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Jake Hoagland wails on the sax. (John Fisken photo)

Jake Hoagland wails on the sax. (John Fisken photo)

Jake Hoagland

Hoagland (far left) and friends celebrate the end of the school year.

With a new high school football season ahead of us, let’s take a look at some of the young men who will play for Coupeville High School for the first time this fall.

When it comes to football, Jake Hoagland is putting the remote down and picking up the pigskin.

Already a successful baseball player for Coupeville High School, he’ll trade watching football for playing it as he enters his sophomore year.

“This year is my first year actually,” Hoagland said. “I enjoy watching football, but now I have the chance to play.”

He’s making the transition after being talked into it by those around him.

“I was kinda coaxed into playing by my friend Hunter Downes and coach (Brett) Smedley also said that I should play, so here I am,” Hoagland said. “My parents were not sure if I was going to play until the first practice.”

Having shown up for those opening spring practices, he plans to keep going, with an eye on snagging passes for Coupeville.

“Right now my strength is receiver and I only plan on playing that position, for now at least,” Hoagland said. “Since this is my first year I don’t have any goals really.

“I just plan on doing my best to support my team.”

While he may not have much football experience, Hoagland does have natural athletic ability and an easy-going nature.

A long-time baseball player, he saw varsity action for the Wolves as a freshman.

Making his first career start in an Olympic League game against Port Townsend, he smacked a pair of hits and knocked in three runs.

When he wasn’t on the diamond, he was also a standout with an instrument, playing a vital role for Jamar Jenkin’s CMS/CHS band.

“I usually spend my time sitting around, but when it comes to my classes I enjoy fitness and band the most,” Hoagland said.

If baseball and music are any indication, expect the scrappy Wolf to play a sweet tune on the football field, as well.

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Alex Turner (left) with dad ?.

Alex Turner (left) with dad Joseph.

With a new high school football season ahead of us, let’s take a look at some of the young men who will play for Coupeville High School for the first time this fall.

“I like hitting people!”

Before you think Alex Turner is being overly violent, he’s talking about the time he spends on the gridiron.

Turner, who will be a freshman at Coupeville High School in the fall, is entering his eighth year as a football player.

He was introduced to the sport by his dad, Joseph, and has loved the fast-paced, physical game ever since.

“I really don’t know what I’d be doing without football or my dad,” Turner said.

On the field, he lives for the big hit, and continues to put in the behind-the-scenes work necessary to make an impact once he straps on the gear.

“I’m fast, I can hit hard, I’m a good route runner,” Turner said. “I need to work on footing and reading the quarterback’s eyes and getting my wind up.”

Turner is working with a personal trainer on fine-tuning all of his moves.

“He’s helping with that right now; I want to be a better all-around player and to work hard every time I hit the football field.”

Football is not his only game, as Turner is a year-round athlete, having also played basketball and track during his time at Coupeville Middle School.

Away from sports, he spends most of his free time playing video games and working out.

Preparation for that moment when he steps on the field, clad in red and black, ready to lay down a string of hits that will put his name on the lips of Wolf fans everywhere.

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Clay Reilly (John Fisken photo)

Clay Reilly hauls in a pass. (John Fisken photos)

Mitchell Losey (21) takes a handoff from Hunter Downes.

Mitchell Losey (21) takes a hand-off from Hunter Downes.

Someone might need to scrounge up some extra uniforms.

While this is only spring practice, and many things can change between now and the start of the season in September, the Coupeville High School football team currently has a roster that is 67% bigger than a year ago.

First-year head coach Brett Smedley has had 55 prospective players out so far, which is amazing given that the Wolves had 33 on their in-season roster last year — and lost seven to graduation.

Of the 26 Wolves who could return from 2014, 22 have made appearances so far.

One of those four missing players, Christian King, is moving, and the other three — Gabe Wynn, Cole Payne and Luke Carlson — could still resurface.

