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Sean LeVine with wife Joline and youngest daughter Izzy. (Photo poached from Joline LeVine)

Leading by example. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One of Whidbey Island’s most influential coaches is heading in a new direction.

Sean LeVine, who has helped shape the games and lives of hundreds of local soccer players over the past quarter-century, announced this week he was stepping away from being an active coach.

His statement:

This week I “retired” from coaching soccer on Whidbey Island — an endeavor I began in 1995 as my little brother’s team needed a coach.

For 26 years I have coached both boys and girls of all ages, including all three of my daughters.

There are no words I can put here that can adequately describe what these experiences have meant to me and my family.

Thank you to all the parents, coaches, board members, and players who have made this an overwhelmingly positive part of my life, and for offering soccer to the youth in our community year after year.

It has been an honor and privilege to have served by coaching kids in a sport I love.

LeVine, who is a paramedic with WhidbeyHealth in his non-soccer life, is a member of the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

He was inducted in 2015 as part of a particularly-impressive class which included Brad Sherman and Tyler King, among others.

During his time on the pitch, LeVine worked with numerous soccer squads, but his Whidbey Islanders girls teams had an especially-big impact.

Bringing together players from North, South, and Central Whidbey, including oldest daughter Micky, those teams went toe-to-toe with big-city clubs on a regular basis, winning frequently against top-level competition.

Sean LeVine was a master at bringing out the best in each player, while also devoting extensive time to making sure his proteges excelled away from the pitch.

Many of those Islanders, and countless other kids he coached, went on to attend college, some playing soccer, with a great deal of success.

LeVine was also one of the easiest coaches to work with, a guy who would shoot me detailed info and clever quotes even when he was likely tired after an early-morning wakeup, a long off-Island trek, and a series of games.

The continued growth of soccer in Coupeville is the result of a lot of people working their tails off, often without getting (or asking for) full credit.

People such as LeVine, Jim Copenhaver, Kyle Nelson, Reese and Michelle Cernick, Scott Rosenkranz, and Robert Wood — just to name a few — have been invaluable.

Whether this is really the end of his coaching career (he’s just hitting his mid-40’s, so a comeback is not out of the question) or just a cool-down period, LeVine leaves Whidbey soccer in a better place than he found it.

One of the legends, even if he blushes a bit when you call him that.

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Scott Fox has joined the CHS boys basketball coaching staff, working with veteran post players while also running the C-Team. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sometimes you get lucky.

Thanks to Coupeville making a top-notch retirement destination, the Wolf boys basketball program has added a valuable component to its coaching staff.

Scott Fox, a former All-City player in California who went on to play college ball in Alaska before becoming a coach, joined Brad Sherman’s staff this season to work with the varsity post players.

Now, thanks to an influx of Wolves turning out for boys basketball, he’ll also be calling the shots for the school’s C-Team.

That latter job has to be officially rubber-stamped by the school board at its next meeting, but hey, it’s happening and that’s a good thing.

In Fox, Coupeville inherits a man who tore up the court for Millikan High School in Long Beach, CA, before moving on to play basketball at Long Beach City College, then on scholarship at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks.

After that, he mixed coaching with a 30-year career with the Anaheim Fire Department, where he was a paramedic and put in 12 years as a Captain.

Fox has been both a head coach and an assistant while working at every level of high school ball, first at his alma mater, then later at Orange Lutheran.

While planning for retirement, he and wife Susan purchased a house in Coupeville, after finding they loved life in Cow Town.

“The amount of friendliness and true compassion for fellow neighbors is second to none,” Fox said. “We meet terrific people on a daily basis and are truly impressed with the amount of volunteerism and dedication to community that we experience.”

When the couple arrived on the Island for good, the longtime coach began to follow the CHS basketball program’s progress, eventually reaching out to Sherman.

“We found our coaching styles were very similar,” Fox said. “I specialize in working with the post players, which freed up coach Sherman to work with the guards and overall strategy of the team.

“I played back in the Jerry Tarkanian and Lute Olsen era, who both came from Long Beach, and I enjoy passing this knowledge on to today’s basketball player,” he added. “My passion is coaching basketball and this is my way of giving back to our community.”

Along with their past success as players, Fox shares a similar philosophy with Sherman and Wolf JV coach Chris Smith, allowing the trio to mesh well.

“Coaches have a huge impact on student’s lives and I would like to be part of their development into adulthood,” Fox said. “I/we prioritize in helping develop the total student, which includes being a responsible person first, student second, and athlete last.

“We hold our athletes accountable for their behavior and academic success prior to ever being allowed onto the basketball court,” he added. “We feel this will benefit them as they develop habits for success past high school.”

In his work, both with the younger C-Team players and with the varsity post players, Fox wants to help build a winning program, but also one the community can look to proudly off the floor as well.

“Beyond the wins and losses I want to instill a work ethic of accountability, responsibility and teamwork in these athletes,” he said. “I would like to see us improve after every game and learn what it means to be part of a team.

“This is a truly special place and we are glad to be part of it.”

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