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Today and yesterday, the football players of 1986. Mitch Aparicio (1) is joined by clockwise from top right, David Ford, his brother Marc, Rusty Bailey, Jay Roberts and Brad Trumbull.

   Today and yesterday, the football players of ’86. Mitch Aparicio (1) is joined by clockwise from top right, David Ford, Marc Aparicio, Rusty Bailey, Jay Roberts and Brad Trumbull.

What was your dad doing 30 years ago this fall?

Probably being a bad-ass, that’s what.

Going through piles of paperwork found at the bottom of a filing cabinet deep in the darkest heart of the CHS gym complex, I stumbled across a stat sheet for the 1986 Wolf football team.

Many of the names are fixtures in the local community, fair-haired lads who grew up to sire Cow Town athletic stars of the present day.

What better time to put their youthful exploits out on the internet, where they can be received with much hootin’ and hollerin’ by their progeny?

The ’86 squad, which celebrates a 30-year anniversary this fall (if the players care) is one of four Wolf gridiron squads to make it to the state playoffs in the modern era.

While they didn’t win a league title like the ’74 or ’90 teams, the ’86ers do have the distinction of coming the closest to a state win of any of the four CHS football teams.

They fell 21-15 to Naselle Nov. 15, 1986, losing by less than a touchdown.

By contrast, ’74 lost 12-0 to Willapa Valley, ’87 was rolled 34-7 by Mossyrock and ’90 was thumped 34-14 by Rainier in their state playoff battles.

Not having come to Whidbey Island until ’89, I never saw the ’86 squad play in person, though I frequently bump into many of the team’s players in modern times.

Looking just at the stark black and white of the stat sheet, it was an impressive team, one which outscored foes 201-95 on the season.

You might hang around for a quarter (the Wolves held a slim 45-40 edge in first quarter play), but then Coupeville would put you down with a vengeance.

The second quarter was where the massacre generally went down, with the Wolves drilling opponents 61-13.

There was little hope of a comeback after halftime, as the third (41-23) and especially the fourth (54-19) were almost as brutal on teams not wearing red and black.

Or was it still red and white back then?

The ’86 squad was fairly well balanced, gaining 1,106 yards on the ground and 1,386 through the air.

They were also, apparently, a fairly rough crew. Or just not great at avoiding the watchful eye of the ref.

One of the few places where they lose the statistical battle is on penalties, where they racked up 80 miscues, giving back 728 yards, almost 250 more than their foes (63-489) did.

Call them the Raiders-lite.

The stats from 30 falls ago:

Offense:

Passing:

Brad Brown 91 completions in 197 attempts
Tom Conard 3-7

Receiving:

Steve Konek 26 receptions for 516 yards
Chad Gale 24-346
David Ford 11-132
Mitch Aparicio 11-107
Dan Nieder 8-105
Rick Alexander 8-79
Jay Roberts 1-37
Rusty Bailey 1-27
Marc Aparicio 3-25
Brown 1-7
Jeff Sobieski 1-2
Tony Ford 1-0

Rushing:

Mi. Aparicio 94 carries for 522 yards
Alexander 74-413
Brown 52-220
Alan Weddel 18-65
Gale 2-27
Aaron Hall 6-11
Bailey 3-6
Conard 3-0
David Cox 2-(-2)
Rick McCormick 1-(-5)

Defense:

Tackles:

Konek 38
Alexander 34
Mi. Aparicio 31
Nieder 27
John Beasley 26
Weddel 25
Morgan Roehl 24
D. Ford 23
Cox 17
Roberts 16
Chip Perkins 12
Ma. Aparicio 11
Bailey 10
T. Ford 9
Scott Losey 8
GT Wolfe 6
Brown 5
Jason Jones 5
Kevin King 5
Conard 4
Eric Gunter 3
Andrew Bird 2
Gale 2
Hall 2
Sobieski 2
Nick Zustiak 2
Don Gullick
1
Steve Lewis
1
McCormick
1
Brad Trumbull
1

Assists

Beasley 38
Mi. Aparicio 30
Alexander 27
Konek 25
Weddel 23
Roberts 20
Perkins 18
Nieder 17
Cox 16
Losey 14
Ma. Aparicio 14
D. Ford 13
Bailey 10
Roehl 7
Wolfe 5
T. Ford 3
Gunter 3
McCormick 3
Sobieski 3
Gale 2
Gullick 2
Jones 2
King 2
Bird 1
Brown 1
Theron Wofford
1
Zustiak
1

Interceptions:

Konek 7 (tied for CHS single-season record)
Nieder 7 (tied for CHS single-season record)
Alexander 2
Mi. Aparicio 2
Ma. Aparicio 1
Bailey 1

Special Teams:

Kickoff returns:

Weddel 8 for 140 yards
Mi. Aparicio 4-67
T. Ford 3-29
Brown 1-12
Gale 1-11
Alexander 2-10
Hall 1-8
Sobieski 1-7

Punt returns:

Brown 4-53
Mi. Aparicio 2-42
Trumbull 1-7

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Clay Hughes

   Clay Hughes plays through the blood and churns for yardage back in 2006. (Photos courtesy Willie Smith’s spring cleaning)

Hughes2

Concrete’s defenders are already too late.

ballet

Hughes was also an accomplished ballet dancer in his spare time…

Who knows what lurks in the back rooms at the Coupeville High School gym complex?

Go digging through old boxes, like I’ve done recently after Athletic Director Willie Smith went on a spring cleaning binge, and I’ve found treats galore.

Old stat sheets, middle school basketball photos and a lot of rosters from rival schools (Tom Roehl liked to horde them).

Buried in one box were a couple of discs containing photos from the 2006 CHS football season.

Who the photographer was, I have no clue.

And, to my great disappointment, no incriminating photos of any Wolf coaches taking Bellevue-style payoffs or players involved in raging keggers.

Come on man, where’s my decade-old scandal?!?!?, he said with a grin.

Anyways … back in reality, the one thing that popped out from the photos was the frequent image of Clay Hughes, gridiron stud extraordinaire, hard at work.

Mr. Hughes, now a wildly successful businessman, was a junior during the ’06 gridiron campaign and the Wolves primary rusher.

Working in tandem with Casey Larson and Trevor Tucker, he led Coupeville’s ground game in a season in which they churned out 2,042 yards over a 4-6 season.

Larson had the biggest single game of the year, ripping South Whidbey for 182 yards and four touchdowns in a 27-8 Wolf win.

But it was Hughes who carried the brunt of the offense, piling up 907 yards in the nine games he played, while Larson tallied 784 yards in 10 games.

Twice the duo combined to smash the 300-yard barrier that season.

South Whidbey, of course, where Hughes tacked on 119 yards as the Wolves battered the Falcon defense silly.

Their best game, though, came in an 18-7 win over Concrete in week two, in which Larson went for 165 and Hughes 164.

Coupeville gained an astonishing 411 yards that day — Sept. 8, 2006 — on 58 carries, allowing quarterback James Smith to throw the ball just twice.

Larson and Smith are already in the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame, and Hughes will likely join them one day soon.

Until then, as we approach the 10-year anniversary of the Concrete Massacre, let’s look back at some photos of Hughes in action and reflect on one of the best seasons ever thrown down by a Wolf rusher.

La Conner — 17 carries for 69 yards
Concrete — 28-164
ATM — 13-38
Sultan — 28-159
Granite Falls — OUT
South Whidbey — 19-119
King’s — 29-158
Lakewood — 18-85
Cedarcrest — 12-42
Friday Harbor — 27-74

Totals: 192-907 with 5 TDs; averaged 4.7 yards a carry and 100.8 yards a game.

Also had 26 tackles on defense.

PS — He added 675 yards and another 9 TDs as a senior.

So, a tip of the hat, Clay. Once a beast, always a beast.

