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Posts Tagged ‘The Sandlot’

   Central Whidbey softball standout Izzy Wells (right) meets up with a friendly foe. (Katy Wells photos)

Combining two of her passions, reading and softball.

   Izzy and younger sister Savina fuel up before wreaking havoc on the diamond. (John Fisken photo)

The middle child is making a name for herself.

When she’s not busy cheering for older brother Ulrik or lil’ sis Savina, Coupeville 7th grader Izzy Wells is fast becoming one of the most skilled young athletes in Central Whidbey.

A dynamic pitcher on the softball diamond (where she plays both little league and tournament ball with the Washington Patriots), she’s also an accomplished volleyball spiker and a hoops hotshot who played a grade up this winter.

Not that any of this success has gone to her head, as Wells remains low-key, far more likely to scream in support of a teammate than try and draw any attention to her own play.

The best part of each sport is “that I can be around my friends and play sports with them.”

It’s a trait all of Lyle and Katy Wells‘ children exhibit, and one which will serve Izzy well as she progresses in her athletic career.

She plans to stay with her busy schedule, bouncing between volleyball, school and SWISH basketball and little league and travel ball softball through middle school.

Once she hits high school, Wells is ready to play her core three sports … unless she takes a detour.

“I would like to play basketball, softball and volleyball,” she said. “I would also like to maybe try tennis or track in high school though.”

While she derives great joy from all of her sports, the two which she puts the most time into are in a battle for her heart. And it’s a battle which doesn’t have to have a winner.

“I can’t choose between basketball and softball because they are both my favorite,” Wells said. “I like these sports because softball is very fun and I love being around my teammates, and basketball because it is very fast-paced and a team sport and I love my coaches because they always cheer me on and guide me.”

Wells, who wants “to get a team banner on the wall and go to state” once she hits high school, is a work in progress, something she embraces.

“I think that my strengths as an athlete are being able to focus and not be super serious about everything,” she said. “I would like to work on every area, but mostly it would be my hitting in softball and my shooting and post work in basketball.”

A big fan of movies like Fantastic Mr. Fox, The Sandlot, Napoleon Dynamite and the Spider-Man and Lord of the Rings series, Wells “loves to play the electric bass guitar, read, do a lot of crafts and cuddle with my three cats.”

She also enjoys “hanging out with my friends and painting my nails all the time,” though she admits, with a big laugh, “I usually take the polish off right after I paint them.”

Those friends, such as fellow athletes Kiara Contreras, Ja’Kenya Hoskins and Audrianna Shaw, “have always pushed me in sports and help me whenever I need it.”

Tack on her family and her many coaches, and Wells has a support staff which is helping her grow into her athletic abilities.

“My mom and my dad have always helped me and taken me to every practice and every game and always cheered me on,” Wells said. “Also, my coaches, Coach Ryan King, Coach Dustin V., and many more, have always helped me to get better and I would not be the athlete I am right now if it wasn’t for them.”

Of the many positions she plays across all of her sports, being a softball pitcher, with its specialized routines, might take the most work, and Wells is grateful for those helping her put in extra work.

“One of my most influential coaches is my pitching coach, Sarah Bils. She believed in me and has taught me to work hard to become a better pitcher.”

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   Abby Mulholland (left) with cousin, and Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Famer, Kendra O’Keefe. (Renae Mulholland photo)

Abby Mulholland is part of Coupeville sports royalty.

Her relatives, whether they played as an O’Keefe (or, back in the day, simply as a Keefe), are stocked full of Wolf legends, many of whom are enshrined in the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

It’s a big legacy, but one the eternally-upbeat Mulholland is eager to live up to as she prepares to start her 8th grade year at Coupeville Middle School in the fall.

A three-sport star (volleyball, basketball and little league softball), Abby is a young woman for all seasons, but hoops will always have a slightly larger piece of her heart.

“My favorite sport is basketball because of the fast pace, teamwork and adrenaline,” Mulholland said.

“I enjoy the challenge of competition and I believe in teamwork.”

She has “a decent basketball shot,” which uncle Ryan O’Keefe, noted hardwood sage, is helping her perfect, and Mulholland is always eager to fine-tune her skills, regardless of the sport.

“Areas to work on are jump spiking, serving, my speed … my goals are to make it on varsity (in high school) and continue these sports,” she said. “To cheer on my teammates and just have fun.”

Mulholland has a strong support crew and she’s grateful for the many different ways in which they help.

“My dad, who shoots around with me and helped with my basketball shot; Miss (Casie) Dunleavey helped me with serving,” Mulholland said. “Izzy Wells and Genna Wright helped with my confidence, and my mom is my biggest cheerleader.

“(Little League) coach Mimi Johnson inspired me to do better.”

When she’s not playing a sport, Mulholland enjoys her history class and playing trumpet, as well as drawing, photography and trips to Disneyland.

Favorite movies include The Sandlot, Planes, Trains and Automobiles and the Pirates of the Caribbean series and she makes her parents, radio station veterans, proud by enjoying a wide variety of music, from Queen to The Chainsmokers.

While she’s still young and her athletic career stretches far ahead of her, one thing is for sure — on the playing field or off, Mulholland is solid gold.

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Win for your school. Win for your teammates. Win for your self. (David Svien photos)

   Win for your school. Win for your teammates. Win for yourself. (David Svien photos)

The last time a Coupeville High School baseball team won a league title. PS -- How many of those phone numbers are still good?

   The last time a Coupeville High School baseball team won a league title. PS — How many of those phone numbers do we think are still good?

