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Posts Tagged ‘medalist’

Aaron Curtin (Photo courtesy Ken Stange)

  Aaron Curtin submits to a photo op with his state tennis medal. (Photo courtesy Ken Stange)

Curtin flies up court during basketball season. (John Fisken photos)

Curtin flies up court during basketball season. (John Fisken photo)

The joy of  a game-winning hit. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

The joy of a game-winning hit. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Let’s take a moment to honor the quiet warrior.

For four years Aaron Curtin has been as good an athlete as Coupeville High School has had.

Tennis. Basketball. Baseball.

He was talented at whatever he played, and he attacked everything he did with passion.

Aaron was his own man the whole way, as well.

He would pop up in photos, usually with a small smile, but he didn’t hunger for the camera the way some Wolves do.

A lot of what we do here at Coupeville Sports is full of exclamation points and kids goofing off for the camera and big-bigger-biggest.

Curtin chose to glide through all that, being a great athlete, a quality guy, but a low key one.

Which is totally his right.

I give him all the credit in the world for doing things his way, the way that made him comfortable.

He handled his business with class every step of the way, and his family, his coaches, and us, the fans, should be proud we got to be a small part of it.

His tennis coach, Ken Stange, reflected on Aaron in the moments after Curtin placed eighth at the state tennis tourney, fighting through four epic matches in two days of searing Yakima heat:

“It was beautiful to watch.

I’ve spent four seasons with Aaron. He played nearly 100 matches for CHS, over the course of four regular and post seasons.

I was so incredibly proud of his effort, and was happy he’d be earning a medal.

I have a hard time finding words to describe the moments he and I shared, just after the match.

It’s surprising because I’m usually not shy about descriptions.

That’s okay, though.

This one was special–it was Aaron’s and it was ours. He’s a pretty quiet and private young man, so I guess it’s appropriate that I can’t give you a description.

It was such an enjoyable experience, and I think it was even more so for Aaron.”

As he prepares to graduate this week, Curtin leaves behind visible reminders of his excellence.

Every time Wolf fans enter the CHS gym in the years to come, they will see his face on the wall of honor, forever enshrined as one of the Wolf Athlete of the Years.

But it will be the memories that will last longer.

The mental images of a young man of sterling character, who fought through tough times on the basketball court as a program rebuilt with young players.

Of a quietly confident veteran who baffled hitters with his fastball, tossing a no-hitter on his home diamond.

Of a class act who never gave in, never gave up, always, ALWAYS fought to the final moment and sacrificed himself for his teammates.

Aaron Curtin was one of the greats, and he stayed true to himself every step of the way.

It was a pleasure to cover your exploits, sir.

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

Aaron Curtin, an ace every day. (John Fisken photo)

Iron Man is bringing home a medal.

Coupeville High School senior Aaron Curtin won two of three matches Friday in Yakima at the 1A boys’ tennis state tournament, with the final win coming after a two-hour war, assuring he will place.

Curtin will face Mark Hay of St. George’s at 10 AM Saturday, with the winner taking 5th and the loser claiming 8th.

To get there, the Wolf ace had to rebound after an opening round loss.

While he fell 6-2, 6-1 to Eli Jenkins of Chelan, Curtin never flinched.

And, while Jenkins promptly lost his next two matches and left without a medal, Coupeville’s finest came roaring back to knock off Jacob Martin of St. George’s 6-3, 6-1.

After a brief break, he capped a long day in the heat by topping Eduardo Ceballo of Cle Elum/Rosalyn 4-6, 6-2, 6-1.

The make-or-break match was a brutal war of attrition that mom Judi Curtin described as “So many deuces. Crazy!”

This is the second straight trip to state for Curtin.

As a junior, he qualified as a doubles player, but he and partner Ben Etzell did not place.

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Fields

Christine Fields lets fly with a shot. (John Fisken photo)

Locked and loaded.

Swinging into mid-season shape, Coupeville High School senior Christine Fields earned co-medalist honors during a three-team golf match at Useless Bay Golf and Country Club Monday.

Fields, the lone Wolf to tee it up, did battle with her training partners from South Whidbey and the rich school interlopers from Archbishop Thomas Murphy.

She carded a 34 in modified Stableford scoring over 12 holes.

Fields, a three-time state meet veteran who placed fifth in 1A as a junior, has three regular season matches left.

She travels to ATM April 23, then wraps up her final campaign with stops at King’s May 4 and Sultan May 6.

After that comes her final trek through the high school postseason, kicking off with the Cascade Conference meet May 11.

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Christine Fields brings the power. (John Fisken photos)

Christine Fields brings the power. (John Fisken photos)

"And another birdie for me!!"

“And another birdie for me!!”

The Everett Herald is wrong.

Which is not a huge surprise, as the Canadian-owned big city paper covers about 12,000 high school sports teams, and gets the facts right on at least 27.4% of its stories.

But, anyway.

Check out the Herald and you’ll believe the medalist at Thursday’s golf match between King’s and South Whidbey, held at the Mill Creek Country Club, was a duffer from the host Everett school.

That, however, would be wrong.

Coupeville High School junior Christine Fields, the lone Wolf at the meet, carded a 53 in modified Stableford scoring over 14 holes, to claim that honor.

She edged out King’s Hannah Roh (51), the presumed (at least by The Herald) champ.

King’s smacked the Falcons 172-152 in team scoring. That part they got right.

UPDATE: Numbers got added wrong and Fields did NOT medal, as first thought. Miss Roh was the rightful medalist.

But, since I am on vacation, since Miss Fields is still awesome, even if she didn’t win on this day, and since The Herald is still often incompetent, we’ll just leave this as it is.

And that’s all I have to say on that…

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