Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘Rants’

   I spent three springs playing tennis at Tumwater High School. That’s me, third from the left.

In less than 24 hours, spring sports begin.

Which means I am here, once again, to poke, prod and needle those who are sitting on the fence.

A lot of Wolf athletes will show up tomorrow for the first practice, whether softball, track, baseball, tennis or soccer is their sport.

But a fair amount won’t.

There will be the usual excuses offered, some sincere and some not so much.

So be it. It’s your choice.

Though, ultimately, that is what will nag at me personally the most.

Not that you want to go work, or study, or drive, or hang out with friends, or violate the athletic code without impunity, or any of a million little reasons you will offer for why you’re not playing a sport this spring.

No, what will bother me, personally, the most, is you have the choice to play, and you still choose to walk away.

Because I never had that choice.

For someone who makes their meager living off of writing about high school and middle school sports, I came at the job in somewhat of an odd way.

I grew up playing outside 24-7, whether it was basketball, baseball, football, churning through the neighborhood on my battered bike or waging a constant war with a neighbor kid, who, at the time, seemed super annoying.

Now, looking back, I’m pretty sure I was just as annoying, if not more so.

But what I’m saying is, I was, like most kids in the late ’70s, early ’80s, a natural athlete.

And also rail-thin. But no beard … at the time.

Playing sports was what I lived and breathed for on a daily basis.

If no one else was around, I’d play basketball myself, the Trail Blazers vs. the ’76ers, Jim Paxson knocking down jumpers over Maurice Cheeks all day long.

My dad wouldn’t put up a backboard and rim?

I used a tree with a thick, low-hanging branch, which caused weird ricochets on the rebounds and made me a better defensive player.

During this time, I was miffed my dad wouldn’t let me play little league baseball, but, since basketball was my #1 sport, I let it go without too much arguing or thought.

There weren’t any SWISH-style youth basketball options in our town back then, but, as soon as I hit middle school, I would be able to play organized basketball.

I might not have been crossing days off the calendar, but it was close.

In sixth grade there were three players on the playground who were picked 1-2-3, in fluctuating order, day in and day out, for every game.

We were all wiry guards, with similar games, builds and skills, and it was actually more exciting to be the one who got picked #2, which meant you would have to fend off the other two as they worked together.

Lee and Larry went on to play middle school and high school ball, with Larry making the high school varsity as a freshman.

I did not play in middle school or high school.

It wasn’t my choice, and yes, it still bothers me greatly to this day.

And please, do not for a second think I believe I was destined for greatness, for college or the NBA.

I was a super-skinny kid who topped out at a shade under six-foot and liked to drive people batty on defense. No one was ever gonna give me money for my hoops skills.

But man, I wanted desperately to play organized basketball, and I will always be left to wonder what my experience would have been like.

And why didn’t I play, you ask?

Growing up, I was part of a family which belonged to a rather rigid religious sect, and my father, for many years, was one of the leaders in our local branch.

Organized sports were seen as preparation for military life, something also not allowed by this group.

So, the thinking as best I understand, was why allow children to do one thing, if it was merely leading to something else which also wasn’t going to happen?

We had discussions, my father and I. We had arguments. Nothing changed.

My sister was far more vocal, while I tended to react as passively-aggressive as possible. Which meant I have sulked ever since.

It was only late in my sophomore year, after my father had stepped down from his leadership role in our church, and after I had come within 99.29% of dropping out of school, that he relented a small fraction.

Desperate to find some way to keep me in school, my mom convinced my dad to allow me to play tennis — and only tennis — and I got most of three seasons on the court.

Tennis wasn’t my first choice, my second choice or my 37th choice, but I enjoyed my time playing for Coach Barona.

I was the kid who went full-tilt every practice, then always stayed after practice to keep playing until it was so dark we couldn’t see the tennis ball anymore.

On weekends, I would bike down to the courts and play for hours more.

I still have my racket, a framed team photo from my senior year, my Tumwater High School letter and a second-place trophy from a summer tournament.

The trophy isn’t that impressive, pretty much a run-of-the-mill tennis one, and parts of it have come a bit loose over the years.

