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   Dear KFC, this is Andrew Martin. He would happily be your celebrity spokesman, if you paid him in free chicken. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Central Whidbey remembers.

The last time the Coupeville High School varsity football team went to Vashon Island, it made history. And not in a good way.

Two years ago the Wolves surrendered a state-record 573 yards and nine touchdowns to Bryce Hoisington on a dark day in Wolf football history.

Friday night, the epic, never-ending trip to the hinterlands ended in a much happier fashion for Coupeville’s gridiron squad.

Even if the Wolves did have their bus scraped up by a wayward car on the way in, then had to wait an hour-and-a-half in the parking lot for an exit ferry to arrive.

Opening the game with back-to-back pick-sixes — Coupeville led 12-0 before taking its first snap on offense — they crushed Vashon’s spirit and rolled to a 42-7 win.

The victory, which could have been by twice the margin if CHS coach Jon Atkins hadn’t pulled back the reins, snaps a two-game losing skid for the Wolves.

Now 3-2 overall (they’ve already matched last year’s win total) and 1-1 in Olympic/Nisqually League play, they sit just a game out of first place.

Vashon, which has been outscored 248-21 this season, slid to 0-5, 0-2 and sits far removed from the heady days of Hoisington running amuck.

The game didn’t come without a few sour notes, as both of Coupeville’s top weapons, senior Hunter Smith and sophomore Sean Toomey-Stout, exited with injuries.

Smith, the Wolves top receiver, got twisted in three directions at once by Vashon tacklers while executing a running play and spent the second half on the sideline wearing a knit cap instead of a helmet, resting his back.

Thankfully, the early word is he is not expected to miss any future games.

The situation may be more dire for Toomey-Stout, the team’s leading rusher and tackler.

After scoring a pair of first-half touchdowns on short runs, “The Torpedo” took a bad hit to his ankle early in the third quarter. When the team packed up after the game, he limped out on crutches and headed off to the ER with his family.

It was a rough and tumble game all around, as Vashon also lost its best player, Connor Hoisington, Bryce’s younger brother.

Trying to pick up a first down on a fourth-and-two, he went up the middle and had his world exploded by Wolf senior Julian Welling, who came through the porous Vashon line like a semi truck with no brakes.

It was a clean, but lethal hit (the bang could be heard all the way up at the top of the stands) and Hoisington was down on the ground afterwards for some time.

He eventually was able to walk off the field, but, like Toomey-Stout, spent part of his evening in the suddenly-busy Vashon ER.

Welling’s blow was a prime example of how the Wolves played all night.

Jake Pease spent most of the game in the Vashon backfield, or sitting on the Pirate QB’s head, with one sack literally coming after he went airborne and pounced on his foe like a jungle cat unleashed.

Rattled by the constant pressure, Vashon’s signal caller threw the game away in less than three minutes.

Coupeville ended both of the Pirates first two possessions with interceptions which they brought back for touchdowns, taking all the air out of an already deflated home crowd.

On the game’s second offensive play, Smith jumped a route, snatched a wobbly ball and sprinted 45 yards down the left sideline for his sixth score of the year.

Not to be outdone, Cameron Toomey-Stout matched him on the next possession.

A pass over the middle hit a Vashon receiver in the pads and popped up in the air, where the silky-smooth Wolf defensive back was lurking.

Snagging the deflection in traffic, Camtastic skipped, whirled and twirled like a ballet dancer, avoiding five would-be tacklers on his way to pay-dirt some 40 yards away.

About the only thing going Vashon’s way was Coupeville’s surprising inability to hit on either of its first two PAT attempts, as the first one went low and the second one clanged off the scoreboard.

If the Pirates were holding out any kind of hope based on that quirk, they weren’t thinking straight, however.

When the ball finally went into the hands of Wolf QB Hunter Downes, the first quarter was almost played out, so the senior gunslinger moved quickly.

After softening the Vashon defense with a pair of passes to Smith, he rolled to his right and lofted a buttery 27-yard TD strike which dropped with a pleasing plop into Cameron Toomey-Stout’s hands as he lurked in the right corner of the end zone.

This time, CHS mixed things up, going for and converting the two-point conversion on a Smith run.

Up 20-0, the Wolves almost added more in the first quarter, and it came from a somewhat surprising source.

Senior lineman Kyle Rockwell (remember the name, cause you’ll hear it again in a sec), playing in only his second game, batted a Vashon pass into the air and came 99.4% within capturing his own pick-six.

While the ball was in the air, it pinged off of at least six of Rockwell’s body parts before falling just out of his grasp, causing his teammates on the sideline to lose their collective mind cheering for the hard-working, well-liked role player.

