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Archive for the ‘Football’ Category

An injury might have sidelined Jacob Martin, but he still stayed busy all night long. (John Fisken photo)

   An injury might have sidelined Jacob Martin for a moment, but he still stayed busy all night long. (John Fisken photo)

Lindsey

   Wolf soccer stars (l to r) Ema Smith, Lindsey Roberts, Kalia Littlejohn and Mckenzie Meyer crossed the water to root for their boys.

Payton

   CHS athletes turned fans-for-a-night Payton Aparicio (left) and Lauren Bayne fuel up for a long night of cheering.

Refs

   Kaila Olin, a Port Townsend grad, spends her Friday night working the game along side her dad.

Zane

Zane Bundy gets things kicked off.

crowd

“Oh, we’re gonna get loud. Don’t worry about that…”

rose

   Roberts makes dang sure she only has to make one trip to the concession stand, while Wolf spiker Lauren Rose kicks off a new career as a noodle model.

rose 2

And then, as always, the giggles took over.

Ridin’ the ferry. Ridin’ the ferry all year long.

It’s what Whidbey athletes and fans do, and the familiar routine played out again, as a chunk of Wolf Nation flooded onto a boat or two and bobbed its way over to Port Townsend for a dash of Friday Night Lights.

Coupeville returned with a win (28-26 over Chimacum), a share of first place in the 1A Olympic League standings and a string of snazzy photos courtesy travelin’ camera clicker John Fisken.

The faces change from year to year, but the feeling remains.

Something magical about small town football Fridays, on and off the field.

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Hunter Smith (John Fisken photo)

Hunter Smith, cold-blooded killer. (John Fisken photo)

Wolf volleyball star Hope Lodell and gridiron giant Julian Welling are all smiles after the win.

   Wolf volleyball star Hope Lodell and gridiron giant Julian Welling are all smiles after the win. (Ally Roberts photo)

Hunter Smith, with the adrenaline shot right to the heart.

The Coupeville High School sophomore wasn’t alive when Pulp Fiction hit movie screens, but he went all John Travolta on Chimacum Friday night, plunging in the needle and saving a huge football win for the Wolves.

Smith’s interception with just 32 seconds to play sealed a wild 28-26 win, the first-ever for CHS head coach Brett Smedley, and lifted the Wolves into a first place tie in the 1A Olympic League.

Coupeville (1-2 overall, 1-0 in league play) sits atop the league along with Port Townsend (3-0, 1-0), which crushed Klahowya 52-6.

The Wolves will hit the road for a fourth consecutive week next Friday, Sept. 25, when they will meet the high-powered RedHawks in a battle for sole possession of first.

Port Townsend, which entered this week ranked #10 in the state polls, has outscored its first three foes 145-6.

While it will be a daunting task, it’s one to think about on another day.

Tonight, if you hear the roar coming across the water as Coupeville players and fans return on the ferry, there’s reason. Big reason.

Facing a team that is better than its (now) 15-game losing streak might indicate, the Wolves, who were missing several starters, spent the night battling from behind, then surged into the lead in the late going, only to almost have it all ripped away.

Having reeled off 16 straight points, capped by a Zane Bundy field goal, Coupeville staked itself to its biggest lead of the game at 28-20.

Refusing to go down easily, the host Cowboys closed the gap on a touchdown with under a minute to play.

Coupeville blunted the damage by preventing Chimacum from converting on a two-point conversion that would have tied the game, but the Cowboys got a break when they recovered the ensuing onside kick.

With the ball in its hands, Chimacum came up firing only to have Smith, who was the only freshman to earn All-League honors last year, come up huge.

That dagger capped a wild and woolly affair in which the lead changed hands at will, often in the matter of one play.

Coupeville opened the scoring on a touchdown pass in which freshmen twins Gabe and Ty Eck hooked up.

But before the Wolves could really celebrate, Chimacum blocked the PAT and returned it the length of the field for a score of its own to grab a 7-6 lead.

Ty Eck would score again, but the Wolves trailed 13-12 at the half.

The strongest run of the game for Coupeville came in the second half, when the Wolves put together three straight scores to turn a 20-12 deficit into a 28-20 lead.

Wiley Hesselgrave slammed in for one touchdown, then Smith snagged another through the air, before Bundy converted on the first field goal of his short high school career.

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(Scott Losey photo)

   Top row: (l to r) Shane Losey, Josh Lord, Ty Eck, Hunter Smith. Bottom: Mitchell Losey, Jake Lord, Gabe Eck, CJ Smith. (Scott Losey photos)

They're deeply impressed by the historical significance of the moment. Deeply...

   They’re deeply impressed by the historical significance of the moment. Deeply…

Bloodlines run deep in Wolf Nation.

Especially when it comes to the CHS football squad.

There are currently four sets of brothers, including two pairs of twins, anchoring the gridiron team.

While there have been brothers who played at the same time before, and a lot of siblings who played several years apart, having four different pairs at one time is out of the ordinary.

Leading off are seniors Jake and Josh Lord, big, bruising linemen who are actually really easy-going dudes.

Up next, two pairs that combine an older sibling with his little bro.

Senior CJ Smith is joined by sophomore Hunter Smith, while senior Mitchell Losey looks across the field and sees freshman Shane Losey shadowing him.

And wrapping up the family affair is freshman twins Gabe and Ty Eck.

Gabe used to have long, curly hair, now it’s Ty’s turn for the flowing locks, but both are already starters for the Wolves as ninth graders.

Graduation in the spring of 2016 will break things up a bit, with four of the eight siblings set to depart.

But, that doesn’t mean the Ecks will be alone, as over the next two years they should be joined by new brother/brother units.

Cameron Toomey-Stout, already a speed demon for the Wolves, will be a junior next year, while Sean Toomey-Stout (who is a twin, but with sister Maya) will be hitting high school as a freshman.

And, if my calculations are correct, a third brother combo pops up in 2017, when Wolf QB Hunter Downes (currently a sophomore) could be joined by lil’ bro Sage, currently a 7th grader at Coupeville Middle School.

So, sometime between now and then, we just need to find a family with triplets — all preferably 6-foot-5, 300-pound linemen with 4.2 speed in the 40 — and we’re really set.

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Lincoln Kelley (John Fisken photo)

   Win for Lincoln Kelley or he’ll have to go rip the computer’s heart out with his bare hands. (John Fisken photo)

Dear Coupeville High School football players,

The computers think you stink.

There’s really no other way to look at it, since that’s what “Debbie,” the diabolical and vehemently anti-Whidbey computer at the heart of ScoreCzar.org is burping out right now.

In her latest rankings, she has the Wolves ranked #52 … out of 53 schools playing 1A football.

That’s right. Debbie thinks you could beat Stevenson, a school that has been outscored 91-7 in its first two games, but just about no one else.

Granted, you are 0-2 on the young season, but you were within two points with six minutes to play in your opening game, and lost to a 2A school that had a line comprised almost entirely of 300-pound beasts last week.

So, I think Debbie is underestimating you here, by a lot.

But this? This is what should really sting.

Coupeville’s opponent this Friday, Chimacum, is also 0-2. Oh, but wait, the Cowboys have actually lost 14 consecutive games covering nearly a two-year period.

And yet, Debbie has them ranked 12 slots higher than you at #40.

Whaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa?

I know. I know.

Debbie’s handlers can, and will, reel off a list of smooth computery talk about ratios this and slide rules that and it’ll sound almost convincing, but don’t listen.

Just stop and realize the computers say a team that hasn’t won since 2013 is somehow 12 slots better than you.

Then go out and drop-kick Chimacum Friday night.

Do it for yourself. Do it for your teammates. Do it for your town.

Tell our computer overlords that Wolves do not go quietly into that good night. Instead, they live to make Debbie cry sweet, sweet tears of regret.

 

To see the complete rankings, which feature Coupeville’s 1A Olympic League mate Port Townsend at #2, pop over to:

http://www.scoreczar.org/classifications/4-high-school-football-wa1a

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Matt Hilborn (John Fisken photos)

   Matt Hilborn, having snagged the ball, realizes there’s several Sequim players lookin’ to thrash him. Time to flip on the jets and get movin’. (John Fisken photos)

Cameron Toomey-Stout

   Cameron Toomey-Stout calls his TD catch. “I’m going that way, skippy, and I’ll be gone before you blink.” He was right.

Vidoni

   James Vidoni (76) and Teo Keilwitz (33) drop the boom on a runner stuck in no man’s land.

Jonathan Thurston

   “Time to go kick some booty, boys.” Jonathan Thurston, moments before he took a pick-six to the house.

Shane Losey

Shane Losey, gunslinger.

Ryuan King

   CHS coach Ryan King, himself a former Wolf standout, imparts some wisdom to Hilborn. “When you hit ’em son, make their momma feel it.”

Helmets crunched against shoulder pads, touchdowns were scored and the cameraman fired off a billion or so photos.

Monday was football night in Cow Town, as the Coupeville High School JV gridiron warriors tangled with visiting Sequim.

Along for the ride was travelin’ photo man John Fisken, who was kind enough to provide us with the pics above.

To see more of his click-tastic work, 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=8997&league=21&page=1&page_name=photo_store&school=181&sport=0

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