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Posts Tagged ‘Rants’

Madrona Way, now free of Checkpoint Charlie for the first time in nine months. (David Svien photo)

   The corner of Madrona Way and Sherman, now free of Checkpoint Charlie for the first time in nine months. (David Svien photo)

Our long national nightmare is done.

If you had nine months in the Madrona Way road project bingo game, time to cash in.

Checkpoint Charlie, which has loomed outside Coupeville Sports World Headquarters, right there on the intersection of Madrona and Sherman, is no more.

Freedom. Sweet, sweet driving freedom.

No longer do a kazillion cars have to make a right, shoot up past my duplex, then make the scintillating choice between taking Black Rd. or the highway.

Now we have TWO, I say TWO ways in to town.

What an age to live in…

Now what insignificant thing will I have to whine about?

Oh, don’t worry about me. I’m sure I’ll find something.

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Coaches like Wolf boys' hoops guru Anthony Smith (John Fisken photo)

  Coaches like CHS boys’ hoops guru Anthony Smith have agreed to sacrifice time and work their schedules around a season. When athletes (and parents) don’t want to do the same, why expect a free ride? (John Fisken photo)

High school sports can be tough.

Not everyone can play them. Not everyone should.

But, if you, as a player, and you, as a parent, make the decision to do so, realize you’re going to have to occasionally step out of your entitled world and face off with reality.

Not every kid makes varsity. Not every kid gets the same playing time.

Right there, sports just introduced you to the cold, hard reality of the real world.

Those with internal fortitude will press on and work harder, and, possibly, hopefully, be rewarded for the time, effort and sweat they put in.

Sports teach tough lessons, but they also show reward can come (sometimes, not always) when effort is put in.

But then you have parents such as Kimberly DeJesus, who just had a letter to the editor published in The Whidbey News-Times.

In the letter, which I have linked to below, she cries (a lot) about coaches having practices during holidays.

Her main point:

I, as a parent who had children in school, would not allow my children to practice on holiday break, especially if we were traveling out of town to visit relatives.

And then if the coach(es) wouldn’t let my kids play because they missed practice, oh my.

You would not want to take me there, as it would be my decision that we left town, not my kids’.

Let’s go through this, shall we?

1) In the state of Washington, athletes have to have a certain number of practices in to be eligible to play in games.

With barely two weeks from the first official day of practice to the first basketball game (and athletes needing 10 practices to be eligible), coaches have little choice but to have practices AROUND the holiday (none that I know of had day-of-Thanksgiving practices).

So, while you scream at the coach, you ignore the WIAA, which set the practice requirements.

2) When you signed your kid(s) up, you saw a schedule. You knew, in advance, when the practice and games were. It is your choice if you want to have them play or go on vacation.

You don’t always get to have it both ways.

The coaches, who have committed to the season and agreed to work THEIR schedules around the holidays, certainly don’t.

3) So, we’ll say your child is not at practice. Other players are.

Fine. Your choice to make, as a parent. No one disputes that.

Yet you want them to be rewarded the same as the players who sacrificed, who scrapped, who committed heart and soul to the program. Who actually showed up.

Or else you will throw a snit fit.

Thereby teaching your children that if you’re not given everything you want, regardless of whether you worked for it and deserve it, the only way to solve the problem is to scream and cry and pretend to be abused.

And we wonder why so many high school coaches burn out and walk away after just a few years.

The letter:

http://www.whidbeynewstimes.com/opinion/letters/284017111.html

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Permission? I'm Wanda Grone, buddy! No rules for me!!

Permission? I’m Wanda Grone, buddy! No rules for me!!

Christa Canell, posting a sign AFTER asking permission. I approve this message.

Christa Canell, posting a sign AFTER asking permission. I approve this message.

I don’t know Wandra Grone and Wandra Grone doesn’t know me.

So, it was with some surprise that I woke up this morning to find several of her campaign signs shoved deeply into the grass in front of world-wide headquarters for Coupeville Sports.

If I was supporting anyone in the race for Island County Treasurer this year, it would be Christa Canell, mom of recently graduated Wolf two-sport star Haley Sherman.

During Cookie Wars 2014 — when CHS sports moms bribed me with goodies all spring — Haley was one of the few who got one of my cookies, which I otherwise ruthlessly guarded.

I never gave a cookie to Wanda Grone. Not before and definitely not now.

No cookies for you!!

And no putting up campaign signs on people’s property without permission.

Having spoken to my landlord, who, you know, actually owns the property, NO PERMISSION was given to the Grone campaign to besmirch a property that sits on SHERMAN Road.

In her campaign info, Grone states she is “professional and ethical.” It’s possible.

Her fly-by-night supporters with their hammers and campaign signs, however, probably prefer words like “sneaky,” “obtuse” and “oh crap, run, they saw us!!!!!”

So, I’ll tell you what. I’m going to even things out a bit.

She has never asked for, and would never ask, but Christa Canell is getting a free ad here on Coupeville Sports.

She didn’t pay for it. She isn’t a sponsor.

This is a freebie.

