Morgan Weaver 
Curtis High school / Washington State University 
2016 
Soccer
On the way to scoring 93 goals in her four-year career at Curtis High School -- and becoming one of the finest female soccer players the region has produced -- Morgan Weaver came by her love of the sport rather naturally.

When Morgan was a baby, Mike Weaver was a youth soccer coach and sometimes carried along his infant daughter in one of those front-side carrying pouches while he coached games on the sidelines.

What was launched in the University Place rec leagues has turned into quite a journey for Weaver, 18, who is committed to continuing her soccer career as a forward-midfielder at Washington State University next fall. She will leave Curtis with a boatload of achievements, including 40 assists and South Puget Sound League championships the past three years (Curtis shared the 2015 title with Puyallup). She was the league's most valuable player all three years.

Weaver was named to the 4A all-state team in 2013, 2014 and 2015 by the Washington State Soccer Coaches Association, and she was selected MVP her final season. She was also The News Tribune's All-Area player of the year all three years.

As a senior captain, Weaver racked up big numbers -- 36 goals (including three 4-goal games) and 11 assists last fall, helped lead the Vikings to the state 4A quarterfinals and was selected to play in the High School All-American Match in December in Raleigh, N.C.

Big as those accomplishments were, Weaver was perhaps even more impressive for her club team, Washington Premier, with which she won two national championships with 96 ECNL. She now plays for 97 ECNL. She played four years for Federal Way Reign and the past five years for Washington Premier.

The lanky Weaver's most obvious assets are explosive speed and strength, but she says Seth Spidahl, who coaches Washington Premier as well as the Pacific Lutheran University women's team, and Aaron Kimura of Federal Way Reign speeded along her development.
"Aaron worked with me on the fundamentals and ball skills, and coach Spidahl has always been there supporting me and turned me into the player I am today," Weaver said

This spring, at the urging of a friend, Curtis track athlete Reggie Hayden, Weaver elected to try her hand in track and field. She quickly established herself as one of the state's better sprinters, and was handed the role as anchor runner on both the 4 x 400 and 4 x 200 relay teams, both ranked in the top three in the state. The 4 x 4 unit combined for a meet record 4 minutes, 2.49 seconds at the 29th annual Viking Relays.

Frank Hankel, the girls and boys soccer coach at Curtis, says Weaver's intensity makes everyone around her better, and he raves about her breakaway speed.

"She's exceptionally quick and fast, one of the top 400 runners in the state," he said in listing off Weaver's skills. "Power, she's strong, very strong legs. And she has a lot of drive. Few players are as fast, as strong, as driven -- and play at that fast pace. Those things make her special."