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Jacob Zettle was in the thick of things on defense all night. (John Fisken photo)

   Jacob Zettle was in the thick of things on defense all night Friday, doing his best to slow down Port Townsend’s very slippery QB. (John Fisken photo)

Dear Alex Heilig,

We know each other by sight, if little else.

You were an assistant football coach at Coupeville High School for a bit, but my conversations at the time were with your boss and not you.

You were also briefly the track coach at CMS, but largely ignored me when I tried to get meet results.

Which is neither here nor there.

You were busy, a teacher, coach and new husband, then new father. And I know for a fact I can be annoying.

I feel the need to tread sort of carefully here, as your wife, Ashley, is one of my favorite people in the entire world.

I knew her before you did, when she was one of the best athletes our town has ever seen, and when we worked together behind the counter at Videoville.

She is a truly wonderful person, and I think the world of her. If she’s married to you, I have no doubt you’re a good guy.

Which is why, instead of calling you names or flinging anger at you, I would instead like to merely express my disappointment.

When you became head football coach at Port Townsend this year, after a year as an assistant at South Whidbey and a year as head coach at Granite Falls, you scored. Big time.

The RedHawks have a proud football tradition, and when you stepped in, you inherited some stellar athletes like Berkley Hill, Detrius Kelsall and Gerry Coker.

You’ve taken what was given you, and you’ve done well, going 4-2 (a play away from 5-1).

Friday night your team came to Coupeville, with you, the prodigal son returning on Homecoming, and you waxed the Wolves 57-0.

It was a classic example of one-sided football.

Your team won every battle, blowing people off the lines and letting your super-slippery QB, Hill, slice through the Wolf defense, scoring four touchdowns on the ground and tossing a fifth through the air.

Kelsall also scored three times, twice on the ground and once on that Hill pass.

Other than a 30-yard run off a fake punt by Clay Reilly and some late-game heroics by freshman running back Sean Toomey-Stout, who went 15 yards on his first varsity carry, it was not an especially bright night for CHS.

The Wolves are now 2-4 overall, 1-2 in league play, a team that looks great at times and like a work in progress at others.

But this is where it gets sticky.

It’s not that you won 57-0 that bothers me. Good teams often score a lot of points.

It’s the way you chose to stick the knife in and twist it that irritates me (and probably a lot of other people.)

When you’re up 41-0 at the break, on a running clock in the second half and your opponent has pulled all of its primary starters on both sides of the ball in the final quarter, what compels you to leave your (probably) All-League QB in to run up the score?

There’s 6:44 to play, the game is 50-0, Coupeville’s defense is all second-stringers and yet you leave your first-string offense in to ram home one more score.

Why?

Like I said, we’ve never really talked, so I’d just be guessing.

I understand your backup QB is a freshman. He’s also maybe the best pure athlete on your team.

He probably would have scored himself, given the opportunity to go under center some time before the 1:55 mark of the game.

To someone who really doesn’t know you, leaving Hill and his line in to score a meaningless touchdown against JV players reeked of bush league.

You didn’t need to do it that way. You chose to do it that way.

And like I said, I adore Ashley and if she vouches for you, I don’t really have a problem with you.

It’s your team, it’s your style, and so be it.

You’re a coach, I’m an idiot blogger in another town, you don’t really need to lose much sleep over what I think.

But, if, in a few weeks, your team gets blown out by Cascade Christian (as I’m now hoping), I’m not going to feel real sorry for you, that’s for sure.

Sincerely,

David Svien

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Taylor Consford

Taylor Consford (Submitted photo)

Taylor Consford has changed schools, but retained his positive outlook.

Having moved from Oak Harbor to Coupeville for his senior year, he’s jumping right in, with plans of being a three-sport athlete for the Wolves.

Consford is currently suiting up for the CHS football squad, with plans to play basketball and baseball as the year unfolds.

Regardless of which sport he’s playing, the future Navy man is always working on his game.

“My strengths are always something to improve,” Consford said. “My mentality is that I can always improve, so I don’t look at my strengths.

“I look at what I can do better.”

During his Wildcat days, Consford played with and against some of his future Wolf baseball teammates in summer ball.

While he has a comfort zone on the diamond (“my main sport”), taking to the gridiron is a new experience.

“This is my first year playing football. I have always wanted to play football but I’ve always been too nervous,” Consford said. “I started to play because I love to be a part of a team.

“I enjoy everything about football, being a part of a team, making new friends,” he added. “But in reality, to me they aren’t my friends, they are my family. They accepted me and made me feel great.”

As Consford and the Wolf squad head into the second half of the season with a Homecoming match-up with Port Townsend Friday, he just wants to make an impact, in whatever way he’s called upon.

“My goals this season for football are to always be there for everyone that needs me,” he said. “Do whatever I can to help my team win, and not to play for my self but all of my brothers that are out there by my side.”

Away from the field, he enjoys history class (“It just gives so much meaning to learn about what happened in the past to form the world around us today”) and hanging out with girlfriend Gaby Halpin and their friends.

“My main focus this year is to have the best senior year I can,” Consford said.

“The people that have made an impact in my life would most definitely be my parents and friends,” he added. “Everyone around me has encouraged me to great things and pushed me to the best of my ability to perform.”

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Dakota Eck tears off some yardage against Forks Wednesday afternoon. (John Fisken photos)

   Dakota Eck tears off some yardage against Forks Wednesday afternoon. (John Fisken photos)

Logan Wertz

Logan Wertz is ready to rumble.

Cade Golden

Wolf QB Cade Golden triggers the offense.

receiver

Damon Stadler checks his positioning before the snap.

Jake Mitten

Jake Mitten looks for an opening, any opening against a tough Spartans defense.

Trystan Ford

Trystan Ford anchors the line.

OK, let’s get this out of the way quickly and then move on.

Losing 50-0 is not a great thing.

Hopefully though, it can be a lesson, a building block for the future.

That’s the hope of Coupeville Middle School football coaches, who saw their team, made up of mainly 7th graders, get mashed by visiting Forks Wednesday afternoon.

The Spartans, whose roster is awash with 8th graders, dominated from the opening kickoff. Literally.

Sweeping up the ball in his own end zone, Forks’ returner spun back onto the field, cartwheeled towards the right sideline, then strolled 100+ yards the other way, coming into contact with (and getting away from) every one of the Wolf defenders.

Things went downhill pretty quickly from there, with Coupeville trailing 22-0 after one quarter and 44-0 at the half.

A running clock kept things from getting further out of hand after the break, though the Wolves came within a dropped pass of finally busting into the end zone on the game’s final play.

While the Wolves were pasted pretty good and fell to 0-2, head coach Bob Martin found a positive in the play of his quarterback, Cade Golden, who completed passes to Dakota Eck, Daniel Barajas, Ben Smith and Jake Mitten.

Damon Stadler also had a strong kickoff return, coming within one tackler of busting it for a quick six.

To see photos from other CHS and CMS sports events (purchases fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.johnsphotos.net/

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Hunter Downes (John Fisken photo)

   Wolf junior Hunter Downes leads all Olympic/Nisqually League QB’s in passing yardage this season. (John Fisken photo)

Everyone’s stats jumped.

Scoring 63 points against Vashon Island Friday — the most a Coupeville High School gridiron squad has scored in one game in decades — always helps with that kind of thing.

As we sit here on this Sunday morning, the Wolves have the top player in the Olympic/Nisqually League in six different categories, with the caveat that not every team has been flawless reporting stats to MaxPreps.

To those teams, tough.

As it stands, CHS has the #1 passer, receiver, runner, PAT kicker, sack king and kick returner.

As an aside, I tweaked one of Coupeville’s stat categories on my own, as it appears Hunter Smith’s 78-yard punt return against Vashon is being credited to Clay Reilly at the moment.

Since I clearly saw Smith’s #4 sail right past me as he took the punt to the house, I’m pretty confident on that change.

Unless Reilly is so fast he took the punt, stole Smith’s jersey and shot down the field in one smooth move…

Anyways, here are your pretty-close-to-set-in-stone CHS football stats at the halfway point of the regular season.

If you agree, awesome. If you don’t, whine to your coaches, not me. I’m just the messenger.

Offense:

Passing:

Hunter Downes 29-54 for 673 yards (#1 in league) with 8 TD and 4 INTs

Receiving:

Hunter Smith 15 receptions for 369 yards (#1 in league)
Jacob Martin 5-137
Cameron Toomey-Stout 6-119
Clay Reilly 2-39
Jake Hoagland 1-9

Rushing:

Martin 51 carries for 399 yards (#1 in league)
Reilly 47-211
Smith 20-71
Chris Battaglia
15-50
Matt Hilborn 9-20
Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim 1-(-4)
Downes 25-(-55)

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

Smith 754
Martin 536
Reilly 280
C. Toomey-Stout 196
Hilborn 65
Battaglia 50
Sean Toomey-Stout 10
Hoagland 9

Total yards (Rush/Pass/Rec):

Downes 618 (#2 in league)
Martin 536
Smith 440
Reilly 250
C. Toomey-Stout 119
Battaglia 50
Hilborn 20
Hoagland 9

Touchdowns:

Smith 8 (tied for #3 in league)
Martin 5
C. Toomey-Stout 3
Downes 2
Battaglia 1
Ryan Labrador 1
Reilly 1

PATs:

Reilly 18 (#1 in league)

Points:

Smith 48 (#4 in league)
Martin 30
Reilly 24
C. Toomey-Stout 18
Downes 12
Battaglia 6
Labrador 6

Defense:

Tackles:

Martin 35
Reilly 27
Smith 23
Uriel Liquidano 22
C. Toomey-Stout 15
Julian Welling 14
Hilborn
13
Teo Keilwitz
13
S. Toomey-Stout
13
Battaglia
12
Jacob Zettle
8
Dane Lucero
7
James Vidoni
4
Labrador
3
Axel Partida
2
Jake Pease
2
Hoagland
1
Shane Losey
1
Pacquette-Pilgrim
1

Sacks:

Liquidano 4.5 (#1 in league)
Vidoni 2
Zettle 1.5
Martin 1

Fumble recoveries:

Labrador 1
Reilly 1

Interceptions:

Smith 2 (tied for #4 in league)
C. Toomey-Stout 2 (tied for #4 in league)
Reilly 1
S. Toomey-Stout 1

Special Teams:

Kickoffs:

Reilly 8 for 365 yards (*not complete*)

Punts:

Reilly 2 for 36 yards (*not complete*)

Kickoff/punt returns:

Smith 9 for 297 yards (#1 in league)
Hilborn 3-45
Reilly 3-28
C. Toomey-Stout 2-11
Pacquette-Pilgrim 2-0

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Sophomore lineman Ryan Labrador recovered a fumble for his first varsity touchdown Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Sophomore lineman Ryan Labrador recovered a fumble for his first varsity touchdown Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

They flipped the script.

A year ago, Vashon Island throttled Coupeville 70-31 on the gridiron as Bryce Hoisington ran for a state-record 573 yards and nine touchdowns on his home turf.

Friday night, back in Cow Town, it was time for the big pay-back.

Scoring five different ways (pass, run, punt return, interception and fumble recovery) the Wolves mashed the Pirates 63-32 in their biggest assault on the scoreboard in memory.

The win snapped a three-game skid for Coupeville and evened their Olympic/Nisqually League mark at 1-1 headed into a Homecoming showdown with Port Townsend and former Wolf assistant coach Alex Heilig.

Coupeville is 2-3 under first-year head coach Jon Atkins, which doubles its win total from a season ago.

“This was a quality win,” Atkins said. “We’ve been working really hard on executing the little things, and we did that really well tonight. It was a big difference.”

The Wolves came out on fire and never turned down the flame.

While Bryce Hoisington still got them for four touchdowns this time around, they all came after Vashon was already dead and buried.

Far more often, the Wolf defenders, led by Julian Welling, Clay Reilly, Dane Lucero and Co., swarmed him, rode him down hard, caught him from behind and, all in all, made dang sure they weren’t going to be on the wrong side of history again.

Coupeville scored early, late and often, hitting big less than two minutes into the game.

Having forced Vashon to punt — Jacob Martin hauled down Vashon QB Connor Hoisington for a loss on third down — the Wolves seized the moment.

Junior speed demon Hunter Smith pocketed the kick a step behind his 20-yard line, sauntered to the side for a half-step, then dropped the booster rockets and roared through 11 would-be tacklers like a hot knife slicing through sweet, defenseless butter.

Up 7-0, the Wolves were just getting warmed up, and they started hitting with a vengeance on defense.

While the Hoisington brothers are a slippery duo, CHS lost a few battles while winning the overall defensive war.

Chris Battaglia blew-up a pitch for a loss, then Uriel Liquidano and Ryan Labrador combined to plant Connor Hoisington 15 yards from where he started on a sack by committee.

Coupeville, which never punted on the evening, scored on every possession except one.

That was on a lost fumble, but they immediately responded by forcing yet another Vashon punt to even things out.

Martin plunged in from four yards out to push the game to 14-0, then Labrador fell on a fumble in the end zone with just 25 ticks on the clock in the first quarter to effectively end the game.

A second touchdown from Smith, this one on a 31-yard sprint to daylight on his only rushing attempt of the night, made the score 28-0 midway through the second quarter.

The play was set-up by a sensational block from Cameron Toomey-Stout. While it was the first time the junior’s name was intoned by PA announcer Randy King, it was far from the last.

While he waited to score until Coupeville’s fifth touchdown, Toomey-Stout actually led the Wolves, crossing the goal line three times.

First came a 43-yard catch and run in which Wolf QB (and birthday boy) Hunter Downes heaved a bomb, then a 14-yard dart of a scoring pass on which Toomey-Stout beat his man to the deepest part of the right corner of the end zone.

After a brief rest — while Battaglia and Martin each added 25-yard scoring runs — Toomey-Stout returned to put the cherry on the victory sundae.

With 3:40 to play on the clock, Connor Hoisington heaved a desperation pass into coverage, only to see #11 in the red and black go airborne, snag the wayward ball, then spin and take things to the house.

Covering 60+ yards on his final jaunt, Toomey-Stout brought the overflowing stands to their feet and came dangerously close to making Wolf camera woman BayLee Dunsmore cough up a lung as she screamed like a woman possessed.

That she didn’t knock best bud Madison Aylesworth off the top of the stands in her frenzy (she came close) was probably the most remarkable thing about the play.

With the game decided, the Wolf bench got playing time, with sophomore QB Shane Losey getting some snaps and Matt Hilborn ripping off a pretty 21-yard jaunt that almost turned into touchdown #10.

The win leaves Coupeville a game back of the league leaders, with five to play.

In other action Friday, Cascade Christian crunched Klahowya 40-6 and Port Townsend blasted Chimacum 55-7. Bellevue Christian and Charles Wright play Saturday.

Current Olympic/Nisqually League standings:

School League Overall
Cascade Christian 2-0 5-0
Port Townsend 2-0 3-2
Charles Wright 1-0 2-2
COUPEVILLE 1-1 2-3
Klahowya 1-1 3-2
Bellevue Christian 0-1 0-4
Chimacum 0-2 1-4
Vashon Island 0-2 0-5

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