But, every time I look at it stashed away on top of a bookshelf, I remember upsetting one high school teammate, James, in the semifinals, then battling my high school doubles partner, Ari, for three-plus hours in the final.

It was a very hot day and by the end, after repeatedly trying to slug the ball off of each other’s faces, and much yapping back and forth, our coach decided we might need a change.

Suffice it to say, I played singles as a senior. Which was probably best for all involved.

That trophy stands as a perfect testament to how drive and commitment can help you achieve anything, while also offering a stark reminder that maybe I’m not the easiest person to get along with.

A fact to which many newspaper editors can attest.

During those three seasons of tennis, I came back at my father often with pleas to play basketball, but he never bent. Ever.

As an adult, I’m no happier with his choice, but time does tend to take some of the edge off of our hurts.

I don’t hate my dad.

Didn’t while he was alive and certainly don’t now that he has passed. In almost every other way, we had a great relationship.

I don’t agree with all the decisions he made, but I know he genuinely wanted the best for me at all times.

But I still wish I had been given the chance to play. And I probably always will.

So, to the Wolf athletes who sit on the fence on this Sunday night, trying to decide whether to play or not — it’s your call, not mine.

But whatever you choose, to play or sit, just be thankful YOU get to make that choice.

Read Full Post »

   Ema Smith captures the mood of everyone in Coupeville when we think about OlympicLeague.com these days. 

Coupeville fans are told, again and again, that there is one “official” site for Olympic League news, schedules and standings.

But what if that site makes an error, then compounds it day after day, for 17 days?

And what if that site doesn’t want to hear from me or you, or pretty much anyone, that they are doing a mediocre (at best) job?

Welcome to http://www.olympicleague.com/, where incompetence is the flavor of the day … day after day after day.

So, what am I wailing about?

Jump back in time 17 days (so, two-plus weeks), land on the afternoon of Jan. 6 and the Coupeville girls basketball team beat Klahowya 29-23.

At which time, the big brains behind the Olympic League site updated both team’s overall win/loss records, but did NOT do the same for their league marks.

A small error at the time, but one compounded when day after day after day, they refuse to use two small key strokes to fix the issue.

And why is this big, at least relatively speaking?

Because most people (including a lot of newspaper writers) just take a quick scan of said standings when talking or writing about how teams are doing.

Which presently show Coupeville at 3-2 and Klahowya at 1-4.

Which isn’t true.

If you pop into the schedule for either CHS or KSS and go down and manually count up the league games, you wind up with 4-2 and 1-5 respectively, which rightfully places the Wolves in a first-place tie with Port Townsend heading into Friday’s showdown between those two squads.

But 99.6% of people aren’t going to go do that, so they buy the incorrect 3-2 and 1-4 records.

Is this end-of-the-world type of stuff? Probably not, but I am easily chafed, frequently vocal and have plenty of time on my hands to be irritating as all get out, so here we are.

Do your one job, OlympicLeague.com!

Do it for the kids!

Or just do it to get me to stop whining.

But do it!

Read Full Post »

The only mascot you’ll ever need. (John Fisken photo)

I am a big ol’ hypocrite.

Let’s just get that out of the way right off the bat.

On one hand, I openly campaign for athletes at other schools to consider the benefits of playing for Coupeville.

It’s a small 1A school, with a no-cut policy, which means whatever your skill level, your chance of playing (and making a substantial impact) are greater than at a school with a larger student base.

I personally think we have stellar coaches, both in the newbies and grizzled vets, our uniforms are snazzier than other schools, our prairie is prettier than some of the hell-holes other schools occupy, and, last, but certainly not least, media attention, baby.

Play for a school like Klahowya and you’re fighting to get the briefest sniff from the Kitsap Sun, which has a ton of 2A and 3A schools in its area.

Find yourself in Port Townsend (where Seran Dances won three state track titles in May, yet not a word has appeared on the local paper’s website) or South Whidbey (more than a week to read anything on-line about softball’s adventure at the state tourney), and things get really dire.

