared on the honor roll as a wide receiver in 2009, then as a quarterback in his senior campaign.

That was similar to his work on the diamond, where he was a Second-Team pick as a pitcher one time around, then a First-Team nod as an infielder another season.

Through it all, Smith was an absolute rock for his teams, the very definition of a player who lived for team, played for team and gave his last drop of sweat for team.

While the argument over who was better between Ian and older brother James (who, simmer down, will get his day in the Hall as well) will probably never be settled, suffice it to say they both earned every one of their honors.

P.S. — I flipped a coin to decide which brother to put in first. Talk to the quarter, James, cause it did not go your way.

And then we move on to our final inductee on this Sunday, Ginnings.

A highly-accomplished two-sport sensation who excelled on the soccer pitch and the tennis court, Jacki remains one of the most beloved, respected Wolf athletes I have ever witnessed play.

She had more grit than you can imagine, and would fight like a devil to win the day, yet would always emerge at the end with the same serene expression on her face, win or lose.

Ginnings, like her fellow inductees, more often than not came out on top, but she always treated her foes with grace and they usually responded in kind.

Ask her teammates and coaches and the response was overwhelming in a way rarely seen.

They adored Jacki, as an athlete and a person.

The day she graduated, CHS lost a true warrior and a class act, but it also gained a legend to inspire those who will follow her path in the years to come.

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(Photo courtesy Paul Messner)

This photo of the 1963 Coupeville HS football squad includes my landlord, Jack Sell (#73). (Photo courtesy Paul Messner)

So, does this mean I don’t have to pay rent next month?!?!

Yeah, probably not, but it is proof that my landlord here at Coupeville Sports HQ was once a Wolf athlete himself.

I’ve heard some of the tales from Jack Sell’s past, in the days when he was an undersized but over-achieving gridiron giant.

But here we see the legend that was, in bold black and white, thanks to former teammate Paul Messner, who dug it out of the archives.

Anyone else have stuff like this?

Send it my way (davidsvien@hotmail.com or find me on Facebook), as we reclaim Cow Town sports history one tidbit at a time.

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Freshmen Sage Renninger (left) and Payton Aparicio played #1 doubles for the Wolves all season.

   Freshmen Sage Renninger (left) and Payton Aparicio played #1 doubles for the Wolves all season.

McKenzie Bailey

McKenzie Bailey won the Coach’s Award for a very successful junior campaign.

Haleigh Deasy

Haleigh Deasy was named Most Inspirational.

Jacki went out on top.

After leading the Coupeville High School girl’s tennis squad all season with grace and quiet fire, senior Jacki Ginnings was tabbed as the team’s MVP Thursday during the season-ending awards shindig.

She also shared captain honors with fellow senior Wynter Thorne, junior McKenzie Bailey and sophomore Valen Trujillo.

Bailey, who copped the Coach’s Award, will reunite with Trujillo as captains in 2016, with Jazmine Franklin and Sydney Autio set to join them.

Franklin (Most Improved), Haleigh Deasy (Most Inspirational) and Ana and Ivy Luvera (4-Year Awards) also walked away with hardware.

CHS coach Ken Stange, in his 10th year at the helm, guided the Wolves to an 11-3 record and an Olympic League title.

Varsity Letters:

Payton Aparicio
Sydney Autio
McKenzie Bailey
Bree Daigneault
Haleigh Deasy
Jazmine Franklin
Jacki Ginnings
Micky LeVine
Ana Luvera
Ivy Luvera
Mckenzie Meyer
Sage Renninger
Wynter Thorne
Valen Trujillo

JV certificates:

Maggie Crimmins
Kenzi LaRue
Hanna Seiffert
Ashley Smith
Kameryn St Onge

Managers:

John McClarin
Joseph Wedekind

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Jacki Ginnings capped a strong three-year run Wednesday, exiting at the district tennis tourney. (John Fisken photos)

   Jacki Ginnings capped a strong three-year run Wednesday, exiting at the district tennis tourney. (John Fisken photos)

Valen Trujillo, heir to the throne.

Valen Trujillo, heir to the throne.

Aaron Curtin is headed back to Yakima for the 1A state tourney.

Aaron Curtin is headed back to Yakima for the 1A state tourney.

“She was very kind and respectful, but would always hold her ground.”

Over the last three years, Jacki Ginnings has been a rock for the Coupeville High School girls’ tennis squad, a player Wolf coach Ken Stange could always count on, match after match.

“She has been a tough competitor for us, and she will be missed,” Stange said. “She could possibly be made of iron. She didn’t miss a single contest this season, and many of her matches were of the 2+ hour variety.

“I’m going to miss her tenacity,” he added. “She had a way with opponents. Early in her career, she would let players cheat, but, by her second year, she would hold her foes accountable for bad calls.”

Ginnings, a senior, capped her career Wednesday with a strong showing at the district tourney, falling 6-0, 6-1 in the semifinals to eventual champ Alexis Schorno of Charles Wright Academy.

Schorno claimed the lone spot at state being offered from the highly-competitive District 3 tourney.

Ginnings traveling partner, sophomore Valen Trujillo, also made it to the semifinals, before being knocked out 6-1, 6-2 by Taryn Mulvihill of Vashon Island.

“They both fought hard, but came up short against a pair of talented players,” Stange said.

The Wolf tradition of having a strong #1 singles player carried down from Amanda d’Almeida to Allie Hanigan to Ginnings in recent seasons, with Trujillo set to inherit the mantle next year.

Jacki put up a 10-4 record at #1 this year. Those are excellent numbers,” Stange said. “Luckily, Valen seems fit to take over the role as our top singles player.”

Extra match:

A quirk in the schedule forced Wolf netter Aaron Curtin, who had qualified for state back in the fall, to go back out and beat a player he had already taken down to reaffirm his trip to Yakima.

The CHS senior did just that, dispatching Steen Jennings of Vashon 6-3, 3-6, 6-1.

“I’ve never seen Aaron hit serves harder than he was hitting them today,” Stange said.

Curtin will take his second consecutive trip to the 1A state tourney May 29-30. He advanced as a doubles player with Ben Etzell during his junior season.

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