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Logan Downes (John Fisken photos)

Logan Downes waits for a target to get free. (John Fisken photos)

Bronec

   One of Coupeville’s Bronec brothers (right) battles in the pits. Is it Hunter or Hurlee? Only their mother knows for sure.

Reed and Howard

   Wyatt Howard (13) and Gabriel Reed (far right) lead the charge, as Downes prepares to deposit the ball in his running back’s hands.

The gridiron is alive with the sounds of fall.

Helmets hitting, water bottles squirting and paparazzi clicking.

As the Oak Harbor Football and Cheer League opened regular season play Saturday, John Fisken was in place, snapping away and capturing all the action.

The pics above, which come courtesy him, showcase a few of the Coupeville kids playing youth football while disguised in purple and gold.

To see more (and possibly purchase glossy pics to decorate your mantle), pop over to:

Midget Goldhttp://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/OHFCL-Midget-Gold-vs-MV-Black/

Midget Purplehttp://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/OHFCL-Midget-Purple-vs-Lakewoo/

Juniorshttp://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/OHFCL-Jr-Gold-vs-South-Whidbey/

Seniorshttp://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/OHFCL-Seniors-vs-LaConner/

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Jon Atkins (John Fisken photos)

   Jon Atkins is Coupeville’s fourth head football coach in the last seven years. (John Fisken photos)

Ryan Labrador

Sophomore Ryan Labrador (front) will help anchor the lines.

Everything’s new.

New head coach, new assistants (well, two of three), new league (sort of), a new set-up for the fans (for a season at least) and, ultimately, everyone hopes, newfound success on the field.

When the Coupeville High School football team kicks off its season at home Saturday, Sept. 3 with an Island rivalry game against non-conference foe South Whidbey (7 PM), it will be a team looking to the future, and not the past.

Intent on improving on last year’s 1-9 mark, the Wolves want to post the program’s first winning record since 2005, they want to make the playoffs, they want to put a league title on the gym wall.

To do all of that, or any of that, though, they need to build each step of the way, something preached by first-year head coach Jon Atkins.

“A successful year would be that we improve each week,” he said. “And that we stay true as a team to our core values of Competition, Leadership, Family, Commitment and Toughness.”

Atkins is the school’s fourth gridiron head coach in the last seven years, jumping from an assistant job at Oak Harbor to replace Brett Smedley, who left after one season to return home to work at Columbia River.

His staff includes one holdover in veteran assistant coach Ryan King, a former Wolf player who was on that 2005 team, and two relative newcomers in Brad Sherman and Jonathan Martin.

Both are former star prep players themselves, with Sherman a prairie legend for his career at CHS, where he still owns the school passing records.

Along with a turnover in coaching staff, Coupeville football has two new wrinkles this season.

With the home bleachers having been ripped out to make room for the installation of a brand new eight-lane track oval around the football field, temporary seating will be used this season.

Bleachers will be brought over from baseball and tennis, but fans are encouraged to bring lawn chairs and/or embrace the idea of standing for one season.

Permanent covered bleachers are planned for the 2017 season, and will spring up on what is currently the road team’s side, in front of the apartments.

While you’re lounging in your lawn chair, you’ll also get a chance to get familiar with a few new teams, as Coupeville and its three fellow 1A Olympic League rivals have merged with the Nisqually League for football.

The agreement means the Wolves will play a seven-game league schedule (after opening with three non-conference tilts) and no longer have to play schools more than once a season.

In addition to Port Townsend, Klahowya and Chimacum, Coupeville now faces Vashon Island, Bellevue Christian, Cascade Christian and Charles Wright Academy in league play.

Depending on how allocations break out, the combined league will either send its top two or three teams straight on to the state playoffs.

Two-time defending Olympic League champ Port Townsend, which has a new coach in former Coupeville assistant Alex Heilig, and perennial state title contender Cascade Christian are the heavyweights, while Vashon boasts the state’s top rusher in Bryce Hoisington.