Make them fear the Wolves. Make them Bow Down to Cow Town.

Make them fear the Wolves. Make them Bow Down to Cow Town.

Today is about today, but it’s also about yesterday and tomorrow.

When the Coupeville High School baseball team takes its home field this afternoon to face Port Townsend (4 PM), the Wolves have a rare opportunity.

Coupeville enters the day at 6-0 in the 1A Olympic League, 9-8 overall and ranked #9 in the most recent state poll.

The RedHawks, who have had to play their entire season on the road thanks to problems with their home field, are 0-6, 0-13.

Go out there, put the hammer down, and the Wolves will bring their school its first baseball league title since 1991.

25 years is a long time.

Fashion changes. Music changes. Hairstyles change.

The entire world, from how we watch movies to the fact you’re reading this on a computer, phone or some other newfangled device never thought of in ’91 is proof of that.

The oldest players on this Coupeville squad weren’t even a twinkle in their parents eyes the last time something like this happened on the prairie.

And when it does (and I said WHEN and not if), these Wolves, from CJ Smith to Jake Hoagland, from Cole Payne to Clay Reilly, and all of their teammates and coaches, will freeze a moment in time.

Forever.

I know, when you’re 15, 16, 17, 18, everything is about today and not down the road, and little I say now is likely to sink in. I get it.

These Wolf players will celebrate in the moment, as Coupeville’s girls basketball and girls and boys tennis teams have done over the past two years when they won titles. It will be big for them.

But it will be bigger later. I promise.

A decade down the road, 25 years down the road, when you’re pushing 30 and coming back for your 10-year reunion or when you’re crawling into your early 40’s, it will mean so much more.

When you return to the CHS gym and look up on the wall and show your own children the banner, you have no clue right now how much that is going to matter.

Time will change all of you.

Some will achieve great things, some may fall hard. Hopefully more of the former, less of the latter.

But you win today, and this moment will truly live for all time.

On the gym wall, and in your own hearts and minds.

And yes, I get the argument that sports are not everything, that how you do in the classroom right now will likely affect your life more than whether you get a bunt down or throw out a runner at home.

They are semi-valid arguments, and I understand why some people won’t want you to spend the rest of your life marinating in your “glory days.”

And I would tell you to tell those people to blow it out their rears.

You have worked hard, as individuals, as a team, to get to this moment. It should be treasured.

It is not the final destination, certainly, and there are many prizes ahead waiting to be vied for, and won.

But today can be, should be, a moment you will have forever.

Play with confidence, embrace the spotlight, carry yourself with pride. Execute, execute, execute. Win the day and step into history.

What you are about to achieve is something relatively few teams in Coupeville have, in baseball or any sport.

Live out the words of The Sandlot (another thing from before you were all born…).

“Remember kid, there’s heroes and there’s legends. Heroes get remembered but legends never die.”

Walk on that field this afternoon heroes. Walk off legends.

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Wolf linemen Brenden Gilbert (left) and Nick Streubel went all out in a previous Mr. CHS pageant. (Photo courtesy Kali Barrio)

   Wolf football linemen Brenden Gilbert (left) and Nick Streubel went all out in a previous Mr. CHS pageant. (Photo courtesy Kali Barrio)

Are you a Coupeville High School student of the male persuasion?

Want to take a stab at winning cash prizes and don’t embarrass easily?

Than now is your moment.

There’s a week left to sign up for the annual Mr. CHS contest, a fundraiser that benefits the Class of 2016.

The pageant, which is set for May 11 in the school’s Performing Arts Center (7 PM), will be accepting contestants through May 6.

Entry forms can be picked up in the school’s office and returned there to Eileen Stone.

There’s no cost to enter, and, as mentioned before, you can walk away with cold hard cash for participating.

Those who do enter will be judged on talent, beach wear and interviews, with the crowd getting to pick a favorite before final winners are announced.

Amy Briscoe, who runs My Fairy Godmother, which provides dresses for events like Prom, has offered to set up contestants with the finest in  frilly clothing for the occasion.

So, think about it.

You have seven days to man up, sign up and get ready to go up on the stage.

And you know you want to, cause, in the immortal words of The Sandlot … heroes get remembered but legends never die.

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Gabe Eck climbs the ladder and makes off with an interception. (John Fisken photo)

Gabe Eck climbs the ladder and makes off with an interception at a jamboree Saturday. (John Fisken photo)

You’re wearing the wrong colors, son.

Part of me says not to run this photo, because this is freakin’ Coupeville Sports and not Oak Harbor Sports.

I start running big city stuff, and there’s no end to it. Next thing you know the South Enders will expect some coverage, as well.

But, it’s a nice photo … and the Eck brothers, Gabe and Ty, are at heart, Coupeville kids.

They starred for Coupeville Middle School as seventh graders, and, while they have moved North for their eighth grade football season, there is a strong shot they will be back in red and black when it’s time to hit the field for high school ball.

At least that’s my hope, and I’m sticking to it.

I’m sorry, but they don’t look right in purple and gold.

No one does.

And this is coming from a guy whose diploma is yes, purple and gold, since the last semester of my high school career came at OHHS after a family move from Tumwater.

So, in the interest of poaching some page hits from that place where they hold Holland Happening and where I go to watch my movies, I’ll let this photo slip by.

But seriously, while I won’t tell any parent where they should send their children, or tell any players what town they should suit up for …

COW TOWN, BABY!!!!!

I’m just saying, you want 24-7-365 coverage, you hang out on the prairie. Cause next time you’re sporting purple and gold, I may not recognize you.

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