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Posts Tagged ‘track and field’

Jump back to a different era.

It’s a blast from the past, featuring a who’s who of ’80s Coupeville track stars.

The photo above, which comes to us courtesy Jennifer Marzocca, features the Cow Town oval sensations from the Greed is Good decade.

I can ID Aimee (Messner) Bishop, Mitch Aparicio, Chad Gale, and coach Guy Whittaker, among others.

How many do you recognize?

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Kirsten Pelroy, a talented athlete and better human being.

Kirsten Pelroy is a special human being.

Utterly unique, her soaring spirit eclipsing even her often-amazing athletic talent, the 2016 Coupeville High School grad forever lives large in the memory of Wolf fans.

Kirsten’s name still graces the CHS track record board in the entrance to the school’s gym.

She was just a fab frosh in 2013 when she ran a leg on a 4 x 400 relay team which set a mark which has now stood for more than a decade.

One of the silkiest, deadliest runners to ever step to the line while reppin’ the red and black, Kirsten was a multi-event threat.

She ran on all three relay teams during her high school days, and actually also still holds part of a Coupeville Middle School record for the 4 x 200.

When not perfecting her baton handoff, then coming up big in crunch time moments during the postseason, Kirsten ran in the 100, 200, and 400, while also competing in both the 100 and 300 hurdles events.

Racking up 10 wins, multiple PR’s, and a lot of dropped jaws from rivals, she was a key part of a generation of superb female athletes who held their own against athletes from much-bigger schools as Coupeville proved it didn’t matter how many students a school had, as long as the ones they did possess were kick-ass warriors.

That carried over to the soccer field, where Kirsten used her quicksilver speed to zoom away, or sometimes right over, any fool who tried to make a play for the ball while it was on her toe.

Staring down the best booters the world could send her way, she was a rock-em, sock-em superstar who often sacrificed her own stats for the good of the team.

Kirsten played for the girls on her squad, and her happiest moment as a CHS soccer player seemingly came on Senior Night, when she asked for a group hug and got promptly mobbed by her pitch sisters.

“Can’t catch me, can’t stop me!!” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Toss in a run as a Wolf cheerleader, and Mitch’s lil’ sis was the real deal as a well-balanced athletic success.

But like all of the truly memorable ones, Kirsten’s impact went far beyond sports.

She was, and is, a bright, shining light piercing a world of greys.

Back in her high school days I described Kirsten thusly:

“A whip-smart, truck-drivin’, multi-hair-colored-rockin’ whirlwind of fun ‘n sun, she has style for days and her epic smile reaches the field a good two feet before she does.”

A radiant star, hanging out with two of her biggest fans. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Nothing has changed since her exit into the adult world, as she remains one of the most-vibrant human beings you will ever meet.

Which is part of why today, after too long a wait, we warmly welcome Kirsten into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame as our newest inductee.

After this you’ll find her hanging out under the Legends tab at the top of the blog, joining big bro.

Entrance to our digital shrine may make it “official” that Kirsten is one of the true big-timers of Wolf Nation, but you don’t need me to tell you how special she is.

If you’ve ever met her, spoken to her, or watched her gracefully navigate the world, you already know.

Look up “transcendent” in the dictionary, and there Kirsten Pelroy will be, rockin’ the joint as always.

Dr. Jim Shank gets to shake the hand of a legend. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Carolyn Lhamon, born to be a Hall o’ Famer. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Whoops.

In the crush of whacking out four stories a day, every day, sometimes I look up and discover I didn’t actually do something I thought I did.

Case in point — putting Carolyn Lhamon where she belongs, in the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Catherine’s lil’ sis, now a freshman tearing up things in college, both in the classroom and on the soccer pitch, is a slam dunk for my digital shrine.

She qualifies in every way.

Superb student? Check.

Entertaining off the field when she’s telling elaborate stories to keep fellow CHS softball fans from thinking about the fact they’re freezing during another balmy, windswept, rain-splattered “spring” afternoon?

Check and double check.

