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Sophomore Tyler McCalmont (John Fisken photos)

   Sophomore lineman Tyler McCalmont has 16 tackles and a sack in his first season as a Wolf. (John Fisken photo)

Football runs in the family for Tyler McCalmont.

The Coupeville High School sophomore, who has recorded 16 tackles and a sack through the first six games, is following in the footsteps of an older sibling.

“I started about five years ago, in fifth grade,” McCalmont said. “My brother was playing football and I wanted to be like him.”

He’s stayed with the sport since then, developing into a two-way terror on the line who also sees action on special teams.

“Defense is my strong area,” McCalmont said. “Tackle strategies and pass blocking when I’m on the offense (is what I need to work on).”

Having moved back to Washington state from Fremont, Michigan in February, he’s in his first season of Wolf football, but has adapted quickly to his new environment.

“I like the sense of family, the camaraderie,” McCalmont said. “I would like the team to continue to work together, and for everyone to be a part of it.”

Over the years, he’s drawn inspiration and support from “my father, several coaches, and, most recently, my grandparents.”

McCalmont wrestled in Michigan, but CHS doesn’t have a mat squad, so he will fill his time with other pursuits after football season wraps up.

“I’m learning to play the guitar at school,” he said. “I like to hunt, fish, go camping, and play video games.

“I’d like to start my own YouTube channel someday.”

He singles out guitar and robotics as his favorite classes, and, while undecided about his future, is leaning towards pursuing the military or a trade school after graduation.

Until then, McCalmont will continue to school foes on the gridiron, much to the delight of Wolf fans.

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Monica Vidoni (Photo property of Rainy River Community College

   Former Wolf Monica Vidoni (back, far left) and her college volleyball teammates. (Photo property of Rainy River Community College)

Spikers one, gridiron warriors zero.

Of the five former Coupeville High School athletes competing in college sports this week, only one came away a winner.

That was Monica Vidoni, who saw action as her Rainy River Community College volleyball squad rolled to wins Oct. 7 against Hibbing and Oct. 9 against Fond du Lac.

None of her former classmates could say the same Saturday, as three teams, featuring four former Wolves, all fell in college football games.

Central Washington University and former CHS lineman Nick Streubel lost 49-44 to the South Dakota School of Mines, snapping their three-game winning streak.

Also taking a loss was Simon Fraser University, which was edged 38-35 by Dixie State.

The Clan boast two Wolf alumni, Josh Bayne and Jake Tumblin, and Bayne snared a tackle from his defensive back position.

Rounding out the Coupeville contingent was Mitch Pelroy, who brought back a kick-off 37 yards and had a tackle in Montana Western’s 37-30 overtime loss to second-ranked Southern Oregon.

It was the second straight loss for the Bulldogs, who had previously put together a seven-game winning streak covering parts of two seasons.

While her male counterparts are a combined 6-9 this year (Western is 3-2, Central 3-3 and Simon Fraser 0-4), Vidoni and her Voyageurs teammates are 14-11 on the season, 6-3 in conference play.

Vidoni, a freshman, has played in 11 sets over seven matches, compiling four kills and a dig.

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CJ Smith (John Fiskenb photos)

   Senior CJ Smith leads the Wolves in reception yards and is third in total yards. (John Fisken photos)

Josh (72) and Jake Lord have combined for

Linemen Josh (72) and Jake Lord have combined for 11 tackles this season.

Clay Reilly lets rip with a punt Friday night. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Clay Reilly lets rip with a punt Friday night. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Clay Reilly is movin’ on up.

Riding a 70-yard boot in Friday’s game against Port Townsend, the Coupeville High School junior is now the third most-proficient punter among 1A kickers whose coaches stay on top of their stats.

Reilly is averaging 32.6 yards per punt, which puts him hot on the heels of Jake Sargeant of Klahowya (34.8) and David Postma of Bellevue Christian (33.9).

His footwork highlights our weekly look at CHS football stats, as reported to MaxPreps by Wolf coaches.

Other guys making moves include Jacob Martin, who took over the team lead in fumble recoveries and Ty Eck, who rode a nine-tackle performance Friday to move within an inch of second-place in that category.

