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Gillian Crossley

Gillian Crossley

Crossley and her Islander teammates prepare for their season-opening tourney, where they threw down three straight shutouts. (Kali Barrio photo)

   Crossley and her Islander teammates prepare for their season-opening tourney, where they threw down three straight shutouts. (Kali Barrio photo)

Gillian Crossley made a major change in her life when she was in the fifth grade.

A youth football cheerleader up until that point, Crossley began to hang out with soccer players. What began as a sideline activity soon transformed into a new way of life and a soccer junkie was born.

“I would go out at recess with them and kick a soccer ball around with them,” Crossley said. “That’s when I decided that I would like to try something new and join recreation soccer.”

Crossley, who will be a sophomore at Oak Harbor High School in the fall, never looked back.

After playing rec soccer for three seasons, she tried out for her first select squad, the GU13 Whidbey Islanders. Waiting for the call back put her on pins and needles, but paid off nicely.

“My friends that had been playing soccer for a long time wanted me to try out for their team,” Crossley said. “I was really nervous, but two long days passed, waiting for call backs and I had made it!

“My first season on select, my coach, Ryan Baker, would put me nowhere but center defense,” she added. “He pushed me to get better and become a stronger player. That is how I became a forward.”

Now in her fourth season of select soccer, Crossley, who bounced between JV and varsity for OHHS as a freshman, made the jump to join the GU18 Islanders this season.

She made her debut at a tournament this past weekend and immediately drew praise for her play.

Gillian was a pleasant surprise at the striker position,” said Islander coach Sean LeVine. “Her speed and strong beast-like presence up top opened up several opportunities to score and we expect her to do very well.”

Crossley, who enjoys the camaraderie she has with her teammates (“I enjoy playing soccer with my friends. Soccer has caused me to develop strong relationships with some of the most amazing people”) is still a work in progress, like most younger players.

“As a player, one of my strongest strengths would be my speed,” she said. “It’s always nice to have speed as a forward.

“If there was something I had to work on, I would work on my foot skills and trapping the ball out of the air,” Crossley added. “I will really need to get used to trapping the ball out of the air with (Islander goalie) Kenzie (Perry’s) amazing drop kicks.”

When she’s not on the soccer pitch, Crossley enjoys her science classes (“I have always been best at science. I am lucky I enjoy science, because there are very few things I like”) and spending time with her friends.

And, since many of her friends are equally involved in soccer, so much the better.

“I am great friends with a lot of people from the Islander teams,” Crossley said. “It’s nice having friends that all have something in common.”

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Don't tell anyone, but I shared some of the cookies liberated

  Don’t tell anyone, but of the hundreds of cookies I received this spring from CHS moms, a few were shared with my Whidbey News-Times “rival.” (Shelli Trumbull photo)

It’s true — I like to poke the Evil Empire up in Canada that owns the three Whidbey newspapers.

And yes, I once cashed checks from them back in my misbegotten youth. We all have our youthful indiscretions.

But never think that I am poking the guy who is doing the same job for those papers that I am, covering sports.

Jim Waller, the Sports Editor of the Whidbey News-Times (whose articles also run in the shadow paper that calls itself the Whidbey Examiner) was my high school journalism teacher during the extra semester I spent at Oak Harbor High School after my dad moved us out of Tumwater mid-way through my senior year (long story).

He is the person most directly responsible for my journalism career — and a lot of my editors since that point would like to have a long discussion with him about that, outside, behind the building, about now — getting me in the door of the News-Times at 18.

I have a great deal of respect for Mr. Waller, as a teacher, as a Hall of Fame high school baseball coach and as a journalist.

The man is a consummate pro, the quiet, elegant flip side of the coin to my frequently hyperventilating, gossipy Dennis the Menace approach to sports coverage.

With that being said, I just wanted to direct you to something he wrote recently. It was timed to Father’s Day, but it slipped past me somehow and I just noticed it the other day.

It’s a reflection piece on the life and times of his dad, Mert Waller, maybe the single most influential coach to ever work on Whidbey Island.

My path crossed with the senior Waller during his later days, when he had moved to being an assistant baseball coach for his son on Wildcat teams that I covered for the News-Times.

He was a class act through and through, a great guy, and that comes through vividly in the article Mr. Waller wrote.

Go take a look at it. It’s well worth your time.

http://www.whidbeynewstimes.com/sports/263081711.html

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