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Hunter Downes (3) stalks the CHS record book. (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf QB Hunter Downes (3), under the guidance of Brad Sherman, stalks the CHS record book. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith, seen here hauling in a pass against Chimacum, could break two school records Friday night.

   Hunter Smith, seen here hauling in a pass against Chimacum, could break several school records Friday night.

One night to bust the record books.

Coupeville High School faces its toughest football opponent of the season Friday when it hosts Cascade Christian (7 PM kickoff.)

The Cougars are 9-0 and ranked #5 in 1A by the Associated Press.

They also have the stoutest defense in the Olympic/Nisqually League, allowing just 12.6 points per game.

But expect Coupeville (3-6) to come out firing, regardless.

The Wolves, who are averaging a hair over 23 points a game this season, have a chance to bust several school records on Senior Night.

Though, if the records go down, they will be shattered by underclassmen.

CHS quarterback Hunter Downes sits two away from tying the school single-season record for touchdown passes in a season, trailing Joel Walstad 18-16.

If he connects with fellow junior Hunter Smith, it will allow his receiver to break a tie with Josh Bayne for the single-season mark for TD receptions.

Smith hauled in #10 last Friday against Chimacum to tie the mark.

Even if he doesn’t break the plane of the end zone, Coupeville’s most dangerous receiver could dismantle two other records, which have stood much longer.

Chad Gale racked up 844 receiving yards in 1987, and 29 seasons later, Smith sits at 791 yards on the season heading into the finale.

Reach 136 receiving yards tonight and Smith knocks Gale off the record book twice, as he would also take the career mark away.

Gale leads that race 1,345 to 1,210.

Oh, and there’s another career mark within Smith’s reach as well, though this one is on defense.

With three interceptions this season, he’s up to 11 overall, one shy of Bayne’s 12.

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Jake (John Fisken photos)

   Jake Mitten (right) and teammates operate as a pack to bring down a Chimacum runner. (John Fisken photos)

line

The Wolf line, looking dapper in pink.

Dakota Eck

Dakota Eck fights for yardage in a clash with Forks.

block

“And where do you think you’re going?!!”

Time to put the gear away.

Wrapping up its season a little later than originally expected, the Coupeville Middle School football squad fell 19-8 Wednesday at Chimacum.

The game, which was pushed back from its originally scheduled date when wind played havoc with the ferry, was played, not surprisingly, in tons o’ wind.

That made life difficult on the Wolves, who wanted to come out runnin’ and gunnin’.

“Lot of good things, but the wind was a huge factor,” said CMS head coach Bob Martin. “Wanted a pass game, ended up with a run game and lots of dropped balls.”

Still, even in defeat, Coupeville continued to show a lot of positive signs.

The Wolves thrashed Port Townsend this season and were competitive in every other game, especially against schools that didn’t boast rosters three times the size of what CMS could offer

Now, 8th graders like Jake Mitten, Cade Golden and Sage Downes will make the jump to high school ball, while the team’s 7th graders will form the core of the next CMS squad.

However they line up next fall, these players have impressed their coaches.

“So proud of the progress they have made this year!,” said assistant coach Michael Davidson.

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James Vidoni (John Fisken photos)

   James Vidoni is here to chew gum and destroy quarterbacks, and he’s all out of gum. (John Fisken photos)

captains

   “How you doin’?” “How YOU doin’?” “How you DOIN’?” “HOW YOU DOIN’?!?!?”

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Coupeville’s line prepares to launch.

Hilborn

Matt Hilborn reaches out and touches the promised land.

Freshman QB Dawson Houston stands tall in the pocket.

Freshman QB Dawson Houston stands tall in the pocket.

tackle

   Hilborn (right) and a karate-choppin’ Andrew Martin drag down a wayward Wildcat runner.

They made things easy on the photographer.

Thanks to a last-second change in the schedule, the Coupeville High School JV football squad ended up playing Monday in Oak Harbor.

That was enough to lure wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken out of his nearby home and away from the Halloween candy.

The photos above are courtesy him.

We’re still waiting on any candy, though…

To see more (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/FB-20161031-Coupeville-JV-at-O/

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Matt Hilborn (John Fisken photo)

   Matt Hilborn accounted for all of Coupeville’s points Monday in a loss at Oak Harbor. (John Fisken photo)

For one bright, shining moment, an upset seemed to be brewing.

Then reality reared its head.

In the time it took for one pass to head the wrong way, the chances the Coupeville High School JV football squad would upend host Oak Harbor Monday went from “hey now…” to “no, sir.”