Stats through Week 6:

Offense:

Passing:

Gabe Eck 47-89 for 545 yards with 3 TD and 2 INTs
Hunter Downes 25-46 for 239 yards with 1 TD and 3 INTs
CJ Smith 1-1 for 10 yards

Receiving:

C. Smith 17 receptions for 254 yards
Hunter Smith 24-247
Ty Eck 12-109
Wiley Hesselgrave 10-87
Jordan Ford 4-58
Lathom Kelley 2-22
Ryan Griggs 1-10
Jake Hoagland 2-7

Rushing:

Hesselgrave 52 carries for 301 yards
Kelley 35-126
Jacob Martin 7-12
Chris Battaglia 1-4
C. Smith 1 (-1)
Mitchell Losey 1 (-3)
G. Eck 45 (-28)
Downes 12 (-49)

Total yards:

G. Eck 517
Hesselgrave 388
C. Smith 263
H. Smith 247
Downes 190
Kelley 148
T. Eck 109
Ford 58
Martin 12
Griggs 10
Hoagland 7
Battaglia 4

Touchdowns:

T. Eck 2
Hesselgrave 2
Martin 1
C. Smith 1
H. Smith 1

PATs:

Zane Bundy 4

Field Goals:

Bundy 3

Points:

Bundy 13
T. Eck 12
Hesselgrave 12
Martin 6
C. Smith 6
H. Smith 6

Defense:

Tackles:

Kelley 60
Hesselgrave 38
T. Eck 37
Uriel Liquidano 31
Battaglia 26
Brenden Gilbert 21
Mitchell Carroll 18
Julian Welling 17
Tyler McCalmont 16
Martin 14
H. Smith 14
Ford 12
Clay Reilly 12
Losey 11
Jake Lord 7
C. Smith 6
Josh Lord 4
JR Pendergrass 4
Griggs 1
Matt Hilborn 1
Teo Keilwitz 1
Josh Robinson 1
James Vidoni 1

Sacks:

Battaglia 2
Ford 2
Gilbert 2
Kelley 2
Carroll 1
Hesselgrave 1
Martin 1
McCalmont 1

Interceptions:

H. Smith 4
Hesselgrave 1
Martin 1
Reilly 1

Fumble recoveries:

Martin 3
Ford 2
H. Smith 2
T. Eck 1
Hesselgrave 1
Liquidano 1

Blocked kicks:

Hesselgrave 1
Liquidano 1

Special Teams:

Kickoffs:

Bundy 8 for 253 yards

Punts:

Reilly 17 for 555 yards
Bundy 12-308

Kickoff/punt returns:

Hesselgrave 16 for 237 yards
T. Eck 8-93
Kelley 5-68
H. Smith 4-39
Martin 2-2
Reilly 1-0

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Freshman Chris Battaglia recorded seven tackles Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

   Freshman Chris Battaglia, dubbed “The Italian Stallion” by Coupeville PA announcer Willie Smith, recorded seven tackles Friday night. (John Fisken photo)

When your most exciting play of the night is a punt, pretty good bet you’re not going to win the game.

But, that said, the Coupeville High School football squad did capture a string of small, but important, moral victories Friday night while facing off with the best team they will see all season.

And it was a dang good punt. But more about that later.

A look at the scoreboard told the big story — that Port Townsend rolled to a 44-0 win to all but put a choke-hold on the 1A Olympic League title.

Now 4-0 in league play, 6-0 overall, the Redhawks hold a one-game lead over Klahowya (3-1, 4-2), while Coupeville (1-3, 1-5) and Chimacum (0-4, 0-6) bring up the rear.

Port Townsend will host Klahowya next Friday, and, having outscored opponents 299-6 this season (beating those Eagles 52-6 earlier), would seem a slam-dunk to repeat as league champs.

But there’s intrigue beyond that certainty, as the Wolves actually have a better chance at earning a playoff berth than originally thought.

While the Olympic League only sent two teams to the postseason last year, it was revealed Friday the top three teams will be playoff-bound in 2015.

For Coupeville, that means a Homecoming win over Chimacum next Friday would allow it to clinch a trip to the postseason.

Plus, a Wolf win combined with the inevitable Klahowya defeat at Port Townsend would pull CHS within a game of second place heading into the conference finale, when Coupeville hits the road to face the Eagles on their home turf Oct. 23.

So, what that all means is a loss against Port Townsend, while rough, is not the end of the world.

The Wolves hit the Redhawks hard, and often, holding Port Townsend to its fewest points of the season.

Along the way, Coupeville recovered a fumble — the third picked up this season by Wolf junior Jacob Martin — and forced the Redhawks first-string offense into a rare four-and-out at one point early in the second quarter.

What they could not do, and what no team has been able to do so far, was fully control an impressive ground attack led by a 5-foot-9, 235-pound, surprisingly nimble battering ram named Wesley Wheeler.

The Redhawk senior slammed in to the end zone three times, with a pair of one-yard scores sandwiched around a 14-yard touchdown.

When the Wolves did bring Wheeler down, the Redhawks mixed things up with Ezra Easley, who is 80 pounds lighter but three times as quick.

Easley bolted in to score on back-to-back possessions, as Port Townsend built a 21-0 lead after one quarter.

Coupeville’s best play of the night came midway through the second quarter.

After finally breaking through for a first down, on a pass from Gabe Eck to Jordan Ford, the Wolves hit a brick wall and eventually had to punt.

That was when junior Clay Reilly unloaded a cannon shot off of his toe.

Zooming across the black sky, what would turn into a 70-yard punt traveled most of that distance in the air, then bit the turf and skipped through the end zone, preventing Port Townsend from getting any return on the ball.

It was an impressive moment and drew a startled gasp from an out-of-town guy broadcasting the game across the internet and an enthusiastic “ooh” and “ah” from the guys in the CHS press box, silver-tongued announcer Willie “Balls… Balls…” Smith and clock wizard Joel Norris.

After that, it was all Port Townsend, largely, as Redhawk QB David Sua connected with Carson Marx on a 14-yard scoring strike in which Marx made a circus catch while tumbling backward.

Gerry Coker tacked on a 33-yard field goal to close out the scoring, but Coupeville escaped without being the team to give up Port Townsend’s 300th point of the season.

Good luck on stopping that next week, Klahowya.

With little to play for except pride, Coupeville came within an inch or two of busting Port Townsend’s string of shutouts.

With Eck hitting Hunter Smith on an 11-yard pass, the Wolves were down to the 25, forcing the Redhawks to put their first-string defenders back in with two minutes to play.

On fourth down, Eck rolled out and heaved a bomb to Smith, who reached over his shoulder and hauled in the pass as he crossed into the end zone.

Unfortunately, carried to the side by the pass, he couldn’t keep his feet in bounds and it went down as a beautiful catch that ultimately didn’t count.

Forced to scramble for his life much of the time, Eck compiled 40 yards through the air, with Ford hauling in two passes for 22 yards.

Wiley Hesselgrave led the ground game with a very-hard-earned 30 yards.

Freshmen Ty Eck (nine tackles) and Chris Battaglia (seven) paced the defense, while Hesselgrave had six and Lathom Kelley added five.

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Unleash the beast, Lathom Kelley. (John Fisken photos)

Unleash the beast, Lathom Kelley. (John Fisken photos)

"What do Wolves eat? RedHawk meat!!"

“What do Wolves eat? RedHawk meat!!”

OK, let’s get this out of the way — no one thinks you’re going to win.

No one. And I mean no one.

Except me.

Call me naive. Call me stupid. Call me a true believer.

But I’m old enough to remember a time when Mike Tyson was as unbeatable as any human being on the planet has ever been.

Until he got knocked on his ass by Buster Douglas and never got back up.

It can happen. It has happened.

So, you can look at the numbers in preparation for tonight’s Coupeville vs. Port Townsend football game (7 PM kickoff at Micky Clark Field) and be swayed. A lot of people are.

The pertinent info:

Port Townsend is 5-0 overall, 3-0 in 1A Olympic League play.

They have thrown four shutouts and outscored opponents 255-6, are ranked #8 in the state AP poll and #1 by ScoreCzar.

Coupeville is 1-4, 1-2, has been outscored 175-55 and is ranked #50 on ScoreCzar, two slots BEHIND Chimacum, who they beat.

Though they are three slots ahead of South Whidbey, so it could be worse.

Every person, every computer, that picks Friday night games has come through with the same choice. They all pick the Redhawks.

It will be easy to lose, very hard to win.

But I say, why not?

Someone has to take the RedHawks down, why not the Wolves?

You’re better than your record would indicate.

A play here or there, a penalty or two less here and there, and you would have toppled South Whidbey and Klahowya and be 3-2.

You have big play weapons in Wiley Hesselgrave and Lathom Kelley and Hunter Smith and Ty Eck and a lot of other guys.

You will have the home crowd behind you.

You are the ONLY team to have beaten Port Townsend in a league football game in the season-and-a-half existence of the Olympic League.

The RedHawks are 8-1 so far and you, the Wolves, were the team that gave them that one loss last year.

So tune out the pundits. The experts. The predictors.

Buster Douglas was a 42-1 long shot, he was suffering from kidney disease and had the flu. Mike Tyson had never been knocked down, much less beaten.

Feb. 11, 1990 the boxing world got a wake up call it has never forgotten.

Oct. 9, 2015, the high school football world is waiting for that same call.

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