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Posts Tagged ‘Julia Myers’

CHS booters Joel Walstad (left) and Cody Menges celebrate a goal, as we look back at some of the best photos from 2015. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

At this point, we were really clickin’.

By the time we hit 2015, the fourth year of Coupeville Sports, my writing was supplemented by a number of people snapping photos, foremost among them being John Fisken.

During the COVID-19 shutdown, I’ve been going back through the many, many pics to grace these pages, and today present the 20 glossy images which, at this moment at least, stand the tallest in my memory from that year.

Kiara Burdge brings out the big megaphone. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Current CHS senior Gavin Knoblich, back when he was a dinger-hittin’ little league sensation. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Kacie Kiel (right) embraces Makana Stone during a post-game celebration. (Amy King photo)

Wolf coach Dustin Van Velkinburgh offers sweet-shootin’ Brian Shank some in-game props. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Ryan Freeman slides past a blown-up defender. (Sylvia Hurlburt photo)

Wolves (l to r) Kalia Littlejohn, Kailey Kellner, and Kyla Briscoe get some new headgear during a break at summer basketball camp. (Amy King photo)

Lauren Grove keeps her net goal-free. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Jordan Ford swoops to the hoop. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“Quicksand?!?! Why did it have to be QUICKSAND?!?!?!?” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Izzy Wells enjoys a milk shake after a long softball tourney. (Katy Wells photo)

Float like a butterfly, sting like a bee. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“Sweep the leg! Sweep the leg!!!” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sylvia Hurlburt (left) gives Makana Stone some award-stand lovin’. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Angie Downes gets her middle son, Sage, ready to play. (Deb Smith photo)

“Goooooooooooaaaaalllllll.” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolf volleyball spikers mug for the camera. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Well, that’s one way to play defense. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“Do my elbows taste minty fresh? Hope so, cause you’re gonna suck on ’em all game!!” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Andre Avila, ever on the attack. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Julie Myers (top, right) is joined by fellow inductees (l to r) Brad Haslam, Boom Phomvongkoth and Lexie Black.

   Julie Myers (top, right) is joined by fellow inductees (l to r) Brad Haslam, Boom Phomvongkoth and Lexie Black.

Domination.

It’s the common trait when you look at the members of the 39th class to be inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Regardless of the sport, the four athletes, one who is going into the Hall for a second time, towered above their rivals on a regular basis, more than earning them enshrinement in these hallowed digital walls.

After this, when you want to find Julia Myers, Boom Phomvongkoth, Brad Haslam or two-time inductee Lexie Black, who is being honored today for putting together the ultimate block party, all you’ll have to do is look to the top of the blog and find the Legends tab.

We’re kicking things off with the Lexinator, who is already in the joint, one of the first to be inducted.

Today we’re honoring her performance on Mar. 4, 2005, when the six-foot-two enforcer extraordinaire rejected 10 shots by Zillah, helping her CHS girls’ basketball squad capture a 45-41 win at the state tourney.

Coupeville won two games at state that year, finishing 8th and bringing home the third (and so far final) banner in program history.

Black’s ten-spot, and the 14 total blocks by the Wolves in the game, remain the gold standard to this day. No player, and no team, have ever topped those marks in a 1A girls game, more than a decade later.

Now Lex Luthor is counting down the days until she’ll be a mom, and you know the child is gonna pop out and immediately slap the doctor across the room, just like their mom did to so many errant shots.

Our second inductee, Phomvongkoth, was a little lower to the ground than Black, but he was just as much of a scrapper on the hardwood.

One of the first players I covered back in my Whidbey News-Times Sports Editor days, Boom went all-out all the time, slamming to the floor, harassing rival ball-handlers and knocking down big shots of his own.

It took me a bit to get the spelling of his last name down, but I could see his talent, and his love for the game, from the first moment he strode out into the CHS gym.

When the Tom Roehl Roundball Classic brought Wolf alumni back to town in Dec., Boom was among the returning veterans.

He might be down a few hairs on the head these days (who’s not?), but the skill-set and inner fire were still there, and he still looks like he could school some young punks, if necessary.

Our third inductee, Haslam, was one of the most imposing high school athletes I ever covered.

Which is funny, because off the field, he’s a supremely nice guy, easy-going and laid-back.

