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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photos)

   This is Hunter Smith. You can’t stop Hunter Smith. End of discussion. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Downes

   Wolf QB Hunter Downes scrambles for a first down under the watchful eyes of his coaches.

trio

   CHS spikers (l to r) Emma Smith (rockin’ the old school letter jacket), Payton Aparicio and Ally Roberts kill some time while waiting for their playoffs to begin.

Julian Welling

The Beast, AKA Julian Welling, rises up out of the muck to fire a snap to his QB.

Cameron

   Cameron Toomey-Stout can smell the concession stand behind him, but he only has eyes for the football.

Dylan Estes

   The fastest water boy in the biz, Dylan Estes stays one step ahead of a thirsty pack of Wolves.

Clay Reilly

Bending the laws of physics, Clay Reilly hovers in mid-air.

Uriel and Jake

   Wolf senior captains Uriel Liquidano (63) and Jacob Martin, looking tough in a photo which will make them cry when they look at it again in 20 years.

Well, at least one of us wasn’t sick.

While I stayed back in Coupeville Friday with a touch of the good ol’ stomach flu, wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken was feeling hale and hearty and hopped on the ferry to cover Coupeville’s football game against Chimacum.

The photos above, which come from various stages of a 24-6 Wolf win, are courtesy him.

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

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/FB-20161028-Coupeville-at-Chim/

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Julian Welling (John Fisken photos)

   Julian Welling and his Wolf teammates captured their third win of the season Friday night, smacking Chimacum 24-6. (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith

   Hunter Smith, seen here in an earlier game, hauled in his 10th TD reception of the year, tying the CHS single-season mark.

A true team win.

That’s what the Coupeville High School football squad put together Friday night, riding touchdowns from three different players as it romped to a 24-6 win at Chimacum.

The victory snaps a three-game skid for the Wolves and lifts them to 2-4 in Olympic/Nisqually League play, 3-6 overall.

With one game left on the schedule — next Friday at home against undefeated Cascade Christian — the Wolves have taken a huge step forward from last year’s 1-9 mark.

First-year coach Jon Atkins mixed things up a bit Friday, going for two-point conversions after all three scores.

When Hunter Smith scampered in on attempts after the first and third touchdowns, it was the first successful conversions of the season for CHS.

The Wolves broke the game open early and never let go of the lead.

Hunter Downes dropped the ball into Cameron Toomey-Stout’s hands on an 18-yard scoring strike late in the first quarter to kick things off.

The first of three TD passes on the night for the junior quarterback, it set the tone.

Smith bolted in for two to open an 8-0 lead and Coupeville stretched the margin to double digits with a safety on the first play of the second quarter.

Downes went right back to work, finding the other Toomey-Stout brother, freshman Sean, with a 20-yard pass to run the score to 16-0.

It was the first varsity TD for the young receiver, and a reward, as Sean Toomey-Stout had provided the Wolves with the earlier safety.

He blew up an option play and rode down the pitch man in the end zone.

Coupeville held Chimacum scoreless through the first half, with Cameron Toomey-Stout pilfering a pass — his third pick of the season — and the Wolf line partially blocking a Cowboy punt.

The hosts finally cracked the code midway through the third quarter, when they put together a seven-yard scoring pass.

The conversion failed, however, and the Wolves put the game on ice with a pair of plays from Smith.

After having opposing teams fail to throw his way most of the season, the junior finally got a rare crack at an interception, and immediately made off with it.

His third pick of the season, it gives Smith 11 all-time (he had one as a freshman and seven as a sophomore), leaving him just one shy of Josh Bayne’s CHS career record.

Shortly thereafter Smith continued his quest to attack all of Bayne’s records, hauling in his 10th touchdown reception of the season.

The snag ties Bayne’s single-season mark, and was Downes 16th TD pass this season.

He’s spread his scoring strikes out between Smith (10), Cameron Toomey-Stout (4), Jacob Martin (1) and Sean Toomey-Stout (1).

Downes sits two shy of Joel Walstad’s single-season record of 18 touchdown passes, set in 2014, when his primary target was … yep, Bayne.

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Dakota Eck (John Fisken photos)

   Dakota Eck picks up a full head of steam en route to a 30-yard run. (John Fisken photos)

run

Wolf quarterback Cade Golden, just out for a relaxing stroll.

Jake Mitten

   Jake Mitten fools the defense on the PAT, suddenly rolling out and finding Golden for the conversion.

tackle

   Jacob Kendall (21) and Ben Smith (1) lead a fired-up pack of Wolves as they haul down a wayward Cowboy.

Trystan Ford

Trystan Ford dares you to try and get through the line when he’s blocking.

