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While teammates Hunter Downes and Hunter Smith were setting offensive records Saturday, Axel Partida was going all-out on defense. (John Fisken photo)

   While teammates Hunter Downes and Hunter Smith were tying offensive records Saturday, Axel Partida was going all-out on defense. (John Fisken photo)

It was a record-tying day when ultimately it needed to be a record-breaking one.

Coupeville High School quarterback Hunter Downes connected on four touchdown passes Saturday afternoon — tying a school single-game record held by his offensive coordinator — but came up one pass short of rallying the Wolves past a feisty Bellevue Christian squad.

Despite a stellar performance from the Wolf junior, who threw for 243 yards while dealing with a wet football, and a record-tying game from receiver Hunter Smith, Coupeville was nipped 34-28 in a game played at Lake Washington.

The loss drops the Wolves to 1-3 in league play, 2-5 overall.

Downes four scoring strikes, two of which came in the fourth quarter, ties a mark set by Corey Cross in 1971 and tied twice by Brad Sherman (the current CHS play-caller) in 2001.

Smith hauled in three of those TD’s, making him the fourth Wolf receiver to ever accomplish that feat.

Glenn Losey (1970), Brian Fakkema (2001) and Josh Bayne (2014) are the others to pull off a trio of scoring catches in one game.

Unfortunately, all the records set Saturday are overshadowed a bit by the final score.

Coupeville looked like it was going to pull off a stunner, rallying from the brink of death with less than five minutes to play.

With the weather far balmier and a million times less windy than forecasters had predicted, the only storm was on the scoreboard, with CHS trailing 34-21 and having just turned the ball over deep in its own territory.

Holding on to a two-score lead and taking over at Coupeville’s 17-yard line, BC was ready to put the hammer down.

But, with their main running back, senior Daniel Ficca, having hobbled to the bench a few plays earlier, the Vikings went away from the run and tried to seal the deal with a pass.

It was a bad move, as Cameron Toomey-Stout picked the pass to put the ball back in Downes hands.

Two dropped passes and a sack later, Coupeville was shoved back to its 15, Downes was sent to the bench for a play by the refs after getting leveled and the Wolves needed another miracle.

And they found it, as Smith promptly connected with Toomey-Stout on a 67-yard catch-and-run in which the super-speedy #11 twirled like a ballet dancer, bouncing off of bodies and carrying half the Bellevue team down the field with him.

Bursting back into the game, Downes got Coupeville into the end zone four plays later, sliding a four-yard pass into Smith’s waiting hands, helping both players tie single-game marks at the same time.

Closing to within 34-28, the Wolves seemed to be crafting a storybook ending.

They forced the Vikings to go four and out, accepted a punt and stood 51 yards away from victory with 1:56 to play.

But the football gods, unlike the weather gods, were not smiling on Coupeville, as a Bellevue player read things correctly, jumped the route and picked off Downes on the Wolves next play.

Unable to stop the clock, Coupeville missed on getting one final play when the officials allowed too much time to bleed off the clock at the end of the game.

It appeared BC would have to punt, but, thanks to a fast clock and a slow ref, the Vikings escaped unscathed.

Up until the wild end, the game had been a back-and-forth affair, with Bellevue scoring and then Coupeville responding.

Despite the on-and-off rain, Downes was on point most of the afternoon, raining down fire from above.

His first scoring strike, set up by a Chris Battaglia fumble recovery, was a 30-yarder to Smith in the first quarter in which he flung a frozen rope that split two defenders in mid air.

Downes then came back with a 75-yard scoring play early in the second quarter on which he threw a bomb out into the great unknown and let Smith outrace two defenders to snag it.

Touchdown #3 went to Toomey-Stout, a 40-yard play early in the fourth quarter, before #4 went to Smith during the furious finale.

While the wind never developed into a problem of any magnitude, a slick ball was often hard for both teams to hang on to, as multiple fumbles were lost.

Dane Lucero joined Battaglia in snaring a loose ball, while a third was scooped up by an unknown Wolf in the middle of a dog pile.