Which means 33 players are new to the program this year (or, as in the case of Dalton Martin and Tyler Cermak, hoping to return to active duty after taking time off).

The current Wolf roster:

Noah Allison
Jonny Alvarez
Andre Avila
Chris Battaglia
Chase Boudreaux
Zane Bundy
Kyle Burnett
Mitchell Carroll
Cody Cashdollar
Tyler Cermak
Dominic Dausey
Seth David
Hunter Downes
Gabe Eck
Ty Eck
Coleby Fleming
Brenden Gilbert
Tim Goss
Ryan Griggs
Wiley Hesselgrave
Matt Hilborn
Jake Hoagland
Brandon Jansen
Ethan Kedrowski
Teo Keilwitz
Lathom Kelley
Chance Kleinfelter
Ryan Labrador
Uriel Liquidano
Jake Lord
Josh Lord
Mitchell Losey
Shane Losey
Jose Marcos
Dalton Martin
Jacob Martin
Tyler McCalmont
Axel Partida
Jake Pease
JR Pendergrass
JT Quinn
Clay Reilly
Micheal Rice
Josh Robinson
Brian Shank
CJ Smith
Hunter Smith
Jacob Smith
Matt Stevens
Jonathan Thurston
Cameron Toomey-Stout
Alex Turner
James Vidoni
Gregory Villarreal
Julian Welling

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Start practicing today and you can grow up to be the next Lathom Kelley. (John Fisken photos)

   Start practicing today and you can grow up to be the next Lathom Kelley (with ball) or Hunter Downes. (John Fisken photos)

Smedley

Brett Smedley, camp director and new CHS head football coach.

Your future is waiting. Will you step up and tackle it?

Future gridiron warriors who are entering grades 3-6 can take part in a football camp run by the Coupeville High School coaching staff and current and former Wolf players.

The camp runs July 8-9 from 9 AM-noon both days and cost is $30 for one session or $60 for both days (includes camp t-shirt).

Registration is ongoing at the Coupeville Boys and Girls Club (203 N. Main).

Sessions will cover the fundamentals of passing, catching, blocking, tackling, and kicking with work on basic offensive and defensive systems.

Players will scrimmage and there will be a camp tournament, daily awards and team building activities.

The camp is run by new CHS head coach Brett Smedley, who brings 14 years of football playing and coaching to the field.

A former player at Linfield College, he coached high school football in Vancouver before coming to Coupeville, where has has been a PE teacher and assistant coach.

He inherits the head coaching spot for the Wolves this fall with the departure of Tony Maggio.

Smedley and his staff want the camp to “provide campers with an experience that improves his/her football skills in a safe and positive environment.”

“Players are encouraged to reach their fullest potential and come away from camp not only with new skills but an enthusiasm for the game,” he said. “We focus on a maximum number of quality repetitions and give students a high level of attention through a low camper to coach ratio.

“Finally, we expect players to learn and have fun!”

For more information, contact the coach at bsmedley@coupeville.k12.wa.us

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Play football for CHS? Now you know what the school records are. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Play football for CHS? Now you know what the school records are. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

School sack leader Nick Streubel, with dad David. (Nanette Streubel photo)

School sack leader Nick Streubel, with dad David. (Nanette Streubel photo)

Mark it down. June 5, 2015 — the day Coupeville High School got serious about its athletic history.

League title banners were raised for girl’s basketball and girls’ tennis — the first new ones in any sport at the school since 2002 — and then football finally got a shiny record board to rival the one that track has had for many years.

Now, we could quibble that Nick Streubel, the sack king, had his last name misspelled.

And, I am curious, with all the records being from the 2000’s, how deeply the researchers have gone into the past.

Though, based on the haphazard ways records have been curated at CHS, numbers for anything prior to the ’90s might simply have vanished into the mists of time…

In any case, this is progress.

Shiny progress that finally puts a spotlight on those who wore the red and black on the gridiron, while setting a target for those who come in the future.

Well done, gentlemen.

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