But put him on the gridiron and he was an animal, de-cleating anyone who tried to get in his way as he led the blocking charge for the undefeated 1990 CHS football squad.

A superb kicker with a cannon for a leg, he knocked down field goals from uncanny range, as well, earning his keep on offense, defense and special teams.

Equally skilled as a hoops player, Haslam’s biggest impact came on the diamond, though.

A four-time All-League selection as a pitcher, the ’92 grad made batters tremble in the box. Seriously. I saw it happen.

Tall, burly and (in the moment) looking like he was going to murder you, Haslam remains the most overpowering high school pitcher I have ever witnessed on a day-to-day basis.

Our final inductee, Myers, shares a lot in common with Haslam.

No, she wasn’t all that tall, and no one would describe her as burly, but, like her compatriot, she was a supremely nice person off the field (and one of the best ever when it came to taking goofy photos) who played like a beast between the lines.

Whether smacking tennis balls, shutting down fools as a soccer goalie, or droppin’ elbows as a rebounding machine on the basketball court, Julia was a stone-cold killer.

Injuries were the only thing that ever slowed her down, but she fought through some horrific ones and still stalked her prey, knee brace glinting under the lights, slight smirk on her face as she watched her rivals souls shrivel up and blow away.

A vital part of the first Wolf girls’ hoops team to win a league title in 13 years during her senior campaign, “Elbows” always had the heart of a champion.

If we have to win one game to save the universe, I want Julia on our team. Cause when the final buzzer sounds, she’ll be the last one standing.

Of that I have no doubt.

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(John Fisken photos)

In 2014, Brandon Kelley and Breeanna Messner took home scholarship money. In 2015 it was Aaron Trumbull and Julia Myers. This year it could be you.

Every time the camera clicks, you could get richer.

If everyone does their part.

The way it works is this:

John Fisken, in between shotgunning cases of Diet Coke to keep his trigger finger jittery, can be frequently seen at CHS and CMS athletic contests, various cameras whirring away.

He shoots a variety of action and behind-the-scenes photos, then sends a selection my way to use here on Coupeville Sports.

In return, I post links to where parents and grandparents and aunts and uncles and coaches and the athletes themselves and whomever can buy high-quality copies of Fisken’s images.

Now, anything that appears here on this blog is fair game. That’s how we’ve set it up.

Right click to your heart’s desire and snatch the glossy images up.

Post them on your Facebook, Twitter, Instagram or a billion other obscure new apps my brain pan doesn’t want to know about.

Send them to relatives. Use them as screensavers. Print them out and fill the bird cage with them.

Whatever makes you happy.

But take notice. NONE of the pics here on Coupeville Sports have a big copyright “C” marring them. That’s intentional.

Now, when you pop over to where Fisken’s work is up for sale, the place where ALL the photos are, and where they will be available in a HIGHER quality, they do have that copyright “C” smack-dab in the middle.

You post those with the “C” on them, you just look like a cheapskate, frankly.

Either ask me if I have a pristine copy of said photo (if I do, I’ll shoot it to you) or spend the few bucks Fisken charges and get the high-quality stuff.

Either way, you look like less of a dork than you do if there’s a giant “C” marring your pic.

Plus, when you buy photos from Fisken (either straight from the site or by contacting him at johnfisken@comcast.net to set up a personalized order), part of the money goes to college scholarships he gives out at the end of the school year.

This will be the third time he’s graced CHS grads with his kick-back, and the successors to Brandon Kelley, Breeanna Messner, Julia Myers and Aaron Trumbull will see their dollar amount rise in direct correlation to photos sold.

It’s simple. You buy, you help. You don’t, you don’t.

With that being said, it’s also a great time to remind current seniors to get your rear to the counselors office at CHS and pick up the scholarship form, which needs to be back in before spring is done.

To be eligible for Fisken’s scholarship(s), you should have played at least two sports for all four years (consideration is given to students who moved to Coupeville during their high school career), have a 3.0 or better GPA and not be receiving any financial aid for playing sports from a college program.

If you will be getting that sweet, sweet college sports money, congrats, you already won.

For everyone else, you just need to fill out the form, write an essay (the particulars can be found on that form we just mentioned) and, eventually, have a one-on-one interview with the always-chatty Mr. Fisken at a later date.

If you bring a can of Diet Coke with you to that meeting, so much the better, but you didn’t hear that from me.

