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Posts Tagged ‘McKenzie Bailey’

McKayla Bailey

McKayla Bailey: The Best

There will be a day, too soon, when McKayla Bailey will no longer be a student/athlete at Coupeville High School.

On that day, I may cry. For a very long time.

Miss Bailey, who celebrates the final birthday of her high school days today, is nothing less than the reason Coupeville Sports exists.

Without her, will there even be a reason to go on?

I may start crying now…

Talented athletes come and go, but no one else has had quite the same impact McKayla has had.

And it’s not because of what she can do on a softball diamond or a basketball or volleyball court or soccer pitch. Even when she was impressive, as she often has been, and will be again once her injured arm heals.

She is bigger than that, though.

McKayla is a bright, shining superstar because the camera loves her, she loves the camera right back and every time she sees one, something magical happens.

She is an exuberant, free-wheeling force of nature in real life and the many pictures we have run of her on this blog show that in crystal clear detail.

Bailey loves life and it comes through in every action, whether she’s being goofy, being an attentive big sister to McKenzie and Mollie (who have both inherited her ease in front of a camera) or, on the rare occasion, exploding in anger.

I have seen her royally pissed, pacing around like a caged lioness in the pitching circle, slapping her thigh repeatedly with her glove, aiming daggers at the poor girl about to step into the batter’s box.

Boom-bam-boom.

Strike one, strike two, strike three, a small grin escapes and then she goes bonkers, chasing her teammates into the dugout and jumping on them, unable to contain her re-found glee.

The thing that sets Coupeville Sports apart the most from the Canadian-owned newspapers is our willingness, our burning desire, to run as many glossy pics as possible.

They can cover the same games we do, but we capture the highs and lows better with liberal uses of eye-catching photos.

And, while game photos are often dramatic, many of the most memorable ones have come from pre-game and post-game shenanigans, a place where McKayla thrives.

I have noticed that high school and middle school female athletes as a whole tend to be much more open to being goofy and embracing the chance to act up for the cameras than their male counterparts.

Maybe it’s an ingrained thing, since most team photos of boys’ sports usually feature snarls and tough guy looks, while the girls are usually one epic team-wide smile.

No one beams brighter, or longer, than McKayla Bailey.

Hunter Hammer was the rarity, a guy who played to the camera, a six-foot-seven photo bomb impresario.

Taya Boonstra was awesome, as was Haley Sherman, while Breeanna Messner lit up the joint (and her photos) with a quiet, graceful glow.

Madeline Strasburg, Kacie Kiel, Hailey Hammer — the Class of 2015 has a bevy of camera-lovin’ stars and junior McKenzie Bailey can bring it almost as strongly as big sis.

Keep an eye on freshman Lauren Rose, who could be the next big breakout Photo Queen.

But they all are at least a sliver behind McKayla, who has made it look effortless seemingly forever.

A moment ago, she was a “diaper dandy” (and yes, I still hear about that, and I still say, go talk to Dick Vitale, it’s a compliment), now, she’s on the cusp of graduation.

On this, her special day, I want to wish Miss Bailey a wonderful birthday, of course.

More than that, though, I want to say thank you.

Thank you for making all of this so much fun. For being the spark that lit the fire.

For letting me post photos of you in surgery, for always letting John Fisken or Shelli Trumbull take “just one more photo” regardless of your mood at the moment (and always working that photo for all you are worth), for putting up with me and the often idiotic things I write under your photos, for inspiring me to find joy again in my writing.

I have gotten more personal satisfaction out of two-plus-years of doing Coupeville Sports than I did out of 15 years of freelance work (and two years as a Sports Editor) for the Whidbey papers.

It’s a different style, a different flow, a different view and it wouldn’t have blossomed the same without that one unassuming, blissful ball of fire willing to put herself at the center of the whole thing.

Thank you McKayla, for being awesome. For being amazing. For being you.

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McKenzie Bailey

McKenzie Bailey

McKenzie Bailey may be the second sister, but she’s a star in her own right.

The Coupeville High School junior-to-be, who celebrates her birthday today, makes a dandy duo with big sis McKayla, the Photo Bomb Queen of Cow Town.

Together, and with lil’ sis Mollie, they’re keeping family tradition alive by kickin’ fanny in as many sports as possible.

And, in the brief moment when they’re not actually playing themselves, each of the Bailey girls can usually be found at one of their sister’s games, being loud and proud in support.

In her two years at CHS, McKenzie has been a true throw-back, one of the few Wolves to play year-round.

Bouncing from volleyball to basketball to tennis, where her star might be the brightest, Miss Bailey lives up to the reputation that comes with her last name.

She works hard. She plays hard. She’ll crack a girl in half and leave her on the hardwood (if necessary).