CHS coach Jon Atkins praised his defense, giving credit to Uriel Liquidano for being a rampaging force of nature and Lucero and Axel Partida for “doing a really good job of setting the edge.”

Up in the press box, Clay Reilly’s super-powered leg, shown off on extra points and kick-offs, was the #1 topic of discussion among the locals.

Unofficially, Coupeville threw for 310 yards (243 from Downes and 67 from Smith), with Toomey-Stout accounting for 166 of those yards and Smith 144.

Jacob Martin led the Wolves with 62 yards on the ground, while Coupeville had three kick returns of 15+ yards.

Smith brought one back 26 yards and another 19, while Matt Hilborn creased the defense on a 16-yard return.

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Luke Carlson had a pair of sacks Wednesday, as the Coupeville JV played for the first time in a month. (John Fisken photo)

   Luke Carlson had a pair of sacks Wednesday, as the Coupeville JV played for the first time in a month. (John Fisken photo)

If no one else will play you, turn to Olympic.

The 2A Trojans, nestled down in Bremerton, are the only one of Archbishop Thomas Murphy’s final six scheduled varsity foes not to have forfeited.

And Wednesday, Olympic’s C-Team came to the rescue of the Coupeville JV, giving the Wolf young guns their first live opponent in a month.

After beating La Conner way back on Sept. 9, CHS had four straight foes (Nooksack Valley, Charles Wright, Vashon Island and Port Townsend) decline to play a JV game, mainly due to lack of players.

Enter Olympic, which stepped in for the RedHawks and garnered themselves an extra game in the process.

Playing their sixth game of the season, while Coupeville’s JV took the field for only the third time, a well-oiled Olympic squad ran away with a 44-14 win.

The loss drops the Wolves to 1-2, with the hope they will get three more games in the final month of the season.

Coupeville is scheduled to host JV games against Bellevue Christian (Oct. 17) and Klahowya (Oct. 24), before hitting the road Nov. 7 to face Cascade Christian.

There’s no game on Halloween, as Chimacum only has a varsity team.

While the Wolves lost at Olympic, JV coach Ryan King was just happy to get his team back on the field.

“I was really impressed how we played in the second half,” he said. “We started off slow in the first half and then really turned it around in the second.”

Freshman Sean Toomey-Stout was the headliner, cracking the 100-yard barrier on the ground while rushing for a touchdown.

Fellow frosh Andrew Martin also found pay-dirt, while Wolf QB Dawson Houston hooked up with Jake Hoagland on a two-point conversion pass to round out the scoring.

Houston’s biggest play through the air came when he found Kory Score on a 37-yard pass play.

Luke Carlson, Toomey-Stout, Hoagland and Martin led the Wolf defense, with Carlson bringing down the Olympic quarterback on sacks twice.

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"What's that I taste? Oh yes, sweet, sweet victory." (Deb Smith photos)

“What’s that I taste? Oh yes, sweet, sweet victory.” (Deb Smith photos)

Wolf fans

Wolf fans enjoy the balmy Port Townsend weather.

Bob Martin

CMS coach Bob Martin (red shirt, middle) rallies his troops.

wolves

“Water tastes nice, victory even better!”

“It was “that” game, the one you wish you could duplicate throughout the season.”

As he basked in an improbable, but highly satisfying, rout of host Port Townsend, Coupeville Middle School football coach Bob Martin was almost downright giddy.

Almost.

Former Marine Corps drill sergeants don’t do full-on giddy. Even when their out-manned team rises up and thrashes their foe 52-13.

So, maybe not giddy, but definitely pleased.

“Yes, we need to work on tackling, but once those young players figured out they could do it, you couldn’t stop them,” Martin said “Yes, our hard work beat their talent!

“They had big kids and you could tell our boys were intimidated, but that wore off quickly.”

Despite hitting the gridiron Wednesday with just 14 active players, the Wolves seized control of the game early and never looked back.

Coupeville took a 14-13 lead, stretched it out to 30-13 at halftime, and continued to pour it on in the second half, scoring from all directions.