Cheridan and Deb

   Football moms Cheridan Eck (left) and Deb Smith brave the gusty winds to watch their sons play.

Jesus

Jesus Garcia-Partida is cold, wet and ready to play for another three hours.

Wertz

Logan Wertz prepares to drop “The Stunner” on Chimacum’s QB.

The wind was howling, the pads were popping and the camera was clicking.

Wandering paparazzi John Fisken ended up down in Cow Town Wednesday and snapped away as Coupeville and Chimacum staged an overtime thriller on the gridiron.

The pics above are courtesy him.

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

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/FB-20161026-Coupeville-MS-vs-C/

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Jake Mitten, seen here in an earlier game, scored four touchdowns Wednesday in an overtime thriller. (John Fisken photo)

   Jake Mitten, seen here in an earlier game, scored four touchdowns Wednesday in an overtime thriller. (John Fisken photo)

It was a thriller that kept you guessing until the final play.

A rainy day turned halfway nice, if predictably windy, Wednesday afternoon, allowing Coupeville and Chimacum ample opportunity to wage a knock-down, drag-out middle school battle on the gridiron.

By the time it was done, with the visiting Cowboys pulling out a 35-34 thriller in overtime, there had been something for everyone.

Big pass plays, last second escapes, even a Wolf coach wiping out on the muddy sideline and crashing into the team bench.

The game ended when Chimacum’s line shoved Coupeville’s defense back into the end zone on an extra point conversion run, giving the Cowboys the slimmest of margins.

With the game knotted at 28-28, after Chimacum had pulled off a fourth-down miracle with under a minute to play in the fourth quarter to force the extra period, the two squads took turns trying to punch the ball in from the 10-yard line.

The Wolves had the ball first in OT and hammered the ball in on fourth and goal, with Jake Mitten plunging around the right side for his fourth score of the afternoon.

But, on the ensuing extra point attempt, the Wolves couldn’t get the snap down for kicker Sage Downes and Chimacum players swarmed through the line to smush holder Dakota Eck.

With the ball in their own hands, the Cowboys took one play to score a touchdown — on a run up the middle — and one play to end things, ramming home the game’s final point behind a cloud of dust.

The frantic overtime action capped a game with five lead changes, and a miracle at the end of regulation.

Coupeville had gone ahead 28-20 with three-and-a-half minutes to play thanks to a three-yard scoring run from Mitten and a successful PAT kick from Downes.

Middle school football rewards teams with two for a kick and one for a run or pass on extra point plays — the opposite of high school action — and with Chimacum down by eight and going into the wind, things looked good for the Wolves.

The Cowboys had two miracles (a big one and a very important small one) still in their pocket, however.

First, they slipped a tiny, but quick receiver behind the defense on fourth-and-everything from the 30-yard line, and his TD reception with 47 seconds to play pulled Chimacum to 28-26.

Then, despite kicking into the wind, a burly Cowboy drove the ball through the uprights — by the slimmest of margins — to knot things up.

Somehow, despite there being less than a minute to play in regulation, both teams got the ball back before the buzzer sounded.

Coupeville went four and out and gave Chimacum the ball with 15 seconds to play, then dodged a bullet when Cade Golden tipped away a potential game-winning pass.

With regulation run down, and a ferry awaiting the Cowboys, there was serious discussion at midfield on whether to call the game a tie.

To the delight of players on both sides, and the surprise of onlookers who have grown accustomed to middle school games not being allowed overtime action, the refs shut off the clock and let the teams decide the game on the field.

While Coupeville would have liked to have held on for the win, the Wolf coaches were thrilled to see two similarly-sized schools get a chance to go at it, with neither side backing down.

“They played with their hearts and for each other; loving it!!!,” said CMS head coach Bob Martin. “It was a good day!”

The Wolves stung Chimacum several times, starting with their opening drive.

After watching the Cowboys eat up nearly seven minutes of clock while marching to a touchdown after taking the kick-off, Coupeville responded with its own score in less than 75 seconds.

Eck broke free for a 31-yard sprint to daylight, then Golden hooked up with Mitten on a 25-yard pass play to put CMS on the doorstep.

From there, it was all Ben Smith, as he took a hand-off and scampered around the left side for a two-yard touchdown run.

Mitten dropped a perfect conversion pass into Golden’s waiting arms for the extra point and the Wolves were up 7-6 and off to the races.

Coupeville’s next two touchdowns came through the air, with Golden flinging the ball into the overcast sky and Mitten hauling it in, then churning away for extra yardage.

The first went 32 yards, the second 75 yards.

In between Golden picked off a Cowboy pass — the only turnover in a very cleanly played game.

Thanks to weather issues that erased a game from earlier in the season, the two teams will reunite in a week, this time at Chimacum.

