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Wiley Hesselgrave (John Fisken photo)

   Senior Wiley Hesselgrave has been a team leader on both sides of the ball this season. (John Fisken photo)

There is a wild beast on the prowl, and it’s leaving a path of carnage as it thrashes its way through the 1A Olympic League.

The Port Townsend High School football squad has resembled Mike Tyson in his prime so far, and nothing about that changed Friday.

After dinging visiting Coupeville 52-0, the Redhawks (4-0 overall, 2-0 in league play) have outscored opponents 197-6.

But, while the loss made for a rough night for the Wolves, hope is far from dead.

Coupeville (1-3, 1-1) slips into a second-place tie with Klahowya (2-2, 1-1), which beat Chimacum 55-18 Friday, and is still very much in the hunt for a playoff berth.

The top two teams in the four-team conference will advance to the postseason.

The Wolves, after opening with four straight road games, will finally play at home next Friday, Oct. 2, when they host Klahowya.

Coupeville plays four of its final five regular season games at home and will get a rematch with Port Townsend Oct. 9.

Friday night, the Wolves ran into a team that relies heavily on its big, bruising runners crashing away behind its even bigger, even more bruising line.

Once again, the plan worked for the Redhawks, who rolled out to a 21-0 lead after one quarter, then doubled that before halftime.

A running clock kicked in with 1:40 to play in the second quarter and Port Townsend up 42-0.

Ezra Easley and Wesley Wheeler scored three touchdowns apiece to pace the Redhawks, while Gerry Coker capped the scoring with a long field goal in the fourth.

“Port Townsend is a very good team and I expect to see them go far in the playoffs,” said Coupeville coach Brett Smedley. “Our kids fought hard all night and there was absolutely no quit in them, which is something we have been preaching all season.

“The coaching staff is extremely proud of the players for their attitudes and efforts and willingness to go out and fight hard for their brothers and the CHS community!”

While highlights were few and far between for Coupeville, one fourth quarter completion from Wolf freshman quarterback Gabe Eck to senior receiver Jordan Ford did get some love from the announcer on Sound Sports Net, which live-streamed the game.

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Sean Toomey-Stout (far left) was a rampaging force of nature on both sides of the ball Wednesday afternoon. (Deb Smith photo)

   Sean Toomey-Stout (far left) was a rampaging force of nature on both sides of the ball Wednesday afternoon. (Deb Smith photos)

CMS coach Bob Martin

   CMS coach Bob Martin (red hat) and his staff meet with their players after the game.

There is a wild beast stalking the sidelines.

Coupeville Middle School eighth grader Sean Toomey-Stout isn’t the biggest football player on the field, but he never stops attacking.

Quick, nimble, explosive and fearless, prone to pulling off highlight reel moves just like older brother Cameron, he was the main attraction Wednesday afternoon.

While Toomey-Stout’s heroics weren’t enough to lift the Wolves to a win — CMS fell 27-0 to visiting Stevens, a school that boasts 600+ students — his play, especially in the second half, gave Coupeville fans something to holler about.

After surrendering all 27 points in the first half, the Wolves clamped down on defense after the break, hitting with more aggression the further into the game they got.

Toomey-Stout single-handedly changed Stevens flow, forcing the visitors to go four and out on a series in which the rampaging Wolf made four consecutive tackles in the back field.

The most bone-crunching of the smack-downs came on an aborted pitch, as Toomey-Stout arrived at the exact moment the startled Stevens rusher felt the ball start to graze his fingertips.

A millisecond later, he was flat on his back, and asking if anyone saw the bus that had just flattened him.

Not content to star on just one side of the ball, Toomey-Stout followed up his defensive stand with Coupeville’s best offensive play of the game.

Taking a pitch from Wolf quarterback Dawson Houston, Sean the Shifty went on a twisty rampage, bolting through and around almost all 11 would-be tacklers before finally being hauled down 42 yards from where he started.

Unfortunately, Coupeville’s lack of a battering ram in the red zone prevented them from scoring on the drive, as the Wolves stalled out at the five-yard line after Toomey-Stout’s rampage.

