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Posts Tagged ‘SW Falcons’

Tim Collins

   Monica Vidoni (red uniform) stands next to former South Whidbey High School softball coach Tim Collins. (Photo courtesy Vidoni)

Falcon. Wolf. Doesn’t matter in the end, as it’s one Whidbey.

News that South Whidbey High School softball coach Tim Collins had passed away suddenly at 66 reverberated across the Island.

The news hit home especially hard for former CHS player Monica Vidoni, who had left for college in Minnesota earlier in the week.

Vidoni played summer ball for Collins and had the following to say about her coach:

I knew Tim really well. He was very, very kind.

He was my coach last summer and he helped me  become a better hitter in softball.

He used to pick me up for softball every week with his daughter.

If it wasn’t for him I wouldn’t of hit that inside of the park grand slam. He adjusted my hitting and now I can hit better then ever.

He let me play first base every game.

He would take us to Jack in the Box after every game.

He invited me to open gyms for softball in South Whidbey.

Even though I was on the rival team, Tim still wanted to make me a better softball player, and that’s what he did.

Tim was and always will be one of my favorite coaches in my life time.

Tim has been such an inspiration to me. Tim always said the most positive things to me.

He wasn’t one of those coaches who got mad at you when you screwed up. He would always say “that’s okay, you’ll get it again next time.”

I first met him the summer of 2014. He needed people for his softball team and he asked if I wanted to play.

We were the combination of Burlington, South Whidbey, and me, the only Coupeville person.

We went 8-1 and we were the number one team.

While we were playing in the summer he adjusted my batting and I was hitting about .400. Then he invited me to come to open gyms for softball practice hitting.

He would always joke with me, telling me that I should bat with a broom because I used to sweep with my bat, he would say.

He was joking with me before a game one day that Mackenzee, his daughter, was gonna strike me out.

And I just laughed and said ” in her dreams” and she ended up striking me out in five pitches.

The smile on Tim’s face was huge and he was so happy.

He always took the time to help everyone out. Tim was a special coach. He wanted to make everyone succeed.

When softball season comes around this year I’ll always think of Tim.

My condolences go out to his family. I will miss you Tim.

You were such a goofball and you always made me laugh. I can’t wait till I get to see you again in heaven.

I will never, ever forget you.

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Cole Payne flings heat for South Whidbey's American Legion baseball squad. (Shelli Trumbulll photos)

  Cole Payne flings heat for South Whidbey’s American Legion baseball squad. (Shelli Trumbulll photos)

Payne's so fast he can throw the ball and...

Payne’s so fast he can throw the ball and…

get behind the plate, ready to catch it.

get behind the plate, ready to catch it.

Fellow Wolf in Falcon's clothes Joey Lippo is impressed.

Fellow Wolf in Falcon’s clothes Joey Lippo is impressed.

Cole Payne will play all the positions.

I said all of them!

The Coupeville High School senior, who has been moonlighting this summer with South Whidbey’s American Legion baseball squad, has usually been a rock behind the plate or working the infield.

But, in these pics snapped exclusively by roving photo mom Shelli Trumbull (son Aaron is another Wolf currently masquerading as a Falcon), we see Payne bring the heat on the mound.

With Aaron Curtin and Trumbull having graduated, the CHS baseball team will enter next year with 2015’s pitching staff cut 50%.

Now it looks like fellow senior CJ Smith and lil’ bro Hunter Smith (both playing summer ball as well) may have some company as pitchers in spring 2016.

Welcome to the jungle, rival batters. Get ready to feel the Payne pain.

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South Whidbey goaltender Cassie Neil. (John Fisken)

South Whidbey goaltender Cassie Neil denies a shot Tuesday. (John Fisken photo)

When Coupeville and South Whidbey play, in any sport, it is personal.

The Wolves and the Falcons are separated by only a few miles, living together on an Island, and since both are 1A, while Oak Harbor is 3A and rarely plays either of its neighbors, this is THE rivalry.

Games get chippy at times. Fans get personal at times. A win can make or break a school year, depending on what town you call home.

Coupeville bouncing from the 1A/2A Cascade Conference to the 1A Olympic League this year has taken the schools in different directions, but keeping the rivalry going, even in non-conference games, was the best decision the school AD’s could have made.

With wins in football and girls’ soccer, and a loss in volleyball, the Wolves have an early 2-1 edge in 2014.

But, the first big winner is a Falcon, junior soccer goalie Cassie Neil.

She, along with Wolves Mia Littlejohn and Marisa Etzell, reminded us Tuesday that you can have hard-core rivalries while still respecting your foes.

Neil is a bubbly force of nature and a frequent visitor to Cow Town.

In the world of select soccer, where Wolves, Falcons and Oak Harbor Wildcats often play on the same teams, she has frequently worn the same uniform as many of the girls she faced Tuesday.

In the second half of a narrow game, Neil twice got taken out hard. Both times were accidental in nature, but that didn’t keep the Falcon net-minder from being laid out.

The first time came on a breakaway when Littlejohn, who scored two goals, lit Neil up when they inadvertently collided at full-speed out in front of the net.

The second came with Neil on the ground, trying to grab a ball and getting clocked in the face by Etzell’s foot.

What was touching was the concern of all three girls for each other.

Instead of hanging back and letting the injured player’s teammates deal with the situation, as you might normally do, in both instances the Wolves immediately went to check on Neil.

And, after the worst of the two collisions, when she regained her feet, still a little wobbly, Neil went and grabbed Littlejohn in a bear-hug, one friend making sure the other knew that she held no ill will.

It was a quick moment, but it spoke volumes.

It reminded all of us what grace under pressure, class and hard-nosed mutual respect should look like on the athletic field.

Well played, ladies. Well played.

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CHS football coach Tony Maggio

CHS football coach Tony Maggio: “Week 1? We’re playing them Week 1?!?!”

Lathom Kelley: "Relax, Papa Wolf ... we got this." (John Fisken photo)

Lathom Kelley: “Relax, Papa Wolf … we got this.” (John Fisken photo)

Rivalry week comes early next season.

When the 2014-2015 school year starts in September, Coupeville High School is leaving the 1A/2A Cascade Conference and moving to a new 1A-only division in the Olympic League. As the smallest 1A school in the state, CHS is looking for a more level playing field.

One thing the Wolves won’t leave behind, however, is their natural rivalry with South Whidbey. The two Island schools will continue to face off, just in non-conference games.

And that back-and-forth battle is probably biggest on the gridiron, where the Wolves and Falcons battle for possession of The Bucket.

Two years ago, Coupeville went to Langley and, led by seniors Caleb Valko and Danny Savalza, brought the trophy home.

Last year, with All-State lineman Nick Streubel out with injury, the Wolves fell at home in what may have been the foggiest game ever played on Whidbey.

Coupeville’s effort to reclaim the hardware will get an early start in 2014, as Wolf Athletic Director Lori Stolee has confirmed the two schools have penciled in each other for week one of the football season.

“South Whidbey is locked in,” Stolee said. “We don’t have the schedule made yet, but my unofficial schedule has them locked in!”

Nestled away in his top-secret mad genius lair, Wolf coach Tony Maggio has already started plotting out new, mind-boggling plays.

The countdown to smack-down has begun.

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