Being a kick-ass three-sport athlete, whose impact goes far beyond mere stats, a young woman who was a captain and team leader, an award-winner, a force of nature who was also forever graceful?

Check and triple check, and how the heck did I forget to give Carolyn her rightful due?

Cause I’m an idiot, apparently.

Carolyn is that rare student-athlete who already looked like a Hall o’ Famer in middle school, where she helped lead the CMS girls’ basketball team to an 8-0 record during her 8th grade campaign.

Jump forward to high school, and she had an immediate impact in every single one of her sports.

Born to play varsity, and only varsity, Carolyn was a two-way whirlwind on the soccer pitch, offering a nuclear-powered leg which could rattle the goal from far away, while also seemingly loving to thwart other team’s would-be shooters.

She scored seven goals, tied for 9th best in program history, but that stat is deceiving.

If Carolyn had focused on scoring, the number would have been much higher.

Instead, her touch with the ball, while deadly, was just a small fraction of what she brought to the game.

Enjoying her time on the pitch with Nezi Keiper. (Carlota Marcos Cabrillo photo)

As one half of a Wonder Twins combo with fellow Hall o’ Famer Nezi Keiper, Carolyn thumped people, made the smart pass, always knew where she needed to be, and was invaluable.

Scoring? It’s nice, but she was playing chess while others played checkers.

That carried over to the basketball court, where Carolyn once again provided scoring pop when it mattered most — she tallied 153 points — but was most valuable because of everything else she did.

Knifing her foes, one shot at a time. (Andrew Williams photo)

Need a rebound, and need her to outduel three rivals to get it? Done.

Need a smart pass, a well-set pick, a willingness to take the brunt of a charge, an artful use of her hip to send an opposing player crashing into the parking lot?

Done and done, each bruise telling the tale of another small battle won in the pursuit of helping Coupeville win the big wars.

Once “spring” broke, Carolyn headed outdoors for track and field, where she competed in shot put, discus, the 400, and all three relays across three seasons.

She was always game to try just about any event, and advanced to state four times, saving her best for last.

We have launch! (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Nailing a PR in the shot put as a senior, Carolyn claimed 4th place and brought home a medal to top off her long list of awards, certificates, and trophies.

Among those was being named the CHS Female Athlete of the Year as a junior and earning Salutatorian status as a senior.

So, in short, Carolyn, every step of the way, has been a Hall o’ Famer in waiting.

Not that she needs my nod of approval, as she demonstrates her awesomeness every day, in every way.

But today (finally!!) I’m officially catching up by inducting the youngest of the Lhamon supernovas into my Hall o’ Fame.

After this you’ll find Carolyn hanging out at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab, right next to her sister.

You know, right where she should have been this whole time!

Legendary. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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Taygin Jump monitors a Coupeville Middle School track meet last spring. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It begins.

Coupeville grad Taygin Jump made her college track and field debut Saturday in New York and claimed a top 10 finish in one of her events.

The former Wolf, now a freshman at Plattsburgh State, was competing in the SLU Saints Holiday Relays in Canton.

Competing in the weight throw (indoor track’s answer to the hammer throw), Jump launched the implement roughly 35 feet, six inches (converted from meters), finishing 10th out of 21 competitors.

She also threw the shot put 23-04.75.

Plattsburgh returns to action Dec. 8-9 with an appearance at the Utica Holiday Classic.

During her time at Coupeville High School, Jump was a member of two varsity teams, playing volleyball and participating in track and field.

As a spiker, she earned a spot on both club and school teams, and was a fireball, one of her teammate’s biggest supporters.

When spring rolled around, Jump threw the discus, javelin, and hammer, as well as running the 100, 200, 800, 1600, and 4 x 100 relay.

She competed in the state championships in hammer, setting a PR in the event.

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Tim Ursu is here to rain down the pain. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Timmy hit like a tsunami.

One of the hardest-working athletes to walk the hallways at Coupeville High School, Tim Ursu was a soft-spoken dude, polite to those around him, and a living testament to what you can accomplish if you put in tons of work.