Not to toot my own horn too much, but I am relentless, and will shower you with coverage morning, noon and night, even if you’re the last player on the JV bench.

So, just imagine the tsunami of articles you can print and clip if you’re actually a big-time star.

College scholarships? A bigger school is not the mecca some think they are.

There may be more Wildcats than Wolves playing college sports overall, but that’s mainly due to the bigger student body from where those athletes came.

Take the last decade and Oak Harbor (a 3A high school) and Coupeville have exactly the same number of athletes who received scholarship money while playing for a major D-1 college program.

It’s Wolves Tyler King (U-Dub) and Kyle King (Oklahoma) vs. Wildcats Marshall Lobbestael (Wazzu) and Heidi McNeill (U-Dub).

With Oak Harbor housing 1,132 students to Coupeville’s 227 in the last classification counts, I’m not sure earning a draw isn’t more of a loss.

If you want to play college sports, you can, and it has little to do with the size of your high school.

In the end, talent, hard work and absolute commitment means more than a fancy name on your high school jersey (unless maybe it says ATM, Bellevue or Garfield).

You have to find your niche, whether it’s D-1 or a small community college, and there will be a chance to compete.

I’m not saying you’re guaranteed a scholarship, or even a chance to play. But you find the right place, be it Alabama or Skagit Valley, you can get a shot, and then it’s up to you to do what you can with that shot.

In the end, though, this all comes down to one thing.

I write about COUPEVILLE, and the better the Wolves do, the easier my job.

There are no conflicts of interest. I don’t work for the school district, they don’t give me a penny, and they have little say in what or who I write about.

If I want to shamelessly recruit, it’s my call, and it makes perfect sense.

I have shed any form of journalistic impartiality. I want, and need, Coupeville teams and athletes to do well. End of story.

And yet, as I said, I’m a hypocrite.

Because, at the same time I openly try and convince people to leave other towns, other schools, behind, I piss and moan when the exact opposite happens.

When we head into the new school year in the fall, there will be at least four very talented athletes playing for Oak Harbor High School who could still be wearing the red and black of CHS.

These are not athletes whose families moved to a different school district, necessitating a change.

That happens, for many different reasons, and I can name a whole string of top-level athletes who were very successful at other schools after landing at their new home.

Volleyball spiker Jessica Riddle, who holds the CHS single-game record for kills and aces, led Anacortes to back-to-back 5th place trophies in 2A as a junior and senior.

Two who moved before high school are Kwamane Bowens, who went on to earn a D-1 football scholarship and Emma Laurion, who scored 118 goals and won back-to-back state soccer titles for Crosspoint Academy.

Huge losses for Wolf Nation. Huge “what if they didn’t move?” scenarios.

The current Wolves masquerading as Wildcats, though, didn’t move. Their families have simply chosen to let them attend, and play for one school, while living in another district.

Which is their right.

As long as both schools, and the WIAA, have no issue with what they’re doing, who am I to question their choices?

Parents should be allowed to make whatever decision they think benefits their children.

Especially when I would openly glad-hand those who made a similar choice … if it benefited Coupeville.

I could be pissy. I could be whiny. Wouldn’t be the first time.

While none of these athletes are the next Kobe Bryant or Mia Hamm, if they played for CHS, they would give me plenty to write about. So, on a personal note, these decisions hit me.

Which sounds really whiny. I get it.

Once again, this blog is not called Oak Harbor Sports or the Klahowya Klarion, or Up with Chimacum.

So let me marinate in my pool of tears over here.

I want athletes to jump to Coupeville, not away. I may understand when the opposite happens, but I don’t have to be thrilled.

Like I said, I’m a big ol’ hypocrite.

Read Full Post »

   Keaton Farris, a former CHS student/athlete, died in the Island County Jail April 7, 2015. (Photo courtesy Fred Farris)

We live in a time where everyone seems to get an award.

Whether you win, place or merely show up, here’s a ribbon. Aren’t you special?

But, there’s a huge difference between say, rewarding a little kid for running aimlessly around a soccer field for a few hours and rewarding an institution like, say, a jail, for doing what it should have done in the first damn place.

