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Posts Tagged ‘Taya Boonstra’

Taya

   Taya Boonstra, a queen of volleyball, basketball, softball, cheer and photo-bombing during her time as a Wolf.

Hall o

   Kit Manzanares is joined by Boonstra (middle with David King), and Jodi Crimmins (top) and Linda Cheshier, who had big roles in big moments.

Game-changers.

The athletes who are part of the 40th class inducted into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame were just that.

We’re mixing it up a bit today, with two athletes, four-sport whiz kid Taya Boonstra and three-sport rampaging beast Kit Manzanares, being joined by two great moments, one a solo effort, one very much a team accomplishment.

After this, both moments, and both of our athletes for all seasons, will be found at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab.

Our first moment comes to us courtesy of Jodi (Christensen) Crimmins, who’s already in the Hall for her career work on the hardwood.

Today we’re remembering one night (Jan. 11, 1994), in a bit of a lost season, when the senior whirlwind came within a steal of getting a triple-double the hard way.

Playing on the road at Meridian, Jodi collected 13 points, 12 rebounds and a season-high nine steals, doing all she could to keep a severely undermanned team afloat.

While she couldn’t save the Wolves, who were missing key players Misty Sellgren and Emily Wodjenski, while a third (Marlys West) spent the night chained to the bench with foul trouble, Christensen went down fighting like always.

Jodi had an out-of-sight game,” her coach, Deb Whittaker, told me at the time. “She played an outstanding game.”

Of course, that quote could have fit Jodi every time she took the floor.

Our second moment arrived Feb. 7, 1992, when the CHS girls’ basketball team pulled off one of the biggest upset wins in program history.

Hosting a King’s squad that came in at 16-1 and ranked #4 in the state, the Wolves, behind Linda Cheshier, Emily (Vracin) Kosderka and Sellgren, stunned the hoops universe.

Hitting 23 free throws, including 14 in the fourth quarter, Coupeville toppled the Knights 55-39, blowing the roof off the CHS gym.

“It’s an incredible boost for us. It was our turn, and we wanted this one really bad,” Vracin said in the moments after the game.

The wily senior dropped in seven, while Cheshier banked home 17, Sellgren netted 11 and Joli Smith tickled the twine for four.

“The first two quarters (when they led 33-18) were the best we’ve ever played,” legendary Wolf coach Phyllis Textor said. “This was the biggest win of the season. Make that the biggest win in many a season.”

Joining our two bright, shining moments is Manzanares, one of the first breakout players I covered back in my early days as a writer at the Whidbey News-Times.

The father of current Wolf star Ryan Griggs, Kit was a star in every sport he picked up for Coupeville. Football, basketball, track, he could do it all and do it all well.

A strong mix of height, speed and power, he tore up defenses on the gridiron, was a tower of power alongside Virgil Roehl and Boom Phomvongkoth on the hardwood and showed blazing speed on the oval, where he went to state.

His ability to raise his game regardless of the sport is matched by Boonstra, who was rock-solid in volleyball, basketball and softball, while also helping anchor the Wolf cheer squad.

One of the smartest, friendliest, most energetic forces of nature ever to stroll through the hallways at CHS, Taya also joins McKayla and McKenzie Bailey and Hunter Hammer as the absolute gold standard when it came to pulling off photo-bombs as an athlete.

While always remaining fully aware of everything going on around her in the game, Boonstra had an uncanny ability to know just when the camera was going to click, and where best to position herself for maximum impact.

Plus, she bakes incredible cookies.

No, seriously, I mean Hall o’ Fame-worthy cookies. Yeah, that good.

There’s a billion reasons to honor Tatiana, but let’s face it, after she delivered fresh-baked cookies to me at a softball game last spring, she was guaranteed induction.

Yes, I’m that easy.

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McKayla Bailey: She's kind of a big deal. (John Fisken and Shelli Trumbull photos)

   McKayla Bailey: She’s kind of a big deal. (John Fisken, Shelli Trumbull and Janine Bundy photos)

Every once in a while, I hear the same thing in regards to coverage here on Coupeville Sports.

“You play favorites.”

To which I respond, “Don’t be stupid. Of course I do.”

And it has little to do with whose parents have donated or bought ads from me, and whose parents have not.

The better you are as an athlete, the more sports you play, the more you get involved, your willingness to pose for photos — all factors.

Then, sometimes, it just depends on your personality.

If you’re a ray of sunshine, it’s going to be easier to cover you. Be a pain in the ass, and it’ll be easier to ignore you.

It’s not rocket science.

With all that said, there is no doubt McKayla Bailey is right there at the top on my short list of favorite Wolf athletes of all time.

Miss Bailey, who celebrates a birthday today, has always been everything you could hope for, and it’s not hard to figure out why she has often been the face of Coupeville Sports in the three-plus years of our existence.

First, we start with talent, both on the field and off.