The Nov. 2 clash will bring the middle school football campaign to an end.

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Senior Jacob Martin leads Coupeville in rushing and tackles. (John Fisken photo)

   Senior Jacob Martin leads Coupeville in rushing yards and tackles. (John Fisken photo)

This could be a record-breaking season.

With two games left on the schedule, a pair of Coupeville High School football players are making bids to put their names on the program’s all-time record board.

Junior QB Hunter Downes and junior receiver Hunter Smith already tied CHS single-game records for touchdowns thrown and caught in a single game.

That came when Downes riddled Bellevue Christian for four scoring strikes, three of which went to Smith.

Now, Smith sits one snag away from tying Josh Bayne’s season record of 10 touchdown receptions, while also finding himself just 143 yards shy of Chad Gale’s mark (844 yards in 1987) for receiving yards in a single campaign.

When it comes to career marks, Smith sits 225 yards and six touchdowns off of Gale’s records (1,345 yards and 17 TD’s).

Downes is a little further away from his goals, but with a strong finish could make runs at Ian Smith’s single-season mark of 1,848 passing yards and Joel Walstad’s 18 touchdown passes in a year.

The Wolf gunslinger sits at 1,201 yards and 13 touchdowns and Friday’s foe, Chimacum, has the second-worst scoring defense in the Olympic/Nisqually League.

Cascade Christian, Coupeville’s final rival Nov. 4, is #1 in every defensive stat, however.

While the Hunter to Hunter passing attack is making a run at history, they are not the only Wolves putting up strong stats this season.

Here’s a look at where the whole CHS roster stands through week #8 on offense and defense, according to numbers posted on MaxPreps by Wolf coaches.

Complete kicking/kick-returning stats aren’t available at the moment, but are expected to be back in the mix by the end of the season, said CHS coach Jon Atkins.

Offense:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 55-126 for 1201 yards (#2 in league, #5 in 1A) with 13 TD and 10 INTs
Hunter Smith 1-1 for 67 yards
Shane Losey 1-1 for 5 yards

Receiving:

Smith 30 receptions for 701 yards (#2 in league, #3 in 1A, #16 in all divisions)
Cameron Toomey-Stout 15-317 (#6 in league, #13 in 1A)
Jacob Martin 5-137
Clay Reilly 3-64
Sean Toomey-Stout 1-32
Jake Hoagland 2-17
Taylor Consford 1-5

Rushing:

J. Martin 74 carries for 488 yards
Reilly 59-224
Smith 26-103
Chris Battaglia 24-61
S. Toomey-Stout 8-45
Matt Hilborn 15-20
Teo Keilwitz 1-12
Andrew Martin 3-7
C. Toomey-Stout 2-1
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim 1-(-4)
Losey 2-(-10)
Downes 37-(-80)

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

Smith 1040
J. Martin 625
Reilly 404
C. Toomey-Stout 395
S. Toomey-Stout 87
Hilborn 65
Battaglia 61
Hoagland 17
Keilwitz 12
A. Martin 7
Consford 5

Total yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes 1121 (#3 in league, #6 in 1A)
Smith 871 (#8 in league, #13 in 1A)
J. Martin 625
C. Toomey-Stout 318
Reilly 288
S. Toomey-Stout 77
Battaglia 61
Hilborn 20
Hoagland 17
Keilwitz 12
A. Martin 7
Consford 5

Touchdowns:

Smith 12
J. Martin 5
C. Toomey-Stout 4
Downes 2
Battaglia 1
Keilwitz 1
Ryan Labrador 1
Reilly 1

PATs:

Reilly 20 (#2 in league, #6 in 1A)

Points:

Smith 72
J. Martin 30
Reilly 26
C. Toomey-Stout 24
Downes 12
Battaglia 6
Keilwitz 6
Labrador 6

Defense:

Tackles:

J. Martin 62
Uriel Liquidano 46
Reilly 44
Smith 38
Hilborn 27
S. Toomey-Stout 27
Battaglia 24
C. Toomey-Stout 24
Julian Welling 24
Keilwitz 14
Labrador 12
Dane Lucero 12
Jacob Zettle 11
Axel Partida 10
Jake Pease 5
James Vidoni 4
Matt Stevens 3
Hoagland 2
Downes 1
Losey 1
A. Martin 1
Pacquette-Pilgrim 1

Sacks:

Liquidano 5.5 (#2 in league, #4 in 1A, #18 in all divisions)
Vidoni 2
Zettle 1.5
J. Martin 1
Welling 1

Fumble recoveries:

Battaglia 1
Hilborn 1
Labrador 1
Lucero 1

Interceptions:

Reilly 2
Smith 2
C. Toomey-Stout 2
S. Toomey-Stout 1

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