Here’s what’s irritating me: http://www.whidbeynewstimes.com/news/island-county-jail-wins-award-for-improvements/

When Keaton Farris, a former Coupeville High School athlete fighting mental health issues, died of dehydration and malnutrition April 7, 2015 in the Island County Jail, it was a scandal.

Don’t sugarcoat it.

People screwed up, either choosing to do the wrong thing or making terrible calls in judgement, and a young man died.

End of story.

In the two years since, there has been international media coverage, vigils, lawsuits and firings.

The Island County Jail, and those who work there, have made a public, concerted effort to fix things in the aftermath. For that, certainly, credit is due.

But an award? That the county applied for itself?

Go screw yourself.

After all the kicks in the rear, you now want a pat on the head for doing exactly what you should have already been doing in the first place?

Look, I’m glad you’ve changed things. Glad you’ve improved things.

You had NO CHOICE.

I’m just going to say this — it would have been better to make the improvements THAT YOU HAD TO MAKE and go on about business, without actively seeking a pat on the head afterwards.

The county can hang all the plaques it wants on the wall.

The only thing which really matters is our jail, which sits a mile-and-a-half from my house, a place I pass on almost a daily basis, DOESN’T KILL ANYONE ELSE.

Whether you can apply for the “award” is neither here nor there. What matters is whether you SHOULD have applied for it.

I am firmly on the side of those who say, “No.”

It’s a bad look all around, both the application and any hint of celebrating said “award.”

Someone in the Island County chain of command really should have stopped, thought for a second, and realized just that.

Read Full Post »

Park the car here. The drive to Oak Harbor is overrated. (Janie Keilwitz photo)

Small town, farm town, your town
make ’em bow down

Wear the Wolf with pride
your passion, no need to hide

Red and black, red and white
debate rages, for which colors do you fight

Matters not, either way
you’re here to make the other team pay

Starts with a C, ends with an E
fight, no bended knee, bleed to make them see

Play for the uniform on your back
the players who line up, stack by stack

Big city to the North, big city to the South,
talk, talk, talk with the mouth

Leave your town
ignore everyone with the frown

Come play for us
even take the bus

Big city opportunities abound
especially if you can rebound

Take the easy way out
if you don’t have heart for the bout

Run away, leave Cow Town to deal
who cares what they steal

We’ll get you to the next level, they say
though with your soul, you might pay

Big town, big town, it’s a lure
for the one with no fight, the common cur

Stay in the small town, suck it up
talkin’ to you, buttercup

No need to believe the lie
facts not shy

College rides land for a small town star
just as often as those who ran far

Far, far away from their town
makin’ everyone frown

U-Dub, Oklahoma, full ride
what town they come from, no need for us to hide

Cow Town kickin’ your rear
open your ears and hear

Stay local, stay loyal
you can still be a royal

You don’t build teams
you just destroy dreams

When you take the easy way out
ankle to be a big city lout

You live in Cow Town, stay in Cow Town all day
Make the Eagles and RedHawks pay

Or show your lack of heart
by exiting like a big old fart

Leave a stink behind as the door swings
head to Joke Harbor and see what it brings

Not sticking it to coaches
no claims of recruiting like Bellevue cockroaches

Honor abounds where purple and gold adorn hats
much respect for the ‘Cats

Parents, parents who see things not there
that’s what’s tough to bear

Kill Cow Town, exit stage right
do you fear the small town fight

My kid’s goin’ pro one day
gettin’ me that big pay

Brain matter leaking out your ears
for your sanity there are fears

What do you learn when you cut and run
drain the fun

Teach your kids to shortcut
trade homes like a mutt

Lookin’ for somethin’ not to be found
moving up slightly on the mound

Or stay, stay and build, have pride
remain loyal, with nothing to hide

Show guts, show loyalty, show who you are
help us raise the bar

Stay, stay in Coupeville, teach your kid pride and passion
instead of gettin’ a lyrical lashin’

Stand tall, stand straight
make your own fate

Be a Wolf, live a Wolf, today and every day
listen to my words and … stay

We are Cow Town, with you, without you
better to hear us cheer than boo

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »