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Jacob Martin wants to spend less time on the sideline injured, and more time on the field, ripping up things. (John Fisken photos)

   Jacob Martin wants to spend less time on the sideline injured, and more time on the field, ripping up things. (John Fisken photos)

Clay Reilly

Clay Reilly was the best punter in 1A as a junior.

It’s their time.

With Coupeville High School’s football team hoping to field a dynamic running attack, continuing a trend from recent years, three Wolf seniors hope to step up and make a big impact.

Young guns like Chris Battaglia and Teo Keilwitz should figure in the mix, but Jacob Martin, Clay Reilly and Mitchell Carroll are hoping to give the Wolves a three-headed monster of a backfield.

Martin is the only one of the three who played there last season, picking up 123 yards on 25 carries.

He was third on the squad in rushing behind seniors Wiley Hesselgrave and Lathom Kelley, but spent much of the year slowed by injuries.

Now he’s feeling healthy and wants to take a crack at the kind of numbers former teammates Jake Tumblin and Josh Bayne rolled up on the gridiron.

“I’m quick and shifty, hard to take down,” Martin said. “I want to set scoring and rushing records.”

Reilly, a strong defensive back who led all 1A punters last season with 1,156 yards, is eager to make an impact on both sides of the ball this season.

“My strengths as a rusher is that I’m fast and strong,” he said. “My goal as a rusher is to have a touchdown every game (at least).”

Carroll, who opts to let his actions speak for him, was among team leaders in tackles as a junior, and is coming off of his first trip to state as a track jumper.

However the carries shake out among the seniors and their sophomore counterparts, they all aspire to reach the heights set by their recent predecessors.

Watching some of the now departed players in action every day at practice and in games helped to shape the current Wolves outlook on the game.

Lathom taught me to lower my shoulder and run through defenders,” Martin said. “Jake and Josh taught me to lead by example and to keep my head up.”

That last sentiment is one shared by Reilly.

“What I’ve learned from them is to run through defenders, stiff arm them when they try to take me down and to always keep my head up,” he said.

They may not agree on which player has the best skill-set, staking their own claim (Martin says “I’m the quickest” while Reilly counters with “I think I’m the fastest”), but they remain committed to excel, as individuals and a team.

Knowing this is their final prep season, they want to exit strongly and impact younger players like Bayne and Co. did with them.

Reilly sums it up perfectly for all of the backfield seniors.

“I’m gonna try to be the best.”

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Sean Toomey-Stout (John Fisken photos)

   Sean Toomey-Stout elevates and electrifies on the hardwood. (John Fisken photos)

Toomey-Stout hauls in a punt.

Toomey-Stout hauls in a punt.

The future of Wolf sports is here and it just came flying in the door.

Coupeville High School freshman Sean Toomey-Stout, much like twin sister Maya and older brother Cameron, is fleet of feet.

That speed, a love for competition and a willingness to work hard and mesh well with his teammates bodes well for his athletic future.

Like his siblings, Toomey-Stout plans to be a three-sport athlete for the Wolves, continuing a trend from middle school.

He’s currently out on the gridiron putting in practice time with the CHS football squad, then plans to follow that up with basketball and track.

While Toomey-Stout enjoys all of his athletic pursuits, it’s a close battle for which one is nearest and dearest to his heart.

“It is between football and basketball,” he said. “They are both sports I’ve loved to play and watch since I was little.”

Embracing sports, both as a fan and a player, is something which comes naturally.

From moms Lisa Toomey and Beth Stout on down, the clan loves the arena.

“My entire family, they are sports nuts,” Sean said. “I have learned to love watching and playing sports.”

He’s also learned to work well with others, blossoming as a rock-solid teammate while toiling for CMS squads.

“I like being a part of a team and learning new things,” Toomey-Stout said. “I like meeting new people when I play.

“I am able to rely on other people, and, if I mess up, I know they will have my back,” he added. “I try my hardest in everything I do and give my maximum effort.”

When he’s not playing organized team sports, Toomey-Stout can often be found on a paddle board or snowboard, while still carving out time to finish homework.

“I want to get good grades,” he said. “And enjoy my time playing sports and doing well at sports.”

While he comes equipped with strong athletic skills, Toomey-Stout is not content to coast on his natural abilities alone.

“I need to work on my overall speed and agility, as well as my physical strength,” he said.

And while sports are a big part of his life, they aren’t the only thing driving him.

He’s a drummer who “likes all kinds of movies” and has musical tastes which run from opera to rap.

In the classroom, he gravitates towards math, which is “pretty fun,” and band, which allows him to be creative.

“I enjoy playing the drums and I drum a lot at home,” Toomey-Stout said. “I love to try to figure out new pieces of music in band.”

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Julian Welling (John Fisken photos)

   Julian Welling is one of several key returning players for first-year CHS football coach Jon Atkins. (John Fisken photo)

It’s the start of a new era.

Jon Atkins is diving in feet-first as the new head football coach at Coupeville High School, with two days of practice now under his belt.

As he and the Wolves get to know each other and prepare for their opener (Sept. 3 at home against South Whidbey), Atkins will be providing us with some of his thoughts on how things are unfolding.

He’ll be delivering a weekly address this season, which will hit the blogosphere Thursday (or early Friday in this case, since I went to bed early and ignored my emails…).

Anyway, without further ado, let’s head over to the Coaches Corner and see what Atkins has to say.

Hopefully David will let me hijack his blog for one post a week.

I don’t know if I have the knack for writing or the whimsical tone that he does, but I will try my best to keep Wolf Nation informed about our football boys throughout the season in this Coach’s Corner.

This is our first Thursday.

We have only had two days of practice and no game planning for an opponent this week; the coaching staff and the players have been working hard teaching, learning and memorizing a new playbook both offensively and defensively.

Each day the players are conditioning and getting their bodies ready for our first game on Saturday 3rd. (More on that in two weeks).

We are creating a new look for the 2016 season.

In the first few days of our fall camp in addition to installing our new defense and offense we have been installing our Core Covenants that will be the pillars in our program that the coaches believe in and will install in our players.

It is my hope that the community will see these behaviors  from our players in the community. 

The first two days we have focused on Competition and Leadership.

The players know that it is the coaching staff expectation that they compete in the classroom, on the field, or even in our Day 1 thumb war tournament competition, which ended with Co-Champions Woody Liquidano and Teo Keilwitz.

The second covenant is Leadership; all of our players are expected to be Leaders, and demonstrate Leadership in their position groups, in their PE classes and in the community.

We will install the last three covenants: Family, Commitment and Toughness.

We are thrilled to have the players out; we are still missing some faces from last year and would love to have them back out this year as well.

I believe that our program is going in a great direction and would love to have them hop on this train and enjoy the ride.

One of the differences you will see, well, you will hear if you come to practice, is a bit of practice music.

If you drive by practice you might hear some different sounds as our practice playlist changes up each day. 

We expect some AC/DC, Disturbed, Drake and Jake Owens to make an appearance on tomorrow’s practice playlist.

The coaching staff likes to make sure practice stay light and fun while getting our work done.

Next Coach’s Corner I will look to take on Burlington and La Conner in the La Conner Jamboree in our first test for Wolf Nation in 2016.

I am excited to meet all the football parents at our meeting Saturday, Aug. 20 at 4:00 PM.

PS — Don’t forget to follow us on Twitter — @WolfPrideFB.

Coach Atkins

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Ian Barron

   Ian Barron, the current CHS football record board and the documents which prove the identity of the one true rushing king.

Coupeville High School is making impressive strides with its athletic programs these days.

New bleachers in the gym, a sparkling new track oval blossoming before our eyes, and, of course, the project which has consumed me for the past year-plus about to come to fruition.

Next week 112 title boards will be installed on a wall inside the CHS gym, documenting league and district titles as well as state accomplishments won by the Wolves.

Finally, the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s, and the athletes and teams of those eras, will get their moment in the spotlight.

But, since I like tilting at windmills, before we finish with that epic endeavor (which has only been possible with the help of a ton of people inside and outside the school) I want to raise another issue.

And that is Ian Barron.

Or, more precisely, the indisputable fact he should be at the top of the football record board which greets visitors to the CHS gym complex.

The board is what it is, an honorable attempt to finally document some Wolf gridiron history in much the same manner the track record board has done for years.

It was a good start, though an incomplete one.

Records for CHS sports are notoriously hard to find, and I give the previous football coaching staff credit for doing what they could.

But Barron’s omission, while not being intentional, is glaring.

First, because his rushing marks, both for a season and a career, are so far ahead of what is currently listed as the records, and, secondly, because it is so easy to prove.

I have in my possession a two-page letter, signed by longtime Wolf coaches Ron Bagby and Tom Roehl, which breaks down precisely what kind of numbers Barron put up.

And, with all due respect to Josh Bayne, who is currently listed as the school record holder and was a beast on the gridiron and a quality guy off the field, those slots rightfully belong to Ian.

Bayne’s marks of 1,528 yards in his senior season and 2,154 for his stellar career currently sit atop the board.

Barron blows those away, however, even though he missed all but three games as a junior after breaking his leg.

His marks:

1997 — 425 yards
1998 — 1,753
1999 — 1,087 (in only three games)
2000 — 1,448

Career — 4,713

It’s right there in black and white, documented in a letter Roehl sent to the Everett Herald when CHS coaches were nominating Barron for the All-Area football team.

There’s no question of whether Ian deserves to be on the board, just a question of whether someone will do something about it.

So, as we welcome a new coaching staff to Wolf football, I’m calling on them to join me in asking the school and the booster club to make things right.

The board is up there to honor the past, while giving current CHS athletes a target. Let’s make sure it’s the right target.

Ian Barron is the one true rushing king, and he should be recognized as such.

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Uriel Liquidano (John Fisken photos)

Uriel Liquidano, busy being awesome. (John Fisken photos)

First you hear the explosion, then the screams.

Two kinds of screams.

When Uriel Liquidano unloads on a ball carrier, roaring across the football field and spearing them like a runaway missile, there’s often an audible boom.

Then, while his foe screams “Why? Why me?!?!?” through mouthfuls of turf, the Coupeville fans scream, just a lot happier.

Liquidano, who celebrates a birthday today, is a rampaging beast on the field, and we would have it no other way.

Cracking heads and blowing up blockers, Woody is a weapon, and it’s awfully nice to have him on the side of the good guys.

Following the example set by older brother Oscar, who rocked a few would-be rushers in his day, he has carved out a niche for himself.

As he gets ready for his senior season, the multi-sport wonder (he’s also a strong midfielder/defender for the Wolf boys’ soccer squad and could possibly return to basketball after some time off) is a key player for the CHS gridiron squad.

With the Wolves trying to bounce back from a 1-9 season, and with their third head coach in four years, elder statesmen like Uriel will be looked to as leaders and role models.

It’s a job he should fill nicely.

During his time in Coupeville, Liquidano has earned much love and respect from his teammates, and admiration from his fans.

He’s a rock-solid guy, well-liked by all it seems, and as talented off the field (where he sits on the honor roll) as on.

Our town got lucky when his family moved here, not just in picking up three athletes (Oscar, Uriel and younger sister Estefanny), but in nabbing a quality family.

From Uriel’s parents on down, the Liquidano clan is the best of what Coupeville is, and we wouldn’t be the same without them.

So happy birthday to a rampaging beast with a heart of gold, from all your many fans.

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