Wolf quarterback Cade Golden lit up the skies, completing 12 of 17 passes for 180 yards and four touchdowns, while Jake Mitten and Dakota Eck tallied three touchdowns apiece.

Mitten, who rushed for 80 yards, scored twice on passes from Golden and once on a run, while also finding time to kick four field goals.

Eck was a two-way threat, rumbling for 72 yards, scoring twice on offense and pulling off the play of the game on defense for touchdown #3.

With Port Townsend threatening to score, the CMS 8th grader swooped in, stripped the ball at the two-yard line, then sprinted 98 yards the other way for a game-busting score.

Coupeville’s defense was strong (Miles Davidson and Ben Smith recovered fumbles while Alex Jimenez had a “great bone-crushing tackle while on kickoff – stopped the kid in his tracks!”) and its offense even stronger.

When Mitten and Eck weren’t lugging the ball, Smith (42 yards rushing) and Gabe Shaw (28 and a touchdown) both stepped up and helped shoulder the load.

The key to a successful day was the team’s line (Tian Yu, Davidson, Shaw, Smith, Sage Downes and Logan Wertz), which shoved Port Townsend back time and again.

“Can’t do anything without them,” Martin said. “They’re figuring it out, gaining confidence every day. It’s great to see!”

With just 14 active players, everyone chipped in, and Coupeville also got contributions from Dylan Estes, Damon Stadler, Trystan Ford and Jacob Kendall.

The team-wide effort was best summed up by assistant coach Michael Golden, who surveyed the winning Wolves and delivered the line of the night.

“They played their hearts out!”

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Wolf sophomore QB Shane Losey has a growth plate fracture in his shoulder. (Scott Losey photo)

   Wolf sophomore QB Shane Losey has a growth plate fracture in his shoulder. (Scott Losey photo)

Football gives and football takes away.

Late in Friday’s Homecoming game against Port Townsend, Coupeville back-up quarterback Shane Losey completed his first varsity pass, hooking up with Taylor Consford.

It was the first reception for his senior receiver, a first-year player, and a bright moment for the sophomore signal-caller.

Unfortunately, it’s likely to be the final big play of either player’s season.

Both suffered injuries in the final minutes against the RedHawks, with both believed to be season-ending.

Scott Losey confirmed his son has a growth plate fracture in his shoulder and will be out four to six weeks.

With four games left on the regular-season schedule, that means Shane won’t see the field again this year, leaving freshman Dawson Houston as Hunter Downes back-up at QB.

Downes, a junior who has been mostly pain-free this year, was knocked out early last year by the same type of injury Shane Losey suffered.

“These are the bumps of the sport,” said Scott Losey, a former Wolf player whose dad, uncle and two sons all suited up for CHS.

Consford was on crutches at the Homecoming dance after taking a shot to his knee.

Sunday morning he confirmed that his first varsity catch was also his last.

“I’m out for the season,” Consford said.

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CHS grad Mitch Pelroy topped 1,000 return yards in his college career Saturday. (Photo courtesy Pelroy)

   CHS grad Mitch Pelroy topped 1,000 return yards in his college career Saturday. (Photo courtesy Pelroy)

Four digits, achieved.

Former Coupeville High School football star Mitch Pelroy zipped past the 1,000-yard mark for kick returns at the college level.

Taking back three kick-offs for 49 yards Saturday against Montana Tech, he pushed his career total to 1,011 yards in the five years he’s been at Montana Western.

Pelroy also chipped in on defense with three tackles and an assist from his spot in the secondary, but it wasn’t enough to save the Bulldogs, who fell 35-20.

Montana Western, ranked #22 among NAIA teams, is 3-3 overall, 2-3 in Frontier Conference play.

With five regular-season games left in his senior campaign, Pelroy has amassed 952 yards on kickoff returns and 59 on punt returns.

He has 56 tackles, 15 assists, two sacks and five tackles for loss in a 33-game career.

Montana Western returns to action next Saturday, Oct. 15, when the Bulldogs host the College of Idaho during Hall of Fame weekend in Dillon.

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