As a junior, he ripped Coupeville for a state-record 573 yards and nine touchdowns in the team’s non-conference finale, capping a season in which he gained a state-record 2,929 yards.

Vashon comes to Coupeville Sept. 30.

The Wolves counter with a number of returning players, led by junior quarterback Hunter Downes.

He got off to a strong start in 2015, connecting on 26 of 47 passes for 272 yards, before injuries sidelined him for much of his sophomore campaign.

Healthy, with a stronger arm and a bigger body, and working with Sherman on a daily basis, Downes is primed for a breakout season and will have some help getting there.

Junior Hunter Smith was the second-best receiver in the Olympic League last year, hauling in 32 passes, and he could swing between receiver and running back this time around.

Seniors Jacob Martin (the team’s leading returning rusher), Clay Reilly and Mitchell Carroll and sophomores Chris Battaglia and Teo Keilwitz are all potential backfield weapons, while juniors Jacob Zettle, Cameron Toomey-Stout and Jake Hoagland will be counted on as receivers.

The lines will be anchored by senior Uriel Liquidano, juniors Julian Welling and James Vidoni and sophomores Dane Lucero, Josh Robinson, Ryan Labrador and Jake Pease.

Coupeville will count on a bevy of hard-hitting linebackers (Battaglia, Martin, Welling, Liquidano, Keilwitz) to control things on defense, with ball-hawks like Smith and Reilly holding down the corners.

Smith set a school record with seven interceptions as a sophomore, which tied him for best in the state among players from all divisions.

Reilly might have been Coupeville’s best weapon a year ago, however, as he led all 1A punters, racking up 1,156 yards on 34 boots, earning First-Team All-League honors.

While returning players are expected to lead the way, Atkins doesn’t rule out newcomers like hard-charging freshman Sean Toomey-Stout making an impact.

“We have some freshmen that should get to see the field on some special teams,” Atkins said. “I think everyone on the roster will contribute this year.”

However the roster plays out, the Wolves are hard at work, building for a competitive future.

“Our biggest strength is our players desire and work ethic to be great,” Atkins said. “Learning a new system and a new coach can be difficult, but they are flying around and learning, watching film and doing what is needed to get done to make a great team.”

At the end of the day, win or lose, the head coach wants his team to be remembered for the right reason.

“I want Coupeville football to be known as the toughest team in the Olympic/Nisqually League.”

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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photos)

   Hunter Smith looks for running room, as Ryan Labrador trails the play. (John Fisken photos)

Jacob Zettle

Jacob Zettle stays hydrated on a sizzling afternoon in La Conner.

cheer

   Coupeville was the only school to bring its cheerleaders. Thereby proving, as always, the Wolves have far more spirit than their rivals.

Dawson Houston

Dawson Houston snags a wayward ball.

team

The Wolves have a meeting of the minds.

Teo Keilwitz

Teo Keilwitz runs to daylight.

thumbs up

Which gets a thumbs up from Jake Hoagland.

Sean TS

   Rampaging freshman Sean Toomey-Stout already has the whole “tackling like a wild beast” thing down cold.

No one worried about the score, but Friday was still important.

With Coupeville High School’s football team sitting eight days away from its season opener (Sept. 3 at home vs. South Whidbey), the Wolves got a chance to go out and hit someone who wasn’t their own teammate.

The occasion was a three-team jamboree down La Conner way, with Coupeville and Burlington-Edison filling out the marquee.

The game gave the Wolves a chance to run through their offense and defense under game-like conditions (and the watchful eye of first-year head coach Jon Atkins).

It also might have provided a little bit of an informal scouting session, as Coupeville returns to La Conner in Week 2 (Sept. 9) for a non-conference game with the Braves.

As the teams battled under a scorching sun, wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken worked the sidelines, capturing the late-summer gridiron action.

To see more (and possibly purchase some glossy, mantle-worthy pics while helping fund scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=11762&league=21&page_name=photo_store&pid=0.5.24.0.206&school=24&sport=0

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