Worry not, Wolf fans, because while he might not have gotten the year’s most surprising interception, he returned to get the season’s first blocked punt.

With Vashon pinned deep in its own territory, the Pirate punter took the snap, swung his foot and then screamed like a little girl as Rockwell roared up the middle, punching the kick out of mid-air.

Emerging from behind his rampaging teammate like a heat-seeking missile, Wolf junior Teo Keilwitz followed the bouncing ball and landed on it in the end zone for yet another CHS touchdown.

Toss in two TD runs for Sean Toomey-Stout (one set up by a sweet 14-yard catch under heavy duress from Jake Hoagland) and Coupeville carried a 42-0 lead into the halftime locker room.

If you’re saying, but wait, I’ve been counting points throughout the story and it appears the Wolves picked up an extra one, good eye, and you’re right.

Matt Hilborn crushed PAT kicks on two of the three second-quarter TD’s, while on the final one, the Vashon line got in too quickly for him to have a chance.

Thinking quickly on his feet, holder Shane Losey pulled the ball up and lobbed a flawless spiral over the defense to Sean Toomey-Stout for a two-point conversion.

With the game thoroughly out of hand, and a running clock used in the second half, Coupeville’s coaching staff had a chance to try out some different wrinkles.

Dawson Houston subbed in for Downes at QB in the fourth and, with Sean Toomey-Stout out, the rushing load was handed to sophomore Andrew Martin.

He slammed through the line for several tough-guy gains, then broke through and went down the left side for the Wolves longest run of the night, a 28-yard bolt to daylight.

It was his “KFC run,” cause Martin, possibly the world’s biggest fan of the fast food establishment, was churning like a man who’s been told a free lifetime supply of chicken tenders has been hidden in the end zone.

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   Tyler McCalmont has 12 tackles, three for a loss, this season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

As milestones go, it was a fairly quiet one.

Coupeville High School senior Hunter Smith already owns or shares seven football records, but late in last Friday’s home game against Charles Wright Academy, he pulled in yet a bit more of history.

His final snag of the game, on which he was denied a touchdown by a spectacularly blind ref, was his fifth catch of the game.

More importantly, it was the 100th reception of his stellar career.

While I can’t claim with absolute certainty he is the only Wolf to break the triple-digit receptions barrier, it seems to make absolute sense.

Smith has surpassed every CHS receiver in every category which matters, making it highly unlikely any of them reached the same milestone.

As Coupeville chases numerous team and individual offensive marks — senior QB Hunter Downes is angling for a few himself — the Wolves boast the #3 scoring offense among the eight Olympic/Nisqually League teams.

That number could take a large positive bounce this week, as CHS (2-2 overall, 0-1 in league play) heads to Vashon (0-4, 0-1).

The Pirates have the worst scoring defense in the league, and it’s not close, having been outscored 206-14 this season.

As you count down the hours until that game, take a gander at the season-to-date stats, as compiled by CHS coaches and posted on MaxPreps.

Keep in mind, though, that when you look at where Wolf players are ranked, it comes with one caveat — not all teams in the state are actively reporting stats.

OFFENSE:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 43-90 for 844 yards (#1 in 1A) with 9 TDs and 4 INTs
Shane Losey 1-2 for 16 yards

Receiving:

Hunter Smith 19 receptions for 401 yards (#1 in 1A, #9 in the state)
Cameron Toomey-Stout 16-282 (#3 in 1A)
Sean Toomey-Stout 5-120
Matt Hilborn 3-51
Losey 1-6

Rushing:

S. Toomey-Stout 30 carries for 171 yards
Chris Battaglia 24-127
Hilborn 24-75
Jean Lund-Olsen 2-5
Smith 3-5
Downes 14 (-1)

All-Purpose Yards (Rush/Rec/KR/PR/IR):

Smith 565
C. Toomey-Stout 438
S. Toomey-Stout 336
Hilborn 130
Battaglia 127
Teo Keilwitz 48
Lund-Olsen 10
Losey 6

Total Yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes 843 (#1 in 1A)
Smith 406
S. Toomey-Stout 291
C. Toomey-Stout 282
Battaglia 127
Hilborn 126
Losey 22
Lund-Olsen 5

Touchdowns:

Smith 5 (#5 in 1A)
C. Toomey-Stout 4 (#7 in 1A)
Hilborn 2
S. Toomey-Stout 2
Downes 1

PATs:

Hilborn 8 (#3 in 1A)

Points:

Smith 30 (#5 in 1A)
C. Toomey-Stout
24 (#9 in 1A)
Hilborn
20
S. Toomey-Stout
12
Downes 6

DEFENSE:

Tackles:

S. Toomey-Stout 47 (#4 in 1A, #6 in the state)
Battaglia 26
C. Toomey-Stout 26
Dane Lucero 21
Hilborn 19
Losey
17
Julian Welling
17
Jake Hoagland
15
Smith
15
James Vidoni 14
Tyler McCalmont
12
Jake Pease 12
Trevor Bell 3
Keilwitz 3
Gavin Knoblich 2
Lund-Olsen 2
Andrew Martin 2
Cameron Dahl 1
Koa Davison 1
Dawson Houston 1
Kyle Rockwell 1
Gavin Straub 1

Tackles for Loss:

Vidoni 4
Lucero 3
McCalmont 3
Hoagland 1
Knoblich 1
Pease 1

Interceptions:

Smith 3 (#1 in 1A, #6 in the state)
C. Toomey-Stout
2 (#3 in 1A)

Fumble recoveries:

Pease 2
Hoagland 1
S. Toomey-Stout 1
Welling 1

Sacks:

Losey 1.5
Lucero 1.5
Battaglia 1
Pease 1
Vidoni 1
Welling 1

SPECIAL TEAMS:

Kickoffs:

Hilborn 18 for 371 yards (#4 in 1A)

Punts:

Downes 5 for 124 yards

Kickoff/Punt returns:

C. Toomey-Stout 7 for 126 yards (#5 in 1A)
Keilwitz 4-48
S. Toomey-Stout 3-45
Smith 2-33
Lund-Olsen 1-5
Hilborn 1-4
Welling 1-0

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   Caleb Meyer played a ferocious game on defense Wednesday as a 17-player CMS football team almost upended Sequim, which has 53 on its roster. (Photo courtesy Mckenzie Meyer)

53-17.

No, that’s not a game score. It’s the difference in roster size between Sequim and Coupeville’s middle school football teams.

One funnels players to a large 2A school, the other to a small 1A school, and yet, there they were, facing off on the gridiron Wednesday afternoon.

CMS coach Bob Martin, a former Marine Corps drill sergeant, has a philosophical approach to the disparity.

“That’s how we roll,” he said with a laugh. “We have no choice. Fight, get beat-up, or go home.”

Wednesday his Wolves fought, almost pulling off a stunning upset.

While time ran out on them in a 32-27 thriller, their effort never waned, even while being out-manned by a rival who had three players to every one they suited up.

“Just a good game,” Martin said, and then a pause, “And no injuries!”

While the Wolves might have had a lack of bodies, those bodies they did have were ready to rumble.

Coupeville scored every which way possible, just about, with quarterback Xavier Murdy having a standout game.

The CMS 8th grader connected with Hawthorne Wolfe on a 30-yard scoring strike, picked off a pass on defense and brought back a kick 85 yards for a touchdown.

When Murdy wasn’t hitting pay-dirt, his teammates took their turns.

Caleb Meyer, blasting in from his spot at outside linebacker, blitzed Sequim’s QB and knocked the ball free on a hand-off.

Staying alert, he then snatched the loose ball out of mid air, pulled it in to his body and rumbled 35 yards for the touchdown.

Damon Stadler capped the Wolf scoring, punching in for a TD off of a sweep.

Coupeville’s special teams play was outstanding all game, with a blocked field goal a particular highlight.

While the big plays lit up the scoreboard, everything was set up by the line, which held its own with a big school rival.

Isaiah Bittner “was key; his snaps were on the money tonight,” while Logan Martin and Gabe Shaw “made a huge difference by getting into the backfield.”

As he boarded the bus for the long trip back to Whidbey, Martin was all smiles, proud of how his undermanned squad fought valiantly.

“What a game — interceptions, blocked field goal, kickoff return for a touchdown … we had it all. Just a fun game!”

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Wolf QB Hunter Downes (3) limbers up his throwing arm. (David Stern photos)

   Shane Losey (10) peers in at the Charles Wright offense over the shoulder of a ready-to-launch Dane Lucero (55).

A man and his prairie. Lark Gustafson holds the line.

   Sharp-eyed Wolf captains (l to r) Downes, Julian Welling, Hunter Smith and Cameron Toomey-Stout lead some blind refs across the field.

   Losey’s helmet, adorned with Wolf stickers for various accomplishments, tells the tale of a young star on the rise.

Downes scampers for vital yardage.

Jake Hoagland (8) pulls down a pass during pre-game drills.

   Wolf linemen (l to r) Welling, Tyler McCalmont and James Vidoni take a knee while an injured rival player is down on the turf.

Boom-boom goes the players hitting each other, pop-pop goes the camera documenting it.

Coupeville High School’s gridirion squad was back in town Friday, playing Charles Wright Academy in the league opener, and photographer David Stern worked the sidelines, capturing the images seen above.