Stevens, however, had a battering ram. Well, more than just one.

Their running backs and a chunk of their line looked like they were already in high school, and they spent the early stages of the game just running straight at, and straight through, Coupeville’s undersized defenders.

With several players already dinged up, and others forced to play out of position, the Wolves opened the game tentative, before getting their second wind and an injection of steel into their collective spines.

The first jolt came from Toomey-Stout (who else?), but then Gavin Knoblich, Trystan Ford, Trevor Bell and Jean Lund-Olsen all stepped up with strong defensive plays of their own.

Houston, when he had time to set up and throw, looked sharp on several heaves, with his best target being Toomey-Stout.

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JR Pendergrass is about to unload a can of whup ass, and your address is on the return label. (John Fisken photos)

   JR Pendergrass had a candy bar in his locker, for after the game. It’s missing, and he now has a can of whup-ass with your name on the return label. (John Fisken photos)

You thought you had a candy bar carefully hidden in your locker, waiting for after the game. Hunter Downes disagrees.

Hunter Downes: “Don’t make me run. I’m full of chocolate.”

"DOWNNNNNEEESSS!!!!"

   Brenden Gilbert: “DOWNNNNNEEESSS!!!! You dare to mess with lineman chocolate?!?!?”

"It was actually me!!" Dylan Schachtner

Dylan Schachtner: “Unless it was really me…”

"I will burn

   Wiley Hesselgrave: “I will burn down your house of chocolate with you in it, Goldilocks!! Three generations from now, your family will cry when they look at a candy bar!!!!!”

Matt Stevens

   Matt Stevens: “Good lord, Hesselgrave. Is is too late to go play tennis instead? Seriously. Guys? Guys?”

Clay Reilly

   Clay Reilly, being a veteran, stays out of the fray, staring thoughtfully off at the setting sun, thinking about baseball season. Or candy bars. Probably candy bars.

Let’s face it, girls are better than boys.

OK, let me clarify. What I’m talking about is high school female athletes posing for photos, as opposed to their male counterparts.

The ladies love the camera and are far, far more willing to be goofy or entertaining, while the dudes too often buy into the idea that you have to simply stare at the camera with no smile or it somehow shows weakness.

Like anything, it’s not always true.

Hunter Hammer had a love affair with the camera, Gavin O’ Keefe had a huge smile in every pic ever taken and Joel Walstad couldn’t tamp down his impish charm. There are guys who will step up.

But, as a whole, girls kicks guys butt.

So, it’s nice to leaf through the CHS football portraits taken recently by John Fisken and see some variety.

A smile here, an artful pose there. Some individuality breaking out.

I’ve gathered some of the best for your quick-reading perusal today, as concrete proof that, hey guys, be willing to play to the camera (at least a little bit) and it’s far more likely you’ll see your picture up on Coupeville Sports.

If that’s your thing.

If not, carry on. McKenzie Bailey will be back any second.

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"Good evening, my name's Jonathan Thurston and I'll be droppin' highlights all night long." (John Fisken photo)

   “Good evening, my name’s Jonathan Thurston and I’ll be droppin’ highlights all game long.” (John Fisken photo)

He wasn’t messing around.

Jonathan Thurston played ferociously all night Monday, refusing to back down against the big boys from Anacortes.

Even in the final seconds of a 44-14 JV football loss to the 2A school, the Coupeville High School junior went down fighting, trying to pull in a pass through double coverage, then smacking one defender’s hands away after the Seahawk got extra handsy.

While his team may have lost — and the game was much closer than it sounds for a very long time — Thurston was electric, hauling in a pair of touchdown passes on offense, then flipping to defense and snagging an interception.

Flying from sideline to sideline, his bright orange shoes leading the way, he showed why he’s become a fan favorite at Mickey Clark Field.

Thurston got the pro-Wolf crowd on its feet early, slipping behind the Anacortes defense to haul in a Shane Losey pass, then hitting the jets for an 83-yard scoring play.