Because I like Christa and I think she raised a wonderful daughter in Haley, who was always a shining example of what a Wolf student/athlete could, and should be.

Team Canell all the way!!

To see more info on the woman I hope wins this election, pop over to:

http://www.canellfortreasurer.com/

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Former Wolf teammatesx Aaron Trumbull (top) and Taylor Ebersole reunite during summer ball. *Shelli Trumbull photo)

Former Wolf teammates Aaron Trumbull (top) and Taylor Ebersole reunite during summer ball. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Taylor Ebersole will play basketball in the Coupeville High School gym Friday night.

Two years ago, that wouldn’t have seemed like a big deal. Ebersole started as a freshman for the Wolves and was one of the bright spots in a winless season.

His older sister, Hayley, had been a strong contributor during her time playing basketball in the red and black, and his father, David, was an employee in good standing of the Coupeville School District.

But then, Taylor was gone, in a flash.

The family moved to La Conner, making their son fully eligible to suit up for a different school starting with his sophomore season. The Braves are a top 2B school, one rich in tradition and banners on their walls.

Now, Ebersole spent most of his first year sitting on the bench, seeing much of his playing time at the JV level. With the sophomore finishing 15th on the team in scoring, La Conner went 24-2 and placed fourth at the state tournament.

His former teammates in Coupeville won a single game, upending Mount Vernon Christian, as the 1A Wolves rebuild a program.

Graduation, injuries and the retirement of longtime coach Randy King have taken the Wolves from 16 wins in 2009-2010 to nine in 2010-2011, and then one win in the first two and a quarter seasons under Anthony Smith.

This is where it gets sticky.

Families move all the time, for many reasons. Their reasons for moving are their own.

But the overwhelming public perception is this: the Ebersoles moved so their son could play for a “better” program for the final three years of his high school career.

Since David Ebersole still commutes to Whidbey for his job as principal at Coupeville Elementary School — a job he handles with great skill — I have one question.

How, in good conscience, can you tell parents that the Coupeville School District is great for them and their children, when, by your own actions, it appears you don’t believe that to be true for your own child?

I have great respect for the players, and their families, who have remained committed to the Wolves during what has been an admittedly hard ride.

The ones who have shown up for early morning Saturday practices after being pounded on by much larger 2A schools on Friday night. The ones who have gotten on the bus twice a week for long trips late in a lost season.

The ones who didn’t run away at the first sign of struggle and have dug in for the long haul.

Everyone wants to win. That is human nature.

But there is something to be said for those who persevere. Who fight the good fight even when they are outnumbered, over-matched and slagged on by people who have never been to a game in the last three years.

The program is heading back uphill.

But to get back to where it once was, it needs commitment. From players, coaches, parents, administrators, fans alike.

The Wolves who graduate next year will know that they stayed loyal. That they gave their all to their school and put others before themselves and did not buckle and take the easy way out.

Perhaps I am wrong. Perhaps I don’t understand the situation. It wouldn’t be the first time, or, likely, the last.

But Friday night, as I watch a player who could have been a key part of the rebuilding process play in a different uniform, that question will linger.

If you truly believe the Coupeville School District is worthy of your time, if you truly believe what you say when you sell your school and town to incoming parents and students, how do you square that with transporting your son down the highway to play for another school?

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According to the computer, it would be better for Julia Myers to throw this pass away. She does not, however, as, unlike the computer, she is a WINNER. (John Fisken photo)

   According to the computer, it would be better for Julia Myers to throw this pass away. She will not, as, unlike the computer, she is a WINNER. (John Fisken photo)

Computers…

In a world run by the madly beeping and whirring lil’ bastards, losing is more important than winning. Better to fall hard to a “good” team than beat a “less good” team.

What other conclusion can you draw from the latest rankings released by ScoreCzar.org, which currently places the Coupeville High School girls’ basketball team as the 47th best 1A squad (out of 75) in Washington state?

The computer would have you believe that NINE different teams with LOSING records are currently better than the Wolves, who boast a 3-2 record.

That’s a winning record, which includes a victory over a 2A team (the much bigger Lakewood), while Vashon Island, at 1-5, with its only win over a 2B squad (that’s a smaller school, in case you were wondering), sits 12 slots higher.

Yes, you can be 1-5 and be considered the 35th best team in 1A. By … a … computer.

Of course, you can be WINLESS and be #18, as well.

Eatonville (0-2) may not be able to put a ball in a basket, but they apparently fail in a really, really spectacular fashion.

Newport (6-1), Zillah (5-0) and Cascade (5-1) must be THRILLED to be ranked multiple slots behind a team that does the exact opposite of what they do.

You know, actually win games.

Now, it’s possible the computer is really a genius, and that it’s right in its hypothesis that the teams that currently can’t win would beat the teams that do win, if they faced off.

We’ll see, as the season plays out.

For now, though, anyone with an actual human brain has to wonder — did you drop the computer on its “brain” before booting it up?

http://www.scoreczar.org/classifications/255-high-school-basketball-girls-wa1a

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