Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘new coach’

   New CHS assistant cheer coach (and Wolf alumni) Amanda (Streubel) Jones. (Photos courtesy Jones)

Rockin’ the red and white, old school style.

Cheering for a semi-pro team in Bellingham.

“I enjoyed feeling like I belonged to a group, and actually felt safe being myself.”

Cheer gave Amanda (Streubel) Jones a new lease on life in high school, and it’s something she wants to pass on to a new generation of Coupeville High School students.

After years as a successful swimmer (she went to state at the 4A level and swam at the Western Zones Championship against rivals from 11 states), she left the pool because of built-up verbal abuse.

Jumping to cheer as a Wolf sophomore, she found a new family and blossomed under long-time coach Sylvia Arnold.

As a senior she brought home the Wolf Award and the “Do It Again” Award (“That was my saying after we nailed a new stunt; had to be sure we could do it again”), then went on to put in a year as a cheerleader with a Bellingham semi-pro team.

Now, the 2011 grad is a wife and mother of a little girl, and one of Coupeville’s new cheer coaches.

Jones, hired as the school’s assistant coach, is joining fellow alumni Emily (Norris) Stevens as the duo prepare to return to the sidelines of their (slightly) younger days.

It’s a huge moment for both of them.

“I care about the program; I never want to see it go away,” Jones said. “It brings so many people together, and I love the inclusiveness of the program.

“My goal is to continue working with Emily, and making the program as strong as we can.”

Jones, who cheered at a time when the Wolves operated as both a sideline team and a competition squad, fondly remembers her time working as a base.

“Stunting was definitely my go-to. I love it.”

Her four years as a cheerleader continue to impact her life in positive ways.

“Most of the traits that the cheer program taught me, helped me maintain my job, and has helped me build relationships with people,” Jones said. “I tend to be more on the socially awkward side of life. So cheer has really helped me break that barrier.”

Read Full Post »

   New CHS cheer coach Emily Stevens, out and about with son Aiden. (Photo courtesy Stevens)

“Cheer can be fun!”

It’s a statement Emily Stevens repeats more than once as she bops happily between making espresso drinks, tickling her 14-month-old son and talking to an intruding interviewer.

A former Coupeville High School cheerleader now returning to coach the activity (WIAA won’t let us call it a sport) at her alma mater, the former Emily Norris is bubbling with ideas.

Her final two years of high school, she was a member of a competition cheer squad which won state and went to nationals, and she would love to see the Wolves return to their roots.

“I would love for us at some point to compete again, but I won’t ask them to do anything they’re not ready for,” Stevens said. “We’ll take it step by step.”

Stevens, who cheered for four years under long-time CHS coach Sylvia Arnold, graduated in 2007 and will be assisted by Amanda (Streubel) Jones, another first-time coach and Wolf alum who obtained her diploma in 2011.

The pair have already met with prospective cheerleaders and parents, and plan an open gym after school May 31.

“If they are interested at all in cheer, I would love to see them there,” Stevens said. “It’ll give us a chance to answer questions and give them a feel for what’s going on.”

And it’s not just open to girls, as at least two Wolf boys have expressed interest in joining the squad.

Coupeville had male cheerleaders for several seasons in the ’90s and 2000’s, and adding guys to the mix again could allow the Wolves to do more stunting.

Since being hired, Stevens has juggled her day jobs (she and husband Bruce own Emily’s Sweets and Treats and she works at Front Street Grill), her bouncing boy and getting fully up to speed in the modern cheer world.

From learning what popular cheer terms from 2007 are no longer used, to the white-hot battle which has erupted over glitter use, to whether her squad will travel for road games (and if so, how), there’s a million little things to learn.

She’s been recently stunt certified and is attending coaching conferences, eager to pick up every detail.

“It’s a lot flying around, but I love being back in this world,” Stevens said with a huge smile.

“I’ve found a really good community on this side of town (with the cupcake shop). I thought this would be a great way to find a really good community on the other side of town.”

As she plunges into her new adventure, Stevens is doing so with the same take-charge attitude and sunny personality she brings to everything she does.

“I want our cheerleaders to be respectful, disciplined and to know what they’re doing when they’re doing cheers or stunts,” she said. “But most of all, cheer can be fun.

“If you work really hard, you’ll get to do really cool things!”

Read Full Post »

Ryan King

Ryan King

Ryan King (left) hangs out with fellow football coach Brett Smedley, who he will replace (John Fisken photo)

   King, hanging out with the man he’s replacing on the hoops beat, CHS head football coach Brett Smedley. (John Fisken photo)

The King is expanding his empire.

Ryan King, who is already an assistant football coach at Coupeville High School, will be adding to his middle school basketball duties in a few weeks.

After working with Bob Martin to coach CMS 8th grade boys’ hoops this winter, King will step in as head coach for the 7th grade girls when they start practice Feb. 1.

The move, confirmed by Coupeville Athletic Director Duane Baumann Tuesday, fills a spot left open when Brett Smedley recently resigned his hoops job to focus on his roles as a teacher and head CHS football coach.

Martin, who coached 7th grade last year, will slide up and replace Smedley in running the 8th grade girls.

King has two years experience helping to coach the middle school girls, which should make the transition a seamless one.

“I’m excited for the opportunity to be a head coach and look forward to the season,” King said. “I know there is a good group of girls in the 7th grade class and I hope to compete in every game, and, more importantly, have fun.”

CMS girls hoops kick off a 10-game schedule with a home game against Chimacum Thursday, Feb. 18.

A former standout lineman during his days as a Wolf football player, King is a 2007 CHS grad.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts