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Archive for the ‘Football’ Category

The future of Wolf football is a bright one, with Jake Mitten carrying the ball. (John Fisken photos)

   With Jake Mitten rumbling, the future of Wolf football is bright. (John Fisken photos)

Dylan Estes

Dylan Estes (9) can not be stopped. End of discussion.

Alexis Reimers

   CMS volleyball star Alexis Reimers (center), Cole Collins (far right) and friends show off a poster supporting their classmates.

face

“Come with me if you want to live!”

Dakota Eck

   A Sequim player thinks he’s going to wrap up Dakota Eck (42), but, SPOILER ALERT, the Wolf running back got away.

The future is here.

Kicking off their season on a sunny fall Wednesday, the Coupeville Middle School football squad put in strong work, while providing wandering paparazzi with plenty of photo ops.

The pics above come to us courtesy John Fisken.

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

http://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/MSFB-20160928-Coupeville-vs-Se/

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Ben Smith, seen here last season, was one of several Wolves to rip off strong runs in Coupeville's first game. (Deb Smith photo)

   Ben Smith, seen here last season, was one of several Wolves to rip off strong runs Wednesday in Coupeville’s first game. (Deb Smith photo)

Dylan Estes will wreck a dude.

The Coupeville Middle School football player is far from the biggest player on the field, but he makes up in heart what he might currently be shy of in inches.

That was on display several times Wednesday during the Wolves season opener against visiting Sequim, most notably when Estes chased down, then body-slammed a receiver twice his size.

Hustle plays like that, and a late offensive surge, were the highlights for CMS, as it fell 36-12 to a much-larger foe.

Coupeville rallied for both of its touchdowns in the fourth quarter, refusing to go down quietly.

Jake Mitten, who led the Wolf attack all afternoon, used a drop-the-shoulder-and-inflict-some-damage running style to rip off Coupeville’s first touchdown of the season, on an eight-yard plunge.

He then successfully pulled off an on-sides kick, allowing the Wolves to get the ball right back.

CMS quarterback Cade Golden promptly took advantage of the opportunity, guiding the Wolves down the field, before hooking up with Sage Downes on a touchdown pass to the left corner.

On the scoring play, Golden avoided a potential sack, then dropped the ball right onto Downes fingertips, giving the Wolf receiver a perfect ball to snag.

Sequim put the game away in the second quarter, using a very effective passing attack centered around a tall receiver, punching in three of their five touchdowns.

Coupeville’s own passing attack picked up the pace as the game went on, with Golden hooking up with Mitten several times.

A number of dropped passes muted the Wolf attack, however.

Along with Mitten, who ran like a battering ram on the same field where his uncle, Jason McFadyen, led the 1990 CHS gridiron squad to an undefeated season, Coupeville got big runs from Dakota Eck and Ben Smith.

Mitten was a two-way warrior, also dropping the Sequim QB on back-to-back plays where he bull-rushed the line and the blockers melted away under his assault.

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Downes

   Wolf QB Hunter Downes threw for three touchdowns Friday night, one to Jacob Martin (right). (John Fisken photos)

Hunter Smith

   Hunter Smith snagged the other two scoring strikes, giving him six TDs on the season.

This one was a heart-breaker.

Coming off of back-to-back blowout losses, the Coupeville High School football squad made huge strides Friday night, but fell just short in its conference opener.

Unable to hold on to a four-point halftime lead, the Wolves were clipped 23-20 by Charles Wright Academy in a game played in the wilds of Tacoma.

The loss drops Coupeville to 1-3 overall, 0-1 in Olympic/Nisqually League play.

CHS will get a chance to even its record with back-to-back home games the next two weeks, facing Vashon Island and Port Townsend.

With the 1A Olympic League having joined up with the Nisqually League to form an eight-team super conference for football, Coupeville found itself facing off with one of its new rivals to kick off the seven-game league season.

And while the Tarriers scored first, the Wolves hit right back, using an effective air game to pick apart the Charles Wright secondary.

Junior quarterback Hunter Downes rifled three touchdown passes, two to Hunter Smith and one to Jacob Martin, doubling his season output.

The first one went 34 yards on a Hunter-to-Hunter connection, while the second scoring pass, also to Smith, staked the Wolves to a 13-9 halftime lead.

Downes hit Martin for a second-half score as well, but Charles Wright answered with two touchdowns of its own to hold off Coupeville.

The three passing touchdowns was one off the school’s single-game record of four, jointly held by current CHS offensive coordinator Brad Sherman (2001) and Wolf legend Corey Cross (1971).

Cameron Toomey-Stout picked off a Tarrier pass to pace the CHS defense.

In other league games, Klahowya clocked Vashon Island 35-14 and Cascade Christian clobbered Chimacum 47-19.

Port Townsend and Bellevue Christian wrap up the first weekend of league play when they meet Saturday.

Current standings:

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

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Be all you can be. Be a Wolf Buddy. (John Fisken photo)

Be all you can be. Be a Wolf Buddy. (John Fisken photo)

Come together through sports.

Coupeville School District students in grades 4-6 can sign up to join the Wolf Buddies program this fall and spend quality time with current CHS volleyball and football stars.

For the low, low cost of just $5, students get to participate in two activity dates and attend CHS games where they will get to sit in special seating and take part in pre-game events.

The program is set up to “provide mentorship and positive interactions between elementary students and high school athletes.”

Athletes gain leadership skills and accountability while young students benefit socially, emotionally, and academically from interacting with an additional positive role model.

The activity days are Oct. 12 and 19, from 2:45-3:30 each day.

Students involved will be allowed to miss the final 45 minutes of the school day to participate.

Volleyball buddies will attend matches Oct. 18 and 25 (they can be at either or both), while football buddies get their game in the spotlight Nov. 4.

Students will be present for the pre-game speech in the locker room, form the tunnel on the court/field, and sit in a designated section.

Admission for the student is FREE.

However, students MUST be accompanied by an adult in order to attend the games. Adults will need to pay admission.

To sign up your student, either print and fill out the application below or obtain an official-looking version of the application from the office at CHS, CMS or CES or at the ticket table at tonight’s Wolf volleyball match (4:00 varsity/5:15 JV and C-Team).

=====================================

2016 Wolf Buddies Application

I am applying for (circle one):

 Football Wolf Buddies Program              Volleyball Wolf Buddies Program

Name of student: __________________________________ Circle one:  Male   Female

Name of Parents/Guardian: ________________________________________

Contact Phone Number: ___________________________________________

Parent email: ____________________________________________

Student’s grade: ___________     Student t-shirt size: _________

Fee: $5

Includes:

-Two 45 min activities lead by CHS Volleyball or CHS Football Players

-Free admission to two home Volleyball matches and one home Football Game.

-Inclusion in two pre-game activities on Wolf Buddy Game Days

-A Wolf Buddies Shirt!

*Make checks payable to “Coupeville High School”

By signing below, you are acknowledging that your child will participate in the Volleyball or Football Wolf Buddies Activities, and attend the designated Wolf Buddy Volleyball or Football Games in order to be a part of the program.

Signature:__________________________________________ Date:____________

*Please return in this application to the collection station in front commons area on either Thursday, Sept. 29th or Friday, Sept. 30th (4th and 5th grade). Or if your child is in 6th grade, to the front office secretary no later than Friday, Sept. 30th.

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Shane Losey threw for two touchdowns, ran for another and picked off a pass during a busy Monday night of football. (John Fisken photo)

   Shane Losey threw for two touchdowns, ran for another, picked off a pass and recovered a fumble during a busy Monday night of football. (John Fisken photo)

It was a night for trying new things.

With visiting La Conner not able to field a full JV squad, Coupeville agreed to play 8-man football Monday, then went out and waxed the Braves to capture the program’s first win in three years.

Sparked by a sensational game from sophomore quarterback Shane Losey, the Wolves rolled to an 18-6 win and evened their record at 1-1.

“This was a great win for these young kids,” said CHS coach Ryan King. “It gets their confidence up and rewards them for all the work they put in this summer and at practices.

“It’s a credit to all the coaches and all the players in the program.”

The win was a perfect example of teamwork, as King called the defensive scheme and fellow Coupeville assistant Brad Sherman pulled the strings on offense.

Working with three less players than usual took a bit of time for both teams to get used to, but Losey, who split time at QB with freshman Dawson Houston, adapted well.

He opened the scoring by plunging in on a short run on the final play of the first quarter, then came back to toss a pair of touchdown strikes in the second half.

The first was a 75-yard catch-and-run to Teo Keilwitz in which the Wolf running back ended up leaving not only the defenders, but his own shoe, behind him.

With one Brave still hot on his trail, Keilwitz hit the turbo jets, shed his shoe, and still took the ball to the house.

Not content to stop there, Losey moved Coupeville down the field one more time, then rifled a picture-perfect pass into the left corner of the end zone, putting the ball right on Jacob Zettle’s fingertips for the score.

Other than a few plays (including a four-yard touchdown run midway through the second quarter that knotted things at 6-6), the Wolf defense also adjusted to the different style of play.

They kept La Conner’s QB scrambling for his life most of the night and pulled off several takeaways.

Losey picked off a pass to ice the game in the fourth, after recovering a fumble on the opening kickoff.

So, basically he checked about every box possible on this night.

Jacobi Pacquette-Pilgrim had another fumble recovery, though the ball was jarred loose at the last second as he came dangerously close to turning it into a defensive touchdown.

Luke Carlson was a rampaging beast, in on what seemed like every other tackle, while Losey, Jake Hoagland, Ulrik Wells and Co. all chipped in with scrappy defensive play.

Coupeville stayed on the ground for much of the night, with Zettle, Keilwitz, Pacquette-Pilgrim and hard-charging Andrew Martin sharing the rushing duty.

Losey and Houston also showed a flair of holding on to the ball and grinding out yardage themselves.

One late carry from Pacquette-Pilgrim, in which he spun three defenders around as he reversed field, brought his varsity teammates to their feet for a round of sideline hysteria.

“Everyone played well,” King said. “I’m really, really proud of them all.”

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