A gunslinger who carried her squad to the state tourney as a softball slinger, McKayla was also a splendid volleyball, soccer and basketball player.

Injuries slowed her down a bit in her old age, but, when she was sidelined, she was always among the loudest ‘n proudest when it came time to cheer on her teammates.

Let’s face it, Bailey would have been an awesome Wolf cheerleader … though the mere thought of waving pom poms seemed to make her break out in hives.

She could holler like nobody’s business, loved the spotlight (you think?) and could have commanded a crowd by herself.

But, like I said, the hives…

McKayla preferred to be in the thick of things, swinging elbows and collecting scalps (metaphorically … most times), and she was always one of those athletes who left every last bit of sweat, every ounce of effort, every muttered thought about incompetent umpires, on the field.

She fought like a woman possessed, and the epic grin showed the delight she took in the butt-kicking.

Off the field, Bailey is a smart one (and maybe a bit of a smart ass at times…), a multi-talented young woman who would win a softball game, then sprint off at a dead run to go deliver a speech to the National Honor Society.

While making up the speech in her head as she covered the short distance between the diamond and the PAC.

But, of course, what has always set McKayla truly apart from all others, is her complete, unblinking devotion to being the greatest thing to happen to sports photographers since the birth of the digital camera.

She would pose for a hundred photos, then pose for a hundred more just to make sure the focus was on, then a hundred more just cause she had suddenly had some more photo op ideas bounce madly across her brain pan.

The absolute queen of the photo bomb (approached only by the legendary duo of lil’ sis McKenzie Bailey and old school pro Taya Boonstra), McKayla had it down to a science.

It’s one thing to know when to suddenly pop up, but she knew where the camera was going to click before the photographer did and her surprise appearances were downright uncanny at times.

It was as if all the girls in the Bailey family were born with a special sense, an ESP involving cameras.

There is a photo of a Wolf girls basketball game in which every single person in the gym (players, coaches, refs, fans) are looking one way, while McKayla, impish grin on her face, is looking the other way — directly into the eye of the camera.

So, then we top this all off with the fact Miss Bailey is also one of the friendliest, most genuine people you will meet, and it’s not hard to see why she would be on my favorites list.

And hey, she put up with me over four years, even when I called her a “diaper dandy,” so bonus points.

As she plows through her freshman year of college, we want to send McKayla the biggest of birthday wishes. May cake overflow for you today, and every day.

You’re awesome, Bailey, as awesome as awesome gets.

Never change.

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Taya Boonstra: Legend

Taya Boonstra: Legend

21 years ago a legend was born.

If rumors are correct, Taya Boonstra, at approximately ten seconds after birth, popped her eyes open, looked around and yelled “Hey, where’s my camera?!?!?”

Then, she found it, cocked a finger and winked at the photographer and we were off.

There is a long, proud tradition of camera-lovin’, photo bomb-workin’ young women attending Coupeville High School, but, really, when you get down to it, only two can go toe-to-toe at the very tip-top of the game.

One is urban legend/force of nature McKayla Bailey. The other the sensational, bright as a whip, fast ‘n fun Tatiana.

Or, as the Everett Herald used to love to call her from time to time, Taya Boonscara.

Taya is now, and has always been, a bright ray of sunshine in this world.

She is genuinely one of the sweetest, kindest, loveliest, most talented people you are ever likely to meet.

And I’m not just saying that because she once baked me cookies…

A lot of athletes have come and gone at CHS, and many more are on their way.

Some will achieve great athletic moments. Some will be top students. Some will be first-rate people.

Few will be able to combine all three aspects and effortlessly take it to the level that Miss Boonstra does every day.

As you celebrate your birthday today, Taya, and in every day after that, I hope you always know how much others think of you.

How proud of you we all are.

What a wonderful impact you have had, and continue to have, on everyone around you.

You spread grace and joy everywhere you go, Taya. That is a gift and you are the very definition of gifted, in every sense of the word.

Your first 21 years have been remarkable. All the years to come will just grow the legend even more.

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Taya Boonstra: American Legend

Taya Boonstra — she doesn’t mind if you take her photo.

Taya Boonstra is God’s gift to photographers.

Part of a proud tradition of camera-friendly Coupeville High School athletes that includes McKayla Bailey, Hunter Hammer and Caleb Valko, Ms. Boonstra never met a camera she couldn’t photo bomb.

During her time as a Wolf, whether she was doing time as a cheerleader or playing in the games herself, the irrepressible one always sparkled on camera.

She played her rear off on the court and diamond, but never failed to keep one eye cocked for a wandering camera.

Now a student at the University of Washington, Taya celebrates her birthday today. The legend turns 20.

And on this day, and every other day, we celebrate her — one of the classiest, sassiest to ever wear the red and black.

She made her town a better place, and she will always be held in high regard by those who have known her.

You are the gold standard, Ms. Boonstra. Never change.

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