One second, the Wolves were knocking on the door, the next Wildcat defensive back Ashton Prats had firmly slammed that door shut.

And while the Wildcat sophomore was hauled down two yards shy of a 76-yard pick six, the play changed the whole tone of the game, which eventually finished with Oak Harbor rolling to a 52-8 win.

Before Prats grabbed the spotlight, for the first, but not last time, Coupeville was holding its own with its big city neighbors.

The Halloween afternoon game was put together at the last second, after Marysville-Pilchuck bailed on Oak Harbor.

Lil’ 1A Coupeville, which had a gap in its schedule thanks to Chimacum not fielding a JV squad, stepped up to the challenge and headed up Island to play the 3A Wildcats in their 3,000-seat, turf-field-rockin’, covered stadium.

Half the Wolf JV roster is made up of freshmen, while Oak Harbor limited themselves to just 15 or so JV-level sophomores plucked from their 59-player roster.

The Wildcat freshmen didn’t see action, as they have a game scheduled for later in the week.

After a 45-yard punt from Matt Hilborn pinned Oak Harbor deep in its own territory, the Wolf defense played strongly on the ‘Cats opening drive.

Gavin Knoblich hauled one runner down from behind, snagging him by the back of his shoe, and Coupeville forced an incomplete pass on fourth down to get the ball back.

Sitting pretty with first-and-10 from the Wildcat 24, Wolf QB Dawson Houston went to the air and had a man open … until Prats jumped the play, snagged the ball and was off like a rocket down the left sideline.

CHS forced him out at the two-yard line, but Prats made up for it on the next play, slamming in for a touchdown run to open the scoring.

There was plenty more of that to come, as Oak Harbor tacked on four scores in the second half and another three in the third to trigger a running clock.

Prats and ultra-speedy Zion Gomez racked up three TD’s apiece, while Cody Fenton and Juan Luna-Elliot chipped in with a score each.

Two of the touchdowns came on passes from ‘Cat QB Taylor Rummel, while the Oak Harbor running game hummed along behind a stout line led by Joseph Orr.

Coupeville bent, but didn’t break, twice blocking PAT attempts.

On the first one Jake Hoagland came roaring around from the outside and took the ball in the middle of his back, while on the second stuff Andrew Martin came up the middle to get his hands on the ball.

Martin also teamed up with Luke Carlson to blow up a running play in the backfield in the fourth quarter, bringing the Wildcat runner down for a big loss and forcing a turnover on downs.

The Wolves finally cracked the end zone themselves in the final quarter.

Hilborn, giving Houston a breather, ripped off a 15-yard run, then hit Jonathan Thurston on a 27-yard bomb to set things up.

Camped on Oak Harbor’s 10-yard line, Coupeville turned a bad play into a brilliant one.

Snagging a high snap over his head, Hilborn started right, spun back to the left, then ran over three defenders as he scooted in for the touchdown.

He then tacked on a two-point conversion, accounting for all of the Wolf scoring himself.

Houston spent much of the game scrambling for his life, but he still completed seven passes, with Hoagland hauling in five of those.

Matthew Shreffner and Thurston also had snags on balls thrown their way.

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College football star Mitch Pelroy hangs out with his biggest fan, sister Kirsten. (Photo courtesy Kirsten Pelroy)

   College football star Mitch Pelroy hangs out with his biggest fan, sister Kirsten. (Photo courtesy Kirsten Pelroy)

The end is near, but Mitch Pelroy isn’t slowing down.

The Coupeville High School grad ripped off 55 yards on three kickoff returns Saturday, helping spark Montana Western to a 43-24 thumping of Southern Oregon on the college gridiron.

Pelroy, who has two regular season games remaining in his senior season, has rung up 256 yards on 10 returns this season, pushing his career total to 992 yards bringing back kicks.

Toss in the 59 yards he ground out on punt returns early in his career, and he has 1,051 return yards at the college level.

Pelroy is a two-way warrior for the Bulldogs, having amassed 53 tackles, 14 assists, six broken-up passes, four tackles for a loss and two sacks in his time playing college ball.

Montana Western (5-4 overall, 4-4 in Frontier Conference play) hosts Carroll College Nov. 5 and will honor Pelroy and his fellow vets on Senior Night.

The regular season ends on the road Nov. 12 against Rocky Mountain College.

During his time in Coupeville, Pelroy starred on the gridiron and basketball court, while making it to state in five different events as a track and field athlete.

He competed in the 100, 200, 400, 300 hurdles and 4 x 400 relay at the big dance and held the CHS 200 record until Jacob Smith broke it last spring.

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