And, she’ll always, kinda, sorta, know where the camera is during every game. Cause no one has EVER accused a Bailey of being camera shy.

Which is why McKenzie and her family are the very definition of awesome.

They give me a lot to write about, and they provide me with billions of photo opportunities — which means less actual work for me. Win-win.

As long as there’s a Bailey doin’ their business in a Wolf uniform, we’re solid gold.

So thank you, McKenzie, for being a great athlete, an amazing sister and a pretty terrific person, all wrapped in one.

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The Bailey sisters never shied away from a camera. Ever. (Donna Bailey photo)

McKenzie Bailey (left) and big sis McKayla have never shied away from a camera. Ever. (Donna Bailey photo)

McKayla, modern day. "Hello camera, my old friend." (John Fisken photo)

McKayla, modern day. “Hello camera, my old friend.” (John Fisken photos)

McKenzie

McKenzie, cheering on little sister Mollie at her softball game.

McKayla and McKenzie Bailey are the best thing to happen to photographers since the camera was invented.

The dandy duo, who star for about 26 different Wolf teams, tend to light up whenever they hear the faint click of a photographer at work.

The day they leave Coupeville High School will be the day I have to shut this blog down, because they represent about 37% of all photos I run and … wait, they have a younger sister, the equally camera-happy Mollie?!?!?!?

Life goes on.

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Wynter Thorne (John Fisken photo)

Wynter Thorne teamed with McKenzie Bailey for a big win at #2 doubles Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

It was bounce back day on the CHS tennis courts.

Recovering nicely from an opening day loss, the duo of Wynter Thorne and McKenzie Bailey found their missing mojo Tuesday, storming to a key win at #2 doubles that proved to be the difference in Coupeville’s 3-2 win over longtime rival Friday Harbor.

The victory, which also featured singles players Allie Hanigan and Jacki Ginnings remaining undefeated in 2014, lifted the Wolves to a sparkling 2-0 on the season.

Next up, a big-time test Friday, when Coupeville travels to Blaine to face a very tough Borderite team.

But that’s still three days away, leaving CHS coach Ken Stange plenty of time to marinate in the joy of victory.

“It was an exciting day for our team,” he said. “Our girls continue to improve and we’re looking good.”

Thorne and Bailey shared Player of the Match honors for their crucial win over a duo that featured a girl named Summer.

“In a battle that featured opposite seasons, CHS proved that it’s better to be cold than warm,” Stange said, with tongue firmly in cheek. “I was proud of our girls, who yesterday struggled with their opposition. Today, they came out firing.

Wynter played under control and McKenzie unleashed her aggression,” he added. “This was a big win that will instill much confidence in my duo.”

Hanigan and Ginnings both pulled out hard-fought wins, with Ginnings going to three sets to claim hers, after dropping the opening set in a tiebreaker.

Complete results:

Varsity:

1st Singles — Allie Hanigan beat Roxanne Bormann 6-3, 7-6 (7-4)
2nd Singles — Jacki Ginnings beat Yasmin Sarah 6-7 (3-7), 6-2, 6-3
1st Doubles — Samantha Martin/Sydney Aparicio lost to Meagan Anderson/Ashton Timmons 6-0, 4-6, 6-2
2nd Doubles — McKenzie Bailey/Wynter Thorne beat Summer Fox/Sophie Dillery 6-3, 6-2
3rd Doubles — Valen Trujillo/Ana Luvera lost to Kendall Calvert/Isabel Gibbons 6-4, 6-2

JV:

4th Doubles — Ivy Luvera/Micky LeVine beat Mai Ngo/Samantha Hopkins 8-5
5th Doubles — Maureen Rice/Haleigh Deasy beat Morgan Timmons/Isabella Brown 8-0
6th Doubles — Rice/Deasy beat Jessica Goncalves/Faith Buck 6-0

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McKenzie Bailey (left) and McKayla Bailey, out for a drive.

McKenzie Bailey (left) and McKayla Bailey, out for a drive.

McKayla (left), cousin Chelsea Huff (center) and McKenzie, in more modern times. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

McKayla (left), cousin Chelsea Huff (center) and McKenzie, in more modern times. (Shelli Trumbull photos)

Radar locks in and...

Radar locks in and…

we have contact.

we have contact.

There are certain cultures where people don’t want their photographs taken, as they believe it steals their souls.

McKayla Bailey would have a really, really rough time living in those cultures.

The undisputed reigning Photo Bomb Queen of Coupeville High School (former champ Taya Boonstra is in exile, off the Island in college, these days) has an uncanny knack for hearing the smallest, quietest click of a camera.

If you shoot it, she will be there.

And that’s a guarantee.

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