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Matthew Campbell will be live on stage this weekend, carrying the banner for Wolf Nation.

The Coupeville High School sophomore held off nine other contestants to win a Poetry Out Loud competition, and now moves on to compete at regionals.

That event goes down Saturday at the Phil Tarro Theatre on Skagit Valley College’s Mount Vernon campus, with two finalists advancing to the state finals in March.

Nationals are typically held in Washington DC in late April or early May.

Poetry Out Loud was launched in 2006 by the National Endowment for the Arts, and draws contestants from all 50 states, as well as the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

The goal is to promote the art of performing poetry.

Washington state has a previous national champion, with Langston Ward of Spokane claiming top honors in 2013 for his recitation of “The Gift” by Li-Young Lee.

This year’s opening poetry rumble drew 10 Coupeville High School students, with Campbell, Sydney Wallace, and Cristina McGrath finishing in the top three.

Contestants memorized and performed two poems, and were graded on “physical presence,” “voice and articulation,” “dramatic appropriateness,” “evidence of understanding,” and “overall performance.”

Each performer was also checked for accuracy as they recited their poems.

Campbell is slated to perform the work of poets Jones Very and Richard Blanco at regionals.

The former, who died in 1880, was a “poet, clergyman, and mystic” who was also a huge Shakespeare fan boy, while the latter is still going strong, born in 1968 and noted for performing at Barack Obama’s second inauguration.

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Wolf freshman spiker Jaimee Masters. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

When Coupeville High School freshman Jaimee Masters takes the volleyball court, her role model isn’t too far away.

That would be her cousin, Wolf senior Hope “The Surgeon” Lodell, a lethal weapon waiting to be unleashed, who owns the school record for service aces in a season and a career.

As Masters fine-tunes her own game playing for the Coupeville JV and C-Team squads, she watches Lodell crush fools for the varsity and knows she wants to be in the same place one day.

Hope has had a big impact on me,” Masters said. “When I was younger I always looked up to her; she was like the big sister for me.

“And during volleyball she’s the reason why I push myself constantly,” she added. “I strive to get on her level of skill or even better.”

Masters has two seasons of middle school volleyball, and another of club volleyball, under her belt, and her passion for the sport continues to grow.

“I started playing because I’ve always loved the sport,” Masters said. “I enjoy being a part of the team, and overall just playing.

“Volleyball has always sparked my interest,” she added. “I love the feeling of getting a perfect pass or a perfect set, or getting an ace when I’m serving.”

Masters, who plans to join her cousin on the softball field as well, spends a fair amount of her free time listening to music and drawing. At school, she most looks forward to classes revolving around art and poetry.

When she hits the gym, though, it’s all about improvement — taking the skills she currently has and constantly expanding them.

“I feel like my biggest strength would be passing,” Masters said. “An area I would love to work on would be my setting, because my team relies on me as a setter.

“My goals for this season are perfecting my setting ability, like being able to back set and having my thumbs back,” she added. “During my season of club volleyball, I got tendinitis in my thumb. And that really hurt me and my team because I was the setter. So hopefully I can perfect it again.”

Masters would also like to be “able to spot serve,” a skill her cousin excels in.

As she grows, on and off the court, Masters benefits from the support she gets from her family. It’s something she deeply appreciates.

“My parents have had a big impact on me. Without them I don’t know if I would be the person I am today,” Masters said. “They make me happy every day.

“Yes, we do have our hills and valleys, but they have helped me through so much.”

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Ja'Tarya Hoskins zooms to another win on the oval. (John Fisken photo)

Ja’Tarya Hoskins zooms to another win on the oval. (John Fisken photo)

Ja’Tarya Hoskins is a legacy who is well on the way to making a name for herself.

When she steps into the hallways at Coupeville High School to kick off her freshman year this fall, Hoskins will be following in big footsteps.

Older sister Jai’Lysa was a standout in three sports (cheer, basketball and track) and is in the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame for her efforts.

But Ja’Tarya is already garnering her own attention, especially on the track oval, where she was a league champion both years at the middle school level.

After ruling the high jump as a 7th grader, she took home the crown in the 75 meter hurdles this spring.

While she plans to continue in track at the high school level, and possibly play basketball as well, it’s cheer which will garner Hoskins‘ attention first.

She’s already hard at work with the CHS cheer squad, taking part in spring practices.

“I cheered once when I was younger and I really loved it,” Hoskins said. “I started because Jai’Lysa really liked it, so I wanted to try it.”

Her older sister has been a mentor, and her own personal cheerleader.

Jai’Lysa helped me be a better person because she always saw potential in me, even if everyone didn’t,” Hoskins said.

When she’s not involved in sports, Ja’Tarya enjoys a wide range of activities, from writing poetry, reading and drawing to singing and dancing.

While cheerleading may look easy from the outside, Hoskins appreciates the time and effort required, but also the payoff.

“You have to work hard to get the goals that you want,” she said. “No, you don’t play to win, but it’s fun and exciting.

“You get to meet new friends and they all become your sisters.”

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Wynter Arndt, poet. (Charles Arndt photos)

Wynter Arndt, poet. (Charles Arndt photos)

The arts. Just as important, if not more so, than sports.

The arts. Just as important, if not more so, than sports.

dddd

Poem #1

Poem #2

Poem #2

Poem #3

Poem #3

You thought we didn’t appreciate the finer arts here at Coupeville Sports?

You thought wrong, Skippy.

Proving once again that there are two words in the name of this blog, we’re taking a mini-detour to explore one of the many scholastic offshoots found in the first word — Coupeville.

Today’s contributor to the arts is Coupeville Elementary School poet Wynter Arndt, who, along with her third grade classmates, recently held a poetry cafe for their classmates, parents and literary fans.

Arndt, daughter of renown local lawyer Charles Arndt and former CHS sports sensation turned legendary farmer Georgie Smith, crafted the poems above, which she has been kind enough to let us reprint.

Thank you, Wynter. Write on!

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