At just under 5-foot-4, Kristina Kelly does not present an imposing figure on the soccer field or the wrestling mat.
But then you watch her compete.
No soccer player in the state did it better than Kelly, a Camden Hills Regional High graduate who will next play at Division I Central Connecticut State University. And few girlsâ wrestlers were better.
Kelly led the Windjammers to their fourth consecutive Class A soccer title last fall, compiling 49 goals and 20 assists, and then finished second in the 120-pound weight class at the girlsâ wrestling state meet in February.
She is our choice as the 2019-20 Varsity Maine Female Athlete of the Year.
Kelly finished with 159 career goals and 58 assists, using speed, agility and tremendous foot skills. In December, she was named the National Player of the Year by the United Soccer Coaches organization.
âSheâll be remembered not just for the goals she scored,â said Meredith Messer, the girlsâ soccer coach at Camden Hills. âShe set a bar in terms of what you can do if you put your mind to something.â
When Kelly arrived at Camden Hills as a freshman, Messer said she was shy, quiet and about 5-feet tall, not exactly projecting the image of the stateâs next great player. âI didnât even think Iâd make the varsity as a freshman,â said Kelly.
But she learned a lot that year, watching the seniors carry the Windjammers to the Class A state title. And she went to work making herself better.
âOne of the things that made Kris so special is that she had the natural athletic ability, clearly, but she was not a kid who can sit still,â said Messer. âShe took advantage of every opportunity she had to get better. And then she created her own. Not every high school kid can have that focus, they feel theyâre missing out on other things. For her, that wasnât an issue. She loved what she was doing.â
âSheâs a phenomenal player,â said Scarborough Coach Mike Farley, whose team lost to Camden Hills in each of the last three state finals. âI think sheâs the best girlsâ soccer player Iâve seen in a long time.â
Farley said itâs not surprising that she wrestled as well. âYou can see it, because she is a tough girl on the field,â he said. âAnd sheâs fierce. Sheâs a small girl that doesnât look fierce, but when they blow the whistle and the game starts, sheâs the fiercest player I saw.â
Kelly took up wrestling as a junior because, well, everyone in her family wrestles, including her father, Jack, her brother, Drew, and her uncle, Patrick, who is the Windjammersâ coach. As a junior, she won the 113-pound girlsâ state championship.
âI never had any intentions of competing (in wrestling),â said Kelly. âI just thought Iâd be in the room getting stronger (for soccer). It just so happened they needed somebody my weight to compete. That gave me a lot of mat time and experience.â
These days, sheâs doing some dirt biking with her brother and running with her three dogs as she prepares to head off to college. Sheâll study human biology on a premed track, with hopes of becoming an orthopedic surgeon.
Sheâs thankful for the opportunities she had at Camden Hills, and especially for Messer.
âShe was always pushing me to be my best,â said Kelly. âThe last three years, Iâve grown way more than I could have imagined, and a lot of it is because of her. She never told me I was a great player. She always told me I could become a better player.â