To find out more about his work, pop over to:

https://whidbeycustomevents.com/whidbey-island-custom-photography/

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   Matt Hilborn ripped off a 12-yard scoring run Friday, his second touchdown of the season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

This was a rough one to sit through for many, many reasons.

A spectacularly inefficient refereeing crew derailed any sense of momentum Friday night, raining down a never-ending stream of penalty flags and stretching out the Coupeville vs. Charles Wright Academy football game well beyond its recommended running time.

To their credit, the refs weren’t one-sided.

To their discredit, they were just flat out stinky on both ends of the field, though they ultimately stung the Wolves worse.

And frankly, Coupeville’s gridiron players didn’t respond tremendously well, allowing frustration to seep in as they watched a one-score game rapidly slip away and turn into a 52-20 defeat.

The loss, coming in the Olympic/Nisqually League opener for both teams, drops the Wolves to 2-2 overall, 0-1 in league play.

There was a moment, late in the first half, when it looked like Coupeville was in control of the game.

Rallying from a 13-0 deficit, the Wolves broke through on an electrifying 68-yard touchdown pass from Hunter Downes to Cameron Toomey-Stout.

It came on a fourth-and-eight from their own 32-yard line, with Downes double-clutching, then rifling a shot into the great unknown on which his speedy receiver outran a CWA defender to snag the ball in full stride.

A play later, Wolf senior Hunter Smith picked off the Tarrier QB for the second time — his first interception allowed Smith to break a tie with Josh Bayne and claim the CHS career record for picks — and Coupeville was starting to roll.

Downes marched the Wolves 68 yards down the field, mixing passes to Smith and Toomey-Stout with a run by Matt Hilborn and a crucial face mask penalty by Charles Wright.

Coupeville was sitting first and goal at the eight-yard line, ready to retake the lead and carry all the momentum into halftime.

But it wasn’t to be, as a short run by Sean Toomey-Stout was stuffed at the five, then three straight passes fell incomplete.

At which point, everything which could go wrong for Coupeville did.

It started with Sean Toomey-Stout, Coupeville’s leading tackler on defense this season, getting dinged up and spending the rest of the game on the sideline undergoing concussion protocol.

Then the refs got nasty, issuing three consecutive penalties on the Wolves, allowing CWA enough life to stage a miracle last-second drive and tack on a score on the first half’s final play.

While the refs shocked everyone by not throwing a single flag in the third quarter — don’t worry, they would make up for it in spades in the fourth — Charles Wright’s running game, personified by Asher Shakoor-Asadi, did more than enough damage on its own.

The silky-smooth Tarrier junior busted off two more touchdown runs, giving him four on the night, and a 27-0 third quarter surge crushed every last Wolf hope.

Coupeville didn’t go down without a fight, getting touchdown runs in the fourth from Downes and Hilborn, but that was small consolation.

The flags flew in flurries in the fourth, Smith was blatantly robbed of a touchdown reception by a ref whose seeing-eye dog promptly slunk out of the stadium in shame, and then the Wolves took a late sucker punch.

Junior Chris Battaglia, who is #2 on the team both in rushing yardage and tackles, was ejected when a tackle which went high was questionably ruled a punch.

That’s a double whammy, since an ejection in high school play results in the player being suspended for a game.

Barring a successful appeal — and WIAA rules make it virtually impossible to win, going as far as not allowing teams to present video proof of the ref being wrong — Battaglia will miss next Friday’s game at Vashon Island.

By the end the game was well out of hand, both on the scoreboard and with the zebra’s inability to understand their own rule book.

Much time was spent with the reffing crew huddled together arguing/debating/trying to correct blatant mistakes and it was beyond tiring.

“There’s another flag on the field” vied with “oh lord, they’re not talking again, are they” as two minutes on the game clock frequently translated into 10 minutes on people’s watches.

In the mash-up of emotion at the end — coaches on both sidelines were visibly upset at times, though genuine anger ruled on Coupeville’s sidelines by the final gun — a few strong plays by role players might have been missed.

Lineman Kyle Rockwell, making his debut, earned praise from an otherwise beyond-frustrated CHS coach Jonathan Atkins, and Jean Lund-Olsen showed no quit.

A botched Wolf running play on the next-to-last play of the night turned into a fumble which Charles Wright almost brought back for a game-capping 80-yard defensive touchdown.

Lund-Olsen though, sprinting full tilt from one end of the field to the other, caught the shocked Tarrier and slung him to the turf at about the two-yard line.

On a long, frustrating, angry night, it was an unexpected positive note for the Wolves, a sign that, even with the world conspiring against them, they’ll keep on fighting.

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