 

Wait! I want to buy photos now!! Remind me where to go!!!

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?district=3&league=21

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Tyler King (John Fisken photos)

   Coupeville’s lone D1 scholarship athlete, U-Dub track/cross country whiz kid Tyler King, swung by to help dad Randy run his 7th grade basketball practice. (John Fisken photos)

Breeanna Messner

   Four-sport star Breeanna Messner dropped in to see parents Aimee and Robert Bishop (and give out hugs to the media).

Kacie Kiel (top)

   Kacie Kiel (top), imparting wisdom to the young ‘uns, in this case Wolf junior spiker Ally Roberts.

Joel, Curtin

   High school stars turned college athletes (l to r) Joel Walstad, Aaron Curtin and Ben Etzell catch up while being harassed by the paparazzi.

locks

The Nebraska air has been good to Walstad’s silky locks.

fords and messners

   Messner has a (partial) family reunion after watching cousin Jordan Ford (not shown) score 13 in a win over Concrete.

Julia

   “Elbows” returns. One-time hoops enforcer/photo queen Julia Myers checks out the new bleachers (and drives my page view count up 276%).

Aunt Judy hangs out with her lil' niece, Lydia, and gets bum-rushed by everyone in the crowd.

   Aunt Judy hangs out with her lil’ niece, Lydia, and gets bum-rushed by everyone in the crowd.

Tis the season for heroes to return.

As the holidays hit, former Coupeville High School hoops stars are prone to return to town to see family and check up on the “young punks” who now wear the uniforms they once did.

Travelin’ photo man John Fisken kept one eye cocked at Friday night’s Wolf boys’ hoops games and snagged the photos above to give us a brief visual reminder of the walkin’, talkin’, muggin’ for the camera glory days.

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Julia Myers

Julia Myers

July 23, 1997 everything changed.

A legend entered the world that day, one which couldn’t be fully appreciated at the moment.

It was only as Julia Myers, AKA Judy, or “Elbows” as I like to think of her, grew up, that the world began to fully realize what a hunk of pure, unfiltered awesomeness had popped out that day.

In my 25 years of covering sports on Whidbey Island, there have been a fair amount of dynamic athletes and a few transcendent ones.

Julia is one of the transcendent ones.

I’m not saying she’s the single most talented athlete I’ve ever seen, but she is resilient beyond belief, as tough as they come (while fiercely loyal and caring to her teammates) and has a spark, a light, that is hard to match.

It is not fair that her momma can’t be here to see the woman Julia has become, both as an athlete and a human being, but her heart would burst with pride.

Miss Myers, as much as any high school athlete I have covered on the beat, exudes a warmth and calmness of spirit that is unmatched.

If she reminds me of anyone, it is of former Wolf basketball star Jodi (Christensen) Crimmins, because both were supremely gentle, deeply caring friends to all off the court, and utter beasts on the hardwood.

Her left leg encased in a brace and all sorts of support gear — victim to horrifying soccer injuries that might have forever derailed a lesser athlete — Julia, like Jodi, played basketball with a beautiful, king-sized chip on her shoulder.

Myers eyes, so full of life and joy off the court, would flip over like a shark’s as she stepped on the court and go cold, black and deadly.

And it was freakin’ awesome to behold.

So often, young girls are told to be nice, to act like a lady, and on and on, and it sometimes stunts their growth as an athlete.

I hope every little girl in Coupeville had the chance to see Julia play, and is allowed to embrace her philosophy.

You can be supremely nice, considerate of others, a blessing to your family, friends and community. But you can also be proud of yourself, have confidence, play with passion and a rock-solid belief you deserve to win.

Julia, like Jodi, was not a dirty player. Ever.

But she never, ever, backed down. She attacked. She committed.

When she came off the floor, dropping subtle side-eye daggers at the ref who fouled her out, there was not an ounce of sweat or spirit left, because Julia never held back.

She was a player every young athlete, girl or boy, should emulate.

As she celebrates her birthday and prepares for the transition to college, all I really want to say to Julia is two words.

Thank you.

It has been a genuine pleasure to write about you, Miss Myers, and, since you’re wise beyond your youth, I hope you realize now, and not just down the road, what high regard we all have for you.

You’re a winner, Judy. Every day, in every way.

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