After Jake Hoagland crashed through the Seahawk line to cash in the two-point conversion, Coupeville had an 8-0 lead with just a minute and forty five seconds having ticked off the clock.

Call the game at that moment and the smallest 1A school in the state would have had a beautiful upset.

Unfortunately, Anacortes, not having to catch a ferry like some other schools, was content to stick around and use their superior beef to eventually wear down the ever-scrappy Wolves.

Three first-quarter touchdowns, all coming on basically the same play — running right at the Wolf defense like a battering ram — staked the Hawks to a 22-8 lead that they would never relinquish.

Coupeville didn’t fold, however, holding Anacortes scoreless in the second quarter, with Ethan Marx knocking down a pass at a key moment and Tavian Woolett picking off a potential touchdown pass at the halftime buzzer.

The Wolves couldn’t score themselves, though, despite putting together a fairly sustained drive.

With Losey completing tosses to Thurston, Cameron Toomey-Stout and Hoagland, and Anacortes committing two fairly boneheaded penalties, CHS was on the move.

Hoagland kept the drive alive with a gorgeous fourth down catch in which he planted his toes a millimeter inside the sidelines as he hauled in a pass under duress, but an interception two plays later doomed things.

Getting the ball back after a punt, Losey kept slinging, and Hoagland busted a catch for 42 yards, taking the ball down to the five.

The Wolves, who spent the night hitting on the big play but coming up short on small ones, couldn’t punch the ball in, though, letting Anacortes escape one more time.

While the game slipped away a bit in the second half, with a couple of scores making things seem more lopsided than they had been, Coupeville wasn’t done with adding some new hits to the highlight reel.

Hoagland went airborne for a sweet mid-air catch that netted 20 yards, Thurston hauled in a five-yard scoring strike and Axel Partida and James Vidoni both came up with bone-rattling defensive stops.

The biggest roar (and biggest ensuing groan) came when the Anacortes quarterback coughed up the ball and Wolf freshman Matt Hilborn caught the bouncing ball in mid-stride.

Flying down the field, #80 brought the ball back 84 yards for a touchdown.

Or, at least everyone, including at least one ref who signaled a score, thought he did.

The ultimate call came from another ref whose seeing eye dog went missing mid-game, who declared Hilborn down on about the one-inch line.

While Losey and Thurston would hook up for the second time mere moments later, that score was rightfully Hilborn’s.

Even the seeing eye dog could tell you that.

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Gabe Eck (John Fisken photos)

   Eyes scanning downfield, young gun Gabe Eck gets ready to pick apart the defense. (John Fisken photos)

block

   “I said NOOOOOOOO!!!” Grizzled vets Lathom Kelley (44) and Wiley Hesselgrave (10) team up to block a Chimacum kick.

CJ Smith

Hauling in the ball in mid-stride, CJ Smith is footloose and fancy free.

Jordan Ford

Jordan Ford, getting ready to make his 2,561 relatives in the stands go crazy.

Wiley

Hesselgrave can not be stopped by mere mortals. Fools.

Mark

   Proud papa Mark Hesselgrave exchanges hair care tips with the most stylish soccer player in Wolf Nation, Kirsten Pelroy. Yep, I’m sure that’s what’s happening.

Hunter Smith

Hunter Smith, about to make a lot of folks miss.

Uriel Liquidano

Uriel Liquidano (63) and Ford team up to lasso a Cowboy.

A win is a win, but photos last forever.

As the buzz from Friday’s victory over Chimacum fades just a bit (eventually the focus will shift to next week’s foe, Port Townsend), Wolf football fans can relive the moment through John Fisken’s photos.

With Oak Harbor High School on a rare bye week, we got the travelin’ photo man’s full attention, and he delivered the pics above.

To see more (a lot more), and possibly purchase some (thereby helping to fund college scholarships for CHS student/athletes) pop over to:

http://www.olympicleague.com/index.php?act=view_gallery&gallery=9057&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=183&sport=0

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