In the weight room, on the gridiron, around the track oval, the 2023 CHS grad was the true heir to Sean Toomey-Stout, a Cow Town legend who went on to play at the University of Washington after earning his spot sweat drop by sweat drop.

While Ursu may not be suiting up for the Huskies, he got his playing time in a Wolf uniform the same way “The Torpedo” did.

By outworking everyone in sight.

By never, ever backing down, regardless of the size of the guy on the other side of the line.

And then by hitting anyone foolish enough to enter his realm like he was taking an axe and chopping down a Redwood by hand.

Never dirty, always willing to leave an imprint on his rival’s very soul.

Those who got tackled by Ursu, or got run over by him, got up from the turf a little slower, moved a little more gingerly, and, almost always, tried to get the heck out the way the next time he came thundering at them.

“Try and run from me! See how well that works!!” (Photo courtesy Ashleigh Casey)

Like Sean Toomey-Stout (and older brother Cameron before him), Tim Ursu wasn’t the biggest dude on the field.

But like Maya’s brothers, he crafted his body into a piece of ripped art, one in which every muscle was there not just for show, but to get the job done.

Ursu, whose playing time steadily increased from season to season, was at his best as a senior.

A potent force of nature on both sides of the ball, he did it all, helping lead Coupeville to its first league title and trip to the state playoffs in three-decades plus.

Once there, Ursu was one of the true bright spots in Coupeville’s clash with powerhouse Onalaska.

Making the magic happen. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Late in the game, with starting quarterback Logan Downes on the sideline with an injury, he briefly took over the gunslinger role and showed he would have been pretty dang amazing at that position as well.

Backup QB Chase Anderson flipped the ball to Ursu deep in their own territory, then watched in awe as his older teammate pegged a perfect ball to a breaking Hunter Bronec.

Dropping the ball over the outstretched arms of the defense, a half-second before an Onalaska tackler caught up with him, Ursu brought both the razzle and the dazzle.

The play went for 54 yards, and while Coupeville couldn’t quite pull out the playoff victory, it sent an electric jolt through the stadium.

Ursu led the Wolves in receiving, was a solid third option on running plays, was the team’s primary kick returner, and was lights out on defense.

Playing in the backfield, he covered the entire gridiron, picking off passes, while also finishing the season as Coupeville’s #2 tackler.

You weren’t going to throw the ball past Ursu, and you weren’t going to run it past him either.

He was an equal opportunity destroyer intent on preventing you from getting anywhere near the end zone.

“End zone, here I come!” (Helen Strelow photo)

Altogether, with the catches, the runs, the picks, and the returns, Ursu tallied 12 touchdowns as a senior, putting a strong exclamation point on his career at CHS.

Well, his football career.

While Ursu never unleashed his mad dog style on the high school basketball court, he did make quite a splash in the world of track and field.

During his two seasons at the oval, he competed in eight different events, competing as a sprinter, a relay ace, a jumper, and a thrower.

Racking up strong performances in all of his events, Ursu went out in a blaze of glory in the 4 x 100.

He teamed with fellow seniors Dominic Coffman, Tate Wyman, and Aidan Wilson to finish first in the prelims and second in the finals while competing in stormy Eastern Washington conditions at the state meet.

The Wolf four-pack actually dropped its time from the first race to the second, coming within an eyelash (or two) of being the second Coupeville relay team to ever win a state title.

They look fast even standing still. (Elizabeth Bitting photo)

Now, in an act which makes perfect sense, Ursu will get the equivalent of a first-place medal.

He’ll be joining Coffman and Wilson in the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, part of our digital shrine to the best athletes to wear a Wolf uniform.

After this you’ll find him hanging out at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab.

The choice is easy, and it’s well deserved.

Ursu is being honored for his work on the gridiron, for his work on the track oval, and for his work in the weight room.

And, maybe most importantly, for the way he channeled his drive and desire and made himself a star, while never losing his humility and open heart.

Tim Ursu was a sports sensation, yes, but he has always seemed to me to be a better human being.

It served him well during his days at CHS, and it will serve him well in real life.

#2 in the program, #1 in their hearts. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

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