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Posts Tagged ‘Mica Shipley’

Heather Nastali and fellow Wolf cheerleaders have left the football field and are headed inside for basketball season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

The venue may be changing, but the attitude is not.

As Coupeville High School cheerleaders depart the football field and head inside for basketball season, one thing will remain consistent — their larger-than-life school spirit.

Wolf coaches Emily Stevens and Amanda Jones are currently working with a roster which goes 12 deep, though that may change.

For the moment, this is who looks like they will be in uniform for Coupeville when hoops action tips off at the end of the month:

Ashleigh Battaglia
Julie Bucio
Kayla Caudle
Coral Caveness
Maggie Crimmins
Gaby Halpin
Jesse Hester
Ja’Tarya Hoskins
Isabel Hucke
Claire Mietus
Heather Nastali
Mica Shipley

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Mica Shipley (John Fisken photos)

   Mica Shipley was named Most Spirited when cheer awards were handed out Thursday night. (John Fisken photos)

Ja'Tarya Hoskins

Fellow frosh Ja’Tarya Hoskins was honored as Most Improved.

It was the year of the newcomer.

Three of four girls to take home awards Thursday at the Coupeville High School cheer banquet are in their first season of working the football sidelines for the Wolves.

Freshmen Mica Shipley (Most Spirited) and Ja’Tarya Hoskins (Most Improved) were joined by German foreign exchange student Sophie Fürtjes (Coaches Award) as winners.

Wolf junior (and relative grizzled vet) Claire Mietus topped off the honorees, taking home the Wolf Award, while seniors Kiara Burdge and Kaela Hollrigel were hailed for their work as team captains.

Coupeville had a 29-woman roster, with 23 Wolves receiving letters from CHS Assistant Principal Melissa Rohr, who was the team’s acting coach for the second half of the year.

Letter winners:

Ashleigh Battaglia
Amber Benway
Julie Bucio
Kiara Burdge
Robin Cedillo
Maggie Crimmins
Lainey Dickson
Natasha Estes
Sophie Fürtjes
Kaley Grigsby
Naika Hallam
Abby Hamilton
Kaela Hollrigel
Natalie Hollrigel
Ja’Tarya Hoskins
Jaden Marrs
Nancy Melendrez-Partida
Mckenzie Meyer
Claire Mietus
Mira Mostafavinassab
Heather Nastali
Moira Reed
Mica Shipley

Certificates of Participation:

Hannah Benway
Jae LeVine
Amanda Neitzel
Melissa Otto
Bronwyn Schmidt
Kameryn St Onge

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Mica Shipley

Mica Shipley (Submitted photo)

Mica Shipley knew early on she wanted to be a cheerleader.

“I’ve been doing All-Star cheer since I was six,” she said. “I started because I was so mesmerized by all that was going on and I wanted to do that.”

Shipley will be moving to the next level this fall, when she enters Coupeville High School as a freshman.

A two-sport athlete (she also competes in track and field), she has embraced the opportunity to join the Wolf cheer squad.

“My favorite thing about cheer is tumbling and flying,” Shipley said.

She credits her mom with having “a huge impact in my life” and enjoys spending time with family and friends when she’s not busy with cheer.

“My mom is such an inspiration in my life,” Shipley said. “She is an inspiration because she never gives up and she encourages me to do the same.

“I got hurt very badly a while back and I was going to give up on cheer and if it wasn’t for my mom I wouldn’t be the person or cheerleader that I am today.”

In school, Shipley looks forward to her creative writing class, while away from the classroom she tries to spend as much time at the beach as possible.

While the battle over whether cheer should be viewed as a sport or an activity will probably rage on forever, there is no doubt how the Wolf frosh feels on the subject.

“I think that cheer is a sport, because even though we are not competing against a team we are doing just as much, maybe even more work then the football players,” Shipley said. “For example, we have to lift people in the air, which takes a lot of strength and conditioning.”

There’s also the intensive amount of work the Wolves put in under coach Cheridan Eck.

“We also have to tumble, which means a lot of practice and we have to learn all the cheers perfectly and we have to do jumps which takes a lot of stretching,” Shipley said. “So, even though we do not go against anyone, we practice like we are.

“We are going against ourselves to get better and better each game,” she added. “In my opinion, that’s a sport.”

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